Tuesday • April 18, 1995 The Battalion • Pa : ge 13 PINION . . The Battalion Estublished in 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. Mark Smith Editor in chief Jay Robbins Heather Winch Senior Managing Managing editor editor for Business Sterling Hayman Opinion editor Erin Hill Asst, opinion editor EDITORIAL PI Punishment Local law enforcement officials should not punish responsible drinking. Last year, the number of public in toxication citations issued by the Col lege Station Police Department in creased by over 60 percent. While it is absolutely necessary to punish those individuals who carelessly drink and drive, those students who act responsibly after drinking too much should not be punished. Many students choose to walking home or call a ride to pick them up. These students are acting correctly, but ironically, lo cal police are reprimanding them for it. by issuing Pis to people sitting on a curb or walking down the street. Law enforcement offi cials should realize that just because students have been drink ing, they are not necessarily going to be irresponsible and reckless. Students can drink and, at the same time, act in a mature fashion, realizing the conse quences of their actions. Those students who are responsi ble enough to not get behind the wheel of a vehicle should be praised instead punished. The number of drinking and driving accidents has become a serious problem on all of our nation’s campuses. It is in evitable that some students will drink, but if they help curb the number alco hol-related deaths by acting responsibly and not driving, police should consider their actions positive instead of negative. Anyone who is drunk, caus ing harm and are disturbing the peace should be punished. Students who are under the in fluence of alcohol and are pos ing a threat to either them selves or others certainly should be punished by law en forcement officers .They deserve to be issued public intoxication citations because they are not acting in a mature, responsible manner. But pub lic intoxication citations should be limit ed only to these individuals. The local police departments should re-evaluate the purpose of public intoxi cation citations and be sure that they are issued in a responsible and effective manner — to those who deserve them. rv\ZLzvzT/wn A- Mail {^ALT New design of former students sticker a dud I have been at A&M for four years now and am looking forward to gradu ating this May. With graduation comes the respon sibility of all good Ags to go by the Clayton Williams, Jr. Alumni Center and pick up an Association of Former Students sticker. Well, I decided to go by and get my sticker a little early. To my horror, I found out that someone changed the design of the sticker! I am really disappointed with this new design, as are most people that I have talked to. I have two questions. First, “Why?” What was wrong with the old sticker? I think that it was much more pro fessional looking. The lettering of the new sticker looks too much like some thing you would find in a cartoon. Sec ond, “When?” When is this new sticker going to be axed and the old one brought back? I am a proud Aggie and want the world to know it. So, whomever made the decision to change the sticker doesn’t have to ad mit who he is, just admit it was wrong and do something about it! Ross E. Sanders Class of ’94 accompanied by 25 signatures Equity 2000 dumbs down A&M standards It seems that the higher education establishment cannot rid itself of the erroneous idea that diversity and equality should be principal ends of ascending humanity, the idea formu lated by the high priests of our day — academicians (and their intellectual admirers, regents). Apparently the A&M Board of Regents has voted to support the Access and Equity 2,000 plan, whereby equal access, opportu nity, education and employment to qualified people will be extended, be ginning in September 1994. Some of the classical Utopian ideas to be mate rialized into policy include: faculty ethnic balance and equalizing gradua tion rates for minorities. The latter two goals seem suspiciously like an outcome-based system, where the very good ends of equal opportunity and perhaps even equal access are grouped together with the unjust and unworkable outcome equalization, such as would be a faculty ethnic quo ta system. Though the concept of jus tice is lost on today’s secular world, it must be shown that a system can be fair, even “diverse,” but unjust. In the process of increasing minority faculty, qualified non-minority candidates may be rejected and thus loose their equal opportunity for employment — ethnic discrimination. Since there are apparently fewer minority Ph.Ds per capita than non-minorities, market forces would dictate that you would ei ther have to pay them more, and/or otherwise choose them, without basis, over equally or more highly qualified non-minority candidates to dispropor- tionally increase their numbers. At tempting to equalize graduation rates is even more preposterous for similar reasons. Would the administration have to lower standards for the partic ular ethnic group — white, black, whatever — that needs to have its graduation rates raised? What