Opinion player; :a useslie';- J°ne. Sh, comes u , onds whc la $ grov.- -ar at As 1 t this sea^v aid thefe Wednesday, February 16,1994 The Battalion Editorial Board JULI PHILLIPS, Editor in chief ICHAEL PLUMER, Managing editor KYLE BURNETT, Aggielife editor BELINDA BLANCARTE, Night news editor DENA DIZDAR, Aggielife editor HEATHER WINCH, Night News editor SEAN FRERKING, Sports editor TONI GARRARD CLAY, Opinion editor WILLIAM HARRISON, Photo editor JENNIFER SMITH, City editor EDITORIAL ehavetc; • = No more waffling expects: JJ.N. must uphold NATO deadline 1 They say the hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules ■he world. But on today's glob al political scene, it appears that the hand that stays firm in Bosnia will direct the course of world events. 1 NATO is doing the right thing by remaining firm on its threat of airstrikes against Bosnian Serbs around Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina. But, in now familiar style, U.N. offi cials are painting a different, less threatening picture than NATO by telling Serbs that some guns may be left in the r7as7oIr ar by mounta i ns ar, d that the Beadline is still up f(?r grabs. I U.N. officials have been try- ling to negotiate a peaceful end to the bloodshed in Sarajevo, and while this is a noble en- Reavor, it is the NATO threat ■rat finally has brought about a Herious cease-fire in the region. KChildren played on streets pre- . viously controlled by snipers Monday as Serbs and Muslims =—^ began to place their heavy yc? msc weaponry under U.N. control. » Serbs still have a large arsenal ;ure, !| rol the te| II be reboa "We ha, msition.’ ill be a ie he teann: Oral Son ;ive the Iff home ian llnive idist Unii; ;t the J swqij iz PaviliJ Aggies aij of howitzers, tanks and rocket launchers which they must hand over to prevent airstrikes planned to begin next Monday. This plan is working, but NATO must stand by it even if it takes airstrikes to implement the policy. If the lack of harmo ny between the U.N. and NATO leads Serbs to view the airstrikes as only a hollow threat, then the U.N. will be partly responsible for the plan's failure. History teaches that objec tives must be set and deadlines must be observed for military operations to be successful. NATO has enough airpower in place to begin the strikes at any moment, and both sides have had long enough to remove their guns. To back down on this dead line would be a huge mistake and would drag out the suffer ing even longer. NATO has taken the necessary steps so far, and by standing firm on the threat, the Serbs and Mus lims will finally be forced to hear that message. The Battalion Page 7 You can never be too rich or too thin Waif look in again as beauty standards reflect the y 60s T wiggy of the '60s is Kate Moss of the '90s. Three decades ago young girls were eying Twiggy's ribbon-thin waist with envy. Today it seems that young men and women both are eager to imitate the hollow-faced look of the waif models. Kate Moss's 5-foot-7-inch, 98-pound figure has gotten a big reaction — everything from a spoof advertisement in "Esquire" magazine that implores readers to "Feed Kate Moss" to a new trend in plastic surgery that trades cheek fat for a concave face. Andrew P. Ordon, a Manhattan plastic sur geon, offers a "waif procedure" that sucks fat out of cheeks, allowing the deflated skin to em phasize the facial bones. This procedure is nec essary for the average person to achieve a waif like appearance because, as Ordon stated in a Houston Chronicle article, "This fat only goes away on its own, literally, only if you're starv ing/ Sometimes it is amazing to witness how quickly society's philosophies can make a com plete 180-degree turn. A few short years ago we were singing "We Are The World" and cry ing over the starving children in Africa, and to day we want to look like we're starving our selves. It is an obvious fact that the waif models, in their state of near starvation, are endorsing the dangerous idea that thinness is equivalent to beauty. If the problems of anorexia and bulimia weren't enough to question the glorification of super thin models, there is also the problem of amenia. When girls become too thin and lose too much body fat, their menstrual cycle will stop. Although this is a common occurrence among women athletes, it is dangerous nonetheless. When a girl does not menstruate for an extended period of time, she can lose calcium, bone mass and even the ability to be come pregnant. While many of these dangerous messages are aimed at women, men are also questioning the acceptability of their chubby cheeks. Ac cording to the article in the Houston Chronicle, Edward Park, 23, is paying $3,000 to Ordon to have the fat removed from his cheeks. "Asian people have a lot of buccal (cheek area) fat in their face," said Park, who is a Ko- rean-American. "It sounds really shallow doesn't it? A really shallow thing to do." Park's personal struggle with shallowness is really irrelevant, except that it supports a