Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, August 13, 1986 Pull the plug While Bryan residents will be basking in the glow of cheaper electrical power. College Station may be forced to weather yet another increase in utility rates. College Station’s troubles stem from its electrical supplier, Gulf States Utilities, which expects its customers to pay for the obsolete River Bend nuclear power plant it built in Louisiana. It’s time to pull the plug on Gulf States’ continual rate increases. The city of Bryan announced Monday that its customers won’t have to pay fuel charges in August and September be cause of the cheaper cost of fuel and increased efficiency of the Bryan Utilities power plant. Bryan lowered its fuel costs last year when it sold some of its megawatts to other electric companies, and Bryan Utilities is ahead of budget by $900,000. Meanwhile, GSU is proposing another substantial rate hike. The company’s president, E. Linn Draper, says GSU is in an eco nomic crisis and needs $150 million to $175 million more each year to dig itself out of its hole. Draper proposes that customers pay more of the utility’s costs, including the cost of River Bend, now operating near Ba ton Rouge, La. College Station residents already have been paying for the power plant, and until recently were providing more funding than the Louisiana residents who were supposed to benefit from its construction. But GSU admits that the demand for power generated from River Bend is almost non-existent. While it’s unfortunate that GSU is facing financial difficulty because of a bad investment in River Bend, College Station and other customers should not be subjected to incessant power cost adjustments just to help the company fend off the throes of bankruptcy. GSU built the River Bend plant, and it should absorb the losses for its fiasco. College Station residents shouldn’t be ex pected to pay for services they don’t receive — they’re paying enough already for the services they do receive. They will only tolerate so many rate hikes before they really blow a fuse. The Battalion Editorial Board Nuclear confrontation a worldwide concern Last week (Aug. 0 and Aug. 9) marked the 41st anniversary of the bombings of Hiro shima and Naga saki. The usual wire service arti cles recounted the incident for the people who have been brain dead for the past 20 years. The United States, during World War II, dropped its two remaining nu clear weapons on the Japanese cities. Being the first, and so far only, nuclear warheads used against a civilian popula tion, these two bombings have become the leading argument for nuclear dis- armement. Mark Ude The peace movements have flocked to these sites as if they were holy shrines, and staged assorted protests against the superpowers and their apparent disre gard for human survival. Such goals are worthy of attention, and need to be stressed, especially in these days of po tential annihilation by just one country. Thousands gathered in Japan, mark ing the historical event with songs, dis cussion and silent prayer. The proposal for nuclear disarmament to be held in these cities could be a motivating incen tive to the hesitant powers. The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Michelle Powe, Editor Loren Stef'f y, Opinion Page Editor Scott Sutherland, City Editor Sue Krenek, News Editor Ken Sury, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Bmttilioit is n non-profit, self-supporting ttewspu- /MT ofieruted ns ii community service to I exits A&.M iinci Du itn-Collepe Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion me those ot the Hditoriid Hoard or the author, and do not net essat ih t en- resent the opinions oi 'i'exus . IX .W Hdministrators. tucullv or the Hoard o/ Heffents. The Battalion also sen es as a lahorittoi \ newspaper for students in reporting, editing and phoitiffrapln classes within the Department ol journalism. The Battalion is published .Mondm through Friday tin ring I exits A&M regular semesters, except tor holiday and examiniitioii periods. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 pet semester. S:i.i,25 per school vein- and $55 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion. 216 Reed McDonald Httilding. 1 exits AA-.M L’niversitv. College Station. TX 776-1.5. Second class postage paid at College Station. TX 776-1.5. 1‘OS'TMAS’TER: Send address changes to The Battal ion. 216 Reed McDonald. Texas AA-.M L'niversity. College Slat ion TX 776-1.5. South African Bishop Desmond Tutu flew to Japan to milk the event for all the publicity he could. Instead of en couraging talks between the superpow ers, the Anglican bishop denounced the United States and warned that unless sanctions are imposed upon South Af rica, the blacks there will face a potential Armageddon. That really encourages me to start chanting “no nukes, no nu kes.” Tutu even went so far as to express wonder and amazement at the people of Hiroshima who have no trace of bitter ness at the United States — as if we were at fault in declaring war against the Im perial Japanese Empire. Americans are too quick to forget what caused the dropping of the bombs which devastated the two cities. The United States was just starting to finish the fourth year of a bloody global war. The conflict in Europe was over, and American troops were ready to go home. We had just lost one of our most popular presidents, and the future of the Pacific War was in question. Not withstanding the Japanese war on China started 1939, the surprise air raid on Pearl Harbor and the Bataan Death March, the Japanese were de fending their home island of Okinawa with kamikaze tactics, extoling a high casulty rate among American service men. With concrete evidence that the Japa nese would continue to defend the main island with continued ferocity, then- President Harry S. Truman had to de cide which lives were more valuable. The encroaching Soviet Army was an other factor which forced the issue. To avoid a divided and occupied Japan, the U.S. would have to beat the Japanese by themselves. The most formidable problem facing nuclear disarmament now is the abun dant number of nations with nuclear ca pability. Until France and Great Britain include their arsenals, and