Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 4, 1984 Opinion Hunting with Joe Commando Living off land: fun of the sport My dad said I had it. He could see it in w my eyes — Buck txatni Fever. Cook I thought the glazed look was from three tests the week before Thanksgiv ing. I knew he was determined. I pre pared myself to spend the entire holiday in the mesquite trees of west Texas. I had proved myself ^ marksman early in life, but I hadn’t been on an ac tual hunt since childhood. All I could remember was darkness in the early morning and cold, freezing cold. I got home on Wednesday and Dad had already made a spot on the trophy wall for a new rack. I felt the obligation. Deep guilt would have followed. I also had to stop the harassment from Mom and my sibling rivals. “She won’t go. The sales start this week.” “Four days without a shower? Where will she plug in the hot rollers?” They almost got me with the soap op eras, but All My Kids could make it without me a few days. I knew if Dad could rough it, so could I. Dad excused himself from the turkey feast 32 minutes after we began. He re turned to the living room, wearing your basic camo-everything. I was going out in the woods with Capt. Joe Commando. He shook his head at my purple sweats and Kaepas. Six hours later when we arrived at the lease outside of Junction, I wondered if I could still pitch a tent. I was surprised when a trailer appeared out of nowhere. “Does Mom know about this?” I ques tioned, thinking about all the stories of barbaric living on these hunts. “I think I mentioned it,” he mumbled. “It only sleeps four.” The wind was howling and the tem perature was dropping as we unpacked. Numbly, I wondered when the last death due to frostbite had been re ported in the county. I tried to count my toes through the three pairs of socks I was wearing. One, two, three...six. Close enough. Capt. Joe Commando asked if I was really that cold? I chattered out, yes. He produced an outfit similiar to his. Same size,too. Men’s large. I’m 5’2”, but insulation is insulation. Green is not my color either, but I suffered. Commando has slipped into the woods. He returned to open the trailer door and the electricity flickered. The light revealed a color television, (I knew Doug Flutie woudn’t do it without me), a bathroom, stove, oven and kitchen area. This I could handle. It was a little cramped, but it was inside. I rolled out at 4:30 a.m.(That’s usually before I roll in at school.) I was wired, but images of the brush blinds I had heard so many hunters moan about ran across my mind. The blind was not a pile of sticks at all, but a little house on stilts. It was complete with windows, carpet, a swivel chair and a heater. I sat there in total darkness trying to put the chainsaw murders out of my mind. I made a mental list of the nifty equipment Commando had outfitted me with. -hand-loaded bullets. Check. -.243 rifle. Check. -binoculars with zoom lens. Check. -special nylon trigger-finger gloves. Check. -flashlight. Check. -plastic bag for deer and game. Check. -plastic gloves for field dressing. Me? Joke, right? Check. -knife. Check. I was ready for the big kill. I didn’t get a deer. I saw several does, but the image of Bambi’s dad telling Bambi his mother would never come back to the thicket wouldn’t let me shoot one. . We stopped at a smokehouse in town where a deer Commando had bagged earlier was being processed. In the meat locker, deer carcasses with beaming hunters hovering over their prizes filled the room. One hunter was offering to sell his deer. “Hey, Dad,” I started, “I could maybe see how much he wanted...” I thought about the empty place on the wall and my family, waiting. A scowl crossed Commando’s face. “No, Kathi,” he said. “It just takes the fun out of the sport. It is just too civili zed.” Kathi Cook is a juniorjournalism ma jor. LETTERS: Beating Longhorns enough for Aggies EDITOR: Jackie and Team: Who needs cotton anyway? Thanks for beating t.u. Steven R. Hart accompanied by 117 signatures Aggies love to hate Cassavoy EDITOR: First, I’d like to say a few words to the sports editor everyone loves to hate, Ed Cassavoy. Hey, Ed, do you remember last week when you picked Texas to beat our Aggies by 75 points? Do you? Well, you were wrong. You were off by exac tly 100 points. Take your foot out of your mouth, eat your words, and resign your editorship, please. A bleeding- heart liberal two-percenter like you should have never have 1 anded the job in the first place. Now that that’s out of the way, I feel confident that I speak on behalf of the other ninety-eight percent of the stu dent body when I say congratulations to Coach Jackie Sherrill and the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Football Team, especially the seniors. Your domination of Texas was the biggest A&M over t.u. point spread since 1925, and 37 points is the most ever scored by the Ags against the sips. Let’s make it a habit. Adam D. Hartman, ’87 accompanied by 20 signatures EDITOR’S NOTE: Ed Cassavoy is no longer sports editor for The Battalion. Starting with Monday’s paper, he is The Battalion’s city editor. Aggie bonfire should be maroon EDITOR: If the Aggie bonfire is supposed to be the ultimate manifestation of Aggie Spirit, then why are the flames it pro duces orange (burnt orange, at that)? I would think that