Page 2 College Station, Texas Friday, October 1, 1971 THE BATTALION Listen up Knocking the editor’s Editor: Although I respect the editor’s opinions as a third-party observ er and, in fact, agree with many of them, I was under the impres sion that “Listen up” wasjfor the students to express opinions on topics important to themselves and to be answered by other stu dents with their own opinions. It seemed that the editor’s job in this column consisted mainly of presenting the letters, noting any clear misstatement of facts, and providing answers to questions asked of or accusations made to the university administration. I feel the editor should restrict any personal comments to edi torial articles, as was done in “The ‘real’ Aggies” (September 28). An editor exerts a great amount of influence just in choosing the letters to be pub lished without making a student’s opinion look foolish by following his letter with a reply, at times indignant, which the student can not immediately answer. Last year’s editor of The Battalion began in the same way, and this matter was called to his atten tion. This university has its share of dissenting opinions, and many of these may be unneces sary, but freely debating issues is to be preferred to having a campus of 14,000 conformists. Finally, if this letter is printed, let us learn what other students think. We do not want the editor to supply our replies. Peggy Pearson ’69 P.S. At the risk of being la beled a “militant coed,” I think that “Maggie” is a pretty nick name for “Margaret,” but to be a Maggie is depressing. Replies to letters are one way I can express editorial policy on subjects without having to write a lengthy and repetitive editorial. Also, they are letters to the edi tor, which is me, and I feel I have a right to reply. On the subject of selecting which letters are run, I run all that are legible, even those that are not typed, and aren’t vulgar or incomprehensible. Occasionally I don’t run a letter because it says virtually the same thing as another one has, but other than that, everything is run. If there are any other opinions on the replies, or opinions of the same sort, I’d like to see them. —Ed. ★ ★ ★ Editor: What has happened to Texas A&M ? What is becoming of the “West Point of the South?” Are we not becoming as any other university in this country, only that we have a large ROTC pro gram. These are questions that should and can be asked by just what has been said and seen of only a month of the 1971-72 school year. Traditions. Traditions are what makes this fine institution and they are already beginning to die. Progress is the main reason giv en. Why should this be ? Students are losing respect for the Corps, for which this school was established and still stands for. Letters have been exchanged back and forth in this Listen Up column and this also produced an editorial. What was accomplished by all this exchange ? And now another tradition is being eliminated. That of mid night yell practice. A changed route, for reasons that aren’t very substantial and could be taken care of by more than changing the route. Yell practices are something no other school in this country can boast. Especially the “march on Kyle Field.” The next thing that we will eliminate will be “Sawing Var sity’s Horns Off” — or standing at the game or by not even light ing the Bonfire, if there even be one. The Friday night yell practices have been the same for more than 30 years. It involves the whole school—but the way the new route change is, it will involve no one but the Corps and will be come no more spirited or exciting than our Tuesday yell practices. Criticism was given the civi lians for not participating, this way they aren’t even given a chance and miss the fun of yell practices, which are probably the most exciting thing on this cam pus. The Twelfth Man needs all the support it can get. It needs all the spirit it can give to those “Fightin’ Texas Aggies”—if a shorter route is being sought for the reason of having a shorter yell practice or because the “go ing is rough” to Kyle Field, then this institution is defeating its purpose of building men. Aggies, let’s get together. Let’s join in getting the Spirit of Ag- gieland back to where it should be. Let’s support the Twelfth Man and those “Fightin’ Texas Aggies.” My feeling, as probably is most of the student body, is that the route should not change and something should be done other wise to elevate the problem. W. Morris ’74 A&M as the “West Point of the South” or as a school that stands only for ROTC is dead—fortu nately. As for Midnight Yell Practice being eliminated, that’s not quite true. The intent of the changes is to make the practice more ef fective, rather than the semi-riot we now have. If you wish to keep marching on the old route to Kyle Field, be our guest. But you might want to know that soon Military Walk, a major part of it, is to be con verted to a hole in the ground, and therefore mud. I doubt the Band will mind you climbing over and around the slime, but please don’t ask them to do it.