Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, April 1, 1983 opinion Drugs, payoffs and high schools by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer In May 1950, a group of businessmen and civic leaders in Mosinee, Wis., (1980 population 2,900) staged a mock “totali tarian” takeover for a day to teach a les son about communism. With cameras rolling, Mosinee’s mayor, newspaper editor and town preacher were “imprisoned” behind barbed wire for being “disloyal” to the state. To complete the totalitarian imag ery, some residents were shown passing the names of similarly dissident neigh bors to local authorities. Thirty-three years later, well-meaning civic leaders in another American town have asked local citizens to turn in their peers. This time, however, the Amer- ican-style snitching is for real, and de cidedly capitalistic town elders in Lewis ville, Texas, (population 24,000) are offering a $100 reward to students who provide information about drug users or sellers at the local high school. Though various American high schools have encouraged students to make anonymous tips on local drug pushers, only Lewisville’s has been de sperate enough to post “wanted” signs and offer bounty. Last September, Lewisville High School’s principal, C. Douglas Killough, solicited community leaders for commit ments to pay for the drug-reward prog ram. The money, Killough explained to them, would be filtered through the Pa rent Teacher Student Association (PTSA). According to Killough’s proposal, any student who turned in a name to school authorities would receive $50. As they used to say on “Gunsmoke,” “half now, half later.” Lewisville’s business community re sponded enthusiastically to the proposed program. So many commitments were received, in fact, that the local PTSA ceased its solicitations. “It only took us a few days ...” recalled John Zepka, an ex ecutive committee member of the Lewis ville group. To date, the program’s practical suc cess has turned out to be less certain. An assistant principal at Lewisville High, Malcolm Dennis, told the Dallas Morning News last week that “you’d be astonished at how well the students are cooperating. Some have even turned in their best friends.” But of the 30 students turned in to school authorities, principal Killough himself told us, only half have actually been found in possession. In a school of 2,200 students, that’s less than 1 percent. Comparisons with national averages would indicate that either students aren’t snitching of Lewisville has really no drug “problem” to speak of. It would be callous to rely simply on the latter possibility. Lewisville has neith er the size nor the complexities of Dallas, its neighbor to the south, but its fear of teenage drug use is probably many times greater. Around the U.S., small- and medium-sized towns have probably been the most persistent in seeking remedies to the “problem” before it gets too big. “If there was only one kid on marijuana,” said Lewisville High trustee Jerry Dor man, “the program would be worth it.” Simple solutions, however, beg scru tiny, especially when the problem is so complicated, emotional and longstand ing. And when the solution encourages problems that are as serious of worse, the ends don’t justify the means. In their own paranoia, Lewisville’s leaders have cynically sought to play on that of a far more vulnerable group. Fear of authority has a way of turning friend against friend, brother against sister, as the Chinese, Soviet and other dictatorial regimes have found to their advantage. To grease totalitarian tactics with brib ery (rewards are nothing more in this case) is to encourage people’s worst in stincts. But it also ignores that most younger Americans are more likely to consider drug use an abuse of oneself than a crime against the state. That fact alone makes the problem social in nature and explains why most Lewisville students, according to student body president Jeff Nowak, “have pretty much ignored the program ... It’s not the way most of us handle things between each other.” ■ # k OHSWEa, m 60 TO CALIFORNIA AMP IT RAINS...WE60 TO FLORIDA AND ITSNOWS,.. AND NOW WE COME HERE TO EUROPE.., Arms control: Reagan vs Andropov by Donald A. Davis United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan is applying steady and mounting press ure on the Soviet Union in an unwaver ing belief that unless Moscow feels menaced by U.S. military might, the Soviet Union will not seriously negotiate disarmament. It is a very dangerous gambit to play against an opponent that lost millions of its citizens in the last world war and open ly vows never again to be placed in jeopardy. “If you’re going to negotiate, you have to have some strength on your side,” the president said this week. “You have to have some reason for them to look at and weigh the value of reducing their own weaponry.” Therefore, Reagan sees success for the odd process of launching a massive and expensive improvement of the U.S. armed forces while at the same time bar gaining for reductions of forces and weaponry. The Soviet Union sees it differently and views the U.S. expansion of its milit ary muscle as an open threat by Washington. f The latest move — Reagan’s proposal to build a space-age supersystem to des troy missiles zooming toward U.S. targets 1 — clearly demonstrates the far extremes at which the White House and the Krem lin are operating. Reagan says it is only a defensive measure and Soviet leader Yuri Andropov treated it an “insane” offensive strategy. When he announced the program last week, Reagan said the bottom line was that since the dawn of the atomic age, the “strategy of deterrence has not changed.” “We maintain the peace through our strength; weakness only invites aggres sion,” he said. The president likened the superpowers pointing arsenals of mis siles to card players sitting at the same table pointing loaded pistols at each other, and that it didn’t matter who pul led the trigger first because everyone