opinion Battalion/Page 2 February 25, Slouch By Jim Earle “It’s my plan for making the maximum use of solar energy!” Increasing our net worth ■ Imagine a picture of a Texas A&M student, her white silk blouse in tatters, looking forlornly at you from a stark black and white photograph. Under the photo runs a one-line appeal for money: This Aggie needs your help — Give. Hardly within the bounds of reason, huh? Well, with the increasing drain on the financial resources of Texas A&M, we could use the money, says President Frank “Please Help” Vandiver. He says our outlays are outrunning our inlays, and he is willing to lay odds that our school colors will shift from ma roon and white to red and white if we don’t get the green to move our credits toward the black. Our ledger balance is sinking, or will have the appearance of sinking, for a variety of reasons, such as more construc tion, a larger, faster computer system and more books in the library. Of car designs and romance I thought because of immense amount of brain power oftentimes lying fallow here, finding a solution to our money woes would be as easy as taking PUF from other state universities. So, after picking some of the best brains on campus, I put together a prop osal for increasing our net worth: Kyle Field Heat Stroke Rokkoncert (or Shindig) To be held in the dead of summer, when nary a wind blows and the sun bare ly burns the 90 percent humidity off by 9 p.m. The idea of a concert that would draw fellow travelers from Houston, Dal las, Austin and Waco has been bandied around since time immemorial, but one stumbling block has always been the pro hibition of alcohol on the forever green football turf of Kyle Field. The solution to that block is simple. Keep intact the prohibition on beer and whiskey and tequila, but allow Percodan, PCP and pot. With generous amounts of cool water supplied by hoses and firemen from the nearby fireman’s school, the drugs could be ingested with no prob lems, and for those people about to rock (or two-step), the water would help them salivate to new heights of debauchery. The financial benefits are gainfully obvious. Since College Station is close to everything, everything must be close to College Station. The potential crowd would far outstrip the 70,000+ seating capacity of Kyle, probably running near 250,000. At $5 a ticket, my between-the- ears calculator says that gross would be 11.25 million, not to mention the massive tangential business pharmacies mi food places would do. Subtracting $100,000 topsapn five bands, another $200,000 [on; tising, staff and security, and: $50,000 for sun screen and; $50,000 in miscellaneous expense;| es out to $450,000 for more.) computer system memory,oram leather-bound editions of the ( English Dictionary (unabridged), The field itself would beputtoil and higher use since, like brains who helped with thisproM it lies fallow during the summer. Would you like to talk expost kind of exposure would put usi above sunburned shoulders o\e other southwest school, even the!] sity of Texas. And we’re talking fun. Imagine] up near the top of the third dedii setting on the lights of the Small Clinic, you leaning back with ap filled with cool water, yourpinM flabby legs radiating heat, yo throbbing from inhaling a Head sulfuric acid blend, listeningtoeitk sultry tones of Crystal Gayle onkaL p r i ce 0 f Iv power of Rush. Hey, baby.noillL f e w we< livin’. ''M And if we didn’t spend ourmJ books or memory or newly ton| blouses, we could have patedefe with our cool water the next year baby, that’s livin’ it up. By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Despite revved up re bates, improved warranty mileage and other promotions, auto sales continue on the dire side. All sorts of explanations for the slump have been advanced, some of them pretty fan ciful. For example, auto engineers participat ing in a recent survey blamed lagging produc tion on such factors as management, govern ment and unions. Note, if you please, the engineers blamed engineering hardly at all. Yet a motorist may wonder if auto designers are really as blame less as the survey would indicate. One of the scholarly papers prepared for an auto show in New York this month traced the impact of motor vehicles on love relations. “Cars helped revolutionize American ro mance,” wrote sociologist Lynn Atwater. “They moved courtship off the front porch and into the front and back seats of the car and then to motels.” Atwater must have been referring to older models. Despite the introduction of reclining seats, many contemporary cars definitely have lost something insofar as abetting lovers is con cerned. Bucket seats alone have cooled enough ardor to keep a Playboy club running six months. Perhaps that helps explain why new car sales have been falling off. Lovers can, after all, always catch a bus to a motel. It may be persuasively argued that Detroit’s single most effective contribution to romance was the rumble seat. “Rumble” nowadays usually means a con frontation between street gangs. But in the infancy of the automobile it meant something a lot different. Moonlight uninhibited by vinyl roofing. The wind and the rain in her hair. Believe me, neither the convertible, now all but gone the way of the manual crank, nor the sun roof favored by today’s designers could ever re place the rumble seat as a passion pit. Another heavy blow to motorized romance was the disappearance of a gear shift lever emerging from the floorboard. Millions of romances began when a driver reaching for the gear shift knob accidentally grabbed his