ay • September 26, nt committees against| tiers in an effort to prou jamming and unity. ■ special events commiti; expanding its hosting y hosting such events resident’s Buffet and|| eadef’s Reunion, is an honor for us to! to host these events, eat for our member different people,”Loti mid ? Hospitality conunitti so planned bilingualps •grams, a mystery rami r with NOVA, new inners and a 25thMS ality Reunion, reunion in October will 275 Conner members, k 1 people who have help ality with the 150am? 'rs for dinner anddancj k Hiemstra, public rt ind development exeerni >r finance major, saiii on will give members • to talk with peoplefn ality’s past, spitality has growntn GO members to its cum Hiemstra said.‘1 1 membership in the ars, but it has madeNi y stronger.” e if you really takeiii reshman computer et e recently signed upb ren. 1,1 )awes said. “1 wan; going to do to us." 2s not expect the expe ith his cl ass work, bul 't in the experiments, ested in how the m; n’t think the experim r me, but it will hel] 2d research subjects us,” he said. “Their pm >r coming here is that 2 graduate business s mked d 1st in the nation ■nt U.S. News and Vo:; t article and in other ; as high as 27. vers said the graduatep: has been overshadowed', at, but has begun to disc; itself' in the last few years nee they have reorganii 'ogram, we have steppt competing with the unde ate program,” she sai. ^The Battalion Opinion Tuesday September 26, 1995 The Battalion 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 Rob Clark Editor in Chief • Sterling Hayman Managing Editor Kyle Littlefield Opinion Editor Elizabeth Preston Assistant Opinion Editor EENING WHOOPI GOLDBERG iJlB l y- o itself. i Available at )x Office f Show AT&T yburTrue Choice Editorial Never Fold The media should not cater to terrorist or government demands. Last week, the New York Times and the Washington Post printed the manifesto of the Unabomber in an effort to put an end to the 17-year ran dom string of mail bombings. The Unabomber, whose identity is unknown to au thorities, promised to end his bombing streak if the Times and Post would print his 35,000-word essay. This decision not only af fects both newspapers, but all media organizations, as well. Caving into the demands of a terrorist sets a dangerous prece dent: The media can be persuad ed by threats to “bend its rules.” In this sense, last week’s de cision does not put an end to the violence but rather leaves another unpredictable door open for more threats of vio lence to bully the media. The decision to print the manifesto also exhibits ques tionable logic on the part of the two papers. Obviously, the Un abomber is not a rational hu man being, which makes the decision all the more interest ing. The papers have no guar antee he will keep his promise. The Houston Chronicle re ported the newspapers made their decision under persistent urging from the Justice De partment and the FBI. For these government agencies to make such a request, there must be details not known to the public. The media has always prid ed itself on being independent of the government. Giving in to such a request seems to go against that basic philosophy. While standing up for the freedom of the press — which includes deciding what is fit to be printed in a newspaper — in the face of threats of vio lence, may seem like a ro mantic ideal, it is an ideal that has served the media well in the past. There is no need to shelve it now. The media’s main purpose is to objectively report news to the public. By succumbing to other interests, such as the Unabomber or the govern ment, the media fails. College athletes don’t deserve pay Erin Fitzgerald Columnist I f you watched the football game Saturday against Colorado, you might have seen the commercial with the characters from Coach explaining how the gradua tion rate for football players is continuously increasing. That’s a good thing to know, since football players should actually be going to college for an education and not for any other reason. Last semester, I mentioned to a friend that Texas A&M is one of the only major universities that does not pay our student body president. Somehow, I received an unexpected, un related response of, “Well, football players should be paid before student body presi dents.” In disbelief, I questioned from where such reasoning came. The justification was based on faulty reasoning like: Our University monetarily profits by having a winning football team. These players deserve to share in some of the wealth. Another argument was they are out on the field every day risking injury which could completely ruin their future as a professional athlete. Also, many are on scholarships which they could lose if unable to fulfill their du ties as a football player. Other myths include: Many would have to drop out of school if they were not on the football team because they would not be able to pay tuition. And finally, they do not have time to hold a part-time job since foot ball practice takes up so much time. All of these arguments are full of fluff. Beginning with the first, I didn’t know Texas A&M was now incorporated. Often we complain about teachers focusing on re search and ignoring their responsibility to teach the students. Paying football players is another exam ple of people forgetting our University is an institution of higher learning. Besides, football players receive enough perks on the side to compensate them for their work. For example, football players living off campus receive a monthly stipend for living ex penses. I will only briefly remind you that the university lost millions of dollars by being put on probation for certain perks given by former stu dents. Remember Greg Hill? As for risking bodily harm that could be detrimental to their.future — do football players not have a major field of study anymore? Perhaps they have promising futures as professional athletes, but having a major should at least count as a back-up. If foot ball players are seriously injured, that is a risk they take for re ceiving a free education for playing football at an excel lent University. If a football player were to lose a scholar ship, he would simply have to find another means to pay his tuition. No one would have to drop out of the Uni