ne 15, ‘ n 8 a South- 16 game. His ts is A&M's the draft bf three saves, He also hit members oi Writers As- began with, ird has beep San Diego's "e's Ben Me- Opinion Tuesday, June 15,1993 The Battalion Page 5 WHAT ARE Vou t>oiKia7 E CT ; rj C' ~VO EL K I ^ C> A y • V A i-r e « A rJ E f V e R The Battalion Editorial Board Jason Loughman, editor in chief Mark Evans, managing editor Stephanie Pattillo, city editor Kyle Burnett, sports editor Dave Thomas, night news editor Anas Ben-Musa, Aggielife editor Mack Harrison, morning news editor Billy Moran, photo editor The Battalion 100 years at Texas A&M TT/The Battik ttempt. tes of bein' two differ- is a six-laf and the sec ession tha! ree-day set :s about f g 160 mph. Editorial Student loans Senate revision improves NSI d tightly as fast as : that was arge iron red the gate and ad on the reached eeling for the nick cathed. r side, I ? - a Dal- I won- hat com- iat could id, "You You are either of draft lot- irtantly, n't accu- you are question ds, yes, I e for the women aj o look and e that has a college/ President Clinton announced his Na tional Service Initiative on May 6 and since that time it has been in committee. Last week the Senate Labor and Re sources Committee headed by Sen. Ed ward Kennedy, D-Mass., approved a revised plan. Both Clinton's and the committee's plan have valid points but the answer to the financial aid ques tion lies somewhere between the two. As of now, the govern ment's involvement in stu dent loans is from a guar antor position - they in sure the investments made by private financial institutions. Under Clinton's plan the private sector would be phased out by the year 1997 and the gov ernment's role would drastically redefined, moving them directly to the investor position. Giv en the government's history of mismanaging money, a full scale takeover may not be the best solution. Under the committee's plan, however, there would be a cap placed on government involvement. This cap would be placed such that govern ment's investment could not exceed 50 percent of the student loan volume. Clinton's NSI consists of two pieces of legislation that would offer students several choices of loan repayment. The first bill, the National Service Trust Act, would allow students to pay back loans with one or two years of community service. The second bill, the Student Loan Re form Act, would allow students to bor row money directly from their college. While these are solid ideas, the com mittee's plan expands on the first bill, making it easier for students to obtain these jobs. The committee did not change the second bill, which as it stands would greatly benefit students, but did offer a unique plan that would allow students to repay loans through fixed income payments to the IRS. Also, under the committee's plan, stu dent's would benefit immediately from a 50 percent cut in first time fees. It is estimated that this alone will save stu dents $2.4 billion over five years. While the existing stu- “s* dent loan process is in need of an overhaul, a complete government takeover may not be the answer - especially when the major ity of America would rather see spend ing cuts. The best answer offered yet is the Senate Resources and Labor Commit tee's revised plan. Students would still be insured loans and the government would still be cutting expenses without completely taking over the loan process. Friendship has gone to the dogs Daschund roommates teach lesson to canine-hater ROBERT VASQUEZ Columnist I always considered myself a friend ly sort — if not a sordid sort. But lately Tve noticed a problem. I can't bring myself to say the three simple words: "I like you." Maybe it's a guy thing. "If you want friends, you should show yourself friendly." I read that somewhere. Though I always thought I showed myself friendly, Tve recently found myself trying to appear aloof, as though I didn't care about those around me. I figured I was being friendly when I told my roommate that I would be happy to watch his three dogs while he visited his wife in Dal las. He left me in charge. I hate dogs. So, for the weekend my roommates were two Daschunds ("weinie-dogs") and a Weimaraner (a breed of dog which recently became popular when photographer, William Wegman, caught one of the species secretly trying on various articles of human clothing). Now, these weinie-dogs and I -were not on the best of terms to begin with. A few weeks ago, after a long, gruel ing 86-hour work shift, I staggered home, dinner in hand, ready to nourish my weary body, before collapsing into a very deep slumber. The dinner: Shrimp Primavera. Six dollars it cost me, but it would be worth every penny. I LOVE Shrimp Pri mavera. I placed the dinner on the dining room table, on which the dogs are not allowed — and they know that — and I went upstairs to change my clothes. I HATE dogs ... did I mention that? Coming back down to eat my $8 meal, I noticed the brown, furry culprits licking suspiciously close to a take out box which was now on the floor. "Curses!" I thought (well, not the generic word, "curses" but very specific, ap propriate curses) ". . . my dinner! They almost ate my $12 dinner!" The box was still closed, so there was hope that the little devils had not devised a way to open the sealed container with their stinking, little, wet noses and get to my $18 meal. I lunged for the box, fending for my dinner with gritted teeth — I could swear I actually barked. I opened the box to find it was spotless, methodically licked clean by a cruel and very evil animal. Cujo. Now, I was charged with Cujo's well-being. Yes, 1 was to make sure that the animals were alive when my room mate returned. But the shreds of life they would be cling ing to was my decision entirely. Yes, I fed them. And yes, I gave them water. But these dogs, I determined, would feel the hatred they spawned in me the day they ate my $30 Shrimp Primavera. I should have known that even my efforts to hate them would be thwarted by the beasts. For the rest of the week end the dogs followed me around the apartment, as if each moment together might be our last. I'd yell. I'd shove. Couldn't the little dummies catch a clue? They never left my side. Finally, Casey, the smallest of the weinie-dogs pushed me too far. Just as I was about to fall asleep, she barked. A loud, piercing "yap" of a bark which she released just as she found the hollow of my ear. I jumped about 10 feet high. My apartment ceiling is only eight feet high. When I landed, I picked up the bark ing soprano and brought her face as close to mine as possi ble without actually sticking her nose in my mouth and I yelled, "Casey — !" I