Opinion Soviets say Americans are enslaved bv bills Fifty or so former citizens of the So viet Union who had been living in the United States went home the week before last. When one of the returnees was asked why he was giving up the free dom living in the United States had provided him, he freedom is there Lewis Grizzard answered: “What when the bills keep coming each month?” I think the man is on to something here. / What freedom is there, indeed, when you go out to Finance a new car and the capitalistic creeps down at the bank keep sending you payment due notices each month? And what about monthly house pay ments? Wouldn’t we all have a lot more freedom if we simply could pick out the house we wanted, move in and never have to fork over those worrisome pay ments. It’s a lot different in the Soviet Union-. You don’t have to worry about car pay ments because there aren’t many cars available to buy, and even if there were, you couldn’t afford one anyway. And housing, that’s a lot simpler in the Soviet Union too. Who wants to worry about buying a house when the government can assign you a cozy two bedroom bun galow where you can live with your fam ily, your spouse’s family, Uncle Dimitry and God knows who else. There’s no reason to have a credit card if you live in the Soviet Union, ei ther. What’s there to charge? Toilet pa per after you stood in line three hours to buy it? If you live in Moscow, you could go down to the big department store near Red Square. It’s called Gum. I was there once. What a choice Soviet shoppers have. There were piles of shoes, just in from Poland, the latest in 1935 fashion, perfect for walking down to the hard currency stores to watch Westerners go in and buy goods you can’t afford. And for the ladies, there were yards and yards of designer fabrics for mak ing homemade dresses. One floral pat tern caught my eye. Nothing makes bur lap stand out like a floral pattern. And cosmetics. Soviet women have a great choice of perfumes, Evening in Minsk, Evening in Minsk or Evening in Minsk. The only bill you really have to worry about in the Soviet Union is the vodka bill. Since life in the Soviet Union is cold and drab and void of very much in en tertainment or diversion, drinking vodka is the national pastime. Soviet citizens drink so much vodka, as a matter of fact, the state has become concerned about rampant alcholism and has raised the price of vodka and cut down on the hours it can be purchased. I can think of nothing worse than hav ing to live but one day in the Soviet Union sober. The Soviet propagandists use the re turn of the 50 or so from the United States as proof the West is just as deca dent as they say it is. What they didn’t mention is the fact that while 50 may have gone home, a half million others wouldn’t go back at machine-gun point. The poor fool wanted to go back to the Soviet Union because he didn’t like having to pay his monthly bills. The next time I feel like complaining about my own. I’ll stop and think, and then thank the Lord I have the opportu nity to pay them. Copyright 1986, Cowles Syndicate Schoi est of ■ul chc ■ was a I jail tea I hat gu •jlf g e Su is the i pi Bond hi lavcj ioii tit re |r singi Movies make memory mur "I could ■ng in Hind's ( Wot) U Hit the HI. Be ds w iijd's we )nd rion My desk was once in a movie. The desk, blue and made of metal, was replicated in a Hollywood studio. It was identical to the real thing and appeared in “All the President’s Men.” So, in some- w h a t the same way, did some of Richard Cohen my Washington Post colleagues, includ ing Bob Woodward, Carl Bernstein and Benjamin Bradlee. They were repli cated by Robert Redford, Dustin Hof fman and Jason Robards. I thought my desk stole the show. But the movie itself stole my memory. Much of my recollection of the Water gate period comes from the movie and not from my own experience. What is true for me is also true for Bernstein, who called me a while back to check about a minor aspect of a certain Water gate experience. Did it actually happen, Bernstein asked, or was it just in the movie? Neither of us could remember. For a movie, “All the President’s Men” stuck pretty close to the truth. But certain decisions made by one editor at the Post were, for dramatic reasons, at tributed to another. Filmmakers excuse this type of cinematic license by saying something like, "It’s only a movie.” That it’s a movie is undeniable. It is at the word “only” that the statement collides with experience. Something about a movie obliterates reality. What we see, we believe. Back in 1980, for instance, the Public- Broadcasting Service aired a docu- drama called “Death of a Princess.” It al leged that rich Saudi Arabian women occasionally drove out into the desert for liaisons with paid lovers. 