would suffer. So he outlined the high tech answer — a shield made up of advanced lasers and such things to wipe out any incoming missile. As when he named the MX mis sile the “Peacekeeper,” Reagan said the new system would be solely for defensive purposes and help push nuclear missiles into the sunset. The Soviet leadership immediately viewed the proposal with gloom. In a re turn to cold war rhetoric Andropov de nounced Reagan’s futuristic proposals and charged they could “open the flood gates to a runaway race for all types of strategic arms, both defensive and offen sive.” Reagan then shifted the focus again with his newest proposal for reducing medium range missiles in Europe. And he said Tuesday that there is “no change” in U.S. determination to put Pershing II and cruise missiles into Europe if Mos cow doesn’t come to terms in those talks in Geneva. Early next month, he is expected to announce a decision on basing the nuc lear-tipped MX missile. The main question at this point is whether either side is listening to any possible peace overtures from the other or is the arms race overheating once again. According to Reagan, he doesn’t think “there’s anything particularly new in the rhetoric that was used by Andropov.” And the Kremlin clearly does not view Reagan’s intentions as peaceful. “Let there be no mistake about it in Washing ton,” Andropov said last week. “It is time they stopped devising one option after another in the search of the best ways of unleashing nuclear war in the hope of winning it.” Perhaps the rising tensions and pole mical rhetoric between the two super powers will only be reduced if the two leaders find a way to sit down at a summit meeting sometime this year. The L more c month, cars a than t towed, cars un tickets. Horatio Alger learning new jobs ai fret by Art Buchwald “Hi, Mr. Peters, remember me? Hora tio Alger the Fourth. You laid me off from the company six months ago be cause I was unskilled labor. Well, I just completed a welding course, and I’m ready to go back to work.” “Sorry, Horatio, but since you’ve been gone, the company has decided to invest in robot welders. I don’t believe your welding skills are necessary any longer. Now, if you knew something about robo tics.” “I don’t, sir, but I’ll retrain myself and become a robot serviceman. I’ll see you in six months.” “That’s a good idea, son. Come back when you know something about robots, Horatio, and there will be a job waiting for you.” “Hi, Mr. Peters. Well, sir, here’s my certificate from the Consolidated Robot School. It says I can repair any kind of robot now on the market.” “This is very impressive. Let’s see, according to your file, you were in this personnel office last July. Since you were here the company has invested in a state of the art computer that can repair the robots that make our zits. We’re no lon ger hiring service people to take care of the robots.” “But surely, sir, you must need some one to program the computers.” “As a matter of fact we do. Have you any experience in this field?” “I don’t at the moment, but I know I can be retrained to become a computer expert. If I do well in school may I have a job with your company?” “Of course you can. You show the spir it this corporation is always looking for.” “Hello, Mr. Peters. Long time no see.” “As I live and breathe, it’s Horatio Al ger the Fourth. What have you been up to for the past two years?” “I’ve been going to advanced compu ter programming school, sir, I am now fluent in BASIC, PASCAL and FOR TRAN, and cna work with any software on the market. I assume the company is still looking for programmers?” “We were for a while, Horatio, then we subcontracted all our prop mine work to a software compam specializes in improving robot pn tion for zits. We no longer haveacora ol ] j u by If you pi this mo rised if it’ ter division of our own, except foras| section that devotes itself to collating! on the zit market and then mak nomic predictions on how thecomf should expand. “Do not worry, Mr. Peters, hi l rtment f is montl lore than onth the Univer irector f train myself to become an econoraisn p majori an emphasis on long-range zit planm “You’ll need a doctorate beforel hire you |on’t have (ave mon ti kets. Althou ‘Do not fear, sir. I will drive a 10ret ) un ckets car during the daytime and go toscto night. If becoming an economistii iid, the ] only way I can get a job, sobeit-l icatethes become one.” “You show gumption, boy. that sheepskin and you payroll.” (Three years later.) “Do my eyes deceive me? Is this ight or ni Vehide be oi# e y are little Horatio Alger the Fourth whoi ec j p erm races rest :served s] ig zones ( irs fount faddox s; When a to drop in here to see me aboutaj “The very same, and I havesomei to show you. Here, sir, from the Han Served s Business School, is my doctorate ini |Mce can Tech Economics. And hereismydodldiceand al thesis on the future of the zit mark | e ^^tec the 21 st century, as broken downWI' wants ^ tinents and countries throughout I non-Communist world. Now that 1^ retrained, may I have a positionwitli • “Thev ' company?” paces) p a “Horatio, please sit down. Since* othey ha' went off to get your economics def arremov we’ve moved the entire company’sopfl When ; tions to South Korea. We don’t do)! deowner thing here except distribute zits tod t; >nda$ dealers.” Aninve “I understand, sir, and I certi ' la ^ en ^ don’t blame you for going whereyotit make a better product for muclii cost.” > ^ 1 “What are you going to do ni r Horatio?” ; J “The same thing any ambitiousAnf ! | ican boy would do. I’m going to renl J myself to be a South Korean.” its, JKfr USPS 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editor Diana Sultenfuss Managing Editor Gary Barker Associate Editor Denise Richter City Editor Hope E. Paasch Assistant City Editor Beverly Hamilton Sports Editor John Wagner Entertainment Editor Colette Hutchings Assistant Entertainment Editor. ... 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