Illj Pagre 2 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 20, 1971 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle Listen up ‘Fowler jocks’ criticized for wisecracks B “Not only is the posting of grades discriminating, it’s down right embarrassing!” An effective senate Lately the Student Senate has been charged with being a “rubber stamp” or an organization that exists more as a joke than as a functioning body. The Student Senate may very well be a “rubber stamp” organization as has been charged, though we feel it isn’t. But if it is, much of the blame rests with the students of this university as well as it would rest with the members of the Student Senate. It rests with the students because they don’t supply the input that the Student Senate requires to be effective. The students don’t come to the meetings to see what is being done. They don’t know who their senators are. They don’t know what issues are up before the Student Senate, much less care. For any government to be effective, it must have the support of the people. If the people aren’t concerned, it either becomes a big joke or it becomes ineffectual for lack of abilitity to implement its ideas among the people. The same that concerns all forms of government, concerns the Student Senate^ ^ If you do care about what is or isn’t being done, then get out and work for a better student government. Go to the meetings, speak with your senators, show the Student Senate that you want effective measures and answers. Show them that you know an effective government is your responsibility. Editor: Last Thursday night at the yell practice, something happened which is typical of the attitude of the Fowler jocks. Now the Fowler jocks are sup posed to be the elite of the cam pus, because they represent our university in athletic competition. They do a pretty good job of it, too. But I think that they should either participate in the yell prac tice or stay in their rooms. At least if they are going to watch, quit making wisecracks. In the silence that precedes the singing of “Spirit” some person up their yelled out “Why don’t you sing something.” That remark was un called for and unneeded, especial ly just before “Spirit.” In case you’re wondering, I’m a non-reg, too. Steve Terry ’74 ★ ★ ★ Editor: I would like to comment on your editorial “A&M and change.” This romantic revolution or mythological movement is won derful for literature, but first- class journalism usually is free of non-fiction. Change certainly is not new at A&M. If it were otherwise, graduates of ten years ago would recognize more than half of our “traditions” when they visit our campus. What is new is that be fore the past couple of years, Bulletin Board Tonight Solid Waste Committee of SCOPE meets in room 333 of the library at 7:30. Thursday San Angelo-West Texas Home town Club meets in room 3C of the Memorial Student Center at 7:30. Mid-Jefferson County Home town Club meets at the Pizza Inn at 6:30 for pictures for the Aggieland. Young Americans for Free dom will meet in the old city hall of College Station, 101 Church St., at 7:30 p.m. Model Airplane Club will meet in room 201 of the Physics build ing at 8:30 to collect dues and hear about free flight models. Laredo Hometown Club will meet in room 2B of the Me morial Student Center at 7:30. has Steve Hayes The four laws of ecology Barry Commoner is an inter nationally recognized ecologist- scientist who attempts to com municate his concerns to the pub lic, as well as the scientific sec tor. In the Sept. 25, 1971 issue of The New Yorker (available in the TAMU library) Commoner pro poses the four laws of ecology for the benefit of public educa tion. I. Everything Is Connected to Everything Else. “The amount of stress an eco system can absorb before it is driven to collapse is also a result of its various interconnections and relative speeds of response. The more complex the ecosystem, the more successful it can resist a stress . . . Environmental pollution is often a sign that ecological links have been cut, and that the ecosystem has been artifically simplified and made more vulner able to stress.” II. Everything Must Go some place. This is simply a revision of a basic law of physics-matter is in destructible. “In nature there is no such thing as waste.” What we call waste is simply not such with nature. Everything we dis pose of affects natural systems, for better or worse. Commoner uses mercury as an example of this second law. A dry cell battery is used and thrown out. It is then taken by the trash man and incinerated. The heated mercury becomes va por, and is taken by the wind. Eventually it returns to the earth in the form of precipitation. Say it then enters a lake or river, and sinks to the bottom. Bacterial action converts it into methyl mercury, which is soluble in wa ter, and it then is taken up in fish. Because the mercury is not metabolizable, it is stored in the organs and flesh of fish. Man eats the fish, and it is now stored in man, as a poison. Said simply: “Nothing goes away; instead it is transferred from place to place. .” III. Nature Knows Best. As might be expected, this law meets considrable opposition from those who have always felt that man’s role on earth is to conquer nature, rather than to co-exist. “Stated baldly, this third law of ecology holds that any major man made change in a natural system is likely to be detrimental to that system . . . the structure of a present living thing ... or eco system is likely to be ‘best’ in the sense that it has been screened for disadvantageous components (by time) that any new one is likely to be worse that