ige 8 • The Battalion The Battalion TUESDAY April 2, 1996 Opinion Page 9 t, the presidents ol d-Victoria and sever p administrators at impus. ar Lake President iples said the success structure will de • the person selected or/president can nterests of both the us and the satellites, r is who is the person Itaples said. "Does he e a perspective i i system and the and missions of the four universities? it’ll be a challenge for because you’re wear illy two hats at the jislature established ystem in 1977, ir UH was founded irs after it became a ol. Growing demand! in campus led to the of satellites in the 1970s. fall, the four universi ore than 1,200 facult; nd 47,000 students, ;round storage tanks, nay contain F soil on the Riverside and-a-half years sments, he said, lete, so we really don't lat’s why the rose results and ;d within a structured ,y will not know if an are released. He said i is not severe to Riverside Campus & and staff need to take .hey stay behind areas pment operations, nediate dangers toils the contamination,’ orkshops IT retreat MOSAIC deals with ; attitudes, progress :)w. iy new program does all, (the facilitators) ill grow as people at- workshops and see putting blame on pee allowing them to talk d express their opia itiago said, izations and depart i request general work workshops on spec® ireas. einhart, a MOSAH r from the Engineer ent Programs Office , in order for the pr»' be successful, people rceive the need fot n and take advantage portunity. s is a definite ograms because uires discussion i s in the student (bod; ilty and administrate e,” Reinhart said. i sen Bar ;t inks and | Necks l lOp.m The Smoking Gun Texas is justified in tobacco lawsuit M Dan Morales Guest Columnist 'ost Tex ans know that using tobacco is a dan gerous practice. But not all Tex ans know about the dangerous and illegal prac tices of the tobac co industry. The truth is tobacco compa nies have violated state and fed eral laws for so many years that these violations have become their standard operating proce dures. The truth is the tobacco industry has deliberately mar keted its products to our children. The truth is that for 40 years, the industry has consistently and de liberately lied to its customers and to the general public. In the eyes of the law, those lies are no different than the lies necessary to conduct any il legal activity. The state of Texas has amassed evidence that the tobacco industry has engaged in racketeering and conspiracy for decades. These illegal activities have created serious consequences for Texans, whether they smoke or not. Each year, more than 25,000 Texans die from tobacco- related causes. And each year Texas taxpayers spend hun dreds of millions of dollars to care for friends and relatives who are sick and dying because they use tobacco. Each year, the tobacco indus try must find 25,000 new Texans to replace those who died from using their products, and the overwhelming majority of these new customers are our children. For decades the tobacco indus- 1 try has denied responsibility for the harm its products cause. They point out that some con sumers freely choose to use to bacco. But freedom of choice is not at issue. The real issue is that no individual, no company and no industry is above the law. If Texas adults choose to smoke, that’s their business. But when the tobacco industry bla tantly violates Texas laws, that’s our business. On March 28, Texas filed suit against the tobacco industry to recover more than $4 billion in Medicaid costs used since 1980 to treat tobacco-related illnesses in Texas. Six states have already filed similar suits, and more states will sure ly follow. Each year, the Ameri can people suf fer more than $100 billion in losses because of rising health care expenses, higher insur ance premiums and premature deaths caused by smoking. The tobacco industry por trays use of its products as a matter of choice. However, the evidence now shows that the industry systematically targets children with advertisements and promotions to addict them to cigarettes before they are old enough to make adult choices. It is no accident that Joe Camel is as widely known to most kids as Mickey Mouse. Eighty-two percent of adult smokers began as children, and by the time they were able to make adult choices, it was literal ly too late. The companies satu rate stores near public schools with cigarette promotions, and they continue to resist efforts to ban vending machine sales be cause they know that is how most kids purchase cigarettes. The tobacco industry will deny, as it has for decades, that it markets its products to children. The companies will deny they conspired to defraud. But these denials are no longer credible. The purveyors of smoking death now hold a smoking gun. Literal ly thousands of pages of previous ly concealed industry information have been made