The Austin Chronicle

https://www.austinchronicle.com/columns/2002-02-01/84500/

Postmarks

February 1, 2002, Columns


Goetz Speaks for Villas

Editor:

Last week I sent a letter to the Chronicle detailing why I think that the Villas at Guadalupe development is good for the Austin community ["Postmarks: Pro: Villas at Guadalupe," Jan. 25]. Since NUNA has retained legal counsel to sue and/or harass anyone who disagrees with them (I believe they view this as an example of building community), let me be very clear in saying that it is very likely that it was not members of NUNA who kept me up most of Thursday night by calling me on the telephone and shrieking epithets such as "Fuck You!" before slamming the phone down, despite the fact that only members of NUNA would have been offended by my letter. Let me also mention that I'm confused by the assertion made by almost every anti-Villas letter writer that "this project will bring 700 cars into the neighborhood and only provides 395 parking spaces" when the project allows for a maximum of 500 residents. In fact, the project only includes around 350 bedrooms. Are Mr. Roemisch and his friends aware that over 90% of students entering UT today have never shared a bedroom with anyone in their entire life, making it statistically apparent that this project is actually supplying too many parking spaces (as do most multi-family housing projects in Austin)? Looking forward to the next round of supportive phone calls from fans of my letters; but do stay on the line and chat a while this time.

Patrick Goetz


Change Is Good for KUT

To the Editor,

So KUT is making some programming changes, and once again the Chronicle throws up all manner of red warning signs about how this will end KUT as we know it ["KUT and Paste," Jan. 25]. Perhaps the Chronicle should put out a bumper sticker something like "They can change KUT when they pry it from my cold dead hands." Did it ever occur to you that there are some of us listeners who just might think the changes are a positive move? I for one support the recently announced changes. I've also heard less dramatic but noticeable improvement in the station during the past year, and I look forward to the upcoming addition of local news in the schedule.

A recent letter to the editor mirrors the Chronicle's mindset. The writer complained about the addition of NPR news on Eklektikos ["Postmarks: Becoming a Bit Less Eclectic," Jan. 18]. Such a hardship -- three minutes of news and 57 minutes of music. Pity the poor listener. To me such an attitude speaks volumes about the imbalance in KUT's programming that has existed for decades. It's been way overloaded toward local music programming and away from news and public affairs. I too would cry foul if local programming were tossed aside, but count your blessings. In many major markets in the country, NPR-affiliated stations are programming nothing but news and information -- no music whatsoever. Let's hope that doesn't happen here, but in the meantime I look forward to a more equitable balance between the two.

Kenneth Pfluger


Change Is Not Good for KUT

Dear Chron:

So station manager (and relative newcomer) Stewart Vanderwilt says re: drastic KUT programming changes, "... initially it seems like a lot, but ultimately people will adjust" ["KUT and Paste," Jan. 25]. I must have missed the part where he describes why KUT supporters need to adjust in the first place. Was there a membership survey that indicated the majority of members wanted major changes? A huge dropoff in membership and revenues? Or do we have the desires of one person being foisted on the loyal listeners of one of the most successful public supported radio stations in history?

Nancy Weaver

Driftwood Listener


Stay Local, KUT

Dear Austin Chronicle,

I would like to congratulate KUT 90.5 FM on their wild commercial success. It is greatly deserved. But, I am quite saddened to hear that KUT has taken on more NPR programming ["KUT and Paste," Jan. 25.] This means that several excellent local programs will cease to be. These include: Access (a local affairs listener call-in program), SoundSight (a news program for the blind and vision-impaired that can be enjoyed by everyone), and fanfreakintastic music programs steered by Tom Pittman, Jeff Johnston, and others involved with our own local and (somehow) still vibrant music scene.

This means that KUT is ceasing to be truly ours. How long before other longtime shows become extinct? Twine Timeí to be replaced by Driviní and Cryiní Timeí with blues updates and body counts from all over the globe and well into the evening. The Phil Music Programí will become the Unreal Issues Program. Left of the Dial is now to be The Right Imperative. Eklektikos will become the morning drive and chat with TeriGrossitos. Folkways [will become] Folked-up Daze. KUT will become analogous to most of the rest of Austin's Smart Growth. Not to mention the souped-up fundraising spectaculars that will be needed to keep KUT abloat.