didn't know what to say, I was so angry. I paused only for a second, aching to fling the dog across my living room, to the wall where her blood stains might easily be covered by a framed poster or a new coat of paint. And in that moment of silence, the stupid dog began to lick my face. I was stunned. Not only was this dog coating my face with doggy drib ble, her tail was wagging as if I had finally begun to play her game. Her tail wagged so hard that her body began to wiggle, showing her excitement at my excitement. How pathetic. A wagging, wiggling weinie-dog. It was like a bad joke but I couldn't help laughing. This dog couldn't understand that she was overbearing. She just kept licking and wagging, happy to be there. It seems that no matter what you do to a dog, it always comes back. It likes you and it's not afraid to show it. Like a good friend. No wonder they say a dog is a man's best friend. Thanks, Casey. Vasqez is a senior journalism major me p£cc#p . new New multiculturalism requirement educationally unsound GUEST COLUMN MORGAN O. REYNOLDS W elcome to the cul ture war. It finally hit Col lege Station, with quite a thud. On June 9 the Univer sity's Liberal Arts Council voted to force liberal arts majors to take six hours of courses in multiculturalism. At least three hours must deal with "racial, eth nic, or gender is sues in the United States." Despite the proponent's rhetoric about a world that is "increasingly globally connected," no student under the re quirement must take any course in a non- American culture or region of the world. This makes the real agenda pretty clear: to force students to take the touchy-feely pish posh that is covered by the Golden Rule already. One professor, speaking in favor of the mandate, asserted that A&M needs "A New Identity." I like that statement. It doesn't hide much, in sharp contrast to the image of moderation and freedom of choice feigned by the Dean's Office. Oth er speakers agreed that the requirement would increase tensions on campus but claimed that they would be "positive ten sions," a proposition worth recalling on down the road. I like that admission, too, because it is more truthful about what's afoot. A similar University-wide cultural re-education proposal is on the fall agen da of the A&M Faculty Senate. Once upon a time, universities were about the best that had been thought and written, the open pursuit of the truth, the critical sifting out of error and non-politi cal scholarship and teaching. While these traditions eroded badly at other universi ties, or collapsed altogether, A&M re mained a little different, reluctant to fol low every fashionable liberal agenda. I hold three degrees in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and survived the 1960s tumult of that star- crossed campus. I have been proud to have been in the economics department at A&M for 19 years. I have two sons who graduated from A&M. And it's ex cruciating watching A&M go down now. If good Ags do nothing, A&M is about to become irrevocably captured by the politicized activists on the faculty and the administration of the College of Liberal Arts. Can feminist physics be far behind, the obvious answer to the white male-biased physics now taught at the university? Will A&M become better known across the state and nation for its institutionally- imposed social engineering instead of its mechanical, chemical and electrical engi neering? How can this intellectual fraud be stopped? And stopped it must be, be cause collectivist-minded faculty and ad ministrators understand only one thing: insurmountable resistance. Information is the number one weapon to stop the aggressors. Former students should express their distaste to university officials, including the Board of Regents, and hold up their financial support for A&M. Both student and fac ulty opponents of political correctness must organize opposition. At the faculty level, we must make the impending Uni versity mandate an issue for a faculty wide referendum. At UT-Austin a diversity requirement was defeated 2-1 in a faculty referendum after winning by nearly 4-1 in the Faculty Senate. Similarly, an A&M faculty-wide vote on a cultural mandate would proba bly lose 3-1 or 4-1. The authors of the liberal arts resolu tion claim that they spent two years re searching programs elsewhere and came up with the best ideas. Yet only one pro gram was mentioned as the model, namely Indiana University at Blooming ton. Two hours in the library reveals that the lU-Bloomington Culture Studies re quirement in Arts and Sciences resembles the proposal at A&M in only one dimen sion: two courses are required. lU-Bloomington divides cultures into 20 groups (e.g., eight in West Europe, three in East Asia, two in the Middle East, etc.) and requires each student to take two courses in a single area like France, Japan or Latin America. The fo cus is clearly international. Only some of the courses in the last two categories — Indian Cultures of the Americas and North American Minority Cultures — may include the "racial, ethnic ... issues in the United States" as their slant (but no hint of A&M's "gender issues"). Of course, the Dean of Liberal Arts says that the A&M courses were selected "hurriedly" as examples, a surprising ad mission after two years on the project. A&M's liberal arts mandate is political from start to finish, not motivated by scholarship nor sound pedagogy. We must remember that ultimately, Texas A&M's livelihood depends on the good will of the taxpayers of Texas. Are we entitled to this goodwill? Thomas Jefferson wrote, "That to com pel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful and tyran nical." Shouldn't we focus on the busi ness of sound analysis in mathematics, chemistry, economics and literature? Reynolds is a professor of economics EdJtoriofs appearing in The Boftolion reflect the views of the editorial board They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of other Battalion staff members, the Texas A&M student body, regents, administration, faculty or Columns, guest columns, and Moil Coil items express the opinions of the authors. The Battalion encourages letters to the editor and will print as many as space allows in the Mail Call section, letters must be 300 words or less and include the author's name, class, and phone number. Contact the editor or managing editor for information on submitting guest columns. We reserve the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, style, and accuracy. letters should be addressed to; The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald /Moil stop 1111 Texas A&M University College Station, TX 7/843