Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, October 21, 198/ Bork rejection a Last Friday, the death knell sounded for Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court as the Senate rejected him 58- 42. The Senate’s action is more than the mere rejection of a nomination. It is a frightening indication that many of our politicians are willing to compromise our long-term welfare for immediate social outcomes. Robert Bork undisputedly was a most qualified candidate. His legal credentials and record are impeccable. He is a man dedicated to upholding the Constitution and our traditional ideal of a government of laws rather than of men. Even so, he was rejected, first by the Senate Judicial Committee “lynch mob” led by such principled men as Joe Biden and Ted Kennedy and then by the full Senate. The hearings were hardly fair by any standard. Although he attacked Bork for being closed-minded, Biden came out in opposition to Bork before the hearings ever started. Biden must be admired for his ability to judge Bork’s competence before hearing any testimony and for his guise of impartiality during the hearings. Bork is a judge who practices the same theory of judicial restraint that he preaches. He believes “that judges should be guided only by the written law and the intentions of those who wrote it.” Judges must base their decisions on the law as it stands, taking into account the intentions of the writers to clarify possible ambiguities. Bork’s view of the law does not square with that of his opponents, who desire that judges take a more active role in changing society. In our system, it is a judge’s duty to decide cases based on the existing law, not on law he wishes existed. If people do not like that law, they may change it through Congress and their state legislatures or by Constitutional amendment. Bork’s opponents wish to see the Court legislate by handing down sweeping decisions that affect the whole country. They are not content to seek implementation of their social goals through the proper legislative channels. That is too much work, and voters and legislators may prove recalcitrant in accepting their goals. It is much easier and more effective, they think, to get a case before the Supreme Court that activist judges can use to set new precedent that will apply immediately to the whole nation. Roe v. Wade is a case in point. On the grounds of a Fictitious right to privacy they created for the purpose. Five justices struck state laws regulating abortion, laws that had been enacted by state legislatures. In effect, they enacted a new law, one that was not approved by the elected representatives of the people. The citizens of the United States had no say in the matter. Laws properly legislated were overturned by a Court that felt that a woman should have a right to an abortion regardless of what the ofFicial lawmaking bodies of the nation had said on the matter. It was not willing to judge the case by existing laws while leaving the people and their representatives to decide if they wanted these laws changed. Because Bork does not believe that a judge should assume this activist role, Biden and his cronies cruciFied Bork and caricatured him as a threat to our civil liberties who would return us to the “dark ages.” This was unjust treatment for a judge whose only crime is that he believes the Court should base decisions upon the unexpanded letter of the law. His opponents do not want a justice who believes that judicial “activism has gone too far and has lost its roots in the Constitution or in the statutes being interpreted.” They want a pliable judge who will be sympathetic to using the Court as a tool for remolding society. Using the Court in such fashion mi ■ , r Brian Frederick Little Eddie a master at scuffing baseballs Each time I read an article about baseball pitchers scuffing the balls (which allegedly makes them curve and dip and stuff like that), I think of Little Eddie Estes. Lewis i grew up Grizzard practically next door to Eddie and his family. He was a couple of years younger than me, but we shared a common passion — baseball. The Baptist Church sponsored a baseball team in my hometown. This wasn’t official Little League. This was blue jeans and T-shirts and lending your glove to somebody on the other team when you went to bat. Eddie was 10 when he joined the team as its youngest member. Eddie eventually would become the best 12- year-old centerfielder I ever saw, but at 10, he was small and punchless at bat and needed much work on his defense. So for two years, our coach played Eddie at “bird dog,” a position even the most ardent baseball fans likely aren’t familiar with. I’ll explain. Our team had a severe scarcity of baseballs. We got two or three at the beginning of the season, and that was that. A few feet behind home plate at the elementary school ballfield where we played was a dog pen, home for two rather rowdy bird dogs. When a foul ball was hit into the pen, which occurred quite often, the dogs immediately launched a frantic effort to retrieve it and have at it with their teeth. Somebody had to stay in the dog pen at all times in order to get the foul balls before the dogs did, so the game, and the season, could continue. That position became known as “bird dog.” That somebody who played it was poor Little Eddie, who spent two seasons battling the dogs for the precious horsehide. You play the same balls all season, ones that large dogs are trying their best to destroy, you know something about scuffing. This story has a happy ending, and then a sad one. Little Eddie, as I mentioned before, became a gifted centerfielder and a big RBI man. He developed speed and power, and after spending two years Fighting off two dogs for foul balls, running down line drives was nothing to him. He made one of the greatest catches I’ve ever seen in a game against Mills Chapel, then turned and threw out the tying run at the plate and got his name mentioned in the weekly paper. (I was our team’s correspondent, and I compared the catch to Willie Mays’ grab on Vic Wertz back whenever that was.) I think Little Eddie was 14 when he got killed. The car rounded a curve and the driver lost control. I was a pallbearer. I still see his mother occasionally when I get home to visit the folks. This was supposed to be about scuffing baseballs, but I got off track.. Excuse me. I think it was a lump in my throat that did it. Copyright 1987, Cowles Syndicate The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Sondra Pickard. Editor John Jarvis, Managing Editor Sue