SPOfi| THE BATTAll Opinion :gional competing first. “Right now we are ii osition, and we determine, wn destiny,” Helme s e play good golf, we s fine.” Nearly one-third of ation’s top 20 teams v tendance, including niversity of Nevada-Las Vsj he Morris Wife itercollegiate is also exp® :veral of the NCAA’s topi dual golfers. The No. 2 UNLV icled largely by the otitstani ay of sophomore Ryan Mon ho is currently ranked e top 10 collegiate golfersiii mntry by Golfweek/Sa® mfomiance Index, eraging less than 70 strol;ei|i und this year. A quartet of 2002 PINGS mericans will also beci ting in Austin, esno State’s star seniotS atney, Oklahoma Stateje; unter Mahan, Georgia 1 nior Troy Mattesonand' nior Adam Rubinson. ur are ranked among the i by Golfweek/Saraginak; ie Moore. The two-day Morris Wife :ercollegiate tournament te lay on the men’s char :s at the Austin Country Cl BRIEF uestrian tourney eredith Houx won mpions on Saturday. ? nation's top riders, scotef ompetition in Canyon, n a tie for ninth place Ik urth place on Saturday is over weekend rd and junior Adam Motjit tctively in the three-mete ampionships this weeW one-meter event heldtP rd. The Battalion Page 9 • Monday, March 17, 2003 Eliminating voter apathy As campaign week begins, students should not neglect voting responsibilities I t has begun. Even reading this news paper, you have already been hit with it. Campaign week is here and stu dents are being mauled by smiling cam paigners passing out flyers, candy and platform cards. There are shirts and sandwich boards all over campus and Bryan-College Station touting candi dates' names and slogans, attempting to catch eyes and win votes. Let's all pay attention this year. In the student body elections last year, voter turnout was 9,479, down from the previous year's 10,307 votes, according to an April 1, 2002 article in The Battalion. This is a dismal number, considering Texas A&M enrollment constantly sits higher than 40,000. This year's official 12th class day tabulations, according to the Feb. 4 Battalion, set A&M's official enroll ment at 42,184. Considering this figure, less lhan 24 percent of the student body votes in the largest, most important campus election of the year. Sadly, the 6,116 votes cast in the fee referen dum that took place on Feb. 26 and 27 were a record high for that type of ballot. Astonishingly, only 7 percent of the total enrollment of this campus casting a vote is con sidered a record. This voter turnout shows a compelling lack of concern on behalf of the A&M student body in the political process as it pertains to this campus. In a student body election, most candi dates have Web sites, representatives to speak with, or the candidates will make time to speak with students. The voting process is relatively accessible and easy to take part in. Campus elections are important for the functioning of a university, but only if the students take them seriously. This year’s fee referendum turnout shows it the tide is turning and more, though not enough, students are paying attention to events around them. Students have an obligation to educate themselves and to take note of the candidates they feel will serve and provide leadership in the upcoming year. aJ The March 6 Battalion quoted A&M President Robert M. Gates as saying student fees will not be increased because he said he feels student inter est was represented by negative votes in the fee referendum. Someone is listening, and when students take part in the voting process, it does matter. A&M students should take a stand when voting in the student body presi dent, yell leader student senate and class officer elections. By seriously considering candidates, holding them to their platforms and question ing them on issues they will face in the next year, candi dates too are held to a high er standard. It should not be easy to win an election on a campus as large as A&M's, but if a candidate only needs about 8 per cent of the votes to achieve a majority, the task is not as daunt ing as it could be. More than 10,000 students must vote in this election for it to be truly representative of the stu dent body. The process is easy and takes only a few seconds online or at any number of voting booths across campus. Characteristically, A&M is not a political campus, but it is time for students to take a stand and pay attention to the politics around them. Honor and integrity are issues in this election, especially considering some events surrounding some of last year's top the University, one with a new president and vice president of student affairs and a changing of the guard in the Athletic Department. A&M needs student leaders who are up to the chal lenge and will represent students well. The turnout for the fees referendum was record breaking, but not admirable. Hopefully more than 7,500 students will cast votes in next week's student body elections. This is A&M and its students are its most valuable resource, but only if they pay attention and choose not to throw those campaign flyers away. Kelln Zimmer is a senior English major. Graphic by Ivan Flores. i. After I did it was illegal, ithout his or raternity, my my friends, ow that this nts of Texas rrested and irvice, pay a MAIL CALL Ashcroft's attack on pipe dealers ridiculous In response to George Deutsch's March 7 column: At a time when America was under high alert for terrorism, Attorney General John Ashcroft was on a marijuana jihad, squandering Department of Justice resources on a nationwide hunt for bongs. With marijuana decriminalization on the horizon in neigh boring Canada, the United States may soon be one the few Western countries that uses its criminal justice system to pun ish otherwise law-abiding citizens who prefer marijuana to martinis. Ashcroft's reefer madness is best exemplified by the federal government's paramilitary raids on voter-approved medical marijuana providers in California. The very same attorney general