other possible program could the university implement to achieve such a goal that was workable, let alone just? The Regents should spend their time encouraging minority young people to get advanced degrees, thus increasing their presentation in acad emia naturally, instead of instituting a reverse discriminatory social engi neering program to equalize faculty representation and graduation rates in the A&M system. In addition, they may wish to allo cate more money for remedial educa tion, thus bringing the disadvan taged of whatever color up to the standards that have been chosen for the whole, instead or “dumbing down the standard selectively, which ben efits neither the University not the one for whom the standard is being relaxed. Steve Cunningham Class of ’97 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 stu dent I.D. is required. Letters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call Fax: (409) 845-2647 01 3 Reed McDonald E-mail: Texas A&M University Batt@tamvm1.tamu.edu College Station, TX 77843-1111 Write the hell, Ags Many people have responded to the Vanity Fair article that referred to Texas A&M University as “second-rate.” If anyone would like to respond to the magazine by e-mail. Vanity Fair’s address is listed below. VFAIR@AOL.COM Equity 2000 plan not needed I n an age of political correctness, affirma tive action and the fear of offending some special interest group, Texas A&M has once again succumbed to the agents of liberalism. The A&M Board of Re gent’s recent vote to sup port the Access and Equity 2000 Plan has paved the way for more affirmative action and quota plans for this Univer sity to follow. According the plan, A&M — by the year 2000, would increase the enrollment of minority students in undergraduate and graduate studies to equal that of white students. The plan also seeks to hire more minority faculty and staff. I am assuming the plan means to in crease enrollment and hiring, percentage wise based on the percentages of minori ties in Texas or the nation. However, it wouldn’t be surprising if their actual goal is to have an equal amount of minorities as non-minorities enrolled at A&M. While this would be ludicrous from the standpoint that the minority popula tion in the nation is not equal that of non-minorities, it nevertheless falls un der what liberals call “equality”. This plan is nothing more than a means of continuing affirmative action programs, which have been under fire by Republicans in Congress and many citi zens who are sick of the government telling us that minority groups are se verely discriminated against and need a “step up” to even the playing field. By supporting this plan, A&M has ef fectively taken a step backward in its mission of equality as well as quality. Texas A&M prides itself on striving for the utmost excellence, but in support ing this plan and those similar we are talking out of both sides of our mouths. This University should enroll stu dents and hire faculty based on their qualifica tions, their dedication to A&M and their desire to see themselves and A&M grow. In doing this A&M will undoubtedly enroll and hire a diverse and large amount of minorities. Granted the percentages may be less— or even more— than the percent ages of minorities nation-wide, but A&M should strive for quality not quantity. To say there are not many qualified minorities out there is asinine. If they want to come to A&M, they will come, but we don’t need to go searching for mi norities just to have higher percentages so we can fill someone’s quota system. About a month ago I attended a meet ing titled “White Men Need Not Apply.” ' The topic of the meeting was how affir mative action benefits the workplace. Of the three quest speakers, all said that they hired or recruited people based on their qualifications. All said that their companies could not afford to hire under qualified applicants. I asked that if this was the case, then what they were actually saying was that there is really no need for affirmative ac tion. None would touch the question, in stead they all sat there dumbstruck— too scared to admit that affirmative ac tion has outlived its usefulness. It appears that the Regents, in actual ity, have created another bureaucracy within the University which will spend millions of dollars doing unneeded re search and paperwork. They have created new positions for people to run around, crunch numbers and juggle statistics with the goal of pro gressing their outdated, unwanted, liber al political agendas. Another aspect of the plan that I take opposition to is the idea that A&M must graduate minorities for the benefit of Texas. A&M is under no obligation to grad uate anyone minority or non-minority. Stu dents graduate because they have achieved the requirements for graduation; they have attained the amount of knowledge that their college has deemed sufficient to grad uate. If the University is going into the busi ness of “graduating” students to fill quotas, then the University needs to re-evaluate its mission; and I need to re-evaluate my choice of University. Before you slam down the paper and make your way to The Battalion to demand my resignation, realize that I am not