While NPR is better than most, they are fast becoming the CNN of radio, concerned primarily with the all-powerful head-spinning, crotch-grabbing, headline blitz style of news reporting. That is to say nationalist sensationalism. It will truly outdo itself once it is figured that they can run the continuous banner spewage over the radio in a continuous collage of national sensory overload.

And in order to protect my family and myself, I will let my fingers walk a few steps down the dial to the more anonymous KMFA located at 89.5. In a strange way this is reminiscent of KGSR's rise to commercial success that made me flee to KUT some nine years ago. What a revelatory ear-gay that has been. Nevermore? And with the dial walk will go my radio dollar credits. "Daddy, how do you spell Stravinsky?"

Clayton Kusaj


Audition Notices Needed

To whom it may concern at The Austin Chronicle:

I am an actor in this town who needs her auditions notices! First of all it is elitist as hell to only put them on the Web page [austinchronicle.com] in the first place, assuming that everyone in Austin has access to the Internet when lots of people (especially starving artists) can't afford Internet access. But to not even have them on the Web page when you say they will be there is wrong. This is information that many people need. We actors can get very cranky if we are out of work too long. Please fix this. If you don't have room for the auditions in the actual paper Chronicle (which you should, there is no reason not to put them in), you need to at least make sure your Web site is up to date. Thank you.

Sincerely,

The starving artist Leigh Anderson Fisher


Arts Listings Are Vital

Editor:

I have been told that the Chronicle will be "cutting back" on its "Out of Town" arts listings. Many arts organizations in the surrounding area depend on the Chronicle to reach a very important audience of committed arts supporters, just as I and many others depend on the Chronicle to find listings for groups that are too small or have too small of a budget to pay for extensive advertising. Your publication and its listings are absolutely vital to the survival of many of these organizations. Please consider continuing to run listings for as many local and surrounding area organizations as possible.

Tim Bjerke


Things to Do: Don't Die

Dear Austin Chronicle,

I just found your positive review of my book, Narcocorrido: A Journey Into the Music of Drugs, Guns, and Guerrillas ["Phases and Stages," Jan. 11], and I wanted to write and thank you, and also clear up one question. Your reviewer, after saying that she enjoyed my interviews with the songwriters who have produced the Mexican drug ballad boom, suggests that there is, however, something lacking: "Why not interview drug dealers -- some who reportedly commissioned corridos to document their deeds," she asks. I consider this a very fair question, and can only respond that I had two agendas when I went into the hills of Sinaloa to investigate the narcocorrido phenomenon. One was to learn as much as possible about the subject, and for this purpose I would have loved to get the opinions of some traffickers. Unfortunately, my other agenda was to come home alive. I was forced regretfully to conclude that these agendas might be mutually exclusive. ... However, if your reviewer would care to undertake this part of the investigation, I would gladly do everything in my power to help.

All the best,

Elijah Wald

Cambridge, Mass.


In Support of the Villas

Dear Editor:

I have read with interest recent letters you have published concerning the Villas at Guadalupe project next to the University of Texas campus. I agree with your correspondent Patrick Goetz that the project is a win-win proposal.

Instead of having UT students clogging I-35 from Riverside to UT or racing through NUNA down Guadalupe going from North Lamar apartments to the UT campus, this project will encourage students to live next to the UT campus and remove their car traffic from the commuter congestion of Austin. NUNA should be grateful for this project because the streets will be safer for everyone in Austin.

Yours truly,

Thomas W. Smith


A Matter of Safety

Editor:

I'm writing in opposition to Stratus developers getting their zoning changed from RR to a PUD. The safety issues for 1826 are not being taken seriously enough to get them solved. What Stratus wants will put over 7,000 new trips a day onto 1826! We have enough problems now with getting out of our subdivision. As we exit we have a large dip to our right and we hope no cars are in it as we turn onto 1826. Then to our left we have a large curve with very poor visibility. We don't want to see 1826 become a worse death trap than La Crosse ever could have been. At least La Crosse had four divided lanes with shoulders. FM1826 has none of that. It is only a two-lane road without shoulders, lights, or turn lanes. Four people had to die at La Crosse before CAMPO finally put a light in. How many deaths will it take to get the problems of 1826 taken care of?

