Page 2/The Battalion/Monday, March 31, 1986 Have a seat Student elections at Texas A&M never have attracted much participation or even notice from the students. But this year stu dent apathy has spread to those who run for office as well as those who vote. If the current trend continues. Student Govern ment may degenerate into a handful of people serving their re sumes rather than the student body. Last year 4,324 students voted, and pnly 1,799 cast ballots in the runoff for student body president. This year voter turnout seems to be the least of Student Government’s worries. Not only are students ignoring the polls, they’re disregarding vacancies on the ballot as well. Thirty-five Student Senate seats have not been filed for. Only six seats out of 77 are being contested. The class councils, too, are struck by student apathy. Three of five seats for the Class of ’89 are uncontested as are all five for the Class of ’88 and four of five for the Class of ’87. This is a significant increase from the, almost 20 unfiled Sen ate seats last year. The vacancies can be filled in the fall, if enough concerned students decide to'apply. Then the Internal Affairs Committee selects the best applicants for each vacant po sition. Burle he bod; [ut of norniti] Richa wildlife 1 or fror n a bo: b.m. ’ll Burk Iff Joe [itting ii ind lost :ircle ai ikier. Beck ucked read b propelli lies; ;or the Wtstof The iay mi recover This procedure fills the empty seats, but it doesn’t give the students a chance to choose their representatives. Uncontested races also may fail to provide accurate representation. Students frequently complain that Student Government doesn’t do any thing for students, but now students aren’t doing anything for Student Government either. about Reporting on proof, not rumors Covn ruled a; The cycle continues to spiral downward. The only way to stop the plunge is for the potential of Student Government to be realized, which can’t happen if no one runs for office. The Battalion Editorial Board I know a sen ator who’s a wom anizer. I know at least four who are drunks. I know a governor who beats his wife and I know several that he is now or ever has heen a homo sexual. Journalism has had prouder mo ments. about hypocrisy — character, again, suppose. For still others, it wouldsimpii AUST Mail Call Incessant bickering EDITOR: It really bugs me that there is all this incessant and petty bickering between the Corps of Cadets and the non-uniformed students (I hate the term non-regs). There should not be any difference between the two factions. What a person wears, be it a uniform or other organizational regalia, should not extract them from the rest of the University. Texas A&M itself is the organization we all belong to and represent. Sure the Corps was here first, but the Indians can tell you it doesn’t mean a thing. Why is the Corps singled out in many Battalion articles? We get more frontal assaults on us than anyone else, including the GSS. Is it because we have a lot of jerks in the Corps? Sure we have our share of them, but so does every other organization. No organization is made up of Albert Schweitzers, so we all have our faults. It must be the uniforms. You see us in them everyday; it makes us more visible. Let me tell you by personal experience that it is no fun to be singled out because of a uniform. I went through this attitude for five years, both at home and abroad, while serving in the Navy. All I am asking is to not judge the many by the actions of the few. So lets give each other a break and drop these barriers between us. I mean, look at it this way. If we all got along real well, The Battalion may go out of business. Devan Breedlove Class of’88 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 he signed and must include the address and telephone number of the writer. politicians — not to mention admin istration officials — who are gay. Richard ^Cohejj^ Would you like to know their names Well, I’m not going to tell you. In the first place. I’m not so sure it’s any of your business. And in the second place — and more to the point — I really don’t “know” the things I think I know. I merely have heard rumors. Washing ton, after all, is a company town. The rumor about Kemp stems from an incident that occurred during Ron ald Reagan’s first term as California governor. Kemp, a young GOP zealot (he is now an older zealot) and quar terback of the Buffalo Bills, was a part- time Reagan aide and the co-owner of a vacation lodge. The other owner of the lodge, another Reagan aide, used the lodge for homosexual parties. There has never been any evidence that the lodge was anything other than what Kemp said it was — a real-estate invest ment he never even visited. Neverthe less, the rumor persists. raise questions. What does it meanPAtammem ter all, when it comes to sex, it’s hard (April 21 say what matters. John Kennedy aw c ‘ nt0 B pears to have been a womanizer, buti[il u ' tane( » ■exas cit not clear that it affected his presidenol y‘j ewt , ( Richard Nixon, on the other hand,ajJorks w j pears to have never cheated on hiswiitlar Stat — just the American people. lepartm Helebrati ii - if * .l r . I It is e But in Kemp s case, the tact remain!