Opinion Jso, the si- >d service md thepo- bargaining rsity mi;' vc reached ‘ccive per- Marriott in leal going ttalion and e when it watchdog ices should "hat is pre- gainst de ies of scale 'd rates as - e today, tition. E an is home 1 out, com- the names ttod line, a race for akc all the e that two- :r. Will he period for o the oper- have now? i throwing i his per- Thursday, September 30,1993 The Battalion Editorial Board CHRIS WHITLEY, editor in chief JULI PHILLIPS, managing editor MARK EVANS, city editor DAVE THOMAS, night news editor ANAS BEN-MUSA, Aggielife editor BELINDA BLANCARTE, night news editor MICHAEL PLUMER, sports editor MACK HARRISON, opinion editor WILLIAM HARRISON, sports editor KYLE BURNETT, photo editor EDITORIAL The Battalion A century of service to A&M The Battalion Page 11 Why do journalists put up with it all? What has drawn staffers to The Battalion all these years? MACK HARRISON Opinion editor P ardon our narcis sism this week — we're celebrating. It's not every day your newspaper turns 100. As you nave probably gathered by now. The Battalion is commemo rating its centennial year of publication. One hundred years of newsprint. One hun dred years of writers rushing to meet dead lines. One hundred years of editors harass ing writers about dead lines. One hundred years of Battalion staffers rushing to get the paper to the printers before press time. Why do we do it? Why do writers, pho tographers, editors and graphic artists put themselves through the stressful, frenetic pace of the newspaper business? It’s certainly not for the paycheck. Battalion staffers haven't always been paid — in fact, most of us started out not expecting to get E aid. Any money you receive you regard as a anus — extra spending money. No one ever bought a new car on a journalist's salary. Most Battalion staffers end up balancing the newspaper, schoolwork, at least one oth er part time job and whatever social life they still have energy for. Usually, the grades are the first to go.Tm sure a few staffers manage to make good grades and still work on the Batt, but I can't recall any. If we don't do this for the cash, then why? Why do writers spend hours waiting to talk to a source that may not even call? Why do good on the page? Once the printers' ink gets in your veins, it's over. A reporter will work for weeks on a story, interviewing reluctant sources and sifting through wild rumors only to find out that the murder coverup she was investigating was ac tually just a drunk graduate student who cut himself with a grapefruit knife and didn't tell anybody. A news editor will get home in the early morning hours after laying out the newspa per, see a story on CNN and go back to the newsroom to pull that story off the AP wire and put it in next day's edition. A sportswriter will travel to an away game at his own expense and return home to deal with an uncooperative Sports Informa tion Department. A photographer will spend an hour and several rolls of film trying to catch the best image with her camera — only to be told there’s no space for it to run that day . An editor will handle irate phone calls and pressure from the University administration whenever someone takes offense to the most minor p>oint of debate in the newspaper. An entire staff will resign when it feels the hand of censorship closing about the news room. Why do we do all this? Why do we put up> with angry readers, reluctant sources and an apathetic public? Because, damn it, it's the greatest feeling in the world. To have the paper go to press knowing you're the ones whove just broke a major Story — you are telling the world about something it had never heard of until now. It doesn't matter if you wrote the story, as signed it, edited it or photographed it. You may even work in a different section of the paper —- it doesn't matter. It's a team effort and you know you did your part. You'll sit in a bar and talk shop all night long, because you love what you do so much. This camaraderie binds The Battalion staff together. Journalists here express their love for Texas A&M by doing their best to pro duce the £>est newspaper they possibly can, one that serves its readers: the students, staff and faculty of Texas A&M. It is this lofty goal that the founders of the Battalion set out to achieve; it is this same goal that we, their descendants, are still striv ing to carry out. Mack Harrison is a senior agricultural journalism major we, as stu- time, in acumen to tract ade- imp in bed is why we these fun- low. possibility r is not act- terest, we rough and ition. We to blame if /ill future we did any ul Dcignan Class of'9i iilleries iplex 7 p.m- ht y ry-7 p.m. nninity”- idence, or e: What You H 10-3 p.m- .m. i:30 p.m. Rollie-7 p.m- p.m. MSC7p.ni, The Battalion celebrates its centennial with a special com memorative edition today. The staff has spent the last month re searching the history of the newspaper as well as the history of Texas A&M. We have uncov ered some great stories from the past, and we have put them to- ether into what should be a eepsake for anyone who appre ciates A&M history. Now, as The Battalion enters its second century, we can look forward to the future. The peo ple from the past who have made The Battalion the ac claimed newspaper that it is to day have set tremendously high standards for us to follow. Those standards must be met I every day when the paper reaches the newsstands^ We can