Opinion Reforms work after 30 years Monumental decisions requiring great cour age are nothing new to the U.S. Supreme Court. But perhaps none is more important than one made 30 years ago today. It was May 16, 1954 — Brown vs. Board of Education — and the Court resolved that the educational philosophy of separate but equal had no place in America, that an equal opportu nity of education could not be provided when whites attended one school and minorities an other. In the history of the American judicial sys tem, few Supreme Court edicts have had as pro found an effect as that one carefully chosen case. Who Brown was and which Board of Educa tion he sued are unimportant. The NAACP se lected them for that reason. Brown represented all men just as that Board of Education rep resented all others. The changes the decision forced didn’t hap pen overnight and surely weren’t painless, the first minorities to enter the all white schools can testify to that. But those first children found the same courage the Court had in making its deci sion and America is a better place today because of it. Many mistakes were made along the way and many attempts at righting the wrongs ended in failure. But America has learned from her mis takes and those wrongs are being righted. We can celebrate the fact that the educational sys tem envisioned by the Court is almost here. What’s more, the reforms are expanding be yond the elementary and secondary school level. The nation’s colleges and universities are re cruiting minority students with as much vigor as public school districts are putting into their de segregation programs. And that’s the best solution of all. Once inte gration begins to take place voluntarily the proc ess will be complete. So stand up and take a bow, America. With out you it couldn’t happen. — The Battalion Editorial Board Tax proposal preposterous $4.8 billion is a lot of money. $4.8 billion in taxes is a lot of our — the tax payers — money. A $4.8 billion increase in state taxes is absolu tely absurd. But that’s just what Gov. Mark White is asking for, a $4.8 billion increase in state taxes for the nebulous purpose of education finance. No par ticulars, just education in general. Sure education and the financing thereof is important, but to dedicate the single-largest in crease of state taxes in Texas history solely to el ementary and secondary education while ignor ing the needs of the prison system, state employees (including state college and univer sity professors) and other governmental services demonstrates weakness in the governor at best and incompetance at worst. How does White plan to fund these other state programs? Is a state income tax the next trick up the governor’s sleeve? These are questions we must ask ourselves be fore giving the governor Carte Blanche on tax proposals Texans cannot afford. The economic impact of increased sales and gasoline taxes would be devastating, especially to the middle and lower income groups — the groups that sent Mark White to the governor’s mansion. It is time for White to open his eyes and re member that he was sent to Austin to serve the people of Texas not H. Ross Perot. If Perot thinks it will take almost $5 billion per year to make the changes he wants in the state’s educational system, let him find the money and pay for it. — The Battalion Editorial Board The Battalion C1SPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Rcbeca Ziinmermunn, Editor Bill Robinson, Editorial Page Editor Shelley Hoekstra, City Editor Kathleen Hart, News Editor Dave Scott, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editor Staf f Writers Copy Editor Photographers Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-pro In, sell-support- infl neivs/Kipct operated as a community serv ice ti> Texas A AM and Bryan-('.ollege Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those oi the Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions oT Texas . A AM administrators, faculty or the Boartl of | Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing i and photography classes within the Depart ment of Communications. Bill Robinson Robin Black, Kari Fluegel, Sarah Oates, Travis Tingle Track* Holub Bill Hughes. Peter Rocha, Dean Saito Letters Policy Letters to the Ediit>r should not exceed 300 words in length. The etlitorial stall re serves the right to exlit letters for style and length but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must be signed and must include the address and telephone numl>ernfthe writer. Our atldress: The Battalion, 216 Reed Mc Donald Building. Texas A AM University, Col lege Station, TX 778-13. United Press International is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, May 16, 1984 It could end up in Of talking cars and mothers khoe, th crestio gl cartoo* ion’s dail ^ Anyone is, goo. ly find e Wash in lion of S “My fuv 0E, '' ’ i' By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — Now that another Mother’s Day has come and gone, this might be a good time to give some thought to the direction that talking cars are taking. Not that automotive loquacity is ever likely to replace moth erhood as a social force in American life. But the technol ogy