Tuesday, March 26, 2013

My Top 10 Favorite Movies

     My top 10 favorite movies was a hard list to come up with.  I have an eclectic taste when it comes to movies.  Personally, I enjoy history, whether it be in studing about it, movies or in books.  I haven't found a historical movie that I didn't care for.  It also depends on my mood if I am interested in a good war movie, romance, horror, or comedy, just to name a few.  I like movies that can pull me in and have me feel what the characters are feeling.  I am not going to write movie reports about all 10 of the movies I personally picked.  However, I will explain why this movie has a high place of value in my favorite list. 

10.  THE STAND:  This is one of those movies where the plot is good verses evil; heaven verses hell; right verses wrong.  Who says this apocalyptic themed movie couldn't really happen?  I am not saying it will but the idea of it could happen.  Scientists could create a massive illness that could wipe off over half of the worlds population.  The Black Death in Europe in 1348-1350 it was estimated that up to 200 million people died (up to 60% of the population).  We do have better medical technology today than we did 700 years ago but it did happen and who's to say that it cannot happen again?!  It is a twisted lottery of fate of whether you got the illness or not.  The lack of people means lack of food, lack of electricty, and lack of other means.  Survival is the key.  People have to rely on their skills and other people to survive.
     The movie gave a great illustration of what the end times could be like.  Would Satan tempt you to do his work all for power and glory or would you stay on the straight and narrow no matter how hard it can be?  Who can you learn to trust?  At the end good does triumph over evil and life begins pure and new again. 

9.  SOMEWHERE IN TIME:  I never heard of this 1980 movie until the time Brian and I went to Mackinac Island the summer of 1995 (Fun, Fudge and Nuptials July 24, 2012 blog http://ymaout.blogspot.com/2012/07/fudge-fun-and-nuptials.html).  As we biked our way around the island we came upon a rock with a plaque on it that talks about a scene from the movie being filmed right at that very spot.   It wasn't until several years after that trip that we finally got to see the movie. I fell in love with it. Christopher Reeve (Richard) and Jane Seymore (Elise) did a great job working together in this movie. 
 
 
 
    

It's a bad picture of the rock but you get
the general idea of it.

Brian and I trying to recapture the
movements of the actors.

 
 
 
 
    
 
 
 
What if you could go back to a moment in your life to relive it?  I know it is impossible but that is similar to what happened here.  Elise comes to, my guess, the reincarnated Richard in the 1970's and walks up to him and whispers, "Come back to me." and walks away.  Years later he takes a vacation (Mackinac Island) and he sees a picture of a young lady and he remembers the old lady who whispered to him and realized it was the same woman.  He ends up floating back in time to 1912 to be with her.  At the end of the movie he dies alone from a broken heart. 
     The movie reminds me of those bittersweet moments in our lives where we think they will last forever but in time it is no more.  How grand it would be to live that certain moment in our life just one last time!
 
8.  PATRIOT:  This movie has a deeper meaning, to me,  than the countries rebellion against England.  Yes, I do enjoy it for the historical content and the meaning of fighting for something so great that you are willing to lose your life in order for others to have something even better, a chance for freedom.  The council meeting at Charlestown would of been very realistic that some were for the rebellion and others wanted to stay under England's control.  This was not a decision to be taken lightly.  On news sites and radio I hear talk now about people wanting another revolution and that it is time for the common man to stand up to the government and say enough's enough!  Are we, as a country, following the same footsteps, that our forefathers did 200+ years ago?  Time will tell on that one.
     But the deeper meaning has to deal with my ancestry.  I do a lot with my genealogy.  I had family, traced down on my mother's side, that WAS in the Carolina's during that time.  I am still figuring out if they fought in the war or not.  I did come across a name, same as my past relative, who was listed as a Loyalist (fought for the British), but I am trying to validate if it is the right person.  As I watch the movie I realize it isn't just a movie.  My past family lived through it.  I am sure they have seen the redcoats.  I am sure they seen the American's blue, too.  Their lives, no matter what side they were on, were about to change forever no matter the outcome.  The reason I love this movie so much is that my roots tie into it.
 
7.  LEAN ON ME:  I was 12 years old when this movie came out in 1989.  Right away it impacted me.  Based on a true story of a principal Joe Clark who turns a poorly run high school in New Jersey into something amazing.  He kicked out all the drug dealers, the slackers, and the kids who caused trouble from the school.  He gave the kids hope and a vision for the future that they didn't see in themselves before.  He brought back school pride to the students.  He had to get the students to pass a basic skills test or the state would take over the school and as a school body they all worked together at it.  He didn't do all of this accomplishments with ease.  He did it in a style all his own and some would even say it was a bit radical.  Nonetheless, he got the job done.  In the movie a teacher changed the school song and it turned out to be a beautiful song. 
 
