mm^m itors in the *r hurdles, ju- sns division ard the finish ie Track and impetition is the largest it the Games s, attracting rticipants. ir is the sec- r that Bryan- Station has ie event. The are expected approximate- llion into the momy. The Battalion Editorial Board Mark Evans, Editor in chief William Harrison, Managing editor Jay Robbins, Opinion editor EditoriaU 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 letters express the opinions of the a Contact the opinion editor for on submitting guest columns. Act against AIDS Texas A&M should develop research efforts une in to of Woodstock wentysomethings must find own defining moment, not emulate hippies ense Rutherford Woolcock\ Winship 'hompson n Goynes / Golden re Kalu Conrad avis iams tt Waldron ' Mercer zzo ones k Franklin imy /ells i my Stanley A/ashington ' Dixon Hogan r Phillips Biggs ters: 7 ermen: veryone has probably heard about this "new Woodstock” thing. A bunch of bands are getting together q perform for people, just like in the rand old 1960s. Right? This isn’t the 1960s anymore. Has nyone considered the fact that a [edone Woodstock is just kind of a ham? After all, it isn’t about peace or reedom or any of those other abused iut lofty words. Instead, it is about rofit and greed, a more familiar ■oup of words for the ’80s generation. Tune in, turn on, and drop out. This ite phrase captures the essence of what our hippie ancestors were trying to ccomplish, if they were not dying in fVietnam at the time. It means tune in to the world, turn on to drugs and [experiences and drop out of society. Hey, ■whatever floats your boat, man. | Now, I decided to try to understand phat everyone sees in all this ’60s revival. First of all, hippie-type [clothing is now “in.” But, the whole idea behind hippieness is that it is [supposed to be “out.” In other words, what is supposed to be cool is something that no one else is doing, [not something that Cindy Crawford pears on a Vogue magazine cover. I Second, people have been doing the ||rug thing for a while. How many times are people going to have to get screwed [up in order to figure out that drugs are [stupid. Let me spell this out for all the n Hccnito miccinn slow learners in the audience: DRUGS )3, despite missing ^ BRAm CELLS _ Third, dropping out of society doesn’t work for very long. It is great to do your xpenence and has own thing and to go out and find Iknerica. It’s even more exciting if a person can find a way to see some of the ast two seasons, world and meet new people. I do not [believe that anyone would mind if a 'person wanted to leave civilization JOSEF ELCHANAN Columnist behind and spend time with nature. On the other hand, everyone should remember that the vast majority of those ’60s communes Eire closed down and that the people who used to run them are now bank presidents and lawyers. Or even worse, many of them now have to get on national TV and tell the whole world what they smoked and why. We are supposed to stand on the shoulders of giants, not steal their clothes and shoes and run around making the same mistakes. Yet, that We are supposed to stand on the shoulders of giants, not steal their clothes and shoes and run around making the same mistakes. is what so many of our fellow college students are doing. Some of them want to use 15th-century religion to solve 21st-century problems. Some of them want to use 19th-century society as a basis for modem race relations, Unfortunately, very few twenty- somethingers want to go out there and find out who we really are. I guess that might be kind of gruesome, since so many of our generation are skinheads or Klansmen, and so many are shooting each other in cities across the country for drug money and so many killed themselves when they were 14 or 15. Growing up, I really knew people in Plano, Texas, who hung themselves and blew their chests out with pistols. Yeah, I guess it must be much easier for all of us to lie to ourselves and melt our brains away rather than thinking about that fact that most of our leaders are liars and thieves and that the world did not get much better, whether our fathers went to war or whether they stayed here and protested against it. Instead, lets act like hippies. Nope, it won’t be quite that easy. There will be security at this Woodstock and lots of electronic equipment and no Jimmy Hendrix. Why go? It isn’t some community get-together, but a cheap way to capitalize on a name. The real question here asks when we all are going to discover our own Woodstock, our own defining moment. Can’t we do something a little different, something that suits our needs as the generation that is supposedly disenfranchised from the American Dream? The other day I rented a copy of “Easy Rider.” The whole point of the movie is that two guys are doing something they want to do, without harming anyone else. In the end, they die, just like many of the dreams of their generation, crushed under the stresses of their times. To have wisdom is to learn. Instead of making the same mistakes, as well as showing the same kind of poor taste, let us all try something different from ourselves, but also something original, and a bit more productive. Josef Elchanan is a senior