Tuesday; April 19,1977 THE MIGHIUAN DAILY Pagi Tuesday, April 19, 1977 THE MICHI(iAN DAILY Pag One farm family's e Three mm] battle against the blight of PBB r- --- (Convinued from Page 1) "They hear all this stuff that goes on," she says, gesturing with a:wide sweep of h'er arm, meant to encompass the whole state of Michigan, the whole tragedy. "My family had to live with the cows, seeing them die all the time . . Even more frightening to the Trombleys, but not as apparent to the public, are the health problems experienced by farm families who unknowingly con- tinued 'to consume their own highly contaminated beef and dairy products for years, be- cause they had frozen food in their freezers. Farmers handled the feed itself, wore it on their clothes next to their skin, and ate home-grown vegetables nur- tured in soil rich in PBB. SINCE 1973, the chemical has been accumulating in humans' fat tissue. Most dangerous of all, women's breast milk, high in fat content, is laced with PBB. Similarly, milk produced by cows is often unsafe for human consumption and milk is ex- pected to conform, like meat, to legal PBB content levels. "Michigan Milk Association, which I sold to at one time, shipped to Livonia Krogers," Trombley recalls. "They told me, 'we'll take your milk, it's good, it's underneath the quar- antine level, we'll buy it.' Well, I said 'no." Trombley has lost his faith in the state's ability to assess his milk accurately. He found he would send samples off to the state labs marked .with the cow's state identification num- ber and the test results would come back lettered: "A", B" "C'",, and so on but carrying no numbers. "So one time we sent 'em out marked ABCD and what hap- pened? Carol asks. "They refused to test them," Trombley answers. TROMBLEY'S OWN sons have suffered. symptoms of PBB poisoning not unlike those the cows displayed. When they broke out in mysterious rashes and lesions, the doctors treated the boys as if they had ring- worm. The medicine had no ef- fect. When their joints became painfully arthritic, they were prescribed Moltron or aspirin. "Craig, he's the oldest one, you could hear him walk the full length of the upstairs from -down here - his joints squeak- ed just like our cows." Trombley and his family par- ticipated in a research program designed by a New York doc- tor, Irving Selikoff to measure PBB levels in human beings and assess the effects df- the chemi- cal. The PBB in Trombley's fat measured over the level that would quarantie ai cow. "If I were a cow" he says, "they'd have me in ,alkasia (a cattle burial site); by now." Perhaps as damaging as the stomach problems and head- aches the Trombleys endured are the pychological wounds sustained by all of them. "Kids (at school), they found out that we had PBB on the farm and they were making fun of them (the Trombley boys) saying 'Don't touch me, you've got PBB.' Even the teachers called the kids 'PBB kids'," Carol says.{ BUT MANY of those. same children's parents themselves own large herds of cattle. Rath- er that allow their stock to be tested and possibly quarantined, they have chosen to ignore the situation. Their complacency is further protected by govern- ment laws which require testing for dangerous PBB levels only at slaughterhouses and milk packaging plants. Recalls Trombley: "I had a guy sitting here saying, 'I ain't checking my cows. I'm gonna sell,'em - I'm going to get $10,- 000 out of 'em. Why should I lose $10,000? Let the next guy worry about. I'm not going toL eat them, somebody else is'." Attitudes as polar as these sharply divide the community.e "People who have been friends for years don't even speak any more," he continues. "A neigh- bor over here, right across the street - we shared work back and forth and done everything for years - he wouldn't even wave if he drove by." Still, Trombley is not going to sit back and let the issuemfade with time as so many do. In fact, he- has toted his briefcase packed with documents, tests, research articles and photo- graphs to countless hearings and meetings designed to deal with a situation already spread- ing out of control. Trombley is determined to ex- pose what he believes to be a widescaletstate governmentbcoy- erup of the severity of the PBB problem, especially in the ear- lier episodes of the drama. "I asked the governor, last fall, to fire (Michigan Dept. of Agriculture Director B. Dale) Ball and he said he would if I could prove there had been a cover up," Trombley says. "And I did. It's beenproven a hundred times over - there's been a cover up and the govern- ment still hasn't acted." THE CORPORATIONS in this scenerio go by names that cause them to be easily mistak- en for governmental agencies (Michigan Farm Bureau, Farm Bureau Services). Many sneer 200 head of cattle buried here."1 at the irony-they contend the "They (the state) didn't even private and public parties in- go according to the D&R buriel volved are so intimately linked laws. There's got to be 9-11 feet in favor-swapping, they might of burial room (per cow) these as well be joined under the cattle can not touch. My cattle same title. are all in trenches, all touching "What right has a bunch of state legislators, trying to save a corporation, got playing Rus- sian Roulette with our lives?" asks Trombley. The Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA), the gover- nor and the state's elected of- ficials - all are under scrutiny for their roles in the PBB situa- tion and for their failure to fur- nish state aid or secure feder- al funds for stricken farmers. "Every disaster that happens - cherries get hit by frost or a tornado goes through - our governor can go to Washington and ask for federal disaster funds," explains Trombley. "But the Michigan Chemical and the Farm Bureau poisoned the farmers and there's been no disaster fund, even under the ChemicaltToxic Subsidy Act." When the Trombleys realized the governor was not going to head up a fighting brigade to Washington, they organized one