Slouch By Jim Earle “I don’t care too much for April Fool’s jokes on April 1, but on April 3 I don’t care for them at all. ” Opinion Supermarket freeze is telling Time was when inflation was a subject taught only in economics courses in college. Today, the lessons of inflation are being learned in Amer ica’s kitchens, every time someone brings home a bottle of ketchup and finds the price stamped on the cap is five or ten cents higher than the one on the now-empty bottle being discarded. On March 3, a modest movement got under way to keep the lid on some supermarket prices, at least temporarily. About a dozen major chains responded to an appeal from Esther Peterson, the president’^,special assistant for con sumer affairs, and agreed to put a price ceiling on selected staple food items. The freezes will remain in effect for periods ranging from one to five months, depending on the chain. In most cases, the stores have sufficient stock on hand or stockpiled to cover the expected demand. However, under the terms of the voluntary agreement, even if a retailer’s costs go up on a given item, the price will not, at least for the duration of the agreed-upon freeze. There are benefits in this program, both to the companies and to consumers. In the long run, however, the supermarket price freeze is the most valuable for what it tells us about our fragile eco nomy. This nation is in serious trouble, indeed, when a limited price freeze on selected grocery items can be touted by the White House as an “important contribution” to limit ing inflationary pressures. Keene (N.H.) Sentinel the small society by Briclcman iMTf^iWL- WAMT-5 irt WITH ALL MY ^AtoLL^P AKP £LAKK - 4-ZZ The Battalion USPS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY Li'tttrs to the editor should not exceed 3(X) words and an subject to beinfi cut to that length or less if longer. Tht editorial staff restTies the right tt> edit such left its and does not guarantee to publish any letttT. Each letter must In signed, show the address of the uritiT and list a telephom number fttr verificatitm. Address correspondence to lA’tttrs to the t.ditor. Tht Battalion. Room 216. Reed McDonald Building. Collegt Station. Texas 77H43. Represented nationally by National Educational Adver tising Services. Inc.. New York City. Chicago and Los Angeles The Battalion is published Monday through Fridav from September through May except during exam and holidav seriods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesdav hrough .Thursday ascriptions are $16.75 per semester. $33.25 per $35.00 per hill year. Advertising rates furnished t. Address: The Battalion. Room 216. Reed McDonald Building. College Station. Texas 77843 United Press International is entitled exclusive!} to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved Second-Class postage paid at College Station. TX 77843 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 . Mike Burrichter Focus Editor Rhonda Watters City Editor Louie Arthur Campus Editor Diane Blake Staff Writers ....... . . ! . Nancy Andersen, Tricia Brunhart,Angelique Copeland, Laura Cortez, Meril Edwards, Carol Hancock, Kathleen McElroy, Debbie Nelson, Richard Oliver, Tim Sager, Steve Sisney, Becky Swanson, Andy Williams Chief Photographer Lynn Blanco Photographers Lee Roy Leschper, Steve Clark, Ed Cunnius, 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 The Battalion Texas A&M University Thursday April 3, 1980 O Lets just sav we've dip i got a little theirad Lets put it gome ether |fy|| W'i ^ it if §€ ! Definin ■•aticand topic of a i jjy .MSC P< at noon in I Garry \ of the fe.x Chester l Texas Rep manel me were is litl If the two | "Democ He same j d fferent them." ■ Upham Rrter’s pi balancing t , '''''sss////s//s/s/ssssssssy//jV / A ing savings "If you [ding a 1< By 1 < shift c Mining to § year's censi ■Sharon i for the cen B^ing fre ell Texas Jn a tel< ,co, Alii; bably ga expense Penns rida will eeause i ortionm entative: hue shari himself by [' ‘The dat we enumer fk” Allison Letters Women allow bad treatment to occur Editor: In reponse to the letter of Strain, Mel- son, McDonnel and Caldwell I would first like to state that my views here do not reflect the majority of men at this universi ty (if not in the world). If the previously mentioned gentlemen (and I use the term loosely) would stop and think about why the women of this univer sity act the way they do perhaps they would not be so quick to criticize. Everyday I see women treated like, at best, second class citizens. Most of the men around here see the aspects of a woman in this order: \.f Body 2. Face 3. Hair and it stops there. If they take the time to find out that she has a personality and intellect so much the better. I think you will find, gentlemen, that if you treat women as people first with rights, feelings, and minds that your social life will improve immensely. I personally have never been at a loss for female companion ship at this university, using this ideal. And I would like to remind you that it is an ideal I believe in strongly. I would like to point out however that conditions like this prevail only because women allow men to get away with such attitudes. I would no more date a woman who would allow me to get away with such abuse anymore than the women on campus will go out with gentlemen. Men are people and they have rights. Women are people too, and they have rights also. It is a philosophy that works. I know. I am going to marry a woman that is a person in her own right at the end of the year. Jeff Tix ’80 inability to meet women or be given a chance to do so. Well, let me ask you this question: “How do you think you’re going to meet anyone sitting in your dorm room or apartment all day wondering why you don’t have a date or anything to do?” If you want to have a date this weekend, get out and get involved. Open your eyes to everyone around you. The next time you meet a girl, even if it’s casually in the cafeteria, if you’re interested ask her what her name is. You never know when you may see her again. And what have you got to lose? Absolutely nothing! I honestly feel that if y’all were really interested in having something to do on Saturday nights or any night, you’d do something about it. If