opinion Minorities Reader: No‘dorm racism Editor: Dear President Vandiver: We, the council of Mclnnis Hall, feel it is our obligation to give you our response to the article in the Jan. 21 Battalion, based on a study released from your office concerning the underrecruitment of minority students here at Texas A&M. It is the opinion of our council that comments found in the article regarding racism and discrimination in the dorms are in general inaccurate and misleading. While we understand that there is a large problem with the percentage of minority students here at Texas A&M, we do not feel that your committee’s implications of dorm “racism” were justified in their attempt to draw support to their recom mendations. While some acts of discrimination may have occurred in one form or another on campus, these were merely localized mis haps, and in no way reflect the general attitude of the residence hall council, staff, and residents of Mclnnis, as the article leads readers to believe. We can guarantee you that we are not aware of anyone here who is “living with constant fear” for reasons of racism, and it is un fortunate that your committee is disillu sioned into believing that this is so. Obviously, none of your committee has ever lived in Mclnnis Hall, much less any other dorm on campus. Thank you for your time and attention to this matter. Bruce C. Moore, president, Mclnnis Hall J. Colin Kirkham, vice president Editors Note: This letter was also signed by the dorm treasurer, secretary and in tramural chairman. Report called forceful ruse Editor: The spate of articles and editorials concerning the recently issued minority report that have appeared in The Batta lion is the biggest collection of sophistry and non sequiturs I’ve encountered in quite a while. The main conclusion of the report, as summarized in The Battalion, was that since the University of Texas has more minority students and faculty than A&M, then UT is a better school than A&M. I totally disagree with this conclusion and submit that the quality of a university is related to the moral and intellectual character of those associated with it, not their race. One point overlooked in the comparison is the substantially higher minority population in Austin thus im plying that, other things equal, UT should have more minorities. Another specious conclusion the re port comes to is that setting aside money for minority student scholarships prom otes equal opportunity, in fact the oppo site is true. Reserving scholarships for minorities only is discrimination against non-minority students and no amount of rationalization can change that fact. The minority r eport is in general a collection of special privileges for minorities and as such is inherently in conflict with Texas A&M’s stated goal of equal opportunity for all. Instead of facilitating the ascendancy of A&M, as Dr. Vandiver claims, the im plementation of the actions the report recommends will have the opposite effect. The increased emphasis that will be placed on a prospective student or professor’s ethnic background will inevit ably cause the academic qualifications of the applicant to be de-emphasized and thereby lower the overall quality of the faculty and student body. Support for this argument is provided in the minority report itself. At UT they spend several times as much money on minority scholarships as A&M does; however, their minority student reten tion rate is lower than ours. In short, a good portion of their minority scholar ship money is wasted. In summary, the minority report is no thing but a ruse designed by those in positions of authority at A&M to force their oppressive socio-political philoso phy on others while having the tax payers pick up the tab. Richard H. Fosberg ’78 Course of evolution Editor: Readers of the article that discusses the minority report (Battalion, Jan. 21) should recognize that any effort to favor minorities at Texas A&M will create some problems while presumably alle viating others. Certainly every group on the planet has a right to exist and to perpetuate itself and its culture. These rights cannot be pursued without the use of real estate which allows the practice and perpetua tion of culture, and jobs, by the members. The difficulty lies in the fact that the growth rate of most clusters of western man, as opposed to those of blacks, Latin Americans, and Asians, is zero or nega tive; that is, on the average, gendered pairs are not replacing themselves. The growth rate for western man in Austria, Western Germany, Eastern Germany, British Isles, Portugal, and almost cer tainly the United States and European Russia is zero or negative. Add to this the high immigration rate of non-western man and it at once be comes obvious that with every passing hour western man constitutes a decreas ing proportion of human beings in the United States. High birth and immigration rates have diluted out both western man and west ern civilation in the coastal cities, leaving the midwest and south to perpetuate and develop western civilization. While it is true that both species and cultures evolve, no natural law that I am aware of rules that just any evolution has to be an