Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 2, 1986 Opinion Loyalty to old writing machines a typographical erro You know what really bugs me about Andy Roo ney? He loves typewriters. So does Lewis Griz- zard. William Zinsser, in his book “On Writing Well,” assures writers that for saking typewriters Loren Steffy for word processors isn’t sacrilege it’s progress. He states the obvious. These gentlemen insist on romanticizing about typewriters. Many other “seasoned” journalists like to recall the good old days when newsrooms were more “fla vorful” because of the incessant clickety- clacking of typewriter keys. But like Reagan’s recollections of the McCarthy Era, the memory is selective — it has to be. The old-timers may recall the comforting sounds of keystrokes with the fondness that one might re member a fine melody, but I guarantee the sweet pecks were accompanied by less delightful utterings — namely swearing. I know because from time to time I try to use the maniacal mechanization men call a typewriter. A journalist, I tell myself, should be proficient with this in fernal device. I don’t know why, that’s just the way it is. Lou Grant and Com pany used them. Redford and Hof fman, pretending to be Woodward and Bernstein used them. Even Kolchak the Nightstalker used them. Typewriters are more closely associated with journal ists than even beer bellies, divorce, ner vous breakdowns, heart disease and em physema. But they are obsolete. The technol ogy-fighting holdouts who refuse to write on anything they have to plug in or sign on to are simply stragglers, ce mented in their outdated ways. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not that I can’t use a typewriter, it’s just that I can’t use them properly. I’m a rapid typist, but I’m also a rapid errorist. Correction fluid salesmen can spot me a mile away. Buy a typewriter, they say, knowing that I’m a gallon-a-week guaranteed sale. But it’s really not funny. I’m also a deadly typist. When I flip on the power switch, my wife gathers up the cats and heads for cover. Papers fly. Ribbons fly. Correc tion fluid flies. Hair flies. Newly in vented obscenities fly. Computers, of course, present no problem. Mistakes can be erased as quickly as they’re written. Some comput ers even erase them for you. Many type writers now are made with computer like functions — a perverse hybrid of la bor-saving device and manmade frustration. I’m not fooled. My typewriter troubles started in my childhood when my parents gave me a plastic “Children’s TyP e_ writer.” The first thing I noticed was the keys were all out of order. It took longer to find the desired letter than it did to write a whole paragraph by hand. Besides, most third grade teachers didn’t re quire homework to be typed and dou ble-spaced. Eventually, I bers; 1 was absent that day), and 1 in herited my dad’s old clunker when he bought a sleek, new IBM. 1 consid ered myself lucky to have my own electric typewriter before 1 had my own razor. What a boost to my writing career! All 1 had to do now was come up wit h subject matter. thing the whole time) before I'll J my thoughts to that gadget. Mail would make a nice, journalistic J ter. . . . My typophobia is starting to talJ toll on my mental health. I’mstarnijl have typewriter-induced hallucinaJ The other night 1 was watching* den Impact,” the latest Dirty Harn* lead-in-cold-blood extravaganza. 1IF Harry threatens the thugs in the* and they reply “You and whoekr thought Clint Eastwood replied,“Snfl C lorona and me.” I But my first typ- i n g m a c h i n e needed more re pairs than my ’7d Chevy Vega. As typewriters go, this one was a n a n - tique, manufac tured a r o u n d collection I Underwoods. GR Rooney can have t urn-of-the-century /.ai d can keep his old clacker under» John Wayne portrait. Zinsser canittl millions convincing other writers® computers are friend and not foe yj doesn’t base to sell me. I fi' tried my parents’ manual model using the HPC method —hunt, peck and cuss. But I’d just about get up speed, and then I’d have to hit the return handle and start all over. I960. To make matters worse, the “o" key didn’t work. Typing without using the circular vowel was detrimental to my abilities. Smetimes 1 still have truble. : I took typing in high school, hoping to master this typographical demon. I learned to type (except for the num For graduation I got a new Smith-Co rona. It sits in front of the window, dar ing me to use it. But I’ll write on paper (as I did this column, sneering at the I know it’s a technologicalcrutcliP I’ll risk a system crash over stuckii any day. When it comes to writings! anything between a pen and acorapiml screen just isn’t my type. iV Loren Steffy is a seniorjournalism f( jor and the Opinion Page editcr | The Battalion. Mail Call First and ... last? EDITOR: Where does Karl Pallmeyer think he is? Pallmeyer, this is Texas A&M, not the University of Texas. The Aggie bonfire he talked about in his Nov. 20 column is more than just tradition. Being a freshman, this is my first bonfire, but with more people like you around, it could be my last. Bonfire does more than keep up a tradition, it unifies many students for one common cause, and this can only help the University. Any risks involved are well worth it, and I think more would agree than disagree. So give up Pallmeyer, and help “BUILD THE HELL OUTTA BONFIRE”. Oh, by the way, his hair would look much better with a letter in it. Blayne Rowland ’90 Long live roaches EDITOR: In response to the comment made by University of Texas football player John Hagy (I wish he could read this), they say in the event of a nuclear war, the cockroach will be the only living species to survive. Enough said. Victoria H. Larroca ’88 Get back in line EDITOR. For Christmas, I was going to ask Santa for a few things I’ve been wanting or needing, such as a compact disc