'The viewer saw women being driven out into the desert to meet men parked in waiting cars. But remember, these liaisons were only alleged. When the allegation was raised a second time in the docudrama, it was denied. This seems like balance — an assertion, a denial. But the assertion is depicted, the denial merely stated. That’s not balance. You cannot tell us that what we saw with our own eyes is not true. I sometimes fall victim to this sort of thing. In a recent column comparing AIDS with syphilis, I wrote that Isak Di- nesen had chronicled her Fight against syphilis in her memior, “Out of Africa.” She had done no such thing. Her strug gle was instead depicted in the movie of the same title. My inability to distinguish between movies and what you might call real life has taken other forms. For instance, I no longer know if some of my recollec tions of, say, Paris come from my trips there or from the movies. Given the power of Film, it is not sur- Wcl lil Hutinc prising that President Reagan oc ally mistakes movies for reality.iH he reportedly said he filmed ihe If at ion of a Nazi concentration H when, in fact, fie had really seen^H of it. (Reagan denies that he sai igaied such thing.) A not her time, Re oou say inspired an audience with the g drkei - s< of a wartime hero who had gonecB' nte ^ with his plane and was awarded a;® ulv humous Congressional Med eu V s V 1 lonor. Again, he took that exploit:C r , the movies. Dana Andrews, the jfjy in( j , went down with the plane. H, r j| ni . Reagan has attributed the desepi|ther tion of the armed forces to thebt eld a y of a black galley hand at Pearl Hi diool bo; In fact, the man existed and hisei l g Nava were depicted in a World War 11 pry to h ganda film. The armed services® not desegregated until after the When that was pointed out to RcJ& ex<1 i i- i -I 1 i i. onmnssi lie replied, I remember the see )0 | was very powerful.” Indeed it was. powerful than truth. Bond ■ It’s fun to take a shot at Reagan onto he he confuses movies with reality-fi; deep in til you or I do the same thing. ButH' gan is really more typical ofAmeni| this regard then he is different.Htl Nancy watch at least two movies weekends at Camp David. Not stir] ingly, he has a cinematic view of A ica. No less surprisingly, it has bttl real political asset to him. Afterali version of America is also ours. Well seen the same movies. But something about movies, from how they turn us into witr makes them extremely powerful haps something about tne actorsilHh selves. For instance, before my oldcT ^ made its screen debut, I had luncti jexas U Alan Pakula, the director of “All®onve President’s Men” while its filming" ^"fd progress. fe re Pakula, who knows the poweronH'” a y decided to illustrate it at my exptfft' * )u< “What’s the color of Woodward’s 1) ^ ' k he asked me about my friend andM ' ' league. “Blond,” I said. Pakulashoolr«p' l \ 1 head. “Redford’s hair is blond. Wfm st 0 j 1 ward’s is brown.” Maybe my desk wasn’t blue after. Copyright 1986, Washington Post WrilersGt Husr ■> cloi F s off, ie ty After marriage, men become Maybe someone ’ can tell me what Debra happens to men Fowler when they get Guest Columnist married. What happens to these supposedly strong and independent creatures who seemed to have it all together when they used to pick you up for a date? If you ever overhear a group of women talking about their husbands, you’ll find that married men seem to have quite a few common characteris tics. Look at married men when they’re sick, for example. When a man gets a cold, he jumps in bed and stays there for days, almost any woman will tell you. And the whining Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Loren Steffy, Editor Marybeth Rohsner, Managing Editor Mike Sullivan, Opinion Page Editor Jens Koepke, City Editor Sue Krenek, Jeanne Isenberg, News Editors Ken Sury, Sports Editor that comes out of his sick room is unbe lievable. He wants soup to unstuff his nose; he wants ice cream to make his throat feel better; he wants extra pillows so he can watch TV. “Every move he makes is painful — it must