Monday, September 18,2000 rity game United Way o station KVJM (103,1 I the Lincoln Recreation n College Station helda basketball game Satur- ernoon benefiting the Valley United Way. team the B-Bad Enter- it took on the Compound it the Lincoln Recreation part of the College Sta rks and Recreation De nt. B-Bad edged the jnd by a score of 43-32, Compound's takingar, L-0 lead. ety-nine percent of the Is from the event will sta\ os Valley," said Lance n, chairman of the Col ation United Way. KVJN ersonalities Squeak G i, and J-Que organized rity event. Monday, September 18,20f)0 V1ING Page 3A THE BATTALION Sn2£z§ button rUvSlutSUn Students must take destiny in their hands and take classes on their own terms 'on tinned from Page 1- j send email to lists or to ar; who might make yourema nailable to someone ek a u eels out and oBtoOdn ists.'hesaid. "There’srcL 1 I > control who getsyourena .are already in his mind, especially if you're sen:: ists and things like that" . right said there are way t spam. .end a note to the person This scenario is repeated for near ly every student on the A&M cam pus at least once a week. So. the questions are: Why would anyone skip class, and if they did. why you saying, 'Don’t sendrlwould they feel guilty? ■ /more' or. ultimately, it’s to delete email. It’s \sm keystroke. ver, Comyn said, replyri ssages can be a mistake, y messages contain ins:, ng the recipient to reply ic and type ‘remove’ intnesi " he said. “But this rar; i fact, it sends a message: ress is an active account5 li up to receiving more spa: /n said choosing the con; omewhere S on the Texas A&M cam pus, a classroom sits empty. Somewhere in Bryan, in the heart of the ghet to, a student lies sleeping. His head is filled with dreams of sug arplums and scantily clad women. Piles of trash and half-eaten pizza lie on the floor around him; roaches .wander in mid out. Everything is as it should be. However, there is a seed of discontent in this harmonious scene — the student is skipping class, and the few grains of guilt that will eventually grow into a mountain wheels of this great sewer system turning is severely chastised. Who at this campus has not had a finger waggled at him or been roundly in sulted for degrading the Student Handbook, the Torah of the Aggie synagogue? A&M and its piddling interests are not the center of the universe, and any student who real izes this fact probably skips class and all other University functions on a regular basis. The root cause of A&M faculty’s and staff’s self-congratulatory and student-deprecating attitude is that they have forgotten who they work for. Out-of-state students pay more than $10,000 a year to attend this University. In any other business, would the vendor thumb his nose at a customer spending that much money at his kiosk? What hot- dog vendor or garage would dare insult a customer spending so much money? Part of the capitalist ethic is that the customer has the ultimate power. The customer’s money is what keeps the businessman afloat, so the busi nessman inevitably does what the customer wants, except in academia. In the academic realm, it is the customer who serves the service provider. Students pay to work, like inden tured servants. It will not be long be fore students will not only do home work, but serve as butlers and The answer to the first question is 'obvious. A&M’s staff and faculty suffer from a collective delusion of grandeur, for which the student body continually suffers. Anyone who has ever had to drop a class or get rein stated into one has felt the sanctimo nious wrath of the self-prtK'laimed demigods who rule this veritable Mount Olympus, or Hades, depend ing on one’s point of view. Any minor mistake in the mountainous trash heap of service provider (ISPle , , , went spam from reacliill )rtx:et ure ^ ee P s ^ ie >ox. r Internet providers te es regarding spam email. :k with your provider to* le a complaint," Com\Tiv ild also consider using ao£ :lv enforces its anti-spam(t lat filters emails for spam.’ that they can't drink uk )f 21.” m people were arrestedi including contributing md driving under the ini nrty-five loud party o reported. ;ems to be working eeth said. “There seent iction in the number of els :d to earlier this semestei ire hearing out on the sim program is working." bathroom attendants for faculty members. What is next? Will the Corps of Cadets have to shine the bald heads of our administrators rather than those of hallowed campus landmarks? How long will it be be fore graduate students are picking cotton? Remember, this is the South; it could happen. Students inevitably feel guilty for skipping class because they feel they are wasting money by not going to class. This is true. One pays for a se mester of school, and this time is not made up. However, what sense does this make? In theory, it is an oxymoron to pay someone to have power over the buyer. Any stu dent should, in theory, ' ^ ave t ^ ie t0 £° b ac k •"^and retake classes he missed or complain about a Substandard grade. After all, the Student paid for this time. In any other field, the student would get it. If one makes an appointment with a barber and does not make it, one does not still have to pay for the hair- The only answer to such un- £- American and anti-capitalist business practices is a boycott (and if neces- sary, hostage-taking, raping, pillag- • ing, the usual). How can the student^ of a major university in such a great.’ country sit by and let The Man have ! his way with them like a wife beater; whose dinner is late. Americans are traditionally ac- '* tivists, and, in that great tradition, / students of this University should ! stand up and take arms. The only / way to get the administration's atten tion is through bloodshed. Only when the streets run ma- roon with the blood of the infidels;; who run the cult compound that is A&M will sanity return to the edu-' cational institutions of the nation. What this campus needs is a leader for the revolt, a Spartacus-like fig-? ure. Of course, he will need a Tony Curtis look-alike for a sidekick so ; that Bowen, after plastic surgery to look more like Olivier, can take him prisoner an question him on the merits of snails and oysters. Rise up, fellow students, and put your teachers to the sword. And whoever our Spartacus may be — his name is probably Garth or Jethro — but whatever, lead us to ■ everlasting glory (and oysters, or ■ perhaps snails). ; Jason Bennyhoff is a senior journalism major. OVER 2000 IMAGES! tf Minor] on sr the Weekend! BRADLEY ATCHISON/Thh BATf hief Jutson, Aggielife Editor xe, Opinion Editor Atchison, Photo Editor /ages, Photo Editor • Bales, Night News Editor ilquist, Copy Chief ckens, Radio Producer ay through Friday during the fall nmer session (except UniversityK Postage Paid at College Station? 1 1 i,Texas A&M University, llllTf# | nts at Texas A&M University in ®; ilism. News offices are in 014 Re® \ 5-2647; E-mail: Thebattalioni® onsorship or endorsement by W f call 845-2696. For classified a# Donald, and office hours are 8 aT 1 ich Texas A&M student to pick if * 254. Mail subscriptions are 1 summer or $10 a mor >611. Monday-Friday, September 18-22 Front Porch of the Texas A&M Bookstore In Memorial Student Center 10am-6pm Mon. & 9am-6pm Tues.-Thurs. & 9am-4pm Fri. Rosi© the Riveter