Page 4B/The Battalion/Wednesday, August 27, 1986 Colleges beg stricter policies to end drug us< Cooling off Randy Hickok, a senior Business Analysis/Finance major from Houston, beats the summer heat by floating in the Brazos River. Photo by Robby Smith Spindletop depicts end of oil success BEAUMONT (AP) — Like dust to dust, the Big Oil era is returning to its Jefferson County birthplace to die. Here, Spindletop was an unex pected and tremendous First. Here was started an 80-year orgy of enter prise, when every Texan with a hunch about a chunk of land could make his play. Now Jefferson County may be first in the state again. But this time it’s a sad distinc tion, as Spindletop’s domain teeters on the edge of drilling oblivion. “It’s just open-and-shut,” laments G.P. “Pete” Cokinos, a Beaumont- based wildcatter of more than 32 Gulf Coast wells over 24 years. “Domestic production onshore as we know it is a thing of the past,” Co kinos, Texas A&M Class of’38, says. “As far as I can tell, it’s all in the hands of the majors now.” The only major still working Southeast Texas last week was Mobil Oil Co., with a 9,000-foot effort northwest of Beaumont. Only a company such as Mobil can afford to cut other operations to subsidize the $26 cost of producing a $ 12 barrel of crude. That kind of mathematics just lays the average independent wildcatter on his back. In the 1970s, for example, Coki nos paid contractors $700,000 to drill each of 20 wells at his Orange- Field stake. Now he could get the job done for $280,000 a shot, but it’s just too late. Cokinos has left the era when he had contractors working 32 wells across two Louisiana parishes and a Texas county. What remains for him is a few working interests, a few roy alty checks, and his own consulting business. But for bigger companies, the mathematics of cheap oil don’t spell an overnight change of pace. Majors and larger independents will do any thing to bring that $26 closer to $12. There’s a tragic irony at work here. To stay in the enterprise they’ve learned to love, survivors of U.S. drilling are forfeiting all the ro mance and adventure of “the Long Shot.” True, the Texas independent producer was always beholden to the major refiners, or to federal subsi dies of independent refiners. But bucking the big boys, after all, was half the fun. In 1973 and 1974, for example, Cokinos was selling his Port Barre, La. oil to Humble Oil Corp. (now Exxon), his Starks, La. crude to Cities Service Oil Co., and Orangefield production to Sun Pro duction Co. Each major had a corner on local markets, but they all paid Cokinos the same $3.15 a barrel. Nineteen days after the cocaine- induced death of University of Maryland basketball star Len Bias, Education Secretary William Ben nett advised college presidents to write students this summer: “Wel come back for your studies in Sep tember. But no drugs on campus. None. Period.” As the new school year ap proaches, the call for harsher drug policies is being heeded at some col leges. Ohio Wesleyan’s President David L. Warren wrote letters to parents and students serving notice that drug use would bring on a range of reprisals, including dismissal. The school is also outlawing drug par aphernalia this year. At Newberry College in South Carolina, the police, rather than the tiny school’s disciplinary council will be called in to handle even minor drug offenses. Freshman orientation at Mount St. Mary College in Newburgh, N.Y., will include drug education for the first time, offered by college offi cials, health experts and law enforce ment officers. drugs the biggest problem schools, and 49 percent aj drug testing of students, w percent opposed it. Some congressmen hope tot added pressure for campus drug action with a proposedant ment to the Fiscal 1987 educatiot propriation bill which would 1 federal funds to any school doesn’t have a drug prevention gram. v i But many college officials (acted by I he Associated Press issue with suggestions that i drug policies weren't toughenotj Only a minority said they plan stiffer penalties for drug olfe# or tighter campus security, The University of Michigan Boston University, for instance, among many schools that have claimed the right to search a dent’s dorm room for illegal stances or terminate a students deuce hall lease for sale or utt drugs. McKlN ound-fac as the ^ icnts m; erry Boj “Wildcatting and the drilling con tractors have been curtailed,” Coki nos concluded, “and the forerunner of all this was the major oil compa nies. The independent always marched to the drumbeat of the ma jor companies, you know?” Many other schools have begun voluntary or mandatory drug testing programs for athletes. The Univer sity of Maryland this summer an nounced it will have more frequent unannounced drug testing of its ath letes in the wake of the Bias death, along with closer scrutiny of the test ing to ensure that urine samples can’t be switched. An annual Gallup poll on educa tion issues released last weekend found that the public considers M any argued that more an ter drug education, rather harsh le^.il > >i .u adcmir non:' would better solve the problem College of ficials said