Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, February 11, 1986 Opinion Malltigers continue to thrive despite hostile environment This past weekend I received quite an 1 education in ani- mal science. I don’t usually go to a shopping mall, but I was feeling a little masochistic, so I loaded up the checkbook and went off in search of new pants. LorOfl Steffy Naturally every- 1 1 ■ - ■ — one else had the same idea, so tne mall was chock-full of slow-moving fat peo ple and kids with runny noses. Shop ping under these conditions I refer to as “getting mailed.” But in the middle of my bemallment, I came upon a wonderous sight — wild life. There were big cats in the middle of the mallway! At first they looked like Bengal tigers and African lions, but I soon found this was not the case. I forced my way through the crowd to where one of the attendants was stand ing. I asked the man who was putting the Good Housekeeping Seal of Appro val on one of the cages what kind of creatures these were. “Malltigers,” he replied. “Malltigers?” I repeated, somewhat confused. “They’re a distant relative of feline family that thrives in shopping centers. These particular beasts were born in the wilds of Bloomingdale’s.” “How can a tiger be born in Bloo mingdale’s?” “Well, it’s still a bit of a mystery. Sci entists have found that the cages go up first. Once they’re fully developed, the animals just sort of appear.” “What happens when there gets to be too many for one cage?” “That’s been the biggest problem. We tried redistributing them to other de partments at first, but eventually we had to start relocating them in other stores and malls.” “Isn’t that cruel, taking them out of their natural habitat?” “Not at all. Proper mall wildlife man agement is very humane. Of course, you hear of some freak accidents, like the mailed eagles that flew into the ceiling fan in Gimbles, but that’s an exception. We have to take care of them. How else would they get fed? Nature planned it all out with the mall offices.” “There sure seem to be a lot of lionesses in that one cage,” I said. “Oh, well Bloomie lions were born in that kind of environment. They’re very inactive and they’re used to compan ionship. They wouldn’t be happy if there weren’t at least eight to a cage.” “What if one of them turns on that little kid who’s blasting them with that Rambo Automatic Water Rifle?” The attendant began to get indig nant. “Sir. these are not vicious jungle animals. They have to be prodded, pinched,yelled at, gawked at, made fun of and pelted with small objects in order to survive. It’s what Nature intended for them. Look at how docile they are.” He pointed to a child who was having his pictui'e taken with one of the mal- Itiger cubs. While the photographer was reloading, the kid stuck his finger in the cub’s eye.The little cat purred. “See?” the attendant said. “They love it.” “It musthurt,” I said. “All malltiger cubs are born with an inner eyelid that protects their eyes from children’s fingers. Nature takes care of her own.’ - I looked at the adult malltiger step ping over his comrades in the cage. He found a comfortable-looking storelion in the corner and, after fluffing him up a bit, lie down to take a nap. “I ought to get one for my house,” I thought out loud. “You, sir, are despicable,” the atten dant retorted. “Taking a malltiger out of its naturalenvironment is cruel. They wouldn’t lasta day in the wild.” Loren Steffy is a junior journalism ma jor and the Opinion Page editor for The Battalion. MAftCOllES G>I9B6 HWWCrt POST United Feature Syndicate Christa McAuliffe’s legacy A few weeks ago I wrote a piece about schoolteach- ers going into space. I speculated as to what kinds of candidates my own teachers at PS 35 would have made if they had applied for the trip. It was a light piece because, like most Americans, I never dreamed anything could happen to the flight of the shuttle Challenger. During the last numbing week, as I watched the television screen, I got to The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Michelle Powe, Editor Kay Mallett, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Jerry Oslin, City Editor Cathie Anderson, News Editor Travis Tingle, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&rM and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas AScM administrators, faculty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Communications. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas AScM regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester, $33.25 per school year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. I Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald fc Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. thinking about teachers. Although Christa McAuliffe wasn’t a professional astronaut, she did leave behind a won derful legacy. Consider this. For the past 15 or 20 years, America’s teachers could not have been held in lower esteem. They were underpaid, underrated and blamed for anything that went wrong with our schools. It appeared the only time we saw tea chers on TV was when they were on strike or arrested for child abuse. The perception was that teachers were peo ple who taught because they couldn’t make it in the rea/world. Except for covering vandalism and crime in schools, the media ignored what was going on the classroom. And with reason: if teachers were teaching, and students were learning, it wasn’t news — that is until the destruction of Challenger. Suddenly our schools received more attention than they have ever been given before. Seven brave people died that morning, but it was the death of a schoolteacher that made our children cry. When the TV cameras entered the nation’s classrooms to record their grief, we saw principals &nd teachers fighting back their own tears as they tried to comfort the students. The cameras not only focused on tea chers but also panned to the agonized faces of the students. They showed tea cher to pupil and pupil to teacher —and in that moment of sadness we witnessed the educational process at its best. When these pictures came into our homes we were reminded of something we tend to take for granted: the role tea chers quietly play in the lives of chil dren. The lesson was not just for grown ups. You had the feeling that the stu dents had gained a new respect for tea chers as well. It went something like this. “Christa was a teacher, and Christa died in space, but it could have been anybody’s teacher — including mine.” So what was Christa McAuliffe’s le gacy? When Sputnik went up and we real ized the Russians were ahead there was a great clamor to educate American children and make our schools second to none. Then after the successes of our own space program, the clamor died down. Education was dropped as our No. 1 priority. At least it was until last week. After that one horrifying moment in Florida, things changed again.The parent-tea cher-pupil bond that had been fraying for a generation seemed to be joined again. Christa McAuliffe’s gift to us is