Jane Gilley


Give Bush Vendetta a Rest

Editor:

As usual, Mr. Hightower is so far out in left field you have to wonder what planet he is on! Mr. Hightower rightly points out that many Republican politicos have received generous "donations" from Enron ["The Hightower Lowdown," Jan. 25]. What he seems to be almost blind to is that most reports show that Enron was an equal opportunity donor. When Democrats held the upper hand, they also participated in the feast. Like many liberals, Mr. Hightower can't wait for the facts, he needs to jump into a still unclear situation and show us how sharp he is. It is obvious something unethical has happened, maybe waiting for the investigations to proceed before you assign blame or guilt would be more productive? The "Lowdown" is an example of an ex-politician without personal restraint to write about any idea that happens to pop into his head and pass his opinion as fact. Just a suggestion, give the Bush vendetta a rest, you are close to exceeding Rush Limbaugh's fixation with Clinton when he was in office!

Bill Holt


West Campus Woes

Editor:

Several years ago I had a talk with a young man who was president of a well-known fraternity and an officer on Interfraternity Council. He told me about true living conditions in West Campus.

He called West Campus a high-priced slum where overcrowding is a way of life. "His fraternity house," he said, "serves as a sanctuary of quietness, and a place to study for the members who live in West Campus. The level of frustration was so high in the area that tense feelings erupted one night into an all-out war between two fraternities. The members were lined up in battle formation as they fought each other with boards and bricks, a scene he witnessed. "No wonder students in turn erupt into noisy carnival parties on the weekend," he said.

One night a year ago I talked to a policeman whose beat was West Campus. He said it was a place of disorder where each street gets worse each year, and it is creeping northward.

What do I know of West Campus? I live in Heritage Neighborhood which borders it. I think of West Campus as a forest fire that threatens our lands. I've spent 33 years as a neighborhood citizen working to maintain vitality in our area. This activism pays off. What once used to be a near slum of mattresses thrown in yards, cars parked on lawns, and several wild 3am parties every week has metamorphosed into a quiet and thriving place of houses being renovated, families being raised, and nights quiet enough to actually sleep.

The City Council will be deciding soon on Villas of Guadalupe, a high-density student housing development. Does this mean increased disintegration for central Austin? I think it does.

Tish Williams


Make Your Voice Heard

Editor:

I continue to be amused at the vitriol Mr. Black has for those of us who didn't vote as he saw fit for us in the last presidential election ["Page Two," Jan 25]. I can only imagine the contempt he must have for countries that actually offer multiple parties to address multiple points of view. Democracy, it seems to me, has exactly to do with the chaos of expressing one's own point of view (as well as the implicit obligation to vote for the same); dictatorships, on the other hand, offer the more tranquil route of limited, sanctioned options. For those who do enjoy voting outside the lines and speaking out, I encourage you to look into the activist phone service of Working Assets (workingassets.com or 800/362-7127). Not only does 1% of the annual charges get donated to nonprofits of the members' choice, way more fun, is the "Make Your Voice Heard Plan." Each month two issues are presented with phone numbers and contact persons. One free, five-minute phone call per day, per issue, is encouraged and there is little more satisfying these days than calling the White House comment line and letting Bush know how I want the government run. After all, if he doesn't know what I want, how can he possibly do it? Seriously, as per Michael Ventura's thoughtful essay ["Letters @ 3AM"] in the same issue, making our voices heard does make a difference, and WA is a nifty way to do this.

Nancy Weaver


The Great 'MHz Myth'

Dear Editor,

This is in reference to Michael Connor's article about the new iMac ["The New iMac: Futurism Is So Passé," Jan. 25] and my plea that you find competent writers when explaining technical issues. While I appreciate the amount of research invested in finding out about the Canadian Time magazine's info leak, Michael forgot to explore the most important topic. He says, "True, it's not the fastest machine on the block ... but who really needs a gigahertz processor anyway?" In that statement he made one of the most notorious and ignorant statements one can make about the speed of a computer (Dijkstra would have a field day). I would like to refer Mr. Connor to Apple's Web site under the "MHz myth" section at www.apple.com/g4/myth/. On that Web site he will find that the G4 800 MHz processor is actually "faster than" a Pentium 1.7 GHz for certain benchmarks like graphics and video rendering (which is what the Apple is designed for). Please enroll Michael in a basic computer architecture course before he uses any more technical terms with which he is not familiar. "Faster than" when referring to computers is actually a very measured and accurate term with some well established processes for comparison. None of which have anything to do with the clock speed of the processor.

