w.^mm VI arch 2(); ys age 9 Opinion quarters i; i emerged; and then ' Tuesday, March 29, 1994 eporters. ad an em opportune 2 years. h f nothing x said. Ire po$itjy t • past and' gether, % ‘ tomorro# ay." The Battalion Page 11 77ie Battalion Editorial Board JULI PHILLIPS, Editor in chief 1 ( ' MICHAEL PLUMER, Managing editor KYLE BURNETT, Aggielife editor BELINDA BLANCARTE, Night news editor DENA DIZDAR, Aggielife editor HEATHER WINCH, Night News editor SEAN FRERKINC, Sports editor [TONI GARRARD CLAY, Opinion editor WILLIAM HARRISON, Photo editor JENNIFER SMITH, City editor Son of a gun leaves legacy of laughter Idol’s death leads to reflections on life of influential man DAVE WINDER Columnist Presidential pick attalion endorses Brooke Leslie on II) La. Feb. Allowed on a. Mart; against Ii tave to Is off of th whether: • oppont: mson si; tve have; < from lb: orn turn thought ll weeks. ing dial n and« re g«i» “This wi T-madei create i ty of pL in the!: Lakeii yard Program offers insight into France’s war experience er first'' played oach b® coaebi s this ) ,fi 1- if Johnso y. He cs .ts I im enoiij hyped aj Drew s® hose tif Ded up*' one u» Elections are upon us. This fednesday and Thursday all good Aggies concerned with the future o: student leadership on this cam pus will turn out to vote. This year, the choice for student body presi dent is limited to only two: Jeb Jones and Brooke Leslie. I The editorial board of The Bat talion has chosen to endorse Leslie as the candidate who can best pro mote, protect and preserve the best interests of Texas A&M. 1 The decision was not an easy qne. Jones has good ideas — such as promoting across the board guidelines for student adviser qual ifications. However, Leshe’s experi ence, knowledge and presence make her the best choice. I Granted, there is only so much that can be gleaned from a 30- minute question and answer ses sion. During this short period of time, however, Leslie addressed several important issues with a dear plan of action. She is well versed on the origin and importance of guarding me 'ermanent University Fund (PUF) the Texas legislature. The PUF fund is a permanent cache set up by the state around the turn of the ;century which provides millions of dollars in revenue each year for the University of Texas and Texas A&M exclusively. I She also calls for the restructur ing of the Senate Finance Com mittee, such as moving the com mittee to the executive branch of student government because it currently ‘has no checks and bal ances.” Leslie noted that the minority population at A&M fails to reflect society and suggests that the best way of promoting minority in volvement is to let other minori ty members do the recruiting. Sne also plans to pursue an ex tension of the number of reading days currently allotted students before finals, noting that A&M is one of only two universities in the nation, Texas Tech being the other, that allows students only one day. Aside from her agenda, Leslie’s record in student government clearly makes her the most quali fied choice. She has been involved with all three branches of student government and boasts an impres sive list of positions held. Both candidates are qualified and willing to share their ideas with anyone. But if you make the effort to educate yourself, you will probably find one to be most qual ified, most prepared for the consid erable task of being Texas A&M’s student body president: Brooke Leslie. L ewis Grizzard once said that he wished whoever wrote his obituary made a special note about his cutline writing skills. I hope whoever writes my obituary makes a note that my columns might have been half as funny as his. The popular syndicated columnist died last week due to complications during his fourth heart surgery. But he wasn’t just a writer of whom I was a fan. He was my idol. It became a goal of mine to come as close as I could to his career accomplishments. He started out working on his high school paper and continued when he went to the University of Georgia. After graduation he started covering high school sports for an At lanta paper and worked his way up until he was the sports editor for the Chicago Sun Times. After that he went back to Atlanta and became a columnist and author. I’m so glad he did because it is hard to picture my life without his influence. I had already read a couple of his books, but my life forever changed when I read the autobio graphical “If I Ever Get Back to Georgia, Tm Gonna Nail My Feet to the Ground.” I stayed up all night reading it in an tm- heated room at my grandmother’s house dur ing the middle of winter. Even though I could see my breath drifting past my reading lamp, 1 kept on reading because he made newspapers sound like so much fun. By the time my mother demanded that I go to sleep, I had already decided that was the career I wanted. It was not uncommon for him to arrive at the paper at 5 a.m. and not leave until mid night. He gave up his home life, wife and everything else for journalism, his first love. The stories he told about his experiences in newspapers only made me want to enter the business that much more. His tidbits about coaches, players, editors and other writers told me what a career in newspapers is like. He intrigued me so' much, every other profession dropped out of the picture. His other books also had a great effect on me because they were so personal, they could make you laugh and cry on the same page. Because of books like ‘‘Shoot Low Boys, They’re Riding Shetland Ponies,” and “Don’t Bend Over the Garden Granny, Them