companion’s knee instead. And then Detroit had to go and spoil it all by de signing something stupid — like the automa tic clutch. Still another engineering impediment is the precision fuel gauge. Time was that a motorist taking a date home could count on running out of gas at some convenient spot — namely, one lovers’ lane. Accurate measurement has ruined that ploy, and many a love has gone unrequited as a result. While these design mistakes may have brought on heavy unemployment among auto workers, it isn’t too late for the industry to accommodate courtship trends. The first U.S. company to introduce a mod el with a candlelit dashboard can send the Japanese reeling back to the drawing board. by Davii 15 at tali Tlhe Off-Can week-ion jn drive with '““ktos Cent< ght. gHhe drive, brted by Stud pt’the Reside jm, was aimed Hfciwareness :&M students ■o attend t rove they registerec ty. Memb nt to helj jegister to j liuny. i’aul Bette )0CA, said 1 sen registere ie previous \ rive was sup: aders throut f|We’ve had Orps of Cade 'on: Studer lencourt s; Bettencour [was spons Sates in Bra Letter: A&M’s integrity seems doubtful Editor: Attention: Board of Regents and Presi dent Vandiver: I was recently sickened by the publicity which arose concerning the inexcusable and distasteful conduct of the Texas A&M Board of Regents. I am insignificant compared to the more wealthy and influential alumni. But last year, in the tradition of A&M gradu ates, I started my own business, and this year I will enjoy my first significant pro fits. It is with great pleasure that I have pledged contributions of 10 percent of my profits throughout my lifetime to those institutions, which helped me get my start. I have planned gifts this year to my church, my high school and North Carolina State University, where I re ceived my master’s degree. It is with sadness that I have planned no contributions to Texas A&M. I love my school, but I can not and will not under any circumstances support admi nistrative policies which deal with em ployees in an unprofessional way. You have cast doubt on the integrity of our school, and you have opened to question the merit of every diploma received by all former who is interested, let me go on record now as a supporter of the recent Christ ian speakers who have been tearing up Mr. Moore’s beautiful days on campus. I have no intention of opening the proverbial can of freedom of speech worms. Instead, if you, Mr. Moore, had the courage and nerve of these obno xious zealots to publicly preach your con trary convictions, I would defend your right and encourage your commitment to do so. The questions of life after death are very serious in consequence, and con sequently deserve more consideration than most of us ever give them. Can I look forward to hearing you blow your horn, Gabriel? D.S. Zimmerman ’83 More abortion debate Editor: Faber F. McMullen, President Drilcon International Inc. Class of ’77 Freedom of speech Editor: For Mr. G.D. Moore and anyone else I sincerely hope that this letter will be printed because I believe that it is vitally pertinent to the issue of abortion and I also teei that many students share my views as well. I am by no stretch of the imagination a “self-righteous Christian.” Ask any of the people who know me and this will be quickly confirmed. However, being a Christian, I was disturbed by Bonnie B. Langford’s letter of February 16 and more specifically I was puzzled by the last paragraph of this same letter. Although it is true Jesus never forced his beliefs on anyone, as Bonnie Lang ford has pointed out, he was an opinion ated man who was not afraid to speak out against all forms of evil and wickedness. Nothing better exemplifies this than His constant warning of repentance to those who sin. In regards to Jesus’ love and concern for children I offer these verses from the Bible: “Whoever then humbles himself as a child, he is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever receives one such child in My name receives Me; but who ever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea ...” Matthew 18:4-6 “Permit the children to come to Me (Jesus), and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. Truly I say to you, whoever does not re ceive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it at all.” Luke 18:16-17 I ask you, Bonnie Langford and the rest of you Christians, is there any doubt that preventing the birth of a child would keep it from realizing its potential in God’s eyes? Finally, concerning the ques tion of when human life actually begins, which is the fuel for all abortion debate, it is a problem with a solution that is incom prehensible to mortal man. Since God only knows the answer to this question, I will leave you with this scripture from the book of the prophet Jeremiah: “Now the word of the Lord came to me (Jeremiah) saying, ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, And before you were born I conse crated you...’” Letters policy must also be signed, show the add* phone number of the writer. Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length, and are subject to being cut if they are longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter Articles for Reader’s Forum areai come, and are not subject to I length constraints as letters. Ad quiries and correspondence to: Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, A&M University, College 77843. Daniel T. Smith ‘84 The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Angelique Copeland Managing Editor JaneG. 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