Opinion Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 27,1984 Space technology not yet perfected Just when Americans have be come blase about space travel, a near disaster seconds before Tues day’s launch caused more than one person’s heart to plummet. The six-member crew spent 38 tense minutes waiting for ground crews to put out a hydrogen fire be fore they were hustled out of the space shuttle Discovery. The blaze, which flared moments after two of Discovery’s main en gines shut down on computer com mand, occurred 24 hours after the shuttle’s blastoff was delayed by the failure of a backup computer. Dis covery’s maiden voyage now has been delayed indefinitely. The space program has come a long way since the tragedy of Apollo 1, when three astronauts were trapped in the burning craft and died. Since that time, many as tronauts have flown safely to the moon and in the space shuttles. But the program is as human as the people who put it together. We shouldn’t take the dangers lightly, but the near disaster shouldn’t curb the spirit of adventure and discov ery that characterizes space flight. The episode simply reminded people that technology isn’t so per fect that disasters don’t happen. Comity soon to pur Ptpicianfs Freezer. — The Battalion Editorial Board IP ■me of®aoNiAN<*w phfw* mem* Seedless melons don't a tourist-town make MONDAY— Once a week it’s Monday in Mun- day and some of the town’s folk re joice by opening the doors of their businesses and starting the work week. For most of the citizens of Mun- day, the work week never ends. The 5,329 residents donn friedman of Knox County — 1,785 in Munday, and the rest scattered near Knox City, Goree and Benjamin — combine to produce $24.5 million worth of crops. The po tatoes can’t take off to Abilene for the weekend, and neither can the farmers — they don’t have the time or the money. Nor can the seedless watermelons. Monday’s brochure, it’s not quite a tourist’s brochure, boasts that Munday is home of the seedless melon. In fact, the brochure tells the reader, it’s now the only place where the seedless melon seeds — everyone has a mother and father, but not everyone has chil dren — are produced and harvested for commercial markets. Munday’s other crops: 130,000 acres of wheat, 65,000 acres of cotton and 1,500 acres of potatoes are de scribed in detail along with the town’s offering to the capitalist system. Mun day has over 90 businesses including a bank with drive-in facilities, a funeral IUNPERSTAW HE INHERITS A FORTUNE WHEN HE WAS A FROZEN EMBRUO,,, The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Rebeca Zimmermann, Editor Bill Robinson, Editorial Page Editor Shelley Hoekstra, City Editor Kathleen Hart, News Editor Dave Scott, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editor Robin Black Assistant News Editor Dena Brown Staff Writers Kari Fluegel Sarah Oates, Travis Tingle Copy Editor Tracie Holub Photographers Peter Rocha, Dean Saito Editorial Policy Letters Policy 77ie Battalion is a non- Letters to the Editor profit, self-supporting news- should not exceed 300 paper operated as a commu- words in length. The edito- nity service to Texas A&-M rial staff reserves the right to and Bryan-College Station. edit letters for style and length but will make every Opinions expressed in effort to maintain the au- The Battalion are those of thor’s intent. Each letter the Editorial Board or the must be signed and must in- author, and do not necessar- elude the address and tele- ily represent the opinions of phone number of the writer. Texas A&M administrators, The Battalion is pub- faculty or the Board of Re- lished Monday through Fri- gents. day during Texas A&M reg ular semesters, except for The Battalion also serves holiday and examination pe as a laboratory newspaper riods. Mail subscriptions are for students in reporting, $16.75 per semester, $33.25 editing and photography per school year and $35 per classes within the Depart- full year. Advertising rates ment of Communications. furnished on request. Our address: The Battal- United Press Interna- ion, 216 Reed McDonald tional is entitled exclusively Building, Texas A&M Uni te the use for reproduction versity. College Station, TX of all news dispatches cred- 77843. ited to it. Rights of repro- Second class postage duction of all other matter paid at College Station, TX herein reserved. 77843. Letter: Gay community opposing Gramm Editor: (An open letter to Phil Gramm) Dear Phil, How thoughtful of you to use Gay Pride Week to launch your gay baiting campaign. You could not have made my job any easier if you had planned it. Until you opened your mouth and stuck your “Chris tian” voice for “Moral” Government in it, you had a pretty solid base of support in the gay community. Until you opened your attack, I had been finding it rather difficult to get people interested in the elec tion. Now my phone is ringing off the wall with people wanting to know how they can ensure your de feat. If you had been in Texas in stead of in Washington voting ag- ianst the ERA you might havee noticed that Kent Hance used the very same tactics. As a direct result of your barrage we now plan to launch a full scale voter registration drive among the more than 3,000 gay students at TAMU. I doubt that even one will vote for you. Oh yes, we have con tacted the Doggett campaign to pledge our time, money and votes. So Phil, keep up the good work. We couldn’t have done it without you. Lenny DePalma, president Alternative home without drive-in facilities and a motel. That’s singular as in one motor lodge. The motel is clean, the air con ditioner works and it has color tele menu. The Mexican special: two en- chilidas, beans, rice, a tamale and a trip to the salad bar. I placed my order and walked into the other room where the salad bar vision. Munday is also home for the Texas Vegetable Research Center. Texas Ag ricultural Experiment Service scien tists are hard at work propogating new and improved foodstuffs from the Munday soil. When supper time comes a visitor’s choices are few. I’m not sure what the name of the place was that I ate at my first night in Munday, the sign on the rectangular building said plainly, ‘Good Food.’ I meandered in, taking a seat near the front of the diner and opened the sat. To my suprise, it wasn’t a lettuce cart with carrots, tomatoes, three choices of dressing and plastic wrap ped crackers. Instead, it was a vegeta ble table with all kinds of vegetable sal ads. Homemade crackers sat where their plastic second cousins would nor mally be. All this, but just a six-inch plate. Back at my table I dug in, it was the first non-fast-nor-fried food I had sampled since leaving College Station three days before. The Mexican plate was just edible, but my taste-buds had already bee: appeased by a broccoli salad tk tasted fresh-picked. I decided that the next day 1 wouW have to try another six-inch plate of vegetable salads from the Good Foot Cafe. After a non-eventful morniiif watching onions sweat, I requested that my host join me for lunch at tin cafe. He declined. With bitterness he said, “No thank My ex-wife works there.” Kinda limits your choices in a one Dairy Queen town. I had a Hunger Buster. (Donn Friedman is a seniorjoum lism major and The Battalion’s roving columnist covering the plains of Tan this summer) Huffing and puffing athletes By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — Intelligence tests long have been a part of the American scene, but I have gone bli thely through life never knowing what my FQ is. Until recently, I didn’t even know I had a FQ. Then I met Sharon Bar- bano, a champion long-distance run ner who lives about as far as you could throw a bottle of linament from “Heartbreak Hill” on the Boston Mar athon course. Barbano helped develop what are called “six simple tests to measure your personal ‘fitness quotient’.” To describe them as “simple” is to do complexity an injustice. To arrive at a score comparable to what is produced by IQ tests, it seems to me you would have to add together such singularly incompatible figures as heart beats, push-ups, seconds and inches. By that count, my FQ is 228. But a few more seconds of the stairstep test and I probably could have topped that sum in pulse rate alone. It might be more meaningful to say the FQ tests rate a individual from “poor” to “excellent” on inflexibility, agility, strength and endurance. In some ways, however, I doubt this scoring system gives as accurate a pro file of physical condition as IQ tests provide of brain power. There are, for example, no mea surements for “huffing and puffing,” which I consider a vital part of physi cal conditioning. Barbano, who began jogging nine years ago, told me she developed a back problem even though she was winning marathons. That was when she decided she was “lacking in tod fitness” — strength and flexibility be ing the two areas in which she was most deficient. I didn’t ask whether she is strongei and more flexible now, or whethersh still has backaches. I must say, how ever, that in a green shirt, white slack and jogging shoes, she does look to tally fit. Too bad she never metmylalt father. In all of his adult years, my fathei never turned a muscle that wasn't somehow connected with work. Recre ational exertion wasn’t his ideaoffm Once, I recall, shortly after I began exercising for pleasure, my father commented, “You are really going to be in great shape when you quil breathing.” Had he known my huffing and puf fing quotient, he would have known that observation was irrelevant. Senate not safe Mondale draw By STEVE GERSTEL Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — As Walter Mondale, now seemingly assured of the Democratic presidential nomi nation, searches for a running mate he must take into account the titanic struggle for control of the Senate. Unlike previous Democratic nomi nees — beginning with Franklin D. Roosevelt and running through Jimmy Carter — Mondale cannot dip with impunity into the Senate, which has produced the Democrats’ vice presidential candidate since Harry S. Truman in 1948. The outlook, shared by analysts in both parties, is that the struggle for control of the Senate is going to be so close, it could hinge on one or two elections. At present, the Republicans hold control of the Senate 55-45. This 10- vote margin is expected to shrink — perhaps to below a majority — after the elections. The GOP problems are due partly to the fact that more Republican seats are at stake in November, partly to the retirement of two top vote-getters, Howard Baker of Tennessee and John Tower of Texas, and partly to the vul nerability of a number of incumbents. Despite the hazards, Mondale has properly included a number of sen- Unlike previous Democratic nominees, Mondale cannot dip with impunity into the Senate, which has produced the Dem ocrats’ vice presidential candi date since Harry S. Truman in 1948. ators on what is presumed to be his list, probably incomplete, of possible candidates for the vice presidential nomination. Among those mentioned are Sens. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas (already inter viewed), Dale Bumpers of Texas, Jo seph Biden of Delaware, John Glenn of Ohio, Sam Nunn of Georgia, Christopher Dodd of Connecticutt — not to mention Gary Hart, who is sometimes named as the second part of a “dream ticket” for the Democrats. Bradley, Biden and Nunn are up for re-election and, depending on the state laws, probably could not run for the vice presidency and the Senate at the same time. In 1960, Lyndon Johnson managed to get around that problem, convinc ing the Texas legislature to make an exception and allow him to run for both posts at the same time. He won both. But Bradley, Biden and Nunn do not wield that kind of power in their home states and probably would have to abandon their Senate races. It ma) be the reason that none of the three have evinced great interest in joining Mondale on the national ticket. The others, with the exception of Bentsen, who was re-elected in 1982. are due to face the voters in 1986, now judged an excellent year for the Dem ocrats to regain control if they cannoi in November. Alleviating the problem somewhat is that the governors of Texas, Arkan sas, Ohio, Colorado and Connecticut are all Democrats. In the event that Mondale chose Bentsen, Bumpers, Glenn, Hart or Dodd, the Democrats would not im mediately lose a seat. But Bentsen, Bumpers and Glenn are powerful vote-getters and their succesors might not be able to matcli them at the polls in 1986. In addition, Texas, Ohio, Colorado and Connecticut are not averse to elec ting Republicans to statewide office. There are greater imperatives in the selection of a vice presidential nominee but, to some extent, Mondale will have to take into consideration control of the Senate. The former vice president, if elected, will need all the help he can get on Capitol Hill. * -A (cor acaden: placem The ture is t agricult “If those r< eral re placem enlists, annual ...- " :cv -: . -