Page 2/The Battalion/Friday July 12, 1985 noiNfirnsr il&ii&i&f Someone hod to be the bod guy The most controversial and disliked governmental figure since Richard Nixon announced he’s packing his bags and leav ing the Reagan administration for a career in private business. David Stockman is leaving Washington. Stockman, the former director of the Office of Management and Budget, was known for his harsh proposals to control gov ernment spending. He managed to offend just about every special interest group in the country, and even infuriated his own mother with his scathing attacks against government-supported farm recov ery programs. Any political career Stockman had planned was virtually destroyed by his lack of popularity. Yet it was for this same job of doing Reagan’s budgetary dirty work that earned him respect. Stockman did what had to be done. No one likes having to face budget cuts, but, as The Battalion has learned this semester, sometimes they are nec essary. Stockman had the rotten job of pointing the finger at the groups that needed to tighten their belts. He did his job with ad mirable dedication. A known workaholic, Stockman frequently worked around the clock to try to iron out budget problems. His ability to withstand tidal waves of criticism and still attack his du ties with dedication and determination was incredible. Stockman will never win a popularity contest, but his meth ods of foregoing politics to get necessary results did win him re spect. He took the budgetary bull by the horns. Such courageous acts are almost unheard of in the present administration. True, Stockman did not completely stop the deficit from growing, but he did slow its growth. Following in his footsteps will require a big-footed successor. The Battalion Editorial Board Anticipating Live Aid; keeping fingers crossed I’m optimistic. I hope that Live Aid will make a differ ence. In my part-time position as music reviewer for At Ease I am some times asked for my opinion on various bands. Sometimes my opinions will start an arguement Karl Pallmeyer I argue about the music the band makes. The others ar gue about the money the band makes. Critical discussions of the band’s musical ability and examinations of the lyrics in their songs are often put aside with the remark: “Well, they make a lot of mon ey.” I believe that music is art, its pur pose to entertain and enlighten. It’s nice when an artist makes money so that he can support himself and continue cre ating, but he shouldn’t create just so that he can make money. If an artist has tal ent he should use that talent to make the world a better place. different starting times of the concerts, some bands will be able to play in both London and Philadelphia. Each band will play for about 30 minutes. There will be at least two stages at each stadium and the acts will be scheduled so that there will be as little time as possible be tween acts. Videotaped appeals for do nations will be shown between acts. Ap- peals have been solicited from performers Dan Aykroyd, Prince and Joe Piscopo, and world leaders Marga ret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan and Mik hail Gorbachev. MTV and Houston’s Channel 20 will broadcast live the entire concerts while ABC will show concert highlights later that night. Mail Call On Saturday a smorgasbord of artists are going to try to make the world a bet ter place. Some of the most popular acts in pop and rock music will perform at two giant benefit concerts, one at Lon don’s Wembley Stadium and the other at Philadelphia’s John F. Kennedy Sta dium, designed to help the starving peo ple of Ethiopia. These acts won’t be get ting paid for their performances. In fact these bands will spend quite a bit to cover the expense of setting up their own stage and sound equipment. Yes, I’m looking forward to Live Aid. Some of my favorite performers, in cluding Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Dire Straits, Paul McCartney, Eric Clapton, Elvis Costello, Paul Simon, Mick Jagger, Jeff Beck, David BowiejThe Pretenders, Sting, U2, The Cars, Julian Lennon, Tina Turner, Santana, Stevie Wonder and specially re-united versions of Led Zeppelin and The Who, are supposed to be there. But I am also apprehensive. The size of the audience expected at Live Aid could cause problems. Rock festivals have often been scenes of death. At the Rolling Stones’ Altamont concert in 1969, a young man named Meredith Hunter was brutally mur dered by the Hell’s Angels the Stones hired for security. Mick Jagger and the band watched helplessly as the Hell’s Angels sliced Hunter into bits at the foot of the stage. Even at Woodstock, a cele bration of peace, three people died. rison, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton,[| Russell, Billy Preston and Bob Di brought in almost $250,000. Dueto duction costs and legal hassels very of the money actually reached Bai desh. Paul McCartney’s Concert fot People of Kampuchea, which feait McCartney,The Pretenders, Elvis rello. Queen, Rockpile, Robert f The Specials and The Who, met with lar