writing this article because I have some personal dislike or vendetta against minorities. The Access and Equity 2000 plan is an insult to minorities : and non-minorities. It breeds discrimination, lower quality and sacrificed standards I, however, believe in the old— and quickly fading— philosophy of working and striving for the highest quality and standards of achievement, whether it be a university or a person. The Access and Equity 2000 Plan does not promote this. It instead is an insult to minorities and non-minorities as well. In its push for “equality” it breeds continued discrimination, lower quality, and sacri ficed standards. It is time that we quit ignoring what those in charge are trying to push on us, and stand up against ludicrous plans such as the Access and Equity 2000 Plan. Zach Hall is,a sophomore mechanical engineering major MAR^tWK The Other c Other Aggie Education I can remember his words plainly. One, I don’t ever want to see you again after you leave this room. Two, don’t fall in love during college. Yes, the dean of the College of Liberal Arts did have a way with words — but I understood what he meant. His first bit of wisdom referred to maintaining your grades — if you did, you would never have a reason to see him again. Thankfully, I have not seen him since. His second piece of advice, however, troubled me. Three years later, I see the light. What a wise, wise man. It makes sense now. But then, we were only a roomful of transfer students, hear ing what we didn’t want to hear. After all, it wasn’t classes we were anxious about; it was that fabled college romance linger ing in the distance that was on our minds. It is a common perception that we will meet the person we eventually marry while in college. Maybe this is because the perception that we would meet that person in high school was shattered. Since college was the next step, hey, why not adapt the perception? Our performance in college will either reward or haunt us for years after we graduate. But no matter how much we are fore warned, human nature just can’t be sacrificed for our grades. Ideally, it makes sense to lock ourselves in our rooms with our text books. But that’s not much of a life. In reality, we hardly ever find ourselves in the same room as our books. If you have a significant other, then you know how hard it is to balance school with your relationship. In my case, the only reading I was doing was of the letters from my girlfriend. I found out that I had a problem while working on a story for a journalism class about people who play games on the Internet in the RCC, well into the night. The funny thing was that I too was in the RCC well into the night, writing email to my girl friend who lived out of state — yes, the dreaded Long Distance Relationship, or simply LDR, for those of us in the know . I realized that the things that I would be writing about in my story, that those who played games on the internet late at night were sleeping in the day, skipping their classes, also ap plied to me. If it wasn’t email, it was the phone. And if none of these, then it was daydreaming, not paying attention during class. Adding up the minutes that appeared on the sincere note that my friends at GTE had sent to me, I came to the con clusion that I spent more time working on my relationship than I did working in my classes. What should I do, add a section on to my resume titled “Relationships?” This is where you would see entries looking something like, “Relationship with Susie Smith, Summer of 1992— Fall of 1993.” ’V At job interviews I could qualify my grades by explaining that when I got that ‘C,’ I was having problems in a rela tionship, much like how we told the college admissions ad viser that we were sick when we took the SAT. Well, it’s the truth. I think A&M is on the right track to emphasize partici pation in the “Other Education.” But why stop at organiza tions and other extracurricular activities? Why should we downplay our relationships? Time is the factor that makes both school and relationships successful. A&M is on the right track to emphasize par- » ticipationg in the 'Other Education/ but why stop at extracurricular activities? Why • should we downplay our relationships? It may not be that large of a leap of faith to say that the same person who has a successful relationship relies on characteristics that are also used to succeed in school and later on in the job market. For one, you have to be dedicated. If you aren’t willing to i- spend time with your school work or your significant other, A then you might as well not even try. Two, you must be interested. A lack of interest might cause you to put your classes or your job on the back bum- er, and could just as easily break up a relationship. But then we arrive at a contradiction. You must have your priorities straight. If you happen to v be blessed or cursed — depending on where your priorities are — with a relationship where you cringe at the thought of being away from your source of happiness for even a mo- / ment, then you have to choose. Do you strive for a 4.0, or do you struggle to maintain your relationship with the perfect 10? Kyle Littlefield is a senior journalism major'