^ , that there is no proof that he is anytliii;l l n ^ other than a reel-blooded American tali, Cor| erosexual — a husband and fatherdltso, Loi four children and a tax bill. All theresl G ar y 1 is rumor the ■alii', sai But for some reason, the rules have been suspended for Rep. Jack Kemp (R- N.Y.). At least three times, recently he has been asked whether he has ever been a homosexual or had a homosex ual experience. Newsweek has posed the question. Vanity Fair, too. And just recently, the question was put to Kemp on the “Today” show where he was asked to “categorically” deny that he had ever had a homosexual experience. He did so — “categorically.” For any politician, a rumor of homo sexuality would be both troubling and damaging. But for Kemp, it could be curtains. His core constituency includes the pathologically conservative. For most Americans, homosexuality re mains a taboo, but for Kemp’s people — their intolerance fanned by a gaggle of Bible-thumping bigots — it represents a kind of sexual communism. It’s beyond the pale, beyond comprehension and, of course, beyond tolerance. Maybe Kemp is learning the hard'way the price of in tolerance. same sort of rumor L._ . says senator so and so is a drunk, thaiil^^ certain governor beats his wifeorthaiil^gu^ member of the Reagan adininsiraiioesl More gay. Merely to ask the question ii/oBexassi spread the rumor. The “Todav'sta l interviewer, for instance, knew fail well what Kemp’s answer would beanAi would have fallen out of her chair if Kemp had answered in the affirmatnd She could just as well have asked himil he beat his w-ife. Each time Kemp says no. No — he is not a homosexual. No — he has not had a homosexual experience. Each time, in effect, he has been forced to respond to a rumor for which there is no proof — not even an accuser. All by himself, Kemp has become victim of a new kind of journalistic excess — sexual McCarth- yism. In a manner reminiscent of the late Joe McCarthy, he is asked to deny If there were any proof that Kemp is a homosexual, bisexual or once had been any of those things, then maybe it would be worth reporting— maybe. For some people, it would raise serious ques tions of character and they would look elsewhere for a candidate to support. (George Bush, can you categorically deny that, even once, even at camp . . .?) For others, it would raise questions The rules of journalism — if you® cede there are such things — arechanj ing. The While House press corps tin looked the other way for John KenneAi would not similarly oblige a presidci nowadays. That’s good. It is theoblip tion of the press to give the public ik facts so it can make its own decisioisl about character. But the key word facts — not rumors. A lot has changei in journalism, but there is onestandaiA still worth keeping: If you have proof, write it. 1 f not, shut up. Richard Cohen is a columnist for lk Washington Post Writers Group. % Welfare another nail in the coffin of the pool We’re in a mess right now, and if we don’t change our tune in a hurry more peo ple will suffer. No, I don’t mean Nica ragua or Libya, but the plight of America’s black youth mired in the ghettos of our cit ies’ backyards. Let’s take the average black male teen-ager. He has a 50-50 chance of growing up without a father and most likely he’s numbered among the jobless. If he takes a quick look out his window, he’ll probably see drug pushers, prosti tutes, permanently unemployed and kids skipping school to dribble basket balls, chasing their dream of escape. He then closes his window to quiet the baby crying in a back room, who has a 44 percent chance of depending on an unwed mother and a 25 percent chance that mom is a teen-ager. Since she’s at home, she tells the young man at the window not to worry; she’s caring for the child. She has prag matically reasoned that she’s better off financially not working a minimum- wage job earning $535 a month when she can collect at least $380 from wel fare, $110 from food stamps and be tween $100 and $200 in rental subsidies on government housing. She can draw from 17 different federal programs, and she’s even encouraged to overlap her benefits from Aid to Families with Dependent Children, welfare and Social Security. As a 16-year-old high school dropout, she’s not a welfare cheat. She’s but one of thousands of black women in poverty who are hanging on to short-term secu rity from the federal government. By remaining single and jobless, she can collect more money plus care for her baby. But she’ll probably have more ba bies, collect more handouts and further the current trends that point to the year 2000 recording 70 percent of black chil dren being born out of wedlock. Her oldest son will turn 16 and try to find a job. But what employer will hire him when minimum wage stands at $,3.35 an hour, topped by Social Security and taxes that make all American work ers worth at least $4 an hour? As an unskilled teen-ager, he just won’t cut the mustard in today’s economy where more than 1.1 million black males are unemployed or are no longer looking for jobs. He