Page 2/The Battalion/Wednesday, August 1, 1984 Opinion Ac records beset that Yiotft be seai on TV tWs week- MR OOWN F. BIUWSKV, OF DUU/IH, M1NN. ? mu Mvm^R/ir CONt COUNT W commits NNrn>iT^; v 22^31 tim^s, A NFW MR HERMAN PFIT1KIN, OF TAMfA,nORlCA, IVIU CONSUME 167 BAGS OF F’RETTRS, 6E5T1N6 1HE OU? MARK SET PUR1N61HE l%4 WINTER GAMES 8/ 26 6A6S. RICK ANP JANET PlSTENPEP, OF OGDEN,UTAH, WILT DRINK 96^ GALLONS of THEIR FAVORITE BORAGES, shattering both men's ANP WOMENS RECORPS SET IN i960. in parking spaces Warning for the unwary You are now entering ... the Com bat Zone. Not quite, but if you spend any time near the Blocker Building (and the re mains of Parking Annex 7), the Chem istry Building or the Academic Build ing, you know that the fences and torn up earth look like a war zone. If you’ve been at Texas A&M for awhile, you probably know that the campus is undergoing continuous con struction and renovation. The con struction is one of those “necessary evils.” The constant sound of jackham mers can be annoying, but those noises and inconveniences are the price stu dents still must pay for Texas A&M’s rapid growth in the 1970s. The cam pus hasn’t caught up with the growth of the student body. Construction sites can be danger ous. During the spring semester, a stu dent was hit by a loose sheet of metal, blown off the addition to the Halbouty Ceosciences building by a strong gust of wind. Accidents such as these do happen. Sitting in a classroom can even be hazardous — at least to your ears. At least one professor who is teaching a class in the Academic Building has found that competing with a blow torch is tough. Workers use the blow torches to loosen paint on the windows so the paint can be scraped off. The noise is a problem. But another problem — or inconvenience — to be worked around surfaced Tuesday when the fences went up at Spence — and Ross streets. To allow construc tion of the new chemistry building, this major thoroughfare has been closed. So if you ever have to walk from the library to Zachry, allow extra time to reach your destination. Cir cling around does take longer. And a gaping hole that has been cut into Ireland Street in front of the Printing Center presents an obstacle course for motorists as workers at tempt to repair a leaking sewer pipe. Stay alert. Don’t wander too close to the construction sites. And don’t stand in front of windows when blowtorches are in use. — The Battalion Editorial Board Investing By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate There is now a big real estate boom in parking places in Washington. As more “No Parking at Anytime” signs go up in the streets, people are desper ate to have a parking spot they can call their own. To find out about the boom I went to see a real estate agent who special izes in selling parking spaces. He had color photographs of various garages on his wall. “I’m interested in buying a parking space,” I told him. “You’ve come at a good time. We have several outstanding ones that have just come on the market. May I inquire what kind of automobile you own.” “A 1984 Volvo.” “Then you will want a quality park ing spot in the upper range brackets. Here is one that was only used by the original owner. The garage is just five minutes from the Washington Mon ument, and your place would be on the first tier, right near the entrance.” “How big is it?” I asked. “It’s quite large, 11 by 22 feet. It is marked by lovely gold stripes and dec orated with a handpainted RE SERVED sign on the wall. Your Volvo will be very happy there.” “How much does it cost?” “Since the owner wants to sell be cause he is moving to San Fransisco we can let you have it for $23,000, not in cluding maintenance charges.” “What are the maintenance charges for?” “Heating, a 24-hour garage atten dant, and keeping your space swept clean, Of course, you’ll have to be passed by a board of the other parking space owners, but I’m sure you won’t have a problem considering the make of your car and the year.” “Can I get a mortgage on it?” “You’ll have no problem at all. The banks consider parking places in Washington much better collateral than apartments and condominiums.” “Suppose I only want to spend $10,000 for a spot. Do you have any thing downtown for that?” “We have a 9 by 16-foot spot in a dark alley that has just come on the market. The front of your car would look out on a meatpacking plant and the rear would face an empty ware house. I don’t know if your Volvo would feel very safe there or not. Frankly, I would buy something with a roof over it.” “But it seem like so much money.” “You must not look at it as a finan cial burden. After all, owning your own parking place is now the ultimate American dream.” The Rusk view of partisan policies By D’VERA COHN Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — Dean Rusk, secretary of state through the turbu lent Kennedy-Johnson years, came to Capitol Hill to dispense some uncon ventional wisdom about the conduct of foreign policy. There is a lot less disagreement be tween the two major parties about for eign policy than election-year rhetoric would seem to indicate, Rusk told a Senate Governmental Affairs Com mittee hearing last week. The University of Georgia interna tional law professor, now 75, also said government leaks are a lot less harm ful than most officials say they are, and only one really got to him during his eight years in office. Rusk, the 54th secretary of state, served under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson during the Cuban missile cri sis and Vietnam War years of 1961 to 1969. As the campaign season gets going, and the rhetoric over Central America and nuclear arms heats up to the level of a four-alarm fire, Rusk said the two parties basically are not that different. “If a president goes over on the soft shoulders of the road,” he said, “The American people and Congress have a way of nudging them back onto the main highway.” As for splits between the Republi can and Democratic parties, Rusk said: “There may be differences in tone, style and emphasis from time to time, but the central interests of the United States do not vary significantly when one party or the other occupies the White House or has a majority in Con gress.” He said in his hundreds of meetings with congressional committees and subcommittees, “not once have I ever seen differences of view turn on party lines.” Tensions between Congress and the White House are inevitable, but can be muted by regular meetings. Rusk said. He recommended the president sit down once a month with the biparti san leadership in Congress to “build up a consensus of understanding,” not necessarily to reach decisions. Rusk said it can be confusing for other nations to hear a “cacophony” of voices from Washington. But he said even when differences are magnified during an election campaign — which he described alternately as “a grand inquest of the nation” and “our qua drennial silly season” — the damage is not usually too great. “Candidates of both parties will probably say some very foolish things and create a certain amount of confu sion at home and abroad,” Rusk said. “One could hope that candidates on the campaign trail would be a bit care ful about foreign policy matters, but complete prudence would be asking too much. “Fortunately, when the elections are over, we are inclined to put these par tisan debates behind us and follow the policies which are set for our nation as a whole,” he added. On the matter of leaks and secrets, Rusk said he would not like laws re stricting disclosure. “Secrets are not as important as people think,” he said. He said only one leak bothered him during his eight years in office. It is perhaps the remark for which he is best known. After the Russians backed down during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis and agreed to remove their weapons, Rusk was quoted as saying, “We were standing eyeball to eyeball with the other fellow and I think he just blinked.” He has said on other occasions that the remark leaked during a dangerous crisis where considerations of ‘face’ or prestige could be important, and who ever leaked the remark had no busi ness doing so. Petroplex A gusher of Aggies Donn Friedm MIDLAND — To understand the culture of Great Britain a tourist visits Buck ingham Palace and Big Ben and the Tower of Lon don and a host of other landmarks, but a visitor who wants to under stand what caused the white man to inhabit the bar lands of the Permian Basin neei make just one stop — the Permian! sin Petroleum Museum. Here you can see oil. Crude Oil. Where it comes from and wheiti going. The men who wildcatted The men who pumped itoutofi ground. The men who condnut wage the battle of the crude. The museum’s brochure says a an average visitor spends 1 1/21x1 in the museum, hut a careful insa tion will take, they Ixoast,4hours. Four hours in a sacred templel voted to oil? Yep, that’s how long ittookforj reporter to travel through the seum. The three wings — the west icated to the pre-drilling people: east centering on geology and ogy; and the north on thefutureo:: including reclaimation of old wel are equally interesting to the pe buff or the environmentalist. The video-touch-as-you-go range from a nitro explosiontoa sized airplane that takes you on a pij | line checking flight. In the Oil Hal Fame you can see the mugsoftheE that have pumped the region inds ing a few good old Ags. Midland itself is an Aggie town. There’s an office building do> town that one resident told mein the skyline with that Aggie flag." That building, along with ont Midland’s newest: Clay Desta, isci trolled by overall good Ag, Clart Williams. On the floor of Clay Desta, amoK the rooms, the glass elevators green plants —that make it lookm like a Hyatt Regency than an off) building—is a small plastic case. Does the case cover a pre-hisw footprint, the Midland women'sbf or perhaps a piece of avant gardes work, you ask. No way, not in the petroplex. Upon closer inspection l coi clearly see the object d’art delica preserved. Gently fingered into concrete it said, “Gig ’em Aggies." It’s a foregone conclusion in land that Aggies are a bit different As I stood in line at the Petroli Museum, I handed my guide $2 the admission. He pulled am buck from his wallet and laid it on counter. Upon realizing that he t only one single, he handed the lad' the cash register a $5 bill. She smiled, picking one of the' gles off the counter and handing back to him. “NO, no,” he said, “that’s airea mine.” Flustered, she punched the on the cash register trying to open. “You wouldn’t,” she asked, “happ to be Aggies, would you?” One man's flower, another's crabgrass By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — The U.S. gov ernment, I am pleased to note, has ex panded by 17 species the list of 76 for eign “noxious” weeds that are subject to import restrictions. The action by the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service means that nobody can lawfully bring the weeds into this country without getting a per mit from the Agriculture Department. While it is difficult to imagine the department being so heartless as to deny an import license to noxious weed-fanciers, I say the move is long overdue. That some travelers to foreign lands will go to any length to enhance their noxious weed collection is apparent to anyone who has spent any time at a port of entry. I’ve known returning globetrotters to try to fool customs inspectors by pressing noxious weeds in the family Bible between the bride’s bouquet that Aunt Mossy Belle caught at Cousin Lobelia’s wedding and the carnation Uncle Rimbeau wore to the senior prom. Once they have are safely through customs, having disguised the contra band as keepsakes, these shifty, albeit artful, tourists then evidentally sow the weeds in my yard. At any rate, I’ve got all 76 varieties flourishing amid the crabgrass. According to my dictionary, the word “noxious” can mean something is injurious to health or morally harm ful. The name of the agency seems to imply that the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service regards the former as the prime menace. But I be lieve the threat to our morals is a greater danger. Oh, I suppose some Americans may be genuinely fond of Rubus molucca- nus, a type of wild raspberry that is one of the 17 newly proscribed plants. I’m told that until you’ve tasted Ru bus moluccanus jam or sipped a bit of Rubus molucannus wine, you don’t really know what epicurean living is all about. I rather doubt, however, that the problem would be as acute as it is if the motivation for the importation of nox ious weeds was mainly a matter of pro viding new taste thrills, or asthetic ap preciation, or ignorance. The Battalion (ISPS 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 The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editor Robin Black Assistant News Editors Dena Brown, Bonnie Langford Staff Writers Ed Alanis, Kari Fluegel.Bob McGlohon, Sarah Oates Copy Writers Karen Bloch, Cyndy Davis Copy Editor Tracie Holub Photographers Peter Rocha, Eric Evan Lee Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting neMptf'' operated as a community service to Texas A&M andAn^ College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of* Editorial Board or the author, and do not ntxessarilf ttf resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, W or the Board of Regents. 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