iy • July 6,1994 WoritiCup U3AD4’ .V,J=5 , Round of 16 — Nigeria Foxboro, July 5 -[ Italy ' j Spain Washington, July 2 J Switzerland J Mexico E. Rutherford, July 5 -j Bulgaria ily 10 J Germany Chicago, July 2 Belgium ards; ns Fexas (AP) — ho spent the ailing father i career high its Tuesday d the Texas Cleveland In- ,eam Monday her, Gerald, t attack at loubts that e it back for lok an after- is to take his rotation, ve up seven te in his sec- 3 of the sea- three errors nan Dean ngers in the ed off Mark is 7-1 in his home a run RBI single fire AP Wednesday • July 6, 1994 The Battalion Editorial Board Mark Evans, Editor in chief William Harrison, Managing editor Jay Robbins, Opinion editor Editorials appearing in The Battalion reflect the views of the editorial board. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of other Battalion staff members, the Texas A&M student body, regents, administration, faculty or staff. Columns, guest columns, cartoons and letters express the opinions of the authors. Contact the opinion editor for information on submitting guest columns. Needle exchanges IPrograms for drug users switch death for life Programs that provide clean nee- iles to drug addicts are proving suc- tessful in several communities across the United States in stopping the spread of HIV and AIDS. Unfortunate ly, similar programs have not been im plemented in Texas because of mis placed public fears that free syringes might somehow encourage drug use. Strong evidence suggests that these ji'ears are unfounded and a needle ex change program would be successful. In New Haven, Conn., drug addicts tan exchange dirty syringes for clean ones courtesy of the city’s health de partment. Outreach workers also hand out food, clothes, condoms and infor mation about needle disposal. Since the program was started in 1990, AIDS cases have declined by 33 percent in New Haven. They have also referred 20 percent of their clients to drug treatment programs. Initially, opponents of the program Oftentimes it s not ‘only a game 5 Sports zealots lose sight of recreation, entertainment in competitions FRANK STANFORD Columnist were more concerned about the effect of the program on drug abuse rates than on the spread of HIV. In most parts of the country, in fact, needle ex change programs are too often dis missed because of the perception that they promote drug use. This perception is false and is pre venting the implementation of such programs where they might be very helping in slowing the spread of HIV. In San Francisco, Calif., education and drug treatment plans coupled with needle exchange programs have proven quite effective in reducing both HIV infection rates and the number of intravenous drug users. The people whom these needle ex change programs serve are going to use drugs whether they have clean needles or not. We should not be content with allowing these addicts to kill themselves when their deaths might be prevented with a cheap disposable syringe. T his week has been a particularly fun and exciting for most countries of the globe. The World Cup Soccer tournament has been providing good, clean entertainment - not to mention national cohesiveness - for many countries who are otherwise out of the limelight regarding world sports events. It’s a big chance for these countries to feel like real contenders in a major world event, and is taken almost as seriously as a war. But competitive sports are kind of a war anyway. Most Americans, including me, don’t give a flying doughnut about this game the rest of the world calls “football.” However, when I turn on the TV and see footage of ethnic Americans hanging out in sports bars to cheer on the motherland’s team, I understand just how serious some people get over the outcome of a game. Many of these contests are treated as mock battles. In the 1980s the US Olympic Hockey Team finally beat the Soviet Union. There was no doubt that the game represented a true battle between the two “nuclear nervous” nations. A loss to “the West” was a far greater blow for “the Russkies” than if they’d lost to Finland or Greenland. Likewise, important games mean much more to the public if a centuries-old mortal enemy is the opponent. Ireland is far more interested in beating England than anyone else. The Israelis versus the Syrians or the Greeks against the Turks would create exciting matches. Soccer could be a great method for settling national disputes. War without violence. Unfortunately, “football” and violence seem to go hand in hand for many countries. Violent, over-zealous British soccer fans known as “hooligans” have been responsible for a number of deaths over the years and countless injuries. Much to the world’s dismay, a Colombian player was recently shot to death upon return to his homeland after he kicked a black and white ball the wrong way. Except for the minuscule link to the team by virtue of living in the same country, fans have no part in these games whatsoever. In fact, the teams would enjoy playing each other whether or not the fans showed up. Many players would even play for free. Unlike the fans, players have a life on the field and off, and have usually learned to distinguish between the two. So why must fans get so out of control over a game? Where did they learn to take what is supposed to be recreation and blow it out of proportion? Well, speaking as an American male who’s been exposed to and subjected