—Ed. ★ ★ ★ Editor: First of all, I would like to apologize to all civilian students and Maggies who feel that Corps members have insulted them in one way or the other in the past several years. I myself have been Cbe Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax- supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and comm unity newspaper. LETTERS POLICY The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is published in College Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association The Associated Collegiate Press Tetters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, and no more than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 778-13. Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim Lindsey, chairman ; H. F. Filers, College of Liberal Arts ; F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr., College of Veterinary Medicine ; Dr. W. E. Tedrick, College of Agriculture; and Layne Kruse, student. Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatchs credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. EDITOR HAYDEN WHITSETT Managing Editor Doug Dilley News Editor Sue Davis Sports Editor John Curylo Assistant Sports Editor Bill Henry CHARLEY PRIDE OVER 18 HITS IN THE LAST FOUR YEARS G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM Friday, October 1, 1971 — 8:00 p. m. EVERYONE MUST PURCHASE A TICKET TICKET PRICES: Reserve Seat Tickets General Admission A&M Student & Date .... $4.00 ea. A&M Student & Date .... $2.50 ea. All Others $5.00 ea. Other Students $3.00 ea. Patrons $3.50 ea. Tickets & Information — MSC Student Program Office Phone 845-4671 Steve Hayes Senator speaks on population repli les guilty, I know, of doing just that on occasions at yell practices, football games, etc. However, I would ask these people to under stand that being a member of the Corps is perhaps a somewhat more passionate experience in re spect to belief in Aggie and Corps traditions than being a ci vilian student. You might note that I differ entiate between Aggie and Corps traditions, for that is the point of this letter. I feel that many peo ple fail to realize that many for mer Aggie traditions accepted by the one-time all military student body are now Corps traditions, such as juniors doing pushups at yell practice, fish spurs for the SMU game, and many others. Personally, I feel it would be ab surd for civilian freshmen to “whip-out” like Corps fish. How ever, I would expect all Aggies to hump it, wildcat, and stand erect during the Spirit. Those are examples of Aggie traditions. All I ask is that civilians accept and respect Corps traditions, both ci vilian and Corps member alike stop bear-baiting each other as teasips and Aggies do, and all Aggies unite behind the Fightin’ Texas Aggie football team, which will be in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Day. Kim Bannister ’73 Often, an article excites me either for its honesty in an age of compromise, or for its novel approach in an era or redundancy. Last year, at Texas A&M, Sena tor Robert Packwood (R-Ore.) presented a speech that really seemed to have less circulation than it deserved, at least I never heard about it in Indiana last year. I would like to use this column to share some excerpts from that speech in case some of you missed it. ON POPULATION: Let’s take a look at the population problem just of the United States. By the year 2000 . . . we’re going to have 300 million people . . . we’ll have roughly half a billion people by . 2050 . . . That’s one problem, the second being we have more women in the child bearing age . . than they are spread throughout the rest of the population ... So even if we reach a replacement rate of 2.11 children per family today, we will level off . . . be tween 275 and 290 million people. . . . I’ll set forth a postulate, . . . Packwood’s Population Postulate: the quality of life is inversely proportional to the number of people times the square of the area in which we live. ON CONTRACEPTIVES: It does no good for them to be available if people don’t know how to use them. . . . the ultimate . . . purpose ought to be to make con traceptive information and devices available to every person ... re gardless of . . . educational back ground . . . income. So that no body gets accidentally pregnant. ON ABORTION: We have no more right as a government to compel pregnancy than we have to compel abortion. . . . I’ve intro duced the National Abortion Act, which if passed, would simply void all of the state abortion laws that have any restriction . . . that prohibits a woman’s right to have an abortion. ON VOLUNTARY STERiu ZATION: . . . there’s no rea,' why ... we cannot again.. available . . . information and f; cilities to encourage ...those*, ^ would like to have sterilizations.' ON POLITICAL ATTITUDES You’ve got to quit being a spe* | tor in the game of government, “can’t” is a euhemism that p* ticians use to say “I won’t,"'i don’t want to.” Personalized Football Mums Large, Beautiful and At The Peek Of Freshness. Prices You Will Appreciate. Boxed and Refrigerated. Try Us! Aggieland Flower & Gift Shoppe 209 University Dr. 846-5825 (Under New Management) l bne c [ 4C Attention College Station telephone customers. BENI Iff lin }M Bed* hh h y< Bal licial it mal btion fVTTI [TES! luncer lon.-F In case of noov tenn 16-973 HAL Dot emergency 111 an Dial 911 HU tER, 23-8i Starting today, October 1, in College Station, General Telephone offers this fast, new service for your convenience. In case of fire, burglary, accident or similar emergency, just dial "91 1". You'll be quickly con nected to the proper authority. You can still receive help by dialing "O" in case of an emergency, but 911 will be the primary 3 W