Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, April 11, 1986 Opinion Buck passing The Board of Regents refused to grant an audience with Students Against Apartheid to discuss divestment of Texas A&M’s holdings in South Africa. This shows a sickening lack of regard for the effects of the University’s money on human life. Board Chairman David Eller, in a Jan. 14 letter to Chan cellor Arthur G. Hansen, said it’s not the board’s responsibilty to make moral decisions. Eller’s statement is itself a moral decision — money before morality, apathy over action. A&M has about $3 million invested in companies that have dealings with South Africa — a miniscule amount when com pared to other schools such as the University of Texas, which has $772.6 million invested. Board Executive Secretary Bill Pre- snal says the board has a responsibility to maximize its invest ments and that, although divestment of funds is within the board’s jurisdiction, divesting strictly on a moral basis would go against legislative policy. But a moral statement is exactly what A&M needs. We need to let South Africa know that we won’t allow our in vestments, no matter how small, to help support government- sponsored racism. We need to show the world that we don’t con done a government’s disregard for human rights. The board’s stance on divestment as moral statement sounds legitimate. It’s much easier to push the responsibility onto the back of the Texas Legislature than to deal with it here. But the University has made moral statements in the past. When the Gay Student Services sued for recognition, the Uni versity defended itself by saying the group would not be “consis tent with the philosophy and goals that have been developed for the creation and existence of Texas A&M University.” The same phrase could be tacked on to a statement about University investments in South Africa. Instead, the regents seem more concerned with how much money we can make on our investments. They’d rather leave moral decisions such as di vestment to the Legislature. It’s time for those in charge to take some responsibility for the University’s money. It’s time to stop passing the buck, be it to the Legislature or to South Africa. The Battalion Editorial Board Grach I Greek wi ulum in th< Languages ; sors in Fre one in clas present nu departmen | The dep graduate p [the additic j Chinese an “The en guages has flly in the says. “We enough ck more deni; Imodate. I There a : majors, wit Legalizing Compound 1080 poses threat to man, animals acto We are now begin ning the celebration of our state’s 150th birthday. If a large number of citizens Chris P. Carter Guest Columnist don’t act now, it may also be the begin ning of the end of a clean, healthy envi ronment in Texas. this poison is its secondary poisoning ef fects. Tissue of the victims is also poi sonous to scavenger animals feeding on the carcasses. People who have handled these carcasses or their vomit also have been poisoned. There is no known anti dote. Seat belt laws, like cartoons, are a joke It is Saturday morning all across America — car toon time for a trillion or so kids. At the moment, they are watching the “Mr. T” show, which is sort of a cartoon of a car toon, but never mind. There’s the Richard Cohen famous Mr. T in his equally famous van and — hold it a second, kids — what’s that across his chest? It’s a sash. It’s a bandolier. No, it’s a seat belt! The federal government has seen to that. Under a compromise announced by Department of Transportation Sec retary Elizabeth Dole, auto manufactur ers will not be required to install air bags if, by 1990, two-thirds of the U.S. pop ulation is covered by mandatory seat- belt laws. One by one, the states have compliantly fallen into line. Just this month Maryland became the 23rd state to sign up for the Liddy Dole Good Sh- nook award, passing a mandatory seat- belt law just as Dole and the auto indus try want. In 1972, President Nixon, by exec utive order, banned the use of the highly dangerous poison Compound 1080 (sodium monofluoroacetate) on federal lands and in all predator-control programs. However, bowing to political pressure, the Reagan administration re voked the executive order and re-regis tered the deadly poison for use in indi vidual states. The Texas Department of Agriculture now wants to reinstate this predator-control poison in the form of toxic collars placed on goats and sheep. This is nothing short of insanity. If this is allowed to happen, it will soon be legal to defile our Texas soil, our ani mals and ourselves with one of the most deadly and harmful of all poisons imag inable — and all in the name of a few sheep and goat raisers who have other alternatives. Prior to the 1972 ban, black bears, bobcats, raccoons, golden eagles and do mestic dogs and cats were found to be poisoned by the compound. Agents of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Ani mal Damage Control Program were dis couraged from reporting the deaths be cause of the political controversy over the issue. children love to touch and putw thing into their mouths. Is it so fetched to see the potential for kids ting hold of this lethal substance? There are many alternatives to tect our goats and sheep from pis tors. The use of guard dogs, not taste-deterrent baits such as litiflEastwood chloride, livestock pens at nigli grazing herds away from the range have proven to be methods ^ SI j eioS | are highly effective in controllingp ators and do not cause a threattoi g r0 wth tl target specie included. our pets andci SAN A ntonio |has sent a [Eastwood good, bad nicipal go Eastwo Carmel, ( and Cisnc gram in 1 of the Nai In th< ram, Cis rences “Welcc gly worl Cisneros which wa Yes, a seat belt. And right ahead of Mr. T’s van (or maybe it’s behind; I’m not really paying attention) is the bad guys’ car. They are mean-looking with appropriately mean, unshaven, faces. They snarl. They growl. But lo! What is that across their snarly and growly chests. Yes! Once again, it’s a seat belt. Oh, golly gee kids, do you get the les son? Do you understand what, almost subliminally and very cleverly, you are being told? Buckle up. At least that’s what it seems at first blush. And a good lesson it is, too. It could save your life and protect your face from going through the mean windshield. But wait, kids. Maybe you also are being told that, perish the thought, if you go through the