, ro J ied to ie Battalion it, 64, In o PINION Page 7 • Monday, March 1, 1999 etting airsick merican Airlines pilot’s sickout caused more headaches, upset stomachs for passengers fn when ver the 3ower Lc.B ■ Presi- t the Te>:HLy dent’s 'iter. D.y weekend, (■ousands of tenfcr ''ll fi;}Ports ,/U t u ®ound the na- Mark , tit n because PASSWATERS roved toM e pilots of wp ^.Mnerioan Airlines decided that they 5( “ rfere too sick to fly. ate Unni aggies. a raiiw Studies of this highly contagious ■ness, now being referred to as The stupids,” shows that it last ap- ig^^noximately five days and does S a , management ot the airline). ‘ al o seems to be somewhat im- ■une to the judgements of Federal Courts. The people who got stuck in these airports suffered a lot more Itan those pilots with this mysteri- e q 0a . ,cais illness. The pilots and their of s M" nion got a great deal of media at- • e t p'. Ittntion during this event. In the in- ee in - w rests ec l ua * time, this space is h a\e : Ldonated to the people who were jranded so they can have their say: I “Dear American Airlines pilots, I We are thrilled that you are all wer your illnesses. We thought fcout you often while we were luck in exotic locales like Dallas- Fort Worth, Boston, and Nashville. You e, we could not do anything else. We are very proud of your show of nity with your brothers at Reno Air. It is |orrible that these poor pilots, at a small irline that American just bought, make a piddling $75,000 a year. You noble pilots, ho make between $120,000 and 200,000 a year, are so courageous in aking a stand. We will make donations to the “Feed Reno Air” fund with money from our aychecks, right after we get done doing >erfom3: things like scraping gum off of park ial-Pol',’ ' Satunlaj a town )lg ston md Klacl inst bill tig acow es’ fivi: fomia i long 'peatecj next - Long’s: •ed Lo# benches and teaching learning disabled high school students. It is usually very commendable to take up the cause of people that are less fortu nate. However, going on an illegal strike to support people who make twice the salary of the average American citizen does not cultivate goodwill, especially when the pay increases will be coming anyway. When the pilots of Reno Air have not even acted on their own behalf, the “sick-out” looks flat out dumb. There is no question that all pilots must be very intelligent people, especial ly when it comes to math and science. However, it appears that these pilots ne glected to take some courses in econom ics, government and psychology. Had you done so, they would have taught you that a business cannot simply double the salaries of hundreds of people at the snap of a finger; there is not space in a budget to do that. The management of American Airlines is implementing the pay increases in two stages because it cannot afford to do oth erwise. If the company goes broke, you do not get paid either. Pretending to be sick and not going to work when you have a binding contract MICHAEL WAGENER/The Battal in effect normally does not make people sympathize with your stance. Leaving people stranded for days on end also does not help. In fact, it usually increases their vocabulary, as they learn new words like Delta, Continental and United. In case you did not know, these are very naughty words. They can make you lose your job if enough people use them. Not only is the public upset with you, but the other employees of American are, too. When the pilots got “sick,” the bag gage handlers, ticket agents and flight at tendants could not work. That means that they did not get paid. Usually, lack of money makes people hostile. If anyone in the union had taken a government class, you also would have recognized that when a Federal Court orders someone to return to work, they do so. The fact that the heads of your union ignored this or der makes all of you, even the ones who did come to work, look arrogant. It gives the appearance that the pilots are out of touch — perhaps 35,000 feet out of touch — with reality. Reality paints the picture that you, the pilots of a major airline, do not care about the people who keep you in business. Your attempt to force things out of your employer by hold ing the customers for ransom was counterproductive. In fact, many people who have suf fered through this will probably never fly with American Airlines again. This may hurt the company, but in the end, the pain will trickle down to you, the employee. This stunt must have been pulled without thinking about the conse quences, much like a person who burns down their own house during a riot. It might be a good idea to choose your battles more wisely. Picking this fight was a bad move; the pilots end ed up looking like spoiled rich brats with no respect for the law-or the IWN people that you are supposed to serve. The damage has been done. The pub lic opinion of American Airlines pilots has dropped faster than Bill Clinton’s pants in a bordello. But, do not stay up at night worrying if you will ever see us again. You certainly will — as we board other airlines whose pilots honor their commitments. Sincerely Yours, The Stranded Passengers of American Airlines” Mark Passwaters is an electrical engineering graduate student. ovie based on Clinton trial rntWafo FXLmxti GM&rrvvrvmmi ould flop at theater box office lU letoo(l (U-WIRE) NEW YORK, N.Y. firstlulifr The situation in government urn to « urren tly resembles the plot of e r Are« mov i e thrown together to in the osf| arner last-minute box office lips 66 t« c ^ et sales. The following is a TournaiBypothetical film review in- nament'ijfnded to identify the absurdi- latchedfty the present political situa- j Kansas t on: [ts, wltfR Scandal, is a film by Dream- 79’74, atf Works SKG, set for release on July 22, 2002. The film is rated R tor language, graphic sexual descriptions and activity, and violently reckless behavior. I The first impression that af fronts a viewer of Scandal is the tremendous decline that the studio has undergone since sweeping the Academy Awards ties at al fo! H ree years ago with Saving e s un^wJVate Ryan. -—"'T* The contrast could not be 5hOP A P TeJ ore Profound. Whereas Ryan Misrepresented all that is best in )leforTA®rierica, Scandal makes every ^Orders)! effort to exploit the flagrant /Wrongs in the current