Page 2AThe Battalion/Thursday, September 18, 1986 Harvard, Smarvard 350 years of 'experience' and snobbism Do you ever get ' the feeling that be- Lewis cause you didn’t GfiZZOrd go to Harvard, vou are less than a complete person, an intellectual sweat- hog in comparison to those who did go to Harvard? There is this Harvard “experience” the} talk about, and most of the people who went to school theredon’t say, “Harvard,” they say, “Hahvahd,” and jut out their jaws in an expression of snobbism. I’ve been following the celebration of fair Harvard’s 35()th birthday. It was such a big deal that they had to get the prince of Wales, the future king of En gland, to come over and help out with the part}. Win did thev want him over here? Wasn't there somebody in this country good enough for Harvard? Was Willie Nelson already booked? Eve been trying to ask myself if it is just sour grapes on my part that all this Harvard business has been getting on mv nerves. Needless to say, I didn’t go to Har vard. I didn’t even apply to Harvard. I figured I would just get turned down anvwav. Even if my grades had been good enough — which I doubt they were— 1 am not from the quality stock that is necessarv for the Harvard, well, experience. None of my ancestry had anything to do with the founding of the country, with the possible exception of the infa mous Archibald (Slick) Grizzard, who introduced certain games of chance and various strains of venereal disease dur ing his trip oveton the Mayflower. As soon as the Pilgrims finished step ping on Plymouth Rock, they hanged Uncle Slick. I have a friend who went to Harvard. He lives in New York. He is a dear friend until he decides he wants to make certain you remember he went to Har vard. “When I was at Harvard . . .” is how he often begins conversations. Or there is, “I was talking to an old school chum from Harvard, and . . .” Or my favorite, “Over drinks at the Harvard Club last evening . . .” Harvard, Smarvard. Let me ask these questions: — Why did Benjamin Franklin once say the only thing Harvard men were in terested in was their appearance? — What kind of school would have an organization known as the “Hasty Pud ding Club”? — If Harvard is such a great school, how did. Teddy Kennedy get a degree from there? — And when was the last time the Harvard football team went to a bowl game? So Harvard is 350 years old. Big deal. I enjoyed Johnny Carson’s line: “Har vard is so old, scribbled on the men’s room wall is, ‘For a good time, call Betsy Ross.’ I like this old story, too: A Georgia graduate is visiting Har vard. He is trying to locate the library. He asks a student, “Could you tell me where the library is at?” The student replies, “Here at fair Harvard, sir, we never end a sentence with a preposition.” Replied the Georgia man, “Then, al low me to rephrase the question. ‘Where is the library at, jerk?’ ” Even when you clean that one up, it makes its point. Copyright 1986, Cowles Syndicate Aggies' windshields attractive to tickets JeffL Brady Guest Columnist There’s the law of gi avitv, t he law of inertia, the law o i ce n t r i 1 u ga 1 force, Murphv’s law, the law of the land, the law of Moses, Harvard law, the law of the jun gle. law and order and the long arm of the law. Todav. however, I propose the accep tance of a new law in the wonderful world of physics: the gravitational pull of pat king tickets toward Aggies’ wind shields. I think it has something to do with the propertv stating that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Or, when vou find a convenient spot to park aiivwhere in Brazos County, you w ill get a ticket — everv time. What bet- tet wav to end a long, hot, sticky day of unexpec ted tests and dust-filled post of fice boxes? I am a chronic of fender. Last week I picked up a record 18 tic kets, and Tues- cla\ was even worse. My profile, mugshot and DPS serial number proba- bl\ are hanging in post offices from Montgomerv to Dimebox. This week the Campus Police are handing out the real things — no vehi cles spared, no spots unchecked. Wh\ is it I always think, “Oh, I’ll just be a minute. There’s no WAY they’ll track me down in less than an hour . . .”? ()h, me of little faith. . . . The} have crack troops that circum- navigate the campus every five minutes. I can see them now, grouped around a crowded, smoke-filled briefing room just before dawn. “Armstrong, you take Olsen Field to dav. And remember nett to cut those former students with their mobile homes am slack. I don’t care how many buildings they’ve donated. “Burns, you hit Zachry. Granite should be your middle name. Pregnant women, kids unloading projects and se nior citizens have to hunt down a spot just like everyone else. “Douglas, you handle the mopeds to dav. Ignorance and mini skirts may go hand in hand, but they’re still no excuse. “Madge, you’ll man the front desk. Keep a lot o’ Kleenex handy and charge ’em five extra if they hold you up too long.” They have to be tough. The parking offenders on this campus are the most wanted criminals — and for good rea son. We are the most cunning, the most daring, the most desperate, the most in genious and the most dangerous of all offenders. I knew a guy last year who kept one of those spiffy, canvas, form-fitted cov-. ers in his trunk just