Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, March 27, 1987 The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Loren Steffy, Editor Marybeth Rohsner, Managing Editor Mike Sullivan, Opinion Page Editor Jens Koepke, City Editor Jeanne Isenberg, Sue Krenek, News Editors Homer Jacobs, Sports Editor Tom Ownbey, Photo 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 regular 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, Department of Journalism, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, De partment of Journalism, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843-4111. A U.S. tradition Let’s get something straight about the controversial Frank Van diver final exam T-shirts. If Traditions Council wants to sell them and you want to buy one, you can — thanks to the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of expression. And Carolyn Adair, director of student activities understands that she — or any other A&M administrator — cannot forbid the sale of the shirts in the Memorial Student Center simply because of the T-shirt’s message. The Student Press Law Center in Washington D.C. explained to The Battalion that because the administration allows other organiza tions to sell T-shirts in the MSC, it must also allow Traditions Council the same right. The problem seems to be that Traditions Council did not get a permit to sell the shirts, and, therefore, was forced to stop selling them in the MSC. Legally, however, the council can apply for a per mit and can get one. If the the administration refused to issue a permit, The Student Press Law Center said, it would be running serious risk of being sued for First Amendment infringement. But according to Adair, the Traditions Council has not applied for a permit to sell the shirts. Adair said that if the council “pushed the issue, I would probably sign a permit.” She said she is most concerned with the tactic used by the council. Adair said the red protest T-shirts aren’t consistent with the council’s more conservative, “professional” methods and that the shirts will hurt any chances the council may have for attaining its goal — re scheduling senior final exams or elimination of the plan altogether. Petitions are nice, and door-knocking isn’t a bad idea, but so far it seems that nothing the Traditions Council or any other student or ganization has done has caught the attention of administrators like the T-shirts have. If students are concerned about senior final exams and want ad ministrators to take note, it seems they have stumbled on to a com- So what happens when In Bergenfield, N.J., four trou bled teen-agers pulled into a ga rage, closed the door and pro ceeded to kill themselves by car- bon-monoxide poisoning. By nightfall, the tra gic story was on the evening news and the next morning in newspapers. Instantly, experts were called upon to comment on teen-age suicide —whether it is, or is not a serious problem. This is what happens when whites die. I do not mean to minimize the deaths in New Jersey. There were four kids in that car and the death of each one is a tragedy. Young lives and all the supposed promise that goes with youth were extinguished. Parents and relatives will mourn, and, inevitably, some will blame themselves. A school and com munity have some hard questions to an swer. One of them is why kids should conclude that they have nothing to live for. But there is a version of the New Jer sey tragedy that is considered the nor mal state of affairs when it comes to the impoverished black community. In ways we often do not recognize as suicide, blacks and members of other minority groups kill themselves at a rate un known in the white community. In 1982, the homicide rate (per 100,000) for whites was 9.6. The same rate for blacks was an astounding 59.1. Sometimes these deaths are caused by what we all recognize as suicide — and for that, the rate for blacks is lower than for whites. But much of the time, the cause of the death is listed as something different — drug overdose, alcoholism or, even the victim of violent crime. Those figures tell a wholly different story. Some homicide victims, of either race, were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. But if that was all there was to it, the white and black rate would be about the same. The difference is ex plained by other factors, like a more dangerous environment for many blacks (inner-city slums) and a tendency to engage in violent behavior — what criminologist Marvin Wolfgang calls “victim-precipitated homicide.” What is true for violence is true also for drug addiction, alcoholism and other forms of what is called “risk-tak ing behavior.” Very often, the same de pression, hopelessness, frustration and rage that is associated with suicide con tributes to what we consider anti-social behavior. At the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, both homicide and suicide are considered public-health problems whose causes may be similar. The hope lessness, rage and depression that con stitute the unbearable pain of the sui cide victim can, in another person, trigger violent