Viewpoint The Battalion Monday Texas A&M University November 10, 1980 By JEI While dternati' By Jim Earle Slouch DEATX FAMILY RIDE LEAVlfeS EARLY Doc-roR. APPOINT. CLOSE A DEAL DY7M6- WITH CAUCEfl To CLA It s not a bit too early to think about a good excuse for leaving early for the Thanksgiving Holidays. ” 1980 election could signal major political realignment By CLAY F. RICHARDS United Press International WASHINGTON — The 1980 elections could well signal a major political realignment in the nation that could strengthen a two-party system that has been in decline since John Kennedy’s election two decades ago. For a variety of reasons the voters rejected a Democratic president who acted like a Republi can in favor of a conservative who was clearly a Republican. Ronald Reagan’s coattails were broad enough to bring in several Republican senators and gov ernors. Major candidates of late — and Carter was a good example in 1976 — haven’t display ed the kind of coattail power that builds party loyalty. The new Senate will be more sharply divided along party lines with the departure of liberal Republican Jacob Javits and the arrival of a new crop of very conservative GOP freshmen. Republicans, who held just 12 governor ships after the Watergate debacle, now hold at least 21 and could pick up more as close races are decided. Conservatives put an end for the most part to the political contradiction of having liberal senators from conservative states with the de feat of Democratic Sens. George McGovern of South Dakota, Birch Bayh of Indiana and John Culver of Iowa. There wasn’t much good news for Democrats in Tuesday’s results — but they still hold con trol of Congress and the governorships. The large number of Republican victories just brought the whole system a little more in ba lance. An important part of the new balance is the South, which wil clearly now never be “solid ly’’ Democratic again after turning its back on a native son from Georgia. Alabama and Florida have new Republican senators, and former Gov. Christopher “Kit” Bond recaptured Missouri for the GOP. Typical of the Republican surge in the south is Arkansas. Frank White, a Little Rock banker and a Democrat, changed to the Rep; Party to run for governor and was I race too close to call with Democratic! Clinton. But the Reagan victory went beyj establishing the traditional Republic^ He cut deeply into blue-collar and lakij that have been the exclusive posses®J Democratic Party, at least since fJ Roosevelt beat Herbert Hoover in Ilf The major job a more liberal Demo Edward Kennedy or Walter Mondalei bring home this traditional constituency! want to recapture the White House in j Ronald Reagan captured union collar votes by pledging to put America;) work again. To keep those votes hewil do what Carter did not and lower um ment and inflation. Just as Reagan won on the pocketbool) it will be the pocketbook issues thaldet) if the Republican resurgence continuesti 1984. new stuc \&M Ui himself, DanU ago to as: egalAd niliar' V&M. “Some ['ll have vhat’s gc puzzled, reshmer ous we fashioner isking, “ naking f (The “ tradition: game ag Jnivers: iustang But th i still s' his newf He is WcM sti Fblitical Football By I In remembrance of ‘incredible Ataturk’ By MEHMET SAHINDGLU Author’s Note: On Nov. 10 each year since 1938, millions of Turks bow their heads in si lence to mourn for Ataturk — father of Turks — without whose existence Turkey would be but another communist satellite, like today’s ethnically Turkic states in Central Asia. 1981, though, will be a year of celebration and reeva luation of his spectacular deeds — as Ataturk was born a century ago. Is it not time that today’s generation learn a little about a man who was neither west nor east but a harmonious combination against fanaticism and foreign domination, and whose model is the Modern Turkey itself, with his simple yet famous “Peace in the nation, peace in the world“? “That tragic fortnight which began with the hardly veiled announcement that Ataturk was in a coma and ended with the apotheosis of his funeral will never be forgotten in Turkish his tory. On Nov. 10, the day of Ataturk’s death, the people were stunned into silence. Where is the man today who can command equal love and respect?” So said the C. Century Magazine on Jan. 4, 1939. “No man wielding as much personal power as did Kemal was so imbued with democratic principles.” In the article “Kemal the Victorious” on Nov. 25, 1938, O. C. Cleveland from The Common weal magazine wanted the world to hear his commentary: “Among the dictators of our time Kemal Ataturk had perhaps the strongest per sonality. Behind Lenin’s work, there were an ideology and a party with a history of six de cades. Futhermore, he had the cooperation of friends of his own kind .... Mussolini also and especially Hitler have been surrounded by companions of remarkable knowledge and ex perience, who more than once have influenced decisions .... Kemal Ataturk was a lone wolf. The fanatic energy with which he brutally des troyed the traditions of many centuries was completely his own and it was his personal con ception ...” In the opening paragraph of “The Incredible Mustafa Kemal” in the June 1938 issue of The Reader’s Digest, I. Phayre writes the following: “No Hollywood Lot ever filmed a story so incre dible as the living work of Mustafa Kemal Ata turk, the low born soldier who, as dictator of modern Turkey, has completely changed the culture of his ancient people. ” During the turbulent years that followed his historic defense in Gallipoli administering to the British their most tragic defeat, Kemal’s military and oratorical skill made him the sup reme leader of an aroused Turkey. Phayre had more to say: “Kemal was 46 when he began his miracle of regenerating Turkey. ‘ Under the furious pace he began to show signs of strain, his fair hair thinning, the strong face tense and full of lines. But the eyes were still a master’s, full of strange light; variable and stern unto menace. His prodigious vitality called for ceaseless reports; he checked all government bureaus, constantly infusing new life into ministers ...” Tax gatherers were stoned and beaten. A “false prophet” roused the peasants to revolt, Kemal met the plots against him with an iron hand. He signed death warrants for friends and foes alike as fast as his hanging judge put them before him. Phayre also wrote, “Once he gave a dance