for those occasions when he knew he was parking out of bounds. They caught up with him in January. I haven’t seen him since. Another guy had three different li cense plates he rotated on his truck from month to month. Now he’s doing five to 10 at Huntsville. His last letter said he was learning to print up a whole new set of phony plates. Someone else bought a white Nissan mini truck, spray-painted the University logo on the doors and drove to class each morning — not to campus, I mean DROVE TO CLASS. He’d park right outside the Academic Building, next to the bike rack, go to class, drive to the Commons, drive to his P.E. class in G. Rollie and on and on. He just let his beard grow, wore green cotton trousers, and no one looked twice. The last I heard he was rooming with Chuck Man- son and headed for solitary in San Quentin. The KKs don’t mess around. Of course, this is a bad season to park illegally. The University budget is threatened, funding hangs in the bal ance and our beloved Permanent Uni versity Fund is on the chopping block. Revenue has to be sucked in from some one’s pocket, right? Of course. So the next time you find a little yellow card on your windsheild af ter a particularly demanding day, relax with the understanding you’re helping to keep the University out of hock. - Gotta go. I’m parked in the staff lot outside. Jeff Brady is a senior journalism ma jor. The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Cathie Anderson. Editor Kirsten Dietz, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Frank Smith, City Editor Sue Krenek, News Editor Ken Sury, Sports Editor Editorial Policy Ihe Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper oper ated as a community service to 'Texas A&M and Bryan-College Sta tion. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial ~ board or the author, and do not necessarily represent the 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 the Depart ment of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during T exas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $17.44 per semester, $34.62 per school year and $36.44 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on re quest. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Building, T exas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMAST ER: Send address changes to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station TX upporters s; Biovement ol dating lx ind is ain hi|e endang itr 1 Americ; I inday tht Blew unde they seer ants across churche .ustin sancl If Sunday is a day for rest, why do football players wo It’s been more than a year since the Texas blue laws w ere r e - pealed on Sept. 1, 1985. Some con sumers enjoy be ing able to buy al- m o s t a n y t h i n g they want any clay of the week. Some merchants enjoy the added reve Karl Pallmeyer nues brought in on Sunday. But not all consumers and merchants are that happy. According to the Bible, the King James Bible, Exodus 20:8-10; “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shall thou labour, and do all thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shall not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manser vant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates.” Almost everyone knows that verse — it’s one of the Top Ten Command ments. Many Christians will say that the Bible forbids work on Sunday. Actually the Sabbath is Saturday, but that doesn’t matter in today's world. Sunday is the day for rest. But Texas’ blue laws, at least the last version of them, were not based in reli gion. They were designed to help smaller businesses that couldn’t afford to be open seven days a week by making sure one day a week was kept free of competition. When the blue laws were struck down, there were protests for both business and religious reasons. Some businesses feel they can’t afford to pay employees to work seven days a week. Others feel it’s morally wrong to be open on Sundays. Since last September, there has been a steady stream of letters to editors com plaining about businesses being open on Sundays. Although there is no law stat ing a business has to be open on Sun days, after the blue laws’ repeal some shopping malls required that all then stores be open to justify the mall being open. Some stores fought and won the- right to be closed on Sundays. Other stores have been petitioning for that right. It doesn’t matter much to me whether a store is open on Sunday. I would like the opportunity to shop on any day of the week, but it’s not up to me if certain stores want to close. It’s their loss, not mine. I do object, however, when people try to pressure me into signing petitions, citing morality as the sole reason for their decision to close on Sundays. I was in a store recently, on a week day, and the owner pulled out a petition while I was paying for my purchase. He cited Bible verses and expressed right eous indignation at the heathen mall owners who wanted him to stay open on Sundays. It was obvious that he felt it was a mortal sin to work on “the Sab bath.” jswell said, “! ■response . ■ lots of r Ho when pt Vusi in-area v ance of ry churc no This man looked like a typicali can, and most typical AmeriarH Hilling l""ili.ill gimes mi ji n sin against God to workonThlsday that work wh\ is football so popular? HingofSH Football players work lun)ij xas em [T game days, many of which day they get paid thousands of di jieeffective ( working on Sundays. So docoadeivesession en; referees. H sponsor Hi the five 11 11 0-risk venture tors, tec hnical clnectors, audioiriC®, r)ient jj ene deotape editors and nutnerowH television people working on SufT we wouldn’t be able to watchthod bull players and coaches breaking the Ten Commandments. I I come f rom a town where t j acher will find himself looking it] other job if he doesn’t let thecoci lion out before noon on days™ Cowboys are playing. 