behavior. In the end, the actions of a suicidal person and some one who is always picking a fight can produce the same result. There is so much of this behavior in the poor, urban black community that some demographers think it explains why in some areas there are fewer men than women. (Suicide, like homicide, is mostly a male phenomenon.) In certain inner-city New York neighborhoods, for instance, the gap is 14 percent—and both homicide and suicide are held par tially responsible. The true explanation may well be under-counting by census takers fearful of entering certain build ings. But just the fact that homicide and suicide are cited shows the extent of the problem in the underclass black com munity. As it has with drug addiction, Ameri can society clutches only when the prob lem spills out into the white middle-class community. Heroin addiction, which has bottomed out as mostly an under class problem, receives scant attention in the media; that same thing will probably happen when cocaine, as some predict, is abandoned by all but the lower classes. What is commonplace in the ghetto usually goes unnoticed until it threatens suburbia. Then media attention stops are pulled, America waxes indignant, the president appoints a study commis sion and its recommendations are for gotten as soon as the problem retreats to the ghetto. Richard Cohen Opinion GIMMIE THAI “GOOD OL' T/A1F" RELIGION By This doesn’t seem like a port L is now weig Congress ar dency, a fori who served president t< night. believe power advai ing, toward Rgan’s str< some degree erid D. McC sistant for le aid Reagan. Iw'Aiid absi having the cl ehaiacter of aularity ai will continue gress’ favor,” |»lcClure, < on relations the presidem April 1 MS< said the role legislative brt mentary and jAs the cc president co McClure saic Only five more weeks and I’ll be a former student. I can tell it’s time for me to graduate because I am fed up with studying. I remember every one telling me that college is the best time of your life and to enjoy it. Ev- eryone said I wouldn’t have any responsibilities and all kinds of free time. Apparently, none of these people went to college — at least not at A&M. It seems I never have a free moment. And I’m sick of worrying about 20 things at once. I can’t wait to get a full time job. After I get off work, the only thing I’ll have to worry about is getting up the next morning to go back. Some how that sounds a lot better than what others die? Given that record, it is reasonable to predict that the New Jersey tragedy will cause the nation and its news media to put a bigger spotlight on teen-age sui cide. Since the problem exists, that’s a good thing. But the hopelessness and despair of the New Jersey teen-agers who call themselves “the burnouts,” their pessimism about job prospects and the solace they might have sought in drugs or alcohol, is an ordinary part of underclass life. We accept it as that —or dinary — and not what it essentially is — suicidal. The suicide of four young peo ple is a tragedy. Its more frequent coun terpart in the ghetto is that and more. It’s also a disgrace. Copyright 1986, Washington Post Writers Group I’m doing now. The best part about get ting a full-time job is that I’ll only be re- sponsibile to one company. In college, you’re responsible for a number of things. The most obvious one, of course, is your grade-point ratio. Unfortunately, each professor feels his or her class is the most important one. My boyfriend and I went out to dinner one Friday night and we ran into his biochemistry professor. At the restau rant, the professor seemed nice enough, but the next week in class he com mented that he had seen several stu dents from the class out on the week end. He added that if the students had enough time to go out, then they didn’t have enough work to do. Naturally, the professor took it upon himself to correct the problem. It seems almost all instructors feel their class should be at the top of each student’s priority list. 1 have friends who were given homework over spring break or had to take a test the Monday we got back. And now we have a number of faculty members who want graduating seniors to take final exams. Recently I read that the early grading requirements for graduating seniors were complicating the faculty’s schedule and that this was one reason for justify ing final exams. This only seems fair, af ter all the consideration instructors give to the students’ schedule. I’m sure we’ve all had instructors postpone an exam af ter finding out we already had one the same week. Any other reasons for mak ing seniors take final exams escape my reasoning. Of course, that’s probably why I’m only getting a bachelor’s degree and not a doctorate. However, school responsibilities usually extend beyond the classroom. Many students are involved in campus organizations, and membership in them often requires a large time commitment. A friend of mine is in a singing group and the time she spends at reh«qpj , . t * ie / ^' 1 m . concerts and fund-raisingeu j enormous. I he organization hai <; tales to ( oi e sympathy for members who