public. Those documents are power ful evidence. The evidence shows that tobacco companies sup pressed research to make safer cigarettes. They suppressed knowledge that nicotine is high ly addictive. And they publicly ] denied that nicotine is addictive when their own records show they know differently. Tobacco executives swore un der oath to Congress that they never manipulated nicotine lev els. But we know that one com pany developed strains of tobac co with double the nicotine yield. The evidence will show that the time has come for these big tobacco companies to pay us back for their ill-gotten gains. Dan Morales is the Texas Attorney General Tobacco industry should face the truth I f desperate people do des perate things, don’t be surprised by anything the tobacco industry may do in the near future. If its recent actions are representative of their desperation, we should all be watching our backs (and our lungs). The war between the to bacco industry and anti-smoking propo nents has been heating up in recent weeks. Mounting evidence against the industry has prompted a federal lawsuit by six states (and more the way). Texas A icy neral Dan Morales is th t rget t. lost recent Tobacco Insti tute Lihe lob 1 yi*ig firm of the major tobacco companies) sault. Last Thursday, on be half of the state of Texas, Morales filed a fed eral lawsuit against the tobacco industry. Morales hopes to recover the $4 billion that Texas taxpayers have spent on Medic aid for persons with tobacco-related illness es. Morales has said there is sufficient evi dence to prove that the tobacco industry has been lying to citizens since the 1950s about the harmful effects of abusing tobacco. Commissioned by the tobacco industry, Public Opinion Strategies of Alexandria, Va., conducted a survey of 800 Texans. The purpose of the poll was to determine how certain unsubstantiated claims about Morales would affect a possible re-election bid. The results were delivered to Morales in an attempt to remind him of the indus try’s political clout and to try and convince him that a well-funded candidate could pose a serious threat to a re-election bid. Despite the threat, Morales went ahead with the lawsuit. According to Morales, “Thousands of pages of previously concealed industry infor mation have been made public.” Contained in these documents is evidence suggesting that tobacco companies have kept quiet about knowledge they have proving that nicotine is ex tremely ad dictive. Also, tobacco companies genetically engineered strains of tobacco with unnat urally high nicotine levels, then smuggled the seeds to South America, and shipped the product back to the Unit ed States for processing. Most startling of all, compa nies suppressed their own re search that would have en abled them to manufacture safer cigarettes. Tobacco industry representatives have always claimed publicly that nicotine is not addictive and that tobacco companies have not deliberately manipulated the amount of nicotine in their cigarettes. America is not convince i. Perhaps it is the 400,000 people who die from smoking every year that causes us to mistrust the testimony of industry executives. According to Morales, 25,000 of those who die are Texans. As if the number of deaths was not enough, three former employees of the largest tobacco company, Phillip Morris, have submitted testimony and affidavits to the FDA contradicting industry represen tatives’ sworn testimony. According to the Wall Street Journal, the former employees say that Phillip Morris “not only believes it is in the nicotine-delivery business, but de liberately controls nicotine levels in its brands.” The new FDA testimony confirms the document evidence being used by Texas and the six other states suing the industry on behalf of their citizens. The FDA is set to pass a rule restricting the tobacco industry’s advertising aimed at children. Because it is considering the tes timonies in its decision, it is required to postpone the rule to hear comments on them. This could push the passage of the rule back until this fall, possibly even after the November elections. President Clinton plans to use the issue in the campaign re gardless. The Republican nominee, Bob Dole, opposes the rule. It is human nature to believe that peo ple are inherently good — that they are “innocent until proven guilty.” Enough evi dence has been mounted, however, to quit giving tobacco companies the benefit of the doubt. They are not in the taste-pleasing cigarette business; they are in the nicotine- delivery business and they know it. Although smokers are not devoid of all responsibility for their own addictions, they have been victimized by a group of powerful citizens intent on getting rich and staying rich regardless of who suffers. It is time for Americans to turn the tide against these victimizing companies. Smokers should join the