everyone, both men and women weren’t so caught up in the “proper” ways of dating, this world would be a whole lot less complicated. Specifical ly, if we could all learn how to give and take each other’s invitations for dates without feeling threatened, we’d all be much hap pier. I know that y’all must feel that this kind of lifestyle is utopian in nature, but I know that the world wasn’t built in a day and I don’t expect our social norms of behavior to change overnight. In closing, Mr. Strain, I hope that if you haven’t changed your feelings about women at A&M, that you’ve at least cleaned some of the cobwebs out of your mind. Regina M. Schulte eating $100,000 of student service funds and/or bookstore funds for women’s athletes. I am not opposed to women’s athletics — far from it. But supporting an athletic department out of student service funds benefits very few students and thus the expenditure, approximately 10 percent of the student service fund, is not justifi able. If the bookstore provides the funds, other student organizations receiving bookstore funds currently include such groups as Aggie Cinema, Town Hall and Hospitality Committee. Supporting athletics is a privilege, not a responsibility. We do support athletics voluntarily — how many of us buy season tickets for football, basketball and/or baseball, or join the Student Aggie Club? The equality in funding for men’s and women’s athletics should not be the stu dent’s responsibility but that of those who created that inequality — the administra tion and supporters of the athletic prog rams. Lisa Nixon ’81 Aid: SG deserves a break SG not harmless Bad manners shown Editor: In repsonse to Craig K. Strain’s (and friends) letter of April 1, to The Battalion, I feel that the following comments should be made. First of all, your statements with regard to the general nature of women at TAMU is rather absurd and shows that you gentle men (and I use the term loosely) exhibit very little in the way of taste or manners. Your second complaint deals with your lack of anything to do on Saturdays, which you state, in other words, stems from your Editor: Until last week, I considered Student Government (SG), a rather harmless group. Until last week, that is . . . I am vehemently opposed to two actions SG took last week. The first was closing meeting to the press and non-elected stu dents. No matter how often Ronnie Kapa- vik and Paul Bettencourt deny it, according to the Open Records Law, the SG is a governing body by virtue of the fact that they assess and collect* a fee from every student through the semester fees, which must be paid in full to attend class. Not a voluntary contribution, it affects and re lates to all the students on this campus, meeting Webster’s criteria for the adjec tive “public. ” The elected members of SG betrayed the trust we placed in them last year at election time, and broke the law when they allowed the closed meeting. The second controversial action was allo- Editor: The Texas A&M Student Senate has been put under pressure by The Battalion to disclose the contents of a closed session last Wednesday night. It is important that we realize just what rights our student government has, and it is just as important to take an objective look at the perform ance of the campus media. In the first place, the student senate did have the right to call a closed session. Their constitution allows for such sessions with unanimous consent, which was later obtained (and verified by reliable sources). The Texas Open Meeting Law does not apply to the senate, as the senate does not qualify as a governmental body; it merely suggests policy. But even if the student senate was a proper governmental body, disclosure would not be required under the Texas Open Records Law (Section 3 (a) (3)), because “information relating to liti gation of a criminal or civil nature” was being discussed. In the second place, The Battalion’s edi tor, Roy Bragg, in Monday’s paper is re ported to have requested full disclosure ol all germane information from the Wednes day meeting according to the law. Howev er, in the same paper, in regards to these same laws, Bragg says “The senate claims that they’re not covered by the Open Meet- numera Ellect cens | During t earn how t< ■d how ti baps. Peo| Bin the er ings Law. Based on a prelimifc'jjjL an tion (see also Battalion, Friday, Mlredge h- from an official in the attorney HL j‘ office, they’re probably right g eU Mc ’ Fa legality of the action is beside the|*L’p US Fr It seems that there is a contradwHj q if the senate is legally exempt pj e t. e formal “legal” motion for discovei'Ht‘yy e s | i()| case, it is surprising to know®^ editor of The Battalion knows a the law than the state attorney Another question I have abort troversy centers around the know.” Does that mean thattk information the public should! Does it mean that the consequei# closure are not important? Shop everything? Well, obviously press has obligations to its readers the senate does to its constitueis must consider the danger their i has put on senate operations shaken faith in our student govei The press is also obligated tod news in an unbiased, accurate nit ing such language as “legal ploy,’ tomfoolery,” and “parliament* flam” is hardly less than sensaS Nor is bragging about how thej “attacked the senate for its actio! In terms of the accuracy of cam! Paul Bettencourt, Chairman oft Committee, has this to say about? lion’s accuracy concerning thii “The student senate did not ij Open Meetings Law ... This is knew about the law, but in our op! do not come under its jurisdiction 27) But this is not the first suchco In The Battalion of March 26, A* Reese, Commanding Officer Mounted Cavalry, stated, “11 campus media has been unfair ini age of our organization. I only I* other student organizations willn) the same traps I have in my The Battalion and KAMU.’Evidfi that has happened. In conclusion, we must le things from both perspectives, trust everything we hear. A f attacks senators (or for that source) as did the editors ofTheiM this case, tends to create less desc source to give information freely;! ages silence. Maybe that’s why closed sessions. Mark Strom Scott fe» Jay H. H* Samira A. Thotz By Doug Grak Rocki