Viewpoint The Battalion Texas A&M University , Friday April 13, 1979 Foreign student bill may hurt U.S. trade By R. MUCHONTHAM There is always a possibility for us to legislate ourselves back into the Dark Ages. That is, when legislators are ill- advised. Sen. Oscar Mauzy’s impending bill to reduce the number of foreign stu dents (or, equivalently, to increase their tuition fee by 300-500 percent) in universi ties in Texas is a good example. We have long evolved from the Dark Ages. Since then, through the colonial era and the era of industrialization of the West, western explorers and traders have sacrificed their lives in order to introduce the West to many backward places of the world. They wanted the rest of the world to be familiar with the West and, most im portant of all, its manufactured com modities; so that they may trade with these people who lived in the far comers of Earth. thousands and all are diligently using our computers, machinery and all sorts of other equipments. This is the most pleasant sight to any intelligent executive who manufactures these products, precisely because these students and trainees are people who will, in years to come, generate potential cus tomers for him. This is' a situation which probably have saved us the equivalent of hundreds of trade missions we would otherwise have to send abroad and mil lions of dollars saved in public relations by our corporate subsidiaries overseas. Sen. Mauzy can probably ask any U.S. executive who has been stationed over seas, on how elated he might have been on occasions when he comes across engineers or researchers who can deftly handle U.S.-made equipment instead of equip ment made in Germany, Japan or Russia. International trade and, additionally, the transfer and exchange of knowledge and technology have since become an im- Because the usage of English language is much more prevalent in most parts of the world, in comparison to the German, Japanese or the Russian language, coupled with farsighted U. S. foreign policy, the U.S. has long been the most popular place for foreigners to come pick up needed ad vance technology. “Isn’t it exciting to have this new facility where our students can pursue academic excellence, broaden their horizons, develop scholastically, achieve their aspirations, and be stimulated to the highest level of per formance?” Reader’s Forum portant part of our well-being, it will in creasingly be more vital to our future soci ety. However, in recent years, countries like Germany, Japan, Russia and even China, for instances, have been trying hard to change the situation. Nowadays, one can find trade missions from these countries in even the most remote corners on earth. They will gladly offer scholarships to stu dents who will merely study their lan guages. Carter fights move for constitutional convention More specifically, in view of the need to increase exports of this country in order to offset our huge deficits. Sen. Mauzy (D- Dallas) might want to know that his pro posed bill will certainly harm this coun try’s trading position in the world market in the future ahead. Or, if one purchases their machinery, for instance, they will gladly send him or her off to one of their prestigious language institutes, set up exclusively for foreig ners, and afterwards, have their scientists instruct the client of the product. Consider this: Foreign firms who have substantial numbers of their engineers, and researchers trained in the U.S. will most likely purchase U.S.-made machin ery equipment, since these are the prod ucts which their employees, having been trained in the U.S., are most familiar with. It is a fact that the majority of foreign stu dents in this country are in science and technology. They number in hundreds of We are living in a competitive world market. We are holding an edge against other competitors as long as we are a popu lar place where people, who might gener ate potential clients in distant markets, want to come and learn technology from us. Sen. Mauzy’s proposed bill will defi nitely diminish this competitive edge we possess, if not immediately, in years to come. R. Muchontham is a graduate student in economics at Texas A