Thank you,

Stephen Austin

[Michael Connor replies: Although clock speed is not the only factor affecting a computer’s speed, it is an important one. The G4 compensates for its slow clock speed through its unique architecture, but the fact remains that the consumer-targeted iMac is not the fastest desktop machine on the block. It’s not even the fastest desktop machine from Apple – that honor goes to the just-released, dual-processor 1 GHz PowerMac.]


Ventura's Folly

Dear Chron,

I am glad to see Michael Ventura is so concerned about our Constitutional rights ["Letters@3AM," Dec. 28]; though I disagree with him that said rights extend either to non-citizens or, especially, to possible (now realized) captives in war. Yet I am disappointed that, like a good party line "liberal," he draws the line at the Second Amendment, by mocking Attorney General John Ashcroft's refusal to (illegally, under the Brady Bill) use Justice Department records to determine whether detainees had ever purchased a gun. These records are required to be destroyed as soon as background checks of a purchaser of a firearm have determined whether or not he has a criminal record. This prevents the federal government from compiling a nationwide register of gun owners, an intrusion of privacy that I am surprised Mr. Ventura isn't happier to see the AG refuses to commit. Buying a gun doesn't make someone a terrorist or a criminal. The fact that any of the detainees might have done so would be quite irrelevant to the investigation ongoing. That self-proclaimed defenders of our rights fail to see that the right to own a firearm, for hunting or self-defense purposes, without being cataloged as some kind of danger to society, relegates their supposed concern to rather insignificant proportions, in my reckoning.

Sincerely,

J.P. Lund


Get Out and Vote

Editor:

I must protest your editorial ["Page Two"] on Jan. 25, Mr. Black. While most of it was fine, the first paragraph slammed Nader voters once again. I'm pretty sick of hearing how we "lost the election" and "got Bush elected." No, we didn't. We voted for an alternative to corporate rule. If you want to know the real culprits for the appointment of Bush, ask the millions of apathetic jackasses who didn't even bother to vote! To those people, I would like to send a hearty "Fuck You!" What was the percentage of turnout in 2000? Somewhere near 50%, I believe. (And presidential elections always have a "higher" turnout.) Had everyone exercised their right to vote, Bush never would have won ... rather, there would have been no questionable circumstances deciding the outcome. I realize that your article was not really about the election, but I am tired of hearing that bullshit line blaming those of us who want a real election and vote for a real alternative for our troubles. How many of you flag-waving asskissers actually got out and voted last November? For those who did vote, you have every right to wave the flag. If you didn't vote and don't make a habit of it, put away your American flag crap because you obviously don't believe in your country enough to participate in its democracy. One cannot throw money at every problem and expect it to go away. Yes, we have nothing but assholes running for office. If we are to believe our media sources, it's often a choice between the lesser of two evils. (Unfortunately, this sometimes includes your publication, Mr. Black.) It doesn't have to be! Write in candidates. Vote for anyone except the two major parties. Vote for Leslie Cochran. If you want to send a message of discontent to the powers that be, don't do nothing -- that only gives them your tacit agreement. If 60% or 70% of registered voters turn out and vote for everyone from Jennifer Gale to "my dick" for office, it may not get the corporate bloodsuckers off of our necks, but it will let them know we are tired of their crap. Thank you.

Vote or swallow!

O.M. Wrinkleman


Stop Racial Profiling

Dear Editor:

I have met personally with Officer Timothy Enlow ["Postmarks: Profiling? Not Quite." Jan. 18] on the matter of his firing and have gone out of my way to give him the benefit of the doubt. But there is simply no way to characterize his actions as anything other that racial profiling, which is a police tactic, not an allegation of personal racism.