 

 
 
     I already knew, before I watched the movie, that I wanted to teach.  I don't want to be like Joe Clark.  I am not that type of person.  But I want to be that type of teacher who will make a difference in a child's life.  I want them to value the importance of themselves.  I want them to go out into the world proud of who they are and where they came from. 
 
 
6.  BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA:   To me this is one of the greatest love stories.  It can be read on the February 14, 2012 blog Bram Stoker's Dracula - A Love Story.  http://ymaout.blogspot.com/2012/02/bram-stokers-dracula-love-story.html   Dracula loved Mina so much that he didn't want her to be part of the living dead.  She feels a deep love for him, a strong connection, where she wants to be part of his life, even in death.  At the end of the movie Dracula is badly injured.  He knows Mina loves him and asks for her to finish him off.  Mina didn't want to see him suffer any longer and knows his heart will be at peace and eventually puts his life to an end.  It is a very thought provoking, romantic movie.
 
5.  BRAVEHEART:  I had never heard of this movie until the early winter season of 1996.  I was attending Grand Valley State University.  A few people were talking about the release of the movie on VCR coming up and they were anxious to rent it.  They told me a brief background on the movie, how Scotland gain's its freedom, and it sounded rather boring.  They insisted I watch it.  Then one night someone rented the movie.  Around 15 or more people crowed into one of the tiny dorm rooms.  The upper and lower bunks were filled with people, the floor was littered with bodies wanting to watch the movie.  I had a floor seat leaning up against the bunk bed.  I seen the two tapes and thought to myself, 2 tapes?  Oh dear Lord this is going to be a looong night!  The lights went out and the movie started.  Right away it caught my attention.  I didn't know this part of history.  I know the movie has its flaws on accuracy but it was still good.  There was war, romance, small comedy scenes (Stephen was one of my favorites in the movie), history and action.  The two VCR tapes of it that I thought would drag through the night actually went by pretty fast.  There was so much that was going on in the movie that it kept you on the edge of your seat. 
      Like The Patroit, this movie is about taking a stand for freedom. It is about the common everyday man who says enough to the government.  Many famous lines came out of that movie that I see being tossed around today in reguards to our own government.  "There's a difference between us. You think the people of this country exist to provide you with position. I think your position exists to provide those people with freedom. And I go to make sure that they have it"  "And dying in your beds, many years from now, would you be willin' to trade ALL the days, from this day to that, for one chance, just one chance, to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take... OUR FREEDOM! !"  and "FREEEEEDOOOOM!" that William Wallace shouts out at the end of the movie right before dies. 
     I had a new insight of death when I seen this movie.  Some quotes from the movie, "Every man dies. Not every man really lives", "We all end up dead, it's just a question of how and why," and "You see, death comes to us all."  I found those sayings to be true.  No matter what we do in life, no matter what paths we take, we all will be dead.  Are we doing things in our lives that can and will impact future generations?  Not everyone is a William Wallace and can change the course of history for our fellow citizens.  But if given a moment to take a stand for something you believed in it should be done at the moment so you don't look back with regret.
 
 
 
4.  LOVE AND WAR:  I never heard about this 1996 movie until probably 2008 (give or take a year) while I was channel surfing one evening.  Sandra Bullock caught my attention as I enjoy her movies.  I watched with no clue on what it was about.  I kept hearing her talk to a young man, or kid as she refers him to, as Erine.  He talked about a cabin up in Michigan and I laughed to myself thinking, "It's probably Earnest Hemingway."   And to my suprise it WAS about Earnest Hemingway, a famous writer.  The movie is based off of his book A Farewell to Arms.  I haven't read the book as of yet but I want to.  It is about his romance with a nurse, Agnes von Kurowsky, when he was wounded in the Great War. 
     Every time I watch this movie I want the ending to change.  Ernie loves Agnes very much but she is somewhat older than he is.  Agnes is starting to fall in love with Ernie and his boyish ways but the age difference keeps holding her back of loving him fully.  He asks for her hand in marriage and she excepts.  Her friends eventually talk her out of wedding him and persuades her to date a doctor who also asks for her hand in marriage and she accepts.  This tore Ernie up.  It crushed his heart.  Agnes did not end up marrying the doctor as deep down she realizes she does love Ernie.  She goes to his cabin in Michigan to declare her love to him.  But it was too late.  He put up a brickwall to her.  He told her a part of him wants to caress and hold her but the other part cannot.  She told Ernie she loves him.  He couldn't respond.  His heart was turned to stone.  She walks away and they never see each other again.  For those who don't know the rest of Earnest Hemingway's story he ended up being a heavy drinker, albeit a great prize winning writer, failed at several marriages and he ended up taking his life.   I wonder what if.  What if Ernie did take Agnes in his arms and married her?  Would his fate had been the same?  Can a person who's heart was crushed like that ever really love the same way again? 
 
