WELL? IS that ^ * SHOT? YOUR 3£ST Opinion Hissing at concert is rude At the P.D.Q. Bach concert Wednesday night, a visiting performer was again treated to a show of bad manners — Aggie Style. As usual, some members of the crowd feel moved to hiss their way through a performance. A running gag in the show was the appearance of a droll, cynical stage manager making occasional forays onstage. He was the “bad guy” of the show, and many Aggies felt the need to remind him of it as often as possible. Except for the first time at the beginning of the show, his stage appearances were meant to be silent. These scenes were written to be performed silently, but the audience will never know. Everytime the stage manager appeared onstage, a few mem bers of the audience felt the urge to hiss. They did it the first time he was onstage. And the second. And the third. And the fourth. As a matter of fact, they hissed all during the show. Ths hissing isn’t bad at football or basketball games; no one comes to listen to those things. But, the idea of hissing at a performance defies good taste. If the performers had intened for the scenes to be accom panied by hissing, they would have made arrangement for it themselves. It is unfortunate that a few people with bad manners can spoil the impact of a show for everyone else. Despite the distractions, it was one of the better shows seen at Texas A&M in recent memory. It’s too bad the audience couldn’t enjoy it as intended. the small society by Brickman Wco-frrf! KA-S TAUGHT /Vte TO UV& WITH IM /AY AMP Hl<£H TAXE* HAV£ TAUGHT /A£ TOUV& \ WITHOUT/AY I \\C0fA& - WMMngton Star Syndicata. Inc. %-t The Battalion USPS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY lA'ttirs ttt the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject tit beinfi cut tit that length or less if longer. The edititrial staff reserves the right to edit such lettiTs and does not guarantee to publish any letter. 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MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Roy Bragg Associate Editor Keith Taylor News Editor . Rusty Cawley Asst. News Editor Karen Cornelison Copy Editor Dillard Stone Sports Editor Tony Gallucci Focus Editor Rhonda Watters Senior City Reporter Louie Arthur Senior Campus Reporter Diane Blake General Assignment Reporters Richard Oliver and Andy Williams Staff Writers Nancy Andersen, Tricia Brunhart, Mike Burrichter, Angelique Copeland, Laura Cortez, Meril Edwards, Carol Hancock, Kathleen McElroy, Debbie Nelson, Steve Sisney I Chief Photographer Lynn Blanco Photographers Lee Roy Leschper Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Regents. The Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Viewpoint lo The Battalion Texas A&M University Friday February 1, 1980 ERA taken all the way! B Apf lock t ar tc yentio ente Ace How about all-girl army? ;er o tiling By DICK WEST United Press International Everybody is talking these days about the prospect of women being drafted for milit ary service but I know one young man who thinks he has a better idea. He favors creating an all-girl Army. “It’s the only fair thing to do” he told me the other night when the subject of renew ing Selective Service registration came up. “We once had an all-male Army and we have tried the all-volunteer Army and now it’s time to give the all-girl Army a shot at it.” I said “The fact that you are a male who has reached draft age wouldn’t have any thing to do with your proposal would it?” “Perish the thought!” the young man de murred, obviously offended by such a sug gestion. “I simply believe it is time to put old wrongs to right. Throughout most of our history men have gotten all the thrills and glory of going to war. That imbalance has lasted so long it can’t be offset now by merely splitting military duties between men and women. The only proper thing to do is to let them have it all to themselves.” I said, “I certainly admire your sense of equity and your selflessness in being will ing to sacrifice your own chance for a milit ary career in order to give young females a break. Nevertheless, I can’t shake off this nagging suspicion that motivating forces other than magnanimity are at work here.’’ A hurt look entered his eyes. “When you are a bona fide supporter of equal rights you go all the way” he said. “I only regret I have hut one draft classification to lose for the opposite sex.” I told the young man that while women probably could perform admirably as sup port troops I wasn’t sure an all-girl Army would provide the level of combat efficien cy the Pentagon was seeking. “Generally speaking, men are physically stronger than women and therefore better able to withstand the rigors of the battle field,” I pointed out. “Don’t be such a male chauvinist” he admonished. “What about the Amazons? I saw some of them in a movie once and they were as fierce a bunch of warriors as you would ever want to see. Pitted against those babies most male soldiers wouldn’t stand a chance. “And what about the element^ prise? Imagine how the enemywyM upon seeing an all-girl Armycharjis;l|^ the trenches. I’ll het the other siiMIi raise the white flag almost witho™ shot.” 1 I said, “I can see you are seri®M * relinquishing your rights toadraltcil wouldn’t a lot of male college studttl Bids come embittered and resentful ' n being allowed to register?” luniT “There might well be somepiuti lecial that sort’’ the young man admi P 11 ^ “However anyone who feels tktsti [unci about being dodged by thedraftpn rim] will sneak off to Toronto andenlistpA Sf. Canadian army.” IFor ( Iking |Dur lenu JSofi I \vh< keni: Anniversary of return from exile Khomeini an ill, powerful leader By PETER COSTA United Press International Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini walks slowly in the small careful steps of a brittle man of 79 years. It is ironic that this frail cleric caused the overthrow of the shah — Iran’s self- proclaimed King of Kings — and brought to a stalemate the world’s most powerful nuc lear-armed nation. To westerners, Khomeini is a caricature of foreignness. He has a lean face with piercing eyes that glare out from beneath a thick, almost Neanderthal brow ridge. He has a long gray beard and wears a black turban, floor-length robe and slippers with out heels. His Iranian Shiite followers call him the Imam or prophet on earth. He returned to Iran one year ago Thurs day after a 15-year exile and was greeted with adulation by millions. The despised shah had left and Khomeini — their savior — had finally come home. Periodically, Khomeini has been forced by poor health to retreat from the public. On Jan. 22, Tehran radio said he had can celed all meetings for the next 15 days and entered the intensive care unit of a Tehran hospital for treatment of a heart condition. But even from his hospital bed, Khomeini urged his followers to vote in their first presidential election last Friday in which Economic Minister Abol Hassan Bani-Sadr emerged as the winner. For months preceding his arrival, Khomeini railed against the shah and fomented discontent that ultimately erupted into total revolution. Evidence of his power and total domina tion of the minds and spirits of his country men erupted worldwide most strikingly on Nov. 4 when a group of students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. At 10:30 a.m. on that cold fall day, 450 militants clambered over the walls of the embassy compound and pulled down a U. S. flag while chanting anti-American slo gans and carrying posters of Khomeini. Marines inside the embassy fired volleys of tear gas, but after three hours could not withstand the onslaught. The swarming Iranians broke into the embassy, captured 63 Americans and held them hostage. In days that followed hundreds of thousands of Iranians demonstrated before the embassy gates chanting: “Margh Bar Carter: Margh Bar Shah! Death to Carter, death to the shah.’ The shah had been in New York since Oct. 22 for medical treat ment with the blessing of President Carter. Some of the 13 hostages who were re leased later would say that the chanting of those phrases hour after hour, day after day was almost as psychologically painful as being tied up and forced to face a blank wall for hours at a time. Three days before the embassy takeover, Khomeini made an emotional radio appeal to students that they commemorate the anniversary of a violent street demonstra tion a year before and “expand with all their might their attacks against the United States and Israel so they may force the United States to return the deposed and cruel shah. ” In a statement broadcast by Iranian state radio, the militants let the world know their demands: the hostages would bet — if and only if— the shah were t to Iran to face Islamic justice. The shah had entered New York Htfl al for gallbladder surgery and chenw apy treatments for cancer. Hospitalc| could not say how long the sh remain under their care. Khomeini repeatedly labeled thelj U.S. confrontation as “Islam ag infidels” and continually referredtoC as a “devil” and the United States! “satanic power.” How does this square with trail^ Moslem belief? Scholars differed, Some said the Moslem religk demns the taking of hostages. Everj the days of the crusades and Ricliai Lion-Hearted, others said, diplomat voys were considered sacrosanct. Scholars in Islamic states said Khol was indeed following the Koran byfijj against a “colonial imperialist Most official government statements!! Islamic nations, however, condemns* hostage taking. Thotz