Scott Henson's analysis ["Postmarks: Racial Profiling Runs Rampant," Jan. 11] was precisely right, as usual. His keen instinct and courage to speak out are precisely why he is in fact director of the ACLU of Texas Police Accountability Project, and absolutely authorized to speak on behalf of this organization. I stand by his comments.

But I'm not the only one. According to a recent ACLU survey of Texas police and sheriffs' departments' racial profiling policies, more than 100 identified "detaining the driver of a vehicle based on the determination that a person of that race, ethnicity, or national origin is unlikely to own or possess that specific make or model of vehicle" as an example of police behaviors that constitute racial profiling. That's what Enlow did.

Moreover, Officer Enlow's complaints of Henson's alleged errors are dramatically overblown. Henson's misgivings have been voiced by many others before. In July 2000, the 299th Judicial District Grand Jury issued an unprecedented report voicing "concerns about entrapment issues as well as the use of questionable probable cause circumstances such as 'appearing nervous or having a taillight not working.'" That these comments presaged Enlow's actions by nine months tells you his behavior is part of an ongoing problem at APD.

We salute Chief Knee for setting a fine example to other agencies around the state. If the consequence of racial profiling is termination, we are on our way to the promised land envisioned by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in which we are all judged not by the color of our skin.

Will Harrell

Executive Director

ACLU of Texas


Remove Barricades

Editor:

Would somebody please take down the barricades on Ninth Street under the federal building?! They are maddeningly in the way. I will come down there personally with my shovel to scoop up the pieces if anyone tries to do anything even remotely terroristic. As a side thought, why the hell would one design a building that runs over the road anyway? Unless of course, the toilets drain directly into all the passing SUVs. Now, that would have been foresight!

Patrealistic,

John Nordstrom


Villas Make Sense

Editor:

The location for the proposed Villas on Guadalupe has apartment buildings nearby on three sides with Hemphill Park on the fourth side. The Park provides a buffer for the neighborhoods to the north. It seems to be an ideal location for an apartment building of sound construction and architectural sensitivity. But the neighbors don't want it.

Instead, we encourage timid, shortsighted developers to build cookie-cutter, sprawl apartments outside of town, lots and lots of them. Just look at MoPac North and South and Parmer West. But what happens when one of them breaks away from the pack and wants to build in our central city near services and transportation? Big problem! Once again, we punish the progressive.

Dick Kallerman


Hardy-Garcia: A Real Advocate

To The Editors:

Dianne Hardy-Garcia's departure from her post as executive director of the Lesbian & Gay Rights Lobby (LGRL) of Texas is a great loss, and a time to reflect on her estimable career and history of contribution to the betterment of Texas.

Dianne started with LGRL back in 1993, when this gay man moved from NY to Austin. I started "lobbying" because of Dianne. She spoke at an Austin/PFLAG meeting about the need for a hate-crimes bill, and I was moved to do something -- that is the essence of her, and LGRL's effect -- Dianne is a coalition-builder and a human catalyst.

At Dianne's urging, this beginner activist lobbied the legislature in '95, '97, '99, and 2001 -- testifying before House or Senate committees in every session along with her and hundreds of others, hoping that one day laws would protect all citizens from discrimination, and from being singled out for attack on the basis of minority status or sexual orientation. Over these many years, the multi-cultural, multi-racial alliance for a hate crimes bill never faltered -- aligned in pursuit of a goal, nurtured by people like Dianne, who insisted that none of us is as strong as all of us.

Last session, Texas saw the Hate Crimes Act signed into law, with Dianne leading the fight and the celebration. She has made Austin, all of Texas and the world a better place through her tireless efforts. I am so sorry to see this advocate move on, but so grateful for her time, effort, energy, and dedication to human rights.

This ex-New Yorker is still in Austin, happier than ever to have had the pleasure of working alongside this veteran of the legislative wars, and champion of the human race.

Vaya con Dios and thank you Dianne, from my heart and soul.