3.  STAND BY ME:  This was my signature movie growing up.  The year was 1987.  I was 10 years old.  Stand By Me was premiering on HBO.  I was spending the night at my best friend, Sara's house.  I was going to tape it off HBO.  We both loved Corey Feldman and he was in the movie.  It probably didn't matter how awful the movie could be, we were determind to like it.  And in no time we did just that.  We watched the movie over and over.  We had the entire movie memorized.  A few years ago my husband bought me the DVD version of the movie because he knew it held special memories from my childhood and I still could recite the whole movie by heart. 
     The main character, Gordie LaChance, was a writer reflecting back on his memories as a kid when he hears about the death of one of his dear friends from childhood.  At that time I enjoyed writing and I wondered if I would look back at my childhood the same way.  And in a way I think I do. 
     There were many lines I remember using from that movie.  One we used to do all the time when someone says shut-up.  "I don't shut-up, I grow up, and when I look at you I throw-up" then you make vomiting noises.  The comeback to that line would be, "Then your mother goes around the corner and she licks it up".  Another line was "You four eyed pile of shit!"  The come back would be, "A pile of shit has a thousand eyes!"  Then there was the famous, "Two for flinching" when you act like you are going to punch someone and they jerk back then you punch them hard, twice, in the arm.  As I am typing this now I laugh at the stupidity of it but we thought that was very clever.
     The mailbox baseball scene gave us ideas of some fun during my adolescent time.  We even had a bat named Louie and we would take turns having a swing at it.  I lived in the city and we went out to the country for some fun doing that.  Train dodging.  We didn't have trains by where we lived but we did live on a busy road and we thought it would be fun to run out in front of a car at the last second to cross the street.  How stupid we were!   We didn't think about what we were doing or the damage we were causing.  I am not proud of that part in my life but rewatching this movie I cannot help but reflect on that time. 
     Just like life, time marches on and people fad in and out of our lives with no apparent reason.  At the end of the movie he even talks about it with the famous last line of the movie, "I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?"  We all knew someone in our lives at that time who could fit into one of those character roles:  Gordie - the guy who cannot fit in at home just trying to find his way in the world; Chris - the hard knocked rebel who deep down is a nice guy; Vern - the oddball kid that is just silly at times; and Teddy - the one who takes dangerous risks and is out to get everyone.  Or maybe there is a little bit of all of them inside of us?

2.  LEFT BEHIND:  This movie combines my thrill of apocalyptical movies and my love for the Lord.  It plays on the idea of what if the rapture would happen.  If Jesus were to come down right at this minute to take his children, would you be one of them?  I pray that I would be but I don't know.  God's standards are set so high.  One of my favorite part in the whole movie is when Buck (played by Kirk Cameron) approaches a guy and asks him if he is a good person in God's eyes.  Have you ever stole anything, even if it was a pen at work?  Then that would make you a thief if you did.  Have you ever lusted, even if it is with your mind, after another person?  That would make you an adulterer.  Have you ever lied to someone about anything, no matter how small the lie is?  Then that would make you a liar.  By that standard we broke 3 out of the 10 commandment.  Hearing that really hits home on how good we are not.  We all have room for improvement in God's eyes.  
     Another one of my favorite scenes, and I may be a bit biased here, is where Chole is driving to college when the rapture occurs.  Traffic comes to a confused messy standstill on the highway.  Chole runs to a semi-truck and opens the door and all that is left is a baseball cap, flannel shirt and a pair of jeans.  The truck driver has been raptured!  YES!  The one that is least expected to flee this Earth in God's calling is the one who goes. 
     In the making now is a new version of Left Behind staring Nicholas Cage.  I am not sure how I will like the new movie but the original version is very impressive.  However, the book is better then the movie!

1.  NORTH AND SOUTH:  I fell in love with this movie the first time I seen it on TV in 1985.  I was 8 years old and I was only allowed to see bits and pieces as I would sneak quietly out in the livingroom and hide behind the couch to see it.  If I were to sneeze or cough my mom would find me and ship me back off to my bedroom. 
     It has everything I love in a movie, Civil War theme, action, drama, romance, scandals, and betrayals.  There is so much that goes on that it is hard to pinpoint one or two things that I like from the movie.  I love it all.  I love how Bent from West Point bullies on George and Orie and later on romances the married Ashton to use her husband's money.  I love the love triangle between Orie, Madeline and Justin.  I love the innocence of Brett and Billy in their relationship.  I love the duel of Charles and the soon to be husband of a lover he had one night.  George and his Irish wife Constance and the conflict in the Hazzard family.  I love how Virgilia goes about in her abolitionist ways and sets a slave free and ends up marrying him.  There was not one part of this movie I don't like.   I even named our daughter, Ashton, after a character from the movie.  We don't like the character of Ashton, as she is set to be a conniving little tramp, but the name sounded beautiful. 



 



 
 





 

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Oh, Those Rodents!

