mm* 15,1993 ers ies !SS 5 1 Kosar terback practice leveland 13 of 21 He also vhile di- oys to a iver the this off me was ach Jim- - Still Houston il? Look incinnati y- w four rters, ca- slogged rds and the Ol niled up n a 38-3 Cincin- ur-game winning this sea- its of- er one- ; were vily on illig to 1 zone, ew for iinator tricks, d from , Tole- vorked ne first :Elroy ie play r ABC- lans," ndary rrback rohm, cialist, to him backs, ercep- ed less rllig. coach rerger quar- :hed," defen- le fact ve did ur de- »udest orner- rcause most lerica, tested ide. nn in ive of jlenn ed off r a 40- score a win nfort- : play roach abig- ne on e Ag- Kyle ost a 3, and their (But more A&M i?) mge, gg ies They ;ames work erall s the 3PN? de nied. pro- si de- \&M arhe- with ever tg af- Syn- Monday, November 15,1993 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 ■We WeLfaRe LNe EDITORIAL Court decision Ruling helps harassment victims Tuesday's Supreme Court 'tiling that employees no onger need to show "serious jsychological injury" to prove iaims of sexual harassment akes a positive step in resolv- ng problems surrounding the ssue. The courts, however nust watch closely for abuses )f the new precedent. The old standard was obvi- jusly unacceptable. The legal system should work to stop sexual harassment before vic- ims' lives are devastated, not ifter. Supporters of the new stan- dard hope it will act as a deter- ent to further sexual harass ment. They hope the ruling will encourage employers to develop and enforce rules to prevent these problems from arising. The less restrictive legal pro cedures will probably lead more employees to report cas es of harassment. Opponents of the Supreme Court's deci sion fear that lessened restric tions will allow people to make false claims. The need for proof of the in appropriate behavior still stands out as the bottom line of the issue. As in the case of liability and malpractice suits, the changes in sexual harass ment judgments could result in a massive tangle of convo luted legalities. The impact of the ruling seems to justify the risk of a new series of legal complexi ties. Before last week's decision, employees had to prove they suffered severe psychological breakdowns due to sexual ha rassment on the job in order to make a case against their em ployers. Teresa Harris, who in the mid-1980s brought the original charges cited in the court's de cision, quit her job after two and one-half years of miscon duct by her boss. Now that the courts have re moved the element of psycho logical damage from such cas es, victims will have a quicker way out of an oppressive envi ronment. The end of the psychologi cal damage restrictions in sex ual harassment trials ends a long-standing injustice. As long as the courts guard against false accusations, the recent decision will benefit em ployers and employees. Opinion The Battalion Page 7 Two types of interracial relationships Couples should date because of love, not out of envy ne of my girl friends encoun tered the young man she'd had a crush on one night (He hap pened to be a very at tractive little business major.) My girlfriend had let this young man know that she was in terested in him quite subtilely, and he seemed to respond. But a little after that, his interest dwin dled, and he wasn't so attentive or sensitive. It deteriorated to the point that neither would really even speak to each other. It be came a game. The night she saw him at a dance was a little stressful for all of us. My tender little ears were bruised from the names she would grit out every once and a while. Sometimes, she would just stare like she was slicing him into nice, thin slices. At one oint, I asked her if we needed to take her ome. The next day, another girlfriend was inter viewed by a teaching assistant on her ideas about the relationships between black men and women. Her viewpoint was frank and not in the most positive light, but she was honest. One of the questions that she brought up to him and later to me was "Why do black men date undesirable white women, and when black women date white men, why is it so wrong?" T thought about that. And it seems to me that there are two kinds of interracial dating that are distinct and should be treated as such. Whether it is more popular in 1993 or just more "acceptable" for an interracial cou ple to be seen in public without hearing overt slurs, it is a characteristic of dating that will most likely be with our society for decades to come. Although covert much of the time, the slurs do occur quite frequently. Black men who date white women are de nounced heavily by white men as well as by black women. It seems to be automatically assumed that the black man is making the statement that a black woman is not good enough for him. Or that white women are looking for something in a black man that is absent in a white man. But this is not always the case, even though the slurs portray this. It is true that some black men