Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, May 4, 1988 i? Mail Call Why the new streamlined cars? EDITOR: Has anyone wondered recently about why our UPD felt it necessary to buy those new two-tone blue police cars with the streamlined lights? Maybe it’s so the UPD can stay hidden and poised to pull over those terri ble people who exceed 30 mph around Olsen Field or the Fish Lot. Or maybe it’s so that they can get into high speed chases and capture those heinous bicy clists. I think next time they should spend their money a little more wisely. Per haps by buying some beautiful new ticket pads, or by opening a telecommuni cations line with A-1. Chris Samsury ’90 Wilson ‘coldly cops out’ EDITOR: In his May 2 column, Anthony Wilson states that “No one has an excuse for . . . injecting heroin into his system or drinking so much so often that he becomes addicted . . .” He then goes on to say that we should stop feeling so damn sorry for them. This is a rather cold and self-righteous way of addressing the problem. To say that it is not my fault, and therefore not my problem is an ethical cop- out and will only serve to perpetuate the problem. The issue should not be whose fault it is, but how we can we help this person get back on his or her feet. To go up to a person who is down and out and say, “It is your own fault that you are an alcoholic or a drug addict, so tough luck,” is not the kind of action I would expect from a self-professed Judeo-Christian society. Alcoholism is not a disease in the sense that cancer is but alcohol is an ad dictive agent the same as drugs and nicotine. People who become addicted, regardless of how they got that way, need our support and help. They do not need our scorn and contempt. They have enough of that. We can only solve our problems as a society if we are willing to face up to them. While trying to place the blame for these addictions on the addicts lack of will power may seem like an easy way to shift the guilt from our shoulders, it really only gives people an excuse for ignoring the problem. Mike W. Thomas ’87 Free will choices determine conduct In Anthony Wilson’s article, “Are we apathetic about willful misconduct?”, he mentions that we shouldn’t feel sorry for people who make the wrong deci sions. There are no excuses to conscious, everyday decisions we make about our personal and social lives. He firmly expresses that our free will determines our conduct and I strongly agree. We should make efforts to help people with severe problems such as rape, drugs, and alcoholism, but we shouldn’t feel apathetic about their willful misconduct. It was their choice. Life is a se ries of choices. We shouldn’t feel sorry or make excuses, but instead teach our society that we are responsible for our attitudes and conduct and that in life, every choice we make, has consequences. So next time you make a choice, remem ber: one of God’s greatest gifts is the ability to choose the way we think, act, or feel. The choice is yours. Charly Carrington ’88 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. Each letter must be signed and must include the classification, address and telephone number of the writer. Stop the presses Opinion U.S. should surely stick with ‘Star Wars’ defense itto Bran biasi In the wake of the Wiley Lecture Series, this year about the nuclear arms race, I for one, want to stick up for the Strate gic Defense Initia tive. SDI, better known by its mis- nomer, “Star Wars,” is a long- Doolen term plan to provide for the defense of the United States, and consequently the Western world, from nuclear atta4^ by the Soviet Union. From its inception, SDI has been accused of everything from breaking down arms talks, to tak ing the arms race into the heavens. The latter accusation assumes that In ter-Continental Ballistic Missiles, which would fly through our hemisphere if used, are not already intruding upon the heavens. At the Wiley debate, Robert McNa mara, President John F. Kennedy’s Sec retary of Defense, claimed that the de ployment of SDI would undermine deterrence of nuclear war, because the Soviets would think the United States ould have first-strike capability. Let’s hope they think so. One of the most powerful things SDI has done for us thus far is to give us the biggest bar gaining tool the U.S. has had since we invented the atomic bomb four years be fore the Soviets. The Soviets are scared of SDI and we should continue to use this fear throughout the next few de cades to the United States’ best advan tage. In the past few years, every time the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. have tried to ne gotiate (Rejkavic and Geneva), one thing has prevented the talks from pro gressing to an agreement — SDI. The Soviets will not agree to any strategic missile treaty unless SDI is included in the bargaining. Reagan and his aides have stood Wilt; tough through years of pressure public dismay, and for good re: Once SDI is included in any arms age, the Soviets will not stop until is no strategic defense program. Meanwhile, Reagan sits on the side of the bargaining table with most powerful bargainin tool in world. Questions have been raised whether technology can meet pectations of the SDI programs the complex system will work wi effectiveness, or whether we wills! alive when SDI is ready to be installi These are questions for the h but presently, the people who put SDI should question their opinions Is it wrong to want a system thai protect your children from nuclear while presently giving us a bar| tool against the Soviets? Give SDI a chance. Timm Doolen is a freshman j major and a columnist for The ion. Reverend with big heart could lose arms to paroled ax-murdere CONR< lion of Cl facially pr 11980 rap Bville teen appea Criminal i “Regan proclamat pf Clarem blind, the jsertions h jtorneys M yind Paul 1 page briei day. “At eac tion anc throughj Itself, rac (the fain: against Cl The Ai vill cons [from bot! 36-ye; Honroe F ceive a th Aug. ■Dee Ferg< The wl the schoo alleyball It’s obvious that the Rev. Thomas Smith Jr. is a com passionate person, a man who be lieves that nobody is all bad and that even the worst of us can be re- deemed. gleton into a community, the residents would raise hell about having a con victed arm-chopper