Steve Basile


Props for G-town City Council

Editor:

I would like to offer some brief shelter from the stormy political front thundering through Georgetown. I want to heartily commend our City Council's support of the San Gabriel Parkland Water Quality Pond. The pond's fortuitous proximity to the Rivery Development will benefit the area's aesthetics and ecology immensely, as well as complement our community through its educational opportunities as a living laboratory. I am also grateful for the vision and engineering behind this project within city departments, the Urban Design Group, and others of which I am not aware. There are realistic and inspiring options for fostering creative partnerships with nature, co-existing in responsible, practical, and powerful ways. Reasonable expectations can become attainable standards. How very refreshing and promising it is to see a city government giving a gift of beauty to the land: preparations instead of reparations. I deeply appreciate Georgetown City Council's judicious practice of reputable stewardship of our natural resources. I would also like to acknowledge and thank Council Member Sam Pfiester for inviting me to walk the Rivery site with Wal-Mart's Head Engineer, nationally renowned forestry consultant Steve Clark, City Planning Director Amelia Sondgeroth, and Interim City Manager Tom Yantis. The superlative professionalism, creative sensibilities, and dedication of Wal-Mart's design team does my skeptical heart a lot of good. To the best of their abilities, Wal-Mart's folks are genuinely interested in maintaining the physiological integrity of the site, in spite of the imposing constraints of the legendary footprint. They encouraged my passionate advocacy for the trees, maintaining a flexible, receptive attitude rather than an immovable "We Won't" stance. I was also heartened by their openness to my sincere plea to pardon a particularly deserving tree by considering the relocation of certain parking spaces. So, thank you very much Council Member Pfiester for supporting citizen involvement and providing a lesson to myself and to others who may think their voices will disappear in the haystack: My words may seem like a pebble dropped in still waters, but the ripples do reverberate and are capable of manifesting positive changes in the many unique landscapes of our Georgetown.

Anne Marie Dorsa


Preserving Neighborhoods

Dear Sir/Madam:

RE: The City Council's Approval of the Villas on Guadalupe

I recently learned of the City Council's approval of the Villas on Guadalupe. After reviewing the "Postmarks" in your January 25 edition, I cannot help but feel sympathy for the members of the North University Neighborhood Association (NUNA). I grew up in Aldridge Place West 33rd Street, and it saddens me to see this charming Austin neighborhood defiled by the City Council's approval of this project in its present form.

I am also compelled to point out that this Council and its predecessor have been historically unfriendly and unresponsive to the wishes of neighborhoods throughout Austin. This is especially true when the Council has been forced to make a choice between the sanctity of a neighborhood and big bucks thrown at them from a developer.

For example, several years ago the City Council (which is largely the same council seated today) unanimously approved the Dell Jewish Community Center project located on Hart Lane and bounded by Greystone Boulevard, Chimney Corners, and Far West Boulevard. The Council's approval came in spite of protests by no less than five of the surrounding neighborhood associations. As a result, our neighborhood was subjected to months and months of pounding, jackhammering, and choking white clouds of limestone dust that covered our cars and lawns.

The Community Center is completed now, but the problems it has caused still linger. (It should be noted, this "community" center is only for those in the "community" who can afford its rather exorbitant membership fees). For example, during moderate to heavy rain showers, our family property receives rain runoff from the Community Center property, that renders the driveway to our family home unusable. In a recent heavy storm, water actually came into our home despite my father's efforts to prevent it. This affront I lay squarely at the feet of the City Council.

Then, of course there is the well-chronicled battle between the Hyde Park Neighborhoods and the Hyde Park Baptist Church, as well as the annexation fiasco during the early days of Kirk Watson's tenure.

While I sympathize with the NUNA, and I applaud their resolve to support only candidates who "truly demonstrate they represent the people of this community," the time to elect such candidates was many years ago, when other Austin neighborhoods were being ripped asunder. I can only hope that the neighborhoods who have endured the injustices of this Council will work together in the future to see to it that the character and dignity of our old Austin neighborhoods is preserved for future generations.

Very truly yours,

James F. Booher


Better Than Riverside

Greetings Chronicleers

Re: Villas on Guadalupe proposed housing: I'm in favor. My opinion is: It is much better to put dense student housing within walking distance to campus than miles away [like south, on Riverside Drive]. The proposed location is an appropriate one for dense housing. Enable more students to walk to class -- a good idea.

