fuly 11,195, PINIOTsI The Battalion • Page 5 Tuesday • July 11, 1995 File Photo RSEAS s Yasuharu )ionships. to again Lhlete. leet was arc! e of sorts't ; in as thei ts before be: nd 200. t performac ifth-and-siE the longjm e Golden W ick and Fit i 10 in Saci t third-pla ong jump ith Chamt 7 in Raleifi r ashout at it getting inv: mtional mee- outstandir.; t high-calk ; become t r ho has beer al meets sk teur Athlet rade school, ar ago, Jon f: ne 100 at tt earning a sp n the silve: U.S. Junk er relay tea. >r Olympics' 1 The Battyveion Established in 1893 Editorials appearing in The Battalion reflect the views of the editorials 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. Editorials Board Jay Robbins Editor in Chief Rob Clark Managing Editor Sterling Hayman Opinion Editor Kyle Littlefield Assistant Opinion Editor Adverse Effect The greed of the players and owners has hurt baseball. What would happen if an All-Star game was held and no one cared? Well this year, as the ma jor league baseball players gear up for the usually excit ing All-Star Game, the still- angry fans are sitting at home. Although the game is sold out, the ticket sales are sluggish and the ticket brokers are left trying to get rid of empty seats. Barry Lif- cowitz, head of the National As sociation of Tick et Brokers, said in a recent Associated Press story that the All-Star game has been a “total flop.” “Without any question,” he said, “the strike has had a dramatic impact on interest in the All-Star game. Or should I say lack of interest.” Ever since the baseball strike, which lasted for more than eight months and in cluded a cancellation of the World Series, game atten dance has been down in ball parks across the country. According to a recent Sports Illustrated article, at tendance at baseball games is down 20 percent compared . to 1994. Apparently, the fans are staying at home to punish the players and the owners for their greed. The strike was a long dry spell in baseball, and to the average American it did not seem to make much sense. Many fans had trouble un derstanding why peo ple earning millions of dollars a year to participate in the great Amer ican pastime wanted any thing more. It seemed not only ludicrous, but unbeliev able. Now that the strike is over, the public is somewhat reluctant to for give and forget the seemingly greedy actions of the players and owners. In the Sports Illustrated article, San Francisco Giants President Peter Magowan said, “I think the fans are trying to teach us all a les son. They won’t come back until they feel that we are properly spanked — and that could be after a whole season goes by.” The players and coaches hope that exciting pennant races will bring the fans back to the All-American pastime. Evidently, their present efforts have not been enough. Hard times hit Democratic party J udging by the results of the midterm elections last November, many American voters are looking to the Republican party for leadership. Many political positions in the House and Senate, gov ernorships and other state and national offices previ ously controlled by Democ rats now are held by Repub licans. Whether this is a change for the better is for history to determine. To add insult to injury to the Democrats, a number of Democratic office holders re cently have defected to the GOP. One of the most recent de fections occurred in the U.S. Congress, with U.S. Rep. Greg Laughlin becoming the newest edition to the Repub lican party. Is such a change fair? Many Texas voters elected Laughlin because they be lieved he embraced the val ues and ideals of the Democ ratic party. He thanked these voters by abandoning them. It is unfair that Rep. Laughlin, as well as the oth er elected officials who have changed parties, accepted campaign contributions, sup port and guidance from the Democratic party and then left it behind. If Laughlin was so unsat isfied with the Democrats, he either should have worked to improve the party or run for office as a Repub lican. Perhaps he feared he would lose as a Republican. Change is certain to hap pen to the Democratic party as the 1996 elections ap proach. According to an article in the Houston Chronicle on July 2, Bill White, Texas’ chief fund raiser for Presi dent Clinton, stated that the Texas Democrats have suf fered from the national par ty’s image. Because Texas Democrats cannot change the Democrat ic Party’s national image. White seems to suggest that the Texas Democratic party should put more distance be tween itself and its national counterpart. Robin Rorapaugh, a con sultant for the Democratic Campaign Committee, said the Texas Democrats will em phasize the conservative tone of the recent Democratic-led Texas Legislature. This is an obvious ploy to gain voters who might oth erwise side with the Repub licans. What kind of image does all this present? If the Democrats want to Mark Zane Columnists Justin Barnett show that the party is strong and can rebound, they must stick together during any sign of trouble. The party should also avoid imitating the Repub licans. Nowhere in the Constitu tion does it state that Ameri ca should have a bipartisan political system. Unfortunately, this is a re ality. Sure, third party candi dates exist, but such persons rarely receive enough fund ing and support to be elected. Perhaps