wars The beauty is that everyone's an authority By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate The beauty of the Star Wars defense system is that every one can discuss it with authority, because no one, including the people in charge, have any idea of what it is. I realized this when I attended one of those Washington cocktail parties where the power elite gather to exchange gos sip and information that only decision makers are privy to. “Is it true,” I asked a source, who has one of the largest offices in the Pentagon, “that Star Wars will become a bar gaining chip in the Soviet-American arms talks?” “Nuts,” he said defiantly. “If we ever decide what it is, we will never give it up.” “Isn’t it easier to give something up in arms talks that we don’t have, than something that we do?" “Not if they have it, and we don’t.” “Do the Soviets have a Star Wars defense?” “They must have or they wouldn’t want us to give up ours.” “Maybe they don’t have it, but hope we’ll go ahead with it anyway,” I suggested. “Did it ever occur to you that the rea son the Soviets are making such a big thing of it is because they want us to spend all our money to develop it, so we won’t have any left to make the weapons they don’t want us to build?” “Of course, it’s occurred to us,” he said. “But our answer to them is there’s no price you can put on national security. Once we figure it out, all our other weapons will be obsolete.” “How can you say that when you have no idea what it is?” I asked. “We may not have any idea what it is, but we do know what we want it to do —and that is blow up every Soviet mis sile before it hits its target.” LETTERS: New video game proposed EDITOR: I propose a new video game: Indiana Jones Goes to the Library. It would por tray the saga of one who sets out on the long perilous journey between Medical The Battalion (ISPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Associalion Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Brigid Brockman, Editor Shelley Hoekstra, Managing Editor Ed Cassavoy, City Editor Kellie Dworaczyk, News Editor Michelle Powe, Editorial Page Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editors Kari Fluegel, Rhonda Snider Assistant News Editors Tammy Bell, Cami Brown, John Hallett Assistant Sports Editor Charean Williams staff Writers Cathie Anderson Brandon Berry, Dainah Bullard Tony Cornett, Michael Crawford Kirsten Dietz, Patti Flint Patrice Koranek, Trent Leopold Karla Martin, Sarah Oates Tricia Parker, Lynn Rae Povec Columnists Kevin Inda, Loren Steffy Photo Editor Katherine Hurt Editorial Policy I he Battalion is ;i non-profit, self-supporting newspaper operatec is a community service to I ex as A&XI and B r van-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinioni )f Texas AUcM administrators, faculty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for student! n reporting, editing and photography classes within the Depart nent of Communications. Letters Policy Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length, 'flu 'ditorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and lengtl hit will make every effort to maintain the author's intent. Each let er must be signed and must include the address and telephone lumber of the writer. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas AArM regular semesters, except for holiday and examination jeriods. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester. $33.25 pe u lnx)! year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates furnished oi ~equest. Our address: The Battalion. 216 Reed McDonald Building Texas AAM University. College Station. TX 77343. Editorial staf ihone number: (409) 845-2630. Advertising: (409) 845-2611. Second class postage paid at College Station. TX 77843. POSTMAS'J ER: Send address changes to 'The Battalion. Texax \ScM University. College Station. Texas 77843 Sciences and the Vet School Library. To achieve his objective, Jones must either drive or walk. Walking gives a higher score but he must: • negotiate a contruction zone, with gi ant machines rushing around blindly, steep drops of about three or four feet, metal lattice and wire entanglements and broken boards with nails sticking up, or • skirt or climb a giant dirt mound, an avalanche waiting for a person to drop on; • negotiate a parking lot between swampy lawns, where cars move ran domly and parked cars pounce (some say this’is the hardest who do it daily); • find the right door in without getting stopped by construction fences, locked doors or falling into a Bottomless Pitfall; and • negotiate an interminable windowless maze of passages and detours. For extra points, it can be