Pat Chipman


Unhappy Cable Customer

Editor:

I have been a resident of Austin for 23 years, and during this time I have seen the TV cable company laying cables and setting up their equipment here and like most others felt very elated that we would be receiving TV signals without the need of antennas. I was assured that as it was allowed by the city they would be able to control pricing by the company using our property.

My protest is against Time Warner and their continued escalation of the price for cable service in Austin without considering the welfare of the customers and the lack of ability of our governing body to have any input into their rating process. I can only speak of my service plan and situation in this instance. We only had the basic and standard packages and they have been elevated 23.07% in the last year. For Time Warner's information, my Social Security paycheck increased 2.6% in the last year.

I am not interested in the propaganda about additional choices and selections as I didn't ask for these, nor do I have any choice of programs you put on the packages. I feel that Time Warner is greedy and price gouging the captive clientele they control. Neither AOL Time Warner nor any other company should have the ability to support any division or debts they have incurred through mergers and acquisitions by another part of their organization and this includes our cable system in Austin.

We in Austin have allowed Time Warner to use the people's property to run their cables and place equipment. Should this not entitle us to have an input into what our citizens are charged for this service? I am well aware that enough political and governmental agencies have been bought to allow Time Warner to raise prices at will but there has to be a better way. The only thing I knew to do was to drop back to the basic service and this what I have done.

Jack E. Rogers


Out With the Old --

Editor:

Michael King's article in the January 25 Chronicle was incomplete in its coverage of the scope of the Austin Film Commission ["What's in a Name?" Jan. 25]. Gary Bond's lack of vision to protect the name of the Austin Film Commission is the first clue that perhaps someone else needs to be in charge. I am encouraged to learn that private business owners have once again stepped up to the plate where the city of Austin has struck out. It seems as if Richard Aleksander and Roxanne Wheless have realized the potential for the influx of possibly hundreds of millions of dollars into the Austin area economy through the production of films locally. It seems equally as obvious that they have the vision that Gary Bonds lacks in realizing that the responsibility of the Austin Film Commission is to recognize the crucial relationship between the film industry, the local government, and the private businesses. I applaud these two private entrepreneurs vision and efforts and wish them well.

Carey Taylor


AOL Time Warner Monopoly

Editor:

When is someone going to get the Justice Department to look into how the previous administration allowed AOL Time Warner to get such a death grip on entertainment and Internet access in America? AOL/Assholes on Line gobbled up Compuserv and has put hundreds of independent Internet service providers out of business. They have a lock on most cable TV in most larger cities and areas of the country, they control a major segment of the so-called "News Media" through their publications and buying that rathole CNN. He who controls information controls the people, and this mega-corporation, which came to life under the Clinton administration and which has oddly enough avoided the wrath of silly little trolls like Jim Hightower who bitch about "Large Global Corporations" at the drop of a hat, has control of a large segment of the media that provides information. They control what we watch, how information is presented to the public, they control a large segment of the Internet access in America and they control some very major news organizations. So when is someone going to start looking at AOL Time Warner/CNN to see what harm has been caused to independent ISP providers and small cable TV companies? Who gives a shit about Netscape v. Microsoft anyhow when we have a real monopoly to deal with? Time to get control of this beast before we all realize that one mega-corporation controls TV, news, and Internet access. Beep Beep this Assholes on Line ...

Carl Swanson


The 'Home-Front' Effort

Editor:

Homeland Security of today -- brings back glorious, sad, and happy memories of long-ago, WWII. When thousands of Mexican-Americans not serving in the military engaged in "home-front" efforts such as bond drives. In the forefront of this effort were organizations like LULAC. For example, the El Paso, Texas, council No. 132 formed civil defense committees that instructed Mexican-Americans on what action should be taken if the war ever came to the United States.

A special measure of patriotism and endorsement of the war was the selling and buying of war bonds, a task that LULAC members took seriously. They also mustered support for the men in uniform by collecting gift packages and sending them to members of the armed forces.

In Phoenix, Ariz., middle-class Mexican-American women joined a campaign sponsored by local women's clubs to harvest cotton and other crops needed for the war effort that would go unpicked because of labor shortages.

