m Wednesday • January 18, 1995 1 a ge 10 E mmmmmmmdmmmmmmnmm&kmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmMmmmMmMmmimwmMmmmm It s time you 0ot off yai 1‘cai* eiui, and. gat H job f... MA&$a,i£s we p&xjtp New jafzu-Y AP) - i nego- Jesday re in hnya, ek-old sides agree- rozny, nfully over- aying use to while offen- week sever- iktor esday from dent v in aking •eace. both using dnes- step 3 an from man seen- /ern- ough say- ef, at uest, or co- to a ssian The Battalion Established hi 1893 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. Contact the opinion editor for information on submitting guest columns. EDITORIAL BOARD Mark Smith Editor in chief jay Robbins Senior Managing editor Heather Winch Managing editor Business Sterling Hayman Opinion editor Erin Hill Asst, opinion editor I-’I >llORIAI Take a deep breath Breathalyzer law violates rights and presumes guilt with license revocation provision. d to way gun jrts ly’s for her ed, Under the guise of stricter laws and sentences for drunk drivers, the Ad ministrative License Revocation (ALR) will suspend the license of any driver who is pulled over under suspicion of driving while intoxicated and refuses to take a breathalyzer test. It can be argued that there is a need for stricter penalties for DWI. However, the re fusal clause of this law is a threat to two of our Constitutional rights. According to a press release from Texans For ALR, a law enforcement of ficer must determine that there is prob able cause and reasonable suspicion to stop a motorist under suspicion of DWI. This is not a problem. If the officer deems the driver im paired and the driver fails a series of field sobriety tests, the driver is arrest ed for DWI and taken to the police sta tion, where he or she will be asked to take a test to measure blood alcohol lev el. This is not a problem. If the driver refuses to take the test (usually a breathalyzer), his or her li cense will be suspended. This is a problem. The problem with this law is that it treats refusal to take a breathalyzer test as if it were an admission of guilt. In fact, the length of suspension is longer for refusing to take the test — 90 days for a first offense — than for tak ing it and failing, which only mandates a 60 day license suspension. Suspects are allowed to request a hearing and to appeal a ruling, but they should not be placed in that position for refusing to take the test. This provision comes dangerously close to violating our constitutional rights to freedom from unreasonable search and seizure and self-incrimination. At best, the refusal provision is intrusive and violates the spirit, if not the actual words of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. The new law could have quite an im pact on Bryan-College Station — a town with an overwhelming student popula tion and dozens of frequented bars. It is important to note that this law will not only affect those who drink. Anyone re fusing a breathalyzer test for any rea son will be subject to the license revoca tion — under the influence, or not. Perhaps no one would refuse this test unless they were trying to hide some thing. While this line of reasoning sup poses guilt, it does not prove it. Ameri cans must remain vigilant against al lowing our desire to control a criminal behavior overshadow the rights and freedoms of society as a whole. Older, not wiser Ideas, fads of youth slip away with age en- im- rief act till her in ms ers tal, n’s 3ne d. ng in- )Ut ss- ed id en to er, in i’s )V, a- ss e- in in re ;d )S s- IS s 0 1, s d E very Christmas I seem to come up with some great is sue that occupies my thoughts for most of the holidays. I always re turn to school deter mined about what I’m go ing to do differently for the new semester. Apparently, the break is too long if I’m thinking like this.. Last year, the is sue of the holidays was deciding on (and staying with) a major. I chose journalism, and her I am, a columnist for The Battalion only one year later. So, of course, since I need ed ideas for my first column, nothing seemed to hit me as overly important over the break. Then I started thinking about how many people my age are getting married (or are already married), or have kids and a career, or are getting divorced. Even though I am nowhere near any of these landmark events, I am on the same path as them. Ready or not, we are all enter ing the adult world, and that scares me. One trip to karaoke night was enough to assure me that most people our age are still living up the young life. But we are all changing. Everyone is just trying to squeeze as much fun into four years as they can before entering the real world. It’s not that everyone is getting mar ried and moving on that scares me. I am looking forward to getting a job and starting “the rest of my life.” What scares me is that many of us are start ing to think like adults, and I don’t mean in a good way. How many times have you and your friends had the discussion about what you will do when you become parents? It seems come up more and more, and the views get a bit more radical every time. I have friends that don’t want to let their kids out of the house until they are 16 years old. And while these poor kids are locked up, they won’t be allowed to have contact with the outside world through television. I can understand the desire to shelter children with the current state of the world but I remember when we used to have these conversations in junior