Opinion Proposed amendment vital to Texas schools Page 2/The BattalionAThursday, July 26,1984 The November elections are impor tant to Texans for more than the highly publicized presidential reasons. Texans will vote on a proposed consti tutional amendment on funding of state-supported universities and col leges. The amendment would benefit schools that share in the Permanent University Fund — the Texas A&M and the University of Texas systems — as well as the 26 state universities that aren’t part of those two systems. The vote is especially crucial for fu ture plans at Prairie View A&M Uni versity, the predominately black uni versity in the Texas A&M System. If the amendment passes, Prairie View A&M will receive $6 million a year for 10 years from the University of Tex as’s two-thirds share of the profits from the constitutionally endowed PUF, in addition to greater access to the Texas A&M System’s share of the PUF. The amendment doesn’t neglect the 26 state universities that aren’t part of the two major university systems. It would create a $100 million annual fund for use by those schools. Tuesday the Texas A&M System Board of Regents formally endorsed the proposed amendment. Adminis trators in the System support the mea sure whole-heartedly. The Chan cellor’s Student Advisory Board — made up of students from System schools — and other student groups also support the amendment. A num ber of groups are planning or have be gun educational campaigns on the is sue. Administrators at the Texas A&M and UT systems and at the other state schools worked long and hard to come up with a more equitable plan for shar ing state funds. The proposed amend ment is their answer to the problem. It’s the best answer. But don’t leave all the work for university administra tors. Tell your friends and family about the amendment — before the election. Higher education in Texas depends on it. THERESA SIMPLE.ANSWER [ WHY THE PEFENSE PEPI! SPENDS $400-FORA FEW SCREWS.. By REP — The Battalion Editorial Board Determining the value of an American life By JIM ANDERSON Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — H.L. Mencken once wrote an essay translating into numbers the romance and folklore of popular American literature and jour nalism. It was based on the question, “How many people could an American whip?” He deduced from the litera ture and newspapers of the times, in cluding the sports pages, that one American (white, naturally, and male) could whip three Englishmen. But, according to the literature, it was as sumed that one Englishman could whip three Frenchmen. One Frenchman, or other (white) European, according to Mencken’s analysis, could whip 16 Chinamen, and one Chinaman could probably handle X Abysinnians, any one of whom could whip Y Zulu tribesman. And so it went, almost indefinitely. By geometric progression, Mencken was able to deduce that one American — according to the popular literature of the time — could easily whip 14,000 primitive tribesmen. Don Shanor, a former United Press International staffer and now a pro fessor of journalism at Columbia Uni versity, once took the same idea and translated it into current journalistic terms: “One American is worth...” Struck by the number of times he had seen tiny stories with the headline, “59 Perish in Mexico Bus Crash” squeezed in at the end of long, dra matic stories about the death of one American, he came to the conclusion that the Mencken formula can be ap plied to current American journalism. The death of one American, in terms of column inches in American newspapers, he disovered, is equal to the demise of several thousand Tanza nians. Of course the timeliness of the report has a bearing, as does the drama surrounding it. New evidence has come to hand that the formula still works. There is even a corollary: In terms of editorial interest, the death of one of “our” Chinese, when reported in a timely fashion, is worth the death of approxi mately 280,000 of “their” Chinese. One day a few weeks ago, not a ter rifically busy news day, two stories on the UPI wires illustrate the point: One story dealt with a mine explo sion in Taiwan, where about 124 min ers were trapped underground. An other reported new and meticulously accurate census figures from the Peo ples Republic of China that revealed for the first time that at least 16 mil lion people — and perhaps as many as 27 million — died in the catastrophic upheavals that resulted from Mao Tse-tung’s ambitious but ill-conceived plan to drag his country into 20th cen tury, the “Great Leap Forward.” According to the daily sampling of newspapers by UPI bureaus around the country, about 65 per cent of the country’s newspapers carried the Tai wan story, but only about 20 per cent carried any mention of the “Great Leap” catastrophe, as reported by ei ther of the major wire services. The Taiwan story had drama, im mediacy and was the sort of tragedy that could easily