improvement for future circumstances. With his steadily-decreasing numbers, western man will have less and less to say about the course of his evolution. He should preserve the one he has until knowledge is such that he can direct his cultural evolution toward a higher plane. Who knows, with his identity intact, by deed or dissertation he may even be able to convince other groups to control their numbers before we all are destroyed by the consequences of overpopulation. Willard A. Taber College Station Problem does exist Editor: Dear Student from Dorm 9: It’s nice to know that such bigotted, narrow-minded morons like you still ex ist in this world. It gives us minorities an opportunity to realize that people with your mentality still exist. It is not that your reaction to the minority article is wrong, it just isn’t right. To defend something on the basis of tradition and what might happen if... is asinine. Tm sorry if I offended you but that’s too bad. A university’s problems that in voke such magnitude as the minority issue can no longer be answered with, “Highway 6 runs both ways,” “If you don’t like it leave,” or “But it’s tradition.” If this University wants to compete with other universities then it is going to have to make changes. Some of those changes will have to include “traditions” that no longer apply to this day and age. Especially ones that can be judged as offensive or degrading. Answering the problems of prejudice with prejudice are not valid nor should they be applied. It is time for everyone that is in someway involved with Texas A&M to sit down and start coming up with some constructive reforms to solve some of this University’s problems. Espe cially the problems that deal with pre judice. It is nice to know, though, that there are thinking people on this campus. Af ter all, who would have known that there was a minority problem on this campus. It must have been a real genius of a man with the intellect of ... anyone to figure it out. Stephen Weiss ’84 Radio’s homogenized future by t Bi The n< nter, nd Hal TipilS, I by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer Often described by New Yorkers as a city lacking cultural and spiritual depth, Washington learned recently that it would lose a local institution that suggests an opposite impression. A progressive radio station long rec ognized as a national pioneer in promot ing new sounds and fledgling musicians, WHFS-FM, announced that it will be sold to a Rhode Island media conglomerate and would assume a newsier format. Many people in this city, particularly its younger residents, were heartbroken. Like many EM stations spawned dur ing the late 1960s, WHFS challenged the top-40 predictability of AM radio. Its programming dodged commercials for album play, introducing Washingtonians to artists such as Bruce Springsteen, David Bromberg and, more recently, the Go-Go’s and Human League. found that outside companies can select, tape and supply “music packages” more efficiently than an in-house music dire ctor. As a result, radio preprogramming is a booming business. In little more than a year, for example, 200 stations have begun to pay a Dallas- based firm $1,000 a month to provide 24-hour music via satellite. Subscribers to the Satellite Music Network (SMN) re broadcast to local audiences live prog rams which originate in Chicago. SMN programs include station IDs, news and commercial breaks and generic time “It’s a Catch-22. You can't sell re cords unless you get air time, but you can’t get air time unless you sell records. ” — WHFS DJ John “Weasel” Gilbert. Unlike most other “progressive” EM stations, however, WHFS refused to go mainstream during the 1970s. Its prog ramming remained too eclectic to clas sify: In a single hour, it has been known to mix rock, new wave, jazz, Texas swing, latin, English folk, fusion, rock-a-billy, R&B, and reggae. The station’s discjock- ies, many of whom have been broadcast ing for a dozen years from the studios in suburban Bethesda, Md., possess a know ledge of contemporary music that goes beyond simply knowing what sells. checks, and come in either rock, country or “beautiful music” formats. Music by satellite isn’t exactly free-spirited: Satel lite Music officials told our reporter, Michael Duffy, that their rock DJs stick to a 30-song play list when spinning re cords. For many Washingtonians, life with out WHFS will be akin to confinement in a cell fed continuously with top-40 hits. Weekly “play lists,” based on record sales, already dictate what most EM stations air here and in other markets. Indeed, as economics pinch budget conscious stations, many owners have Meanwhile, hundreds of stations routinely purchase reel-to-reel tapes from “music consultants.” Tapes pro duced by TM Productions, of Dallas, can provide continuous play on standard stu dio equipment for days on end. Station managers can flip a switch and walk away. The technique is about as sponta- nious as Muzak. “It’s the McDonald’s of radio,” admit ted Bernie O’Brien, manager of WWWK-FM, a Warrenton, Va., station which once resembled WHFS in format but now takes its music via satellite. “They cook out everything but what they :tecl ir i • • ii 3111(1 b know is going to lie abso )r j| cessful.” Re T Gentralized programming, ess off! means that fewer people detections Americans hear on their radioq ee tra i reliance on record sales assurcs| 1 'f rsit ’ time for the new and unhypednuR' has made progressive FM radioilLloyd 1 “Musically, we’ve been prett; thesch live up to now," said Satellite'yed aboi ming chief (ieorge Williams.