Page 2A THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1976 Cartoon by MacNelly Nuclear power: Fifth Horseman By EDWARD P. MORGAN It is fashionable but futile to argue that we never should have split the atom. The pressures of World War II forced the genie out of the bottle and now we have not only fission which gave us the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki but we have fusion which has enabled five powers plus India to make hydrogen bombs and the club is getting less exclusive all the time. On top of this we have a prolifera tion of nuclear reactors for the osten sible purpose of generating electric energy but with such devastatingly attractive by-products as radioactive waste, which nobody so far has found a way to dispose of safely, and surpluses of plutonium, the vital in gredient for making the bomb and thus making it at least potentially available not only to some tyrannical power but to a terrorist as well. downstoivn Tim Downs IF 100 ARE UAmNGTO REGISTER, PLEftSE PLACE VOUR ORANGE card on top of tour ORTA CARD.., NOD FOLD THEM \Nl HALF, AND TEAR THEt^ Partially douin THE LEFTSIDE. 9 FOLD THIS UNDER. TAKETHE REGAINING OPPOSITE CORNERS, AND PULL OUTUARD. YOU NOW HAVE A LITTLE BIRD THAT FLAPS ITS UINGS.m I There is no use blaming ourselves for uncorking the bottle. It was thought — mistakenly as it turned out — that Hitler was far ahead in researching the bomb and nobody doubted that if he got it first he would use it widely. So he would have won World War II while wounding the planet, perhaps fat ally, at the same time. The problem history and science now pose is how to control what, not God, but we have wrought. Confer ences are proliferating trying to re think the problem through. The June referendum in California may be repeated in at least half a dozen other states on the issue of limiting nuclear power. One useful study has recently been released by that useful re search outfit in Washington, Worldwatch Institute. Called “Nu clear Power: The Fifth Horseman”, it was written by Denis Hayes, now an institute senior fellow, an en vironmentalist and former director of the Illinois State Energy Office. Industrial powers, he says, are al ready hesitating to expand nuclear sources of energy because they can get stuck with an uncompromising and unending commitment to a power source that “cannot brook natural disasters or serious mechani cal failures, human mistakes or willful malevolence. It demands an unprecedented vigilance of our so cial institutions, and demands it for a quarter million years” —- meaning the span radioactivity would still be dangerous. International agreements are in ill repute but if the superpowers would set the pace with arms reduction arid better safeguards on nuclear energy use, then the world may have time to pursue substitutes for the atom, whose boon threatens to become a cataclysmic boom. Morgan is a correspondent for In the Public Interest, a press service of the Fund for Peace. A choice eteak cooked to your likin' barbo Choice, heavy grain-fed beef, cooked to order. Served with baked potato (or a roastin’ ear) and Texas toast Make your own salad from the salad bar. Filet: 4.50 / Ribeye: 5.50 / Chopped Steak: 2.95 The Conlee boys are already well known for their barbecue. Their steaks might make ’em famous. 3C m-B-QUE Open 11 to 9:00 every day except Monday across the tracks/nearly downtown Bryan Che Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Servic- of the ivriter of the article and are not necessariltj those of the es > Inc-, New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. university administration or the Board of Regents. The Battal- Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester; $33.25 per school year; ion is a non-profit, self supporting enterprise operated by stu- $35.00 per full year. Ail subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertis- dents as a university and community newspaper. Editorial i n g rates furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, policy is determined by the editor. Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Rights of reproduction of all matter herein are reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. LETTERS POLICY ' ~ T kt ju Editor Jerry Needham letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and are Managing Editor Richard Chamberlain subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. The editorial Photography Director Kevin Venner staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guaran- Reporters Sandy Russo, Lee Roy Leschper tee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verifica- Members of the Student Publications Board are: Bob G. Rogers, tion. Chairman, Or. Gary Halter, Dr. John P. Hanna, Dr. Clinton A. Phillips, ... , , . ,, ~.t,. „ Roger Miller, Tom Dawsey, Jerri Ward, Joe Arredondo Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room Director of Student Publications: Gael L. Cooper 217 Services Building, College Station. Texas 77843. Assistant to the Director: W. Scott Sherman Ford needs Reagan supporters’ help KANSAS CITY — Lyndia Miller had just heard her