Page 2^The Battalion/Wednesday, June 4, 1986 Dance of death While the members of the National Rifle Association are dancing a jig around Capitol Hill over weakened gun control laws, aclvances in the firearms industry are making it easier for people — especially terrorists — to kill people. Plastic weapons are the latest rage for gun manufacturers. An Austrian pistol, the Clock 17, is made partly of plastic, mak ing it difficult to detect on airport X-ray machines and magne tometers. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is said to be negotiating to buy 100 to 300 of these weapons on the black market. Naturally the NRA, which claims to support responsible use of handguns, opposed any import restrictions on the Clocks. But the Austrian handguns are not the only boon to the ter rorists and bane to travelers. A Florida gun developer, David Byron, is working on an all-plastic .22-caliber pistol. Byron claims his intentions are to sell the guns to the U.S. military. His gun is light, non-corrosive and needs no maintenance or oiling. He also claims his weapon is detectable and even has proposed implanting a device in the plastic to make his gun more detecta ble than conventional weapons. While Byron’s intentions sound honorable, the technologies he is developing could be adopted by less scrupulous manufac turers. Terrorist dream-guns could be sold to or even stolen by criminals and hijackers. The guns have slipped past airport security in a number of tests conducted by Pentagon officials, congressmen, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the West German gov ernment. Plastic handguns are the first step, and other undetectable weapons certainly will follow. Regulation will be extremely dif ficult — it’s hard to restrict what can’t be detected. Trying to convince gunmakers to put common sense and humanitarian concern ahead of profits will be even more difficult. Security systems are being developed to combat the new ad vances in gun-making, but few have been effective so far. In the meantime, terrorists have been given a valuable new tool of the trade and the security of the civilized world has been dealt another losing hand. Keep dancing, NRA lobbyists, they’re playing your song. The Battalion Editorial Board The White House leaks Two of the most important posi-i tions in t lie admin istration are the president’s '‘Keeper of the Se crets” and the "Chief Leaker of Information.” Al though their of fices are next to Art Buchwald each other, they always seem to he working opposite sides of the street. Sshhh. as the “Keeper of Secrets” is c alled, becomes li\ id when a govern ment sec ret appeals in print and wants to send everyone to jail. Pssst, on the other hand, works diligently to plant se cret stories with the media that will fur ther the cause of the administration. 1 t an into Sshhh at a fancy restaurant the other dav. "How can we run an anti terrorist intelligence operation when you people print that we broke Libya’s code?" he* asked. "We didn't break the news. President Reagan revealed it himself on TV.” Sshhh was burning. "Did it ever occur to vou that the Libyans don’t watch American TV. but they do read I'he W'lislunLftoii Post and l he .Yen York I imes'r" I said. "Ninety percent of all the con fidential news concerning the govern ment is leaked by this administration, and the* other 10 percent In the opposi- The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Michelle Powe, Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Scott Sutherland, City Editor Kay Mallett, News Editor Ken Surv, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-pntfit. self-supporting newspuper operated as a comnumitv set vice to Texas AAM and Bryun- Collcgc Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Edi torial Board or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions ot Texas A&M administrators, faculty or the Board of Regents. 1 he Battalion also sel ves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photogiapln classes within the Department of Journalism. 1 he Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas \X:M tegular semesters, except for holiday and ex amination pei iods. Mail subscriptions are Sib. 75 per semes ter. S.'Tl.25 pet school year and $35 pet lull year. Advertis ing rates f urnished on t equest. Out addles*: The Battalion. 21b Reed McDonald Build ing. Texas A&M L nivet sitv. College Station. TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station. 1 X 77843. DOS TMAS TER: Send address changes /o The Battalion. 21b Reed McDonald. Texas A&M L'niversitx. College Sta tion TX 77843. lion. Whv don’t vou go after the leakers instead of those of us who are no more than relay stations for the information?" "I deny the administration is now or has ever been the source of leaks,” Sshhh said. 1 confronted him. "Have you ever heard of a White House employee named Pssst?" Sshhh went red. “The name doesn’t ring a bell." "Would it surprise you to know that Pssst has been leaking an average of 10 stories a dav. with the approval of the president's team?” "You’re making it up.” "For heaven’s sake, man, who do you think has been putting out all the stuff about Deaver?” "We wouldn’t leak about Deaver. He’s one ol us." "Correction — he was one of vou. Ex cept lot the president and Nancy, every one in the White House seems to want Mike- to twist slowlv in the wind.” Sshhh said. “I can understand our doing that to Stockman, but not to Dea- \ c-r." "Nevertheless, vou want to send us all to jail lot stuff that Pssst leaked to make the- Reagan administration look good. If vou keep putting on pressure, we won’t accept am leaks f rom vour side." Sshhh un tied his back on me and I walked over to the cloakroom. I saw Pssst standing bv the door handing out secrets. I said. "Fve just been talking to Sshhh. and he told me he.wants to put all of us in jail for using vour leaks.” Pssst guf fawed. "Lie’s just saying that to scare' vou. The onlv time the Justice Department will prosecute is when vou print a leak that wasn’t leaked bv us. I have just as muc h authority around the W hite' House' as Sshhh —— some davs even mot e." "In describing vour work, is it OK to sa\ \oui major tasks ate to hand out classified material, deal in disinforma tion and send up trial balloons?" "There’s a bit of that involved.” Pssst said. "Though sometimes I’ll leak a stoic to hurt someone politically as well. ” "Will vou be walking the streets if the administration puts the lid on a// se ct els?" More' guffaws. "Whoever heard of a go\ cm mneni w ithout leakers.