Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 21, 1988 Opinion Mail Call Some dangerous adiposity EDITOR: You asked for letters, so here’s one sure to get some irate, self-serving responses. In rebuttal to Jill Webb’s column concerning social bias against fat chicks (can we call them fat young women?), I would like to offer comments from one who decided not to knock ’em ’til 1 tried ’em. Fat women sweat a lot. The human body wasn’t designed to cool such a mass of adiposity. They cover the smell with a half-ton of perfume. I picked up my date and spent the rest of the evening unable to smell anything. My sinuses had been grenaded. The woman ate more than 1 did at dinner (decidedly unfeminine). She also smoked — a tremendously gross thing to do in polite company. I tried manfully to dance with her. Leading her was like steering a small planetoid. Very unwiedly, and I couldn’t get my arms around her properly (I’m 6’1”). I had to constantly watch her feet. She had on stiletto heels. I was afraid that one misstep by her would nail my foot to the floor. Let’s face it, half of 300 pounds is still 150 pounds, a formidable weight on a small surface, as the physics people would say. Fat people have a lot to offer society. Certainly, society would be missing a “large” piece of its rich tapestry without them. Fat women can be the sweetest around, if you ignore the fact that they are always stuffing their faces. Let’s not forget that you have to be big in order to sing opera properly! But please don’t inflict them on average men socially! It’s too dangerous! John S. Snowden Grad Student Making tracks is no good EDITOR: Once again the proposal for moving the railroad tracks along the Wellborn Road corridor is in the news, this time with an estimated $50 million price tag. The Board of Regents wants the tracks moved so west of campus will no longer be “divided” from the rest. This project will be funded 45 percent by the state, which includes A&M and state highway department funds, 45 percent by the federal government, 5 percnet by local government and 5 percent by the railroad. The Board of Regents has done all of this without public opinion on the matter. Where A&M, Bryan, College Station and Brazos County will get the money is anybody’s guess. At A&M, aren’t there many more pressing needs such as day-care facilities for faculty/staff, dorm space, parking, a sometimes- inadequate library, establishing colleges of music and fine arts, minority recruitment and pay raises to name a few? What will Bryan and College Station do, cut our already-cut services, not get pay raises, stop building needed roads and parks? All of these could be provided for, and improve the quality of life more than moving the railroad tracks. On the safety side, lowering gates have been installed at all intersections and train derailments are about as common as blizzards in this area. Why not build, at a much moi'e reasonable cost, over- or underpasses for pedestrians and/or automobiles if the tracks are in the way? Moving the railroad tracks is an idea that’s time has come and gone. The cost is too great and the benefits too few for too few people. Mike Varner ’SS Letters to the eilitor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff rrserves 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. Who is that mystery voice? 1 don’t want to sound too h i g h and mighty here, but if it weren’t ab solutely necessary, I don’t think I’d spend the night at a Motel 6. I spend about half my life in mo tels and hotels as it is, and I’ve gotten to the point where Lewis Grizzard I even tried to talk to th.e man di rectly, but he lives in Alaska, as it turns out, and he was off on his dogsled some where. v I did learn the following about him: Tom Bodett was born in Michigan in 1955. He has been a cannery worker, a logger, a building contractor, and a commentator on Naional Public Radio’s “All Things Considered.” He lives in Homer, Alaska, with his wife and son. I need my comforts — minibar in my room, little jars of shampoo and turn down service where they leave a candy mint on my pillow. I’m certain a room at a Motel 6 would be clean, but I’ve got the feeling the tow els would be small and there wouldn’t be but one pillow and there wouldn’t be HBO on the television. Regardless, I’ve become a Tom Bod ett fan, and if you listen to radio at all, you know Tom Bodett is a national spokesman for Motel 6. His commercials are homey and clever and he always signs off by saying, “We’ll leave the light on for you,” which is what your mother used to say when you were going to be out late. In a w'orld where an advertiser would hire that idiot from Australia to scream at you about batteries, Tom Bodett’s calming voice is most welcome. He talks about Motel 6’s great room service (there’s a pizza place nearby that delivers) and he even spoke the recent good news that in some Motel 6 rooms, there are new bedspreads. Since I’d never heard of Tom Bodett before he broke in with Motel 6, I set about to find out more about him. I also found out he is an author. I am now in possession of two of his books and I have read them and they have brought me much joy. One book is “As Far As You Can Go Without a Passport,’ (Addison-Wesley). The other is “Small Comforts’ by the same publisher. Both books are filled with essays that come across as a conver sation with your neighbor. Tom Bodett has a lot to say about stacks of wood, McDonald’s coming to Alaska, getting a truck out of a ditch, naming a baby and machinery. “Machinery and I have an understa- ding,” he writes. “We hate each other.’ What I like most about Tom Bodett’s writing is he’s not topical. He neglects AIDS, nuclear war, racism, the falling dollar, and airline deregulation and deals instead with the fact he’s never been able to spit very far. Tom Bodett has the most believable voice in radio advertising since Arthur Godfrey tried to sell me tea. And you know, he is the sort of per son who would, in fact, leave the light on for you if he said he would. Copyright 1988, Cowles Syndicate Spare a dime for a space station! I recently hap pened to be wan dering aimlessly around some large unnamed down town area when I stumbled upon a poor, hopeless fel low who was ap parently down- and-out on his luck. He was dressed in a sharp Mark Nair three-piece suit and was rattling a few pennies in a small tin cup. “Excuse me,” he said in that raspy, down-and-out voice of his. He rattled the cup and looked at me pitifully. “Got a dime, mister?” Now' I was oblivious to the more than obvious faux pas of helping our society’s downtrodden and poor, so I offered to buy the poor fellow a cup of coffee and a nice, glucose-laden danish. “Oh, no,” he said, smiling a raspy, down-and-out smile. “I don’t want any of that. Just a dime. Or a quarter, if you have a quarter.” How strange, I thought, as I rubbed my chin in puzzlement. But I was quar terless. All I had with me was my check book. “Do you take checks?” I queried quer ulously. “Sure,” he said and handed me a pen. “Make it out to NASA.” Oh, ho. I could smell financial trou ble on the horizon. “NASA?” “Yes, its for the space station.” Ah. It suddenly became clear. NASA, the Space Shuttle, the space station, pennies from heaven. No problem. He leaned into the light to grab my check. I gasped a hearty gasp. Golly! He looked very similar to James Fletcher, big man on campus at NASA, The Ad ministrator. But before I could he cer tain, he snatched my check from my hand and retreated into the dark and dreary shadows. “Thanks,” he said. I could tell he was on the verge of tears. Here was a man with a story to tell. “You know,” the down-and-out fel low said, “I wouldn’t have to be doing this if it weren’t for those meatheads in Congress. You want a space station, don’t you?” “Sure,” I said. Heck, ever since the Ruskies shot old Sputnik over our heads playing the Soviet theme song over and over and over again,I was for anything spacial. “Yeah,” he said, wiping his nose, “e- veryone wants a space station, except those meatheads in Congress.” He be gan to mimic a senator’s voice (doing quite a good job, I might add), “Oh, we need to cut someplace. You hoo, NASA, odd man out. Its your turn. You want $900 million? Well, take $200 million. HA HA HA.” “Sorry,” I said, genuinely sorry. “Well, it’s not your fault that the space station is doomed. Two hundred million? You can’t even buy a decent hammer for $200 million. Jeez.” I was stumped for even a few helpful words of consolation. “And then, oh get this, now' they’re saying that “Star Wars” can’t be de ployed before the turn of the century and it’ll cost more than $170 BIL LION!” “That’s a lot of money,” I said. “You said it, buddy,” said the poor old down-and-out fellow. “But, ho ho, let’s give them they’re money on a silver platter and we won’t even give NASA the stinking time of day.” “Politics,” I said, pacing up and down the alley, looking angry. “Everything is politics.” By 1 ■giit'd fori ■oreign uni ) reign itutions “No kidding. And you know 1 he senate subcommittee thatti dreams to boldly go where nospatJ lion has gone before and smashed like roaches told us to usethegei $200 million sum to either phase space station program or mail with $50 million a month until net nary.” “That rivals my utility bills," |j writing another check. The poor old down-and-out, iij piece suit bum/beggar/borrowern Ins fist and chanted “SDI stinks,Si number one!” a few times untilh came hoarse from the exdtemeu petered out by whimpering, “No lion for the station. Money now.’ “What else can I do?” I asked,>i checks like machine gunfire. But my downtrodden friendti ued to ramble. “Even DOD’sbudc congress have said that SDI will knoc k out 16 percent of incoming! missies. HA! We could spend money much better than ...thi than wasting it!” By then I had asked if he took credit cards hi didn’t after dark. He thankedme|s sely, shaking my hand as if he pumping a water pumpinthedi lef t a stunned yet hopeful space supporter. And on my w'ay, a few street' the block, I heard another rasp nearly as bad down-and-outvoiccBn HQ the alley. I looked around and s Jp i?''* my eyes. It sure as heck looked! cranky Frank Carlucci. “Pssst, buddy. Got a quarter'l SDI in the sky?” “Jenkies,” I exclaimed loudlvl then I cjuickly ran away. Mark Nair is a graduate studei; opinion page editor forThefouit Monday o\ |) quash tl greement [ign institu share idi Ity and gn Most rec lie third Ai n agreerm )es Grand arch-indt ortium the ons. The T ’echnolog} alifornia ; (ther Ame: )rmal agre coles. Cathleen loordinato ational C run out of die 1 f mo , rand sh a form dons that lord ■ SAN DU 'Of the 10 n Be ported a Bppeared N tfict judge, Bionth for: B Judge i om a 19- at she wc arch 26 i a nearby r Repeatedly “We’re r mnty D Gutierrez Jesses are |uly 11, wl e have.” The Sot as shake! at one of Seal, lastii !anch win fight ignor Bay have j Many p they are r fendant, e Wage. 1 Ten me Bictments Three of 'vith sexua arged w gravated 1 as charge One de xual asst gravated k The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Richard Williams, Editor Sue Krenek, Managing Editor Mark Nair, Opinion Page Editor Curtis Culberson, City Editor Becky Weisenfels, Cindy Milton, News Editors Anthony Wilson, Sports Editor Jay Janner, Art Director Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa- Der operated as a community service to Texas A&M and ftryan-College Station. 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