Page 2/The Battalion/Monday, March 3, 1986 Opinion it of financ king contril m the Class tie added I PARTY ADVISER Q. VJUAT PO YOU GET COR , SOMEONES 150™ BIRTHPAY ? MARGULIES FVST Unit+d Fes Curt Syndicate F< By TERE Re [Ernest T. Pitz named p A's 130,000-1 'ormer Stude [itzer says, “I lived a lot as k a chance ti support. "1 never realh It that 1 woul |r, much less lation).” /hile a studt ps of Cadet* 4St Town Hal pred by the YM itzer, who r Isident of I ghton, a pe consulting 1 from A&1 he Student king this se A upplement . A LUMP IN YOUR THROAT Some Lone Star heroes forgotten Texas turned 150 Sunday. The state is celebrating 150 years of independence. It is celebrating a proud history of strong-willed people toughing it out through tough times. It is celebrating its own particular brand of everything-is-bigger- and-better-in-Texas pride. Texans are proud of their heritage, but they overlook parts of it. They are proud of rugged heroes such as Davy Crockett and Sam Houston, but they often overlook others who played a role in the founding of Texas. Myths sometimes get in the way of reality. Texas children are being taught romanticized versions of Texas history in schools. They aren’t taught about Texas’ rich ethnic — partic ularly Mexican — heritage. The role of minorities in the devel opment of Texas is often overlooked. The Lone Star state does indeed have a history to be proud of. But Texans aren’t doing themselves or their children a serv ice by portraying all the state’s founders as John Wayne-on-the- range types. Television and books aren’t telling children the real Lone Star story. Texas was built by not only Anglo-Americans but also Mexican-Americans. People of all races fought for the same goal — the independence of their land. Children today should be learning about the diverse group of people that fought to free Texas from tyranny. It’s about time Texans acknowledged their debt to a//ethnic groups. The Battalion Editorial Board Public-relations firms getting into Angola fight ice is helpir t and also i: dents now crested in o The commi The war in An- go 1 a is getting meaner and meaner. On one side is our ally, Jonas Savimbi and his UNITA gueril las. The immedi ate target of their fighting (freedom will assuredly come later) is the Marxist government which is supported by Cuban troops and Soviet advisers. Now both sides have escalated the fight. They have hired Washington public-re lations firms. For something like $600,000, Savimbi has armed himself with Black, Mana- fort, Stone 8c Kelly, which not only does public relations, but lobbying and, for all I know, windows as well. In an inter view, Savimbi said he was waiting to see how well Black, Manafort, Ston & Kelly perform before signing a contract with them, but he claimed — almost patting his pocket — that his movement con trolled 80 percent of Angola’s diamond production. The check is all but in the mail. The Angola government has re sponded in kind. The Marxist regime has secured the services of Gray & Com pany, whose chairman, Robert Keith Gray, headed President Reagan’s inau gural committee and once worked in the Eisenhower White House. The An golans are, for the moment, going month-to-month with Gray, at an initial rate of $20,000 per. Diamonds may be a girl’s best friend, but it’s likely Gray in sisted on cash. We may assume that this fight be tween Washington’s premier Republi can PR firms will be a bloody and pro tracted one. Roger Stone, a partner in Black, Manafort, Stone 8c Kelly, is not known for taking prisoners. It may come down to some desperate restau- rant-to-restaurant eating along K Street, N.W. We may also assume that, di amonds or no diamonds, should the United States resume aid to Savimbi, some of the money will come right to Black, Manafort, Stone 8c Kelly. And, fi nally, we may assume that when Wash ington’s most illustrious Republican public-relations firm takes a Marxist government as a client, something has gone seriously off the tracks. That something is U.S. policy in southern Africa. It is so chaotic, so con fusing and so illogical that not only can our national interest not be discerned, it’s possible to break bread on either side of it. President Reagan mentioned An gola in his state of the Union speech — “You are not alone, freedom fighters.” But he did not mention that his free dom fighters were allied with South Af rica and had, on occasion, served as Pre- toria’s bounty hunters in nearby Namibia. The flowery rhetoric failed to mention that Savimbi is viewed else where in Africa as South Africa’s stooge. Like details concerning the budget, such information was probably deemed not quite ready for prime time. Indeed, the administration’s reflexive anti-communism has all but obliterated familiar political labels. Liberalism ar gues that U.S. policy should be indepen dent of corporate interests. In Angola, though, it is the conservative adminis tration that makes the case. It has sug gested to Gulf Oil that it get out of An gola. Poor Gulf. Once the corporate personification of the conservative Mel lon and Pew families, now it must turn to liberals for solace: Gan’t it stay in An gola and make a buck? No, says the administration with nary the suggestion that it appreciated the irony of its answer. In its anti-unist zeal, it has asked American corporations to do in Angola (get out), precisely the op posite of what it has asked them to do in South Africa (stay in). Constructive En gagement in South Africa becomes De structive Engagement in Angola — all the more destructive since South Africa, with the alleged help of UNITA, has at tempted to destroy Gulf’s Angola instal lations. Richard Cohen New chapter in U.S.