a chemistry depart ment with people capable of finding an economical way of producing hydrogen or producing a dog comb that kills fleas could produce a chemical treatment that would cause the bonfire to burn deep maroon. Frank Irwin, ’81 Music critic should be more gracious EDITOR: To: Miss Katherine P. Hurt: First of all I would like to know who gave you the power to be music critic for The Battalion. From reading your arti cle it is obvious you have as much musi cal experience as my two-month-old nephew. You must first realize that each indi vidual vocal group is* unique and out standing in their own way. Vocal Music is an extra-curricular activity and the people jn the groups are in them be cause they want to be. Many hours of hard work and practice go into each performance in order that we may share our special Christmas gift to you. My opinion is that you learn to accept gifts more graciously. In closing, I would like to try one more time to wish you a Merry Christmas. Mike Marino, ’86 Dead Zips stomp pregnant woman EDITOR: As you know, there is an Aggie tradi tion called the Elephant Walk. This is supposedly for the graduating seniors to show that they are no longer an active part of A&M’s 12th Man. I believe that traditions are good things, as they give a certain spirit and unity to those involved. However, this particular one has gone too far. I am a relatively new employee of Texas A&M and I am still learning about the traditions around here. Well, believe me, I learned about the El ephant Walk the hard way. On my way back from lunch Tues day, I was engulfed by these “dead el ephants.” I couldn’t get away from them, and by the time it was all said and done, I had been hit by a flying toy pis tol and pushed to the ground. That probably doesn’t sound too bad, but considering that I’m 8 months preg nant, it certainly wasn’t very good! Now, I don’t begrudge anyone a good time. However, when having a good time gets to the point of abandoning one’s senses and pushing pregnant women around, then I think someone needs to step in and take a closer look at things. Is this the kind of behavior our uni versities condone from the supposedly future leaders of our country? Shree Crane How the Democrats can make it worse By I By Arnold Sawislak Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — During the years that Franklin Roosevelt held the presi dency, Republicans made things worse for themselves by embracing the posi tion that FDR’s personality was the rea son he was beating them every time. That certainly was one of the keys to Roosevelt’s political success, but by seiz ing on it to explain all their troubles, the GOP crippled itself for more than two decades. Instead examining what they were doing wrong, Republicans spent the 1930s and 1940s snarling at FDR and his works. (Wendell Willkie was an exception to this, but he was never accepted by the Republican establishment and was in ef fect drummed out of the party after his one shot at making it over in 1940.) The question now is: are the Demo crats repeating history in 1984? The answer is yes if the party tries to explain its 1984 defeat as nothing more than a victory of personality for Ronald Reagan. If the Democrats tell them selves they did nothing wrong and no body could have beaten the old smoo thie in the White House, they will blow the chance to learn something from their loss. Will Rogers has been quoted as saying he didn’t worry as much about things people didn’t know, as about things “they know for sure that are dead wrong.” This points toward several areas in which the Democrats might profitably spend their energy in the next few years. They could examine the government policies they have been espousing. Are the programs of the New Deal, the New Frontier and the Great Society still valid? Are there better ideas that Demo crats can offer? They also could take a cold, hard look at the political strategies they have used 1 Only , , . ir r ■ Christina' in the last hail century, ror opeE stores are here are just area few examplesonw j n g to fim (h i atu polnu al ‘'truths" that migt:!Christina: worth examining. when she The South is Democratic. NotirJjjleVasie: national sense, it isn’t. Most Southerrn paling, cal and state offices are held by IM “Most crats, but the GOP has a virtuallod] they feel its electoral vote in presidential n |‘ c ^ ) an( lions. Yet Walter Mondale wasted™ able time trying to woo Southern r shoplil that never were within reach. industry Big Labor has big politicaldouil ani ' 111 *^' AFL-CIO is a legitimate player in pq dential politics, but it can’t elect apt* ^ p^j) dent and if it appears tobecomeadot leasing< nant factor in the effort, its supjxmc | “Thos< hurt more than help. That seetra breed to have happened to Mondale. t0 * )e t ^ e ‘Howeve Women have untapped politii ers we a power. The gender gap exists,butu tween th tistical difference in male and fei#l ( ‘. w ho opinion or the selection of a woman J|P pr< sid< ntial ( tndidate does notbji • v win a presidential election. Reagan! l2tol5\ a larger share of the men thanolmMany women, but most important, he! their sec more of each than Mondale. against si "We ti Young people are natural liherlchants or Youth and lil>eralism nolongerarei re,” Kapi omymous. Young people seem in ^ ested primarily in makingthejrqw^K^J^ rather than embarking on cnisiiiLg Reagan spoke to that interest; Mon Saying t and Geraldine Ferraro seemed unavineed an’ of it and spoke to the young peop watching the 1960s. X give betn , “We w alert the iware of The ethnic vote is dependably cratic. Italian, Polish, Irishorwhatf Americans aren’t automatic Demot anymore and haven’t been since suburbs bloomed after World \\a ■ j'f W e rt Their grandparents might hatch ment, ar loyal to the party, but that was ir then the days of big city political machines foshopli bosses. The Democrats have just ^ managed to assimilate the fact than ^ machines and bosses are gone forti p r() g Tail and now must accept that so are the well as a ers they controlled. “Coin Hats can say much about their owners’ personalities The semester is al most over. It’s almost time to relax, almost Miller Time. Take a break; quit reading — about the murders and who shafted who. Dib Waldrip It’s time to be a little less serious. If you have a hat nearby, put it on. Now, go find a mirror and look at yourself. Ask yourself, “What does this hat mean to me?” Have you ever taken a moment to consider the meaning of all the differ ent kinds of hats that people wear around campus? Well, let’s take a look. Probably the most prominent hat worn around campus is the military pants’ cuff that is cut off and sewn up on one end called the bider. The color of the braid on the bider is a status symbol among Corps members. Underclassmen just can’t wait to wear a white-braided bider, meaning “watch out, I’m an up perclassmen.”. Along with the tent-looking biders comes the military olive-drab combat cap. What a combat cap on a supposedly peaceful campus means, I don’t know. You figure it out. Next in line has to be the golf cap. Do the donners of these caps wear them to promote a “prestigious” country club or what? Tell me quick, “Who cares?” I have to admit I own a golf cap from the Meadow Brook Country Club in Rapid City, S.D. Did you know that’s where the South Dakota mens’ championship is played? One more time, “Who cares?” Have you ever noticed how the foot ball and baseball caps that people wear correspond with the hottest team going, and as soon as the team loses a couple of games, break out the bugles and play Taps. See-ya-later, Lastros or Disastros (or what ever you decide to call your ex favorite team). Another favorite hat around campus is the ever-present and illustrious cow boy hat. You can see all kinds. Dirty ones, clean ones, felts or straws, colors from pink to black, you name it, and sooner or later you’ll probably see it. Some cowboy hats are so dirty, you would think the owner has been using it to wipe his oil dip stick with. I’ve watched my brother take mud and dirt and rub it into the felt on purpose. I think he’s trying to win a dirty hat con test or something. Some cowboy hats are so trashed out with hat pins and feather hat bands that they look like something won at a circus carnival. I don’t know what they: supposed to mean either, but plea give me a break. You can also see funny loota French berets that appear to be sm form of a hat that has been run over the five o’clock traffic. Some folks wear caps withsotnei'i of lude phrase written across thefn< It’s too bad these folks don’t realize!! ignorant they appear wearing s« trash. Hats can be very personal andini|» tant to the owner. Some hatsalmosi! come security blankets for somefolb really doesn’t matter what anyonefi thinks about your hat. All thatmattec what it means to you. Merle Haggard was right when: sang, “I wear my own kind of hat,” Dib Waldrip is a junior journal major. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference In memoriam Bill Robinson, 1962-1984, Editor The Battalion Editorial Board Brigid Brockman, Editor Shelley Hoekstra, Managing Editor Ed Cassavoy, City Editor Kellie Dworaczyk, News Editor Michelle Powe, Editorial Page Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editors Kari Fluegel, RhondaSnidd Assistant News Editors - Tammy Bell, Cami Brown,John Halltf Assistant Sports Editor Charean WiUiar* Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting timpF operated as a community service to Texas AM * Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are dust d* Editorial Board or the author, and do not ' resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, tor or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory nessjapt' : ‘ students in repsorting, editing and photograph) && within the Department of Communications. Letters Policy Eetlers to the Editor should not exceed 300 »«®* length. The editorial staff reserves the right roftW- for style and length but will make every tlfort lo W ,:i ' the author’s intent. Each letter must ne signed aid c-' include the address and telephone number of lhtsn:e The Battalion is published Monday through fy during Texas A&M regular semesters, except lot I*" and examination tseriods. Mail subscriptions art pser semester, S33.2S p>er school year and f3s ftth- year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed MtO®? Building, Texas A&M University, College Stalieti. 77843. Editorial staff phone number: (409) 845-W * vertising: (409) 845-2611. Second class psostage paid at College Station, TX18 POSTMAST ER: Send address changes ro ion, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texn ’