Page 2 Viewpoint The Battalion Monday Texas A&M University September 5, 1977 Speaking of rights . . . Bare-headed motorcyclists reappeared on Texas’ streets and highways this last week under a decision by the last State Legislature to no longer require motorcycle operators to wear helmets. Libertarians call it another blow for every man’s right “to do what he damn well pleases. ” The weak at heart “wouldn’t be caught dead on one of those things anyway,” wearing helmet or complete suit of armor. And the cyclists themselves are divided. Some couldn’t wait to “feel the wind in their hair” so to speak, immediately casting off their headgear. Others will continue to wear the helmets, not wanting to give up what protection they provide. Who’s right? They all are, in part. Both state and federal safety regulations have expanded more and more in recent years to the point that there are many everyday decisions that John Q. Public can not make for himself — like whether or not to wear a motorcycle helmet. Many people will argue that John Q. Public shouldn’t have the right to decide whether his head will be smashed into mush along with the rest of his body if he wrecks his motorcycle. “Protect that fool from himself— he can’t be trusted to decide for himself,” they scream. But face it folks. If somebody decides they’re going to drive a motorcycle, for whatever reason, they’re aware of the increased risk of serious injury they face in a collision. In a serious wreck, a helmet can and often does mean the difference between the cyclist living and dying. He’s the one who should decide. It’s his responsibility and his right. . . . and responsibilities On the subject of responsibility, the two-legged side of traffic could use some lessons on “Walking defensively.” Particularly on the Texas A&M campus, pedestrians seem to show a disregard for their own safety that would do justice to a kamikaze pilot. Technically, they’re in the right. University traffic regulations specify that drivers and bicyclists must yield right-of-way to pederstrians. However, that does little to remove tire tread from one’s backside. But the real problems start when the those pedestrians conditioned to “yielding” drivers, try-to cross University Dr. to reach the University Square Shopping Center. At lunch time, pedestrians crossing University and driv ers driving down that street cross paths in swarms. There’s no traffic control device there to help pedestrians cross — there are traffic lights less than a hundred yards in either direction — so driver and walker more or less bluff each other out trying to avoid a violent meeting. So pedestrians, remember that you’ve got the same responsibilities those drivers do. Look out for the other guy. Walk defensively. L. R. L. Making a buck Alexander Esau was a victim of the Son of Sam killer. He died last April 17. His corneas and kidneys were removed with his mother’s permission because she “thought it would help another.” Then came the attempted robbery. Esau’s family received a $1,000 hospital bill for the cost of removing the organs. Mrs. Esau’s kindness had become an opportunity for the hospital to turn a quick buck. The hospital offered an incredible explanation: it apparently routinely bills the survivors of organ donors under the assumption that Medicaid or Blue Cross would pick up the cost. Grave robbery is considered proper if the cost can be spread around. Philadelphia Daily News Reforming the reforms Democrats reaching turning point By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — After an eight-year fling with participatory politics. Demo cratic party officials are beginning to turn to the neglected problem of strengthening political leadership in their party and the country. No dramatic changes are likely in the 1980 presidential selection process. But a turning point has been reached which is important in the long-term strug gle to preserve an effective two-party sys tem. The first test of this still tentative counter-revolution will come this month. The party’s Winograd Commision (named for its head, Michigan Democratic Party Chairman Morley Winograd) meets in De troit to frame its recommendations for changes in the 1980 delegate-selection rules. Since the debacle of the 1968 conven tion, the Democrats have been constantly tinkering with their party rules. The re form committee led, successively, by Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D), Rep. Donald Fraser (D-Minn.) and Rep. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.), enacted a series of rule changes “opening the doors” to women, youths and minorities, and shifting control of the presidential nominating process from party leaders, interest group leaders and elected officials to activist citizens. Unkowningly, the reformers also triggered a dramatic increase in the number of presidential primaries in the past eight years. This further eroded the power of organization leaders and elected officials in the nominating process. As a result, the last two times out, the Democrats have nominated “outisders” with few links to the traditional party leadership — McGovern and Jimmy Car ter. Now, in much the same way that Dem ocrats in the House of Representatives have turned from the game of dispersing power and undercutting chairmen to wel come the leadership of Speaker Thomas P. (Tip) O’Neill (D-Mass.), party officials are turning from participatory politics to a search for structure and cohesion. They are searching for ways to limit the primaries and to assure the presence in Letter to the editor WMGY PROG convention hall of the elected officials who were the main targets of the old reforms. That shift was evident at the Winograd Commission’s meeting here in August — and nowhere more so than in the views of Don Fraser, who helped frame the re forms that made the 1972 convention so different from that of 1968. When a commission staff member re marked that “the whole thrust of (past) rules changes has been for representative ness,” Fraser said he agreed. “But,” he added, “to reduce all questions to an issue of representativeness is to degrade the political party. There is also a role for leadership. ” Several factors explain the shift in em phasis. For one thing, the Winograd Commission includes a large number of professional political scientists. They tend to be skeptical of the claims of participa tory democracy and protective of the traditional role of the political party. But they are not the only ones disil lusioned with the spread of presidential primaries to 30 states. Not one member of the commission appears to favor taking the trend further by legislating a national pri mary or even a set of regional primaries. Rather, the desire is to limit and if possi ble reduce the role of primaries in the delegate-selection process. Interestingly, nervousness both about and by Carter are