“VfR er y make sure that an artist is e\[ e >* every part of the country priorR ° , with a particular record." Me, While hot consultants and|]i laVe j promoters admit that preprofisBand lias overtaken the radio indusi* say that little can be done toiR situation. The Federal CommutR Commission, which has purged® her of low-watt college statiorsitM several years, has rejected a propM would open the airwaves to® stations. Meanwhile, cable rat cates have begun to sell prograi dio channels to cable TV-sutt f urt her reducing demand fordid al programming. Losers in this centralization The already-slumped music whose long-term profits depend success of new artists, is sapping lifeblood. “It’s a Catch-22,”said! WHFS DJ John “Weasel” Gilto can’t sell records unless yougeu but you can’t get air time unless 1 records.” Cut off from the new anddj many listeners will also miss depth and breadth of contcn music. Whatever its technology tiers, the dark side of centralized ramming may be personifiedbf lerskater who, ears wrapped in> man, listens unwittingly to from a tape machine 3,000 mfc Traffic, parking in need of solutions 20,000 permits for 10,000 personnel safety zones. Since I have already tried talking with everyone connected with parking and traffic on this campus all 1 cwt “Good Hunting Ags.” chip bn Editor: Well it’s the spring semester of ’83, welcome back Ags! I’ll bet you’re looking forward to all those good times here at A&M, like Aggie Asteroids, you know. It’s where you de posit your hundreds in tuition and see if you can walk across campus without get ting zapped by Zero on his ten-speed fighter. Oh, and now there is a new twist to this well loved game. Same plot, but now you have to keep your senses on long range scan for your newest enemy, Ellie May on her Mitzubishi moped. Watch out Ags, she can come from anywhere, sidewalks, lawns or behind the fountains. And her arsenal includes 150 pedestrians per gal lon. The only place you have for a safety zone is in a building. I believe congratulations are in order for the designers of this traditional Aggie game, the Safety and Security office. Hey guys, I really gotta hand it to you, you’ve got sit coming and going. I mean when you get your cut from the contestants tuition fees plus license the competitors with what you call parking permits, and then collect some $18,000 more a semes ter from fines levied by your own parking lot paratroopers because you issue The Battalion USES 045 360 Member ol • Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Diana Sultenfuss Managing Editor Gary Barker Associate Editor Denise Richter City Editor HopeE.Paasch Assistant City Editor Beverly Hamilton Sports Editor John Wagner Entertainment Editor Colette Hutchings Assistant Entertainment Editor . . . . Diane Yount News Editors Daran Bishop, Jennifer Carr, Elaine Engstrom, Johna Jo Maurer, Jan Werner, Rebeca Zimmermann Staff Writers Maureen Carmody, Frank Christlieb, Patrice Koranek, John Lopez, Robert McGlohon, Ann Ramsbottom, Kim Schmidt, Patti Schwierzke, Kelley Smith, Angel Stokes, Tracey Taylor, Joe Tindel Copyeditors Jan Swaner, Chris Thayer Cartoonist Scott McCullar Graphic Artist Pam Starasinic Photographers David Fisher,Jorge Casari, Ronald W. Emerson, Octavio Garcia, Rob Johnston, Irene Mees Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news paper operated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-Collegc Station. Opinions ex pressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Texas A&-M Univer sity administratorsorW hers, or of the Boar d of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a kbontOtm for students in reporting, editing and pholV ses within the Department of CommunicM Questions or comments concerning 111 !, matter should he directed to the editor. Letters Policy Letters to the Editor should not excel length, and are subject to being cutil lhc) 1 ! The editorial staf f reserves the right to ed 11 ’ style and length, but will make every,effotll the author's intent. Each letter must alsoM show the address and phone number'd ll 11 '' Columns and guest editorials are also Wfl are not subject to the same length constrain Address till inquiries and correspondence 1 ? The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald,Texas® versity, College Station, TX 77843, or phoW! 2611. The Battalion is published daily duringT® fall and spring semesters, except for holiday- nation periods. Mail subscriptionsare$ld^,r ter, $33.25 per school year and $35 perfulb^ tising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Building, Texas A&M University, College^ 77843. United Press International is entitled eld* | the use for reproduction of all news dispatch 6 ' I to it. Rights of reproduction of all other iw r reserved. Second, class postage paid at College^® 77843.