not in the skies but here on earth. From every thing you can read, she was a teacher before she went up and she intended to be a teacher when she returned. In death her legacy is to give her fellow professionals new dignity and honor. Thanks to Christa, each one of them can say with pride, “I’m a teacher too.” Art Buchwald is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length. I he editorial staff rm right to edit letters for style and length but will make every effort to maintain thn intent. Each letter must be signed and must include the address and telephone nut the writer. Unprovoked and vindictive EDITOR: We are writing in response to Karl Pallmeyer’s column ofjai “The Liberty Federation: new name, same game.” We were trulyeu!; rassed that his article was published in The Bait. We felt that it wasn’tl morous, and that it was unprovoked and vindictive. We further felt; his cute little recommendations of possible names (and abbreviations uncalled for (especially in Falwell’s Universal Commie Killers). Since* is profanity necessary to make a point? We guess we should haveexpec it out of one of the founders and writers of Students Helping li Trouble. While we would not classify ourselves as Falwell Followers, we do lieve that men of all walks of life, including preachers and those greaif lectors of democracy, the journalists (“ha ha"), have a right to have ; ions of people and their ideas. However, when expressing theiropi: about someone else’s ideas in a public forum, people should justify opinions with reasons why they do not adhere to another’s viewpoint not resort to personal attacks to try to make their point. Such attacks are tasteless and fail in their attempt to sway an audio views. In his article, he implies that Falwell would like to burn evero knowm to man (except the Bible) and that he supports fascisman^ Carthyism, yet he provides no evidence to back up such statements' we all know that Falwell is not the simpleton that Pallmeyer implies, wouldn’t have attracted so many loyal supporters. We never will understand why some journalists fielieve that itis for people of all professions except religion to express their politic! liefs. One of the intentions of the separation of church and stateh government was to keep the U.S. government from officially supp: and bankrolling one religion, not to gag anyone with any religiouscot tions whatsoever. However, if Karl feels some sadistic, uncontrollable urge to perse all religious leaders who dabble in politics, we’ll give him a tewc names of religious leaders who have become involved in politics Jackson (lie ran for president in 1984 — remember, Karl?), the pope mand Tutu (who won a Nobel Peace Prize), Ghandi and Martin Li King Jr. (he even has a national holiday in his honor). In short, if Pallmeyer must criticize someone, he should at least vide some semblance of justification for his views. We would havetho that with all of his worldly experience and knowledge which he ha pressed through past columns, he could have at least backed u| thoughts with some evidence, especially when lie’s been given halfo Opinion Page to do it in. Mike Head Mike Neben Clay Paulos ‘Lady’ not derogatory EDITOR: After reading Sheila J. Cloudt’s letter of Feb. 6, l really have just what type of “woman” Ms. Cloudt is. In her letter she stalest ‘lady’ is a word which implies a ‘lifestyle’ — a way <>t passively -I It isn’t a complimentary adjective.” Concerning her statement of a “lady” just “passively existing,” !M of no better example to contradict that than our own first lady. Reagan is a “lady” in every sense of the word, and she is constantlyoiil go. Traveling the countryside to speak out on school-age drugC working with the Humane Society and helping further thecausesofj ter Seals are just a few ways in which this “lady” passively exists. As far as “lady” being a derogative adjective, according to Websitj few of the definitions given for “lady” are as follows: 1) a woman of high social standing 2) a woman who is polite, refined and well-mannered 3) the title of respect given to a marchioness, countess or barond spec the daughter of a duke, marquis or earl, or to the wife of a baronet, Nj or lord. Seeing as I am neither a person of high social position orofroyall age, I feel safe in assuming that when someone refers to me as a they are, more than likely, referring to me as a woman who is polittl fined and well-mannered, and I can in no way consider that as at but a compliment. (Does a male being a “gentleman” make himanvl a man? Quite the contrary I believe Cloudt). My parents brought me up to be a woman of the ’80s. Theyt that I can be anything that I want to be and achieve any goal Isetf self if I persevere. But, they also taught me that in striving toreadii goals and achievements I should always act like a lady, and I cant’ believe that being a “lady” can only helj) me to attain all that 1 am sol for. I also can’t help but believe that there are many more “ladiesj there who feel just as I do. Pamela R. Pieratt Gramm-Rudman and the shuttle EDITOR: The Challenger died on Jan. 28, taking with it seven crewmen^ wasn’t the first space disaster, nor will it be the last — unless,thatiii media has its way. The TV stations in particular. They covered the shuttle explosion the exclusion of all else — until well into the night; over 12 hoursoft* sive video coverage of an event about which nothing was really kno^J say that’s going a bit to the extreme. Such extensive coverage is liable to make the Challenger crash Hindenberg kind of memorial to space travel, as that blimp wasti the end of a dirigible flight. Indeed, such a regrettable end may all have been accomplished. The crash had several positive aspects, though. Vice President and Sen. John Glenn got some good exposure when they rushed do 1 Florida to bask unshamedly in front of the TV cameras. And Ptf 9 Reagan — always the expert user of catastrophe — got his own before history; an enviable prelude to his State of the Union when all are sure to be quite attentive and expectant .... Politics,^ ence of thriving on disaster, is hot in this election year. Again, on the positive side, maybe the American people will fin# alize that space travel is really a risky and dangerous business; will recognize that it is not the kind of thing to overly publicize bysd attractive all-American teachers aloft. Maybe we will look upon spa® as a Michener kind of adventure fit for the flashy media hype as I 1 companied the shuttle program from the beginning, but as respo people who recognize that challenge must be met cautiously. Maybe we will realize that the pressures on NASA to beacon# 1 fiscally independent operation has placed so much pressure on that 1 nization to succeed. Stress is the biggest cause of accidents. Hence, j is not to blame, but the nation as a whole; the government espeda"' being so demanding of NASA while the government itself cowswea the looming prospect of making the operation of the governmental' cally liable via the Cramm-Rudman bill. William H. Clark, II