The Michigan DaiMy-gaturday. June 7, 1980-Page 5 Profs say race riots may erupt more frequently By MAUREEN FLEMING Unless government policy regarding race relations is fundamentally altered, incidents similar to the recent Miami riot will become more commonplace, according to a pair of University professors. The disturbance in Miami, which claimed 15 lives and $100 million in property damage, began May 17 after a Tampa jury acquitted four ex-police of- ficers in the beating death of a black Miami man. "The fundamental cause of the riot," according to Aldon Morris, assistant professor of sociology, "was that blacks remain an economically, politically, and sociologically dominated group." SOCIAL UPHEAVALS erupt around any of these causes, he explained. The trigger in the Miami riot was police brutality, a long-standing social cause, Morris said. The riots suffered by cities like Detroit and Newark in the late '60s were also triggered by police brutality, he added, and it remains a major grievance in all urban areas with a high concentration of blacks. "The black community," Morris said, "is sick of the fact that blacks can be shot down by whites and get away with it." Howard Brabson, associate professor of social work, agreed. "Miami blacks have become increasingly upset with whites in the justice system," he said. "The acquittal was 'the straw that broke the c mel's back'." BRABSON SAID the Miami Association of Black Social Workers published a newsletter in April forecasting the riot. "They wrote," he said, " 'Let no one doubt the strength of our determination not to be passively victimized by a perverted criminal justice system'." "Until powerful national whites are willing to restructure police arrangements in communities to give powerful positions to blacks," Morris warned, "then Miami will happen. Police will continue to engage in brutality." Most persons believe riots are spon- taneous events, Morris said, but they are mistaken. Rioting, like all social movements, occurs with the aid of planning and organization. MORRIS ADDED it is unclear to what degree riots are organized, but said some sort of organization is present. "For example," he said, "par- See NEW, Page 6 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL candidate Sen. Edward Kennedy lifts a container of sample water from a residential well during hearings yesterday on Capitol Hill concerning the disposal of hazardous wastes. Kennedy charged that President Carter's Office of Management and Budget slashed funds earmarked for dealing with the problems. People n toxic dump ar11eas 11V~atell Kennedy gov 't not responsive M WASHINGTON (AP)-People who live near apparently toxic dump sites told Sen. Edward Kennedy yesterday that government officials have been unable or unwilling to respond to their pleas for help. "By and large the government is not interested," the Rev. Bruce Young of Woburn, Mass. testified at a hearing as Kennedy returned to the Senate from his campaign for the Democratic nomination for president. "MOSTLY WHAT happened was that we got the royal run-around," added Skip Foss of Erwin, Tenn. t "Nobody has the money to help us," said Kathleen Benesch of Jackson Township, N.J. Kennedy (D-Mass.) charged that President Carter's Office of Management and Budget had eliminated funds to give the Environ- mentai Protection Agency the ability to respond to health effects of hazardous waste disposal. "IT IS EXTRAORDINARY that .. . health considerations were explicitly omitted from the administration's legislative proposal to deal with this problem," he said. Kennedy's underdog quest for the presidential nomination came up briefly at the hearing when Young said to him, "I don't know whether you have ever had a big dream, senator ..." Kennedy at first deadpanned but responded with a grin after a ripple of laughter swept through the standing- room-only crowd. YOUNG THEN WENT on to say that his dream was to bring about "an in- vestment of money, time, and resour- ces to see if there is a cause-and-effect relationship between chemicals and leukemia." "Amen," Kennedy said. Young and other witnesses described severe illnesses, including leukemia, that they believe stem from chemicals at dump sites near their homes. One witness, James McCarthy of Jackson Township, wept as he pleaded for the health of his children. "I AM 33 years old. I don't care what happens to me in the future. But I have two children. Are they going to live? Somebody has got to help us," McCar- thy cried. "We'll try," replied Kennedy, chair- man of the Senate Judiciary Committee and of a health subcommittee, which held the hearing jointly. McCarthy, who lives a mile from a landfill dump site, said 10 persons out of about 160 in his neighborhood have serious kidney ailments. He said he lost a young daughter to a rare kidney disorder and has had a kidney removed himself. Young said the statistics show that Woburn has the highest cancer rate in Massachusetts and a high incidence of miscarriages and stillbirths. Foss, whose home is on a rural area of Tennessee near Erwin, said lung disorders and other illnesses had been noticed in the area for several years and residents have sought to close a inearbydump.