fight as well, be cause they have the most to gain from ciga rettes with less nicotine and the most to lose if they continue not to have the choice. Houston we have a problem — no one cares about the shuttle I came into The Battalion office to write a column on space shuttle apathy. See, I had this theory about how no one cares about the space shuttle program anymore. I sat down with The Dallas Morning News and opened to a story about the recent mal functioning of its cargo doors. The shuttle almost had to make an emergency landing. But, sadly, as I contemplated my angle and re viewed the facts of the story, I decided I didn’t care at all about what I was writing. It was a labor to press each key on the keyboard as I struggled through writing a column about the space shuttle Atlantis. I really didn’t give a poop about the space shuttle. My theory was if no one died or got hurt in the space shuttle, then who cares at all about what happened to them in space? And that’s when it hit me; I was also a victim of space shuttle apathy. Think about it. Did anyone even know the space shuttle Atlantis was in space until the cargo doors mal functioned? That is one clear sign of space shuttle apathy. I remember the days when my family would huddle around the boob tube, feeling our American pride well up in our hearts and burst out of our ears in a spectacle of glorious light every time the space shuttle launch was televised. Tears would run down our faces and my dad would declare the day a holiday. I remem ber the way he would take me aside on those launch days and say: “Son, don’t worry about tak ing out the trash today. Today we should revel in the fact that we are Americans and that we can choose whether we want to take out the trash. And son, the space shuttle is a perfect manifestation of that freedom.” Those glory days are over. Today, space shuttle apathy reigns supreme. Did anyone even know the space shuttle Atlantis was in space until the cargo doors malfunctioned? A clear sign of space shuttle apathy is the way the press reports on the shuttle. On the front page of Sunday’s Dallas Morning News, a story was run about Russian life expectancy. You see, Russians are dying younger these days and sci entists just don’t know why. Now that is one is sue I really don’t care about. But, after perusing the paper further, I noticed the story about At lantis and its cargo doors malfunctioning sitting happily unnoticed on page four. Do you want to know the reason why The Dallas Morning News ran Russian life expectancy on page one and the U.S. space shuttle program story on page four? It’s because The Dallas Morning News knows all about space shuttle apathy. The press knows that Americans don’t care at all about space shuttles anymore. Dear reader, if you’ve even made it to this point in the column, I’ll bet you care more about space shuttles than I. I have so much space shut tle apathy, I can’t even poke a stick at it. I don’t even care enough about it to give this column a witty conclusion. But that’s space shuttle apathy for you. Chris Miller is a sophomore English major Mail ,Wf®2r*p mb Put up or shut up about candidates In the past two weeks, I have heard many people complain about certain student body pres idential candidates, implying that they have proof of severe (even criminal) misconduct. To these and others, I would like to say the following: If you really believe what you have to say is important, take a stand. Don’t just sit around and do noth ing. That accomplishes little. If, on the other hand, you are just blowing hot air, shut up. I am tired of hearing you complain. Jimmy Charney Class of ’96 Columnists should not bash A&M spirit I am writing in response to H.L. Baxter’s column Tuesday. What is so terrible about having school spirit? What is it about the thousands of people who cheer loudly at football games, mug at Midnight Yell and lose their voic es at Fish Camp that makes them bad people? Baxter, Aja Henderson and especially Chris Stidvent seem to have made it their personal mission to bash those who love A&M. Part of their argument may be that they don’t feel welcome. Well, if you don’t try to incorporate yourself into A&M, you are never going to feel like part of A&M. I also won der if Stidvent, Baxter or Hender son have ever been enrolled in another university? I have, and as such I can readily justify my enthusiasm for A&M. Remember, all of us came here because we wanted to, and if we wish, we are free to transfer. If one is honestly unhappy here at A&M, then he or she should go somewhere else. Either way you look at it, life is too short or too long to have to deal with a bad situation that can be changed. I am proud to have the opportunity to come here, and I appreciate what this University is giving me — an education and a head start into the real world. Christopher D. Scheer Class of’97