     It was February 2004.  We lived in Allegan.  Our children just received money for Valentine's Day and wanted to go shopping.  I told the kids (aged almost 7, almost 6, 3 years old and 1 year old) they can buy what ever they want with their money at the store.  I loaded up the children and headed towards Meijer's in Planwell, Mi..  We walked around the toy aisle as the children debated on what to get.  As the older children looked I would see what toy James (the one year old) would like to have as well.  Nothing seemed to grab my or the kids attention. 

     We walked around the store for other ideas.  Then we walked past the small animal area.  It was like magnetic beams shot out of their eyes and dragged them across the aisle to look at the birds, hamsters, guinea pigs, and the multitudes of fish.  Oh no!  I dreaded.  The older two looked at the prices and the money they had in their hands.  They didn't have enough.  Whew!

     Moments later Christian and Beth approach me with a smile across their faces.  "We know what we want,"  they said, "We want to buy a hampster!"

     "Oh no!"  I reply back.  "You don't have enough money."

     "Yes we do, "  Beth chimes back, "If we all put our money together then we have enough to buy 2 hampsters"  she says excitedly.

    "No! No! No!"  I firmly said.  "We already have a dog.  We do NOT need a hampster!"

     "PLEASE?????"  the 3 begged beautifully.  James would sit in the basket of the cart pointing over at the rodent's in the glass aquarium.  "You said we can have ANYTHING in the store?"

     Mental note to myself at that moment:  NEVER say the words ANYTHING IN THE STORE ever again to my children when we go shopping!   

     I looked down at their angelic faces.  I know deep down this novelty will wear off in a week and I would be the one cleaning the cage and feeding and watering it.  Drats!  The kids pinned me in the corner when I said that.  It was their money and I did say anything.  I think just the brillance of them realizing that they can combine their money to get a larger priced item at that age made me give in.  "Okay.  Beth and Christian, you both pick out one and Ashton, you pick one out for you and James."   I chipped in the rest for a cage, food and a ball where the hampster can run around the house in.  Sadisticly, I envisioned one of the hampsters running around in this plastic ball and our dog (about 5 years old) chasing it and trying to flick it around the house where the hampster was at the mercy of the dog.  Okay, I was ready to bring the hampsters home now.

     We brought the hampsters inside and I was giddy to see our dog's reaction.  He sniffed them a few times and left them alone.  I had the kids pick out their names.  Beth and Christian agreed on Pinky because a crazy cartoon Pinky and the Brain.  Ashton picked the name Lilo for her black and white hampster after the movie "Lilo and Stitch" which was a popular Disney movie at the time.  Sure enough, a few weeks later, the kids paid no mind to the hampsters anymore and I was left to tend to their cleaning and feeding.

     Fast forward 5 to 6 months.  We ended up moving to a small town in Osceola county (See Spontaneous Life Changing Decision April 18, 2012 blog  http://ymaout.blogspot.com/2012/04/spontaneous-life-changing-decision.html  on that story).

     It was a warm night.  The children were in bed fast alseep.  We were watching a movie in the living room relaxing.  I was on the couch and Brian was stretched out on the floor.  Suddenly Brian jerks back, "What the hell....?"

     I look over at him confused.

    "Something lifted up on that vent!"  The heater vent was right next to the TV.  We both stare at it for a moment.  Nothing happened.

     I sit up and Brian joins me on the couch and we resume watching the movie.  We both heard a sound coming from the vent.  A loud scratching sound.  We picked up the remote and hit the mute button.  We both stare at the vent and listen to the fumbling, scratching sounds.  The vent lifted up again and a head stuck out from the vent.  "A RAT!"  Brian shouts.

     "A rat?"  I wanted to make sure I heard him correctly.

     "We need to kill that rat!  We cannot have rats in this house!"  Brian commands.

     We quickly unloaded a medium size box to use as a trap.  We planned on waiting until the rat comes out, lay the box on its side for the rat to run into and then tilt the box upright to capture the rat and then killing it. 

     We watched the vent intently.  We were on a mission.  I stood off to one side so the rat would run in the other direction where Brian was holding the box waiting for the rat to run into.  The vent started to lift up and down.  We were curious as to why the rat could lift the vent but neither one of us wanted to get a closer look.  The vent was lifting higher.  We could see his head.  His head would stick out and then go back in.  I look up at Brian with delight.  We were going to catch us a rat!  His head popped back out again.  The rat decided to make a run for it and fully came out of the vent.  He ran for the box and our plan was set in motion.  Brian was able to scoop up the rat with the box and the rat was trapped.  "There wasn't a tail on the rat!"  I shout out.  "It's tailless!"

     "Sometimes rats will get their tails caught on something and they lose their tail.  It's quiet common."  He assured me. 

     Brian went to look for something to end this rat's life.  "I want to take a closer look."  I say to Brian.

     "Why?  They are nasty rodents that we must get rid of!" 

     "I never seen a rat in real life before.  I want to see it before we kill it."