look to An glo women as status symbols and will date them as a way of elevating their own status. This attitude stems from the days of slavery. As whites were placed above blacks, it was' embedded in many blacks that whites were superior. Furthermore, the sexual myths that sur rounded black men and women spurred white men to "protect" their pure wives and sisters from Negro men while they them selves indulged in sexual relations with the slave women either mutually or forcefully. There was an underlying fear of the sexual virility of black men that was salient because in our society, this is what determines a "true man." Thousands of black men suffered hor ribly, some even losing their lives, because of this pervasive fear. Now that it is no longer legally taboo to date interracially, it is both a status symbol and source of power for some black men to date Anglo women— any Anglo woman. That is why you will see these black men with Anglo women who are very unattrac tive and unkempt. But on the other side of the coin, there are black men who are very secure in themselves and will date a woman for her inherent qual ities. And she may happen to be black, white or neither. These men do not chose women who have nothing to offer them just for the sake of ap pearance. For instance, Quincy Jones is mar ried to an Anglo women who happens to be very attractive and is a fairly successful ac tress. The same is true for black women. Dating outside the race does not mean that black men are inferior or less attractive as a whole, but rather that you appreciate the beauty in others also. In addition, the dating environment is shifting radically for black women. As more and more African-American women are moving into the high-paying professions — law, medicine, engineering — there are fewer and fewer black men available. In other words, black women are outnum bering black men, but not outnumbering pro fessional men in general. So it seems only natural that these women would look to a different pool of eligible men. Culture draws people together, not color. Making a life with another involves knowing that person on the inside. And everybody is the same color there. Tracey Jones is a senior psychology major TRACEY JONES Columnist ' / Til y i i 7~%e action cfoa haw recjaegtedfe y There are no other sect tone aa-a/TahTe at this tine. A ir n ' f-i- ■ / I ' •jum i a i C ^ C3, Phone' registration (JooS^e. y IZAwSrJ 1/ 7,peAs 0 /Stey —HI M I t/oa already* haw a cdassgchedadedat this ti/ne. 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 right to edit letters and guest columns for length, style, and accuracy. Contact the opinion editor for information on submitting guest columns. T Address letters to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Mail stop 1111 Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77B43 : Fax: (409) 845-2647 Forget multiculturalism; environmentalism is next hot topic emaining 1^ perfectly JLValigned with the prevailing po litically correct doctrine of our time, the Faculty Senate approved a mandatory multi cultural require ment for all future students last week. While this poli cy will certainly make Texas A&M a leader in the field, our focus on diver sity and multicul turalism seems to be distracting us from leading in the next hot topic of the nineties — the environment. "But Eliot," you're thinking, "the envi ronment is an old issue that was popular back when Gorbachev was in power." However, the environment, like all im portant societal issues, has made its re turn to the forefront. With the election of Bill Clinton and A1 Gore, this nation is seeing a return to strict environmental polices. Surprisingly, the media has spent very little time on this top ic. It is a perfect example of how our gov ernment is misusing its authority, ignoring our rights and wasting our money all in an effort to supposedly save the environment. Not to mislead you here, these policies are not Clinton's. President Bush, in fact, adopted most of them; however, the han dling of these issues is not getting any better under the current administration. Here are a few examples of our environ mental policy as interpreted by the courts of the United States. Wayne Hage, a Nevada rancher, hired a worker to clear some scrub brush from irrigation ditches that have been in use on his property since the turn of the century. He was convicted under the Clean Water Act for "redirecting streams" and faces a possible five-year sentence. Harvey Van Fossan, of Springfield, HI., was ordered by city officials to get rid of some pigeons that were causing a nuisance on a vacant lot near his home. To comply. Van Fossan used strychnine-laced com, which consequently killed two common grackles and two mourning doves. Under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, shooting birds is okay, poisoning them is not. Van Fossan was convicted under the treaty, fined $450 and given three years probation. The prosecutor called