round trip, with Jones at least one way carying a stack of very expensive books and irre- placable papers which will be ruined if dropped or blown away in the Texas wind if not clenched tightly. If Jones drives, he must negotiate: • the winding litui (plural of lituus) of driveways going the wrong way to go the right way, with cross traffic that doesn’t stop or yield, and pedestrians who think the laws of right of way surmount the laws of momentum of moving vehicles; • Finding the right parking lot and then finding a parking space amid randomly moving cars that don’t stop, and parked cars that leap out; • crossing the lot if parking is possible, as in above; • Finding the right door as above, and; • negotiating the maze from another direction. Brooks H. Rohde, Ph.D Research Associate benches throughout our campus so un comfortable? Why are they made of concrete, with out back support, too big and long, without the cover of neighboring trees? Why are the benches so ill arranged? More generally, why are the plazas throughout our campus hardly ever used? What can be done to create a friendly atmosphere? Ben Aguirre College Station Citizens have right to protect themselves or not Guilty guilty? On Dec. 22, four teen-agers re- quested money from a man in a subway train in Lower Manhattan. What each youth got, rather than money, was a bullet from a .38 revolver. The would-be victim fled, manhunt began. The four were seriously 1 f convicted, Goetz faces a substan prison sentence - and for what?Th politicians we proudly call leaders, now making it a crime to protect oi own life. If the police can’t provide enoy protection to the people, what are supposed to do? Give in to all thecii and criminals? I don’t think so. Citij ;ssi the group By MAR Rc A "straight" i ervices? Imposs Not(|iiite. Lvnn Scanna iiigv major, is a arollidal unive Although she emester, Scann and a massive “That’s a tall order. Will Star Wars be able to do that?” “We may never know, but neither will they. Once we in stall it in the sky no one will have the slightest idea if it can do the job. But it will keep the other side guessing. And that’s the best deterrent there is.” A man who has one of the largest offices in the White House joined our group. “The president wants Star Wars be cause he believes once we develop it we will no longer have to depend on mutal terror to avoid nuclear war.” “But the president says he dosen’t know what Star Wars is either,” I pointed out. “He’s not a scientist and dosen’t claim to be one. But he believes in it more that anything he has ever advocated. Be sides, since he’s proposed it he has to go ahead with it, or he would be sending another wrong message to the Soviets.” An assistant secretary, who has one of the largest offices in the State Department, said, “even if Star Wars doesn’t pan out the way we envision, it will still be worth the cost just to show our NATO allies that we have no intention of leaving them in the lurch. If nothing else, it will strengthen the West’s commitment to repelling the Soviet military threat.” “Then our allies are for it?” “They are as long as it doesn’t cost them any money.” A labor secretary said, “When you’re talking about Star Wars, you’re talking about the hundreds of thousands of jobs it will provide for every defense contractor in the nation.” “I take it then,” I said, “that everyone in the government is sold on it?” “They beter be if they want to kee^ their jobs in this ad ministration.” “But how much will it really cost?" The Pentagon man tittered, “When it comes to funding Star Wars, the sky’s the limit.” wounded, and one seems to be paralyzed for life from the waist down. Three of the four teen-agefs had police records, and po lice found three long, sharpened screwdrivers on them when they were taken to the hospital. New York Mayor Ed Koch, a stern law-and-order advocate, quickly con demned the shooting and declared that “Vigilantism will not be tolerated in this city.” Governor Mario Cuomo also de nounced those who cheered the “Lone Ranger” and lectured that impatience with justice is “dangerous and ...wrong.” Even though many policeman felt good about the man plugging the punks, they also knew that once he had struck, and won praise, hundreds of other lone operators might be inspired. Large numbers of New Yorkers, fed up with encountering bullying punks on the street or subway, phone in to declare their support for the unknown loner. Eventually, Bernhard Hugo Goetz, 37, a self-employed electronics expert from Manhattan, turned himself over to police in New Hampshire. Goetz, a victim of several muggings, was charged with four counts of at tempted murder and one count of crim inal possession of a dangerous weapon. kill or catch as many criminals as the lice do. Individuals have the ri| protect themselves. , Every year, the U.S. Governmt . 