     "Be my guest."  Brian says back motioning with his hand for me to go to the box. 

     I look at it.  Cute little thing.  I think to myself.  I take a closer look at his nose.  There was some fur that has been rubbed away at it.  "Honey, I don't think this is a rat."   

     "What makes you think that?"  Brian inquires.

     "His nose.  There is fur missing from his nose.  I think this is Pinkie."  Pinkie had a habit of gnawing at the wires of his cage so much that he rubbed away the fur from his nose.

     "There is only one way to make sure."  Brian walks over to the hampster cage in the other room and peeks in.  Pinkie was missing.  Brian goes back over to the box and looks at the rodent in the box very carefully.  "You are one lucky hampster!"  He picks up the hampster and places him back into his cage. 

     Sadly, a year later Pinkie's life came to an end.  His cagemate Lilo had already passed on earlier.  They are both buried outside next to a tree that the kids like to play on.  I don't think they kids think much about the hampsters but I have learned two lessons:  Be care of what you say and always look twice before killing something.  It could be a pet. 
      

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Remembering the Milkman

     There was a time in America where the men went off to work and the women stayed home to tend to the children and housework.  On an average, families owned one car.  TV's could be purchased in color or black and white.  Music filled the homes with huge rectangular stereo's that were playing 8-track tapes or records.   This was the stereotypical American family in the 1970's.  An end of an era was approaching.  Like many things that fade away from society, for a brief moment, I was able to recall from my memory- the milkman.

     I have to dust off the far corners of my mind to remember our milkman.  I must of been under 6 years old.  The small straight truck would pull into our driveway in Saginaw, Mi..  There were 2 steps that led to our front door with a small cove on either side of the door.  My mom would make out a list of the things she wanted and placed it among the empty bottles that were sitting in a plastic crate in that cove outside.  I would watch from the big picture window the milkman walk up and grab the crate and head back to the truck.  He would fill out my mom's list of milk, eggs, cheese and butter and walk back up to the front door with another crate.  Sometimes he would see me spying on him and give a smile and a head nod in my direction.  I would wave back.  I watched him get into his truck that had a picture of a cow's head on a sunflower and drive off.  Years later I realized the cow was Elsie, Borden's mascot.   

     When my mom was finished doing whatever task she was doing we would go do the door together to bring in the items.  I can still hear the clinking sounds of the glass pint bottles banging together as my mom lifted up the crate and brought it into the kitchen.  When mom unloaded the crate she would hand it over to me.  I would beam with delight as I grabbed the plastic square crate to play with.  I would stick my stuffed animals in it and push it around the house.  To me, that was the highlight of the milkman.  This was a weekly tradition that I just grown accustomed to. 

     I never realized when our milkman stopped coming around.  I just didn't think about it.  It wasn't until decades later something triggered my memory about having the milkman come around.  Something that was so common in American culture just slipped though our hands with time and is no more.  Instead of waiting for the milkman people found it easier to run to the store to get the things they need.  The day of the milkman is gone. 
 

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

PBB Disaster of the 1970's Poison's all of Michigan

     In the early 1970's Michigan dairy farmers woke up and headed out on their farms to tend to their herds of cattle.  Many of these farmers lived on generational farms, successfully taking over the business from their father and one day proudly passing the farm business down to their sons.  The farmers looks over in the field, the sun starting to show it's majestic glow over the horizon, and watch the cows graze.  A smile crosses the farmers face as they realizes they are helping to feed Michigan.  They love their job and they do it well.  Little did they know that one of the biggest cattle feed plants in Michigan is about to poison the entire state of Michigan making it the largest chemical contamination in U.S. history known as "Cattlegate." 

     Even in the 1970's scientists were trying to find out ways to make animals fatter and cows to produce more milk.  As the population of the U.S. grew there were more and more demands to have more foods available at the supermarket.  To help keep costs low the farmer had to find new ways to get more out of their animals.  St. Louis Chemical Plant in St. Louis, Michigan was dabbling with Magnesuim Oxide in the cattle feed to help produce more milk called "NutriMaster".  They also made other chemicals, such as PolyBrominated Biphenyl (PBB) for other uses that was sold under the name of "FireMaster" which was a flame retardant.   Confusion set in as to what happened next.  I read discussions where "FireMaster" ran out of bags so they were using the "NutiMaster" bags or the bags looks similar to each other and were accidently crossed mixed.  Another story I read drew attention to the mix-up of the bags and a superior told him that it was a new name to the Magnesium Oxide and to mix it with the feed anyway.  These bags were then packaged up and sent to feed mills all over Michigan for farmers to buy for the cows.  Feed for other animals, such as pigs and chickens, were also processed in the same machinery as the cattle feed and traces of PBB were added into the feed because the machines were not properly cleaned out between the different types of feed. 