Krenek, Opinion Page Editor Rodney Rather, City Editor Robbyn Lister, News Editor Loyd Brumfield, Sports Editor Tracy Staton, Photo Editor 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 within 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, 216 Reed McDonald, 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, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843-4111. Opinion frightening compromisi subverts the separation of powers in our republic by encroaching on powers properly belonging to the legislative branch. It encourages the development of an arbitrary power that threatens our liberty to a far greater extent than any caricature of Bork ever could have. Sober citizens should consider the consequences of such action and question whether those opposed to Bork have acted for the common good. We need principled men like Robert Bork to hold high office in our country, men who have the integrity to uphold the Constitution they are sworn to protect and who will not sacrifice it for the sake of politics. His rejectionWf!| ill for the future of our liberties, especially if the views of hisopponer:;| continue unchecked in our nation. Brian Frederick is a senior history, Russian major and a columnisthtli Battalion. Educational system is cancerous I'll match socks if I want to Rockcli :ssarily. in a spori i chance ivercome drenalin “You c rood,” saj ior con rom La >ased moi And be idual spc ichieve tl nore exp' veil says. But roc ho pari iriented £ orrectly c ire crazy < ays. “Once ou realiz nize the r ays, who nost four each a p [o furthe he risk, rease it, ] vard.” People for climbi [limbers • ontrolled Hadrenalir “What 1 ioncentra mental foi well says, arrow fc atter wh ing — it’s; Camille ioctorate and outdc pes of p om hor duces wh< venturous The exi al experi EDITOR: EDITOR: I congratulate Brian Frederick for his brave column, “Student Apathy Appalling.” Over the years I have developed some feeling about American education today and its problems. In 1967 I came back to this country and soon was struck by billboards with the slogan, “You need a good education for a good job,” or something of that nature. I immediately knew about the impending demise of the American educational process, because I had known from my experience that “education” usually means a piece of paper, a “degree ” To get this piece of paper the average “student” bores himself through several years of college with the chores of attending classes, doing homework, taking examinations, etc. He leaves the school via the ritual of archaic and resplendent academic regalia and receives a scroll of paper. He presents his grades and this scroll as credentials of his “education” and gets the job. Done! I would have nothing against the above scenario if I could dispose of it as just “apathy” as Frederick does; it is the cancerous degradation that appalls me. The boredom engendered by a “meaningless” educational process shows up in the student as destructive behavior which is aimed at the process itself. The teacher’s function is seen as to be impeccably organized and give the student a clearly prepared cram paper for getting good grades in the exam. Grade inflation goes on and prospective employers get shortchanged, but they deserve little mercy because it is they who gave the college the onerous task of evaluating the potential of their future employees. As a teacher I am in a dilemma and I need help. One way I can get help is that somebody takes away my academic freedom and instead gives me a set of cram books which I pass on to the students. I then go to an acting school and learn to recite my script in an interesting manner. The second way I can be helped is if the prospective employer never sees the student’s grades. The college giving the student a diploma should declare no responsibility whatsoever except for the fact that student has been at the institution for a number of years and has attended a number of courses. The delusion that the teacher can teach without the student wanting to learn must end. The college must not be irresponsible by giving meaningless grades on a meaningless education. Phanindramohan Das Professor, Department of Meteorology I would like to address Mike Hanagan’s absurd letter on fraternities and sororities. Why don’t you just not won' about what people want to do in their spare time? IHwait to go to the Zephyr Club and match socks, are you going!; stop me? What people do in their time is their business,nt( yours. Fraternities and Greeks in general are very traditional in their beliefs. Many CT’s participate in Fight Night year as well as the CT-Kappa Alpha football game (record KA 2, CT 0). n Mike, you know nothing about Greek life, so you haw no ground on which to base your decisions about the “good" of the university. Don’t be scared if “someday” Greeks come to a bonfire cut and actually fullfill your dream of Greeks participating in these long-lived traditions. And Mike, Dillards is having a sale on socks. Jack Connell ’88 Phi Kappa Tau Radio chaos EDITOR: It’s about time somebody said something about the lame radio stations in this town. I find it difficult to understand why the local FM stations are unable to develop formats akin to those in larger cities. Sofarthe only local station I’ve found worth listening to is 1240 KT'AM, which, unfortunately, is an AM station. 1 just can’t understand who the FM stations thinkth® audience is. Not one soul I’ve talked to, and I have discussed thisdilemma with many people, likes the local stations. The only relief available, for those who have the means, is out-of-town stations or tapes. Tapes get old,so I’m left to limited reception of KLOL in Houston. Let me offer the local radio stations a bit of advice; Top five radio and wimpy dance tunes aren’t the way to go. Play a good mix of old, classic rock and somenewrod play three or four songs in a row before breakingtoa barrage of commercials, and the people of Bryan-Colk Station will be yours. Clint Hayes ’91 Richard Coselli ’91 Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorials^ reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every tfjtHik maintain the author's intent. Each letter moist be signed and mustinciwlttb classification, address and telephone number of the writer. BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breath 3UXM COUNTY CHAIRMAN IN. A. W0RNHUMP HeR6... \AJ5T AN "ANOPL OF eovny" ovepseem V£T THBR6 ARC 7W56 WHO wouyp Accuse Me.,./vie/,.. of we unfair uee of W 10 MCP/UM FOR PROPAOANPA PURP00C5,., meRe 16 HUT ONC (NAY ID Res PONT 70 THCOC