Page 4-Saturday, January 7, 1978-The Michigan Daily EigylitI -Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 The nationwid is a matter e farm strike of survival vol. LXXXVII, No. 80 News Phone: 764-0552 I Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Double-bottomtanker ban What took yoolong? 0 t HE RECENT spate of double-bot- tom tanker accidents in southeast- ern Michigan has prompted a ban on these vehicles by Gov. William Milli- ken, in a move which we can only think of as better late than never. The current ban removes double-bottom tankers from the streets of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb Counties between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. The move was finally prompted by two explosions - the first occurring December 15, when a tanker partially, overturned and burned, setting fire to four cars and injuring three persons, not including the driver. The second catastrophe came a scant two weeks later, when a pedestrian was killed and fires raged for hours following the col- lision of a tanker with an automobile at the intersection of Ten Mile Rd. and Collidge in Oak Park. Once again the driver escaped serious injury. Clearly these tankers pose a serious danger to the public. One need not be driving next to one of these mammoth machines to be in danger should they lose control - street and sidewalk traf- fie are endangered alike. The Daily called for a ban on these tankers a year ago, pending a study ofl their feasability. In the weeks before; the Warren accident, and even in the time between then and the Oak 'Park! trash, Milliken publicly opposed such a ban, on the grounds that it would incon- venience shippers of gasoline andi might cause an incidental rise in gas prices. A PPARENTLY the Oak Park crash convinced him of the necessity of the ban; oil company spokesmen, after some hemming and hawing, haves recently stated that the ban will not af-1 fect gas prices after all.iUnder the cir- cumstances, it seems that a lot of wor-! rying about a comparatively minor side issue has gone for nothing. Why, then, should it have cost lives and injuries and great amounts of fire1 damage, before preventive measures were taken? Milliken's conversion to the idea of a ban came late, and he was under intense political pressure when he made the decision. Can we then I assume that nothing would likely have? been done had it not been for the crash in Oak Park? An immensely unsettling question.I Police officers must respect suspects,' rights By MARTIN BROWN Pacific News Service The nationwide "farm strike" by the fledgling American Agri- culture movement bears all the signs of a desperate political ges- ture without any real economic threat, unless it be to the farmers themselves. Spring planting time is a long way off, and in any case farmers are rarely able to co- ordinate production decisions even in the best of times. What the strike may accom- plish, at best, is an awareness that farmers and the Department of Agriculture are no longer the sole masters of farm policy. For since the early 1970s farm policy has become more and more a matter of food policy, inex- tricably linked with foreign policy, energy policy and do- mestic economics. FOOD POLICY has thus become the concern of a wide variety of competing interest groups, and in the current program of the Carter Admini- stration it is no longer possible for activists from the farm sec- tor, alone, to destabilize it. Even the slogan of the Ameri- can Agriculture movement - "100 per cent parity" - is more a political gesture than a real goal. Such parity would give farmers the kind of purchasing power they enjoyed during the prosper- ous years of 1964-1975. But the real intent of the activist farmers is encompassed in legislation pro- posed by Sens. Robert Dole (- Kan.) and Herman Talmadge (D- Ga.) that would tie farm support payments to the rate of, inflation of farm production costs. This would result in farmers always receiving at least their cost of production. Yet even this proposal has met heavy opposition from the non- farm interests in Congress who argue that, because it would in- clude a portion of land prices in the cost of production, it would ensure an inflationary spiral in farm costs and food prices. MANY IN government believe the farm bill signed by Carter earlier this year, guaranteeing farmers 60 per cent parity, al- ready gives too much to farmers. It provides for government loans and a minimum price of wheat, currently set at $2.90, to farmers who agree to keep a portion of their land out of production or their wheat off the market. The intended result is a reduction in wheat output to stop the price slide. Yet even this program, modest compared to the demands of the American Agriculture movement, only passed over strongmopposition from those who see it as a return to the ill- conceived farm policies of the 1950s and early 1960s. Del Gardner, director of the Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economicsnat the University of California, esti- mates the cost to the taxpayer under the current program for surplus storage and direct pay- ments to growers at $6-$10 billion for 1978. And, says Gardner, "If we continue to stimulate further increases in output, the stockpile will be enormous." CIARLES SCHULTZ, Carter's chief economic advisor, also warned against the type of sup- port programs encompassed in Carter's current program in a 1971 study for the Brookings In- stitution. Schultz found that the price support programs provide disproportionate benefits to large farmers, as well as drive up the price df farmland in relation to farm income. For instance, Schultz found that agricultuial land rent and net farm income rose at about the same rate from 1940 to 1960. But from 1960 to 1966, a period of large increases in farm price supports, agricultural land rent rose by 124 per cent compared to a 27 per cent rise in farm income. "In the long run," concluded Schultz, "farm subsidy programs, related as they are to the production of farm commodi- ties, tend to benefit farmers chiefly in their role as landown- ers and not in their role as farm operators." FROM THE POINT of view of' foreign policy, too, many are con- cerned that the kinds of farm support programs promoted by American Agriculture could wreck efforts to use food as a tool for international stability. In a recent issue of the in- fluential journal Foreign Policy, Swarthmore College political sci- ence professor Raymond Hopkins argues that "America's responsi- bility for managing global food supplies is inescapable (and) and be a source of strength for our international markets. Fred Sanderson, staff econo- mist at the Brookings Institution and head of the State Depart- ment's food, policy office, worries that the wheat acreage set-aside in the Carter program, if com- bined with unusually bad weather next year, could drastically un- dercut