I). This rate appliesooy n additional 5 dafss! i to qualify for (to tew pizza jroves low in taste MINTED "Change is almost always excit ing. The prospect of a new ^>type of food being served in lining facility famous for the tobseweiqhi Metawsr;-* r j $2995 v. uc Disc ir« me food year in and year out is ery (409)823-3307■«&, tremely exciting. ■ s - lose8to29pankli! eakthnj. All natural, Guii- 1-435-7591 FRAVEL i Annual College S.i » S: /aapaljoe Basir. its foi Ua> Pilca Dfto liPto iSestefcatlat t^Piws kudDiphcatUii ^ iki '***^ Columnist 3I4AT10M AND RUEfl»<™S 5UNCHAS ■t http'7Aorww.tutKHii».tow ident prayers of good food, just emporary stop to quell growing isatisfaction with the current ection of food. The real problem is that nearly iryentre comes smothered in esort of artery-clogging gravy, lam sauce or fatty bacon, althy alternatives are either too nd or too strange to attract the rage diners. But these doubts aside, many iplewere amazed that the din- halls actually listened to some nplaints made over the years, cries of “Stone Willy” res ated throughout Sbisa like “Re- mber the Alamo” at the Battle Ian Jacinto. It was a source of "ration, hope and wonder. tie wondered who this Willy son was. Some valiant Aggie ^ ATTA f IIll ’perfected the art of pizza J/Vl lAI-ilvU Ifinawhilp fiarh finer thn nno ossified vertising • Easy Affordable Effective formation, call 5-0569 33 Club, Inc l s $15 to Riverside Anne' ule Annex :N AT 11:00' Kansas State' p sirloin. opped with ' BBQ ’th your choice oi ) steak fries. Sbisa in troduced its highly tout ed new line of pizza on Monday, the culmi nation of three weeks of specula tion, fanta sizing, and constant in- vocation of the name, ione Willy.” The hype surrounding this new duct at Sbisa will not prevent impending disappointments ioth the dining hall and the ers.This is not the answer to Patrick Smiley Sophomore zoology major king while fighting the enemy ome godforsaken land? A world Ms Italian chef that we were retofore ignorant of? Or was he, iome of my skeptical friends pantly suggested, Willie Nel- i?Well, that would explain the ne Stone Willy, given Mr. Nel l’s penchant for illegal herbs. The reality is far less satisfying, me Willy turns out to be a fran- se operation, selling the con- t of its pizza to cafeterias lund the country. Nevertheless, looming of Stone Willy bright ed the smiles of all those fortu- te enough to eat in Sbisa, the ly dining hall as yet blessed with me Willy’s Legendary Pizza. Monday at 10:15 a.m., several dents, including me, hungrily laited the beginning of lunch and "first bite of delicious pizza. Judgment day had arrived. We entered Sbisa as we had ne hundreds of times before, ttything looked the same. There re no velvet drapes, marble-tiled ors or mahogany dining tables, emilk dispensers still dispensed lie and not some glorious golden ad. The dessert case still held same old Jell-O — no Baked ska to speak of. Suddenly, pure white light nded me, and a voice ordered to the light. At the other end of (light lay Stone Willy, savior of (ebuds. So peaceful, so beauti- draped so appropriately in lite, stood Stone Willy, purveyor legendary pizza. Entranced by the splendor of me Willy, we took the pizza, mon- ously huge though it was, and sat tvn. Everyone looked on in awe at cheesy goodness of the morsel Which Willy the Merciful so gra- •usly allowed us to partake. One bite and the trance was He. The pizza’s true form was re lied, and it turned out to be the He damned pizza from three £ks ago. The Stone Willy shrine at other end of the dining hall was heap facade, required by the me Willy company (a subsidiary Little Charlie’s pizza, found in the Zen food section at Sam’s Whole- el in the contract made with Food Aices. There is no paradise in Isa, only boring old cafeteria food. The pizza, although actually latable, did not fix what was real- wrong: bland food with few althy, edible alternatives. Our appointment was profound. In the excitement surrounding me Willy, we had been duped to believing that old dining hall ge: “Dining on campus is fun.” What fools we were, what fools.. Technology can’t substitute for the human touch N ew waves of shiny plastic smart machines with LCD displays, ra dio transceivers and full-e-mail capability have come to stroke our short attention spans. These new communica tion tools aren’t making us into a friendlier, bet ter-adjusted society. Instead, they’re turn ing us into a society of people with a million different ways to say “there’s noth ing on my mind.” The information age is making it easier for us to communicate with each other. But technology is making our conversations less personal, even if they are slightly more convenient. Pagers, cellular phones, e-mail and even voice-mail: these are the pipelines from which business in formation flows. And ultimately they’ll be the most common ways to chat with the folks at home. But there’s a conflict and a se ductive trade-off present in today’s communication philosophy. Dis cussion is supposed to bring peo ple together, but we love the way new technology allows us to