Taters Got Eyes,” I actually feel that I knew the man. It seemed he wrote a book about every thing that ever happened in his life. Because of a troubled love life, he wrote “If Love Were Oil, I’d be About a Quart Low.” He talks at length about losing his high school sweetheart, Paula, then having to go back out on the dating scene. He would mar ry two more times but he always talked about Paula. told how his father was a prisoner of war in Korea and planned on being a career army man. But his bad memories made him turn to alcohol and caused his marriage to end. Grizzard dedicated it to every child that ever had to live through a divorce or an alcoholic parent that destroyed a good family. He also wrote a book about his mother and how much she sacrificed for him. He talked at length about all she did but only mentioned once that she spent the last 20 years of her life confined to a bed. The greatest thing about his writings, though, was his Southern humor. In one of his books, he explained why people in the South use both ‘ naked” and ‘ nekkid.” “Naked,” he explained, is when you don’t have any clothes on. “Nekkid” is when you don’t have any clothes on and you’re up to somethin’. He was also a huge fan of country music and even went as far as to write a couple of songs. Though they were not number one hits, they were hilarious. I’d buy any album with songs like “When My Love Returns From the Bathroom Will I Be Too Old To Care?” and “My Wife Ran Off With My Best Friend and Damn I’m Gonna Miss Him” on it. Even though Lewis Grizzard was 28 years older than I am, I could still identify with him. We both shared a love of sports, a love of newspapers, a love of writing and a love of humor. After his father died, he wrote *'Mj/ Daddy Was a Pistol, and Tm a Son of a Gun.” He Dave Winder is a sophomore journalism major 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 wilf 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 I information on submitting guest ; columns. Address letters to: The Battalion - Mail Cali 013 Reed McDonald Mail stop 1111 Texas A&M Universitv College Station, TX 7784.3 Fax: (409) 845-2647 ROBERT VASQUEZ Columnist S : 94 chindler’s List,” an aftershock more than a movie, has rocked the world with reverberations set off 50 years ;o. In America, the movie acts as a kind of liff’s Notes for history, teaching a topic at knew litde popularity until Spielberg added pictures. But ignorance has been a luxury France could not afford. To this day, France re mains scarred with memories of that war; its beaches are pocked with holes where ar tillery exploded the arms and legs and lives of soldiers who fought for freedom. People who five there today remember and friends who died during that era. They tell their stories and point to places where homes and palaces and people once stood. They thank you for coming and invite you to stay in their homes, many of which were built before our nation was even a colony. Tm still amazed that I was able to visit such a land. As part of last fall’s Rudder Normandy Scholars Program, a group of A&M students visited the very sites where these wars were fought, these lives lost. De signed to educate tomorrow’s leaders, the program targets today’s top students. The students are chosen for excellence in acade mics and for expressing a desire to learn about the causes of war and the casualties that result. To ensure that the participants are the best qualified for the program, and not disqualified due to prohioitive travel costs, all expenses for the trip to France are paid for in the scholarship. The group of students chosen to pardcipate last fall in cluded sorpe of the most intelligent, talent ed and gifted students at A&M. And they let me go along, too. For the first part of the fall semester, we studied about the events that led to World War II. What would possibly allow for this war to follow the “War to end all wars”? What drove Hider to invade France if he wasn’t even interested in their land? We then traveled to France to visit the very sites about which we studied. The Memorial Museum in France chronicles the atrocities of war, painting a nation’s past in black and white detail stained with blood and ashes. The stark white facade of the building follows a steady line that suddenly cracks in the mid dle. There, where the solid wall disinte grates into fractured stone and panes of glass, lies the entrance, where, each week, tnousands of visitors enter the museum. This museum is where the Normandy scholars studied. We watched films and read about the war in exhibits and displays that used actual footage and artifacts from the battles fought there. One day as we studied in the Memorial Museum, a siren screamed out. It was faint as it blared from a horn in the distance. And for a second, my mind raced, prepar ing for the worst. The films we had seen in the months preceding our trip to Nor mandy had acquainted us with the sights and sounds of war. That screaming siren warned of incoming enemies, planes drop- The joys, fears and trials we witness in America are deriv atives of a society aspiring to a Mickey Mouse ideal. Such idyllic perspectives don’t meet with much success in Europe. _ bombs, aiming to kill. That was the torn I heard at this moment. For one second, I thought, “We’re going to die.” In the theatres and classrooms, the sound was an effect, the result of some technician whose job was to scare me. This time, it worked. I looked up and listened for the sound to stop, but it didn’t. And then I realized it was only another