be, for all the moaning he does,” a friend of mine said about her husband, who was, at the time, wallowing in mis ery with a sinus infection. “He says he doesn’t sleep a wink all night — but his snoring keeps me awake. And he claims nothing tastes good — after he eats three pieces of pie. “If I don’t call him from work to check on him, he pouts,” she declared. “It drives me crazy.” A man can play tackle for the Dallas Cowboys, drive an 18-wheeler 12 hours Editorial Policy The 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 witnin the Depart ment of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas 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, Department of Journalism, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, De partment of Journalism, Texas A&M University, Colleee Station TX 77843-4111. a day, work construction or work on Wall Street — it doesn’t matter. When a stuffy nose strikes, the world stops. But — their wives can have massive surgery and men still expect us to carry on businessas usual. I remember when I had a skiing acci dent and was laid up at home with a badly injured leg and ribs. My spouse, considerate though he is, Finally called to check onme at 5 p.m. “Are you doing all right?” he asked. “No, I’m lying in a pool of blood at the bottom of the stairs,” I answered. “This is the First chance I’ve had all day to call you,” he said. “I’ll be home shortly. ... What are we fixing for din ner?” “Gee, I don’t know,” I said, “and I’ve spent the entire day thinking about it. How do corn flakes strike you?” Few married men I’ve ever met can keep up with their belongings. How they survived before they got married is a wonder to me. “Have you seen my keys?” my spouse asks me almost every other day. “Have you looked for them?” I used to respond. “No,” he’d say. “I Figured that since you’re always putting things away, I shouldn’t waste my time looking — you probably put them somewhere.” This used to annoy me, especially when I could see his keys from where I The Battalion (USPS 045 360) boys once again F happened to be sitting or standing. And they always were exactly where he threw them when he came through the door. After several years of pointing this out, however, I now just go get them and hand them to him. Why bother making a fuss when the next question will proba bly be: “Have you seen my sunglasses? I know I left them right there.” Men seem to believe that we wives spend our leisure time rearranging their closets. Whenever they’re not around, we sneak into their closets and begin hiding things — as if we don’t have enough to do. Although I’m a firm believer in men doing their share of the household chores, I’m also a believer in never leav ing a married man alone in the house for more than a day or two at a time. What’s neat and clean to him isn’t necessarily neat and clean to his wife. I learned this after leaving my spouse alone for six weeks once. It will never happen again if I can help it. When 1 returned home, strange ob jects were alive and multiplying in my refrigerator, which contained a two- year supply of TV dinners and hot dogs and several cartons of rotting milk. My spouse had assured me on the phone that he’d kept the house neat. I didn’t know until I got there, however, that “neat” meant he’d stacked six week’s worth of newspapers in a| the living room — as opposed to hurl them throughout the house. “Neat meant that the dirty clothes — soni ( ! weeks old — were, indeed, inthej per - , . - , “Why didn’t you wash thesethinf not cc asked in disgust. Il Me “I didn’t need them,” was the« Hn and true answer. Who can argue'ip ov that? i en »r Another thing most married wotff ni ’ don’t like to do is let their husband^ the grocery shopping. A bachelo'B used to shopping for decent fooqti,, an himself. A married man, who SsHndir doesn’t plan the meals, isn’t. In addition to buying the roast chicken and the vegetables you # him to buy, he comes home withpio | s ei artichokes. Five bags of tortilla cl seven jars of hot sauce and five car | sardines. My mother actually hasa cial shelf in her pantry for my fall impulse food buys. Whenever, he] he wants “something different,’ slings the pantry door open, poii'j his shelf and says “have at it, the sail balls and stuf fed herring you bo* last week await you.” But who’s complaining? ThesJ the things that add spice — andinw tion — to life. Debra Fowler writes for the Killeerjp ily Herald