-PhiHppines relations begins Looking ahead with Aquino government The fall of Ferdi- nand Marcos opens a “ new chapter in U.S. Barry relations with the Schweid Philippines even AP News Analysis while the circumstanc remain unclear. The new chapter begins with relief — that Marcos relinquished power instead of trying to fight it out on the streets of Manila and the provinces. It also begins with hope that Corazon Aquino, the new president, will form a cabinet with moderate views, know how to revive the Philippine economy and keep the Clark and Subic military bases open to the U.S. Navy and Air Force. While looking ahead, State Depart ment officials are not being all that clear about the circumstances of Marcos’ res ignation and the U.S. offer of safe ha ven and medical care. WUEW YOU ABSOLUTELY, POSITIVELY, UAVE TO GET OUT OVERNIGHT, “We observed the realities on the ground,” a senior U.S. official said Tuesday night. He referred apparently to the fact that the Filipino people had decided they wanted to be led by Aquino and not by the man who ruled them for 20 years. But no one in the U.S. government is willing to say what constitutional proce dure, if any, was followed in the tran sition. Legal questions remain about Aquino’s mandate. Nor has it been explained how Mar cos was eligible for sanctuary in the United States if his government carried out the human rights abuses that were catalogued by the department in its an nual worldwide report Feb. 13. “I don’t intend to get into a debate about the issue that you raised,” the se nior official told a reporter who pressed him. “I’m saying that President Marcos is the leader of a country with whom we’ve had a long friendship, and we’re providing him safe haven.” The agreement negotiated with Mar cos to use the Clark and Subic bases is good until 1991 and would be extended automatically unless the U.S. or Phil ippines government raised objections. The Reagan administration has not sought assurances from Aquino that the Navy’s Pacific fleet and the Air Force’s tactical and reconnaissance planes —the biggest U.S. military complex outside the United States —would be allowed to remain. Secretary of State George Shultz told the Senate Budget Committee a week ago that democracy has priority over the bases. Still their strategic importance is obvious. Historically, the turnover in the Phil ippines is nearly unique in U.S. relations MAA6UUES Umilmd Ft tun S/rndtctl* with friendly governments. When dictators fell they often were succeeded by authoritarian military re gimes or radicals whose anti-American ism was fueled by resentment over the support the United States gave the old regime. Critics of Marcos, seeking U.S. sup port in recent years, had to cope with a phantom: Iran. Comparisons were con stantly being drawn to the downfall of the Shah and the disorder and hostage taking that followed. Would Marcos be succeeded by a ver sion of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho meini? Or would a dangerous vacuum de velop in the Philippines — to be filled by communist insurgents who would turn the country away from its traditional friendship with the United States? The critics of Marcos argued the suc cession in the Philippines would be peaceful and democratic if he could be persuaded by the United States to yield power. Taking office, Aquino declared in Manila that “a new life” had begun in her country. In Washington, officials were already praising her skill in uniting a frag mented opposition to Marcos during the election and her use of the Roman Catholic church and various volunteer groups to get her message across to the electorate. The United States is willing to help with financial assistance. But, officials say, it will be up to the Aquino govern ment and the Filipino people to deter mine if the country is caught up in the new prosperity in Asia. Its political future is in their hands, as well. Barry Schweid is a diplomatic writer for The Associated Press. orn Much of the world must look at performance with consternation seems that what really gets the Uni States angry is not raw, repressive ists, but Marxists — even those (iulf credit cards. Especially in bladl w 1 , , ; Media cov rica, we are proving that given a cn s j tua between racism and Marxism, we'Qiequate be choose racism anyday. At the verylelfent’s attitm we know more about it. i rmer ^ dent, who w The fight between two of WasMT ton’s better-known public-relatiofi, 1 ou 8‘) firms is an apt metaphor lor a | igshington that’s degenerated into confusi n months c Where the administration prodaipns are still universal rights and wrongs and moral obligation to underwrite an inn gency, PR men will take you tolundi argue just the opposite. Like mostoi Washington issues, the war in An| has become tax deductible. A freed fighter’s got to eat, doesn’t he? ibanon. Oi rtedly bee Richard Cohen is a columnist fork Washington Post Writer’s Group. 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