1 [ < | ) 1 I £"J 1 1/< ( , | | spends much more money on iorei M me lie was i: defense than on domestic defeii i the group when, in fact, more people havebei lamed about ( killed in violent acts in the U.S. than Scannapieco acts of war. How do we expect ourcoii lieni ' HM try to be safe from other countryswin | the government can’t even protecttln q S ;m‘that it own citizens from domestic acts of u |t g () i n g to lence? tith this type <>l 1 he problem stems from a numben 11 * C() things, but the main problem is thattl Ie ^’ ^ tanua P 1 a ws ar e too lax. I f c r i m i na 1 s face "^'Tjjneir tougher consequences for committii j^y (me e | se j () i r crimes, they might not resort to crime I believe in wha a career. “It doesn’t r The Goetz incident may deter othe * rs() i> s sexual criminals from further crimes, buto fJ rson ‘! 1 "! , . , . . • • , , able to the col the other hand, it may give cnmmalstli t re allv should comfort to commit f urther crimes. Ifi lt iice." is convicted to the fullest extent oftk Scannapieco law, other citizens in Goetz’s shoes mi wt is one oi feel more imtimidated by the authoriti * lln f! s stra b'' 1 than the criminals. With this in the criminals will feel safer about coAJ^ milting crimes. - pajority suppi People shouldn’t become vigilanti and set out to rid the world of crime, they do have the right to protect thi selves when the need occurs. The only thing Goetz is guilty of, not Fighting back sooner. Kevin hula is a senior journalism majot and a weekly columnist lor The Bam ion. There is more to your food than meets the eye Univ-'rs Despite (ft exually oik'i dren, presebo inue to ch<>« traditional pa itudy indiede In a stulv [he relation^ creativity a Ml materials, di Rogers fo(w So yon think all those crunchy bits in pea nut butter are pea nuts? And you think that all those little can Patrice Koranek f iieces in your orange juice are the pulp rom oranges? Think again. rom oram One of the most enlightening classes I have taken in college was VPH 404 - Food Toxicology and Safety. We learned that the First federal food laws, the Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection act, passed in 1906, were not strictly enforced because gov ernment agencies didn’t have the power to inspect ractories or restaurants. In t938 the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act was passed giving inspec tors the power to shut down establish ments that were unclean. The 1938 law made it harder for processors to cheat on the ingredients in its products. Through the years many more laws and amendments to the laws have been passed to ensure food sanitation. After all of that you would think that the food you buy is free from Filth and foreign substances. Well, think again. The professor in VPH 404 uses trans parencies. The last transparency he put up was headed “1972 Filth Guidelines. According to the guidelines every three and a half ounces of peanut butter have two rodent hairs and 50 inseti fragments. And that is the allowable amount. So much for peanuts being the crunch in your sandwich. Wait, don’t think changing the k of sandwich you eat w ill help. Wheat can have one rodent pellet in every pim T hat means the bread you eat is yukky too. Fruit juice, that delectable beverage you drink to wash down the peanut but ter and jelly sandwich or use to quencli your thirst after a long walk from /n Rollie to Zachry can have up to 10 eggs in every eight and a half ounces. Chocolate lovers beware. Accordin] to the guidelines chocolate can have 151 insect fragments per eight ounces. And all this time you thought chocolate was only fattening. Now that you’ve read this and de cided to drastically change your dietary habits, stop. The Food and Drug Ad ministration has tested all of these prod ucts and many more and have found that it is perf ectly safe to eat them. So go on, enjoy your next dinner. Patrice Koranek is a senior journalism major and is a staff writer for The Bat talion. New Year’s Resolution f-XS'A }’< TMtWt- J WILL BUV ALL SPARE PARIS AND COFFEE MAKERS AT THE hardware store. Campus lacks nice atmosphere EDITOR: I would like to be told: why are the .1 WILL NOT DOZE OFF IN A CABlNEf ...I WILL NOT SAY, "THERE YOU GO AGAIN” WHEN REAGAN RAISES TOES. O ...I WILL LEAVE MY AGE, NAME, AND SIGNATURE THE WAY THEY ARE. ...NO MORE TW1NKIES UNTIL 1988. WILL NEVER GRCWEL IN PUBLIC FOR A JOB FOR MORE THAN TWO MONTHS. I WILL NOT SALIVATE WHEN I HEAR THE YEAR 1988>. patterns m !)« play center- tm A