Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, October 31, 1986 Opinion The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Cathie Anderson, Editor Kirsten Dietz, Managing Editor Loren Steffy, Opinion Page Editor Frank Smith, City Editor Sue Krenek, News Editor Ken Sury, Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper oper ated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-College Sta tion. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Texas A&M 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 Depart ment of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas A&M r'egular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $17.44 per semester, $34.62 per school year and $36.44 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on re quest. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843. IN THE C,00Z> OLD D/WS, PeuTlCAL C/ANPAKWN5 U>6R6 conducted ujitw TASTE AND DICtNlTtf. Absence of balance Memorial Student Center’s Political Forum is bringing “A Pan orama of Republican Perspectives on the State of Texas” to Texas A&M Monday afternoon. We can only hope this panorama doesn’t turn into a one-sided political rally the day beforedections. Scheduled to appear are Vice President George Bush, Sen. Phil Gramm, Republican gubernatorial candidate Bill Clements and Rep. Joe Barton from Ennis. No Democrats are on the panel, although Political Forum did try to get Gov. Mark White to join the ranks. Although the program is a means of getting different views about the state, this partisan political perspective makes an organiza tion that has prided itself on its non-partisan stance appear biased. Moral onde of Tex TSOT NOT* anymore pres X C.HALLEN6i£ ny dpponcnt to HeAD-TO-HEAC> COMPARISON/ i Political Forum’s effort is not in question — it is the outcome of those efforts that creates a problem. Stacking the panel with Republi cans — even unintentionally — doesn’t give voters an accurate “pa norama” of all perspectives. (Small wonder White didn’t trail along.) Immigrants ultimately enrich, not destroy English language Although the speakers are to address specific topics and avoid iai< endorsing any candidate or party, their mere presence this close to election promotes the Republican Party. Divorcing these leaders’ views about the state from their political affiliation will be difficult, especially since politics in the ’80s is largely cosmetic. This is one case where the appearance of the presentation is as important — if not more important — than its content. Unfortu nately, the appearance suggests all-out Republican hype. By sponsoring such a program before elections without any op posing views, Political Forum has tainted its non-partisan image, per haps endangering its credibility. The committee should concentrate on presenting balanced programs, and let the politicians politick on their own. My grand- mother, an immi grant from Po land, spoke hardly a word of English and almost no Pol ish. Yiddish was her language and for her it was suf ficient. She used it in conversation with her family and friends, lis tened to the Yiddish-language Tadio with a spoon such practices as bilingual ballots where they are not required by federal law. Six other states have passed similar although less consequential laws, offending non-English speakers, but ac complishing little else. Richard Cohen Witch hunt ‘solutions’ not a cure for AIDS and would have read the Yiddish press if she could. As I like to say, she was illit erate in three languages. Since I visited Salem, Mass., this summer, I’ve thought often about how fear can control our lives, about how we dread most of the things we can’t control, about how love for life makes us shun those who have the remotest Cathie Anderson chance of securing our deaths. I still can hear the voices of the re corded lecture at the Witch Museum in that old New England city. “Witch! Witch!” they shrieked in the eerie light of the place, which once served as home to a holier spirit. The building now functions as a mu seum where tourists or townfolk can learn about the intricacies of the witch hunt hysteria — a hysteria that, in 1692, took the lives of about 20 inhabitants of Salem. Historians believe the fanaticism in Salem began after a young girl was said to be possessed by the devil. Apparently the child had fever and seizures for which the doctor could find no cure. The blame fell upon a black slave from the Caribbean who professed to be well- versed in black magic. Although the slave worked in a household other than this child’s, she often told tales to young girls who vis ited her. After the first child fell ill, other girls began to act strangely, and soon the townspeople blamed the slave woman for the the girls’ insanity. The children testified at the trial of the old slave. They writhed on the floor and spoke gibberish, all the while saying the slave was causing their distress. The slave was found guilty. She was not executed but was imprisoned. And when others tried to convince the