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I It Austin, Texas 78701 REALTOR Representing all types of properties in Austin and Central Texas Interesting & unusual property a specialty. 477-3651 and Associates 502 W. 15th Street g innys ‘ COPYING SERVICE Copying Binding Printing Color Copying Graphics Word Processing Austin Lubbock Son Marcos c l? o li ts A Texas Tradition Since 1866 No games, no gimmicks, no loud music. Just good conversation with the most interesting people in Austin. And the best of downhome cooking. 1607 San Jacinto Closed Sundays 477-4171 Good books in every field JENKINS PUBLISHING CO. The Pemberton Press John H. Jenkins, Publisher Simply the best record shop in the state of Texastry us first for hard-to-find, local and regional records, lowest prices 24th austin, texas 472-9459 26 DECEMBER 26, 1980 Marshall . . . from page 19 we’ve been able to \(recover for the year, the first year of our strike force activity. Now I don’t think that’s the basic solution. The basic solution is to deal with . the immigration problem itself. And to make it illegal for employers to hire people. It’s already illegal for them to exploit. * * Hanging over the meeting like the sword of Damocles was the uninviting specter of the incoming Reagan Administration. Marshall, who says he planned to stay at Labor only four or five years anyway, was critical and apprehensive about those who will succeed him. He noted, for example, that Reagan has been opposed to the minimum wage laws, OSHA \(“He’s said, ‘I question the need sation, and international labor standards that prevent American companies from seeking havens in countries where weak occupational safety and health laws persist. “Ydu see, one of the big things that I fear in the new regime is that they have demonstrated no interest in labor standards or standards generally,” Marshall said. “And it gets back to this other fundamental question. Because I believe that those standards are good for the country. “If they want to look at the straight economics of it: prevention is the best way to deal with these problems. You know, it’s better to keep workers from getting cancer than it is to try to cure them when they get it.” As the sun sets on the Carter years, many expect the Reagan crowd, joined by a hostile Republican Senate, to torpedo the gains made on E4half of workers. In the name of saving industry from regulation, Marshall himself fears that the Republicans will do away with standards, and their enforcement, that sometimes force businesses to spend more either for labor costs or to protect their employees. Says Marshall: “It always costs workers something to get cancer. And black lung. And brown lung. It always costs something. And previously, the costs were always borne by the workers and their families. Or by the whole society. Now, what we ought to do with our standards, is to cause those costs to be borne by the enterprises themselves. Now there are some who believe that the competitive market will take care of those standards. I don’t.”