ABSTRACT

The co-ed groups, themselves a variety of nationalities and colours, were reminding each other of the rules of the game and recapitulating the information about their area. This included what territories it covered, its politics, what agriculture it sustained, what resources it included, how much of these was committed to industry and defence and what were its current estimates of food wastage or storage. To represent these each area had been given units of industry, units of resources and units of industrial products. It was a while before groups could assimilate their problem and decide what their national policy must be should they have an insufficiency or an excess of food for their population.