Battalion O PINION how me the money locum’s contract prioritizes athletics over academics Page 5 • Monday, July 5, 1999 ionship • Theju “cond i. leaders* Beverly MIRELES .C. Slocum, the winningest .football coach Texas A&M histo- hasn’t just made ireer out of win- lg — he has made feet ojffdition out of it. tends to lEveryone at A&M most cAw 8 h° w b oun d pounds* school is to tradi-_ 5 an offftoii and how willing it is to accept the bert Cliffcrifices that can come from worshiping Mition. No matter the consequences, Blition marches on. ■One good example — last week, r ALIER$'l° aiin cemented his position in one of looking ft l ess acknowledged, but generally ac- uard tradition of celebrating athletics f (j.,), <; ler academics. This is not something o the but it is definitely something well- i of thedn |ien ched in the minds of all Aggies, e hall tiftBy signing a new seven-year contract, solid ri t has upped his income considerably, periencftt only will he get $1 million over the side h let 12 months, his base salary has been shooter ft reased to $300,000 per year il XIlhis is in addition to the endorsements, Ihoe deal, a housing allowance, money 1m television appearances and cais. \jc lat’s right, cars. As in, more than one. Bender i Something to keep in mind the next the Rrft ie y ou see y our exceptionally hard- ’man sSl )rkin 8 organic chemistry professor pull the n- pp in his ’86 Nissan. iina He ft To clarify, Slocum will be making a 3 He iol 3.1 million salaried dollars, and co - Bting a whole lot of fringe benefits. All in all, a fairly sweet deal for a football coach. R.C. has made a lasting impression on A&M, no one doubts that. But his contract signing is just one more instance of how the University has turned from making knowledge its business to just plain mak ing business. Let there be no mistake about it — when it comes to money, A&M is at its most businesslike. In fact, most of the time A&M is so money-driven that the business of keeping the alumni happy becomes the most im portant task at hand, often at the cost of the students. This is the factor at the root of the ath letics over academics problem. Team sports are great for students and alumni alike. They are something we can all support. The feeling of fan unity can reach a fever pitch at sporting events. However, it seems those who graduate tend to forget that they attended A&M for intellectual reasons, not just for the foot ball. This leads to a backlash against current students. It may not matter to the alumni if stu dents are getting the short end of the stick when it comes to funding for liberal arts departments, but it certainly does matter if Texas wins the next clash on Kyle Field. Unfortunately, this is something stu dents have to deal with. Compared to the alumni, many stu dents feel they are only numbers in a computer. When the alumni come rushing back into town, the students are often treated like second-class citizens. This is a problem not only when the alumni are in town, but year-round. Because there is so much pressure on the administration to keep those alumni donations flowing, sports become more important than individual academic col leges. Sure, administrators could argue edu cation is the main focus of A&M, but the point seems moot when one compares the dollar amounts thrown into The Zone, Reed Arena or the new alumni building on George Bush Drive compared to fund ing for the journalism department, for ex ample. There are a total of 10 art classes at A&M, but money goes to building plush luxury boxes at Kyle Field for alumni. That does not seem stupid so much as it seems criminal. Having a winning football team with a winning coach is great. But how much longer will we throw money at athletics while academics and professors suffer? Educators, whether they teach high school or college, will never make mil lions. However, in a place that is supposed to be a stronghold of intellectual excellence, one would think that academics would get the respect they deserve and not be treated like a boring extension of A&M athletics. Beverly Mireles is a junior microbiology major. Mark McPherson/The Battalion ‘S in thee iamentalii i inconsis passing 1 backcofT tate tax t poor policy isponse to Jeff Beckers 129 column. he estate tax was origi- y established mainly to jentthe concentration /ealth within families se fortunes could forev mass, not, as Becker ,to redistribute wealth, he tax was designed o ent a tyranny of the mn y.On this note, Beckers irtion that the “tax in- s savings and work an urages consumption spending" is also incor mail call Again, the wealth of one family can’t continually go untaxed under our current system. Besides, a little bit of tax planning can all but elimi nate the estate tax, even for the “farmers and family- owned businesses.” Furthermore, the article did not even mention the unlimited marital deduction for the deceased. This is not an estate tax planning tool that only the “extremely wealthy