versity because he could not pay for tuition. That is why there is such a thing as financial aid and student loans. Many non-athletes have financial constraints and manage an education. Oh, and God forbid a football player should have to rely on his academic ability to receive any other scholarship. Assuming football players must meet the same academic requirements to be admitted into A&M, they have just as much potential to succeed as any Aggie. On the other end of the spectrum, stu dent body presidents do deserve a salary. Every student elected to this position has spent years at our University working up through the ranks, contributing to cam pus life, until they are finally elected by their peers to represent the student body. Their position may not bring in the bucks, but they do spend numerous hours working for unselfish goals to benefit fellow Ags. The only perk our student body presi dent has is free parking. This is hardly compensation for the many hours spent in their office and in meetings. In comparison to other universi ties, this “perk” is hardly worth mention ing. Along with parking, the student body president at t.u. receives $500 a month and tuition is waived. However, I am only playing the devil’s ad vocate when I suggest that our student body president should be paid. While I do believe our student body president contributes more to the University than football players, paying him is unethical. As the position now stands, a person must be willing to devote an entire year of their life, traveling to A&M Mother’s Clubs, meet ing with Dr. Souther land, and speaking to wr various student groups on campus. Meanwhile the student body president strives to accomplish the agenda promised to the students when they were elected. Our current Student Body President Toby Boenig isn’t interested for being compensated for his work. “I don’t really care (to be paid). I think the student body president position is one which gives back to the students everything they’ve gotten out of the University. As Aggies, we strive for something which is greater than our selves. Serving as student body president is another way of doing that,” Boenig said. Those who advocate that football players should be paid for their “services” to this Uni versity should take that to heart. Erin Fitzgerald is a senior English and political science major Politically incorrect PC is wrongfully labeled a liberal phenomenon Strange visit IRA's Gerry Adams has nothing to teach Texas A&M Chris Stidvent Columnist T hat’s it, I’m putting away my flag-burning kit, get ting another draft card and joining the John Birch society. Once again, the conservative element has chosen to beat us poor liberals over the head with that big ugly monster of politi cal correctness. It’s gotten to the point that I can’t take it anymore, so I’m defecting to the other side. James T. Evans, self-proclaimed “reformed liber al” and author of the wittily-titled book Where Liber als Go To Die, descended on our campus last Tues day night. He brought with him some conservative propaganda and misconceptions about the origins of the PC movement that have been floating around out there for quite some time. As Evans was there at the behest of the right- wing Conservative Coalition and the somewhat sin ister-sounding Students for America, I had a pretty good idea of what I was getting into before I crept in and slunk into a seat near the back of the room. Evans began by letting us know that he was go ing to “loosen us up from the rigors of political cor rectness,” by creating a “Tough Questions Safety Zone.” The working assumption was that political correctness was a repressive hall mark of the liberal movement. Only in a room full of strict conserv atives could an indi vidual speak his or her mind without fear of the “feeling” of liber als reproaching them for being culturally or racially insensitive. To soften us up, we were first treated to some horrify ing anecdotes concerning in cidents in which proponents of the PC movement had imposed sanctions and fines on those who unwittingly might have offended another person. A woman trying to sell her house was fined be cause the advertisement she wrote contained such descriptions as “a lovely view of the river” and “a short-walk from town.” This was considered offen sive both to the blind and to those who were “differ ently abled,” in that they couldn’t walk. We were then led down the slippery slope from this ridiculous incident to making connec tions with fascist countries such as Czechoslova kia during the late ’60s. The implication was that, once again, we can’t al low the liberal PC proponents to tell us what we can and cannot say, because sooner or later they will be telling us what we can and cannot think. I guess if Clinton and his PC cronies stay in pow er, we’ll be living in a society with a strong resem blance to George Orwell’s 1984 or Stalinist Russia. These sentiments are echoed in the recent let ter sent by the College Republicans urging alum ni to withhold donations from the University be cause of the new “liberal” atmosphere prevailing on our campus. According to the now infamous missive, “if I as a student in a Political Science class argued that homosexuality is an un natural lifestyle ... I would be punished by being sent to sensitivity classes.” Once again, those compassionate liberals are re stricting our right to free speech under the guise of establishing a society in which no body is ever offended by anything that anybody else says. I was damned mad by this point and just about ready to start voting for Pat Buchanan and the true patriots of the Republican party, when I realized something. What is going on here is not only mis leading, but a colossal missing of the point. The PC movement has been pinned onto those sorry liberals for so long that we’ve all forgotten a fundamentally important fact. Political correctness, which involves telling peo ple what they should and should not say, is just plain censorship. It’s the repression of the free ex change of ideas, ostensibly because those ideas might offend the i tender sensibilities ^ of somebody else. Censorship is not a liberal phenomenon. It never has been and it never will be. It is a bastion of conserva- tivism that mas