talk with people without actually see ing them whenever we want, wherever they are. We’re suckering ourselves into believing that reaching more people faster is as good as find ing more depth in the discus sions we already have. At the risk of sounding like my grandparents, there is much to be said for the human touch. That is something that’s sorely lacking in the newest form of mail. The personality content in a handwritten letter is much greater than that present in a few bytes of e-mail. The attempts to make e-mail more personable are well- meaning, but are really an insult to the texture of human emotions. For instance, it’s pretty sad :-(to think what passes for a smile :-) nowadays. It isn’t surprising that phones and computers can’t do anything magical to am plify the importance of the mes sages we entrust them with. They are, after all, just machines. And there is a certain amount of merit to just gabbing for no good reason. But it is sad to walk into a cam pus computer lab at 3 a.m. and find a bunch of students typing away, talking to virtual friends. Some people spend so much time at a terminal, they might as well drive up to say howdy to their compubuddies. Humans are social animals. We’ve always thought that our ability to communicate is what makes us social. However, the essence of society isn’t mere communication — it’s inspiration. Something has to in spire a society to be more than just a collection of individuals; meth ods of communication serve only to disseminate that inspiration. If all that can be said about our new means of communica tion is that they’re convenient, that’s really not enough to war rant the excitement we’ve been displaying. What’s so thrilling about an E-Z Mart? If only we spent as much energy adding meaning to our conversa tions as we do finding new ways to conduct them. So as we rush to get wired and connected, we need to ask what it is that inspires us to communi cate. Politicians and current events generally don’t, more and more of our families are dysfunc tional, and we aren’t answering any phone calls from God lately. So what does move us? It seems as if every few years our collective consciousness asks for the source of our motivations. In the last decade, the common answer seemed to be: “Me!” But after realizing that material ism and self-interest could take us only so far, we now search for some response that’s a little more sophisticated and open-minded. Today we answer the same ques tion by shrugging our collective shoulders, looking around at each other, and asking, “Us?” It is this confusion that makes individuals eager to get to know “us” by the fastest means available. So we page and e-mail each other into an endless sea of chatter. The messages are rather cool and fluffy, but there’s a ton of them. Sort of like E-Z Marts. Jeremy Valdez Senior chemical engineering major Racing hormones keep Howdy alive I wish I’d been born a girl. I could wear pink shirts without being considered effeminate. I could actually open the mail I get from the American Association of University Women addressed to Ms. Shannon Halbrook. I’ve always been curi ous about what’s stuffed into those plain white envelopes “for women only.” But best of all, I could walk around on this campus without feeling like its tradi tions had passed me by. A couple weeks ago, I was ambling along outside the library, my backpack slung over one shoulder. In front of me was —in this order — a girl, then a guy, and then another girl. In an absolutely objective sense, both the girls were fairly attractive. Then a big, butch-looking member of the Corps of Cadets walked by in the opposite direction. And this is what happened. He said a vigorous “Howdy,” to the first girl, skipped strangely over the guy in between, and then said “Howdy” again to the second girl. When he got to me he was looking away; I said “Howdy” and he walked past wordlessly. I’ve noticed it from numerous cadets. Not all of them, of course — I’ve heard that generalization is a bad thing to do in opinion columns and somehow detracts from their credibility. But I have directly observed it several times, and more often than not cadets are the perpetrators. It’s a phenomenon I’ve dubbed “hormones.” And basically it in volves the fact that people are more likely to say howdy to an attractive member of the opposite sex. Not that this phenomenon is a bad thing, necessarily. It’s a great method to start up a conversation. It gives people a nice, two-word template for talking to anyone on campus or elsewhere in Bryan-College Station. Boy: “Howdy.” Girl: “Howdy.” And when an attractive member of the opposite sex walks by, starting up a con versation is, well, not the first thing on everybody’s mind. But it’s the most tradi tional way to go about the process that concludes with one of the first few things on a lot of people's minds. This got me to thinking about how safe Aggieland’s traditions really are — they’re ingrained in the chemicals of the human body. We always hear the howdy tradition is dying, rapidly going the way of abstractions such as morality