Page 2/The Battalion/Monday, April 11, 1983 opinion Focus on the homeless A couple of miles outside the tiny town of Cherokee, a row of small cottages stands beside the highway. A group of little boys plays football in one of the yards, beside the large sign that says, “Cherokee — Home for the Children.” In the gravel driveway, three -children race on bicycles — Christmas presents from long-absent parents. Few of the children who live here are orphans. Most have been abandoned by their parents, or sent to the home by pa rents who were unable or unwilling to provide for them. Some of them spend the school holidays with what they call their “real families,” as if, somehow, the blood relatives that they see once a year are more real than the houseparents that take care of them every day. Tonight, Cherokee High School plays Goldthwaite in basketball, and boys from the home make up over half the varsity team. The children who aren’t on the team will pile on the bus to go and watch. The girls’ team plays first. Veronica, one of the oldest girls from the home, is the team’s star. Not exceptionally tall, but as muscular as any of the boys on the varsity team, she’s a terror on the court. She’s not fast, but she hustles, playing as if her life de pended on it. She wears a look of utmost concentration and determination. She never smiles, not even when her team scores. Veronica takes pride in the fact that she’s fouled out of every game this sea son. She’s tough. She’s tough off the court, too. Her thick black hair is cut short. She wears jeans, T-shirts and a rebellious express ion that seems to defy femininity. No thing can hurt Veronica. Veronica feels, but she’s an expert at hiding her feelings. “You can’t trust anyone,” she says. “Your best friend will turn around and stab you in the back.” So there is no trust in her life. Church groups come to visit the children and work at the home, but she doesn’t let anyone get close to her — not anymore. “They just come and stay for a while and then leave again,” she says. “They say they’ll come back, but they don’t. They say they’ll write, and they usually don’t.” Even when she gets letters, she doesn’t write back. She’s afraid that she’ll let someone get close to her, and “get all torn up inside again.” She speaks from experience. Her young face already shows lines of pain, and her dark eyes belong to a person who’s older than 18. Although I’m older than she, I am the child. I don’t ask her about her life, because that would break the shell she’s built around her. I want to tell her about trust, and about love, but what can I say to anesthize the memories of her past? And what have I experienced in my sheltered life, that I can tell her that her perception of the world is wrong? I look at her and see her tough ex terior, but the younger children see more. She’s the one they go to when they need someone to cry on, and she’s the one the younger teenage girls confide in. And she’s the one who’s written pages and pages of poetry, giving a verse to a special child now and then. She gives of herself, and I feel small. Like most college students, I am the center of my world. Classes, schedules projects, clubs, activities, parties, friends an, occasional call from the folks at home — everything revolves around me. But Veronica, and the rest of the chil dren, throw my neatly ordered priorities into confusion. I think about the chil dren, step outside myself for a while, and realize that failing that test next week and not lining up that big date for the weekend are minor worries. They force me to shift my focus off myself and look at the pain they live with every day. And my visit has been worth while if I can see a small boy’s eyes light up when I offer to play catch with him, or give a big, warm hug to a little girl whose life hasn’t been filled with the hugs and kisses a child needs. the small society Man IM TMl-^ by Brickman ^ooV, <£U?THir^ AKP A TA* ©1981 King Fssturos Syndicate. Inc World rights reserved 3 -50 PRESIDENT ROY WILLIAMS' IRIS ALWAYS OPEN ...AT LEAST DURING VISITING HOURS Letters: Palestinian complaints Editor: I agree with Carol Parzen, that the Holocaust and its victims should never be forgotten, because as she said, “Deeply Berrys World 1983 by NEA, Inc “Someday, I want to be a congressman just like you so I can go on neat junkets too!” rf inhuman crimes require us to take time to reflect on how to prevent them from ever happening again.” “Ironies of ironies” that these other wise truthful and words should be spoken by a person who, herself, sup ports state, built on the suffering and oppression of an innocent people. One wonders vyhere you get the nerve to speak on crimes against humanity, while you are doing the same thing through expulsions and massacres, killing chil dren, women and innocent people as if they want to prove to the world that his tory can repeat itself. For example, look at what was accom plished recently in Lebanon by those who talk about unparalleled crime against humankind. Aggies don’t buy that any more, they are fed up with worthless words and pretending because they are aware of what’s happening in the world. So your letter was a nice attempt and your Israel Awareness Week, too, but it does you no good. And believe me, once you turn the lights off and you have a moment of silence, all you will see is no thing but the reflection of the brutal crimes which are committed daily, as if it’s a habit, against my people, the Palesti nians. Emad Yasin ’83 Election thanks Editor: Howdy Ags! I’m writing this just to thank you. Thank you for being so nice and tolerant of myself and the many other candidates who knocked on your doors or talked with you while we campaigned for our respective races the last couple of weeks. Thank you also for turning out to vote March 29th and 30th. I would also like to encourage you to vote in the run-offs Tuesday. Have a voice in who represents you. Again, thanks Ags., for without you, campaigning and elections would be in vain. Win or lose, the Twelfth Man makes it all worth it. Gig ’em! Frank Reister 802 Natalie Slouch By Jim Earl &LQ0D DRIVE he nee I aciati jwor :r to i ss. Fhet jects] is res nts o : fun of thi “We d wa :ther lin tl :kney it anc irmai ‘There’s nobody here!