themselves. "THESE PICTURES have been in Washington," Trombley says, flipping through a pile of black and white and kodacolor prints. "This is the day when our beloved governor sent the coun- ty sheriff in to bury these cat- tle on my farm rather than take them to the Kalkaska burial site. Against my wishes, I've got with three feet of dirt over 'em. "Now here," he says, tossing another picture on the table, "is 320 sheep, shot. They were all affected with PBB as well. "And here," he says, his tone growing more sardonic, his eyes squinting with anger, "here's a picture from the day the Federal government came out here to serve papers on me, telling me I couldn't shoot these It's no yolk KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Early Christian societies took their Easter eggs seriously, re- ports Hallmark researcher Sal- ly Hopkins. In Europe, it was believed that the yolk of an egg laid on Good Friday would turn into a diamond in 100 years. Other. folk tales credit Easter eggs with protecting people against sudden death, making trees and crops fertile, and exorcising de- mons. The name Easter - from Eostre, goddess of spring and fertility - recalls another egg legend. Eostre had a brightly colored pet bird, . which she changed one day to a rabbit and that, supposedly, is why the nonplussed Easter bunny builds Dests and fills them with eggs. cattle, that' I had to sell them;i for human consumption. "Well, I shot 'em. They wasn't fit for my family to' eat, why should I let somebody else's family eat 'em? They or-t1 deredhmehto turn them over toI the Michigan Chemical and!1 Farm Bureau and they would? sell 'em. I shot 'em.." What kind of impact did Trombley's photographs have on1 the people on Capitol .. Hill?1 "They feel bad about it." MEAN WHILE, as the state deliberated over whether1 the farmers will get compensa-I tion for their losses, Trombley is breaking in a new herd of, cattle. "With testing " in (private) laboratories with something liket 40 or 50 cows, now I have spenti something like $10-12,000 plus1 $15,000 to clean these barns up.I And I went to Indiana, Vermont, i Connecticut, New York, Penn- sylvania and Ohio and brought new cattle back." But Trombley can't go on footing the bills for maintain- ing that kind of vigilance much longer. "Next year, if we don't get some relief from some- where, from a settlement, I'm going to have to sell out. "Farmers can't even get wel- fare," he explains. "Can't even get foodstamps cause they own too much land. If you sell out your equity, you're stuck, what are you gonna work with? You're just in a terrible bind. "There are farms being shut- down now all over," Trombley continues , punctuating every other word with a rap of his fist on the table. "I'd say if they don't do something in the next five years, you're going to have to go to the Detroit Zoo to see a cow. That's how bad it's going to be . .." NEED A QUIET PLACE TO STUDY? "Get Away" without leaving campus. O COMFORTABLE ROOMS with * DESK, TELEPHONE * COLOR TV r FREE COFFEE 0 PRIVATE BATH u-- * Special Finals "'Student Study Rates" BELL TOWER HOTEL 300 $. THAYER 769-3010 _.d LAST 3 DAYS! SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OPEN 6:45 Starts Friday-Julie Christie in "DEMON SEED" a f ENDS THURSDAY AN% AUIIC U[l" CC-C u Tonight in Aud. A, Angell Hall THE RULING CLASS with PETER O'TOOLE at 7 & 9-Adm. $1.25 0 Wednesday, April 20 in Aud. A at 7 & 9:30 ROBERT ALTMAN'S BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS with PAUL NEWMAN-$1.50 Thursday, April 21 in Aud. A CALIFORNIA SPLIT at 7 only-$1.25 NASHVILLE at 9 only-$1.50 BOTH FILMS IN STEREO Friday, April 22 in MLB THE GROOVE TUBE at 7, 8:45, & 10:30 THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD at 7 & 9 0 Saturday, Aoril 23 in MLB THE BAD NEWS BEARS at 7, 8:45 & 10:30 KING-OF HEARTS at 7& 9 $2.00 DOUBLE FEATURE 0 Sunday, April 24 in MLB RAHOMON at 7 oniv-$1.25 FORTUNE AND MEN'S EYES at 9 onv--$1.25 $2.00 DOUBLE FEATURE Monday, April 25 in MLB TARNISHED ANGELS at 7 onv-$1.25 GUN CRAZY at 9 onlv-$1.25 We will show films throughout Finals week- check flyers, The University Record or WCBN for titles. E m- IgC 'A Tee' ''on . -2,0 - SHOWS TQDAY AT 1-00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20 OPEN 12:45 PUBLIC LECTURE Professor Noel 3. Coulson Dept, of Low, London School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London will speak on MUSLIM INHERITANCE LAW Tuesday, April 19-4:00 p.m. Lawyers Lounge, (1 st floor, Lawyer's Club) "The Legal Heir: Pampered Favorite of Islamic Succession Law?" SPONSORED BY: Ctr for Near Eastern & North African Studies, SchodI of Law, International Law Society, Inter- national Center I I - EAGLE HAS LANDED STARTS FRIDAY- Robert De Niro heads an all-star cast in F. Scott Fitzgerald's "THE LAST TYCOON" ENDS SOON TONIGHT AT 8:00 ONLY OPEN 7:45 "BOUND FOR GLORY' COMING SOON-- Academy Award Nominee Marie-Christine _ Barrault in-the delightful French comedy "COUSIN COUSINE" 1 r I ABC CHARTERS ADVANCE BOOKING AIR ONLY FROM DETROIT 1 ~ r SHERUT LA'AM You can work in your profession, make use of your skills and, at the same time, experience and understand Israel. Sherut La'am is a two way program - you can give and you get. After an intensive 'ulpan' (Hebrew course), you will live and work in a AMSTERDAM BRUSSELS QAUFORNA FRANKFORT GLASGOW HAWAII ITALY LONDON MUNICH ZURICH From '219 From '349 From '215 Frnm 1309 From 1319 From '299 From '399 From '319 From 379 From '379 THE MICHIGAn DAI -V Volume 1XXXVII, No. 159 Tuesday, April 19, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i y Tuesday through .Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, M~ichigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $1,3 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription. rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 1y mail outside Ann Arbor. DANCE SPACE 3141/2 S. State Classes in modern dance taught by' Linda Peck. 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