?! i : Page 2/The Battalion/Monday, March 21, 1983 Aggie Rag follows Deadly Texan legacy As students all over Texas were await ing spring break, journalism students at the University of Texas were fighting a losing battle. The group was arguing for the cause of the Deadly Texan, the annual April Fool’s edition of the Daily Texan. The students lost. The Texas Student Publications Board voted down the special edition be cause they said it hadn’t been included in the paper’s budget. Although the Deadly T exan stepped on a few toes last year, the parody will be missed this year. The satirical issue usual ly was both entertaining and a valuable form of criticism. We at The Battalion decided to put out a humor supplement of our own this year — “The Aggie Rag.” We did not intend to offend anyone — just elicit a few laughs and stir up some thought about things we take for granted here. Like the Deadly Texan, our issue may upset a few groups on campus. We hope that students and faculty will read the supplement in the spirit in which it was written. We dedicate The Aggie Rag to the would-be satirists at UT. Poor Nazi fugitive the pain of it all by Art Buchwald I was very disturbed to read in the newspaper the other day. that convicted Nazi war criminal Klaus Altmann-Barbie had to undergo an emergency hernia operation in Lyon, where he is awaiting trial for his role in the deaths of hun dreds of Jews and resistance fighters. I immediately called the French Embassy to find out how he was. “Are you a friend of his?” the embassy official wanted to know. “Not exactly,” I said. “But I am in terested in his health. Tell me, was the operation very painful?” “It might have been,” the man said. “Did he scream a lot? Was he in real agony?” “I doubt it. I’m sure the doctors gave him anesthesia.” “Oh that’s too bad.” “What do you mean, that’s too bad?” “Klaus never believed in anesthesia. Fie felt a man should be fully conscious when he was worked over. It would have been nice of he was awake when the doc tors did it to him.” Barbie is a sick man. He has, besides hernia problems, stomach pain, kidney disease and a nervous disorder.” “Poor Klaus. Does his stomach pains make him wretch a lot? You know, dou ble over as if someone kicked him with a boot?” “I have no idea. Why are you in terested?” “No one likes to be kicked in the sto mach. I know Klaus liked to kick other people in the stomach, but he never wanted anyone to do it to him.” “I don’t understand where this conver sation is leading.” “I told you. I’m just interested in Klaus Barbie’s health and I want to make sure he’s getting the best medical help avail able. You say he has kidney trouble. He must be very uncomfortable.” “The French doctors are taking very good care of him.” “I’m sure of that. But tell them not to give Klaus any painkillers.” “Why not?” “Klaus never believed in painkillers. He said painkillers dulled the mind and senses. I’m sure if he wouldn’t prescribe them for others, he wouldn’t want any for himself. Tell me about the nervous disorder.” “From what we know he can’t sleep at night.” “Poor Klaus. He used to sleep so well in Lyon. Don’t let the doctors give him any thing to get a good night’s rest. Barbie always maintained the less you let a per son sleep, the more willing he was to cooperate with his captors. Be sure and shine a light in his eyes all night long. He likes that.” “How do you know what he likes?” “He used to do it all the time to the people in his care. He wouldn’t have done it if he didn’t believe a bright light was good for someone who needed sleep.” “Are you a doctor?” the man at the embassy asked. “Not exactly. But when someone like Klaus Barbie gets sick, I like to be of help. Have the French doctors hit his kidneys with a night stick?” “I’m sure they haven’t.” “They might try it. Klaus always said hitting a person in the kidneys was a good way to make him forget his hernia prob lems.” “I don’t think the doctors are about to hit Barbie in the kidneys with a night stick.” “I guess not. Maybe the cure is an old wives’ tale or maybe Barbie made it up during World War II. What else is wrong with him?” “He’s also supposed to have a heart condition.” “Poor Klaus. It’s as if his entire profes sional life has caught up with him. The man must be miserable.” “I imagine he is.” “How miserable?” “I have no idea. Why is it so important to you how miserable he is?” “I just wanted to know how much to spend on a ‘Get Well’ card. Slouch By Jim Earle “As an adult, I am not obligated to have my midsemester grades sent home; it’s an invasion of my privacy! But Mom has made a good point: no grades, no money! 99 Study: Truth about China? e oi ir the d fac u by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer In the real world, thousands of newly- and nearly-born babies have been mur dered in rural Chinese villages. But in the academic world of Steven Westly Mosher, who first reported mod ern China’s infanticidal habits in 1981, reality has become virtually irrelevant. Unimpressed by his methods, Mosher’s dons at Stanford University bounced him from the doctoral program Feb. 24. two names), appeared in a Taiwanese news magazine in May 1980. Not surpris ingly, the People’s Republic didn’t like the story; nor did many American acade mics, who blamed Mosher for China’s subsequent restrictions on visiting U.S. scholars. Stanford insithat the two-year investi gation leading up to Mosher’s expulsion ropea arses .