*’ ‘Waste World’ tour could be highlight tan-C d Cof :ek Br oclani Dios (I em by Dick West United Press International composed of barrels and stee/i containing toxic wastes. Fun-seekers willing to standinlin liege WASHINGTON — It’s a miserable disaster indeed that doesn’t blow, shake, rattle or roll somebody some good. rewarded by a roller-coaster ride and through Mount Dumpmore.w art’s When the eruptions first started. Mount St. Helens may have seemed an unmitigated calamity. But that was be fore the federal government designated the catastrophe as a National Volcanic Area, and souvenir dealers moved in. they can see the containers rustif disintegrating, their contentsoozinj iza a nearby creek Bra mi B After that, board an elevatedm ail for a trip across the creek toa (I ased Thiirsd made island where a faulty nucta tor is regularly venting radioacthe into the atmosphere. Now, with another vacation season getting under way, it behooves both gov ernmental agencies and private investors to provide more cataclysmic attractions. The final thrill might be a ride simulated railroad that ends wiiha car jumping the track and defii surrounding area withadeadlydii Tourists are a hardy lot. All they need is a little encouragement and even deba cles can become Grand Canyons. The single admission ticketalsoi ties tourists to watch panic-stricken dents being evacuated to temporarfi ters in churches and public schooii Thus far, to cite one distressing omis sion, hardly anything has been done to upgrade the sightseeing potential of Times Beach, Mo., and other communi ties contaminated by toxic material. Yet environmental adulteration would be an almost ideal leitmotif for a theme park. I am even willing to suggest a name: “Waste World.” Here’s the drill: The promoters of “Waste World” buy up tracts of land that have been conde mned due to spraying, leakage, spillage or some other inadvertent method of spreading poison. Each piece of property is then de veloped to carry out part of the “Waste World” theme. I visualize as a typical unit an amuse ment park called “Pollutionland.” It is built around a towering, Alpine-like structure — Mount Dumpmore — that is Much of the appeal comes quirement that all park visitors^ contamination suits and headgeai plete with individual oxygen app* and Geiger counters. Most tourists, I’m sure, w dressing up like that, particular younger members of a vacationing ly. It would provide an elememof; ture you just don’t get climbingilK tue of Liberty, traipsing througli^ Capitol or driving through a wood. Upon leaving “Waste World,”'- would pass through a detoxifi chamber, something like a car" which they would be scrubbed brushed clean of any contana What fun! Add a trace of acid rain falling food pavilion and how the money The Battalion USES 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Diana Sultenfuss Managing Editor Gary Barker Associate Editor Denise Richter City Editor Hope E. Paasch Assistant City Editor Beverly Hamilton Sports Editor John Wagner Assistant Sports Editor John Lopez Entertainment Editor Colette Hutchings Assistant Entertainment Editor.... Diane Yount News Editors Daran Bishop, Brian Boyer, Jennifer Carr, Elaine Engstrom, Shelley Hoekstra, Johna Jo Maurer, Jan Werner, Rebeca Zimmermann Staff Writers Melissa Adair, Maureen Carmody, Frank Christlieb, Connie Edelmon, Patrice Koranek, Robert McGlohon, Ann Ramsbottom, Kim Schmidt, Patti Schwierzke, Kelley Smith, Angel Stokes, Joe Tindel, Kathy Wiesepape Copy editor Jan Swaner Cartoonist Scott McCullar Graphic Artists Pam Starasinic Sergio Galvez Thompson, Fernando Andrade Photographers Guy Hood, Eric Lee, Irene Mees, William Schulz Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news paper operated as a community service to Tt0 University and Bryan-College Station. Opiw. pressed in The Battalion are those of the editrt author, and do not necessarily represent theop 11 ^ Texas A&M University administrators or htM bers, or of the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboraton for students in reporting, editing andphotegt^r ses within the Department of Communicitio^i I Questions or comments concerning an/ ^ matter should be directed to the editor. Letters Policy Letters to the Editor should not exceed 3 length, and are subject to being cut if they ai tW The editorial staff reserves the right to editM* style and length, but will make every efforttl) |,l, ® the author’s intent. Each letter must also besi| show the address and phone number of thon® Columns and guest editorials are also wcIcoWB are not subject to the same length constraintia**! Address all inquiries and correspondence m The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, TexasA»’j | versity, College Station, TX 77843, or phone!' 2611. . r ?; • Battalion is published dailyduringTeO!** I | d spring semesters, except for holidayanW | The fall and nation periods. Mail subscriptionsarelldYaP* 11 - ter, $33.25 per school year and $35 per full yei|| tising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed MtW Building, Texas A&rM University, College Sia»» 77843. United Press International is entitled esclffl 1 ” the use for reproduction of all news dispatches®’ to it. Rights of reproduction of all other maiierk reserved. Second class postage paid at College Stattoi 77843.