     In the Autumn of 1973 farmers were noticing odd things happening.  Milk production was dropping rapidly among their cows.  Their bovines were miscarrying or delivering still-born calves.  Some calves, that were born, had deformities.  Chicks were being hatched with their legs twisted and the talons deformed where they couldn't stand up.  The farmers were clueless why this was happening over and over.  Some farmers had agents of the Department of Agriculture come out to the farm to investigate.  The agent would brush the farmers off telling them it was because of "bad husbandry" (Ren Chemista).  These were farmers who have been raising animals all of their lives and watching their fathers raise animals.  The farmers knew what they were doing in raising animals yet that still did not explain what was suddenly happening.  Farmers started to feel ashamed thinking it WAS their doing and they didn't want to talk about it to neighbor farmers.  They didn't want to appear as a failure. 

     The Farm Bureau started to get involved as more and more farmers were starting to ask more and more questions.  Feed samples were sent to the State of Michigan for questioning.  They came back fine with no abnormal results.  Someone was able to send some feed outside of the State of Michigan for testing and it came back with high amounts of PBB.  By now it was mid April 1974.  The State of Michigan realized there was a problem and they quickly realized the monstrosity of it all.  They didn't know how to properly handle the situation as nothing like this had happened before in the United States. 

     The Michigan PBB contamination is a historical event of seemingly miniscule proportions with broad, far reaching, consequences over a 40+ year time span.  The PBB has been an ongoing event that has been involved with medical testing and environmental issues since the 1970's.  It is important because not only did the PBB effect the farmers, it also effected 90% of Michiganians through a series of tiers, the first tier being the farmer and the employees with the initial contact with the contaminated feed.  The second tier being the consumers who consumed the animal products such as meat, dairy, and eggs.  The third tier would be the offspring of those who were originally contaminated within the first and second tier by utero or breastfeeding, both in animal as well as humans. 

     For over a year diary, beef, chicken and pork products all tainted with PBB have been sold off the supermarket shelves across the state.  The government didn't want to let people know how bad it was so they tried to keep things quiet.  I read one article where a vet in Big Rapids was threatened by the government if he went public about the ordeal.  The government realized that people have been infected with the bad meat and there wasn't much they could do about it at that point.  Products were quietly pulled off store shelves leaving many wondering what was going on.  Think about it.  You had milk, butter, cheese, eggs, chicken, pork and beef products pulled off the shelves.  Farmers who were using manure to fertilizer their crops now had traces of PBB on the vegetables.  It was literally everywhere.  Food from outside states were quickly shipped in while Michigan grown food was destroyed.  The PBB laced manure eventually soaked into the water supply poisoning some of the farmers wells. 

Alvin and Hilda Green's Farm in Chase, Mi.
Image found on web.
     Farms had to close its doors.  Farms that have been in the family for decades had to shut down.  This was a financial disaster for farmers all over Michigan. An environmental epidemiologist, Lorraine Cameron said, "The Michigan dairy industry nearly went under" (Erb).   Livestock were herded up in deep pits and shot.  Nothing could be saved from any animal.  It all had to be put down and destroyed.  Sounds of gun shots filled the air as neighbors would come out and help the farmer put down his herd.  Some farmers couldn't pull the trigger.  It wasn't just shooting an animal.  They were shooting down the lifestyle they knew and loved.  They were shooting down the money they would earn.  In all,  approximately 30,000 cattle, 4,500 swine, 1,500 sheep, and 1.5 million chickens were destroyed, along with over 800 tons of animal feed, 18,000 pounds of cheese, 2,500 pounds of butter, 5 million eggs, and 34,000 pounds of dried  milk products were destroyed ." (MichiganDepartmentofPublicHealth http://www.michigan.gov/documents/mdch_PBB_FAQ_92051_7.pdf ) 
More than 500 farms had to be quarantined across Michigan.  The effect had already taken its toll.  Hundreds of thousands of Michiganians had already absorbed some trace of PBB into their system by eating the poisoned foods.  Even after 40 years later people still have traces of PPB in their system and are experiencing health issues.  Even the soil and water is showing traces of PBB in it.  In 1998 the chemicals were still being found in the soils and water and in the fish.
Used from the Detroit Free Press Sept. 23, 2012

       The State of Michigan has 3 main dump sites on state land.  One in Kalkaska, the other in Mio over by Pennsylvania Crossing near Mt. Tom road and a municipal dump site near St. Louis.  Several years ago water testing was done near the Kalkaska dump site and it turned up positive for PBB.  How high of level's?  I am not sure.  A lot of this is still being kept quiet.  Clean up from the St. Louis, Michigan Superfund sites are still being worked on as chemicals are leaching out into the Pine River.  Michigan Department of Public Health did not know exactly how to deal with this issue as very little was known about PBB and it's effect on humans and the environment.  They did a study of 300 people divided up into those who were exposed to PBB and those who were not exposed.  Those who were exposed to PBB had a variety of health issues but the federal agency did not publicize the information.  In fact, this study remained unknown until a formal investigation in 1977 (Reich 306).