may receive a high school di ploma, but it’s worthless since the fed eral government’s pushed his public school more to graduate him than to teach him. Whether he’s 15 or 50, if he can’t find a job, there’s always the bro ken life of the streets. Crime is just one step away. Of the 462,442 people in fed eral or state prisons in 1984, 46 percent were blacks, although blacks are just 12.1 percent of the U.S. population. We have been digging deeper graves for America’s poor with each federal dollar we hand out — latest count, $ 11 billion distributed annually in welfare programs alone. In his book Losing Ground, social sci entist Charles Murray notes that throughout the ’70s we knew that the ghetto was growing, but we blamed ra cial prejudice and the system for the blacks’ sad state. We just pumped more money in and turned our heads. On the other hand, from 1950 to 1968, government aid was a trickle and poverty rates dropped, with only free enterprise’s incentives to push them down. It wasn’t until the federal govern ment took it upon itself to fine tune the economy and end poverty that the events took a drastic change for the worse. Although some prosperous breezes intermittently boosted the U.S. economy in the ’70s, those who de pended on welfare never felt a whiff. It’s a case of misplaced incentives, Murray says. When social workers real ized that drawing welfare drew degra dation along with it, they worked to end the the stigma. Consequently, a welfare check became a right instead of a short term crutch. Mommas stopped eyebal ling their sons with stern reminders like “If you don’t work, you don’t eat,” and started saying “If they’re handing it out, you may as well get your share.” We have refused to treat the black poor as individual Americans, responsi ble for their personal successes and fail ures. White guilt over past injustice has resulted in an even greater injustice that makes the climb out of the ghetto almost impossible. “If I were poor or handicapped in this country, I would beg government not to help me,” says Dr. Walter E. Wil liams, a black economist at George Ma son University. He adds that we are a nation of immigrants —Jews, Poles, Ir ish, Italians, Japanese, Chinese — who came here poor, uneducated and knew the pain of prejudice. But they fit into society’s mainstream without govern ment programs. Blacks and Hispanics have received the largest amount gov- wrnment aid, and they remain per sistently in poverty, he says. The problem doesn’t evaporate when the minority group extends itself to the middle class. Murray states that in an ef fort to create equal outcome instead of equal opportunity, the government sad dles some of the black middle class with higher salaries at first. In the long run, these blacks often receive lower salaries because they bypassed some of the training foundation that most get. While the middle class loses its taxes, the impoverished are losing their jobs, their families, their education, their per sonal safety and their self respect. Charity definitely has its place. As the people responsible for 80 percent of all giving in the world, Americans can best handle the needy through private funds at the local level. The Houston Chronicle reported that the city’s financial crunch will prob ably force a cutback in social services. Mayor Kathy Whitmire told the city council that property taxes just couldn’t be raised any higher. Wouldn’t it be bet ter if we cut back gradually on a national level before there is no other alterna tive? Benjamin Franklin learned that les son over 200 years ago. He wrote a friend: “I have long been of your opinioi that your legal provision forthepoorji England) is a very great evil. We ha« followed your example, and begin no* to see our error, and I hope, shall K form it.” Cynthia Gay is a junior journalism 0 jor and a columnist for The Battalion. The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Michelle Powe, Editor Kay Mallett, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Jerry Oslin, City Editor Cathie Anderson, News Editors Travis Tingle, Sports Editor Editorial Policy 77ie Battalion is a tton-ptofit, self-supportingnenspi- per operated as a community service to Texas A&Mw Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of iht Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarilyrtp resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, facuh) or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaperfot students in reporting, editing and photography clastf within the Department of Communications. United Press International is entitled exclusively toll* use for reproduction ol all news dispatches credited toil Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein re served. The Battalion is published Monday through Frith' during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiih' and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are SI6" per semester, $33.25 per school year and $35 per M year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonM Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, T\ 77843. 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