high. We were going to be “cool parents” and let our kids do anything. We now re alize this isn’t such a good idea, but I hope we never completely forget what we thought at that age. And how many times have your and your friends laughed at what kids are wearing these days? Have we so soon forgotten the days of parachute pants, checkered vans and fluorescent shoe laces? These make the latest teen fashions seem pretty tasteful. I caught myself in the midst of this mental change while buying my nephew’s Christmas present, a Power Ranger doll that cost me $40. All I could do was complain to anyone and everyone about how ridiculously overpriced this doll was, and how he should at least be able to do some neat karate moves for that price. I also had to whine about how the doll would be discarded as soon as the next fad enticed my nephew. I realized the error of my ways when I found four Cabbage Patch Kids in the back of my closet, collecting dust. If my memory serves me well, they cost about $40 each, and they certainly don’t have any talents (although they do have that cute signature on their rear-ends). This reminds me of the scene in “The Breakfast Club” where the janitor advis es the principal “The kids aren’t chang ing, you are.” That this movie is 10 years old makes me feel even older. I don’t mind the fact that I’m becom ing an adult. Like I said. I’m looking forward to it. I see that I am already starting to lose my open-mindedness, or my memory, I don’t exactly know which. But what I’m losing is something that is important to me. I hope that this visit from the ghost of my future can help me mend my ways before it’s too late. That’s what I’m determined to do this semester—to not let the forces of aging ruin my open mind. And maybe next Christmas my grand revelation will concern something really useful—like employment. Amy Uptmor is a junior journalism major Uncover Acs Debate over wearing hats in MSC continues When Shawn Williams, a Texas A&M junior, entered, the Memorial Student Cen ter on the evening of Janu ary 8 to check his mail, he knew that by wearing a hat, he was defying a long standing Aggie tradition. What Williams did not know is that, by doing so, he would unmask another. The first amendment grants the unalienable right of free dom of choice and expression to each and every citizen of the United States of America. As a full-fledged citizen of this country, Shawn Williams is allowed to exercise this right, as it long as it is within the bounds of the law. He is free to double strap his backpack if he chooses. That is not against the law. He is free to walk down the street with his shoes un tied if he chooses. That is not against the law. He is free to put ranch dressing on everything he eats if he chooses. That is not against the law. He is also free to wear his hat in the Memorial Student Center if he chooses. Believe it or not, that is not against the law. I do not know if Shawn Williams double straps, walks down the street with his shoes untied or puts ranch dressing on everything he eats. I do know, however, that Mr. Williams wears his hat in the MSC. By no means am I advocating, endorsing or supporting his practice. I am merely defending it. It is, courtesy of the First Amendment, Shawn Williams’ un alienable right to wear his hat in the MSC. By doing so he is not breaking any law of this country, this state, this county, this city or this university. He is breaking the code of a time-honored tradition at Texas A&M University, but he is not breaking a law. While it is Williams’ choice to wear his hat in the MSC if he so desires, it is also Williams’ burden to face the consequences of doing so (i.e. verbal confrontations with tradition-abiding students). Like Williams, a tradition-abiding student is also entitled to exercising his or her First Amendment rights. He or she has the right to express his or her opinion to Williams, concerning his choice to sport a hat in the MSC. The tact with which a student might express his or her opin ion to Mr. Williams is not governed by law, but by morals. Like a tradition, a moral is not a law. Unlike a tradition (in the sense of the word as it is used at A&M), a moral is not necessarily something that is uniform in its expression. A moral is something personal, governed by an individual’s feelings or beliefs. After Williams’ encounter in the MSC with two tradition - abiding students Who expressed their opinions to him concerning his hat wearing practice, Williams understands, all too well, the feelings and beliefs that govern their morals. In defense of the tradition these two students hold so close ly to their hearts, one of them told, not asked, Williams to take his hat hat off and “show some respect for the Aggies that died for your black ass.” When Williams refused to remove his hat, it was removed for him. An infringement on Williams First Amendment right, or just the duty of A&M’s self-empowered tradition police? If a tradition is not a law, a tradition does not need police to protect it. Starting to sound like an infringement on Williams’ First Amendment rights? Williams was upset, and rightfully so. Had the two stu dents not taken it upon themselves to react to the situation physically, they would have remained well within the bounds of the law by merely expressing their opinions ver bally, a First Amendment right. Although I do not condone the vocabulary employed by the tradition-abiding students, it is not against the