Taking a load of cows to the dump site
Pic found on the web.
     The state issued a 25 acre parcel in Kalkaska to bury the PBB poisoned animals.  The geology of the terrain seemed suitable for the purpose as well as the high elevation above sea level so it would have the least minimal effect for water contamination.  Wells were put into place for periodic water testing.  Current data could not be found on whether or not contaminations are leaking out of the pits.  On July 5, 1974 Michigan Department of Agriculture receives a restraining order from the Kalkaska County Commission not to bury animals there.  Then on August 21, 1974 the Michigan Court of Appeals overturns circuit court decision and burial resumes 6 days and continuing until 1977.  there were 2 pits for burial, one hat buried 11,000 animals, and the other pit buried 20,000 animal
carcasses.  The animals were brought to the pits alive and then put down under a vet's watch.  The animals were then cut down the center of the body to help relieve the pressure of the gas the carcasses creates. 

     Mio, Michigan, was selected as a burial site in 1977 under a court order as the other pits have filled over capacity.  The animals that were buried there had only a small amount of PBB detection.  A few years later, due to PBB Action Committee to get ride of the burial site, they had 1500 animals moved to a burial ground to radioactive wastes in Death Valley, Nevada. 

Cranes working at the superfund site.
taken by Jill Moyer
October 2014
      The community of St. Louis gathered together in 1997 after the Superfund  remediation had failed and created the Pine River Superfund Citizens Task Force so they can hire their own experts to secure second opinions on different issues.  As recent as 2012 the Environmental Protection Agency started a residential clean up of the soil.  Contaminated soil is being removed and taken to an approved landfill.  Concerned citizens are wondering if this is going to do more harm than good because it will put the poisons back in the air as the soil is moved about.  The citizens are skeptical because there had already been several attempts to deal with this contamination and none seem to have worked or the funds ran out to care for it properly.  There was a granite tombstone marker from what would

Granite tombstone used to mark the entrance
of the Velsicol Plant.
Taken by Jill Moyer
early Spring of 2012
have been the gates of Velsicol warning about contamination site that was been removed in October 2013.  The City Manager, Bob McConkie told The Morning Sun, "It's putting to rest the stigma of death and starting a new era for the city.  It's the beginning for a new day for the health and welfare of both residents and the environment. " 

       Over 9 million Michigander's consumed meat and milk for a year after the mistake of PBB was found in the animal feed.  It is estimated that everyone in the state had some levels of PBB in their system.  PBB is found in fat cells.  In time the level exposure drops but it still effects the human body.  Studies found that children had more health problems than their parents mainly due to breastfeeding.  There is a lot of fat in breast milk and that was transferred to as babies.  Michele Marcus, Professor at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University said, "PBB is 100 times more concentrated in breast milk than in blood."  My mother was told by doctors when she had me not to breastfeed because of PBB crisis.

     Adults and children have come down with a variety of illnesses:   Thyroid Disease, elevated liver enzymes, Adrenal Hyperplasia, Colitis, Crohn's Disease, Pancreatic Cancer, Breast Cancer, Testicular Cancer, rare throat disorders where sometimes the esophagus is removed, miscarriages, bowel problems, multiple digestive troubles, hair loss, skin rashes, and memory loss. Some children of farmers had died in their early and mid 20's due to some form of cancer from the PBB.  Studies are still being done to see if they truly are linked to the PBB poisoning.  Even daughters from the next generation that were exposed to mid to high levels of PBB have been known to have more miscarrages than those whose parents had a lower dose of PBBs in their system.  Studies are being done to see if there is a connection between certain cancers, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease.  PBB is stored in adipose tissue and has endocrine modifying properties.  it has been known to mimic estrogen, block androgens, and interfere with thyroid function. 

     Michigan Department of Community Health created a study of more than 4,000 people who were in contact with the PBBs back in the 1970's calling the group "The Michigan PBB Registry."  this study includes children and grandchildren as well as the primary people.  the PB's leave the body at a slow rate "about 15 years for half of the PBB in the body to be eliminated" (The Michigan PBB Registry).  Blood work has been done in March 2014 in area's around Michigan and will be sent to Emory University in Atlanta, Ga., for studying to  check the levels of PBB in the blood.  Those results will not be ready for some time.  Citizens of St. Louis and employees of Velsicol were dropped from further studies in 1990 partly because the people were exposed to a variety of chemicals and it is difficult to fin a person that was having health effects solely to PBBs.  However, they were recently reinstated in the study due to grants available t the Michigan PBB Registry.

     Michigan health officials viewed the PBB as an agricultural issue and not a health issue which led to confusion as to whether to do studies on humans or not.  No one, at the time, knew the exact effects of PBBs on a human body to compare it with other sources such as heredity issues or other factors.  Those who were exposed to PBB had a variety of heath issues but the federal agency did not publicize the information.  In fact, it remained unknown until there was an investigation in 1977 (Reich 306).  Again, heath officials did not deem it necessary to share the findings as the findings were not an agriculture issue.