1 guessed needs to get home in time torn sinners. The state of Texas may harej some people when it decided toil the blue laws and turn everyoi*j wasn’t already a football player, or television worker into sinners,^ nice that the liquor stores in Tefli open until after noon on Sunday way the heathens who don't,! c hurc h won’t get a head startod ing before the game Karl Pallmeyer is a seniorjourt major and a columnist for TheS ion Mail Call Ft ai Protection and service? EDITOR: I am writing this letter with regard to recent actions taken by the University Police Department. Last December, during exam week, I was stopped on my bike and.given a ticket for a moving violation. The tic ket was a mere $4, but out of principle, I argued and tried to appeal. Three separate bikers committed the same inf raction (running a stop sign) and drove right past me as I was interrogated for more than 20 precious minutes. This raises the question,“Is the law biased and prejudiced or is it simply unenforceable?” Because of this question and my desire to learn about bike laws which apply to this campus, I tried to appeal the ticket and talk it out with someone. After waiting in line for almost two hours, I was told I would be unable to appeal unless I came back the next semester and waited all over again. I was never told when to come back, just sometime next semester. . . . I’m glad UPD is so specific about their deadlines. What a barbaric and unorganized system! I thought the police motto was to protect and serve. Well, as for the protection of my rights, I question the appeal procedure at the UPD. The Constitution provides everyone the right to a fair and speedy trial. I tried to set up an appeal date, but to no avail. What does it take? It shouldn’t be so timely and inconvenient to set up such a session. In fact, the whole procedure is just not worth it. Like a dictator, the UPD forced me to pay the fine without argument or regard for my side of the story. Surely, one wouldn’t think of this as totalitarian. It’s worse — a complete disregard for a citizen’s rights. Service is a joke as well. After being stopped initially for so long, and then having to wait at the police station for so long without results, my temper was at its limit. Can’t the UPD get themselves organized to be at least somewhat efficient? Recently, I spoke to a Sgt. Dunlap about this issue. Though she clarified my questions regarding the bicycle laws, she was unable to do anything about the ticket or the extra “processing-late fee,” which was tacked on to my original ticket, thereby more than doubling the original cost. Hence, not only was I penalized once for my ticket,!! again because the UPD wouldn’t set my appeal beforeil* deadline to pay. This disgusting and aggravating senes 1 events has lowered my respect for the UPD and their operations on campus in general. Though theyneedio enfore the law, they need to protect the rights of studerfi) faculty and all citizens in general without tediousde and uncalled-for hassles. Unfortunately, thisdoesn to be a priority at the UPD. PaulJanish Rest in peace EDITOR: This is perhaps the most difficult letter I haveever | chosen to write. Like many, I was a friend of Brennon 1 Meyer and had known him since my freshman year,I 1 would like to say something that will stand apart from rest of the letters, but a tragedy such as this is unexplainable. Brennon loved life, and he brought so much happinB to all his friends. He was a very devoted person tohisfail family and friends. I talked to him last week, and he wail telling me of all the plans for his future. It just makes me sick that for no reason someone to I come along and wiped away his life and dreams. Satatol alive and well on this earth. It comforts me toknowthaif Janet and Brennon are living in eternal peace, whiletw«I men here on earth will suf fer for eternity. There isjusi 1 ! sense to this needless tragedy. I would like to leave this I message for Brennon and Janet’s f amilies in this timed | grief. I, as well as others here at A&M, grieve with the® i .. . they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their I strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles;thfl § shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, andn^w faint. Isaiah 40:31 MONDAY EV TUESDAY E\ Wednesday Thursday i eriday evei Saturday evening b SUNDAY NOl evening Suzanne Hall Class of‘86 Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. Thee® 1 ' staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but' every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must be s and must include the address and telephone number of the writer MSC OAF