in their midst. husband’s been out of work sinceas chine crushed his foot in the fat where he worked.” The dt iutline ft sions of U Mstrict J v'ith testii lentiary 1 sided. Pickett Inocent of So the authorities kept moving him around, until finally they gave up and let him live in a trailer on the grounds of San Quentin prison. tht- Well, it’s unfor tunate for the Rev. Smith, but some of Mike Royko But now his parole is over and he be comes a free man. He can go anywhere he chooses. I suppose it’s just human nature, most people feel less compassi when they’re told: “I’m taking in convict who raped a girl and cho| off her arms with an ax. But worry, he’s mended his ways.” Pickett Baying he witnesses ; gomery James Ke case, and lartin, 1, to b< trial, his neighbors don’t share his brand of compassion. the big hearted Rev. Smith offered Singleton a job and a home on the grounds of his church in rural Oregon. And it’s possible that Singleton; reformed and won’t chop off any ie arms. The d Imony frc Irelated 'Brandley mos The minister recently decided to pro vide a home for an ex-convict named Lawrence Singleton. Singleton, 60, isn’t your ordinary, run-of-the-mill ex-con. He wasn’t a stickup man, a burglar, a car thief or a swindler. No, he went to prison in California for a crime that was so brutal, even his fellow inmates thought he was creepy. However, those who live near his church have less tender hearts. And, the preacher says, they have shown their displeasure. When the preacher and his wife go to the small local town, the na tives sit in their pickup trucks and glare and scowl at them. He sometimes hears guns being fired in the distance and sus pects that this is an ominous message. Even John Gacy, Chicago’s mous mass murderer, did other besides kill 30-plus young gay men bury them under his house. He was a hard-working political prednct tain, performed as a clown for dren’s shows, and had a modest for painting. But that’s the way nan? minded people are. Kill a few do young men, and who remembers)! great clown act? About 10 years ago, he kidnapped a young girl, raped her, then chopped off her arms with an ax and dumped her in a gully. With sadness he says “We believe we will be killed, my wife and I.” And he says that he and his wife have wept for those who have threatened to raise their hands against him. And as Singleton’s prison counsi| also said: “The man served his di He’s done all that’s required thro: our legal system. Give the manai chance.” He assumed she would die, but mi raculously she survived. Singlton was ar rested, convicted and imprisoned. Because of California’s dippy penal laws, he was paroled after less than eight years. That’s four years for each lost arm, it you want to figure it that way, with the rape thrown in free. Of course, one could make an argu ment that there might be people more deserving of compassion and help than Singleton. Our cities are filled with homeless and destitute souls who have never chopped off anyone’s arms, or even fingers. Their only crime is to be without skills or jobs. Some have skills, but no jobs. He’s right. Singleton served the tence the law demanded and he serves a fair chance. Of course, if law had required that he be droj head-first off the roof of a tall built that might have been a much fc chance. i A parolee has to live somewhere. But every time the state tried to move Sin- So it’s likely that Smith’s neighbors wouldn’t be nearly as upset if he had said: “I’m taking in this couple. The But if Smith’s really concerned ah his safety, he’d be wise not to give handy-man Singleton any chores ^ involve using an ax. Copyright 1987, Tribune Media Services,bf ! We’ve got all the scoops Ala 6 m 6V2 6 m Pec We Lart U.S News bulletins I’d like to read: HOLLYWOOD - Television game show host Bob Barker, animal rights activist, was eaten today by a walrus. WASHING- The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Lydia Berzsenyi, Editor Becky Weisenfels, Managing Editor Anthony Wilson, Opinion Page Editor Richard Williams, City Editor Deborah Jensen and Tom Eikel, News Editors Hal Hammons, Sports Editor Jay Janner, Art Director Leslie Guy, Entertainment Editor TON, D.C. - Sur- LgwIs geon General Ev- Grlzzard erett C. Koop has announced that researchers have dis covered smoking isn’t harmful to health after all and actually promotes hair growth and renewed sexual energy. HOLLYWOOD - Judge Wapner, At torney General Ed Meese’s latest nomi nee to file for the number two position Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-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, fac ulty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within 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 $17.44 ppr semester, $34.62 per school year and $36.44 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 230 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, Col lege Station TX 77843-4111. in the Justice Department, said today he is withdrawing from consideration for the post and will remain on the “People’s Court.” DENVER - In his new book, “Mon keying Around on the Monkey Busi ness,” former Democratic presidential candidate Gary Hart admits the reason he went into politics was because “it a neat way to meet girls.” WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Department of Immigration has said Australian actor Jacko will be deported as soon as possible, thus saving him from any more embarrassment. BEIRUT - All the fighting and bomb ing ended here today when all those in- voloved couldn’t remember exactly why all the trouble started and who was sup posed to be killing whom. “It just got to be too confusing,"af named Abdul said, “so we’ve decide^ stop to organize softball teams instead WASHINGTON, D.C. - Vice Prf dent George Bush, the shoo-in fori Republican nomination for preside today selected Atlanta Mayor And^ Young, who is black, as his runitf mate, saying, “That oughta wow’em Copyright 1987, Cowles Syndicate BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathe 1 SCTTING our Ativ 50MB PUPPm VJHAT for mouemer, mu/ve OUR House INSPIRE? COCKROACH. YOUTOPO v ^— THflryy PUNNO... JUST 50RTA OCCURKZP SOMETH IMS'S TOME. AMISS. \ XOCKROACHtt. ARE OUR FRmti Yes/ AMP mi\i SHARING repp0 FARrf COOKIES 0 1 Texa