—opinion 4 Did you hug your draft card today? Monday was the last day of grace for about 1 million 18-, 19- and 20-year-old men who had not registered for the draft. If they choose not to register, they face two possible penalties: five years in jail and/ or a $10,000 fine. Fortunately, because I’m at the dod dering age of 23, I don’t face the unenvi able prospect of registering along with other youngbloods, even though regis tration is not the draft is not war. Know ing my name and address were occupy ing a byte of computer space in Selective Service System hardware would give me the willies. More importantly, being com pelled, by force of law, to tell anyone anything anytime concerns me. Especial ly when the products of my information concern my well being. Registering for the draft strikes me right at the core of my libertarian heart. Of course, the mechanics of registration, reading and writing, are not problems — only the possibility of conscription. As citizens, we (both sexes) owe our society some service, but I’m not sure we owe military service. Which brings us back to the end pro ducts of registration: the draft and war making. It’s curious that, traditionally, the men who waged war were not the ones who fought wars. To clarify, older, more learned men, who supposedly had paid their dues to society, were not often in the bang-bang-shoot-’em-up. The same problem exists today. The youngest, least organized, least experi enced and least educated voting mem bers of our society, some of whom are not granted full participation in adulthood (drinking alcohol in Texas, for example) don’t have much of a voice about regis tration or what happens to them as a re sult of registration. Pow. Register or pay U P' . Besides the age discrimination, another confusing area of registration is its halfway stance. We should either have nothing or go to a full draft, so that we’re better able to prevent the Russkies from enslaving all the free peoples of the world. Why this namby-pamby? Pussyfooting has a number of pluses. First, forced service with no identifiable threat would likely cause draft card campfires in one or two cities. Second, it’s cheaper. Third, you can exempt about 50 percent of your population base, women, legally. Fourth, registration is a big part of the battle. Once you’re in the big book, you get to stay there. Where you can be found quickly in time of need. But age and sex injustice aside, the idea of Ronald Reagan, Caspar Weinber ger or Gen. A1 Haig rumbling about countering imbalances, playing brink- smanship and shining our tarnished im age with warm bodies causes me heart burn. Especially when one of those warm bodies might be yours. Or mine. Letter: People too smart to start war Editor: I fully agree with what Elizabeth Cren shaw had to say in The Battalion (a pup pet of Pravda) on March 1st about the imminent attack on the U.S. by the Soviet Union. Not only are the Soviets prepar ing to attack us this moment, but they are infiltrating into every part of our society. The Russians have special agents placed very high in our government and big business corporations. How else can one explain high inflation, unemploy ment and the sale of sophisticated machinery and computers? They plan on destroying our economy and draining every last drop of useful technology from us before they come in for the kill. It doesn't stop there either. Someone you know (professor, dorm janitor) could sec retly be going to meetings where they discuss ways of breaking American morale. No Nukes and other pacifist de monstrations are some of the best ways those sneaky commies bring their ideas into the open. I’ve even seen them broad casting their propaganda here on cam pus. Don’t be fooled by so called fun damental evangelists. They’re trying to recruit our youth into their Red army of followers. They don't want you to be a born again Christian but a born again commie. I bet you didn't know the Russians are controlling our weather. By weakening our farming industv we can't use food as a weapon anymore. Could our own Corp of Cadets (is nothing sacred?) be blindly- following a crazed pinko awaiting the sig nal to invade? That's just a theory, but the list is endless. You can’t trust anybody! Before Ronald Reagan and his conser vative Republican followers (as opposed to those Satan-worshipping liberal Democrats) ascend into heaven, I think he should make even more spending cuts and use the extra money for buying even more tanks, planes and guns for defense (offense). I have been in the hospital four times now- for nervous ulcers and have spent many a night worring about such things. Not anymore though, I figure the end will come sometime around Easter. I’m skipping school and blowing off study ing. What’s the use of such petty w-orries and distractions as these? Enjoy your spring break Ags because it will be your last. By the way, I've taken Highway 6 both ways and found it to be nothing special, but it is a good escape route. Greg Budinger ’83 Jan Word ’83 Writer can’t really exist Editor: I’ve just read Elizabeth Crenshaw’s letter on how Russia is going to blow up America. Surely you can’t expect us to believe that this person actually exists. Next you’re going to tell us that she sees little green men at night. C’mon guys, if you have to make up letters, at least make them believable. Otherwise send them to the National Enquirer. Gary Johnson 603 Southwest Parkway- Blame Russia for everything Editor: Reading Elizabeth Crenshaw’s letter about preparing for a nuclear attack from Russia was quite humorous. She mentioned the world conquering deter mination of Russian leaders and their su perior war machine they have to back it. This war machine should peak in 1982 when our militat e effort should be at its weakest, and the attack could come as soon as this year. Well I’m sorry Mrs. Crenshaw, but you obviously have been reading too many articles from the authors who aren’t too realistic about the present world or the mental state of Russian lead ers. The fact is that the U.S. has enough nuclear weapons to kill the Russian population 35 times over, and the Rus sians probably have the same type of capability. Neither our leaders nor the Russian leadeds are eccentric enough to try an attack that could mean world des truction. Although the Russians have more actual missies than the U.S (appr. 1400 to 1050 (1980)), the American technology is far superior to the Russians. Each U.S. missile has a MIRV warhead which is actually 10 separate heads that