to foreign envoys and the loveliest ladies of the capital. Four miles away in the main square, 11 triangles of timber stood high and under each swung a man in a long white gown with a coarse rope around his neck. Dawn broke just as a messenger came from the chief of police that the last traitor’s body had ceased to twitch ... Only the hand that can wield the sword should grasp the scepter of power. So mused the sardo nic Gazi (Ataturk) adding, ‘I shall make Turkey a civilized country in every sense of the term. ” In the May 3, 1939, issue of The New Republic magazine, M. Arnold wrote the fol lowing lines upon visiting the new capital of a new republic: “Any foreigner who has been in Turkey and visited Ankara, who has talked with govern ment officials and posseses the slightest inkling of the changes instituted by the late Gazi, must feel the loss of this man and mourn with the Turkish people. The horseman in Ankara looks out over the desert, still summoning the Anato lian peasant to new life, literacy, work and hope. His own words might be his epitaph: ‘Those inclined to compromise cannot accom plish a revolution.’” May our Ataturk sleep in peace. Our gratitude to you for teaching us to be proud to be a Turk (a famous motto by Ataturk; previ ously “Turk” had connotations of being a peas ant during the theocratic Ottoman Empire) and to worship through only one’s own consci ence and responsibility in freedom (secularism defined). •' ■ . * t y' V t i The M planned Aggies w Without j ean Gra lith the f pere th< Italy, Sv lany anc The pr; icludes rports, ghtseei inner e; ans an larges ; iriances lay, the knowi It’s your turn Soccer good, but it could be better Editor: Recently Richard Oliver had an enlightening soccer article in The Batt. Enlightening be cause The Battalion is finally recognizing the world’s most popular sport. Yes, soccer is grow ing in this area and Texas A&M now can be proud of their women’s soccer team. Station. A visit to some of the weekend games played on the Krenek Tap fields in College Station by the better teams in Division I will easily prove my point. There are at least 15 players from three or four teams who could be on TAMU’s starting team. Unfortunately, this is not the case. The men’s soccer team, however, leaves a lot to be desired. Before I am criticized and cata logued as a two-percenter, I would like to say that the men’s team has come a long way over the past few years. There is no doubt that the addition of Head Coach Telmo Franco and Assistant Coach David Flentge has added a new dimension to the team; but I fail to understand the reason for the poor recruiting and the rela tively large number of unskilled players on the team. These players are in great physical shape as well as being enthusiastic, but Franco should know very well that this is not enough. What is even more frustrating is that these players would like to play for TAMU but have been either ignored, replaced by some player who was more fit but less skillful (in soccer fitness can be attained in a very short time, skillfullness takes years), had class conflicts which the coaches refused to accept, or simply were disliked by these coaches. I have even heard that recently one BVASL team scrim maged the TAMU team and won 31 even more surprised to hear that theyfc several times before in previous se® And there are other teams consisting of skilled players from all over our coi well as from many foreign nations (will cer is the number one sport) who invaluably to the men’s team. Yes, Richard Oliver, eurekal m seemed lost in the up and down world of 1 sports, you discovered the TAMU mei)| cer team. I only wish you had disco« soccer team which more accurately i quality of soccer that exists on this cam; Mehmet Sahindglu is a doctoral student in the Institue of Statistics. Texas A&M could easily have the best team in the state and be ranked in the Top Ten of the nation. There are plenty of players who are university students who are not on the TAMU soccer team and who should be. Most of these players play on teams in the Brazos Valley Amateur Soccer League (BVASL) in College Warped By Scott McCuilar HERE ALLEN, THE BULB'S OUT, WOULD YOU DO THE yt HfAM, LET'S SEE NOW, WET THE END FIRST, The Battalion U S P S 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Questions or comments concerning any editmii' 1 should be directed to the editor. Editor Dillard Stone Managing Editor Rhonda Watters Asst. Managing Editor. Scott Haring City Editor Becky Swanson Asst. City Editor Angelique Copeland Sports Editor Richard Oliver Asst. Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Scot K. Meyer Asst. Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff News Editors Lynn Blanco, Gwen Ham, Todd Woodard Staff Writers Jennifer Afflerbach, Kurt Allen, Nancy Andersen, Marcy Boyce, Jane G. Brust Mike Burrichter, Pat Davidson, Cindy Gee Jon Heidtke, Uschi Michel-Howell, Debbie Nelson, Liz Newlin, Rick Stolle Cartoonist : Scott McCuilar Photo Editor Pat O’Malley Photographers George Dolan, Jeff Kerber EDITORIAL POUCY The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper op erated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily repre sent the opinions of Texas A&M University administrators or faculty members, or of the Board of Regents, Amen anydi Opera toroa deep. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 wordii* j and are subject to being cut if they are longer. The edit reserves the right to edit letters for style and lenftl make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. W 1 must also be signed, show the address and phone nimh' writer. Columns and guest editorials are also welcome, subject to the same length constraints as letters, inquiries and correspondence to: Editor, The h Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College St>- 77843. The Battalion is published daily during Texas AM:* spring semesters, except for holiday and examina Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester, $33.25 p year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates fun quest. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonaldL Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. United Press International is entitled exclusively It 5 for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to itT' reproduction of all other matter herein reserved, Second class postage paid at College Station,TX' 1