Page 2AThe Battalion/Thursday, March 6, 1986 Opinion 12 professors guilty of encouraging free though!*' 1 * pi F It all began in nocently enough. A few people de cided that certain college professors might be corrupt ing their students’ minds with ideas, so they decided to do something about it. A new or- ganization was formed. Karl Pallmeyer The purpose of Accuracy In Acade- mia was to determine if certain profes sors were guilty of thinking wrong thoughts about America, God, Money and Mankind. If so, these professors shouldn’t be allowed to express their views to young, impressionable chil dren, who, even though they are in col lege, are not responsible enough to make judgments about anything they are told. Since these children have been accepting blindly everything their par ents have been telling them for years, they don’t dare question anything that an older person tells them. These chil dren need someone to look after them. That’s where AIA comes in. The AIA finds students who are pure of mind and body to sit in on potentially dangerous professors’ classes. These faithful watchdogs can determine which professors are a threat to our society and should not be allowed to continue teaching. The AIA watchdog at the Big Univer sity of Cerebral Thanatos is Fred J. Alpheratz, a senior majoring in Repub licanism. Alpheratz compiled a list of 12 professors who were not teaching things like they were supposed to. These 12 professors were arrested and brought to trial. The trial was held in the Joseph R. McCarthy Memorial Courtroom with the honorable Winston Z. Marmoset presiding. It went something like this: Marmoset: “Dr. H.G. Plutarch, you are a professor of history at the Big Uni versity of Cerebral Thanatos are you not?” Plutarch: “That is correct.” Marmoset: “You are charged with criticizing past American policies con cerning the treatment of American In dians, civil rights, foreign relations and the Vietnam war. How do you plead?” Plutarch: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Sigmund Skinner, professor of psychology at the Big Uni versity of Cerebral Thanatos, you are charged with teaching Freudian the ories on sexuality to students. How do you plead?” Skinner: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Alexandria Babel, do you teach foreign languages at the Big University of Cerebral Thanatos?” Babel: “I do.” Marmoset: “You are charged with teaching students Latin, German, French, Spanish, Chinese and Russian. How do you plead?” Babel: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Charles Lamarck, you teach biology at the Big University of Cerebral Thanatos, correct?” Lamarck: “That’s right.” Marmoset: “You are changed with re quiring your students to read “Origins of Species” and discussing Darwin’s the ories in class. How do you plead?” Lamarck: “Guilty as charged.” Marmoset: “Dr. Harry Stotle, you are a philosophy professor are you not?” Stotle: “I am.” Marmoset: “Yes. You are charged with teaching the works of Plato, Marx, Nietzsche and Machiavelli and with comparing Christianity with other reli gions. How do you plead?” Stotle: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Emily D. Homer, you teach English at the Big University of Cerebral Thanatos?” Homer: “Yes.” Marmoset: “You are charged with re quiring your students to read books by Salinger, Vonnegut, Twain, Catullus and Joyce. How do you plead?” Homer: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Thomas Locke you are a professor of political science at the Big University of Cerebral Thanatos, right?” Locke: “Right-o!” Marmoset: “How do you plead to the charges of teaching students about MAftGUUES /906 HOLgJOfl United Feeture Syndicate Vending machine assault nation's most serious crime I n Concord , Calif., a customer became enraged at an automated teller and kept punching it be cause the machine refused to dis pense $80 from the man’s account. street. “It’s true that people shouldn’t assault coin-operated machines. But you have to blame some of the violence on the public’s frustration when they don’t get the product they paid for.” used to rob banks, now they would pre fer to beat up their teller machines. Things have gotten so bad that people kick an ATM whether it makes a mis take or not.” “What kind of country would this be if eVeryone kicked a vending machine that didn’t work?” he cried. “How do you stop the violence?’ Art Buchwald The customer was arrested and charged with cious mischief.” ‘mali- “If you can’t get your money back write a letter to the company,” he re plied. “We want tougher criminal penalities for any premeditated attack on an auto mated teller and we are insisting that anyone who hits the bulletproof glass with an umbrella be charged with as sault with a deadly weapon.” This is not an isolated incident. According to police reports, so many people are beating up on automated machines that it has become this nation’s most serious crime problem. Johnny Hawke, who runs a home for battered machines, told me more than 50 percent of all aggravated assaults are committed against coin machines. “I tried that once,” I protested. “I couldn’t spring a Sprite out of the ma chine and it wouldn’t give me my money back. So I wrote a letter on the spot to the soft drink people. Then I went to buy a stamp and damned if that ma chine didn’t work either. So I drove a stake right through the heart of the word ‘Sprite.’ ” “Will you get them?’ ‘Why did you stab the Sprite sign?’ “Upright law-abiding citizens now think nothing of kicking a Coke ma chine in the groin, or shoving an index Finger down the throat of a coin return slot. Priests have been known to punch out the glass panel of a cigarette ma chine over a two-bit misunderstanding. Vending machine hospitals are filled with broken candy bar racks and frac tured Kleenex dispensers, while the perpetrators of these dastardly crimes are walking around scot-free.” “So there wouldn’t be any witnesses to what I did to the stamp machine.” Hawke said the assaults are getting so serious that many machines are refusing to work unless they have guards. This defeats the whole idea of mechanical de vices replacing people. “People are starting to wake up to the vending machine crime wave in this country. They are furious at the bleed ing heart judges who will not hand out tough sentences to abusers. Just the other day a man was acccused of putting a bullet through a Laundromat machine because it missed the rinse cycle. He was sentenced to 20 years for involuntary manslaughter. The man will be out in 14 years to shoot another washer. When he does we will all ask, ‘Why did it hap pen again?’ ” “Do you find people beat up ma chines more in the daytime or at night?” I asked Hawke. “Why so many attacks on automated tellers?” - “It doesn’t seem to matter. They beat the machines up in the daytime to get their money back. And they beat them up at night to hear them scream.” I tried to defend the man in the He told me, “The automated teller muggings are acts of pure spite. People Art Buchwald is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. other systems of government, including communism?” Locke: “I guess I’m guilty.” Marmoset: “Bob Bernstein, you teach journalism at the Big University of Ce rebral Thanatos, how do you plead to the charges that you have told students that there needs to be greater freedom of information and that journalists have the right to report and comment on any government actions due to the First Amendment?” Bernstein: “Guilty as charged.” Marmoset: “Dr. Milton Smith, it has been charged that in your economics class, you told your students that our country would be better off economi cally if our government would spend more money on social programs than on the military. How do you plead to that charge?” Smith: “I said that so 1 guess I’m guilty.” Marmoset: “Baron Ludwig von Len non, in your music appreciation class you told students that rock ’n’ roll is a le gitimate music form and sometimes of fers valuable social insight.” Lennon: “That’s true.” Marmoset: “How do you plead to the charge that you have played rock ’n’ roll music to your class, Baron?” Lennon: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Margaret Jung, you have been charged with teaching the customs and religions of foreign coun tries in your sociology class at thej University of Cerebral Thanatos. do you plead?” Jung: “Guilty.” Marmoset: “Dr. Nicolaus By CR i, .JAndrew B your astronomy class you told studfl mocra ticgi that the sun, not the earth, istheceMd Wedne: of our solar system.” A.s.*M that he Kepler: "That's true, it is.” Bus 6 citizen: Marmoset: "How do you pbd| i< ' na ) such a charg Kepler: “Guilty.” Briscoe, A Rople are tir rad want so Marmoset: “In this case of theii|dopen tof against 12 professors from theBiglraHe said Gi versity of Cerebral Thanatos, all 12| defeated in t lessors have pleaded guilty to theiira 1156 .^ e w '" vidual chargi-s made against them.* a ^ ntu * tun , ° r i ° ii raBriscoe sai obvious, therefore, that all 12 areg« white . of the greater crimes of exposing|je proposer dents to different ways and tryin. foi the A&\ make students think about thingsifieded if su are better left alone. 1 sentence allliwc costs wer you to life imprisonment.” 'HI * . av f nt 'T-i io . . .i r i,rats in the 1 he 12 were sent to the Franz h a , . i> • r * r cc Bat s where Prison for Enemies of State. ThevBsajj able to read a newspaper accoumraHe said n how Fred J. Alpheratz, the anonvi tjeed to be e witness against the 12 professors, f^tc out pi awarded one of the state’s highest c rations. All 12 remembered havine ;|most efficier is to increasi J. Alpheratz in one of their classesIgriscoe s; was the only student who flunkedolformation o one of their classes. m |ange to t Ad assist a; Karl Pallmeyer is a senior jou™.sp- 0 g ram wo major and a columnist for The Mment at first ion. raate withou ■ Briscoe s has disc Mail Call nte. Finan oil industry he said. “White in ease in < Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 n ords in length. The editorial staff reserves ti* right to edit letters for style and length but will make every effort to maintain the author intent. Each letter must be signed and must include the address and telephone numbers the writer. A dangerous precedent EDITOR: Women lally perce I wish to write in response to KLS Computer’s $4.05 million lawsuiijtent than against the Texas A&M University System Comptroller as a result o! din ^ a *' Micro Center. The suit contends that the Micro Center, by offeringdiilf tlnues a counts to faculty and students, is unfair competition to local computerreKskperfor tailers. [ Dr. Wei By this same reasoning, the Department of Food Services should be seRenclei shut down as they are unfair competition to local food establishments by offering savings through board plans. By this same reasoning, dorm space should not be offered as this would compete unfairly with local apartment landlords due to the cheaper cost of a dorm. A victory in the courts by KLS Computers would set a dangerous prec edent for the future of services offered to students by Texas A&M. Mark Browning Senator Ward I aud measi j She said lewly forn thing the n psumptioi ame initi; jroup me: group met I “It you "bout met ;ender), y linen are Scobee memorial scholarship EDITOR: Now that it’s been about a month since the space shuttle disaster things have quieted down. There are fewer and fewer headline stories about the tragedy, and we’re all about ready to put the incident in thepasi and move on with our lives. The few who are left wondering “Whatcanbel done now?” are usually advised to pick up and go on living — nothing caul be changed now. But that’s not a very satisfying answer for the Mathematics/Sciencel Teaching Scholars of Texas A&rM. Dick Scobee, the commander of tbel shuttle flight was always supportive of our program and of education ini general. We feel that something can be done, as a memorial to those who j gave their lives in the shuttle disaster. We’ve decided that the most appropriate thing for us to do is to estab lish a memorial scholarship in his name. We’re working to raise $25,000to establish an endowed scholarship for a future math/science teacher. We wanted to let all the students at A&M know that we have starteda fund-raising campaign both on and off campus and welcome all support, assistance and participation. Sharon Schulze accompanied by 30 signatures 'omen • lis,” Wi She a men typ jequire agerial r I Wooc Says ma status it team sp because team sp' SCHi .MLY ‘DEN< 226 Soi The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Manor jastw ’DOWh bevef youn The Battalion Editorial Board Editor Michelle Pow Managing Editor Kay Mallett Opinion Page Editor Loren Steff) City Editor Jerry Oslin News Editor Cathie Anderson Sports Editor Travis Tingle ’PKAY Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Brynn-Collef B Station. 2* FI Noun Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author and do not necessarily represent it* I 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 lit I Department of Communications. 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