law for them to speak in such a manner. Williams tried desperately to verbally defend his defiance of the time-honored Aggie tra dition, but despite such ef forts, his opponents refused to cease from expressing their opinion — an unalienable right they were not going to deny themselves the opportunity to exercise. The situation demanded it of them: a near empty MSC in the secluded post office section, two white students stern in defending an Aggie tradition and one African-American stu dent, stern in defending his right to defy an Aggie tradition. Three students having it out in a scuffle that has transcended the tradition in peril. All three fully exercising their First Amendment rights. What a country! One of the white students made a suggestion to a seemingly stubborn Williams: “Why don’t you go to another school where they like your kind. I heard Prairie View is a nice school.” Both sides enraged, the battle continued. Verbal punche —, not physical ones — were thrown. No laws, save the one act of infringement on Williams’ rights, were broken, but a tradition was. In trying to defend one time-honored Aggie tradition, the two white students exposed within their words and within them selves another ... the time-honored tradition of racism. Perhaps less practiced than kissing one’s date after an Aggie score, or honoring our fallen students at Silver Taps or taking one’s hat off when entering the MSC, it is, nevertheless, still a tradition practiced on this campus. Remember, a tradition is not a law. It is your First Amend ment right to choose not to follow one. Drew Diener is a junior English major It is, courtesy of the First Amendment, Shawn Williams' unalienable right to wear his hat in the MSC. By doing so he is not breaking any law of this country, this state, this county, this city or this university. JVlAIL Cat t Student's refusal to take off hat angers many Shawn Williams says, “When he took my hat off it became a racial issue.” Stu dents remove their hats in the MSC in honor of the fine Aggies, black and white, who made Mr. Williams’ free speech pos sible. Although I am unaware of the severity of the altercation, removing a fellow Aggie’s hat is not a racial state ment. It is a subtle reminder of the re spect that all Aggies deserve. How ironic that Mr. Williams aims to build consideration for minorities through the promotion of a Multicultural Awareness class, yet he cannot complete the menial task of removing his hat to re vere his own kind — Aggies. Unfortu nately, whomever removed Mr. Williams’ hat fell into his trap. Is it merely coincidence that the sto ry of this “racist” incident shares the front page with Martin Luther King, Jr.? Dr. King’s dream stresses mutual respect to ease race relations. Mr. Williams’ showboating is disrespectful to Aggies dead and alive. My apologies if Mr. Williams was treated disdainful ly; I am sure that the squabble height ens his cognizance of the insult caused by his insolent actions. Did it ever occur to him that when the men told him to go to a school where he was wanted that they were not referring to the color of his skin? If they are like most Aggies, they are re ferring to the fact that he was not be having with the pride and respect char acteristic of all true Aggies, regardless of their skin color. Sarah Lowe Class of ’98 •Mr. Shawn Williams, president of the A&M chapter of the NAACP, must be a very confused person. He believes his refusal to remove his hat in the MSC to be a “racial issue.” Tell me, how does his refusal to follow a certain tradition tie in with his ethnic background? He said his First Amendment rights were violated, but I don’t believe race is mentioned in the Bill of Rights. Is it a racial problem simply because he is black and he doesn’t feel like doing it? He is correct in that I don’t fully un derstand his reasons for not removing his hat in the MSC, other than the fact that he is emotionally insecure, and breaking an honored tradition is his petty way of asserting his man hood. I’m sure I needn’t remind him that the very men the MSC was dedi cated to died fighting an empire whose ruler wouldn’t think too highly of his civil rights. Yes, the First Amendment says he doesn’t have to remove his hat in the MSC. But I, too, am protected under the First Amendment — and it allows me to state my feelings just as plainly. If he is so insecure as to blatantly dis honor the deaths of those who fought for him and then try to conceal his inse curity with some vague reference to big otry, then he is not worth the spittle I would like to throw at his feet. Quentin N Ellis Class of ’95 Accompanied by 32 signatures Aggie helps another to recover lost wallet As I was dragging myself back to my dorm after completing the Houston Marathon, I unknowingly dropped my wallet (packed with $62, credit cards and IDs). About five minutes after I re turned to my room, a great Ag named Brandi Bender called and informed me that she had found my wallet. I am ex tremely proud to attend a university filled with honest and trustworthy peo ple like Brandi. Shea Sellers Class of ’95 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 for length, style, clarity and accuracy. Letters may be sub mitted in person at 013 Reed McDonald. A valid student I.D. is required. Letters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call Fax: (409) 845-2647 013 Reed McDonald E-mail: Texas A&M University Batt@tamvm1.tamu.edu College Station, TX 77843-1111