this "one of the most important cases" in his office — although in North America, there are approximately 400 million birds like the ones Van Fossan poisoned. VanFossman was lucky — his horrific act was committed in 1989, before the A Nevada rancher hired a worker to clear some scrub brush from irrigation ditch es. He was convicted under the Clean Water Act for "redirecting streams." U.S. Sentencing Commission imposed mandatory prison terms for environmen tal crimes. If Van Fossan had committed his crime against nature today, he would be subject to a $5,000 fine and up to six months in jail. Perhaps the most interesting of these cases involves Chicago commodities trad er Paul Tudor II. He hired environmental engineer Bill Ellen, the ex-wetlands regu lator for the Virginia Marine Resources Commission, to build duck ponds on Tu dor farms, a 3,200 acre development on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Tudor obtained some 38 separate per mits and hired two former Maryland regu lators who, when they had worked for the state, had helped draw the maps that sepa rate wetlands from uplands for the project. As construction proceeded, the Bush administration redefined wetlands to in clude basically the entirety of Tudor Farms. Bill Ellen was stuck in a game of legal limbo. In May 1990, he was indicted on six counts of violating section 404 of the Clean Water Act of 1972 for altering 86 acres of wetlands. Ellen countered that he had in fact created wetlands, rather than destroy them. To indict Ellen, the government relied on a technical violation that Ellen had moved two truckloads of dirt illegally — you see, the federal wetlands manual de scribes even moving dirt as potentially fill ing a wetland. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jane Barrett wrote in the fall of 1992 that Ellen's actions "resulted in the illegal filling of many acres of very valuable and rapidly disappearing wetlands." You've got to be some kind of engineer to be able to do that with only two truck- loads of dirt. Ellen was sentenced to six months in prison. Tudor was also indicted but agreed to pay a $1 million fine and pay another $1 million to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation. He also received 18 months probation during which he was not al lowed to hunt birds. It's hard not to make the analogy to A&M's decision to put the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity on probation last year for holding a racially insensitive party. SAE members were subjected to classes on race relations in the same way the Tu dor was told not to hunt birds. Both penalties accomplished nothing, yet both punishments let bureaucrats show how powerful they are. Now that A&M has conquered multiculturalism, how long before the UPD starts checking our garbage for un-recycled materials? Eliot Williams is a sophomore electrical engineering major ELIOT WILLIAMS Columnist Don't forget to thank your Bonfire Buddy Howdy Ags! Bonfire is in the* making, and with Bonfire comes Bonfire Buddies. I am writing to voice my concern about the current Bonfire Buddy situation. One of the reasons Bonfire Buddies is organized is so that men and women can help motivate each other in the building of Bonfire (not to mention meeting peo ple of the opposite sex). I am a sophomore, and for the past two years, I have been part of the Bonfire Buddy program. When a person signs up to be a Bonfire Buddy, you agree to exchange gifts and talk with your buddy. I, along with others, have experienced a lack of participation with our supposed "Buddy." It seems that many people spend a lot of time and money on gifts to their ex changees and never receive a gift, phone call or thank you in return. (A simple thank you is not asking much.) I guess what I am trying to say is if you sign-up to be a Bonfire Buddy, fol low through. The program doesn't work one way. Be courteous enough to ac knowledge a gift that is given to you, even a simple phone call is appreciated. Jennifer Dittrich Class of '96 Headline helps bring humor back to Batt Hooray! Step aside, "Fritch"! Get lost, "Tubularman"! Give it up "Just the Be ginning." Humor has been rediscovered at The Battalion. James Bemsen is the comedy future of this fine paper. If he can only continue his witty story headlines, just as he did Nov. 10 with "Sperm donors give HELP ING HAND to infertile couples." Brilliant. I laughed and laughed. Thank you, James. It may have been un intentional, but you brightened up a real ly gray day. Oh, yeah. James, give Jason Brown (the guy who draws "Just the Begin ning") a few pointers; he needs your help. Gary Peterson Class of'95 Editor's note: James Bemsen had noth ing to do with the headline in question. News story headlines fall under the domain of the Night News desk. Reporters do not have control over story placement, photographs or headline word ing. In this particular case, the credit — or blame — goes to Heather Winch, one of our copy editors.