Page 4-Tuesday, November 7, 1978-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 53 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Judge Peterson's PBB ruling Mexican students: The undefeated UDGE WILLIAM Peterson's ruling on the Cadillac PBB contamination case has left the public with two basic questions: Why did he rule that PBB has no ill effects on humans and why did he decide the case just one week before the November election. The case involved a Falmouth, Mi., farm couple, Roy and Marilyn Tacoma, who filed suit against the Michigan Farm Bureau and Michigan Chemical Company after their dairy cattle were poisoned with PBB-tainted feed. The Tacomas took the courageous - but costly - step of killing several hundred head of dairy cattle, after the animals started showing signs of PBB-related illness. They refused to sell the cows for meat, despite assurances from agriculture officials that it would be safe to do so. The couple decided that they would rather absorb a financial loss, rather than endanger the public's health with contaminated beef. In the suit, the Tacomas sought to recover the damages from the Farm Bureau and the chemical firm which had been responsible for the PBB contamination in the first place. The case dragged out over several years of hearings, motions, delays, and lengthy testimony by scores of expert witnesses. To observers familiar with the growing evidence of PBB's debiliating effects on ani- mals and humans, Judge Peterson's dismissal of the Tacoma's suit was difficult to comprehend. There was simply very little factual basis for, his statement that PBB's dangers have not been established. Tests on animals have shown that PBB causes nervous and skin disorders, swelling of joints and hair and nail. abnormalities. Cows have also been found to suffer sharp declines in milk production as a result of eating PBB. If the ruling itself is hard to justify, the timing of Peterson's action is even harder to explain. It is difficult to avoid the impression that the ruling was timed to give incumbent Governor William Milliken a last-minute boost in his tough reelection battle. Judge Peterson could not have been unaware of the central role which PBB has played in this year's gubernatorial campaign. He must have heard the barrage of attacks from Democratic challenger William Fitzgerald against Gov. Milliken's mishandling of the PBB disaster. Under the circumstances, any prudent, responsible judge would have postponed his ruling until after the November vote so as not to color the outcome of the election. It would be hard for Judge Peterson to dispell the impression that his ill- timed, ill-conceived decision was aimed at rescuing the state's top official from the mire of PBB. The Tacomas, meanwhile, have indicated they plan to appeal Peterson's ruling. We hope higher court officials will show the wisdom Judge Peterson's action so clearly lacks. This October, across the United States and all the Americas, people commemorated the tenth anniversary of the Tlatelolco massacre. This was a brutal, planned attack by the Mexican army on demonstrators in Mexico City, in which hundreds of defenseless people were killed. However, that massacre was only one episode in the dramatic story of the Mexican student movement, which was as vital and courageous during the sixties as was our own. In one sense, that story is still ongoing, and today, when political stirrings are again to be seen on our campuses, it is a story that we should not ignore. The movement began in 1968, when a high-school brawl in Mexico City was surpressed by the policy with unnecessary brutality. Out of this incident grew a, gigantic upsurge of university students -rotesting the lack of democratic rights in Mexican society. Their demands were simple: the dissolution of the Granaderos, an especially brutal wing of the police used against demonstrators and strikers; the firing of the police officers responsible for the high- school incident; abolition of the laws limiting political activity; indemnification for the relatives of the students killed by the police; and the release of political prisoners, including two union leaders who had been in jail since 1959 for leading a railroad strike. Also fueling the movement was ,a sense that Mexican society was not delivering what it promised. Most of the students came from the lower middle-class, and had hoped to rise in society through their expansion in Mexico, the students felt that opportunities were slipping away from them because of the unequal distribution of wealth: An ever- greater amount of the national income was being monopolized by a US-supported upper-class. (Three-fourths of Mexico's trade is with the US, and like so much of Latin America, she is By Mark Prejsnar Tlatelolco. But it was not the end. Mexican society as a whole was both angered and cowed. One student recalled: "A policeman climbed up on the platform to speak at a The Mexican students have doggedly earned the right to carry their banners bearing the proud slogan: "Better to die on one 'sfeet than to live on one's knees. " V electricians' and other campu employees begin a series o strikes on different campuses Their demands: child care decent salaries, so teacher .would not have to take seconi jobs outside the university greater academic freedom housing programs; and bette health care. These strikes were massivel; supported by the students; thu began for the first time a reall organized alliance between th students and labor. Visciou repression hascontinued, bu many demands have been wo and some strikes hav succeeded. This new labor/studen movement has begun to look lik the massive '68 groundswell: I 1977 there were demonstration of 150,000 people. The Mexica students have doggedly earne the right to carry their banner bearing the proud slogan "Better to die on one's feet tha to live on one's knees." On the evening of November 2 9, the University of Michiga community will -have a uniqu opportunity to learn about th Mexican student movement an related topics. Noted historian and political activists from th US and Mexico will speak i' Schorling Auditorium in th School of Education Building, a