separate over the target. Our cruise missile is fat- superior to anything the Russians have and so too are our Trident submarines. If the Russians launched offensive missiles toward the U.S., our satellites would de tect their launch within 30 seconds. W ith- in 15 minutes, the president would know if the missiles w ere aimed at the L .S. and he would have 15 more minutes to retali ate or surrender. Since the missiles would hit us 30 minutes from launch, a nation wide panic, trying to get* to shelters, would do more harm than good. If you are worried about the Russians and their ideas on dominating the world, concern yourself w ith their conventional army, which is twice our own, and their actions around the world. If you feel something should be done about that problem, join the army. Your help is much more needed there than in The Battalion. The Russians may take over the world but thev will never start with U.S. A destroyed and contaminated Earth is of no use to anyone, even Russians. Tom Reilly Mclnnis Hall Slouch By Jim Earle “It got to be such a problem cleaning it all the time that I said, ‘What the heck! Why not get rid of it/* 9 App ay foi an lie up March I Stu yell le nient jounci A^ies Associ; Itudei t ons. Ap up m Office t ons a filing Rui April 1 Sti both | Irndc I ave b and rr at Te three I The c ent v affaiis far fit c ent c ent v Governors meetings lack flair of past years By David S. Broder WASHINGTON — Watching the na tion’s governors at their meeting in Washington last week, I kept thinking how much that group has changed in the 20 years I have been covering their ses sions. This generation is probably more talented and capable — and certainly more earnest — than the rather light hearted fellows who gathered in Her- shey, Pa. in the summer of 1962 for w-hat was then a casual mixture of partisan politics and play. But whatever the 1982 versioh could claim in superior seriousness and dili gence, it lacked the glamour, the energy and the sheer audacity that was supplied at the Hershey conference — and at many others, earlier and later — by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New- York. When he walked into the room, things started popping. “His arrival was invari ably heralded by the voice, that unmis takable, insistent honking,” his former speechwriter, Joseph E. Persico, w rites in his newly published memoir, “The Impe rial Rockefeller.” “He never arrived alone, but in a flying wedge, Nelson strid ing ahead with easy purposefulness at the point of the angle, while aides trotted at each flank.” He i^ade exactly that kind of entrance into the sun-filled dining room at the Hershey hotel housing that year’s confer ence. It was Rockefeller’s sport in those days to throw a strong civil rights resolu tion on the table and sit back in enjoy ment while northern and southern Democratic scrapped with each other ab out the issue. It was part playfulness and part parti sanship, but in Hershey, lame-duck Gov. (now Sen.) Fritz Hollings of South Caroli na, who had seen Rockefeller’s trick be fore, got a bit aggrevated. If you want to talk about civil rights, he said, let’s have a real talk. And he laun ched into a mini-filibuster. Then as now, the governors had a tight schedule to keep, so there w-as consternation for sev eral hours until Pennsylvania’s David Lawrence was able to to persuade both men to back off and let the game pro ceed. I thought about those days, reading Th shed 4 arc I eld I Persico’s lively book last week, when ta of federalism filled the Washington ai Nelson Rockefeller was out front on tli issue — as he was on so many others. 1 organized the bipartisan politii machine that bulldozed the first big f« eralist initiative, general revenuj sharing, through Congress. And in tha casual days, when the governors’ confe*: ence had no substantial staff resources its own, his staff put together almost all what remains, even today, the organii tion’s federalist platform. Yet Rockefeller was never chairman the group. He was blocked by the lai Democratic national chairman, John Jl Bailey, working through Abe Ribicoffcl Connecticut and other Democratic goj ernors to deny Rockefeller a nation; platform that might have served his pre idential ambitions. In Persico’s telling, it is not a sad stor — and certainly not a tragic one. It is, a Rockefeller’s entourage always was, lively affair, full of graceful touches fo those within his circle, and scorn fo those on the outside. He had not much use for Richard Ni.\ on, so he could — as Persico tells it- make a nasty crack even about the Nix on’s Christmas card. He had so litti esteem for Ronald Reagan that he carril paigned enthusiastically against Reaga: in 1976 even after Jerry Ford hail dumped him from the ticket as Vice Prej idem Rockefeller and Reagan were alwaysa odds at the governors’ conference where they shared center stage — am fill particularly at one held aboard the U.Si n th Independence (“The Ship of Fools") it 1967, the year that Time magazineincau tiously pictured them on its cover as tin Republicans’ 1968 “dream ticket.” Rockefeller always bested Reagan in side the governors’ meetings, and Th d j< ill be udit .os F erfo W lion ers as ir e h an-/ |onn< ana The he liked to point out — ran ahead o Reagan in the challenge to Nixon’s norm ave now M orm ive-\ our. )faS nation in 1968. Recalling him, through Persico’s book I had to think it was probably just as wel that Rockefeller did not live to s« Reagan President. Nixon was enough But, Lord, he would have made the gov ernors’ meeting more lively last week. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Angelique Copeland Managing Editor janeG. Brust City Editor Denise Richter Assistant City Editor Diana Sultenfuss Sports Editor Frank L. Christlieb Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff Assistant Focus Editor Nancy Floeck News Editors Gary Barker, Phyllis Henderson, Mary Jo Rummel, Nancy Weatherley Staff Writers Jennifer Carr, Cyndy Davis, Gave Denley, Sandra Gary, Colette Hutchings, Johna Jo Maurer, Hope E. Paasch Daniel Puckett, Bill Robinson, Denise Sechelski, John Wagner, Laura Williams, Rebeca Zimmermann Cartoonist Scott McCullar Graphic Artist Richard DeLeon Jr. Photographers Sumanesh Agrawal, David Fisher, Eileen Manton, Eric Mitchell, Peter Rocha, John Ryan, Colin Valentine Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news paper operated as a community service to Texas .\&\f University and Brvan-CoUegc Station. 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