town that the girls were playing pranks, the children said they were witches or warlocks. (Often, witchcraft was an expedient means of imprisoning people whom you disagreed with or wanted out of the way for some other reason.) lent that convictions and executions be came a common occurrence. Under the Spanish Inquisition, as many as 100 peo ple were burned for practicing witch craft in one day. Although I know about the effects of such blind fear (The atrocities com mitted at Auschwitz and other World War II concentration camps cannot be forgotten.), I’m always amazed that these things keep happening, that few people seem to realize such persecution when it’s happening and that we have to wait — sometimes several years, some times forever — before the injustices that were perpetrated can be righted. Years after the imprisonment of the reputed witches and warlocks in Salem, they were released. Some had died, and others were deprived of seeing their children or other family members for years. And the people who were exe cuted for the children’s pranks and the unreasonable fear of adults could never be recompensated. Unfortunately, the phrase “witch hunt” comes to me more often now that I’ve come to associate it with another phrase that’s frequently in the media. That phrase is acquired immune defi ciency syndrome or its acronym, AIDS. This deadly disease is panicking peo ple throughout the United States, and many Americans have persecuted and shunned sufferers of the disease rather than try to help them. The National Academy of Sciences on Wednesday urged the federal gov ernment to create a National Commis sion on AIDS to study the disease, and the distinguished academy says the 1986 research funding should be doubled to about $1 billion by 1990. The group says this funding should not be redi rected from other research efforts but should be newly appropriated funds. Such funding, such understanding is needed in the battle against AIDS. We will not conquer this disease by imitating the people of Salem. Cathie Anderson is a senior journalism major and editor for The Battalion. My grandmother’s daughter, my mother, was also an immigrant from Po land. She speaks both Yiddish and En glish, the latter without any accent what soever. And her son — that’s me — speaks no Yiddish, understands just a bit and makes his living writing in En glish. As for my son, he knows a few choice Yiddish words. His second lan guage, at least the one he studies in school, is Spanish. His Espanol is pretty good. My own unexceptional family history suggests that these law’s are, to quote ei ther Shakespeare or Dangerfield, much ado about nothing. The Yiddish-speak ing immigrants from Eastern Europe settled in neighborhoods where it was possible to thrive without speaking a word of English. The community w as so linguistically impenetrable that Henry’ James, slumming on New York’s Lower East Side, observed of the language he heard, “Whatever we shall know it tor ... we shall not know it for English.” A generation later, the children of these people were winning Pulitzer Prizes for their writings in English, and even grandmother was not unaffected. When she w’as stump>ed at checkers, she would pronounce herself “fa-stumpyed” and quit the game. I have gone through the recent lin guistic history of my family for a reason. There is something of a panic in this country about the fate of English. We are told the survival of the language is at stake and that, in certain parts of the country, the language of both William Shakespeare and Rodney Dangerfield is endangered: it don’t get no respect. More recent immigrants will follow the same pattern. Indeed, the forces of assimilation and acculturation are more numerous today than ever before. Ra dio, television and movies — unknown or unavailable to the immigrants of yes teryear — are both attractive and ubiq uitous. The children of today’s immi grants may speak Spanish or Korean at home, but they probably will speak En glish on the street. Inescapably, it is the language of the larger culture. California soon will decide the fate of Proposition 63, which would make En glish the official state language (what about Valleyspeak?), possibly gagging Indeed, it would surprise many of the world’s peoples to learn that Americans fear for the future of English. In many countries, English has become a second language. The one-two punch of British colonialism and American predomi nance in Ixith commerce and popui culture has made English almost aim versal language — the one a Russia; lot uses when spieaking to a Frenck traffic controller. So pervasive is it glisii. so innovative and so vigorous.ih throughout the world, language pans decry its inroads into their ownfe guage — for instance, le drugsiori French. Of course, the real issue is notb glish, but the people who cannotsfo it — immigrants. Ironically,todavsM English speakers probablv will on: the language. But languageaside.ns grants will wind up enrichingourctB try and these laws, either