querades un der the guise of warm fuzziness” and an ar tificially elevated respect for oth er’s feelings. True liberalism protects our right to say whatever we want, whenever we want and wherever we want. If somebody is accidentally or intentionally of fended, a true liberal either apologizes or simply doesn’t care. And then we have the American Civil Liberties Union. These yellow liberal bastards have defended the free-speech rights of despicable organizations like the Ku Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party. As idiotic and backwards as these groups are, they are still guaranteed their right to peaceful self- expression. What the ACLU and its liberal propo nents represent is equal-opportunity defense of the right to free expression, no matter what it is that is being expressed. Here we have Newt Gingrich, Bob Dole and their Republican henchmen. These pseudo-fascists recent ly supported a bill that would censor certain por tions of the Internet. No real free exchange of ideas being promoted here. Politically correct thought and the censorship that it entails belongs in the conservative tradition. Any Republican who wants to take aim at the roots of the political correctness movement might as well shoot himself in the foot. Maybe I’ll be a liberal after all. Chris Stidvent is a senior English and philosophy major Lydia Percival Columnist A ccording to the Student Pro grams Office of the MSC, Gerry Adams of the Irish Republican Army and president of the Irish political party Sinn Fein is coming to Texas A&M. This is in conjunction with a conference by the Wiley Lecture Series on the state of Ireland. I have to wonder exactly what we can learn from a terrorist. Gerry Adams is famous for the bombings which he appar ently orchestrated in an attempt to gain political independence from Great Britain. For more than two decades, his movement has struck terror in the hearts of Irish and Eng lish alike. Tourists and citizens of the United Kingdom have died at the hands of this man who will come to speak at Texas A&M. For example, in one weekend, the Aug. 14, 1995 edition of the. Glasgow Herald reported that “youths threw petrol bombs, set vehicles alight and stoned fire fighters. In Armagh, crowds threw bottles and bricks at po lice and firefighters. One fireman was injured, and police cars and several buses were damaged. In Belfast a bus was hijacked and set alight by a man with a handgun. In London derry, crowds hurled petrol bombs and damaged shops. A crane at a new shopping centre was set ablaze.” These examples all occurred during peace talks, thus they were just plain old riots. Imag ine what life was like when Ger ry Adams wasn’t in the mood for peace. In many cas es, Adams’ groups pre ferred to blow up pubs and shops at their busiest times. In short, his ac tions were de spicable. So how much money did the Wiley Lecture Series pay to bring this terrorist here? Understandably, Wiley Lec ture Series was not able to com ment on the cost of bringing in Adams because the affair is “un der contract,” so 1 called the American FYograms Bureau, Inc. It listed his honorarium any where between $15,000 and $20,000. Wiley Lecture Series receives no student fees, but they are an organization of the MSC’s Stu dent Programs Office. The idea that a terrorist is coming to Texas A&M through Texas A&M seems awful. I do not disagree with bring ing speakers of other ideologies. Bring in a communist and I would be interested to hear how someone can justify believing in an ideology which seems to have failed all over the world. But please do not bring in a terrorist under the auspices of education to this University. There is nothing to learn from Gerry Adams (unless you need a tip on blowing up your professor’s car in order to avoid that chemistry test that is growing near). I understand that Gerry Adams isn’t still blowing people up today. So what? Let’s say a miracle occurred and President Clinton was actu ally successful in foreign policy regarding Bosnia. Let’s pretend that a peace ac cord was struck today and all the shelling would end. In a few months would we bring in Slobo dan Milosevic to speak to us on why he believed genocide was justified in the midst of his civil war? I hope not! If Hitler hadn’t killed himself, maybe the Wiley Lecture Series of 1950 could have brought him to speak at A&M. Okay, maybe Gerry Adams is n’t Hitler, and some even go so far as to consider him a patriot. I was telling a friend in Washington, D.C. about Adams coming here and he said he feels Adams is a freedom fight er, not a terrorist. But is blowing up innocent civilians having a beer in a pub is any way to fight for freedom? Perhaps anarchists would say that if accused bomber Timothy Me Veigh is convicted he was a freedom fighter against a tyranni cal government. I have to wonder how we would feel if some university in Ireland decided to invite McVeigh to speak to them. I would be pret ty ticked off. So why should we bring Adams? However, there is a positive side to Adams’ coming here. Somebody should alert the FBI to come and search the audience because the Unabomber might show up to pick up some tricks of the trade from an expert. Isn’t it nice to know A&M can be of some service to the world? Lydia Percival is a senior political science major Ags shouldn't tear down AIDS signs Many people have recently spent hours putting up fliers to promote events that we are orga nizing with AIDS Services of Mail ALL Brazos Valley, in connection with AIDS Awareness Month. As I was walking through Blocker today, I noticed that a number of posters.! had put up were no longer there. These posters were advertising a fund raiser and had a red ribbon to support AIDS-related issues. I understand that there are some who see this ribbon and con nect it with certain emotions and prejudices they have with AIDS. However, I do not see the suc cess achieved in removing these posters. They were costly to make. They are also the result of months of hard work to organize this event. I am dismayed that these were removed, and hope they will be returned. If you see something that you do not agree with, ignore it. Or read the information: You may leam something. Ignorance is no excuse for stupidity. Jennifer Schmidt Class of ’95