Page 4-Wednesday, May 16, 1979-The Michigan Daily F.Michigan Daily Eighty-nine Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Ml. 48109 Vol. LXXXIX No. 11-S News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Santilons mX should stay- on -Rhodesia MO UNTING Congressional pressure from rightists and centrists alike to repeal economic sanctions against Zimbabwe-Rhodesia serves puppeteer Ian Smith's interests in - polarizing U.S. sentiments. The sanctions were originally invoked with the central aim of inducing the white minority gover- nment to hold free elections. Advocates of lifting the sanctions point to the recently held elections as justification, claiming penalties must be rescinded in order to give the new regime a fair chance. President Carter has wisely adhered to the policy of leaving the sanctions intact until the State Department's election guidelines are met. Several reports indicate those elections were hard- ly free, especially since the Patriotic Front-com- posed of two guerrilla groups-was prohibited from fielding candidates. Most of the country is gripped by martial law, and a substantial portion of the black population is confined to "protected hamlets" behind high wire fences 22 hours a day. And although Bishop Abel Muzorewa gained more popular support than expected, the 28-member white bloc in Parliament can veto any law proposed and supported by Parliament's 72 blacks. Even though the guerrillas were excluded from the election, their power cannot be ignored. The Zimbabwe African National Union (7ANU), which is Soviet-backed, has allied with Chinese- backed Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU). ZANU is said to be in clear control of 50 per cent of the country, while another 30 per cent in contested territory. ZANU collects taxes and also operates an administrative network in those occupied regions. Muzorewa's mostly white regime has made some feeble attempts to improve the lot of black citizens. But without the support of the Patriotic Front and a clear majority of black residents, its rule promises to be short-lived. The Front is now gaining cooperation, or accedence of white far- mers. The latter also comprises a significant proportion of the 2,00 whites leaving Rhodesia each month. The erosion of white support could hamper the new government's quest for legitimacy as well. Repealing the sanctions would be a grave mistake. Such action would signal support for the methods and racial composition of the puppet government. It would also convey U.S. approval of the sham elections. Any softening of the previous stance might-also be construed as the U.S. having designs on economic or military in- volvement in the civil dispute there. U.S. involvement might spell confrontation with Soviet and Chinese-backed guerillas. Rhodesia's bad economic straits would lead her to request massive ecomonic aid from the U.S. Therefore, the U.S. must make no conciliatory moves toward, the newgovernmentRdesia's liberation should The fatalism cloud may yield silver The report that three more familiar substances cause cancer' came so quickly on the heels of the Harrisburg disaster that it palpably thickened a spreading sense of futility. Surely life itself has become hazardous to health, and we can be but spectators in our self-destruction. .. Why even worry about these three carcinogens the National Cancer Institute (NCI) named this month when they are among 14,000 chemical compounds listed by the government as hazardous? Fewer than 200 of these have been tested by the NCI. We can avoid reserpine, the drug used for high blood pressure; we can stop buying selenium sulfide shampoos and never mind the dandruff; we can throw out Compoz, Sominex and other pills that contain metapyrilene. We can even move to some spot remote from all atomic power plants. BUT IN THE deepest forest we might still be aerially sprayed with a defoliant that may cause birth defects. we could inadver- tantly ingest DBGP, the soil fumigant that keeps peach trees healthy but makes men sterile. The cancer-causing PCBs, despite some government con- trols, are everywhere. And our hand-builttshelter couldbe leeching toxins, its lumber having been treated with an ar- senic-based preservative. What's the point of learning of other poisons, spoiling whatever pleasures the present might hold, when there does not seem to be much of afuture? One of every four Ameicans already gets cancer. In St. George, Utah, downwind from the Nevada site where nuclear tests were conducted between 1951 and 1963, someone in almost every family has died of cancer or suffered problems that may be linked to radiation. Last month, residents learned that they were deliberately kept ignorant of the fallout hazard by President Eisenhower and the Atomic Engery Commission. YET A REPORTER found the prevailing mood was resignation By RASA GUSTAITIS when he visited St. George in the wake of this disclosure. "Well, it was wartime and there were some risks," one citizen told him. "This thing has been blown out of proportion," said another. Likewise around Harrisburg. People worried about problems they understood to be real and could perhaps act on-cars breaking down, prices going up. They tended to dismiss as alar- mist the warnings of scientists. As dire reports keep seeping out of various institutions and through the news media, like the poisons that continue to seep from the chemical dumps on New York State's Love Canal, a feeling of helplessness over- comes outrage. YET THE BRINK of fatalism on which we now totter is also a springboard. Considered that way, this same dire news could become the vehicle to launch us out of torpor and allow the creation of a different future. As our technologies-from pesticides to antibiotics to vast water' projects to nuclear power-arrive at a dead end and begin, to fail, they necessitate a rethinking of the assumptions that made them seem sensible. We discover that we have been either lied to or misinformed about the ways the world works. And a different vision suddenly comes into view. There is a global rise in malaria. It is proof that the disease cannot be conquered with pesticides. Malaria-bearing mosquitoes have become im- mune to a whole range of toxins in many partsof the world. The only realistic alternative, proposed in a study for the United Nations, is to control mosquito populations ecologically: by seeing to it that stagnant pools of water do not form, by cultivating mosquito-eating fish in irrigation canals and ponds, planting trees strategically on canal banks. THIS APPROACH is fun- damentally different from the current one, which relies mainly on sprayers. It requires the study lining of environnental interrelation- ships. It only works with knowledge of the habits and habitats of different varieties of mosquitoes, understanding of water and land use that discourages their proliferation, attention to the problem of human poverty, which is linked to malaria. Local populations must participate in such programs rather than simply submitting, as they do to the pesticides. In the case of herbicides, the Forest Service may be compelled to consider an ecological alter- native because of a recent rise in public protest. It may have to hire people to cut down the shrubs and small trees that inter- fere with growth of commercial timber. This would mean, among other things, more jobs in areas of high unemployment. It is the same with energy issues. As the nuclear promise fades and the gas lines grow, the outlook for solar and other renewable energies improves. But here too, as with pesticides and herbicides, the implications are revolutionary: CHOOSING A NEW energy system to replace fossil fuels is a profound social choice, according to Charles Ryan of the Engineering-Economic Systems Department at Stanford Univer- sity. "Energy organizes society," he explains. "With too little energy, man is slave to its production; with too much, he is a slave to its consumption." Overconsumption is one major cause of the economic crisis now wrenching industrialized nations "Inflation is the mechanism that seeks to establish at what new level population and standard of living can come into balance with the resource base," Ryan argues. Moving from nuclear to solar energy means moving toward labor-intensive decentralized society in which many people have an active and much more self-reliant role. In other words, conversion of the fatalist brink into a springboard necessitates the casting aside of the die that has shaped society for several decades. There are signs that this die has already begun to fall apart. Americans are abandoning the poll booths in national elections, voting down traditionallytsacred taxes, revolting against the old public school system, demanding new, stringent limits on gover- nment. While much of this may be interpreted as a denial of social responsibility, it also has another face. Saying no to authority is the first step out of fatalism. It is the first step out of the role of spectator and toward that of actor. A citizen-led collapse of the of- ficial order may not cut down the rate of cancer right away. But it allows us to see with fresh eyes and to reclaim the right to live within natural systems that sustain us. Rasa Gusaitis is an editor of Pacific News Service, for which this piece was written. c. . . f u 6 4 Sr +G£ORCV6. UTAH. 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