l Y 20,1993 nale Opinion luesday, July 20,1993 The Battalion Page 5 Gap A BIT Tt» or ~s '' K ^ * Iroud tiupirf ieJ Art Up 5 low-lying ed and in storms that into Mis- most of the Monday, rest of the increasing I thunder- widespread ;s. sippi basin, ng in Min- n. Farther ome much Mississippi from many crested at 46.9 feet, re the 1973 welve hours me-tenth of find thenv an League definitely ed. Texas, i games be- ole posses- has been in ist chance, m function Ryan ready Ryan said. )ppres- /ouldn't he want- ;>ut is no t, I don't -oblem. I /one . You 1 who as a n you. ; co-rec rms in- include js to be 00 play- : or vari- r of two ;vival of pay-for- ve mar- players' ihanced ge; and annually The Battalion Editorial Board Jason Loughman, editor in chief The Battalion Mark Evans, managing editor Stephanie Pattillo, city editor Dave Thomas, night news editor Mack Harrison, opinion editor Kyle Burnett, sports editor Susan Owen, sports editor Anas Ben-Musa, Aggielife editor Billy Moran, photo editor Editorial Taking the rap Don't blame music for criminal acts In the wake of the sentencing of ionald Ray Howard to death by 1 injection for the killing of a fexas Department of Public Safety tooper, a lawsuit has been filed by ie officer's widow against the rap ist and recording label that pro sed the "gangsta" rap music that fas said to be an influence on Howard. While Linda David- n, the wife of slain leer Bill Davidson, fanted her hus- und's killer to be ;iven the death lenalty, she also igreed with the de fense attorney's ar gument that it was lie hard-core rap music that influ- inced Howard to lull the trigger. Davidson is now suing Tupac Imuru Shakur, Time Warner, Inc. Interscope Records for an un- letermined amount. "I feel like these corporations led to be responsible," she said, im claiming that the 'gangsta' rap music was a factor." Davidson's attorney, Jim Cole, id the lawsuit would ensure that music companies do not produce speech designed to make people kill people. He also said the mes sage of the lawsuit would be one of responsibility. Howard confessed several times to shooting Officer Davidson in the neck with a 9mm handgun during a routine traffic stop for a missing headlight. The responsibility for crimes such as Howard's lies with the offender. „ If Davidson is suc cessful in her lawsuit, not only will the First Amendment rights of musicians be limited, but the possibilities will be endless for criminals claiming their behavior was the result of a song they heard, a televi sion show they watched, a billboard they read or anything else they have come in contact with. The citizens of this nation cannot allow the justice system to continue its policy of eluding blame and shifting responsibility. The courts need to remember that it was not an entertainer that committed the crime, but rather a criminal who pulled the trigger. And now on to weightier subjects There's more to life than singing and weenie dogs Today we will be discussing Bosnia-Herzegovina is bad. At least the war being ROBERT VASQUEZ Columnist Today we will be discussing Bosnia-Herzegovina and Saddam Hussein. OK, now that I've lost half of the readers who bothered to pick up this issue of The Battalion, I will endeavor to comment authoritatively on these topics which have been deemed important, (although I have no idea how to spell them, let alone understand their significance). My columns, it seems, have not been hard-nosed, goat-getting, or ire- raising enough to please the great ed- itors-that-be. While all the other so- cially-aware and morally-superior columnists have been writing respon sibly on such burning issues as rape, pestilence and road trips, I have dilly-dallied with tamer topics such as TV addiction and weenie dogs. I realize that any reader would be hard pressed to de scribe my topics with such words as "relevant" and "grip ping." In my defense, however, I have never succumbed to the intense urge to write on the one topic which took this campus by storm one quiet fall day nearly two years ago, when one very crafty columnist exploited a very serious subject: buttcracks. And 1 never will. You will never the see the word "buttcrack" in any of my columns simply for the sake of sensationalism. As hard as I try to reach every student and expand my audience to a number larger than, say, two, I refuse to lower myself to that level where 1 turn to sex ploitation and pander to the lewd curiosity of the lascivious masses. Buttcrack. In the interest of shedding a very dim light on the im portant topics du jour, I have chosen to address more com pelling issues, such as those we will discuss today. Saddam Hussein is a bad man. Though he has been re sponsible for the deaths of thousands of innocent people and shows no remorse for his actions, he still lives. Sad dam Hussein, not Iraq, needs to be bombed. The man is psycho. The United States does not need to send thousands of troops to fight a war. All it would take is one or two well-placed assassins with good intentions and good aim. Bosnia-Herzegovina is bad. At least the war being fought there is bad. Many people don't understand what's going on there because the minute they hear the words "Bosnia-Herzegovina" they immediately become confused. The brain shuts down and the eyes cross. At least that's what happens to me. But the situation in Bosnia-Herzegovina is more complex than the spelling and pronunciation of the two words put together. As far as I can understand, (from snippets of conversations overheard at parties and on CNN), there are groups of people there who hate other groups of people. The reason for this hatred is unclear. Maybe it's politi cal, maybe it's racial, maybe it's religious. Croatians and Serbians (who are two of the groups of people involved), have joined forces, trying to defeat the Muslims (another group of people) who live in Bosnia (which is a country, sort of). The Muslims are a minority group in Bosnia, not unlike whites in Los Angeles, New York and most major US cities. The Croatians and the Serbians are fighting to overtake the land called Bosnia and then kick the Muslims out. The Croatians and the Serbians don't even like each other. They simply have a common purpose. That being hatred. And greed. The part I don't understand is what the US is doing there. Word's like "humanitarian" and "civil" and "liber ties" keep surfacing in conversations describing the mission of US troops in Croatia. I just wonder who's job it is to decide that we belong in another country, fighting someone else's war. There are those who say that, in the grand scheme of things, we all have a responsibility