the present ones. “I grant that present con ditions and methods of industry make such a process impractical, yet caution should be used. How ever, caution is impossible when billions of pounds of organic sub stances (man-made) are randomly disseminated where it can reach organisms not under our observa tion . . . “This is precisely what has been done with detergents, pesticides, and herbicides.” IV. There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. This is a simple law of econom ics. Anything extracted from the Earth by human effort must be replaced. Nuclear power tells us “that every environmental incur sion, whatever its benefits, has its cost. Air pollution is not merely a threat to the health. It is a reminder that our most cele brated achievements . . . are, in the envh’onment, costly failures.” And water pollution has been paid for with Lake Erie, once a source of great ecological wealth. To paraphrase Commoner, pollution of water is a signal that its limited, natural self-purifying cycle has broken down under stress. Similarly, air pollution is a signal that we have overloaded the cleansing capacity of the weather, and the deterioration of the soil is a signal that another system has been overdriven . . . food is being extracted faster than the soil is being rebuilt. The ex pedient answer of adding inor ganic fertilizer restores the crop yield, but at the expense of in creasing pollution. “In sum, there is something gravely wrong with the way man uses the natural resources avail able to him on earth.” Cbe Battalion change in student affairs been only within the Corps. You say that the idea of A&M remaining solely a past-oriented school and dedicated to the ideas of ROTC does not make much sense. It doesn’t because it never has. A&M has been under con sistent and constant change for nearly a hundred years. About ROTC, Aggie ideals have probably followed more the ex ample of “Twelfth Man,” “Cadet Slouch,” and “Soldier, Statesman, and Knightly Gentleman” than those of ROTC manuals. A&M should not lose the ideals in the past that has made it great in the past. It should only lose things that leave a bitter taste in our mouths, such as getting drunk before midnight yell prac tice, and unrespected and mis trusted student newspaper editors. Thucydides said, “He who is unaware of his past is doomed to repeat it.” Last year, civilian students finally came to the forefront of student leadership; but, having forgotten the awareness that made them leaders, student lead ership again is in the hands of the Corps. In fact, things seem now to be far more reactionary than revolutionary. Frankly, I am sick of being caught in the middle of these disputes between re actionary and radical. On one hand we shouldn’t look at the future with mistrust for fear of losing the good of the past; and, on the other hand, shouldn’t dream of the future in some mythological romantic ideal of change. We must instead replace fear with reason and myths with reality. J. William Fulbright wrote, “What is wanted is not change itself; what is wanted is the ca pacity for change.” This capacity is here and now. Let’s not betray this heritage; let’s protect it. Randy Durham ’71 I feel that you have missed the point of my editorial and, when you did understand it, misinter preted it. I agree that A&M has been changing consistently throughout the past, what I said in the edi torial was that this change we are currently involved in is going to be one of the great changes that this university has gone through, perhaps the greatest it will ever go through. It is not a revolutionary change in the sense of campus turmoil on a massive scale or the kind involving guns and confronta tions, it is revolutionary in the amount of change. The revolution I refer to is the standard diction ary usage “sudden, radical, or complete change.” Your comment about the “romantic revolution” is ridiculous. Your version is good for literature, but first class journalism knows the meanings of words. You aren’t caught between re actionary and radical, at least if you understand the meaning of the editorial. If anything, you are caught between the present and growth. Growth is the Growth is what brings theck Growth implies the loss of ( things mentioned in the edit,] There is no betraying 0 f heritage, there is the chaJ it brought about by gro Read Battalion Classified Looking For Something Different Opening Friday, October 22 The PEANUT GALLERY On Tap Schlitz, Bud & Lone Star Free Peanuts Always Happy Hour — 6 p. m. - 1 p. m. Friday and Saturday (22&23) * Formerly The South Gate Lounge 813 Old College Road CORDI D««P P u masse9 ir " ,tirtiulat« operated U«e s ^ Add 5% s 2**71, 5 OUR Eye Fot c.w. North USDfc CHOICE HtfwV BEEF ROUND FLOOR VNHC-N APPLES ga REDEEM THIS COUPON FOR i lOO EXTRA S&H GREEN STAMPS ^^ With Purchase of $10.00 or More Ob/ (Excluding Cigarettes) 17;4*. Coupon Expires Oct 23, 1971 ij—>• 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 cotntnunity newspaper. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, and no more than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the zvriter’s 7iame will be withheld by arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Jim Members of the Student Publications Board are: Lindsey, chairman ; H. F. Eilers, 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. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association The Associated Collegiate Press ng 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 Cja REDEEM THIS COUPON FOR 1 50 FREE S&H GREEN STAMPS With Purchase of LIPTON INSTANT TEA Coupon Expires Oct 23, 1971 WCu/isitiir