dan gerous idea voiced by Dr. Ordon. "My point is that I don't think a full-cheek look will ever be in," he said. "A high cheek has always been a classic sign of beauty, and I don't think that will change." If this is the case, everybody with cheeks fuller than Meryl Streep's — including Nicole Kidman and Andie MacDowell ~ better toss in the towel. Despite the fact that it is prepos terous to gage beauty by cheek size, this idea takes on an even more derogatory undertone when considered along with a statement from Ordon's publicity packet. "This is an excellent (procedure) for those ethnicities such as Latinos and Asians who have an especially large amount of buccal fat." It is understandable that people want to be happy with their appearance. We live in a visu al world. Fair or not, oftentimes one's appear ance is a determining factor in getting hired and in getting promotions in the business world. However, there is a huge difference be tween having plastic surgery to achieve a pro fessional, clean-cut appearance and undergo ing plastic surgery to look like a waif model, the "chic fashion" of the moment. Kathy Winters, medical secretary at Scott and White Clinic in Temple, said that patients who request plastic surgery are thoroughly evaluated before the procedure is done. "The whole picture is taken into considera tion," she said. "The physician totally evalu ates the candidates from a cosmetic, medical and health standpoint." Obviously, not all plastic surgeons are as concerned about their patients' well-being. But, regardless of anything else, it is our own responsibility to find peace with our personal appearance. Each person in this world is a unique and beautiful creation. Maybe we do not all have blue eyes, clear skin and a paper thin waist. Just because a person does not fit into category of media-defined beauty, does not mean they are not beautiful. Actually, the whole concept of modeling is rather stupid to begin with. Since approximately 95 percent of the popula tion will never look like magazine models, what exactly are they a model of? ]enny Magee is a sophomore journalism and English major JENNY MAGEE Columnist f,..Skater. 'T&n yA CALl-lhJG HE-R&EL1F the. CHARLES f SooJoRA d Ofs! f Aloiv I (JeJpBRSTArJ WHAT HA PPTsJE p> 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 eoitor for information on submitting guest columns. Address letters to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Mail slop 1111 Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843 Fax: (409) 845-2647 Supreme Court's RICO decision paves way for abuses the mu® "one l^ipwid you hear this op® I lit? That huge r Americii ^ smacking sound resonating through Washing ton on Jan. 24 came yj from the lips of the nine Supreme Court justices as ■ud*i J ( Lthev spat out their ^unanimous deci sion which applied America's 24-year- old Racketeer Influ enced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) to the delib erate, malicious ac tions of anti-abor tion groups. WILLIAM HARRISON Guest columnist Put simply, the highest court in the land equated protest groups' radical actions to II the same level of criminality as "The Mob." p. The RICO decision sounds like plain right-and-wrong justice. Originally, racketeering — the orga- ;nized forcing of action through an unlaw ful scheme to conduct the affairs of some "enterprise" — was judged to be a crimi nal action. Organizations planning crimes such as murder, arson, gambling, extortion or em bezzlement constitute racketeering. Crimes such as unlawful protest and tres passing supposedly are not considered "racketeering," although they are certainly unlawful by the first definition. The key word is "enterprise." Through its decision, the courts re-defined an enter prise as an organization not necessarily driven solely by base, profiteering mo tives. Racketeering now takes into account criminal measures taken to command the commodities of morality and religion. By this act, anyone who helps or aids in the activities of a convicted group is now essentially an accomplice, and a target for damages in this country's "deep-pock ets"/"shoot for the head" liability system. Unfamiliar? Here's an example. Any individual or group who has supported these anti-abor tion groups, including its fringe members and the churches and meeting halls these groups use may now be held liable under the law. Big deal, right? Why should one ques tion a little judicial heavy-handedness in tent on punishing blatantly criminal ac tions? Because the damages awarded from convicted groups will be, oh, arbitrarily TRIPLED. It is curious that a court stocked with conservative justices sown from the Rea gan and Bush administrations made a sur prisingly liberal decision, overturning a lower court ruling. But not so when ap preciating where this decision really came from — a bench of basically conservative "Have you been injured in an abortion or any non-prof it organization protest? Call Joe Shyster at 1-800-LITL GATE (not a member of