Page 4-Thursday, August 10, 1978-The Michigan Daily michigan DAI LY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109 Vol. L.XXXVIII, No. 62-S News Phone: 764-0552 Thursday, August 10, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Officials must put stop to poisoning HE PBB issue has taken a bit of a rest over the last few months as state residents seem to have had their fill of the catastrophy and its repercussions. But with a state governor'a cam- paign underway and the recently begun deposit of contaminated cows at the clay-lined pit in Mio, there is sure to be a revival of interest and a justified demand for accountability from public officials in the wake of the crisis. Despite not only a conflict between experts on the safety of the mass cow burial, but the availability of a clearly less harmful in- cineration process and strong protest from Mio residents and concerned citizens, the decision was made to dump the cows in Mio. If area residents lose nothing else, property values will surely plunge as a result of the burial. Republican Gov. Milliken - who is now in a race to hold his seat from Democrat Fitzgerald - along with his administration, is quick to assure state citizens that there is no new wave of PBB contamination even after it has been discovered that sheep, chickens and other non- dairy farm animals have been contaminated and sold in stores. Milliken has tried to assuage the public while dozens of farms are becoming mysteriously recontaminated with the lethal chemical. Together, the state administration and the judges try to allay our fears about burying con- taminated animals. They know that their political lives will have run their courses in 20 or 30 years when the full impact of their decisions are known. We learn that the Hooker Chemical Co., illegally dumped thousands of barrels of pesticide wastes on a vacant lot adjacent to a subdivision in Montague, Mi. Recent reports reveal that at least ten dangerous chemicals were released into the environment on that site during the late 60's and early 70's. Residents in the area now drink bottled water and fear their health is threatened like that of the PBB farmers and the victims of another Hooker bungle in Niagara Falls. So officials announce an effort to halt the spread of chemicals. What does Hooker pay for the pain and potential damage it has caused? A $300,000 fine, not the sort of figure likelty to slow down and industrial decision-makers from repeating such sloppy, dangerous operations. These mishaps all point to a need for stronger controls over the chemical monsters in our en- vironment. Chemical companies must be more responsible, and we cannot trust them to act in the public interest or public health. The mishaps also point to a greater need, that our governmental representatives, governor in- cluded, put the health and safety of Michigan residents foremost y fr minds We cannot e * W - "6e Drug tools attacked By Art Silverman These have been times for the paraphernalia business - which manufacturers and sells ac- cessories for illegal drugs. As the use of such drugs as marijuana and cocaine has become in- creasingly popular among the af- fluent middle class, the paraphernalia business has mushroomed from insignificance to an estimated $500 million-per- year industry. A great many stores in Ann Ar- bor - including Middle Earth, Village Corners, Foreign Matter, A-Squared Tobacconist, the T- Shirt Gallery and Campus Cor- The most drastic action to date has come from Georgia. Acting on citizen complaints last January, the finance director of DeKalb County (Atlanta), revoked the business permits of four "head shops" on the grounds that they were "hazards to (community) health, safety, and welfare." A federal judge eventually or- dered the permits returned, but in the -interim the Georgia legislature passed three bills outlawing the sale of parapher- nalia to both adults and minors, and prohibited the sale to minors of "drug-related literature." store and arrested manager Deborah Lynn Stone. Stone's case is being supported by the national Paraphernalia Trade Association and is expected to test the constitutionality of the statutes. Phil Lassiter, an Atlanta legal worker, helping defend the paraphernalia businesses, said that despite lack of enforcement "the effects of the law have been considerable." WHILE GEORGIA is the only state with anti-paraphernalia laws currently in force, similar statutes are under consideration We're far enough away from Georian laws so that the folks at Village Corner aren't in much danger of any paraphernalia crackdown just yet. But some day such sales may be threatened in the state. ners - keep rolling papers, pipes, bongs, roach clips, and more recently, paraquat-testing kits in stock. But now there are clouds on the horizon. At least six states have passed or are considering legislation to ban the sale of drug- related merchandise. "WE ARE experiencing the development of an anti- paraphernalia campaign,"' charged Vaughn Ermoyan, published of the trade journal Paraphernalia. "We represent the only visible portion of illicit drug use, and they're making us the whipping boys." THE LAST statue - apparen- tly aimed at magazines such as High Times, Weed and Dealer and books on marijuana cuiltivation - was struck down by U.S. District Judge Richard Freeman as a violation of the First Amendent. The other two laws are in effect while being ap- pealets There has been only one arrest under the new law. On June 15 an undercover police agent pur- chased one pipe from a Marietta, Ga. boutique called "Frogs." Armed with the pipe and sales slip, two uniformed officers returned minutes later, con- fiscated merchandise, closed the across the country. Indiana was the first state to ban drug-related merchandise, but the law has been frozen by a temporary restraining order while its legality is being tested in the courts. Bills were introduced last year in New York and Calif- ornia but died in legislative committees. "We as a group are paranoid about our business," warned publisher Ermoyan in a recent issue of his magazine. "Well, WAKE UP!!! You are businessmen who have nothing for which you must apologize," he admonished. "If Dow Chemical can get a loan to manufacture napalm, why should we hesitate to ask for , . . Q" y l a loan to manufacture roach clp? easked. "If we act like Three months early clip-?- s business people, we will be treated with the respect our The day of the state primary, last Tuesday, we ran an editorial system accords the business per- ("Neither Tisch nor Headlee satisfy need") urging readers to vote son, regardless of, the lifestyle down both of the proposed tax-cut measures since we found each to be their product supports." cosmetic attempts to alter a fundamentally unfair system. Our position remains unchanged, but we were incorrect in stating that the " tax limitation questions would be on Tuesdlay's.ballot"If tbe'state , Art Siverman, a political roard on Cartassers gives its okay, efr V pgwvand,thenTisch and _ gorter or KSAN radio in a lee willg put to a vote in Novefibt!CWqn egretraincon'vemen- rFancisco,, wrote this for veamIy Ve caused. the Pacific News Service. i 4