to each other. If our fellow man needs help, they say, then we must oblige. I just know that I wouldn't want the responsibility of de ciding who will fight in someone else's war. I'm not good at telling people what they should and shouldn't do. Who am I to say what's right and wrong, simply because I have an opinion on the topic. Everyone has an opinion. I'd rather just talk about simple things. Things like singing, and weenie dogs. But not buttcracks. Never buttcracks. Vasquez is a se?rior journalism major ANGEL KAN/Thc Bat talion (S>\cm TUB NEW University doesn't need to protect Aggies from nude photos g° over eight alian team ised Kukoc /ould have se in the re- eal let him ns. ould have ould have ? drives, a great feel- "I'm sorry aem, but 1 d of Chica- GUEST COLUMN MUKUL GOEL had never real ized the extent .of conser- Jtism at TAMU ®iposed on Ag- Jiesby the fogy- ishA&M officials a recent inci dent involving the ;SC Visual Arts Committee. wandering tross the hallway ® front of the ISC Student Pro- jiams Office, I ^me across a yet mknown place called the MSC Visual vts Gallery. The walls of the gallery had an unti ed exhibit of photographs. I was so luilled by the compassionate and rustic J Ppeal of the images that I immediately ( ent and congratulated Amy Day, staff I’isor to the committee. To my dis may, I was told the exhibition was being lint down temporarily because there 'are no labels on the photographs, later it was revealed to me that per- ^ps the underlying reason behind the Hosing was the nudity depicted in oirie of the photographs that potential- : could offend representatives of the Hssodation of Former Students. It was dt to be quite risky to have, on cam pus, an exhibition displaying pictures of nude people when Aggie Hostelers were visiting the campus. The former students did not see the gallery which is now opened for public viewing. The matter is already silenced but I thought it might be worthwhile to convey this message to my fellow Ag gies oblivious to the fact that someone else is trying to control our thinking process in the university we are so proud of. TAMU is a great university and for mer students are a big contribution to its greatness. We don't want to offend them in any manner whatsoever. I could not help laughing at those indi viduals that assumed that the former students would be outraged by the mere sight of bare breasts or a penis of pubic hair shown in an innocent paint ing or photograph in a public art gallery and thereupon stop giving aid to the University. Are Aggies so immature and their sensibilities so weak that will get shat tered by the blow of a nude picture in an art gallery? Similar cases have occurred in other universities where exhibitions had to be removed because the nudity might of fend the board of directors and the benefactors of the university, conse quently the artists immediately with drew their work. We certainly do not want our dear Aggieland to be shunned by the art world and the rest of the cre ative community. TAMU should not become a place where artists are afraid of being humiliated or judged by uni versity managers and political players. The Constitution gives protection to freedom of expression that transcends personal taste and correspondingly one had the right to turn a blind eye to any form of expression one doesn't approve of. The responsibility of interpreting any work of art is commonly shared by the artist and the viewers, not the art gallery or the University. Regardless of the artist's intention in creating a work of art containing nudi ty, the erotic or sexual content is usual ly an outcrop of the viewers own feel ing and cultural or social experience. In other words "obscenity lies in the eyes of the beholder." The depiction of nudity in the work of art may not always fall in the cate gories of erotica and pornography. Artists often use nudity as a form of ex pression of self which can evoke feel ings ranging from amusement to dis gust. Even the most perverse people cannot get aroused by the photographs in our exhibit in the MSC. Although there are no absolute criteria for judg ing art and its value, anybody can dis tinguish between Madonna's book "Sex" and the images created by Michaelangelo or Picasso. Some people do not consider photography as a form of art, but I am rather sure Michaelan gelo would have loved to shoot photos if he had a nice Japanese camera. The school has the right to relocate of remove any work of art that may be disruptive to the educational process, in violation of laws or hazardous to the health and safety of viewers or partici pants. The University is a public in vestment in research and teaching that should be free from political pressures or religious fanaticism. The purpose of education is not a dictation of codified set of scriptures from teacher to student but to provide a laboratory environment where ideas and issues can be debated in an atmos phere of academic freedom. The MSC Visual Arts Committee is a student committee that aims to make art a part of education and it should not be appropriated for political causes. Like all the other student committees, its purpose is to enlighten and explore rather than shock people. At a juncture of sexual and moral confusion where the family values are sandwiched between gay/lesbian rights and the feminist movement, let the artist be one who can provide the pub lic a mirror for self-exploration and ex amination and let the universities be free from hypocrisy. I know that our University with all its good intentions wants Aggies to be the best. However, I sincerely wish that our teachers and advisors would give up their paternalistic attitude and let us grow up on our own. This strict quality control may lead to a line of Aggie- brand products made in Aggieland with no individuality or creativity. Well Ags, we are free to express our opinions on this topic and visit the gallery. You are welcome to attend a reception and discussion in the MSC Vi sual Art Gallery, Room 289 on July 23 at 8:00 p.m. Mukul Gael is a civil engineering gradu ate student and a member of the MSC Visu al Arts Committee Editorials appearing in The Battalion 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 staff. Columns, guest columns, and Mail Call items express the opinions of the authors. The Battalion encourages letters to the editor and wiH print as many as space allows in the Moil 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 submlttina guest columns. We reserve the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, style, and accuracy. 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