windshield, it is, as we adults say, your own damned fault. You should have buckled up. Dole’s compromise has put the states in a real quandry. Seat belts sometimes save lives; in a head-on collision, air bags almost always do. By choosing the for mer, the states all but rule out the latter. But worse than that, the Dole rule re vives the pernicious notion that we are always the captain of our own ship. This was the advertising dogma of the auto industry in its irresponsible pre-Nader era: Safe driving was YOUR responsibi lity and any accident was either your — or the other guy’s — fault. As a veterinarian, my husband knows what Compound 1080 can do to an ani mal. It is odorless and tasteless and looks like powdered sugar. So lethal is this poison that a single teaspoon can kill 100 adult tnen. Twenty-five percent of 1/500 ounce is enough to kill a 35- pound child. The time required to kill an animal or person can run two to 12 hours, while the victim experiences vio lent vomiting, convulsions and severe internal pain. One of the most dreaded features of , Human beings have lost their lives to Compound 1080 as well. If we allow this horrendous poison in Texas, the deaths will start all over again. Our beloved pets, even our children — especially those who live in the country — won’t be safe from accidental exposure to this deadly compound. My husband and I live in the country. We do not let our dogs run free, but we do wander the countryside with them running alongside us, enjoying their romp. Like all dogs, they sniff around and get into any and every type of gar bage in the fields they can find. Can you imagine the tragedy that would ensue if they were to get hold of any of this poison? Can you picture this cataclysmic conclusion to a pleasant walk in the country? Even though my husband is a veterinarian, there would be nothing he could do to save them. This type of scene would be happening all over Texas if we allow the reinstate ment of Compound 1080. And what about our children? Young Why should we contaminat Texa** land and treaten our even putting our own lives injflj for the sake of a few who don’t bother looking into safer ata methods? It is imperative that state officii! alize a large number of Texast do not want this poison allowedisl state. During the last 150 years,inlf ants of Texas have had to endurel of adversity, pain and suffering enormous price has been paid I high quality of life that weenjoytodl Texas. For this reason, we cannot small minority to introduce a lethal son into our precious environment One hundred fifty years of pro| has yielded viable alternatives to control of predators of sheep andgt Let's not turn back thehandsofti® resorting to barbarian techniqueso uncivilized past. Chris P. Carter is a secretary I Brazos County Courthouse. No mention was made of poorly made cars, bad tires, roads designed by the mayor’s nephew or the fact, uncon tested since time immemorial, that acci dents will happen. People will be care less or drunk or silly or, when it comes to men, distracted by some young thing walking on the side of the road. What do you mean by that you ask? What’s so bad about teaching kids to buckle up? The answer, of course, is nothing. It is the smart thing to do. But we all know that no matter how clever the message, there are many kids and adults as well who will not buckle up. They will go flying through the mean windshield. But if their cars had air bags, they would not. Air bags would cushion them from hitting the dashboard. It would work in those accidents over 35 miles per hour where seat belts sometimes do not — where, in fact, they seem to cause injuries of their own such as snapped spinal cords. But the auto companies by and large oppose installing air bags. They could add $200 more to the price of the car, although Ford charges $815 for them now. If, though, you are rich enough to afford a Mercedes, you get an air bag as standard equipment. One of the reasons that the rich get richer is that they survive. Now we are creeping back to that era. Of course people are responsible for their own welfare, but so too, are the auto manufacturers and a government that (barely) regulates the industry. Seat belts are now being touted as some sort of panacea against injury. They are no such thing. General Motors offers $10,000 to the heirs of anyone killed while wearing a seat belt in one of their cars, suggesting that such a possibility is remote. But by the first of the year, CM had paid out $2.4 million to the heirs of 240 former CM owners or passengers. Mail Call Thanks to all So now it’s Saturday morning again. The kids are watching cartoon shows on television and there’s tough Mr. T wear ing his seat belt. Adults watching have to smile. They know that in real life nei ther Mr. T, nor the bad guys nor lots of other people, would ever wear a belt. The cartoon is like the Dole rule itself. It’s ajoke. Richard Cohen is a columnist for the Washington Post Writers Group. EDITOR:. Sunday night a fire destroyed 13 Sausalito apartments. We were some of the luckier ones. Our apartment was destroyed, but we managed to save many of our belongings thanks to the help of some good Ags. When we arrived, the apartment already was aflame. Several people helped us pull our belongings out of the smoke-filled house. But it didn’t stop here. The day after, several Ags from other apartments offered trucks and helped haul our things to our new place. We would like to thank the Red Cross, Jamespoint Properties and especially our many friends who stood by our side and helped us throughout the ordeal. Only in a community such as this could everyone pull together like we did. Thanks to everyone involved. Jeff Walton Dave Cudlipp Wade Welkener Peyton Lumpkin Original split EDITOR: I would like to address this letter to Craig Bain and all those who think they can do a better job than the journalists and photojournalists working for The Battalion. I don’t recall any of his stories or photos being published recently. When the “Going Bananas” photo was taken it was for a class, but it showed some human interest and got published. Again I ask, “Where’s his?” I would like to commend The Battalion for very excellent and creative work. The banana split is a one-of-a-kind original — sorry. Michael “Going Bananas” Adams Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. 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