problems. Bob Geldof, organizer of Live has said that all money received ft ticket sales, donations and sale of vision rights w ill go to directly [() hS|| pia. The bands will have to pay fori own equipment and transportation Live Aid will not finance any “olfn live album, videocassette or other aphernalia. One of the major probi with the concerts for Bangledesh Kampuchea was that the money war tributed through horribly ineffe United Nations’ organizations. Cd and his organization will oversee the tribution of Live Aid funds in Eihn||| directly. By now people are getting tird hearing about Ethiopia. After Aid, USA for Africa, NorthernLif i Hearing Aid, the Christian artists’bf tS fit single, the Spanish artists’benefm I gle, the German artists’ benefitsii 1 and Joe Bob Briggs’ “We Are’ |' Weird,” many people may wonderl the Ethiopians can still be starvingi people of Ethiopia have been fed they need help so that they may themselves. The procedes from ( die and dut Cm 1 sho salt abl< Rec alsc S ali< agr era seei roo troi 1 Aid will be used to help the Ethiofi the p 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 include the address and telephone number of the writer. The London concert will begin at 6 a.m. (our time) and last until 4 p.m. The Philadelphia concert will begin at 11 a.m. and last until 10 p.m. Due to the Live Aid is not the first attempt at a benefit concert. In 1971 George Harri son organized the Concert for Bangle desh. The concert, which featured Har- support themselves in the fuit Maybe then, hopefully, we can help feed the rest of the world. Karl Pallmeyer is a senior journi jthou major and a columnist for The Biz.« 5 r , a P, ion. B fhe >' MAft&aiES , MCVSTEN POST ,,\w GSS picture slap in the Corps’ face that the University public would be more interested in. EDI FOR: It is evident, by the front page of Tuesday’s (July 2, 1985) Battalion, that you and some members of your staff have absolutely no respect for the stu dents, staff, faculty and especially alumni of Texas A&M University. True, the law states that we must accept the Gay Student Services at Texas A&M; that’s not the part that bothers me or my colleagues. Are we going to be subjected to this type of “news reporting” from now on? Must we continually have our faces rubbed in this situation? I am quite sure there are other “news” pictures This organization may have a march ing band, but how can they associate themselves with “The Fighting Texas Aggie Band” comprised of CORPS CA DETS that we are so proud of? This banner that was featured in the photo graph is a slap in the face to the entire CORPS, especially the band. By publishing this picture you have alienated many of your readers. I hope you are proud of that. You owe an apol ogy to the CORPS and your readers. Bryan McMurry Graduate Student BR who : lishin day si ■ Su? apult* tempi “It’ “Wi [wo th be all i Me; “been i Mado ‘Mate ‘D and D’ not the root of all evil Reality isrrt al ways pretty, and sometimes dealing w i t h it c a n b e harsh. When the c hecks start bouncing, the tests start piling up and the car won’t start, it’s nice to slip into another world, at least just for a little while. Loren Steffy Some people go to the theater and pretend they’re a muscle-bound illiter ate rescuing MI As from Vietnam. Oth ers select a tune that fits their mood and crank up the stereo. And still others may open a book or flip on the TV. But some play Dungeons and Dragons. D arid D is a role-playing game. Play ers create characters on paper and put them in a fantasy setting. They act out the role of their character, having wild adventures, battling hordes of monsters and generally pretending to be some thing they’re not. In D and D four-eyed nerds can become muscle-bound charis matic heroes and vice versa. Misconceptions about the game con tinue to grow. I’ve met people who think it’s devil worship, and people who think it’s the greatest escape ever in vented. The game can be played for an hour or a lifetime, which is where the prob lems arise. Many D and Ders, especially younger players, frequently spend hours or even days in this false environ ment without ever coming up for a gulp of reality. Obviously, the game is a mag net for every type of looney tune the world has ever known. But Rambo also attracted its share of crazies. However, most Rambo viewers were playing with a full deck, just as most D and D players are. Naturally, a select bunch of less-than-full-deck players have to spoil it for everyone else. Over the past few years, several crimes have been inadvertently linked to the game. A student who plays D and D shoots himself in the head and imme diately the game is at fault. Bothered About Dungeons and Dragons (BADD) is an organization formed by a mother who claims her son committed suicide because of the game. The concern over the D and D-crime relationship is similar to the violent tele- vision-violent crime fear of the early 1970s. A woman was doused with gaso line and set on fire in the movie “Fuzz.” The day after “Fuzz” aired on television, the