Our America "needs us all now" -- more than ever, "teamwork, working together." May God continue to watch over America 24/7!

Moses P. Saldana Sr.


Stop Pet Overpopulation

Dear Editor:

I am writing on behalf of the Humane Society/SPCA of Austin. We are concerned about companion animal overpopulation in this country, and we are doing something about it in Austin and Travis County.

Each year shelter workers are forced to kill approximately five million homeless cats and dogs. That's one every six and one half seconds. Although many of these animals are healthy and adoptable, the sheer number of them outweighs the availability of good homes. America's taxpayers bear the cost of picking up, housing, and ultimately killing these potential pets -- as much as $176 for each one in some jurisdictions. Millions of cats and dogs never even make it to shelters. They are abandoned by their guardians, bred uncontrollably, and ultimately die from starvation, exposure, disease, or some other human-inflicted cruelty.

Fortunately, there is some good news -- Maddie's Pet Project. Maddie's Fund™, a private foundation with the goal of ending euthanasia of all adoptable animals by 2006, has awarded funds to support Maddie's Pet Project in Austin. The project launched July 1, 2001.

As Maddie's Pet Project's lead agency, the Humane Society/SPCA of Austin and Travis County has collaborated with the animal control facility, Town Lake Animal Center, 44 private veterinary hospitals, and the Capital Veterinary Medical Association. The goal -- to create awareness about the importance of spaying and neutering pets by providing discount vouchers for the surgeries and promoting pet adoptions.

The Doris Day Animal Foundation's Spay Day USA will be held on February 26, 2002. Its simple objective is to encourage every humane American to take responsibility for having at least one dog or cat spayed or neutered. This is the perfect day for area residents to take advantage of the $25 off vouchers! Vouchers can be picked up at the Humane Society/SPCA located at 124 West Anderson Lane and at Town Lake Animal Center, located at 1156 West Cesar Chavez, or can be downloaded from www.austinspca.com.

Fix your pet! Fix the problem. Use one of Maddie's Pet Project's vouchers to spay or neuter a companion animal on February 26, 2002.

Sincerely,

Dineen Heard/Public Relations


Missing Coverage

Editor:

For the third time, I went through this week's entire issue and found nothing on Mack Brown's scandalous pay raise, except this little letter by Bruce Marshall on Faulkner's proposed fee increase ["Postmarks: UT Surcharge Faulkner's Fault," Jan. 25]. I shouldn't be surprised, since I also heard from Karen Rae that she's keeping a guy in San Diego for $200 grand to lobby there for light rail here, and you never mentioned it, either. I know your position regarding progress, and these actions might be legal, but when you (the media) balance progress and issues in Austin, you paint it as it was all concerning the middle class and the public servants. You know about the rapes, robberies, assaults, murders, and even family violence going on in town, as a direct consequence of the psychological impact that the privileges and actions of these outsiders cause in our little minds. It's all out of frustration. Just wait a couple of years, when all this computer thing is over, and you will see a new wave of crime. I can feel that UT is no longer within the reach of the people of Austin, but that's what you get when you live in a city where a lunatic institution is built long before a big University, and the media ignores it.

Paul Aviña


'Bias' Is No FAIR

To the Editor:

Readers in danger of being suckered by the well-coordinated right-wing media blitz surrounding Bernard Goldberg's new book Bias (extending even to a recent photo op with President Bush carrying a copy under his arm, cannily helping both to publicize the book and to suggest that Bush is actually reading it) might want to check out some of the January 2002 postings at www.dailyhowler.com, which show just how sleazy Goldberg is in his attempts to feed the standard mythology about the "liberal media." A highlight: his selective, out-of-context quotation from a 1994 New York Times story which supposedly exemplifies "politically correct male-bashing" or somesuch -- never bothering to mention that the story in question is actually about insect behavior! Ah, standards.

Then the reader might want to mosey over to www.fair.org and peruse some of their invaluable work documenting real, and far more common, forms of media bias: de facto censorship by commercial and corporate concerns, over-reliance on "official" sources, etc. And then wonder why Bernard Goldberg and his ilk get scads of media attention -- even on PBS's Newshour -- while FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting) does not. For wonder is the beginning of wisdom.

John Walchak

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