My personal opinion is that HF should not be used for the masses; if you have a large university where you push 3500 students through general chemistry lab each semester (as my undergraduate university did), you will easily wind up with accidents. If you have chem majors, a small select group, watched by graduate students who are into the course, it should be fine. My school did this; chem majors did a couple labs that used HF, but they were in a much more controlled and supervised environment, and the solution was dilute. It wasn't until we hit the undergrad/grad inorganic chemistry course that we used concentrated HF. That being said, undergrads in engineering use that stuff all the time like it's water to etch silicon wafers, etc., and we don't hear of many problems with it. All in all, though, I'd vote no. It's a little hypocritical of me, because I think that most labs are watered down to the point where they're boring now a days. For me, though, I do see a difference in a lab where something can catch on fire or give you a nasty topical burn as opposed to poison you. For this reason, I wouldn't allow undergrads to work with dimethyl mercury or nicotine, either.