St. Louis Chemical Plant on the Pine River.
     In 1979 the U.S. stopped manufacturing PBB.  St. Louis Chemical Plant sold out to Velsical Chemical Corp.  Illegally, Velsicol buried 269,000 pounds of PBB laced feed in a 40 acre landfill (Gittleman).  The EPA made a deal with Velsicol to try to resolve the issue in the early 1980's.  Velsicol had to pay $38 million and they would no longer be responsible for further action to the contamination. The Velsicol chemical plant had been torn down and a thick clay cap placed over the top to contain the poisons.  The clay cap around the banks of the river had been leaking the poisons out into the Pine River.   For some time swimming and fishing had been banned for the Pine River.  In 1982 this was named one of the six largest Superfund sites and now 2010, St. Louis,  used to be home of the best tasting spring water, is ranked #18 as one of the most polluted sites because of the PBB contamination.  In November of 2010, Michigan has 67 Superfund sites on the National Priorities List.  A new water treatment system was installed in 2012 but the water is still being monitored and tested for poisonous chemicals. 

     Organization have formed to create awareness to other dangers of PBB and the hardships on the environment.  Working alongside Alma College, the Pine River group helped sponsor the Eugene Kenaga International DDT Conference in 2008 to bring awareness of the hazards of using chemicals and the dangers it does to the environment (10 Lorenz).  A law was passed in 2003 in Europe banning the chemical and China and South Korea banned PBB in 2007. 

    
    
Joyce Egginton from New York heard about what was happening in Michigan and came out to find out more information.  She wrote the book, Poisoning of Michigan that talks about the PBB crisis in Michigan.  She stated, "It was over a year before the state acknowledged that the problem existed.  And even then it didn't know how to handle it."  She went on saying she is not blaming the State of Michigan as this was a new issue and the State of Michigan did not know how to handle it properly.  Nothing like this in history has happened before.  Chemicals during the 60's and 70's were pumped into the soil to help rid the field of weeds, kill insects on plants, and to give a boost to crops to make them grow faster.  Even the animals were being fed additives to produce a meatier animal.  No one thought of the side effects of using the chemicals and the effects they would have on the environment.

     Michigan Department of Community Health has lost the resources to continue the PBB study.  Emory University, as mentioned above, currently resumed the research of the effects of PBBs by the funds of Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and the US EPA (The Michigan PBB Registry).  Citizens of Michigan question as to why the study has to be done in another state where they do not come to St. Louis themselves to see what it is like.  They depend on others to relay the information to them.  People believe this is a Michigan issue and Michigan should find the funds to research what is happening to the state in regards with the poisoning.  Other people are thankful that there still is a group who is taking an interest in the matter and trying to find out how the PBB are effecting people today.

     A special senate committee for investigation was set up by the state government in January 1975.  Back in the late 1970's controversies over illness, safety, and disposal made PBB a major political issue in Michigan.  No one knew which agency to go to as they all had some part in it such as the Environmental Agency, Department of Agriculture, Department of Health and Human Services, as well as Department of Natural Resources for placement of carcasses.  None of the agencies wanted to take responsibility for how to handle a situation like this and it was only harming the citizens who were left with their hands tied for what to do. 

     John Lorenz, author of article, Civic Engagement as an Antidote to Corporate Greed, believes victims of environment pollutants expect their "political representatives to respond to their problems regardless of the odds"  (13 Lorenz).  The Michigan Department of Agriculture was supposed to protect the common consumer and the agricultural industry, but leaned more to protecting the industry. (309 Reich).  Farmers, in protest of not receiving restitution, became upset and brought the dead animals to the steps of the Capitol building in Lansing.  Finally, in 1982, 95th congress pass the bill HR9616 to give compensation to those who were directly affected by the contamination.  The 96th congress passed another bill HR5074 to better handle scientific evidence on toxic contamination. 

     Overall, Velsicol was primarily responsible for the PBB poisoning to Michigan residents.  However, Michigan dragged its feet in finding a root cause of the problem when the Department of Agriculture was approached by a private citizen.  The contamination site, which thought to be of no health concerns created major health issues.  Each agency thought the other agency was doing research and studies on the contamination and some agencies did not while others would not reveal its findings unless probed. 

      There was a television docudrama in 1981 titled, "Bitter Harvest" starring Ron Howard.  It is based on the 1973 Michigan PBB contamination incident.  http://www.imdb.com/video/amazon/vi96511001/



My daughter overlooking the Superfund site in St. Louis, Michigan.
Taken by Jill Moyer
Spring of 2012









Bibliography: 
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/05/19/americas-28-most-polluted-places.html
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http://www.michigan.gov/documents/mdch_PBB_FAQ_92051_7.pdf
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http://pbbregistry.emory.edu/

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