F Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, May 2, 1986 The buck revisited The Texas A&M Board of Regents’ feeble attempt to pass the divestment buck has been passed right back. The regents refused to meet with Students Against Apart heid to discuss the University’s holdings in companies that do business with South Africa, claiming that the board doesn’t make investments based on moral decisions. The regents claim such decisions are up to the Texas Legislature. “That’s a ridiculous argument,” says Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, chairwoman of the Committee on Higher Education. “I would certainly hope they’d have some moral sense of integrity in their investments.” Delco pointed out that governing bodies of institutions should be conscious of their investments’ implications. Board Secretary Bill Presenel says the board has a responsi bility to maximize its investments. But if done without moral cosideration, the University could invest in prostitution rings, pornography and drug trafficking — all of which could be profitable investments. The regents’ last-ditch effort to skirt the divestment issue has failed. The Legislature is not going to answer for the board’s attempt to shirk its responsibility. Texas A&M has almost $3 million invested in companies that deal with the racist government in South Africa. The board seems more concerned with monetary returns on the University’s investments than with the fact that those invest ments support • an administration that violates basic human rights. The buck that the regents tried to pass to the Legislature has wound up back in their laps. It’s time for the board to assume the responsibility for their “immoral” monetary decisions. The Battalion Editorial Board Ford’s ethical antics overshadow Deaver’s It is early morn ing and the Secret Service detail for former presidents is assembling in an undisclosed Wash- ington location. The supervisor steps forward, clipboard in hand, and calls out some names: “You agents will be traveling with former President Gerald Ford. You will go to Vail, Aspen, Palm Beach, Palm Springs and Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where Mr. Ford will address the annual convention of periodontists and play in their golf tournament. First-class accommodation all the way, as usual.” Then the supervisor looks at his clip board and calls out three more names: “You three will be traveling with former President Carter. You will go by Trail- ways bus from Plains, Ga., to the South Bronx. There, Mr. Carter Will help re habilitate some slum housing and make a speech to a group of orphans. As usual, some of you will sleep on the floor in the slum housing while others will be housed at an Eight Days Motel in Hoboken, N.J. Any questions?” Yes. Did anything like this ever hap pen? Answer: Not that I know. But given the way Ford and Carter have conducted themselves since leaving of fice, I can not be far off. Aside from writing books and making an occasional speech, Carter —the liberal — has con ducted his retirement conservatively. Like most of his predecessors, he has shunned commercialization of the presi dency. Not so, Ford. The longtime legis lative conservative has virtually fran chised the Oval Office. In retirement, he has become a multimillionaire. 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 newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Brvan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, faculty oi the Board of Regents. f he Battalion a/so serves as a laboratory new spaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes w ithin the Department of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during 'Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are SI6. 75 per semester. $33.25 per school year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion. 216 Reed McDonald Building. Texas A&M University. College Station. TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POS'I MASTER: Send address changes to The Battal ion. 216 Reed McDonald. Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843. When it comes to money, Ford’s gov ernment career was mere prelude to what followed. The man, whose various government pensions and allowances earn him $417,000 a year, nevertheless makes speeches, works as a consultant and will write a letter to an official (such as Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole) on behalf of a firm (such as Flying Tiger Line) that paid him a fee ($100,000) to consult on momentous is sues like U.S. landing rights and why a competitor (Nippon Cargo Airlines) should not get them. He may even do bar mitzvahs. He does do corporate boards. He sits on several for fees as high as $30,000 a year. He earns consulting fees of as much as $100,000 a year. He is available as a speaker, but his fee can be a rather