Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, March 5, 1986 Opinion ‘forgofti A good belt Preliminary results of the mandatory seat belt law look good. The first four months show a reduction in traffic fatalities and insurance premiums. But the determination of pro-belt groups such as the Texas Coalition for Safety Belts still needs to be di rected in other areas. State Sen. Ted Lyon, D-Rockwall, a spohsor of seat belt legis lation, says the period from September to December of 1985 shows a 14 percent decrease in the number of front-seat fatali ties over 1984. Lyon says the law also is responsible for the 5.1 percent re duction in average statewide auto insurance premiums by the State Board of Insurance — a $137 million annual saving to in surance buyers. Based on these early reports, the seat belt law could be con sidered a success, especially since most of the findings cover the grace period from Sept. 1 to Dec. 1 when motorists were not fined for driving beltless. If equal vigor were put into adopting an open container law, perhaps Texas also could reduce the number of alcohol-related automobile fatalities— 1,049 in 1984. If an open container law were pursued with the stamina of the seat belt law, Texas could end its drink-and-drive-just- buckle-up highway hypocrisy. If something as unpopular as a mandatory seat belt law can be so successful early on, imagine the support for something as socially acceptable as curtailing drinking and driving. The seat belt law protects drivers from themselves when they drink and drive, now we need an open container law to protect the potential victims as well. The Battalion Editorial Board STOCKBROKER By KIR! Assistan ||‘A funny thir iay to the offic ed, ’Jerry Levi utbureau chief ile Tuesday nig After the lig' ecame serious BMarch 7, 19i amic terrorists; [is 11 months rained to a wt ffiibing down Rt a rope mac ||lut, he said, forgotten host mon — a fact rant and thi fiven’t paid en iThis proble Bernment o )ot to discuss ll ,-3~0ev- < B‘The gover ^.ipuading ed the ho: p|Tss attentior ra said. “1 di< fen, and I do: PLevin said t ©I9S6 HOUSrofifwl United FetlureSyniicili | Grai Ass Texas: How it’s changed over the last 150 yeap ■VASHINC Gramm admi lobe a house 1 cuts, but pess Club on On March 2 , 1836 delegates to the Washington- on-the -Brazos convention unani mously adopted a declaration pro claiming Texas in dependent from Mexico. On March 2, 1986 Texans cele brated the 150th Glenn Murtha anniversary of the birth of the Republic and eventual state of Texas. Much has changed in the state over the past 150 years. Texas has the dis tinction of being one of the most cultu rally diverse states in the union. Much of this diversity has been achieved in the last two decades. How is Texas changing? In 1974 the U.S. Bureau of Census estimated that Texas had surpassed Pennsylvania to become the third most populous state in the nation, with 12 million people. The 1980 census counted 14 million people. A 1985 census estimate revealed a pop ulation of approximately 16.5 million Texans. If the present rate of growth continues, Texas could become the 2nd -most populous state by the 1990 census. Who are these people? The three predominant ethnic groups in Texas are Anglos, Mexican-Americans and blacks. The Anglo group, which in cludes whites, accounts for 70 percent of the Texas population. Immigrahts from Mexico have swelled the Mexican- American population to 21 percent of the total. Blacks account for 12 percent of the population and are heavily con centrated in urban areas. Where do they live? At the turn of the century 80 percent of Texans lived in rural areas. Today 80 percent of Texans live in urban areas. Houston and Dallas, neither of which existed during the birth of the Republic, are now among the 10 largest cities in the United States. Where do they come from? Texas seems to be overwhelmed by a new in flux of “Yankees”. But during the 1970s only three of the top 10 states providing new residents were located in the north. These 10 states were California, New York, Illinois, Ohio, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arkansas. The presence of northerners tends to be felt disproportionately to their numbers possibly because of their odd dialects, outspokenness and liberal ideas. What do they believe? The two states which provided the most new residents, California and New York, can be con sidered as two of the most politically lib eral states in the nation. Texas has tradi tionally exercised more conservative, Bible Belt values. These new residents are bringing new ideas, conflict and change. California and New York are diverse states but both lack the large, re ligiously-oriented conservative faction of Texas. Texas may maintain its large religious faction, but traditional reli gious cultural domination is ending with the arrival of new residents. With whom do they worship? South ern Baptists and Roman Catholics ac count for two-thirds of the Texas church-going population. Roman Cath olics have made tremendous numerical gains in Texas in recent years. The large influx of Mexicans and northern immi grants is prifnarily responsible for the increase. About 19 percent of Texans are Southern Baptist and 17 percent Roman Catholic. The Texas Jewish community is expanding rapidly. About 90,000 Jews reside in Texas with over half concentrated in Houston. Houston XI 1 u . fedia is resp large Moslem, Hi»- lcit reduc J also contain.' Buddhist and Sikh populations.Tenfeiname. also home