Victim’s rage inspires own ‘crimestoppers’ I returned home late one night during the summer after seeing a concert in Houston. I was tired and my head was still ringing with Neil Young songs, but I got the distinct feeling something was wrong as soon as I entered my apart ment. The music buzzing in my head stop ped when I noticed that my kitchen win dow was unlatched. Rage soon took over when I observed that my camera bag and its expensive contents where not sitting on the shelf where they should have been. done so that very afternoon, as a matter of fact, and taken advantage of the situa tion by unlocking the window they later used to break in. This is not the sort of thing that nice folks do. It is the sort of thing one might expect from someone with the morals and brainpower of a sewer rat. My original plan was to form a small posse, find the worthless bums, and string ’em up in the nearest oak. Fortun ately, I saw the wisdom of leaving such matters to the law and set about thinking of ways to protect myself from future cannisters are fairly cheap, and some even come with a handy leather holster. I suggest buying several and placing them in strategic spots throughout the house, so one will always be within reach. Small children are apt to find one and squirt themselves, but they learn very quickly and will not do it more than once. teach discipline and are a greatm stay in shape. Unfortunately, fancy work is no match for a well-ai magnum. A panicked search of my apartment revealed that my guitar, violin and stereo (my only other possessions with any se rious rip-off appeal) were undisturbed, but I wasn’t feeling lucky. My state of mind slipped another scroungers. For the benefit of readers who, like the canine detective on television, want to “take a bite out of crime,” here are a few ideal crimestoppers: Animals—especially large bloodthirs ty ones. Dogs are a popular choice, but security buffs with a little imagination can sometimes come up with something truly original. For example, I have heard of one business that used an ostrich to protect its inventory of junked cars. A jungle anaconda would make a formidi- ble watchman; they can swallow a small Mechanical security devices from the old-fashioned chain toela nic systems that automatically lights on and phone the police.The certainly do the job, but can beexp® I here is also the frightening of accidentally triggering the waking the entire neighborhood up lock or alarm can make a homebut| proof, they just make it moreofai lange. this evil deed and exactly how how they had done it. notch from rage to hatred when, in a moment of borderline psychic inspira tion, I realized who was responsible for Naturally, I would hesitate to call the persons in question friends, but they were acquaintances who had abused my hospitality a number of times. They had Mace. Guns are messy at best, and at times can be downright dangerous; parti cularly when the prowler has a chance to return fire. Mace may not be as efficient as a good handgun, but it will perform well under most circumstances. There is also a certain grim satisf action in seeing a thief writhe around in serious pain. Mace deer whole, so the average catburglar would be no problem at all. Anacondas should be used only by people who have a serious crime problem, however, since a full-grown specimen needs to eat at least one thief a week to stay well-fed and happy. My apartment posed no challJ ^ all, which probably did not bothei if individuals who ripped it off. Foi reason, 1 was especially pleased wl ** was told that my hunch aboutwhohi g turned out to be correct. Thelastlfi one was in jail and another was in Ai Martial Arts are difficult to master, but they work well and tend to catch ban dits by surprise. They are also reputed to Alaska? According to the who handled the case, the suspea fishing. Which comes as no surprii me. Those klondike lunkers are posed to really be bit in’ this time of President Reqgm, aland by reports oThurgjeriri America, re-emfines his food assistance ktic by Melissa Ac Battalion Kepor In recent magazi moring the '‘best’ 1 itors, Senator an ggie Kent Capertoi it three times. In the past thre aperton, I)—Bryan anted as an outstanc The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Hope E. Paasch Managing Editor Elaine Engstrom City Editor Beverly Hamilton Assistant City Editor Kelley Smith Sports Editor John Lopez Assistant Sports Editor Joe Tindel Entertainment Editor .... 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Columns and guest editorials also are welcome, and are not subject to the same length constraints as letters. Address all inquiries and correspondence to: Editor, The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M Uni versity, College Sjtadon, TX 77843, or phone (409) 845- 2611. United Press International is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. Paraquat: high-priced showmanship ir by several Texa ■exas Monthly, Ibserver and Te> liagamies commei ■in for his work dm Igislative session. 1 Texas Monthl ■aperton as a serial Jis intelligence as . lan a weapon: dot Jne down, doesn’ pemies." In Texas Busim aperton was desc bg to put in extra |is homework— a am, io light and And, The Tex jven said Capertoi [otemial lieutenan Regardless of Ijnes particuliar wt agree on one thin m is rising in the w Butin aninterviei by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer WASHINGTON — President Reagan’s decision to enlist the controver sial herbicide paraquat in his battle against marijuana may achieve the admi nistration’s goal of encouraging Latin American countries to do the same. Earnest concern about pot, however, is insufficient reason to begin a domestic spraying program. High-priced show manship might be a suitable description for Washington’s most controversial anti drug effort since Congress briefly sus pended overseas use of the U.S.