that ar^ ■ bounty. Althou} ,vork and nessman t spoken B< enforcenn however, becoming ther, who McKinney his retirer Box’s p Box Jr., m Even tli since he w departme call the f ever a fire “My fa he was dc to the st; this fire ti old Mode somebody chuckling around a help font ciples.” Box d about lav I reer until fre drug use is down considerably ft* the 1960s and 1970s. For moj dents, alcohol is by far the “dm choice.” An annual survey of 17,000(■FRESNO lege students nationwide pubkt me locus on in July by the University of ^1 Idjice, “Frest gan’s Institute for Social Reve;:: rips format t found that roughly one-thirdvBCBS’ six- have tried cocaine by their sawt and grt year. Ipital is a ■rial, not ( Concerns voiced about Japan’s treatment of TOGANE, Japan (AP) — The mentally ill and the physically hand icapped are less visible in Japan than in many other advanced societies, and public discussion of their plight is something of a cultural taboo. But new attention is being drawn to what goes on in Japanese mental institutions, most of them private, and the Japanese government has promised reforms. Nevertheless the problem runs deeper than changes in the rules. There is a new pay telephone in Ward 1 at the Asai Mental Hospital in this pleasant seaside town. It is a recent concession to human rights for Japan’s mentally ill. It can put them in touch with the outside world. Many doctors and human rights ai (I niuch-r m i’s hearth ol San Fram I “If peopi Red, they id Barrv activists in Japan claim that thou sands of people are unnecessarily confined in mental institutions be cause the hospitals want their money — and their families, often fearing social stigma, don’t want them back. “The people and government feel the mentally ill should be secluded from society,” says Etsuro Totsuka, a lawyer who campaigns for patients’ rights. “It’s the Japanese form of apartheid.” Government figures show that more than 60 percent of Japan’s 330,000 mental patients are in closed wards. About 45 percent are hospitalized for five years or more, the highest average in the world. The country was shocked in an in vestigation at the Hotokukai Utsu- nomiya Hospital which uncovered 222 unexplained deaths in three years. Police say they found patients were subject to heatings, forced la bor, treatment by unqualified nurses, and unauthorized loboto- mies. being held involuntarily. The organization pointed to Ja pan’s 1950 Mental Health Act, which allows the head of a hospital to com mit an individual without his consent if the family or guardian agrees. A district court sentenced hospital superintendent Bunnoshin Ishikawa to a year in prison and a $1,807 fine for violating fundamental human rights. His appeal is pending in To kyo High Court. “In many cases,” the league’s statement said, “the very person making the decision to commit is the person who will Financially benefit from the commitment — the head of the hospital.” The affair spurred interest else where. The New York-based Inter national League for Human Rights reported to the United Nations in 1984 that 80 percent of the patients in private Japanese hospitals were Private hospitals treat 85 percent of Japan’s mental patients. i iglus advocate Totsuka and his sup porters claim many hospitals have not complied, many patients have no money to make calls, and their mail continues to be censored. Dr. Kunihikb Asai, vice-director of this prestigious hospital 43 miles southeast of Tokyo, said that only about a fifth of the hospitals have so far complied. He agrees in general with Totsuka’s demands for re forms, saying almost half of Japan’s mental patients now confined should be handled as outpatients. month monthly for abed —aft ■TM Fme ■heduled lion of fees in the West — mantt— u is struggle to meet exptnst iesn<) solutions The p resstire to keep patiet hospitalized too long, he said,oil comes from relatives who ladi time or space to care for them home, and from patients whothei selves shrink from becoming ah den on their families. Some [ami also bow to pressure from neighb to “do the best thing" by sendi awav sick members, he says. In response, the Health and Wel fare Ministry asked hospital direc tors last October to install pay tele phones in all locked wards. But But he disputes the charge that hospitals and doctors are making large profits by confining patients. He says that psychiatrists’ salaries av erage only about $3,012 a month, and with patients paying $1,024 a “Family tolerance for the ment ill and senile has become vend because the new nuclear famih longer has the energy or capa® care foi them," Asai says. “Wed —itcha cure the disease, the family.” hut we can’t ff We Buy Books Marines We’re looking for a few good men. Captain R. Mahany 846-8891/9036 Class of ’77 aps and Sti trc to TUGS traffic ja Cotton Village Apts,Hi 30 Day Special 1 bdrm, $150- 2bdrm, Water, Sewage, Garbage Pa* Refrigerator, Stove, Carpel 12 miles from campus 846-8078 774-0773 Eveiyday T exas ASM Bookstore Hours: 7:45 - 6:00 Weekdays 9:00 - 5:00 Saturdays Barett Shoes Everything a mall shoe store has, except high prices. COMPARE! 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