now is available at least to supplement a certain amount of maternal nagging. At present, the application is somewhat limited. Put a key in the ignition and a voice asks, “Is your seat belt fastened, sonny?” Or words to that effect. Actually, there’s no reason why vehicular vocalizing should be restricted to such querulous inquiries as, “Aren’t you getting a little low on gas, missy?” Or, “Are you sure you locked the trunk?” Or, “Did you have the tires checked before you left?” With a little encouragement. I’m sure Detroit designers could give us cars with the com plete oral equivalent of a back seat driver. at aiional Cz ie Shal jyBC’s Toe lirdbrains 1 jjlin the i m mem trom tailingi MacNelh the wheel. And I’m n(«rs in m< ing about a colloquy witlgow 34, h< tallic monotone of thesoi J978 for h monly associated with rot won the G The state of the art to cehed the such that a driver shoi able to duplicate old-fasl intonations like mother make. Once talking cars reached their full poll perhaps computerized i| components could bead other machines and found around the house, thinking in particularof bathtubs. If it is possible to make clocks that can shrill “W little Susie” at the ap] hour, it should be poi build bathtubs that adi “Don’t forget to wash In additc ps Tattler mded “pe cently joii at keepe )uld neve By BET! your ears Another a appliance be improved with a ni«l touch is the hi-fi system.fc a cassette in the tapeded instead of a red volume flashing, a well-modulated cries out, “Turn that(ex| deleted) thing down!" Imagine being able to take a motor trip alone except for a disembodied voice that cau tions, "Look out for that truck up ahead!” Or, “Shouldn’t you have turned left at that last traf fic light?” Or, “Is that a squad car parked behind that bill board?” Why, with a little fine tuning, solo motorists could even enjoy one of those scintillating high way conversations that help (he came |he aften I victory c he distric sweaty, [he sittirn ceiling f led off h :s, grabf forehe; bother aboi Hotels and motels was fixin ing in homey accommo. Suddenly also would profit fromtht#ied and s technology that compul tion has made possible, about a television set that “Dinner’s ready”just whtm favorite program comes If that doesn’t helpyoil more at home in a homtffl it was tui from home, I don’t kno | Her mo would. becom the as n and h red, sw s. Her 1 she was New Jerse) Sys By BARI By DAVID S. BRODER Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate WASHINGTON — A shrewd Nebraska Dem ocrat says that it’s like the body rejecting an organ transplant. Personally, I think it’s more like the girl turning her head at the last minute to avoid a kiss on the lips. Whatever the metaphor, there does seem to be a terrible reluctance on the part of the Demo cratic Party to accept the inevitability of Walter F. Mondale. Every time it looks like he has the presi dential nomination safely in his grasp, somehow it wiggles free. Whether this is just coyness on the part of the Democrats, or some primitive instinct for politi cal survival asserting itself, the refusal of Ohio and Indiana Democrats to endorse Mondale’s candidacy means his endless struggle with Gary Hart and Jesse L. Jackson will go on to the final day of primaries on June 5. When, at long last, New Jersey will have its day in the sun — or at least in the smog. The voters of the Turnpike State are finally fated to become, in Mondale’s favorite butter- ‘em-up description of every audience, “the most powerful voters in the world.” Nonsense, you say. The big test on the final Tuesday will be Galifornia. California elects 306 delegates that day; New Jersey, a mere 107. The final television debate will come from Burbank, not Trenton. I know that. But I also know there is no way Fritz Mondale is going to beat Gary Hart in California. I have been to California with Mondale. Many times. It is like visiting Samoa with anthropologist Marga ret Mead. Hart and Jackson are swingers. They both have Hollywood pals and fit right into the casual scene. Mondale’s idea of fun is ice-fishing, not hot-tubbing. Hart and Jackson are swingers. They both have Hollywood pals and fit right into the casual scene. Mondale’s idea of fun is ice-fishing, not hot-tubbing. Beginning in, all slu iff from ll n schools y library lools. th When he looks out on an audience of Califor nia Democrats, an inner voice tells him that within eight hours of his departure, 80 percent of them are going to be engaged in activities he has known since his boyhood in the parsonage are wrong. What is worse, they will enjoy what they are doing. I remember a trip Mondale made to San Fran cisco when he was Vice President. In the middle of his rally, a group of aggressive homosexuals came onto the stage and began heckling. Mon dale fled so fast reporters almost missed the mo torcade. His retreat from California will be less precip itous this time, but I would bet that after he sur veys the scene, Mondale and his managers will conclude that though they might hold down Hart’s margin, they cannot beat him on the West Coast. So they will try to do it in New Jersey. Mondale has friends in New Jersey. An Eagle- ton Institute poll last month in the Newark Star- Ledger put Mondale 11 points ahead of Hart, with Jackson well back. New Jersey gets most of its television from New York City and Philadel phia, so the Democrats have already seen Mon dale’s “red phone” ads, questioning Hart’s read iness for the presidency. Mondale has the backing of several of the congressmen, the speaker of the statehouse and, of course, orga nized labor. But he also has potential problems in New Jer sey. Jackson has an urban base, with large black populations in Newark, Trenton, Camden Atlantic City. Newark Mayor Ken Gibsonc 15 percent of the votes in a 1981 gubernakj primary, and it would not he surprisingM Jackson break 20 percent. 