and family values and chivalry. Good Ags incessantly moan in Mail Calls how they walked across campus yesterday afternoon and not a single person flashed them the toothy Aggie greeting. But as long as there are women here, this is one tra dition that’ll never die out. I’ve even been guilty of doing it for prurient inter ests. And I hardly have the massive, masculine stubble of Ol’ Sarge. It is hard to see how the howdy tradition sur vived for so long back in OT Army days when no women attended A&M. But the feminine presence on campus is pretty much here to stay, and it ensures the existence of the tradition. Hormones safeguard other tra ditions, too. For instance, one calls for football spectators in Kyle Field to kiss every time the team makes a touchdown. For Aggies who do this, there’s a personal benefit in pre serving the tradition. Maybe we’re all selfish in that way. But as long as guys on campus hope that saying “Howdy” to an attrac tive woman might give them a chance to get a sec ond glance, they’ll keep saying it. Columnist Shannon Halbrook Junior English major This got me to thinking about how safe Aggieland’s traditions really are — they’re ingrained in the chemicals of the human body. Rights infringed by 'don’t ask, don’t tell’ Regarding David Boldt’s Oct. 16 column, “Homosexual cadets should stay in closet”: Sadly enough, I wasn’t surprised one bit by Boldt’s column. Obvi ously, the view that homosexuals should adhere to the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy is a conservative view, and most likely well support ed by many students of this fine University. However, the argument that a homosexual should stay in the closet while in the Corps, or in the military for that matter, because it will “disrupt the harmony and ca maraderie of the Corps” is ab solutely ridiculous. That argument was the very same one used during the Civil War when President Lincoln allowed African-Americans into the mili tary. It was the same excuse used when the military decided to inte grate those black squadrons with white squadrons, and it was the very same objection men had when the military decided to allow women in the armed services. When will it end? When will people realize that every person who wishes to serve his country in the armed services should be allowed to do so, and whatever differences they have with their fellow men in arms should be ex pressed with pride and dignity. This would be more like the America we’ve all come to know and love, the one that accepts everyone for all their differences and is not afraid to display those differences to the world. That would prove a far superi or gesture than one that says, “If you’re different, don’t tell me and I won’t ask.” Imagine if you were not allowed to display your love of God in any form because it might upset other students. Even elementary school children are allowed to wear crosses to represent their faith. Likewise, all people, no mat ter where they work or what they do, should be allowed to display their own personalities, their dif ferences, and the things that make them who they are. Justin Vincent Class of’98 War on Drugs costs devastate citizens Regarding Chris Cox’s October 16 Mail Call, “Drug legalization endangers morality”: Supporting the legalization of drugs — i.e. mood altering chemicals— is often erroneously characterized by opponents as an immoral and unethical stance. But people with specific character flaws are prone to abuse drugs and no law has the ability to curb a person’s desire to abuse drugs. In most cases, current laws reinforce the desire even though they may temporar ily inhibit the ability. The cost of the War on Drugs to law-abiding citizens in lost wages, property, liberty and lives has been far more devastating to our society than that incurred by drug abusers. Because drugs are illegal, prices are exorbitant. Consequently, the incen tives to addict innocent adolescents and children far outweigh the pain of punishment. This is the price so ciety pays for attempting to thwart the wills of a few weak adults. Oddly, in the minds of many, repealing drug laws has moral and ethical implications. But their support of the systematic de struction of society, by ineffective and counterproductive legisla tion, is immune from moral and ethical judgment. I question the morality and ethics of any person who intentionally ignores the so cietal devastation wrought by the War on Drugs. Jeffery Peterson Class of ’93, ’96 The Battalion encourages letters to the editor. Letters must be 300 words or fewer and include the author's name, class, and phone number. The opinion editor reserves the right to edit letters for length, style, and accuracy. Letters may be submitted in person at 013 Reed McDonald with a valid student ID. Let ters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1111 Campus Mail: 1111 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: Batt@tamvml.tamu.edu For more details on letter policy, please call 845-3313 and direct your question to the opinion editor. r < * * t » t * * # 0 ? ? 1 1 ! i i i i i i « 5 1 »