to high-powered sports zealots, I’m not surprised by many fans’ behavior or attitudes at all. Just look around you. Right here on our academic campus football rules the world. The stadium is one of the most prominent buildings we have. The athletic dorms and training centers are far more elaborate than necessary, and if that’s not enough we’re spending millions to build more sports facilities across the tracks. The library is still the same, however, and many classes are still overcrowded. In addition to suffering from such skewed budget priorities, many universities fall victim to themselves by violating NCAA laws pertaining to illegal recruiting and compensation. Coaches are paid enormous salaries and are the darlings of the school until they lose a few games, then it’s “see ya later coach.” But we are all to blame; our fervor over football creates these problems. The only marginally innocent people are the players, who are pimped by universities and alumni all over America. But it didn’t start in universities. It didn’t even start in high schools like Permian High in Odessa or Judson High in Converse, where football IS the king of the community. It’s parents — usually fathers who instill in their sons that winning is everything, to lose is to die ... even in Little League. Although my parents taught me, “It’s a game, just have fun,” I knew many peers who learned differently. I’ve seen 8-year-olds cursed and even spanked for dropping a fly-ball or fumbling on the 10-yard line. Oftentimes praise pales in intensity to punishment because perfection and winning are expected. At this point the child learns that winning his game is the only accepted way to play and eventually attaches that sentiment to teams he’s not playing on. Screaming at the TV and domestic violence rise significantly during football season. Most of you either know, or feel effects of these attitudes, or you may even agree with them. But there are only two outcomes to this way of thinking: A champion athlete who has never had to learn how to lose at anything, or the capable contender in life who is afraid to play for fear of defeat. We occasionally hear of rich, powerful and sometimes famous “winners” who find it very difficult to cope when they “lose” at some aspect of their lives. A number of successful celebrities have fallen victim to this syndrome and have perished in popularity and even life as a result. On the other hand, students who have made a few ‘C’s in their life are more likely to handle getting one than a senior with a 4.0. Either development can be avoided by some simple thinking about what’s really important in life, and passing that to your children. Frank Stanford is a graduate philosophy student Although my parents taught me, "It's a game, just have fun," I knew many peers who learned differently. I've seen 8-year-olds cursed and even spanked for dropping a fly-ball or fumbling on the 10-yard line. Win ning is the only accepted way to play. Jane Fonda, Oliver North match in un-American behavior iirbo, i P) — Less after win- champi- ston Rock- fired 11 oyees, in- ligh-flying the former mast who :ots Turbo ig Rockets terminat- jdia infor- Jay Gold- ations di- and eight Rockets business the team plans to ness staff ms over, rnal mat- affect the i>r opera nd. “Be- going to >phy and be dis- ent time lected by i.” included ia infor- he direc- >ing and 4s, sales ations. r Peggy Iso re- as the rformed iks dur- it would r him to he was uld say do no 3, fewer ice em- i before xander t July, ses have le team 3d corn- firings s home by The M ost of us weren’t around for the 1960s, but all of us are very familiar with the story of Jane Fonda. A rich, famous actress, Jane fell in with radical organizations galore, spending such of her time learning revolutionary slogans and punishing the American public through her displays of ignorance concerning historical and political issues. While Fonda did attempt to help minority groups and those in poverty, she had one issue that became identified with her for the rest of her life. The Vietnam conflict heated up in the late ’60s, and radical Hollywood insiders attempted to use their name recognition and money to stop the war. Fonda joined organizations that promoted dishonorable activities of soldiers, including groups that assisted draft dodgers and the sabotaging of military activities. These activities certainly bordered on what one could call un-American activities, but nothing that could not be forgiven. Then Fonda went too far. During July, 1972, she went to North Vietnam to celebrate its “victory” over American imperialism. She talked to North Vietnamese soldiers and promoted their cause as I just. She came back to the United States and said that prisoners of war who claimed to have been brutalized by their captors were “liars and hypocrites.” Later, she admitted that it probably happened, but, “what could they expect?” Many people still believe Jane Fonda is a traitor to her country. Confused, “Hanoi Jane” had allowed herself to be used against her own people, and will have to live with her mistake forever. There is another story to be told about a traitor. This individual is not much smarter than the previous one, just luckier. He was a pawn in the international power game, and was almost crushed by the machinery of the system. Lt. Col. Oliver North made it because he was too small a fish for Congress to fry. He