propose! already on the Ixxtks, are what the'; meant to lx* — an insult and rebut! them. [ hose brave and industriouseo. to wade the Rio Grande or set of boats from V ietnam are real nation; sets. America’s most valuablenatun source always has been its peop* many of them immigrants. Thevctt as finished products, ready to wotb brimming with industriousness' Korean greengrocer, the Vietnc fisherman or the Hispanicmerck’: not threats to our way of lifebuub caricatures of it — a babble of Hoi Alger characters. Our language, part John Miliocr part Milton Berle, will weathertta rent immigration wave as it ah®: — by thriving. We will havener to play with, new terms and, in thee new English speakers who will language in new and inventive- Given the history of English,toe otherwise is mind-boggling. To ft one of those inventive immigrant “fa-stumpyed.” Copyright 1986, Washington Post Writers^ AUSTIN (/ Service agreec long moratori an East Texas General Jim h environmenta ■ 'The U.S. to stop crushii been going or about 30 acre palm any of t age during the said. ■‘Mike Lann U.S. forest lan fell it was quit This will give look into it.” ■ Mattox toh Thursday that bui ning 2,600 Four-Notch ai ■“It reminds about burning rid of the rat they’re burnin of the pine bet r Lannan sab damage was clearing of lan B “The open hind the pine several years a reforestation,’ beetles are ge time.” M.ti/o.x suit) destroying h with pines, am wildlife in tf Houston Natit ■‘They are u to crush the rious kinds o( type of wood p gered species Mattox said, grtannan sab stroyed includ trees if “All the tree removed,” La we determine cent of the ar producing qu and that area all.’ The mass hysteria became so preva- CORRECTION —In last Friday’s col umn, I said Kirk Whalum would be appear ing at Texas A&M Nov. 7. Although Wha lum initially had been approved for this date, the committee changed the date to Nov. 13. Mail Call Thank you for your support EDITOR: I would like to give a BIG Texas Aggie thank you to Coach Jackie Sherrill for his recognition of the fans for their support and enthusiasm at the Texas A&M vs. Baylor football game Oct. 18. His recognition was shown by waving a Twelfth Man towel to the student section of Kyle Field, which made all my screaming and yelling worthwhile. I take this time to thank him because no other recognition has been given to the “fans.” I realize we didn’t win the game ourselves, but we gave the team so much support during that game, and to me it kept them going when things were down. The Bryan/College Station Eagle said nothing about the crowd’s enthusiasm, and I am sure that many of the other media didn’t either. I hope in the future we will be recognized by other media (thanks, Battalion, for your recognition), but if not, that doesn’t mean that my support will end! Janie Pluenneke historical context, will bring the templeo separation crashing down on our heads.’ ' religious As a member of PAW for some years now, and as a regular recipient of their press clips and position papt': can assure Steffy and his readers that the officialposfc of that organization is anti-censorship, not anti-religion The central issue in the current textbook debateM whether religion will be discussed. It is rather whether religious indoctrination will take place at the taxpayer! expense, and whether a narrow hand of religious extremists in Tennessee or Alabama or Texas have the right to limit the full access that school children musttu' ! to information about a full range of religious viewpoints they are to be truly educated. It is Vicki Frost in Tennessee who objects to textbooh that mention religions other than her own and believes that the imaginations of her chldren must be “bounded not the People for the American Way. And whereas diet 1 opponents have called for an excision of information about the evolutionary hypothesis from school texts, People for the American Way has never called for dele: 1 from those texts the information that some people in fact, do believe that the world was created in sevenda'S ] RAW'S point missed EDITOR: As a rule, I read Loren Steffy’s opinion column in The Battalion with great delight. His work almost invariably is informed, insightful and carefully considered. Thus I was somewhat surprised to see that he had missed the point of the position that People for the American Way has taken with respect to the treatment of religion in public school textbooks. He suggests that they fear that “the slightest mention of religion, even in a People for the American Way does not stand for “theological abstinence,” as Steffy suggests, but forthe free flow of information regarding religious beliefsand practices of every type. Larry Hickman Associate professor of philosophy Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length.Theti-' f| staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length,bui«i^ every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Eadt letter mustbes and must include the classification, address and telephone numbr writer.