can a f0 t'is designed to only tax the couple one hmeifone s property is bequeathed to his or her spouse. To blame the tax on th failure of farms in America is a blatant overstatement. Brian Oliver Class of '99 Where is NOW now? Women’s group values few issues over its core values The Battalion encourages letters to the editor. Letters must be 300 words or less and include the author’s name, class and phone number. The opinion editor reserves the right to edit letters for length, style, and ac curacy. Letters may be submitted in person at 013 Reed McDonald 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 77843-1111. Campus Mail: 1111 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: batt@tamvml.tamu.edu Mark PASSWATERS the arcs ■ and blit he is a lively. LangdM but even contrite iric fors consid' i. Goodf help oints, r last sei ity Coll his calf ege bas nited St jrtheless 11 be gi O n Thursday, June 24, Mary Moran, wife of U.S. Rep. James P. Moran Jr. (D-Va.) called police to the couple’s Alexandria, Virginia, home and stated that her husband had grabbed her and knocked her down during an ar gument. The police did not file charges against the congressman, but they did take pictures of the bruises visible on Mrs. Moran’s arms. Later that day, Mrs. Mpran filed for divorce, claiming her husband had en gaged in conduct “detrimental to [her] health and welfare. ” Sounds like something the National Organization for Women (NOW) should comment on, considering the emphasis they placed on domestic violence after the O.J. Simpson fiasco. Instead, Patricia Ireland, president of NOW, said “given that this is not some one who’s saying that she has been a battered spouse, it may be less relevant to Moran’s public office.’’ Really? So NOW no longer has any interest in protecting women who are threatened, verbally abused and pushed around by their husbands? Let us not be unfair to NOW. It only turns a blind eye to individual women whose husbands have voted with Presi dent Clinton on issues which NOW’s leadership deems important. If someone does that, then NOW will be more than happy to sell out any one individual. NOW’s track record during the Clin ton Administration does not help them, should they care to rebut this accusa tion. The warm embrace of this nation’s Chief Executive is a very clear example of how this group has discarded many of the more general rights of women in exchange for the furthering of a couple of issues. NOW is strongly pro-choice; Clinton has steadfastly opposed any attempt to limit abortions in this country, including vetoing the plan to ban “partial-birth” abortions, which many Democrats sup ported. Clinton has also been a supporter of extending the maternity leave a working woman may take with pay, another pol icy which NOW supports. Because of Clinton’s support of these issues—most notably the abortion issue—NOW has been 100 percent behind Clinton in both the 1992 and 1996 elections. Since Clinton has coddled NOW with his work on these issues, NOW has, in turn, been more than happy to ignore President Clinton’s abuse of far more fundamental female rights. The fact that NOW had very little to say about how Clinton humiliated his wife by allowing her to swing in the wind for eight months during the Moni ca Lewinsky affair is astounding. On top of that, he destroyed the self-respect of Lewinsky by denying their affair and al lowing his staff to go on record calling her “deluded” when what she was say ing was factual. On top of that, he used his White House secretary, Betty Currie as a pawn so his fingerprints would not be directly on the coverup of his affair with Lewin sky. Also, remember that Bill Clinton set tled a sexual harassment suit filed by Paula Corbin-Jones, has been accused of groping Kathleen Willey in the Oval Office and has been accused of rape by Juanita Broadderick. If even one of these accusations is true, NOW’s charter would direct it to act as if Clinton were the Antichrist. Instead, NOW has said nothing in support of these women, whose most fundamental rights may have been vio lated. Instead, NOW stands by its man—blatant philanderer and adulterer that he is. Not even Tammy Wynette would take it this far. * Apparently, NOW has decided that if someone, like Clinton or Moran, backs them on a few select issues that are po litically “hot,” then they are free to do what they please with women in other situations. NOW has abandoned their struggle to ensure that women are treat ed with equality, decency or even basic respect in order to ensure that a woman may have an abortion. There are no two ways about it— NOW has sold out women on the sim plest of issues. If it chooses to cuddle up with people who say one thing in public and then go on to prove they truly do not believe in what they say, then this group cannot retain any shred of credi bility. It is truly shameful that in its crusade to make sure a woman retains a right to choose, NOW has compromised all of its