who claims illicit drug use funds terrorism is forcing cancer and AIDS patients into the hands of street dealers. Apparently, marijuana prohibition is more important than protecting the country from terrorism. Students who want to help end the intergenerational culture war otherwise known as the war on some drugs should con tact Students for Sensible Drug Policy at www.ssdp.org. Thank you for your consideration. ’ Robert Sharpe MPA Program Officer Drug Policy Alliance The Battalion encourages letters to the editor. Letters must be 200 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 accuracy. Letters may be submitted in person at 014 Reed McDonald with a valid student ID. Letters also may be mailed to: 014 Reed McDonald, MS 1111, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1111. Fax: (979) 845- 2647 Email: mailcall@thebatt.com. Attachments are not accepted. gize to you ‘X fcHDUOSEME 1 \M W * m OF 1 QUEEH FI Conspiring to throw napkins Food Services treated Sbisa diners like criminals W hile Food Services’ usual efforts to elimi nate the practice of throwing wadded paper napkins, or “Sbisa balls,” may meet with objection from some, its actions on Feb. 25 in response to a stu dent-planned Sbisa ball fight were deplorable. According to numerous posts on the Hobbes forum, hobbes.resnet.tamu.edu/forums, several students used the forum to schedule and announce a Sbisa ball fight involving approximately 800 Sbisa balls. Food Services caught wind of the planned Sbisa ball fight, however, so lit tle fun was to be had by Sbisa’s patrons and the planners of the fight that night. While the efforts of Food Services pre vented any large quantity of Sbisa balls from flying in the dining hall that Tuesday evening, those entering Sbisa likely noticed a few things out of the ordinary. Two uniformed University Police Department (UPD) officers were present, standing and watching over the patrons, along with several Food Services employees. Assistant Director of Food Services Cindy Zawieja said she asked the police officers to be present because she felt the situation in Sbisa might be out of control that evening. While Food Services should provide a safe dining experience, the idea that police officers are necessary to control the throwing of paper napkins is laugh able. UPD has far more important things to do than stopping tossed napkins. For example, according to the UPD police blotter, an attempted kidnapping at knifepoint took place in the Read Building the very night of the planned Sbisa ball fight. Some students involved in the plan ning of the Sbisa ball fight are being disciplined for their involvement. Senior computer science major Matt Heard, who admits he was involved in the plan ning, said the fight was meant to bring tradition and fun to the Sbisa dining experience. Heard said he was confronted by University officials before. entering Sbisa for dinner that Tuesday evening, and that he has received a letter from Student Conflict Resolution Services for his role in the planning. In addition to the absurdity of having cops present and dragging Heard through SCRS for conspiracy to throw napkins. Food Services acted inappropriately by treating all of its pay ing customers like criminals. a While Food Services should provide a safe dining experience, the idea that police officers are necessary to control the throwing of paper napkins is laughable. UPD has far more important things to do than stopping tossed napkins. Michael Frink, a sophomore mechani cal engineering major present that evening, said Food Services employees were confiscating napkins from cus tomers, including himself. Frink said the employees took napkins away from those who had taken what Food Services deemed was too many. “I had like five or six napkins,” Frink said. “I was told (by the employee) that napkins cost a lot. One employee was taking them off (customers’ trays) and throwing them in the trash can.” Food Services’ treating of its cus tomers like children and criminals that night was impolite and offensive. Zawieja justified Food Services’ actions by saying that she couldn’t understand why students would want to damage Sbisa property. But freshman meteorology major Jason Hernandez said the Sbisa employ ees scared him more than the prospect of being hit by flying Sbisa balls. Hernandez added that he was shocked by the actions and presence of the UPD officers. “If you were to go to a restaurant and employees there were to treat you in a similar manner, they would be out of business,” he said. Additionally, Frink said he saw one employee walk up to a student juggling Sbisa balls and stare at him. Others were also being visibly monitored. Clearly, students felt uncomfortable. Food Services, the organization that manages and operates on-campus dining facilities, can do as it wants in an attempt to eradicate traditions in Sbisa; but its treatment of customers as crimi nals on the evening of Feb. 25 is absolutely not acceptable. Students should not allow themselves to be treated as children and deviants by Food Services employees. They should patronize dining establishments that actually treat them as the customers they are, and be reluctant to purchase meal plans for next semester. Those residence halls that usually gather for dorm dinner at Sbisa should still go to dinner togeth er, but choose to eat at one of the dining establishments on Northgate. When Sbisa is empty for a few days in a row, or the number of meal plans purchased next semester falls below the expected number, perhaps Food Services will then take notice of patron discontentment. A&M President Robert M. Gates, should not let the actions of Food Services go unnoticed or without repri mand. Zawieja said “dining in Sbisa is like a regular restaurant and everyone should mind their manners.” This “everyone” should include Food Services’ many workers. Nicholas Neumann is a graduate computer science major. NICHOLAS NEUMANN