only hope that we^continue to v raise these goals even higher for the staffs that follow. As journalists, we are obligat ed to provide people with all of the news — not just the good news, and not just the bad news. Yet as students, we all attend class, work on homework and take tests just like the rest of the student body. Just like anyone who works while going to school, some times work and school conflict. And, occasionally, mistakes will happen. But unlike the engi neering or chemistry laboratory where students can learn in pri vate sessions about their crafts, our "laboratory" is seen by 42,000 people every day. Still, the quality of the news paper continues to improve as the quality of journalism stu dents attending Texas A&M improves. Also, students from other academic fields are finding that you don't have to be a journal ism major to work on the pa per. All you need is an inquisi tive mind and an interest in the University. With all of these things going for us, we hope the higher stan dards we set for The Battalion can be passed on to future gen erations. In this way, we can in sure that the people of Texas A&M can enjoy The Battalion for another 100 years. © Cb -ec -i 100years of ‘Howdy letters at Texas A&M Details 1, 1893 /if writtty to v-oici my Jfsp teas art oiks tii iyiosait ftsimm tvio nfre to say Howdy os campus, 7~k/s coHcyt was tsum- owe 10 more yearns at this ratt, iut at least wt stiff do* t iaoe fates sit its. /ffso, ties damspdact suds a fotiaff team so wi cas icat tic fftffoutta t.u./ ffosi/L /(for times Tcd'/fss Cdass otf ’97 October I, 1993 I’m writing to uoice my dis pleasure ouer the Ignorant freshmen who refuse to say ‘Howdy’ on campus. This col lege won’t suruiue 10 more years at this rate, and the dope fiends, democrats and fraternities are all behind it. But at least we’ue got Bon- Far! lUhoop!! Mortimer “Red” Rss IU Class of ’97 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, cartoons and letters express the opinions of the authors. The Battalion encourages letters to the editor and will print as many as space allows. Letters must be 300 words or less and include the author's name, class, and phone number. We reserve the ri^ht to edit length, styleTand accuracy. Contact the opinion editor for information on submitting guest columns. : Address letters to; The Battalion - Mail Call Mail stopITIt ; ; Texas A&M University :: College Station, TX 77B43 :• Fax: $09) 845-2647 IP X. Today's campus newspaper: A hundred years in the making A fter four months of researching, writing and edit ing, The Battalion staff has finished the 100th anniver sary issue. All of those late nights in the news room and count less hours spent in the University Archives culminate with the release of today's special sec tion. A lot of us around, the newsroom were worried about this issue. After all, it's not every day that your editor asks you to report on 100 years of Battalion and Texas A&M history. But, we lived through it, and we learned a lot along the way. When we first laid out the plans for this edition, none of us had any idea of what we had gotten ourselves into. We knew little about the history of A&M — and even less about the history of our own newspaper. That soon changed. We learned that this University has seen many changes during the 100 years that The Battalion has existed. When the newspaper first rolled off of the presses in 1893, only 500 students attended Texas A&M College, and all were members of the Corps. A&M's current enrollment surpasses 43,000 students and 1,900 are Corps members. We learned that some of these changes have not come without controversy. When the school decided to admit women in 1963, 4,000 students booed A&M President Earl Rudder when he made the announcement. One student said, "Co-education would make A&M just like any other cookie-pushing school. It could ruin us." We learned that A&M has many inter esting anecdotes about what the school used to be like. For example, in 1918, in the midst of World War I, increasing numbers of students and army personnel on campus prompted the College to set up tents in front of the YMCA Building to provide housing for A&M's growing population. And, the College even has an unsolved case of its own. Old Main, the College's first building, was destroyed by fire in 1912, and College officials never deter mined the cause of the fire. Even a com mittee formed to investigate the blaze was unsuccessful. To this day, no one knows how the fire started. We learned that controversy has be come a tradition here at The Battalion. Controversy has become a tradition here at The Battal ion. One of the first inci dents occurred in 1908 when A&M President Hen ry Harrington suspended seven members of the staff. One of the first incidents occurred in 1908 when A&M President Henry Harrington suspended seven members of the staff for printing an article that disputed a com ment he had made. In 1967, President Earl Rudder fired Battalion Editor Tom DeFrank because of an unsigned letter that appeared in the "Letters to the Editor" column. The ac tion was the climax in an ongoing conflict between the newspaper and the adminis tration. DeFrank w^nt on to become the senior White House correspondent for Newsweek. In collecting all of this information, the Batt staff virtually moved into the Uni versity Archives. In fact, during the last two weeks I barely saw my writers. Every so often a few