player, some new clothes, a new curling iron and maybe some perfume or jewelry. Of course, this was before I spent 2*/2 hours dialing 845-TAMU trying to register for next semester, only to get a kink in my neck and a sore arm! Now all I’m going to ask for is a new automatic touch-tone phone with a separate redial button. Registering by phone may have eliminated lines (I never stood in line for anywhere close to 2 1 /2 hours), but at least you could socialize or study or eat rather easily while in line. It’s hard to do anything with a receiver on your shoulder, one of your arms constantly dialing and the other holding a registration book. I think I’d rather stand in line! Michelle Rodeghirer ’88 Truckloads of trash EDITOR. Brazos Beautiful and Brazos County say a BIG THANKS to the more than 100 APO volunteers who spent more than five hours cleaning South Texas Avenue and the West Bypass Nov 8. More than 10 truckloads of trash were hauled off. Thanks, Ags, for exhibiting pride in our community. Diane Mills Coordinator, Brazos Beautiful Bring back the sack EDITOR: Crusaders arise! The task is at hand. We must ban together to stop this heinous intrusion into our lives, perpetuated by grocery stores, of pushing off the new plastic bags on us. The brown paper sacks have been adequate for years, and we must bring them back exclusively. The success of any worthwhile venture nowadays depends on a catchy slogan. Therefore, I hope everyone who agrees about banning the plastic bags will let me know what they think of the slogan I have chosen: It’s better when you get it in the sack! Bart Braden Shirt sighted EDITOR: I saw a shirt the other day that said: You can run, but you can’t hide, as long as you are not the ayatollah — President Reagan, November, 1986 Sekar Annamalai ’89 Lost ring EDITOR: A gold ring was lost on Nov. 24 during Elephant Walk. If you know anybody who has found it please call me at 260-1067. A large cash reward is being offered. Kirk Spessard ’87 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 classification, address and telephone number of the writer. Transplanted northerners shook up over culture shock There is a group of Atlan tans, formerly New Yorkers, who have formed their own support group called “The New York Net work.” They get together to whine about all the things they miss about their home- Lewis Grizzard town. There was a story about the group in the Atlanta papers last week. It said these people missed such things as egg creams. Quite frankly, I have no idea what an egg cream is, but as an Atlantan who once was held prisoner of war in Chi cago, I know what it is like to be ravaged by homesickness. I lived in Chicago for nearly three years. It was cold there and the people talked funny. One day, I met a guy in a bar who also was from the South. I knew that right away when I heard him ask a young lady seated next to him, “Do you think wrest- lin’s fake?” which he belonged, “Grits Anonymous,” for misplaced Southerners. He invited me to attend the group’s next meeting. It was wonderful. We filled up the host’s Jacuzzi with grits and wallowed around in them until we all felt we could handle Chicago and our homesickness at least until the next meeting. After some research I found there are other groups of Atlantans who are transplanted Northerners and meet oc casionally to deal with problems they have encountered since moving south. There is, for instance, the “Federation of Former New Jersey Americans.” The members miss such things as seeing bodies floating in rivers. They meet at Barney’s Waterslide every other Wednesday. “It’s not what we’re used to, of cour se,” said the group’s founder, Nick Va lentino, from Newark, “but it does help some of our members to cope.” Then, there’s “We’re from Cleve land,” people who never get to see rivers burn any more. What they do is renU raft and float down Atlanta’s seen* Chattahoochee River. At lunch tint they pour gasoline on the river roast weenies. I even discovered a group of ti planted Chicagoans, “The Fruit Every time the temperature fa 60 degrees the members take off tint clothes and run around outsideinhof of enjoying the invigorating feeling frostbite once more. What’s obviously happening in country is more and more peoplei 11 leaving their roots to find their tunes, and this obviously can leadto' f rious forms of culture shock. I eventually left Chicago forhomA cause I could no longer handlea way of life, and I am certain the pef' from New York and New Jersey^ Cleveland and Chicago will be leaviP the South and returning home son 11 too. Bye, y’all. Copyright 1986, Cowles Syndicate V The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Southerners are known for their abil ity to engage in clever repartee in such social situations as trying to pick up a date in a bar. Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board After the young lady moved several seats away from the man, I began talk ing with him. It turned out he was from Birmingham, Ala., and he, too, was homesick. 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 non-profit, self-supporting newspaper service to Texas A&M and Bryan-CoUtf^ He told me about a support group to The Battalion is a ated as a comm unity tion. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are thoseofihe^ 1 ^ board or the author, and do not necessarily representilicif 1 * of Texas A&M administrators, faculty or the Board ofRegfn^ The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper lorsi> ! in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Dr rnent of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday ' Texas A&M i egular semestei s. except for holiday andexaro^ periods. , . Mail subscriptions are S17.--H pei semester, $34.62per* year and $36. 4d per full year. Advertising rates furnished 11 quest. 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