incident was reproduced on the streets of Boston and Ghicago. There was more to “Fuzz” than one violent in cident, but critics immmediately at tacked one portion of the film as pro moting violent crime, instead of judging the movie as a whole. Mark Twain’s classsic “Huckleberry Finn” is frequently picked apart and la belled racist, while the over-all anti-rac ism message is ignored. And now the anti-Dungeons and Dragons campaign is focusing on the “harmful” effects the game had on a se lect few, instead of considering the ben efits as well. Some people think Dungeons and Dragons is devil worship, blqck magic or just plain evil. Most of these misconcep tions spring from ignorance. Parents know TV, they know movies and to an extent, they know music. But D and D is a new concept for them. My mother never understood that all long hours I spent closeted in my room, I was stretching my imagination and creativity to its limit. She merely no ticed the time I spent on it and won dered if such an activity was healthy. I recently came across my D and D rule books when I was moving, and I re alized what an influence the game had on me. I haven’t played in several years, but some of the effects — the beneficial effects — still linger. I opened the Players Handbook, a guide for how tb create a character. Page one explains how characters have several attributes: Strength, Intelligence and Wisdom. Prettv simple, at age 12 I’d heard those words before. But they also had Constitution, Dexterity and Cha risma, new r and rather large words for a pre-teen. By the time I was 14 the game had ex panded my vocabulary two-fold and made me practice my floundering math skills (D and D first introduced me to bell curves). My senior English teacher exempted me from doing vocabulary words. The game had taught me words like “melee,” “tome,” “peity” and “avari ce” long before school did. The game introduced me to numer ous authors including J.R.R. Tolkein, H.P. Lovecraft, Michael Moorcock, Fritz Leiber, Robert E. Howard, Lewis Car- roll and Sir Thomas Malory. If there was one force that kindled my creativity it was Dungeons and Drag ons. And it was that creativity that en couraged me to be a writer. Just like any good thing, Dungeons and Dragons can be abused. Sure, many D and D players have emotional prob lems. So do many television viewers and movie goers. Many do not. D and D could be banned, and maybe a crazy kid in Wisconsin wouldn’t have crawled through some steam tunnels and later killed himself, but the same could be said for every movie, song or TV show ever connected to a crime. It’s absurd to deprive everyone of television merely because one kid watches one program and sets an old lady on fire. If a kid can’t tell what’s real and what’s “make believe,” his problems started long before he encountered tele vision or Dungeons and Dragons. BADD will continue to try to blame the problems of the few mentally dis turbed people on a game rather than face facts: the crimes they’re trying to link to D and D were committed by mentally unstable people who were just waiting for something to push them over the edge. Unfortunately that some thing was Dungeons and Dragons. Loren Steffy is a junior journalism ma jor and the Opinion Page Editor for The Battalion. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Kellie Dworaczyk, Editor Kay Mallett, John Hallett, News Editor! Loren Stefiy, Editorial Page Editor Sarah Oates, City Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editor Katherine Hut Assistant News Editors •>* Cathie Anderson, Trent Leopdi I Entertainment Editors ■- Cathy Riely, Walter Sirf Staff Writers Karen Bloc! Ed Cassavoy, JerryOsit Brian Pearsi*' Copy Editor Trent Leopold Make-up Editor Ed Cassavof Columnists Cheryl Clad Karl Pallnictf Photographers Greg Bailtt Anthony Gasp® Ins again whon Th photc was d maga $100, F ti repo Dep. * front a ch< feret i v *: the ] It? ■* Iron - * I98C T liH HH! Iron Am FL Editorial Policy 't he Battalion is a non-piofit, self-supporting netispll 1 operated as a community service to lexas AStMe Bryan-CoHege Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion arc thosed 1 ’ Editorial Board or the author, and do not ncccssurilj" resent the opinions of Texas AS M administrators, ti or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory nempipcrl* students in reporting, editing and photography d** within the Department of Communications. The Battalion is published Tuesday through frith) d' i: ing Texas A&M regular semesters, except for hnlid^'h examination periods. Mail subscriptions are tW.JUpK* mester, SSS.2ii per school year and S35 jic: full year.^ vertising talcs furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed MdW Building, Texas A&M University, College Slaiimi.i 77843. Editorial staff phone number: (409)845-2 vertising: (409) 845-2611. Second class postage [raid at < College Station. TX 7$' POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TtieBai* ion, Texas A&M University, College Station, Tt» 77843 de agent seard first E desigi Th< engim Del R ials s;