steep $20,000. For firms like American Express he is both a consultant and a member of the board (Do you know me? I used to be president). Ford’s spokesmen point out that the former president also raises vast amounts of money for charities (true) and that his flourishing business career is yet another expression of his conser vative ethic. The man believes in busi ness, free enterprise and all of that. His defenders say he is only practicing what he always believed. His retirement is vindication of his politics. Maybe. But there is also no question that Ford is selling the presidency and that until he did it, no one even at tempted such a thing. In fact, the mod ern ethic for the presidential retirement probably was set by Harry S. Truman, no man of independent means. In his memoirs, he wrote that he rejected all commercial offers after leaving the White House: “I could never lend my self to any transaction, however respect able, that would commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the presidency.” Truman seems hopelessly quaint now. All Ford does is “commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the presidency,” and he does it to a fair amount of boardroom applause and precious little opprobrium. He is the darling of the executive suite, the den izen of the ninth hole, of first-class plane trips and exclusive airport lounges — the presidential version of Joe Louis who ended his days a greeter for Las Vegas hotels. With Ford blazing the way, it’s almost silly to raise an objection to Michael Deaver who was, after all, a mere presi dential assistant. The same goes with all the other former White House aides who, little by little, sell what the public once gave them. What they all need to do is assemble in my imaginary Secret Service squad room and see the contrast between Jerry Ford and Jimmy Carter. It’s the difference between right and wrong. Richard Cohen is a columnist for the Washington Post Writers Group. Richard Cohen MAR6UU2S ©W86 Mcufirotf wer United Fern lure Syndicate ;itipg two f , endorsen ■xatic gr jrdw Briso ; looking ■t Bill Cl ■governc ■ final c ; primary el talked to He Statioi Hkillas bi M gradual' Hcratic c£ Hior. He .pei 1 exas While mos ^■ilace be H. Don red io a Ui wing Whit •cent of th pn(l with 1 n a receni ■ by The Soviet nuke not chance accident a lesson for taunting failure scoe came it of the v<> Iwitli 50 p< dis recent £ ior >ements H;rou ps j,BUch as i Rornmit l< ors and a S The accident at the Chernobyl nu clear power plant in the Soviet Union clearly is the worst nuclear disaster in history. It .is not just a na tional crisis; it is an international cri sis. Clouds of ra dioactive fallout The Soviet Union has the fastest growing nuclear power industry in the world. Yet it appears that nuclear safety may not be the top priority in the build ing of Soviet nuclear reactors. The Chernobyl plant apparently doesn’t have a steel-reinforced concrete con tainment structure. Michelle Powe can’t be stopped by border patrols. The Soviets further endangered the people of other nations by not immedi ately announcing the disaster. The acci dent wasn’t even discovered until radia tion was detected on a Swedish worker going to work at nuclear power plant north of Stockholm, Sweden. Secrecy, as evidenced by this latest crisis, has no place in the nuclear power game. The rest of the world has a right to know — a need to know — how a disas ter of this magnitude could have hap pened, and how it could have been avoided. We need to know exactly what the magnitude of the disaster is — how many people have died? Are the Soviet claims of two deaths accurate, or are the western claims of 2,000 closer to the truth? How many people — in and out side the Soviet Union — have been per manently harmed? Will future genera tions be affected?"' safeguarc Is pose immense thre; the entin e world . D< baling with nui power is c i global, not : a national, res] sibility. Nucle ar reac :tor s in all couw should bt - 0 Pe n 1 to it iternational ins lion — i lot SO 1 that nations can li their adv ersaries “tr ade secrets - already k now ho 1 w to build nucleari tors — but so th at a 11 nations can li how to build hetti er, s afer reactors. We sh ould us ;e tl lis disaster, m gloat abo ut U.S. siq leriority in the clear pow ^er race or i to criticize the! ets for be ing unc; arin g about the well )up ‘During m (Hriscoe s; Dtesiing th Hind hit tale \USTIN i te Myra M million v< urday’s l)t ju[400,00( r >| Hat woulc 19*2, the I A»00,000 ing of their own pec from it and to work t< tive global security. le, hut to b raid more Nuclear programs without adequate Michelle Powe is a senior journal!! major and editor for The Battalion. Mail Call Huge tot tube « Suburban preparation EDITOR: In Cynthia Gay’s column “On student values, A&M beats UT hands down” she claims that Texas