be visualized by a newspaper reader — or editor. The census story was about an event that occurred some 25 years ago and the drama had to be inferred from the enormous death toll figures. But, even taking into account those journalistic values, it is interesting to note that 80 per cent of the nation’s newspapers are not interested enough in a major human disaster to devote even 2 inches of space to tell their I Even the si liare with creamery in glue Bell Cre gam, is freez: is summer; The praise cs," as one 1 ile like hints lue Bell ice And every 1< glue Bell is a L ~ of keeping i grenham” in When one ivas asked w ibout Texas ;on, the Ala cream.” Anc ity, Texas, er to Blue B “Dear Blu Your ice c kvon’t eat a beam. Here Lyn eating 1 this doesn’t going to the One of thi aramel tur April. “When wi omes out, 1 [cartons we ennifer T Bell’s public mel turtle f ran out of ibring it bad Honey v; as its only < year. This i gredients, E Other ne readers about it as a matter of recori T he magnitude of the“GreatLti 1 berry chees death toll would be roughly qw | May and pi lent, after all, to the state populaDJ icame out ii of New York or Californiabeingdi like latest f nated in mass starvation. The da 1 * ntTC toll in the “Great Leap” aftermath I • ^ three to five times as great, mimt | homemade cally, as the Holocaust in whichdi Icream. An lion Jews perished at the handsofa not used in Nazis. The only recent example ofsud human catastrophe being ignored' in the forced starvation of the Ukri by Stalin in the mid-1930s, in ul the Soviet Union’s wheat belt turned into a starvation chamber! | political reasons That, too, was mainly ignored the American press, even when came to light later, suggesting thai | the Mencken formula one Ukraii is about equal to one Mainl Chinese. Reagan still running against Washington, big government though the * past. “Last ye | own Blue 1 says. “We ' l it wasn’t gc • ter.” Tc Al On this < By NORMAN D. SADLER Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — After almost four years in the White House, Ronald Reagan — the self-proclaimed out sider, leader of a conservative revolt against the trend of government over the last 40 years — is still running against Washington. Listening to his campaign speeches, a Rip Van Winkle awakening from four years of peaceful slumber might never realize Reagan had become part of the same “big government” estab lishment he ran against as an outsider in 1976 and 1980. This is not 1980. But the passage of four years has done little to alter the Reagan campaign battle cry. He re mains a self-described voice of ratio nality, pitted against the vested inter ests and veteran politicians of Washington. His targets are still “the liberals” in Congress and Jimmy Carter, the latter presented in the form of Walter Mon dale. It’s an “us vs. them” theme that strikes at the Democrats, but hits Re publicans as well. Reagan lashes out at “those in Washington” who oppose his proposal for tuition tax credit, as if to gaze at the political debate from afar and to see only Democrats on the opposite side. He belittles “those born-again budget balancers” in Congress, but ne glects to mention Republican anxiety over the huge deficits that have accu mulated during his first term. Reagan, whose “Teflon-coated” image is a frustration to Democrats, is able to mock the political environment he has called home for the last 3 V2 years. During a campaign trip to Iowa in February, he told a crowd of cheering supporters that coming to Des Moines from Washington was “a little like landing in the real world after an ex tended visit to the Twilight Zone.” In Texas, he attacked “the smart sayers and seers” and “grasping poli ticians and indifferent bureaucrats” in Washington. Borrowing a phrase from George Wallace, he blamed years of “liberal leniency and pseudo-intel lectual apologies” for a “crisis of crime in America. For Reagan, this anti-Washington theme is one that plays well in the heartland. At a Fourth of July celebration in Alabama, where he stirred passions by waxing patriotic about men and women in uniform and the struggle between totalitarianism and democ racy, Reagan said he has felt that “if we just slipped out — we in govern ment — and closed the doors, turned the key and disappeared for a while, it would take you a long time to miss us.” No word on what would happen to the millions of people, in Alabama and elsewhere, whose livelihoods depend on government outlays for guns and butter. The refrain is not a new one for Reagan, who for years has regarded government — especially the federal government — as the antithesis of a society devoted to individual liberty. “Either we believe in our traditio; system of individual liberty, or abandon the American revolution confress that an intellectual elite ii far distant capital can plan our lit head of su for us better than we can plantlit: one decade ourselves.” In 1847, republic — ereij^n blac tion in Afri In 1941, thur was n; forces in th In 1967, in Detroit e In 1982 Gandhi an President His view of official Washington and residents of its political fraternity is a throwback to the “time for choosing” speech he delivered in support of Barry Goldwater at the 1964 Republi can National Convention, which com pleted his transition from show busi ness to conservative politics. And as he looks ahead to the bility of four more years in thatsa: “far distant capital,” Reagan may reminded of what he told a group concrete industry representativesk in 1971, while still governor of Cal nia. A thou^ Huxley sai Tor talent.” “I just returned from a tripi Washington, D.C.,” he said, “andli! to say it’s a great place to visit, b| wouldn’t want to live there.” “Two contrary philosophies divide us in this land of ours,” Reagan said. Even someone with such die-h# principles as Reagan is entitled! change his mind. 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 Brigid Brockman, News Editor Kathleen Hart, News Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan- Colk ~ ‘ The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editor Robin Black Assistant News Editors Dena Brown, Bonnie Langford Staff Writers Ed Alanis, Kari FluegefBob McGlohon, Sarah Oates Copy Writers Karen Bloch, Cyndy Davis Copy Editor Tracie Holub Photographers Peter Rocha, Eric Evan Lee college Stadon. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, faculty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Communications. United Press Internadonai is endtled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproducdon of all other matter herein reserved. Letters Policy Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length. 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 must be signed and must in clude the address and telephone number of the writer. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday dur ing Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examinadon periods. Mail subscripdons are $16.75 per se mester, $33.25 per school year ana $35 per full year. Adver tising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Build ing, Texas A&M University, College Stadon, TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Stadon, TX 77843. Crocking down on drunk canoeists By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — President Rea gan has signed legislation intended to raise the nation’s legal drinking age to 21. I don’t doubt predictions that the new law, which restricts highway con struction money to non-complying states, will help cut down on the amount of drunken driving by teen agers. Let us hope it also reduces the amount of drunken boating. The Coast Guard estimates that about half of the fatal boating acci dents last year were alcohol-related. As yet, however, there has been no move to raise the legal sailing age. One approach might be to restrict rivers and harbors appropriations for states that fail to beef up — or maybe bourbon up — breath tests. To date, only five states require skippers suspected of being intoxi cated to take breath tests. Possibly Congress will lend them a hand by making the new buoy net work more sophisticated. You don’t have to spend any time on boats to be aware of the old buoy network. Anyone who goes down to the sea in any type of conveyance has seen buoys bobbing about in the har bor, usually indicating the course of a channel or some underwater obstruc tion, such as a submerged sailor. Now, from the Coast Guard, comes word that these marine markers are being modernized. Some will have solar-powered direc tional systems. Some will be equipped with new radar signalling devices. Some will house improved weather in struments. In addition to outfitting buoys with up-to-date navigational aids, perhaps the goverment also could install a few solar-powered breath analyzers. I can see it all now. A patrol boat, sirens ablare, steers alongside a craft that has been weav ing in the waves. “Pull over to that buoy,” commands an authoritarian voice over a bullhorn. For that matter, the helms® 1 wouldn’t have to be listing to port 1 otherwise handling the tiller inasii| cious manner. Skippers might be cruising im perfectly sober when all of a sudd they find them caught up in a boat® ffic check. Each passing craft would 1 stopped and its pilot invited to bio*' a portable buoy. I’m not just talking about skipf of yachts, barges, scows, ferries, ii* ing boats and other motorized vess I’m also talking about canoei punters, kayakers and others whop 1 pel and guide with oars. Nothing can mar the pleasure®! cooling summer’s dip in an old stream quite as quickly and astl oughly as a couple of drunken noeists. Sure breath-analyzing buoys of some inconvenience to speeds operators and other boatmen hurry. But I say that is a small price pay for getting drunken canoeists the waterways. ©DR. P! PEPPER Dr. Pepf £ At l