contributing to the de sire to tighten up the delegate-selection rules. Many party leaders now see how easy it is for a President who is nominated Slouch under these rules to ignore the party in charting his path in office. No one seriously disputed South Carolina Democratic Chairman Donald Fowler’s assertion that “the primary pro cess as such is destructive of party cohe sion. When candidates get elected be cause they’re on the (television) tube, they’re responsible to everybody. And therefore, they’re responsible to nobody. ” As for Carter, it appears that he is at least somewhat nervous about a new “out sider” — perhaps a Gov. Jerry Brown or a Sen. Pat Moynihan — using the primaries and the proportional representation rules to demonstrate an embarrassing degree of opposition to Carter’s policies in 1980. There was no effort at subtlety by Rick Hutcheson, a deputy to Hamilton Jordan and the White House spokesman on the commission. He proposed that the cutoff point for receiving delegates in a primary or a state convention be raised from its 1976 level of 15 per cent of the votes, to 25 per cent in 1980. Hutcheson called this a “cohesion building mechanism.” But it is also an ef fective device for discouraging campaigns by anti-establishment outsiders. In the wisdom of 1977 hindsight, Jimmy Carter — like a lot of other Democratic leaders — can see the virtues of a slightly more closed and structured process. (c) 1977, The Washington Post Company by Jim Earle Utility rumors false Editor: There seems to ! iber of mors being spread in our community about how Bryan Utility System customers are pay ing their bills, such as; (1) certain custom ers pay only the basic energy charge and do not pay the fuel cost adjustment por tion of their bill, and (2) certain customers pay their utility bills with two checks, one for the basic energy charge and another for the fuel cost tendered in payment ioi iuci nujustmeiit charges. Rumors such as these only cause incon venience for our customers and Bryan Utilities. We wish to assure all customers that everyone is expected to pay their full utility bill. We prefer to be paid with one > ' i , ; r with two checks that is tine The majority of customers consistently pay their bills in full and on a timely basis. In order to be fair to these valued custom ers the Bryan Utilities could not under any circumstances permit any of the practices which are mentioned in the rumors which are being spread in our community at this time. Any customer who does not pay Bryan T ' is s their full utility bill in accordance ifi. the Bryan City Ordinances will cer tainly be put on the customer cut-off list in accordance with established procedures and will have their utilities disconnected. We regret any confusion or inconve nience these rumors may have caused our customers, and we hope the above state ment will help lay these to rest. —J. Bruce Odle City Manager “ARE YOU SURE WE DIDN’T PLAY KANSAS LAST WEEKEND? WE CELEBRATED TH’ VICTORY ALL NIGHT!” Silver Taps ceremonies are planned tomorrow night for eig/itTesj A&M University students who have died since the end of lastsei% ter. Douglas Martin Bums, Howard Allen Fiebrich, Ronald Josep[ Goertz, Michael Grima, Howard Allen Johnston, Carl WayneLoit Richard Frank Miller and Dr. Darrell Shefstad will l)e honoredk the ceremony. yo tal State Highway death toll low in ile tl The number of deaths on Texas highways grew steadily yesterday, but the list was running considerably behind the pace set a year ay; I and below the predicted rate of 44. As of 8 p. m. Sunday, the statehac recorded 20 traffic deaths, five of them motorcycle accidents. Hie Texas Department of Public Safety had predicted as many as fl persons might be killed in traffic accidents in the state during tlie three-day Labor Day weekend. Last year 50 persons died. Officialsol | the Parks and Wildlife Department have predicted another I0p« sons may die in drownings as Texans flock to lakes and benches for tht last major outing of the summer. I Nation [il Gov. Thomson favors canal suit New Hampshire Gov. Meldrim Thomson says if the U.S. Supreme Court fails to act on a suit brought by four attorneys general to force full disclosure of the proposed Panama Canal treaty, it will be another “day of infamy” for America. Thomson said this weekend he sif ported the action of the attorneys general of Louisiana, Idaho, In diana and Iowa. The state officials filed papers with the U.S. Indians may get land I Go! thing Former Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox says that if the Maine Indian land claims dispute turns into a constitutional battle, he feels the Indians eventually will win. In an interview with the Maine Sunday Telegram, Cox said any attempt to wipe out the claims made by the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy tribes to some 12 million acres in Maine, without providing adequate compensation, would violale the U.S. Constitution and be a moral outrage. inato' ars 1 mor SOI linato' laurai |Vitnc ered tomai Gov. Longley blasts rhetoric ppon Gov. James B. Longley says Maine and Canada’s eastern provinces shoidd form a regional energy compact to assure adequate supplies for the next 100 years. “Our State Department should be ashamedol themselves, and so should the foreign service in Canada. Theres been too much political rhetoric,” Longley said during the weekend, World Jther 'the \e Presley still No. 1 The late Elvis Presley has an unprecedented 14 hits in the top record charts, according to the current issue of Britain’s Music Week An Elvis single tops the single charts, eight others made the top 50, singles, and five of his albums placed among the top 50 albums. Brezhnev back after vacation Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev returned to Moscow yesterday from his vacation in the Crimea, the official news agency Tass said. Although Tass gave no reason for Brezhnev’s return, he apparently came back to Moscow because U. N. Secretary General Kurt Wald heim is in town for an official four-day visit. Pope preaches Pope Paul VI celebrated an outdoor mass yesterday at Albano, Italy, south of Rome and said following Christ’s gospel is not easy The pontiff, who turns 80 Sept. 26 and who suffers from painliil arthritis, celebrated the Mass alone for 90 minutes under a hot late summer sun. About 5,000 persons, including Albano’s Communist mayor, attended the services. riggerec nlhe w ay kille ated se 1 !|Rescu ind worl fmers t bre th; "They I tools ick wi spokesm piine 50 nesburg. I “Work he rest arge bai - The S] extreme Ivailable [only 24 i (laces. “Work Jissing r it could t Id. Weather Partly cloudy and hot today and tomorrow. No rain. High both days upper 90s; low tonight low 70s. Variable winds 5-10 m.p.h. The Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Re gents. 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