1 Vi i On the other flank, the Democratic vole et side the cities includes many of the i nc tepe K i^response minded suburban and rural types where! mi started has shown his greatest strength. The rule Bor’s Adv participation are a bit more restrictive thi®i"'nittee n Ohio and Indiana, but new registrants andw '° m l ^ e ^ who have never voted in a primary raa ) 8 |p|° e S into the Democratic primary without chalk | es() f-pT T hose newcomers and independent-niii ^ Galvestoi folks have tended to like Hart. niversity In past years, when New Jersey shareditsl Univei date with both California and Ohio, the a dates gave it short shrift — and the si |xas A&] of its verdict was minimal. Perhaps for that |rhe clecisl son, New Jersey showed a real streak of coi | Sciences ness. In 1976 and 1980, when Jimmy Cartel ixasA&M the nomination cinched, New Jersey voted it Jay Mar anti-Carter candidates: a merged slate oS\ Brown and Hubert Humphrey suppovlti 1976, Ted Kennedy in 1980. New Jersey also voted against Carter ii general elections of those years, so you pro won’t hear Mondale talking a lot about hist connection —there or in California, whichlii identical voting history. Does Mondale need a New Jersey win: managers say no — that he can pick up the gates he needs without it. That’s doubtful last primary win in a major state came oy 10 in Pennsylvania. That may seem like old' to the delegates who have to pick a nomine July 18. Johnny Carson notwithstanding, Newjefl not joke. It could cinch for Mondale —ord the nomination open. Sexual revolution dies for lack of in teres By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate The Sexual Revolution, according to Time Mag azine, is over. It started in the ’60s and apparently was fought to a standstill. Fi nally, according to the mag azine, both sides got tired and have now given up. I remember the begin ning of the Sexual Revolu tion as if it were yesterday. Three friends came over to my house and told me qui etly, “The revolution began at midnight. Are you with us or against us?” “I’m with you. But for heaven’s sakes, what took you so long?” “We had to wait for the post-World War II babies to grow up. Now we’re ready to overthrow the bourgeois mores of the Forties and Fif ties.” I went upstairs to the bed room and put on my old Ma rine uniform, which had been hanging in my closet since Japan surrendered to the United States. “What are you doing?” my wife wanted to know. “If you don’t let it out of this room I’ll tell you,” I said. “The Sexual Revolution is starting tonight and I’m signing up.” “But you’re too old,” she said. “Sexual Revolutions are for young people.” “You’re never too old for a Sexual Revolution,” I said gently. “I could never face myself in the morning if I knew there were so many kids out there fighting for it and I was safely at home.” “What about our chil dren?” “I’m doing it for them,” I told her. “I want them to grow up in a world where they can be free of the dog mas and restraints that our generation was saddled with. I want them to have oppor tunities that were beyond our wildest dreams. Some day when the battle is won, I hope they’ll be proud of the role I played in shaking off the sexual taboos and re strictions of the past.” “But suppose you don’t come back?” “Then hang this gold framed picture of Hugh Hefner in the window.” My friends took me down to the recruiting station. $> “What do you want. Pop?” a bearded fellow in a sweat shirt and blue jeans asked me. “I want to join the Sexual Revolution.” He laughed. “You couldn’t even pass the physi cal.” “That’s how much you know. I’m in better condi tion than I was in 1945. Test me.” “We don’t have time for that. We have too many re cruits already.” “Look, drop me behind the front lines — Vassar, Radcliffe, Sweet Briar. Ex perience counts a lot more than age.” “We’re sorry, Pop. The Sexual Revolution doesn’t trust anyone over 30.” “All right, so don’t send me to the front lines. But let me serve in some cap* Maybe I could be a for* 1 observer?” “The only position have for guys youragei' ‘M*A*S*H’ unit in then to take care of the sick the wounded.” A Sexual Revolt' sounds very glamoi 1 when it begins, but" you see what it does to bodies and minds of f people you quickly get ^ lusioned. After a fewyc J decided I couldn’t take it more and asked for ps' 1 atric discharge. Theyga’ to me with a Good Cond Medal. I’m glad Time M has declared the Revolt over. We should havep® out the troops long ago. cause it was one war no' could ever have won.