foreign policy goals. Says Sanderson, "The world remains as vulnerable to crop failure as it was in 1972." THE LACK of consensus' on farm policy extends even beyond the farmer/non-farmer interests. For there is not even a united front among farmers. ' Fred Herringer, president of the powerful California Farm Bureau Federation, says his organization is against any "in- tervention into the free market." He contends that too high a sup- port price for wheat could price American wheat out of the inter- national market and result in an accumulation of unsalable wheat Farmers Organization has taken a position similar to that of the American Agriculture movement. Robert Lewis, secretary and chief economist of the organization, argues that "There is an urgent need to im- prove the income of farmers. Farmers' purchasing power is at its lowest level since 1932." The NFO supports substantial in- creases in the level of federal loan payments. But most critics of such a poli- cy insist that the farmers in the most desperate financial shape today - the approximately 10 per cent of all farmers who make up the hardcore of the American Agriculture movement - are the victims of the very farm policies they are promoting. THESE hIARDEsT-1hIT farm- ers are the ones who over-invest- ed in response to the high prices of the early 1970s. Thus, they are burdened today by an inflated cost of production - as high as L AST WEEK the Justice Depart- meht petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a lower court ruling which held that the police had violated the constitutional rights of 1,200 demon- strators during an anti-war protest in Washington in 1971. The Justice Department is, in effect, a king the Court to grant police officers immunity from damage suits "for d ing their duty"; this is wholly unac- c ptable. The most basic tenet of American d.mocracy is that "all men (and women) are equal before the law." But haw can this be true if certain members of, our society are not subject to the same laws as others? While it is cer- tainly true that a police officer must be giVen some special privileges when making an arrest, it is also true that the officer could overstep his or her bounds. In such a case the officer ought to be liable to a damage suit. In its legal brief, the department said: ""Imposition of possibly multimil- lion-dollar personal liability for the supervisory law-enforcement decisions made in response to such a difficult and delicate situation would be likely to deter such officials from taking the kind of vigorous and forthright action that effective law-enforcement frequently requires." IT IS PROBABLY true that police of- ficers would have second thoughts before getting rough with a suspect if there were a chance they could be sued. But is this necessarily bad? Police should think twice before arresting or accosting anyone. While some crimi- nals might escape punishment if an of- ficer rethinks the situation, the loss is minimal compared to the innocent peo- ple who will be spared the ordeal of either a false arrest or mistreatment. Police officers have a difficult and thankless job, and an awesome respon- sibility. But regardless of the strain un- der which they operate they must be 'held accountable for their actions and overactions even in the line of duty. Ar Poto GEORGIA FARMERS WALKED off their farms and drove their tractors to Atlanta last month to protest low food prices. - foreign policy." Yet, he claims, the "consider- able pressure from narrow domestic interests" had undercut the efforts of diplomats attem- pting to use food for foreign policy objectives. REFERRING to a World Bank study that estimated some 1.2 to 1.3 billion underfed people in the developing nations, Hopkins warns that "the degradation of life, loss of human resources and potential for violence represen- ted by this situation can be ignored only at great peril to human values and long-term world stability." "For Hopkins and other foreign policy planners, "desirable poli- cy changes" means the estab- lishment of an international grain reserve with administrative mechanisms to guarantee rea- sonable but stable prices and a reliable supply to domestic and stocks. "We would rather see the price of wheat drop this year and let the surplus supplies be sold off' for animal feed," says Herringer. "That way, the farmer will have higher prices next year. The real return to the grower will be higher over the five-to-10-year period without government inter- ventions into the free market." THE NATIONAL Farmers Or- ganization (NFO), represented among Midwestern wheat grow- ers, generally favors the current Carter program. Says NFO Pres- ident Charles Frazier, "It all de- pends on how the wheat farmers respond. If at least 75-90 per cent of the producers participate in the acreage set-aside, then the current downward price trend will be halted, but not reversed. Wheat supplies will still be ade- quate for next year and consuln- ers won't suffer," he predicts. In fact, only the small National $4.75 per bushel of wheat - be- cause of the high' price of newly acquired land and machinery. They are also under heavy pressure to pay off the large deb- ts they incurred in making new investments. The more conservative or well- established wheat farmers, with more equity in land, better credit and lower production costs - as low as $2.00 a bushel - will have an easier time riding out the price slump. What is needed to prevent the disastrous ups and downs of farmers' fortunes, many say, is an integrated program taking in- to account the interests ,not only of farmers, but of all parties who since the early 1970s have come to view food as a kay to national and international stability. What is needed, in short, is an entirely new approach to the future: a "food policy" rather than a "farm policy." Letters to The Datly To The Daily: On Wednesday night, Decem- ber 7, I attended my first Wom- en's Basketball game. At Crisler Arena, I am met with signs stat- ing "Sold Out" on all the doors. After trying 4 sets of doors, I finally am in luck. Inside I am met with "Where is your ticket, When the game starts, I find myself eagerly watching the ac- tion. Numbers 23, 42, and 13 im- pressed me, however, I was mes- merized mostly by No. 12, Denise Cameron - she was always where the action was, both on of- fense as well as defense. Her speed as well as her accuracy women's game moving. At around 3:38 the clock began to run, never to be stopped. Balls went out of bounds, fouls were called and time marched on! What a sham! Both women and men alike realize the importance of the last few minutes of play, especially when there is only a 5- tionally imposing limits on the women's basketball game by manipulating the time clock shows to all who want to see how women's sports are viewed at U- M. I do not want this injustice to happen again. Women in sports must be respected. As women