business management major Texas A&M should devote more effort to AIDS research. Of the 50 publicly funded AIDS re search projects in Texas, Texas A&M is supporting none, while other Texas schools such as Texas Tech, Baylor, UTMB, and University of Texas cam puses in El Paso, Arlington and Dal las are participating in these studies. As a major research university and a public institution, Texas A&M needs to actively work to solve the AIDS crisis. The University has the resources and the capability to be on the forefront of AIDS re search in the state The opportunity to contribute to the fight against this epidemic deserves action. Science and medi cine are not the only fields which can foster AIDS research. Education, psychology, communication and management can contribute to halting the epidemic, while other disciplines search for a cure. It is extremely important that re search continue. When budgets get tight, research is often the first thing to go. This attitude is extremely short-sighted. The future depends on the research of today. AIDS research benefits more than just AIDS patients. The knowledge gained from this research can bene fit many people in many fields. When research is conducted in pur suit of a specific goal, often the knowledge gained finds application in numerous other places. For example, the effort to put a man on the moon developed countless inno vations — from satellite communica tions to Tang — that are widely used to day. AIDS research has similar po tential. With all the resources and efforts being put into finding a cure for this deadly disease, there is a wide range of fu ture applications of this work which cannot yet even be imagined. Another benefit of increased re search is increased awareness. More re search and education about the AIDS virus will cause people to realize how AIDS is transmitted and will reduce the fear of working alongside people with AIDS and reduce activities which cause the spread of the disease. More tolerance and understanding for AIDS patients and less people with AIDS are certainly good things. Fewer people will die, and money will be saved in trying to find a cure. Texas A&M should be a part of this effort. It is time for the Univer sity to do its part to combat AIDS. Jordan joining the peace process, a will has fallen in the Middle East... size of the defe t be a problem ft Jield said, nave the great msive line, but*j for it by just mi the football,” Ha' Tatfield will ext level is e believes he lis players belie 1 vans Library periodically provides magazine-reading ‘fix’ ERIN HILL Columnist e library gets a bad rap. We love to rip on old Sterling Evans often and furiously, and undoubtedly there are sons for the attacks. It seems ridiculous t so many of us have so many problems re, myself included. Most of my complaints have to do ... , ., ivith other students who don’t return rts with kids nooks on time and make the rest of us e best in Americ3 ve ^ we have time or not. To temedy this problem, the library could .pgin charging fines after a book is seven days - Mark Siiii|y erc j- ue This would fix the problem. They ought and Brian Coi 0 implement it. It’s that simple. Other problems, like funding, are perhaps out of idministrators’ control, but I have the feeling that otne serious reevaluation is in order so to make the sive line will be Sforary more useful and accessible for students, issley said. “We'f But problems aside, I have some good things to e to stop the ruf a y about our library. In fact, the periodicals section it people and no jone of my favorite places to hang out. > everyone off th I used to pretend I went there to study, and even t.” wt notebooks on the desk to fool myself. Somehow I said the mai'iave to justify my frequent visits because every time ie defense for thf enter the library, a magnet pulls me to those glass 1 be the linebackdoors at the back of the first floor. I always give in. returns sophomorf It’s no use pretending anymore. I am addicted to ), who was selectetaagazines and the periodicals section provides a big 2 second team aM bur games, with 1*1 >f bulk. Craig Swann u. . ankovich return^ roles after surgi 3 injuries. 5 our main concert) ms the linebacke^ ossley said. “Thai e our strength P fix. When I first came to school I experienced withdrawal symptoms. At my home, it seemed that my family bought a new subscription every time a neighborhood fund raiser came to the door. I was used to having magazines handy whenever I wanted one. As a student who moves frequently it can be inconvenient to have subscriptions, so I went without. But it didn’t take long before I fell behind in my horoscope and knowledge of who was marrying whom in Hollywood. I lost track of which fashion look was hot - I may have even worn what was not! On a more intellectual note, I missed John Leo’s opinions, George Will’s columns and Hints from Heloise. Things were tough then. It was the periodicals section that made recovery possible. The 7,000 magazines (newspapers not included that total) were there for me when no others were. For that I’m thankful. Once upon a time I had to do a research project. I located a relevant article in a periodical called The English Journal, of