if more voters would vocalize their dissat isfaction with the current political system, a change W hy are members of the Democratic party, espe cially those in positions of leadership, deserting the party? Without being presumptuous, perhaps it is because the party has become associated with anti quated concepts in general and bloated, ineffective government in particular. Throw in a dash of liberalism, and you have a guar anteed recipe for failure. Failure is what the Democrats are coping with at this point. Since the elections of last No vember, a surprising number of Democratic office-holders have walked across the aisle to join the Republican party. This exo dus has included federal as well as state and local politicians. can occur. It has become sickening to watch the two parties bicker back and forth, mudsling and call each other names. With competition from ad ditional parties, such occur rences could be minimized. It is upsetting when parties change their positions on is sues only to please the public. This gives the impression the party is only interested in accumulating votes, not improving society. Americans have become accustomed to choice. We have a variety of fla vors of ice cream, many sneaker companies, a ton of colleges and universities and even various choices for contraception. More than two political parties would be a welcome addition to our freedom of choice. Mark Zane is a graduate sociology student Toward the end of last month in Texas, a total of 23 Democrats fled their party in one day. The most notable was U.S. Rep. Greg Laughlin. The state of Texas is a good example of how the Democrat’s once iron grip on important of fices is slowly and relentlessly slipping away. Somehow they have managed to squander the U.S. Senate seat they held for more than a century, lost the governorship and witnessed the purging of several long-time rep resentatives. The party defections are mere salt in their wounds. It would be an understate ment to say this collapse is of ti tanic proportions. Apocalyptic seems more fitting. These people have really blown it. The Democrats have forgotten the people who kept them in pow er and instead have turned to the liberal wing of the party for guid ance and leadership. The Democratic party of the past was the party of the work ing person. It supported fair ness, integrity, thrift and a strong work ethic. It was the party of the common person who wanted life, liberty and the pur suit of happiness. As time progressed and it be came increasingly evident that the liberal influence had become preeminent, the power that the Democrats enjoyed for so long slowly waned. No matter how strenuously the Democrats ob ject, the majority of the people in the United States have conserv ative principles. Now that the Democrats are shackled with the liberal label, they are truly painted in a cor ner. With all of the shrill inter ests groups vying for power, the message of the party steadily is becoming lost in a torrent of rhetoric. Texas Land Commissioner Gary Mauro, as reported in the Houston Chronicle, believes the party has failed to arouse inter est from its core constituents. He said he wants the party once again to convince voters it can govern effectively and efficiently. In his estimation, the parry needs a whole new image. A new image and life-support is closer to reality. What he and many other politicians are not able to see is the big picture. The Democrats, upon losing their majority in the House, promptly assigned leadership po sitions to the same people who led them down the proverbial primrose path. Minority Leader Richard Gephardt and Minority Whip David Bonior still are rehashing the same old charges that the Re publican Party is the party of the rich, the poor are in danger, chil dren will be systematically starved and the ’80’s are to blame. During a press conference, Gephardt was asked his feelings on elected officials switching parties. He had the audacity to speak on behalf of the American people, stating that “the Ameri can people do not want their members of Congress to switch parties for political purposes.” I would guess the American people would much prefer Gephardt keep his mouth shut for political purposes. I am not defending the De mocrats or trying to explain away their failures. The Democrats should be led by people of their own choosing, no matter how disastrous the consequences. Let them continue to espouse a liberal agenda, even in the face of total rejection. Let Gephardt and his merry band of liberals keep providing material for co medians. As long as they want to drive their Edsel, no one should try to sell them a Mercedes. Justin Barnett is a senior English major jfflp' ie back 220-pouf of baseball 1 all earned hi* mention 8 ‘ Students should define ‘success 5 by their own standards Elizabeth Preston Columnist W hen my senior seminar pro fessor turned to the class and asked us why we were there, nervous giggles filled the room. As your typical lazy college students, we were there simply be cause a course of this level is re quired for graduation, and this one titled “Nature and Man” happened to fit our schedules. A few students attempted to answer nobly and impress the professor by declaring they were there i to learn about literature or to further their knowl- ! edge