recorded sound for a film, some stray effect from one of the multi-media displays in the museum. In America, such a thought would have never crossed my mind. But we weren’t in Ameri ca. And that made all the difference. The joys, the fears and trials we wimess in America are derivatives of a society aspir ing to a Mickey Mouse ideal. Such idyllic perspectives don’t meet with much success in Europe, which has seen so much more of death and war without benefit of cellu loid. It was subtle differences like these that struck me most. The Rudder Normandy Scholarship Pro gram is taking applications for students who are interested in participating this fall. Participants are chosen basea on various criteria including academic achievements, extracurricular activities and expressed in terest in the program’s purposes. If you’re interested in applying, go pick up an appli cation at the Bizzel Hall West near the MSC. Juniors and Seniors are given priority, but everyone is encouraged to apply. Hurry, the deadline is fast approaching. Tm grateful that my experience with war and death comes largely from the small and silver screens. To me, like most in my generation, it all happened a long time ago in land far, far away. But once, just once, I saw it up close. And Tm grateful for that, too. Robert Vasquez is a senior journalism major Din Student views Texans as racist, uncivilized I used to go to a local club, but quit after knowing how rude the staff of that dub is. On several occasions the porter rejected my European Community passport as a valid identification when according to the U.S. immigration service it is the right form of identification everywhere in the United States. He also claimed it was not written in English when, being a passport of a Euro pean community, it was written in three . |«European languages including British Eng- iSSlS'lpish f| e interrupted me when I was telling him that and reluctantly let me in. I was then required to pay $3 cover and was later shocked when I met another student who entered an hour after I did and did not have to pay cover. Later I met a rude waitress who collected brandy glasses at 1:30 a.m. She violently grabbed my glass, pulled strongly and almost started a fight. If you are used to dealing with civi lized people, you will never find your niche here or anywhere in Texas. This confirms the awful reputation Texans have worldwide of being uncivilized, wild and primitive. Both my parents, who are Continental Europeans and my British friends tried to persuade me from coming to Texas, claiming that Texans are racists and haven’t evolved in 100 years. All European public schools have the same budget per student regardless of whether they are located in posh areas or slums. Health care is free and the same for all citizens. More people were killed in Houston last year than in any Western Eu ropean nation. The death penalty was abol ished 40 years ago. European Community jobless benefits are twice as much as in the U.S., and these benefits last forever. I have never met more uncivilized peo ple. An English friend once told me, “Don’t go to Texas because you are not going to learn anything, and you are going to have the worst time of your life as if you had traveled 100 years back into history.” His words turned out to be prophetic. Humberto H. Jorge Graduate student Columns appear on opinion, not fact page As I was walking across campus browsing the Mail Call Friday afternoon, I had to walk to the nearest computer lab to write in re sponse to Aimee Llewellyn and Kelly Dodd. OK, look at the top of the page where Dave Winder’s article appears. Now what do you see? Wow, look-ee there, it’s the “Opinion” page. What is an opinion? Well according to those little quizzes I took in elementary school, a fact is what is based on facts, and an opinion is not based on fact but rather what one believes to be true. Now I have to fully support Winder’s article because not only do I believe it to be mostly true, but it is his right to beheve anything he wants. Do you have facts based on why you feel certain ways or is everything factual? Anyway, I di gress. This is for Winder. His columns are not unintelligent. They are entertaining in an otherwise drab news system which only reports horrid statistics and occur rences for ratings. Throughout the history of journalism, there have been writers with a humorous, entertaining side. However, his writing style is very monot onous. Try. something different before you run it into the ground. Remember, people like best what they don’t get very often, (i.e., as with food and college stu dents). Men’s group valid as any minority group Well, since all of the women are going to be busy during their national week, we men need to have something tq do as well. So, let’s have a national “Men’s Week!” This can be a time when our oppressed mi nority can come together and get in touch with our inner selves. We can learn about contraception, prostate cancer, eating disor ders, self defense, hate crimes (Lorena Bob bitt for example), and give out awards to men with outstanding commitments to male issues. We should call ourselves “male.-inists” (taken from the word “feminists”). After all, every other prejudice- oppressed person is jumping on the bandwagon forming their own “minority-based ’ groups, so should we. We don’t need to have different societies based on color, religion or race Ags, you’re our future, stop this ridiculous ^ ' of is ' fad of isolating ourselves from one another. Kevin Stewart Class of ‘96 Aaron Tuttle Class of '96