the Texas Bar Association) ..." lawyers, who somewhere beneath their impartial demeanor must have appreciat ed a lawyer's cut from an award of this magnitude. Surely, they thought the deci sion would "Triple-the-Fun." Those nine justices should have summed up their decision with that profit- at-all-costs. Gilded Age phrase, "What's good for business is good for America." Financially speaking, our judicial sys tem has one more tool in thousands to bog down our courts and stock the coffers of all those lawyers listed in the Yellow Pages and shmoozing on late night television. Triple damages is just a new, exciting square in our courts' Wheel of Fortune. Picture this, if it's not slightly familiar: "Have you been injured in an abortion or any non-profit organization protest? Call Joe Shyster at 1-800-LITIGATE ... (not a member of the Texas Bar Association) ..." As for the First Amendment, Justice David Souter noted that the RICO decision could endanger courts' protections for ad vocacy groups and their rights to protect themselves. He wrote that the courts should ".. .bear in mind the First Amendment interests that could be at stake." Believe that, or consider what this deci sion prompted Randall Terry, founder of Operation Rescue, to say: "the Supreme Court has told civil protest to go to hell." The RICO decision was made to bridge a gap, to make groups pay for their radical actions. But look back 30 years to what this country viewed as "radical." As far as civ il protest is concerned, our generation's equivalent to the "radical" sit-ins of the '60s could be judged by courts as "racke teering." The National Organization of Women may gloat over its victory against the anti abortionists. However, unless Congress steps in to amend and narrow the RICO definition, the bridge built to hold these groups accountable — including groups such as NOW — will be taken advantage of unfairly. Somewhere, in some court, litigious op portunism could freely interpret this deci sion, yielding possibly crippling blows to these groups, as well as their members' First Amendment rights. As the axiom says, power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Put simply, if Con gress does not act, then RICO's can of worms will be in dangerous company with our courts' pit of snakes. As a last resort, someone might sue the Supreme Court. The case has all the ingre dients of a RICO case: a malicious, profi teering scheme unlawfully infringing on the country's First Amendment laws. Sounds like racketeering to me. William Harrison is a senior journalism major orning-after pill not "abortion pill" The morning-after pill that Beutel re uses to prescribe is actually a set of pills containing strong doses of oral contra ceptives. When taken within 72 hours of |fsex, they prevent the egg from implanti- ghg in the uterus. This is not the same as RU-486, which is also called the "abor tion pill" and is not available in the Unit ed States. Morning after pills have been pre scribed for over 15 years, though they are not widely known. They are consid ered emergency contraception, not a rou tine birth-control device. Roughly half of the 3.5 million unwanted pregnancies each year are the result of contraceptive failure. Is it endorsing "risky behavior" to give women another choice if they should need it? Why would BeuteTs director. Dr. Dirks, assume that morning-after pills would become the birth control method of choice? The University of Houston's nurse manager reports never having seen the same patient twice. Plus, these pills are not the best choice. While they are effective, they are not as effective as other types of birth control, and their side effects can include nausea, headaches and dizziness. Worst of all, one might have to deal with peo ple who would assume that trying to prevent an unwanted pregnancy is irre sponsible. Catherine Nuccio Class of '95 Strive to understand religious practices From this week until the beginning of Spring Break, if you ask one of your Muslim friends to go to lunch, he or she may refuse. Why? Muslims all over the world are celebrating a full month of fasting in Ramadan. One day, I said to my friend, "We are fasting from dawn until sunset, ab staining from food, drinks and legiti mate sexual relations." That's crazy!" he replied. Fasting is not as crazy as some peo ple may think. Understanding the virtues of it can clarify this misconcep tion. The main purpose of fasting is to at tain righteousness. However, I person ally learn many lessons from my fast ing. I learn how to appreciate food so that I just eat enough and do not waste any. I also train myself to control my thoughts and feelings from getting an gry and saying bad words. Further, I can feel the difficulties of poor people to get their food. Let's learn and understand the vari ous ways people believe in their reli gions so that we do not misunderstand each other. You can contact the Muslim Stu dents' Association on campus to learn more about Islam. Gatot Pramono Class of'94