candidate, Ronald Reagan, talk to the Missouri delega tion at last week’s Republican Na tional Convention. It was the morn ing of the presidential balloting. And it was all over, as both she and Re agan knew. And now the middle-aged career woman, a supervisor of educational relations at Southwestern Bell, was reminiscing about the golden mo ment, two months earlier, when she and her fellow-conservatives had upset the top leadership of the Mis souri GOP and won 18 of the 19 at- large delegates for Reagan at the state convention in Springfield. There had been a breakfast of the Reagan supporters that morning, she recalled, and it concluded with a benediction from their floor man ager who said the nomination and election of Ronald Reagan was necessary “for the survival of our country.” David S. B voder Understandably, she preferred Reagan’s conservative ideology to Mr. Ford’s middle-road Repub licanism; Reagan has been her can didate for President since 1967. But, interestingly, she says the main dif ference between the two, in her view, is that Reagan had “electabil- ity,” and Mr. Ford does not. “I’ll do what I can’’ for the President, she says, “but I just don’t see how he can “I felt,” said delegate Miller, with no embarrassment, “like I was going forth on a holy crusade. We had the dedication,” she said. “That’s why we won. The delegate who is for Reagan is for Reagan. The delegate who is for (President) Ford is just the normal kind of Republican Party person going along with the power structure.” Could she now transfer that dedi cation to the election of Mr. Ford? she was asked. “No way,” she said. “I’ll support the whole Republican ticket, and we ll do the routine, mechanical work of the campaign. But there’s no way it can be the same.” Lydia Miller’s comment defines the most immediate problem facing the President as he begins his uphill race against Jimmy Carter: enlisting the enthusiasm, and not the mere acquiescence, of the fervent few who do most of the work in the minority Republican Party. She is a particularly important symbol of the Ford problem, for on the day before the President’s nomi nation, she was elected chairman of the Jackson County (Kansas City) Republican Committee. Miller upset a pro-Ford incumbent, using the same organization of enthusiastic volunteers who had labored with her in the Reagan cause. Western states vital to Mr. Ford’s chances, the party organization on which he now depends is in the hands of people who supported his opponent. A few of them, plainly, will sit on their hands. But most, like Miller, will give their support to the nominee, either out of a sense of party loyalty or because they be lieve, as she says, that “Jimmy Car ter would be a disaster.” But if that support is to he more than “routine and mechanical,” if it is to reach the level of effort required for a minority-party candidate to win, Mr. Ford will have to show the Lydia Millers of the Republican Party something more than he has shown so far. It will not be easy, because, Miller says, the workhorses of the Republi can Party tend to “pick the people and causes for which we work.” Her description of Mr. Ford is a classic of damning with faint praise: “He’s an honest, decent man, but he simply does not have leadership qualities. His oral commiii skills are not good. Hesanj bent, but he’s an appointed! bent. Had it not beenfortle! Watergate, Mr. Ford wonldl have been President. Hef been very happy to spend tlJ his life representing thef Grand Rapids.” Turning Lydia Miller i partisan will not be easy I Ford. But without her andlf in Republican organizationsij the country, he probath ] hope to remain President. (c) 1976, The Washington Like so many others of her age, Miller came to politics in the early 1960’s as “a follower of Barry Gold- water.” She was “deflated badly” by his defeat in 1964, but stayed active in the GOP, becoming a ward com- mitteewoman. She worked for conservative can didates in Missouri, most of them also losers, organized against the Equal Rights Amendment, helped with the Women’s Anti-Crime Crusade and is active in a local group opposing any tax increase of any kind. KNOWLEDGE IS YOUR BEST PROTECTION Our Intelligent approach to large diamonds is applied toe our smallest diamonds. To Carl Bussells ~iamond Room 3731 E. 29th 846-4708 Town & Country Center MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY That kind of upheaval happened all across the country this spring and summer, as a direct by-product of the former California governor’s challenge to the President. In Texas, California, and many of the smaller border, Midwestern and Are . your health insurance premiums too high? Interested in low-Cost coverage? For an appointment call Jess Burditt III or Phil Gibson CLU, 822-1550. GABE & WALKER’S 846-41 One Mile West of West Bypass on FM 60 DINE-IN, ORDERS TO GO, OR EAT OUT ON “THE SLU” Featuring: BEEF PORK RIBS LINKS IHOSSOI2C Tuesday-Saturday 11:00-9:00 Sunday 11:00-8:00 Closed Monday CATERING SERVICE • Plates • Sandwiches • Beer • Cold Drinks • Butcher Paper Spreads to your Order ★ / Univ. Dr. FM. 60 A&M 1 ^ 1 CO Parei udder Veteri New