havtabut Congress the day after a rehearsal. Some pfb e strings zations make attendance manc;appropriate and entoKc |xMialities for thok|Ri l,s ,,l( ' n ! don't attend. filled and dvn ■pcClure sa Another large time commitmtspesidential a< many students is work. There ai;g| dents w T ho must work in order to« school. Other students, whose for their education, work sol pay can have spending money for rtii spring break. And finally, studec me work l>ecause they want cartel m ALLAS ( 1.1 • i r .u waclass-acdoi lated expel.CHI' before the. c , But working also means giving up ft rt asking for studying or playing. WorkisadMental Heali commitment and an added stress ■held in contei already hectic schedule. he state is inesubstanda 1 ve oiten heard the expressn tain retarded until you get out in the real world fbAttorney E pie who say this make it soundii!:C on, idential i lege students don’t have a careitH te School r world. College is part of the realuft 1 ’ tarings, and students have numerous dei placed on them by peers, parcc structors and employers. I’m beg: to think the students who take 121S and aren’t involved in anythingek doing it the right way. They’re pie who grow up and proclaim,“ft ^ is the best time of your life.” Of course, my discontent couli be a sign of senioritis or spring: Then again, maybe it’s becauselc in town over spring break. Vita- case may be, I know I’m ready tot 1 real job and a more stable schedti: almost ironic how busy I’vebeentb | semester. I thought I was goingtoj the whole time. I guess this is University’s way of telling me I graduated yet. And if I don’t g vated, I might be here another* ter. Jo Streit is a senior journalism t' and a columnist /or The Battalion m H/ Q\ PI M Mail Call Good intentions? EDITOR: In response to the letter “Good Intentions” by Mr. Markel L. Simmons in Mail Call March 24,1 question just who is the benefactor of the good intentions of President Reagan and the U.S. foreign policy in Central America. Yes, I agree with the idea that it is possible to do the right thing in the wrong way, but I personally feel that some of the intentions of the United States concerning Nicaragua are selfish. In January and February of 1981, I traveled in Nicaragua and saw firsthand some of the problems 18 months after the Sandanista revolution. I also lived on the East coast of Honduras from 1983 to 1986 and worked with Miskito Indians, of which some 20,000 were political refugees from Nicaragua. During my three years in Honduras, I had several encounters with the U.S.-trained and U.S.-backed counter-revolutionary forces (Contras). Following are a few questions that I would like to share with Simmons, all Aggies, concerned citizens of the United States, and especially Reagan and members of Congress: 1. Were our intentions good when we helped set up the Somosa family as dictators in Nicaragua in the late 1920s? 2. Were our intentions good when we allowed the Somosa family (father and two sons) and a very few other families to exploit their fellow Nicaraguans until the peasants had very little left to live for? 3. Were our intentions good as we exploited the resources (human and natural) of Nicaragua and other Central American countries during the last century through the combined efforts of private business and the CIA? 4. Were our intentions good as the Somosa family butchered (“Butcherer” is the nickname given to the Somosa family by the Nicaraguan people) thousandswl opposed them up until the Sandanista revolution of 191 5. Are our intentions still good as thousands ofyoufj people die fighting in the counter-revolution when the' have very little chance of winning (as the congressional report stated recently?) 6. Are our intentions also good in El Salvadorwheri we presently support a very oppressive government against another group of “Freedom Fighters”? As per the use of the word communist in the above mentioned letter, Daniel Ortega has repeatedly stated!- the Sandanista government is not communist — nordtf it wish to be. Neither do they want to align with the type 1 democracy that has been shown to Nicaragua over the f* 60 years. I agree that the Sandanista government is oppressive, but our press and our politicians are sometimes guilty of pulling these sensational factsoutof context. Somosa (whom we supported) was also oppressive. To make my stand clear, I am not pro-Sandanista^ neither am I pro-Contra. If one of my friends is manaff his money poorly, does that give me the right to play policeman and take his checkbook away and managed money for him because I think I can do better? Please don’t accept my opinions without investigating more deeply the history of Nicaragua and Central Americafo 1 at least the past 100 years. Again, what are our real in itions in Nicaragua?^ there maybe not better ways to encourage freedom? Ray H. Griggs ’81 Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial it* serves the right to edit letters for style and length, hut will make net) maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must he signed and must include h sification, address and telephone number of the writer.