part of a teach-in on "Mexico Contours of Crisis." Among th speakers will be Hecto Marroquin, one of the leaders c the student movement in th early 1970s, who is fighting to b allowed to reamin in the US, an who fears for his life if he i forcibly returned toMexico. Mark Prejsnar is a rrenmbe of the Ann Arbor Committe for Human Rights in Latia America. dependent on her northern neighbor in many ways.) Indeed, by the 1970's, combined unemployment and underemployment affected over 50 per cent of the population. The students' demands found an echo in much of the rest of society. The demonstrations held in the summer of 1968 drew over 200,000 people, many of them non- students. Unions and groups of workers at particular enterprises tool out newspaper ads declaring their solidarity with the students. (Direct involvement, on the other hand, was likely to cost people their jobs, and so many shoed away.) When student marches were attacked in the streets of Mexico City, housewives would pour boiling water from their apartment windows on the heads of the police. The climax came with meeting in Atzcapotzalco; he said he was a decent person, took his uniform off, and stamped on it, and then asked us for money to go back to the part of the country where he came from. He was so angry that tears were streaming down his face." (NACLA Report on the Americans, Sept. - Oct. 1978, p. 21). The '68 movement was suppressed. But not until further shootings had taken place, together with mass arrests, torture, and the covert murder of student leaders, and the organization by the government of the Halcones ("Hawks"), fascist-style gangs that would mercilessly attack any student demonstration. Yet the campus movement only temporarily went under. In 1971 it emerged in a new form. Teachers, researchers, W15AT OP) 1ti WOK: .6.. IM4 Lvr 9AMCT UH15 OW. A / JAI! . / Y1/ I i: rMMA fE~ a 5 TOO. /. .. 1 . v5ol l 143d ~ UAV6 IL39O, tDr5M ow pr 1w,~ r t IR V. - 1 Michigan rough rider a- H. Scott Prosterman The previous decision: Guns or butter The present decision: Headlee or Tisch The subsequent decision: Cops or ceramics "essential" services shall fit. The basic intention of Jarvis, Headlee an Tisch is a sincere one, in light of the notoriou waste and inefficiency which ha accompanied the expansion of al levels o government. Quite simply, they seek to limi the available revenue, thereby forcing tha government to become more frugal in it spending habots. However righteous thi intention may be, the arbitrary measure ta en by Jarvis, and presumably by Headle an Tisch, recognize the problem at hand but are destructively clumsy in dealing wit it. If this analysis is inaccurate, then schoolt libraries and museums are a direct product wasteful government operations. (They wer the first to go in California.) Michigan's version of "The Great Ta Revolt" is represented by Headlee and Tisc and in a sense by the Voucher plan. Tisc calls for a tax cut, while Headlee makes mor stringent tax cuts, and implements legislative spending ceiling as well. Th voucher plan, originally conceived by Milto Friedman in the early 60's as an alternative t public education, withdraws public suppo. for schools, and re-distributes that money parents in the form of vouchers. Sta education money would then be at parent disposal, to use as they see fit. But has anyone bothered to ask where th Voucher money is going to'come from either Headlee or Tisch is passed? If w expect to see the merits of freedom of choic in education, we must ask what kind ( education will be available, when the allotte money for schools will be cut nearly in half. Regardless of the effect of these thre measures on the educational system, a mor dramatic decision will face this stat' lawmakers if Headlee or Tisch passes: Whi services shall be cut and by how much? When it comes to a choice of keeping th Ann Arbor Fire and Police Departments i S-1 .--- --- -n ;;"9 +a W i The Daily endorses: U.S Senate, Carl Levin Governor, Zolton Ferency (write in) U.S. Congress, Earl Greene State Senate, Dr. Ed Pierce State- House, Rep. Perry Bullard Attorney General, Frank Kelley Secretary of State, Richard Austin County Commissioner, Dist. 14, Kathleen Fojtik County Commissioner, Dist. 15, Catherine McClary State Supreme Court, G. Mennen Williams and Gary McDonald University Regents, No endorsements It has often been observed that a popular, vote on a special resolution is an easy way for a state legislature to avoid the throngs of a "rock and hard place" political issue. With the recent proliferation of statewide special elections relating primarily to tax-issues, it has come time to ask: What -red-blooded electorate would vote themselves a tax- increase even in the best of times, for the most worthy of causes? Furthermore, who in their right mind would reject a tax-cut for any reason? In passing such tax issues onto the public for approval, the lawmakers are acknowledging their own reluctance to deal with unpopular measures, regardless of their necessity. they find themselves caught up in a dilemma of: "I know we need all the revenues we can get, but if I vote for this increase then I'm through," and "I know we need all the revenue we can get, so how could I vote for a taxv* 1nd Dna4 orrnmcnt servieso bn he three: to shift some of the financial burden of government back to the citizen. bu California passed Proposition 13 by the most overwhleming landslide ever for a special petition (approximately 70 per cent). With such magnificent approval by the electorate, who should there have been such a vocal and widespread reluctance, as there was when it took effect less than a month later? Dare I suggest that Propposition 13 was mis-represented? I dare not suggest otherwise. For example one of the strongest selling points of the Jarvis amendment was the notion that renters and apartment dwellers would directly benefit from the savings of decreased property taxes, through reduced rents. However, when rents were being raised, ironically coinciding with the implementation of Proposition 13, landlords took to begging ignorance about the purpose of 13. as though then weren't intended tn h n A T rTr!1mDD TflT~fXA T CQ