A&M is better than the University of Texas when education extends beyond the classroom. Having been conferred a liberal arts degree from UT as well as seeing an engineering degree on the horizon from A&M, I feel compelled to share my modest opinion. I realize that going from a liberal arts education to an engineering education is like comparing pomegranates to paraquat, especially when they involve two different universities. Yet, I think that I have had broad enough exposure that I have a good grasp of what each university is all about. There is no question in my mind that A&M is friendlier than UT. Smiles and salutations fill any walk across campus. This friendliness, however, does not extend to the realm of thought. Ideas that are even a wee bit liberal are many times rejected before they can be completely expressed. In The Battalion time and time again we see the expression “Highway 6 runs both ways”. This trite myopic remark has no place in any university (I never came across anything about Interstate 35 during my days at The Daily Texan). The fact that this intellectual atrocity appears time and time again is evidence enough that Gay’s statement “.. . Aggies are more able — because of our base of oneness and friendliness — to discuss where we differ and learn more in the process” is patently false. Gay maternally warns us that there is a danger in hearing only one side that leans left. How true! There is, however, an equal danger in hearing only one side that leans right. UT, because of its west mall and general global consciousness, prepares the student for the world. A&M, because of its trade embargo on free thought, prepares the student for the suburbs. Michael Bolton Hgn lease ■llgible for I faculty members who helped them achieve their current status. It would take very little effort to visit their officeor leave a note in a mailbox and express gratitude. Similarly, if it can be done in a professional manner, why not inform professors who were a hindrance or general disappointment of this fact? Perhaps it would enlighten them to problems with their teaching approach |l-F9-6 or cause them to re-examine their attitudes about their positions. Rick Slavens ’86 Ken Stavinoha ’86 Engineering Technology A 401 6< Ring dance disaster EDITOR: For that special professor EDITOR. Texas A&M is a university filled with proud traditions. As graduation approaches, it is a time to look back and reflect upon the college experience. It seems as though everyone has had at least one professor w ho has really influenced their lives. Perhaps, in some small way, we can return the favor. In a time of budget cutbacks and salary freezes, many faculty members find themselves in a frustrating environment. I hink ofwhat a positive effect it would have for the graduatingseniors to convey their appreciation to those I have a definition for you. SENIOR RING DANCE: the totally perfect ending to an absolutely peachy Four, five or six years at the illustriously world-class Texas A&M University — or is it? Energy conservation is a swell idea, but I think 85 degrees was a tad warm for a formal dance, i.e., thousands of tuxedos and dresses with petticoats playing human pinball on a broom-closet-size dance floor. The only resort to the heat was a nice stroll outside, if you can call wrenching your high heels out of the cracks on the second floor walk from Rudder to the Memorial Student Center a stroll. Was the Hilton booked solid after Senior Dinner?? At least they could have served alcohol at the Hilton and I wouldn’t have noticed how much fun I wasn’t having. Photos? With the extensive professional equipment my five-year-old niece could’ve taken sharper pictures with adequate lighting —but wait — is it black on black or black is back? My date and I both have dark hair, but our pictures have these two shiny faces fading into black oblivion. Of course, his black tux adequately enhanced the beautiful black background. Who made that larger-than-King Kong size ring? 1 have a senior ring on my right hand, as do most seniors; we know what they look like. Thank God for that since you couldn’t see mine in our pictures. All this, and less, for the nominal fee of $35 fora Senior Ring Dance ticket — which wasn’t asked for once during the entire evening and no senior identification was asked for upon purchase of the ticket. I’m truly sorry I turned down the invitation to “Senior’ Ring dance as a freshman — maybe my expectations this year would have been proportional to the amount of fun 1 had. •VE Pveleasir Townhc Tow k 2 Bdrm • Co On-Site IV 2t Dawn Miller ’86 Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length. Th editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length but« make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must be signed and must include the address and telephone number of the writer