to the irreligious. Theaware tional headquarters of American ists led by the outspoken Madalyn Vtoilet paper c ray O’Hair (an ex-Yankee) is locatedl front of Austin. H- ,lu '": magic words four years tl A great deal has changed in Tfijbe uttered tl since independence from Mexico i declared 1 50 years ago with muchofij change occurring in the past two! cades. The large influx of new reside! has added much to the richness; versity of our state. Let’s hope t continue to expand upon our diver! as we begin another 150 years. Glenn Murtha is a senior political § ence major and a columnist for Battalion. Don’t play cards with a man named Ron “Never eat at a place called ‘Mom’s, never play cards with a man called ‘Doc’ and never make love to women crazier than you are.” So goes an old Amer- i c a n adage on some of the eter nal verities. One of those verities is Richard Cohen about to be changed, though. I, for one, would never play cards with a man named Ron. Doc Ron has done it again. After fig uratively putting an arm around the shoulder of Ferdinand Marcos, dis patching his vice president to slobber a toast to the nonexistent Filipino democ racy, suggesting the opposition and the government were equally to blame for fraud and violence and then — tick, tick, how the clock doth tick — waiting until he and Marcos shared the same vi sion of the future, things turned out splendidly. When the president turned over his cards, there was Cory Aquino, mellow in yellow, smiling up at him. He had won again. In a recent issue of “Foreign Affairs,” Michael Mandelbaum writes about “The Luck of the President.” Mandelbaum counts the ways. Soviet leaders kept dy ing, making it hard — or harder — for America’s chief adversary to be crea tively adversarial. The president came into office campaigning against the SALT II treaty and then, lo and behold, realized that it was a good thing after all. It is a lucky thing to discover the uses of something you were once willing to throw out. In the Middle East, the president’s peace initiatives have been spectacular failures, but it hardly matters. The Is raelis and the Arabs make no war any way. The price of oil, once sky-high, fell during Reagan’s tenure and, more re cently, has plummeted. For Reagan, there is effect but no cause. He had nothing to do with it. Even the adminis tration’s recent attempt to cheat on the Israelis by flirting with the PLO created nothing like the fire-storm produced when Andrew Young attempted some thing similar. The Israelis are bitter, but they hqve decided to hold their tongue. The Philippines, though, shows Rea gan at his sheer luckiest. In the truest sense, he personally had no policy, un less it was the wish that Marcos some how pull through. Despite the kudos he is now receiving for a job well done, the fact is that for too long he did next to nothing. The bloodshed that accompa nied the elections might have been avoided had Reagan and the United States not suggested to Marcos over the years that he could, literally, get away with murder. He took the United States at its word. The Philippines crisis did produce some genuine heroes — if that is the right word. One of them is Sen. Richard Lugar (R.-Ind.), who had to tell the president the facts of life. Another, sort of, was the Pentagon, which warned that there would be no comfy California exile for Filipino army officers who caused bloodshed. But the truest heroes were the Filippinos themselves — the people, the Catholic church, its prelate and, of course, all those people for whom democracy is not a slogan, but a conviction. It is doubtful today that they would give our president the sort of 1 he ro’s welcome he got in Grenada. In the Reagan imagination, the foe is a wishy-washy figure, a kind of latter- day Ghandi, whose dreamy but mis guided efforts are always doomed to failure in the cruel world beyond Bev erly Hills. If you had to draw such a per son, she would look like Cory Aquino, a breeze of a figure who makes St. Joan seem like an apostle of realpolitik. Nev ertheless, she sits today in the presi dent’s chair, a repudiation of Reagan’s world view, an asterisk to the writings of Jeane Kirkpatrick. Reagan was wrong, Aquino was right, but he wins anyway. Unlike Marcos, the president of the United States is a realist. In the end, he did what he had to do, and Marcos went ( the way of loyalty to Taiwan andccj structive engagement for South Afrt I suppose others might have lasht themselves to the mast with their idd ogy and gone down with the ship.Wlif(l |%| the United States finally did move.fej | |C moved deftly, showing the world the term “great power” means. Ant bow from Uncle Sam was about; took. One thesis of the Mandelbaum artii is that Reagan’s luck, while formidaM does not fully account for his foreijjj policy success. His luck could be 1 fruit of wise policies or, at the least, "' 1 dicate (his) view of the world.” May! But in the Philippines, he initial played all the wrong cards, won any"f and now his critics and Marcos eat atu same place. It’s called “Mom’s.” Richard Cohen is a columnist for I Washington Post Writers Group. The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Michelle Powe, Editor Kay Mallett, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Jerry Oslin, City Editor Cathie Anderson, News Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news P. initv service to Texas AScMw per operated as a community service to Bryan-College Station. 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