would come in to tell me about all of the interesting anecdotes they uncovered. At one point, my writers told me that the workers at the archives even offered them food. And we still managed to put out a quality newspaper. On a more personal note, last week I had the opportunity to meet a truly re markable woman who had some interest ing stories to tell about A&M. Amber May Threlkeld was bom on the A&M campus in 1894, only one year after The Battalion began publication. Her great-grandfather, John Carson, donated the land on which the University was built. She lived on the A&M campus with the rest of her family. Amber said she re members that when she was a child, cadets often visited her parents. She said she was fascinated by the cadets and wanted to take part in their activities. "I marched with my little broom," she fondly recalled. "I had my little toy broom. I'd have that as my gun." Amber continued to live on campus af ter she married. Her husband worked at the College's power plant. She gave birth to her son and daughter in a log house on campus. Mrs. Threlkeld donated many of the pictures appearing on the cover of the special section. I thank her and her fami ly for their hospitality last week during our visit. I congratulate everyone who worked on the special section. Everyone did a spectacular job. Such people have made this newspaper what it is today, and such people will continue to uphold the high standards The Battalion has maintained. To the staffs that have preceded us, you've left us with some awfully big shoes to fill. I only hope that we live up to the legacy that you have left behind. Happy 100th, everyone. Here's to an other 100 years. Mark Evans is a senior biology and journalism major. MARK EVANS City editor .in. [light 11-1 p.m. der-8 p.m. i p.m. ;ater- 4 p.m. plex-7 p.m. i IMarriot- p.m. .in. Midnight iccial needs. :nt to enable MAIL CALL North audience tries to silence protester A lone Aggie chose to exercise his right to free speech and protest the Oliver North speech on campus. As he stood with his sign outside the audito rium before the speech, alone against the thousands who poured inside, he was insulted, taunted, jeered, physical ly threatened and followed until a few conscientious Aggies whisked him away from the area. The Aggie Democrats denounced North, calling him a disgrace. Their ra tionale for not protesting was that they were more interested in education than ugliness. I saw no educational informa tion around campus preceding North's visit, and certainly, demonstrations need not be ugly. I imagine they were just plain scared. Scared of the personal attacks and violent insults that would be hurled at them, rather than following any convictions. This is the type of oppression and in timidation we have come to expect at A&M. It is also in direct violation of civil and constitutional rights given to U.S. citizens. No one comes here expecting to find a liberal haven. But one would expect a ba sic respect for fellow man — a basic re spect for the Bill of Rights. This students here are benefiting daily from freedom of speech, yet think it a selective right. And the aggression and violence that follows this misconception only turns inward and unleashes itself on fellow Aggies. Aggies are well known for blindly and angrily following their conservative agenda, while knowing little about the issues they so violently support. This is why the Ku Klux Klan knew a ripe re cruiting ground when it saw one. This is why Oliver North came here, despite be ing an indicted criminal. It is also why, sadly, only one person had the courage to protest an event that would have been met with extreme con troversy anywhere else. Eileen Murphy Graduate student Multiculturalism — Give it a rest. Aggies So much has been going around about the proposed multicultural re quirement, I just had to say something to both sides; GIVE IT A REST! If anyone thinks that a multicultural requirement is going to lessen the image of Texas A&M University or somehow change what it means to be an Aggie, they are out of their minds. Wanna know what multiculturalism is? Look around sometime, y'all. The same people you go to class with every day are white, African-American, His panic, Asian, International, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, straight, gay, male, fe male — whatever. Whether or not you give a damn about their culture is moot. What makes this place great is that these are the same people you go to Midnight Yell with, stand up as a part of the 12th Man with, say "Howdy" to. build Bonfire with, put your arm around to saw varsity's horns off with,and who you shed a tear for at Sil ver Taps and Muster. If the administration wants us to take a multiculturalism class, fine. Great. Don't worry about political indoctrina tion; Aggies are way above brainwash ing. If you disagree with your prof, you're not going to suddenly jump up in class and say, "Wow! Tm going to totally change my belief system based on your last lecture!" You might even learn some thing interesting, if you're not careful. Ags, don't whine about a mere speed bump on the road to getting that Aggie Ring and an A&M diploma. Just show everyone what we already know; if the world's citizens were as willing to drop their differences to become a part of something better, they may someday ap proximate the greatness that defines the fightin' Texas Aggies. Scott Rylander Class of'94