-made chemical in 1979. To date, only national forest land in Georgia and Kentucky has undergone spraying but federal of ficials contend as many as 40 states could be involved. White House drug abuse policy offi cials, led by former University of Missis sippi drug researcher Carlton Turner, openly admit their targets are more poli tical than anything else. Since 1981, when Congress lifted its ban on subsidies for paraquat export, the U.S. has had more trouble pushing the herbicide on such prominent pot expor ters as Colombia and Peru than it did on Mexico during the ’70s. By instituting a domestic program, said Drug Abuse Policy Office spokes man Patrick McKelvey, “We’re trying- ... to show that we’re not being hypocri tical.” McKelvey insists that paraquat pre sents no health hazard to residents living near targeted areas. Of the contaminated pot which reachs the marketplace, McKelvey says that its users face only a limited health risk. He cites a study, conducted by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, which found that as much as 99.8 percent of tested paraquat samples decomposed during combustion. But opposition from governors, mem bers of Congress and private health and environmental groups shows that the consensus on paraquat’s benignancy ex ist principally as a result of studies done by the federal government itself. Last month, in the American Journal of Public Health, the CDC’s Philip J. Landrigan wrote that as many as 300 U.S. marijuana smokers may have inhaled harmful doses (500 milligrams) of para quat annually from 1975 to 1979. Perhaps more importantly, Land rigan added that CDC researchers had not considered the potential pulmonary damages from the inhalation of 4,4’- dipyridyl, a toxic chemical produced by the combustion of paraquat and found in much larger residual quantities. Though U.S. farmers are said to spray up to 11 million acres of crops with para quat annually, a June 1983 Science Di gest article said that as many as 500 per sons may have died as a result of para quat’s agricultural uses. In that light, the deleterious effects of spraying near national recreational areas and water supplies seem less dismissable. Meanwhile, the administrali effort to limit paraquat applicationsti McKelvey’s words, “areas that arehai get to,” only exposes its economic in ciency. Even those who support marijn eradication would look skeptically program that has as targets patches 13 plants each, as was the caseinGeoi recently. Such unimpressive statistics seem sufficient to prod the White Ho to seek exonomies of scale, at least. Yet is the administration prepare spray the renowned marijuana farms California, a mecca for environmen ists? Given state and local officialdoi hostile response to date, will the House wish to risk alienating moresti as November 1984 draws near? If not, then the latest paraquat sc may be short-lived. But the president have gone to much expense and so risk to bluff a few Latin nations andmi more skeptical Americans. Insurance not for paying claims by Art Buchwald There has been a rash of automobile insurance cancellations lately by the ma jor companies, and everyone is very ner vous about it. The other day my wife was notified that her auto insurance policy was being canceled. The notification gave no reason for the cancellation, and since my wife had not been in an accident nor had ever made a claim, she was perplexed. She asked me to get to the root of it, and I took the next plane to visit our insurance company. The company is housed in a 56-story aluminum and tinted-glass skyscraper on a 30-acre shopping plaza overlooking most of the state of Connecticut. I arrived on the 35th floor where one made inquiries concerning canceled in surance policies. After browsing through the company literature, which told how insurance was making America great, I was ushered into the office of Clyde Featherstone. I gave Mr. Featherstone the cancella tion notice, and he clucked once or twice and then disappeared. He returned in a few moments with the folder. “What did my wife do wrong?” I de manded. “Your wife didn’t do anything wrong. Her records are all up to snuff.” “Then why did you cancel her insur ance?” “Because of Trembling and Tremb ling, her insurance agents.” “Trembling and Trembling?” I said. “Yes,” said Featherstone, going through the folder. “They’ve been very naughty boys, very naughty indeed.” • “Did they steal any money?” I asked. “Worse!” They’ve written too many policies this year that people have made claims on. We’ve had to pay out $ 1,897 to Trembling and Trembling clients in the last 12 months.” “But what’s that got to do with my wife’s insurance policy? She didn’t get any of the money.” “Ah, but since you are with Trembling and Trembling, you are now considered a bad resk. Their record is your record.” “That’s nonsense. I hardly know Trembling and Trembling,” I protested. “I wouldn’t recognize them iff saw them on the street. This is guilt by association.” Featherstone smiled. “You came to us through Trembling and Trembling, and you will leave with Trembling and Trembling. This company will not put up with people who make insurance claims against it.” “But that’s what vou’re here for,” I said. “To pay people off when something happens.” “That’s a foul lie,” said Featherstone, losing his smile. “We’re here to build buildings and real-estate developments, and finance ships and airplanes and ball parks. If we keep paying out claims, where would we get the money to con struct this 56-story building, with its beautiful shopping plaza and under ground computer center? “Do you realize,” said Featherstone, “that every dollar we pay out in a claim is a dollar we have to take away from our advertising budget, which tells the public what wonderful insurance people we are?” Slouch by Jim Eai & 3702 S. BRYAN “I appreciate all that,” I said, “but sure ly you have to pay some claims in order to stay in the insurance business.” “That’s what Trembling and Tremb ling thought,” Featherstone said as he tore up my wife’s folder. J |°t FREE I thanked Featherstone for his kind ness and understanding. He got up to shake my hand. “If you’re staying in town for dinner, we have a great restaurant on the roof garden which is bringing us 15 percent profit a year.” “Would you turn down volume! You’ve kill e '■ jw flo\ver!“ CO q^ I