of nature. Finally, a brave soul raised her ; hand and mumbled that she was in the class as a I means to an end — that end being that she needed I this class to graduate in August. The rest of the class murmured in agreement. My professor immediately began questioning i what the student had meant. If this class was a I means to an end, then when and where would we | reach that end? Most college students will describe all of their | classes — even the ones in their majors — as a means to an end. Thus college becomes a means to | an end, as was high school and all of the little jobs students students have to earn money. But when do we reach our end? Though it is possible that your end is to graduate from college and then you will begin living your dreams, it usually does not happen that way. Students tend to get in debt im mediately after graduation, buying cars and equipment they can’t really afford and charging up credit cards like mad — if their credit cards aren’t already maxed out upon graduation. Then the newly-graduated students are forced to accept the first job offered to them and spends the rest of their lives just trying to keep up. In “Walden,” Henry D. Thoreau says, “I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.” A man in my class said he wanted to ride horses all day, but seeing as how he obviously couldn’t do that, he came to college to get a degree in history and to find a way to support himself in a way soci ety approves of. Thoreau would ask: Why can’t he live on a horse for the rest of his life? If that is his dream, he should become a cowboy or a mounted police of ficer or a park ranger. Pursuing lesser dreams because of fear that your true dream will not support you is a popular cop-out. In modern American society, attending college has become a prerequisite for the middle class. Suc cessful or mediocre students attend college almost as a reflex. Technical jobs, blue-collar jobs and other skilled labors are invariably looked down on. Today, far too many people succumb to society's expectations and accept the standard definition of "success," rather than living up to their own. The problem with all of this snobbery is that many people desire the jobs that require less for mal education more than being accountants, teachers or lawyers. But in deference to pressure from parents, societal expectations and other out side influences, some continue to slog through their classes, their jobs and their degrees until they have fulfilled everyone’s dreams ... except their own. Earning a college education is not, and should not be, the desire of everyone. College is a choice, not a requirement. Great figures throughout history lacked a for mal education, yet many of these same people have left extraordinary marks on society. Ironically, many of these marks are taught as a part of higher education. Today, far too many people succumb to soci ety’s expectations and accept the standard defin ition of “success,” rather than living up to their own. And trying to live up to these expectations of parents, teachers and friends often can drive a person crazy. Hence the term “mid-life crisis.” Thoreau also writes that “To be awake is to be alive. I have never yet met a man who was quite awake.” If people began to live their lives the way they wanted and fulfilled their fantasies, they would not have to look up at the age of 40, or 50 or whenever, and realize that they have never truly been “awake.” School is not the be-all and end-all of modern existence, and a degree is not always a prerequi site to a life — believe it or not. The longer society’s expectations control us and the more we live trying to reach an end that is not our own, the less control we have of our destinies. Elizabeth Preston is a senior English major The B/s. i ea i i ctn Editorial Staff Jay ROBBINS, Editor in Chief ROB CLARK, Managing Editor Sterling Hayman, Opinion Editor GRETCHEN PERRENOT, City Editor JODY Holley, Night News Editor Stacy Stanton, night news editor Michael Landauer, aggielife Editor Nick GeorGANDIS, Sports Editor Stew Milne, Photo Editor Staff Members City Desk - Assistant Editor: Eleanor Colvin; Re porters: Katherine Arnold, Javier Hinojosa, Jill Saunders, Michael Simmons, Wes Swift & Tara Wilkinson Aggielife Desk - Assistant Editor: Amy Collier Fea ture Writers: Elizabeth Garrett, Amy Collier & Libe Goad; Columnist: Amy Uptmor Sportswriters — David Winder and Lee Wright Opinion Desk - Assistant Editor: Kyle Littlefield; Columnists: Elizabeth Preston, Frank Stan ford & David Taylor; Contributing Colum nists: Justin Barnett, Margaret Gordon, Alex Miller, Chris Stidvent & Mark Zane; Editori al Writers: Jason Brown & Alex Walters; Editorial Cartoonists: Brad Graeber & George Nasr Photographers - Mike Friend, Roger Hsieh, Nick Rodnicki & Eddy Wylie Page Designers — News: Kristin DeLuca; Sports: Robin Greathouse; Aggielife: Stew Milne Copy Editors — Rob Clark & Sterling Hayman Graphic Artists — Toon Boonyavanich & Melissa Oldham Strip Cartoonists - Valerie Myers & Quatro Oakley Office Staff - Office Manager: Julie Thomas; Clerks: Wendy Crockett & Heather Harris News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Divi sion of Student Publications, a unit of the De partment of Journalism. 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