political ” system. §| It is the first major release since former President Bill Clin- |f°n joined DreamWorks’ board °f directors after a lucrative of- 1^ % from his monetary and poral allies within the studio. I The move, of course, was ■ Prompted less by a devout in- gll* ter est in the art of film than by financial necessity that arose after his bitter separation ,ere. from Sen. Hillary Rodham, D- |y. joonds i- The film, directed by Steven ||ielberg, tells a sordid and ■psted story of a governmen- 1} scandal that shakes Wash- 3k, go to f < P^ton to its very foundations. far too complex for any !7 pur°cti oi ® reasonable script, the basic na id. C 0 * 1, |r°t can be summed up as Sex, cepte Lies and Audiotape. ■ The film opens with a Bung White House intern, tjayed by Michelle Williams of ■“canceled “Dawson’s Creek” Sa ga, confessing to kinky sexu- pescapades with the President Bfhe United States (John Tra- BRa. in his second presiden tial role) to a back-stabbing Pentagon bureaucrat (Barbara Streisand). Before long, a special prose cutor, played with particular levity by Dan Ackroyd, be comes involved and indicts the president on numerous illegali ties, leading to an impeach ment in the House of Repre sentatives. The rest of the film is con sumed with banter during a Senate trial, until a quasi-dra- matic climax arrives with each member standing to announce his vote. The film ends with an inves tigation into the investigator, and the only survivor is the President who began the drama. He vows revenge on his “op pressors,” but the only people who are truly oppressed are the viewers of this sad excuse for summer entertainment. By the time the credits roll, one is left debating whether to try to understand this sordid mess or just relegate it to the fictitiously impossible. DreamWorks is not known for such exploitative, merely money-seeking summer pro jects, but Scandal certainly fits the bill. A major suspension of dis belief is required throughout the film as a House Speaker and Speaker-to-be resign, and the public continues unswerv ingly to support the President in a one-dimensional farce. The movie desperately lacks a central theme. Focus remains on all of the extraneous events, including flagrant plagiarism from Wag the Dog in a bomb ing scene that pretends to pass for legitimate military activity on the eve of the impeachment vote. The heavy borrowing from outside sources is only further evidence of the impossibility that such a twisted and com plicated drama could have been a natural development of directorial genius. Overall, the film seems to be the mere product of some tabloidish fan tasy that could hardly pass for a column in a college newspa per and never expands from its sex-crazed base. Beyond this lack of credibili ty, however, one may take is sue with its sensational nature. The chief executive is seen as an adolescent who partakes behavior that cannot even be printed in this review. One soon finds that the vast majority of Congressmen in the film are indeed no better, albeit without having broken any laws in the process. It would not at all be sur prising if Jerry Springer had di rected the film instead of Spiel berg. Certainly the sexual free-for-all on which the film thrives is much more to Springer’s tastes. While merely a forgettable summer flick. Scandal demon strates how easily the founda tions upon which America is built can be undermined with almost every branch of govern ment being scarred by the un folding events. One sees a cheapening of politics into a boyish play ground; the plot is not cen tered on the actual guilt of the President, but on the ruckus that emerges. It reads more like a “How Not to Act in Poli tics” manual than a plausible motion picture. In all. Scandal provides mindless entertainment for the type of people who thrive on borderline news stories to oc cupy the drab political scene that has settled in since the election of President Gore. The single redeeming quali ty one may strain to find in Scandal is the gratifying appre ciation that the plot ends with the reel of film, and that such a crisis is not one through which our nation actually has to suf fer. This film receives no stars. Brian Graebe is a columnist for the New York University’s Washington Square News. the Olympic torch Rim festival photo in Battalion tasteless The picture promoting the Texas Film Festival is particularly mali cious and obnoxious. All students and faculty of Texas A&M should feel insulted and offended by such trash. It is obvious that there is a lack decency in today’s society and The Battalion is an integral part of such deviancy. A picture of a young woman smoking a cigarette while sitting on the toilet (with her legs wide open) is vulgar enough. Then, she even has her middle finger extend ed to the camera! Lewd and lascivious gestures are not funny or witty. They are sim ply a sad attempt to attract atten tion. Well, they have caught our at tention and our congregation will physically protest the illicit cover age of the liberal Battalion and the MAIL CALL liberal film festival. God’s judge ment will surely be upon you. The Battalion is a stench in the nostrils of God. Dave McManus Pastor, Faith Almighty Mission Crusade Outreach Ministries Accompanied by 3 signatures The full page picture of the young lady advertising the Texas Film Festival in the Feb. 24 issue of The Battalion has gone a long way to totally denigrate what a ma jor university newspaper should represent, especially this honored University publication. One might expect such a photo in some red neck beer joint, but certainly not in this newspaper. What is the point of showing a young lady sitting on a commode, smoking a cigarette and displaying a sophomoric and vulgar sign with her finger? There are more educat ed ways for getting across the idea of a “flick.” We would not have expected this crudeness even the t.u. Daily Texan. Larry D. Claborn Class of ’59 Accompanied by 4 signatures The Battalion encourages letters to the edi tor. Letters must be 300 words or less and in clude 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 Mc Donald with a valid student ID. Letters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1113. Campus Mail: 3.11.1 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: batt@tamvml.tamu.edu