therefore their offensive ability, with the United States, the Soviet Union will not nego tiate. But on the other hand, the Soviet Union will disarm only enough to en sure their ability to deter a nuclear at tack from both the United States and the People’s Republic of China. The potential for nuclear confronta tion is no longer a one-on-one with the Soviets. It now concerns a great many of other countries who are not willing to entrust their defense to one of the su perpowers. Mark Ude is a senior geography major and a columnist for The Battalion. SPA* I— NAS Itests lat rocket berized preven for the John solid r said th; and ft ceed, i able to Tho ence a Centet team 1 new n prevet the Jar crew n “VVt I stand f Star Rehnquist’s peculiar brilliana lacks wisdom, compassion You must know the story about the city slicker who stops on a country road to ask a farmer directions. To each question, the farmer replies, “Don’t know,” un til the city slicker says, “You don’t know much, do you?” “Maybe so,” PC ‘'Rehnquist’s extremism, if that is what it is, does not foreshadol future, but instead reiterates the past .... (He) was so mudiiel vor of (Julius and Ethel Rosenberg's) executions he rued in am the absence of drawing and quartering (oh, what brilliance'. Rehnquist, it seems, never met a death penalty he didn't like." Richard Cohen the farmer replies, “but I ain’t lost.” Well, pardon me if I play the part of the farmer in the on-going confirma tion hearings of William Rehnquist to be chief justice of the Supreme Court. I have heard Rehnquist described as "bril liant,” an intellectual whiz, learned and, of course distinguished. If he’s so smart, the farmer in me asks, how come he's so often wrong? Take civil rights. From the memos he wrote as a Supreme Court law clerk, in dications are that Rehnquist did not agree with the decision that found school segregation unconstitutional. That does not mean that Rehnquist fa vored segregation. It only means that after peering real hard into the Consti tution, he could find nothing that could serve to strike down school segregation. “I think Plessy v. Ferguson was right and should be affirmed,” Rehnquist wrote, referring to the separate-but- equal doctrine that prevailed until 1954. This was the conventional conserva tive opinion of the time and some con servatives still hold it. As legal theories go, it’s not the silliest you are likely to encounter, but neither is it particularly profound. Had the Supreme Court ac cepted it, some states might still have school segregation and other aspects of Jim Crow as well. In short, the nation would be divided more racially than it is now and further from the goal of a just society. History rebukes Rehnquist on this one issue alone — and vindicates the wisdom and the tactics of Chief Jus tice Earl Warren. Unfortunately for Rehnquist, what was true for school desegregation re mains true for other issues — such as af firmative action — that affect minorities or women. As their spokesmen have tes tified, Rehnquist seems to be against them. He seems almost always to side with authority, with the government and against the individual. Each and ev ery Rehnquist opinion, lawyers will tell you, is witty and scholarly — an intellec tual tour de force. Maybe. But they are almost always historically irrelevant, too. In Rehnquist we have a most peculiar brilliance. It is one that seems to have no relevance to results. It rights no wrongs, expands no rights, champions no op pressed and seems to accept things the way they are. As a school of thought, it has been on the sidelines or opposed to the movements — civil rights, feminism — whose achievements have been his toric and beyond debate. (Do we any more question whether married stew ardesses have to quit work or whether schools can be racially segregated?) At the Rehnquist confirmation hear ings, Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., called the likely chief justice an “extremist.” Kennedy is entitled to his views, but ex tremism, as Barry Goldwater once maintained in a different context, is hardly a vice. Indeed, if over the years either the courtor society had moved Rehnquist’s way, his “extremism” would be laudatory. After all, abolitionists were once extremists, but today there would be nothing extreme about j views — unless, of course, you l«| to think slavery is a good idea. But Rehnquist’s extremism, if what it is, does not foreshadow ih( ture, but instead reiterates tht past for his brilliance, it seems to be nected to his memory and whtit comes to embarrassing inddeiiu,lit been an observer, not a participant his own life. He can not account ton nesses who allege he once harassed norities at the polls. 1 le allows licit have seen a restrictive covenant id own house, but memory fails hirnli too. He does, though, remembet house. Just as history rebukes Rehnquiit his Plessy v. Ferguson opinion, i made him seem small and meanwl comes to the executions of Juliut Ethel Rosenberg for espionage. I quist was so much in favor of thed cutions he rued in a memotheate of drawing and quartering (oh, brilliance!). Years later, though,wet reason to question whether ment fit the crime and w Ethel’s case, the actual crime wasnot own execution. Rehnquist, it se never met a death penalty he didn’t fhe brilliance of William Rehwiii a cold thing. It shimmers without warmth of wisdom and compassion therefore serves no purpose city slicker who mocks the fan Rehnquist knows everything bun he happens to be at the moment brilliant people could provide hii answer: It’s the 20th century. Copyright 1986, Washington Post Writerik DA not p sporti pollut mile s Cat died stretc about down near * Th more Denn Texa mem branc Of 60,DC it is r 184,( Th prog! pleni fox s pollu tocki gle c reme Tl rang the I H up h bottc Wat< coor indu age mu n W rain and The robt essa O min brei poii pari ter. to s side C ing msm (NOT WWl£ CPERSONtb weavv nuclear WEAfSNS) And now, the results of the president’s drug test: SUNW LOTON (T)tmv ftAlUEfc) GRECIAN fORMUlA (OfFIOAU* C£M1K>) ft 8 ' -SOMINEX (RAR&LV NETO>i SLEEK BW) UP BALM (R>R UPSEPVICE TD OON&KE5S CNTHE AtfOHOU Cat stwe pinners) GOTTOL (ID CKSPEl AGE QU&flCN) DR. SCHOLLS AIRPIUOW INSOUS (SDR fcmdLS intro TERM RUN)