-" W hilc we were' talking Sshhh went by and angrile put his finger over his lips. Pssst laughed, and as a joke handed him (ic'ot ge bush’s sc hedule' for the follow ing dav. Copyright l9S(i. Los Angeles Times Syndicate FORE! Christian rector is i a ptate lie auction f nev gene; g! Most c; munity B ulecl to bi July 1 a Courthoi 1 The lr W.N. Ot' by the sta a license General the sale a Bon Ca church w || Otwell includes eilucatior complex, dren and ■ "This building ; iyacticinj it said, know of'i i Otwell assessed ; U.S. adopts Khrushchevian ^ attitude toward Soviet Unior MOSCOW —In a statement that s h o c k e d even manv Russians, Nikita Khrush chev once said of the L’nited States, "We will burv vou.” Much has changed since then. I he Rus sians no longer talk that wav. Now Politicians and Richard Cohen Americans do. commentators alike describe the Soviet Union as being a Third World country straining to sup port a First World military establish ment. T hey sav that it simply cannot compete with the United States, that it has hoisted itself on its own petard — an inefficient economy in which doctrine, and not performance, is paramount. Plodded bv the United States, Russia, we are told, will collapse into history’s ash heap. In short, we w ill bury it. A met/can Khrushchevians have sei/ed upon the accident at Chernobyl to prove their point. It was supposed to be a typical Soviet performance — clods placing with nuclear energy like kids with matches. Here was supposed to be proof that the new information policy proclaimed by Mikhail Gorbachev was just another meaningless slogan. Not quite. The Soviets were tardy in reporting the accident and characteristi- callv hard of hearing when queried by nearbv European countries. But it seems that the information eventually released was correct — two deaths at the outset, not 2.000, and no second melt down. As for candor, no American would be satisfied, but correspondents were kept busy running from one gov ernment press conference to another. Bv American standards, none of this is exceptional — and certainly it remains impossible for a reporter to simply lift the phone and ask a Soviet government official a question. Bv Soviet standards, though, the floodgates of information hav e been opened — press conferences, inspec tions of Chernobyl by non-Sovi ets. even film of the site and, ultimately, a speech on the subject by Gorbachev himself. In the old days, no Soviet leader would think himself accountable to either Soviet or world public opinion. It is not surprising then that the Sovi ets are both stunned and angered at the ref usal in the West to take them at their word. I hey seem especially stung by the American reaction. 1 hey see themselves as criticized and belittled. T his, they say, is typical of the Reagan administration. Thev are being treated as if they don’t matter, as if the Cold Wat will end not with a win or truce, but by the air simply going out of the Soviet tire. We will leave them bv the side of the road. "Arrogance" is what one Russian for eign-policy specialist called the new American attitude. He cited some spe cifics — t/te bombing of pro-Soviet Li bya, the inv asion of Grenada, aid to the Nicaraguan Contras and to anti-com munist forces in Angola and Afghani stan. T he United States, he said, was twilling (he Soviet C/mon — even run ning destroyers into the Black Sea. T he Soviet Union was not being accorded the respect due a superpower: “We are not Guatemala, you know.” Reagan’s "arrogance,” he said, could lead to a “b- lunder" in which the Soviet Union fi nally would be forced to assert itself. So fat that has not happened. It may be because the Soviets are overextended in Afghanistan and, for the moment, distracted bv Chernobyl. So far the | The h l nited States and the' Soviet Fnionl ' been careful to spar only throughf between rl icw — our Contras, theii S,md» a&M soc’n oui UNIT \ gun i illas in Angola.tlfcbshrimf pro-Sov iet regime. But the .spiritoil Associai so-called Reagan doiiime u,ilia: , The shr'n balism" bv the Soviets) might ntfkgSP t ! ie , v easv to contain. At its cote is thefei belief that, like a winning are forbid we have momentum in both h": facing ser the f ree-enterprise system andvicic the territo assured. Lot the other side, deft U.S. officii onlv a mallei of time. Compai Certainlv a v isitor here finds an ... . • . . Mexican w disjunction between what he sees on W ground — poor housing, shabbvd|B vug. veUvUveh few cars— uni tin iBl' titic and tec /tno/ogica/ triumphsihmgii, reported from space. Of course,(kf miJitart apparatus is not seen at the' measure of the Soviet Unionsfit not he taken onlv by goods produfflfj the dankx sound of the plum bind also bv patriotism and nationaffl These are resources, too. I hesetkf Lnion has in abundance. Itsenf I m viet Ivistovv proclaims and ovevvidugffi to consolidate its empire and sliecj image ol a backward land — ar/.^ .spare nothing toward thoseemk Americans who dismiss the' Union as nothing more thana| get |ntffed up w it ft Marxist-f.ewffiS’P air. shackled by a fearsomely ineffioj economy and doomed to sinkintoil t ass of five-year plans, are asdreair| their own wav as those people idiot came here and pronounced Jfusi utopia. T his place is not the futurei| it doesn’t quite work. But it is notj past, either. American Khrushchej not withstanding, Russia is a from the grave. 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