which I had never heard. The article was great, so I looked for more in back issues. I found them dating all the way back to the 1940s. I found so many interesting articles in The English Journal that I spent a small fortune making copies. I knew that I spent too much time with The English Journal when my roommates started leaving my phone messages on its shelf. But it was time well spent. From The English Journal I learned It's inconvenient to have magazine subscriptions during college^ so I went without. But it didn't take long before I fell behind the hot fashions. subtleties about being a high school English teacher (my chosen profession) that I couldn’t pick up in any college classroom. Some of my other discoveries were The New Republic and Mother Jones. It is fascinating to read well-written pieces from that side of the political spectrum. And I try to give equal time to The National Review. I get a new spin on issues, maybe even expand my views. What more could I ask for? Esquire does the same thing by helping me to better understand that misunderstood creature — the modem American man. You, too, can learn what motivates him, what drives him crazy, what he’s wearing and why he’s lazy. And if you can’t handle the cologne inserts, go to the Microtext files - scent-free and just as interesting. Through reading the New Yorker I am able to keep up on the arts in New York City. Though I’ve only been there once and have no plans to return soon, it seems important for me to know who’s starring on Broadway and what show tickets cost. The New Yorker also has great poetry and prose. And Texas Monthly keeps me updated on the Lone Star State. So no matter what people say about the library, Ill always have a soft spot in my heart for the periodicals section. There’s lots to do there. Go practice your language skills in the foreign publications or keep in touch with our neighbors to the north by reading McLean’s from Canada. It’s worth your time to check out what they have to offer - and the price is right. Erin Hill is a senior English major \ ■ idary should a second team/Readers argue current hus R frce7aWvt' :>ers P ectives of feminism el Artmore and i l • j would like to commend Elizabeth Parker anchor ^Bsston. Her July 28 column on the femi- •ositions, while movement has given me renewed eill will take tbtof^Bence in my opinions and beliefs, spot. Feminist groups have about exhausted - Mark Si# every argument imaginable. I am happy to see that Preston’s column was neither passive nor militant. With an issue as touchy as this, there can be no ambiguity, but a little understanding and patience is not too much to ask. There are participants of the women’s movement, who at one time or another, expect that this nation should halt the evolution of society as we know it and im plement laws and legislation that auto matically give women certain inalienable rights. And there are also opponents to the movement who believe that the dete rioration of our society rests solely on the shoulders of those women who chose to work instead of stay home and raise their children properly. Blame is not the issue here. We cannot correct the mistakes our ancestors made, but we can learn from them. If we would spend less time pointing fingers and more time developing solutions, maybe harmony is not an impossibility after all. I am not idealistic enough to believe this will happen overnight, nor will this one letter in a college newspaper in a col lege town make a monumental differ ence. However, if just one woman reads this and realizes that no one’s place in so ciety is defined as absolute, including women, including racial minorities and including homosexuals, then it has made a difference to someone, and that’s really what the movement is all about. Stacy Stuart Class of ’94 • As a former student returning to College Station for a medical school ro tation, it is refreshing to see that de spite all the changes on campus in the past four years, the Battalion Opinion page remains steadfastly committed to its pursuit of knee-jerk liberalism. Elizabeth Preston illustrates this beautifully in last Thursday’s attack on religious institutions and defense of a woman’s right to' sexual promiscuity and other traditionally male behav iors. I’ve seen firsthand the effects of women’s sexual liberation - AIDS, herpes, sterility, abortion and single motherhood to name a few. Women of our generation have made great strides towards achieving equality with men and have adopted many “male behaviors,” among them the right to smoke cigarettes, abuse alcohol, be sex ually promiscuous and neglect family in pursuit of career. The problem with feminists like Preston is that by seeking to achieve equality with men they have set their sights too low! Matt Poling Class of ’90 The Battalion encour ages letters to the editor and will print as many as space allows. Letters must be 300 words or less and include the au thor's name, class, and phone number. We reserve the right to edit letters for length, style, and accuracy. Address letters to: The Battalion - Mail Cai 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1111 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: Batt@T AM2000.tamu.edu