other values and the integrity of the organization. If this continues, women seeking to ensure they are treated with dignity or respect will have to look elsewhere, as NOW has allied itself with those who have proven to have no personal respect for women’s rights. Mark Passwaters is a graduate student in electrical engineering. . murderer wrongly gets plaudits instead of punishment >3 V tflj Marie Noe, a 70- After all, just because Noe new American hero. ly benefit from her ranting and the medical community will in- / u;*l_hAired woman killed eight innocent, defenseless Philadelphia District Attorney ravings of how “ungodlv” she is. stantlv know what motivates s the millen nium JIC m when m at Dt is were^ ittle to 1 nts a gette ct hlkins open-c ( rlando s exp r %idly7p- '-y^lroaches^ne jtinot help wonder g?w the erican [ty of life s become in twisted and distorted V ill tejst few decades. , pes fall 1 Horrific murders aid ^ age Banning both sexe. coV erage. to leaii« 0l ips dominate ne PX ( r emist 1 The proliferation of «i (ed ou Ps and cults has s (ir i SI n. ttenca to domestic lisrn an d Ploding mail, cann 5 an cr ophili a are more atest 0u §h to get even th & °Ptimists down. ^meri- But take heart, fo l0gacy cce- i n le §al system, wlt, ‘i it y, has .HingCjO justice and of us a m the C£T1 this chaos. to its I chart This month, Marie Noe, a 70- T fa white-haired woman year-old, w ^betes and who suffe h r as f graciously accepted arthritis, ha g ^ that will a plea barg nr i S on and allow keepheroutofPns ^ic ^ her to undergo psy wh y she ment to det children over f/fye^ perM beginning in 1949 - to Noe pleaded On June 2 , , g ree murder g uilty t0 Nation deaths of eight in the su ^ c f n previously be- 0 f her chddr from Sudden h eved l? h t a hSymlrome. infant Death aVoide d prison Amazingly, 8 to 20 years and was s^tenc^^ for her co _ probationm x hiatnsts operation wltl ] P y se ems lenient, P If this 8 ent en ^ t o remember the i m P° rta do esn’t have the is that Noe d er, at le a St if heart of a ^ ve her attorney, We ^Rudenstein, whom should David f m nlicitly- be trusted imp After all, just because Noe killed eight innocent, defenseless babies, ranging from 13 days to 14 months old, without so much as flinching doesn’t qualify her as a cold-blooded killer. Indeed, Noe’s words dripped with humanity when she said, “Elizabeth was a lot stronger than Richard was, and she was fighting when the pillow was over her face. I held the pillow over her face until she stopped moving.” Of sterner stuff, few people are made. Even Noe’s attorney was choked up over her coura geousness in agreeing to work with psychiatrists rather than go to prison. “I don’t know any other per son accused of this type of crime in the history of the world who has ever come forward to work with doctors the way this woman is willing to,” Ruden- stein said. Move over G.I. Joe, there’s a new American hero. Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham said she thought the sentence was appro priate, and Deputy District Attor ney Charles Gallagher said the sentence was not impor tant, but the fact that the medical and legal commu nities realize that mothers do suffocate their children is important. With the logic inherent in Gallagher’s statement, it’s easy to see how such a fair and just plea bargain originated. * Lest readers begin to think Noe’s psychiatric evaluations are not a fair trade-off for her avoid ing imprisonment, they should take heart in the fact that the en tertainment industries will great- “Move over, G.I. Joe, there's a new American hero." ly benefit from her ranting and ravings of how “ungodly” she is. A made-for-television movie and several'book deals for Noe and her doctors are sure to flood a market suffering from a lack of ^ |iill|BBB||11 ^^ such perverse topics. A “Just Say Noe” award could be giv en to honor those who have shown extreme acts of courage and heroism. In addi tion, the amount of deranged data that psychiatrists will inter pret and then attempt to apply to the greater deranged community will prove invaluable because everyone knows that generaliza tion is the key to any quest for knowledge. By interpreting what one ob viously sick individual espouses. the medical community will in stantly know what motivates every mentally ill person. By stepping up, Noe is bear ing the cross for the betterment of America. So in an age where atrocities happen at an hourly rate, it is comforting to know one Philadelphia courtroom has tak en America’s well-being to heart and transformed a violation of our most sacred security - the mother-child relationship - into a “get out of jail free” card, cre ating an American icon. Alleged railroad killer Rafael Resendez-Ramirez, who authori ties have linked to a possible 18 deaths, would do well to learn from this lesson in American jus tice and turn himself in so he can cash in and receive the lau rels of American heroism. Ryan Garcia is a senior journalism major.