‘haeol (According to the Chinese, Mw ature, an imported van through resmrketir and exchanged gifts with villajrrman formation.) A fe r< ntswil • If Mosher acted unethicrF wri) I standards was he subverting?.\!®v a all accounts one of Stanforastotip ‘ polony students, says he recewfl cific instructions on thedo'sane* Mosher, 34, says his dismissal was a matter of publish-or-perish. For anthro pologists at Stanford and social scientists elsewhere, “unethical” and “illegal” be havior was the pivotal issue. In the end, a pox falls on both houses, blemishing scholars and scholarship. The case, for now, is closed. Academic relations with the Chinese, precious to so many insti tutions, are on the mend. Cantonese field work. Sofar.rcP questioned his research procedi se. (Stanford’s case isn’t helpecl fact that it relied on testimonvfrJj For all those who thought Margaret Mead’s techniques were anthropology’s only controversy, a brief synopsis of this scholarly soap opera may be in order: was aimed at more than a reconciliation with its Peking collegues. Last week, it also said that Mosher’s choice of a less- than-scholarly journal for publishing his story was irrelevant to the verdict. For nine months ending in June 1980, the former naval officer studied rural Chinese life in the ancestral village of his (now divorced) Hong Kong-born wife. As part of a new scholarly exchange be tween China and the U.S., Mosher’s re search was the first of its kind in a country understandably suspicious of social sci entists. “There were numerous violations of our ethical standards,” said James Fox, one of the 11 anthropology faculty mem bers who voted against Mosher,” ... and they were serious and included illegali ties.” people who had a stake in thciH Mosher's scorned wife and wolr b ’ sors who wanted access to thenuif ^ & been • If Mosher’s article wasn'tJths C why did Stanford wait until after!Joe J. lication to begin investigating:[tor, s; accounts, allegations of miscoi#babl) been known for more thanavcir be :ted b Unfortunately, the evidence for these In the course of his field work, Mosher discovered and documented with photo graphs the darker side of China’s birth control crusade: abortions forcibly per formed on rural women in the third trimester of pregnancy, newly-born females killed outright. An illustrated article on these practices, written under the byline Steven Westley (Mosher’s first . iy. claims lies in a 47-page report that neith er Mosher nor Stanford will make public out of fear, each says, of “injuring inno cent parties.” Nevertheless, until the re port is made public, a number of impor tant questions can be raised in Mosher’s defense: • If illegal acts occur in a totalitarian country, does it matter? Had Mosher been studying in South Africa, would the “illegalities” be taken so seriously? In any event, charges first passed by Peking to U.S. officials hardly seemed damning. Indeed Mosher’s problemw^qYi'iii did something extraordinaryforI^ ar | — he made news — withoutf*t|fo standard practices. Instead ofc|t pric an obscure scholarly journal hum eventually publish his story inpujty; spected Asian Survey), he chose libs 1 ill equivalent of Time magazine,«®j[be story automatically becamepropr e Even Mosher admits that dumb. : >whk The case, for now, is closed. relations with the Chinese, prea fsbeei the many institutions, are on the But, for many of us, irreparaK age may have already been dontl notion of scholarship and pull knowledge. Emphasis on means?; equal recognition of the ends. R ' Reader calls Alaska beautiful, magical place Editor: Hi: I would like to respond to the article pertaining to Governor Mark White and Alaska. I was surprised at the gentle man’s ignorance. I’m wondering who put Mr. White in charge of making a decision for a vaca tion site for other people. Evidently he let his mouth go into action before his mind did. I know from experience that Alaska is a beautiful, magical place. Agreed, it can only be appreciated by a certain breed of person. One who desires independence, simplicity and beauty. I’m sorry to find out Mark White is “miffed” by such things. He certainly has my pity. P.S. In answer to your question on: “Who would live in such a cold and bar ren place?” My sister. Sharon Crone Former student USPS 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editor Diana Sultenfuss Managing Editor Gary Barker Associate Editor Denise Richter City Editor Hope E. Paasch Assistant City Editor Beverly Hamilton Sports Editor John Wagner Entertainment Editor Colette Hutchings Assistant Entertainment Editor. , . . 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