was naive and outspoken, a defused threat to the country who could testify against bigger men. North admitted to having organized the Iran-Contra arms sales, of having lied to former Congressional inquiries and of trying to sidestep and eventually break the laws of the United States, specifically the Boland Amendment, which stated that all government assistance to the Contras should end. Since then. North has made multiple speeches about how proud he is of himself for those actions. Oliver North had fanatically attempted to destroy every piece of evidence that would lead the investigators to discover what had occurred. He never produced any original information, but would only support findings that the Congressmen already knew about. North had sworn an allegiance to defend the Constitution, and discussed this subject in Congressional Committee hearings. He failed miserably. Instead of protecting the American people and their Constitution, North backed the Iranians, the Contras and his own superiors. This same man, having supported such harmful activities, is now attempting to run for the U.S. Senate in Virginia. It is much easier to condemn Jane Fonda as a ic 1 who runs around in hippie clothin s to criticize a decorated Naval Acade graduate who promotes mainstream religious and moral values. It is much easier for people to forget that Oliver North admitted that, “... I misled the Congress,” because he told those supposedly lousy Congressmen what they should do with themselves. North did have some points in his favor. He did want to support what he and his superiors thought were America’s objectives, and he did claim to have been very proud of his actions. Yet Jane Fonda, upon returning from Vietnam, also claimed that she had supported what she believed were important American objectives, such as peace in Southeast Asia, and that she was very proud to have seen past what she considered criminal activities by the Nixon administration. Defining un-American activities seems to be a very politicized task. If you are a liberal, you tend to believe that Jane Fonda simply exercised her right to free speech and did a service to the United States by helping to stop an immoral war. If you are a conservative, the winner of a silver star in the Vietnam conflict, who supposedly saved America from itself through his illegal activities, can be seen only as a hero as well. I guess if someone has always approved of Jane Fonda’s actions or is considering voting for Oliver North, maybe they should read Sen. Daniel Inouye’s closing remarks concerning the Oliver North hearings. Inouye, a Distinguished Service Cross winner, pleads with America to look at our heroes for who they really are and to remember that,’’Our government is not a government of men. It is still a government of laws.” Oliver North broke our highest laws and made our government lie to the world. If you think Jane Fonda is a traitor, then Oliver North certainly has to be one as well. Josef Elchanan is a senior business management major JOSEF ELCHANAN Columnist o ■ ox a ' ; ©sa sag s s-s? mm Bandwagon mentality accepts invalid ideas I was deeply saddened by the col umn entitled “No rules define ‘good’ Parenting” in the June 29 Battalion. Frank Stanford begins with a simple piece on who has a right to be a par ent, but it quickly devolves into a fa talistic look at America, with Chris tians once again to blame. Stanford seems to purport that since our societal values and stan dards are declining we should give in and go with the flow of said change. Of course, the “Traditional” household (read “Christian”) is holding back such “evolution.” I would consider such a flippant attitude regarding life a devo lution for our society, which has ac crued a vast sea of ideas and beliefs. Just because America is a heteroge nous nation does not mean that all its varied viewpoints are valid or vera cious. Ideas such as these can be toler ated, but if we so easily abandon our own teachings, as Stanford would have us do, truth really would be relative. Whatever the trend of the day, we would be like puppets jumping on the bandwagon of popular culture. How sad it truly is that such ideas are tolerated in a way that puts chil dren at risk. Stanford offers no evi dence to the contrary. He simply offers attacks on his cited research from Walter Barbee, which turns into at tacks on Christian beliefs. Stanford portrays Christians as ignorant, intol erant, and abusive. The new bandwag on mentality, exemplified in the arti cle, reveals the key problem with to day’s culture. The general populace wishes to live in a world free from ab solutes. This lack of accountability is the reason this same-sex parenting topic has become an issue. It is also the same reason that Christians are so often chosen as the fall guys, the scapegoats for society’s problems. No one likes to be told that they are wrong. That is why it is easiest to as sume such a careless attitude regard ing what we hold as truth. Contrary to Stanford’s column, our country is not predominantly Christ ian. That’s the reason that such a practice of abandoning any sense of culpability for our actions has become an ever-increasing and ever-frighten ing reality. The Battalion encour ages tetters to the editor and wilt print as many as space allows. Letters must be 300 words or less and include the au thor's name, class, and phone number. We reserve the right to edit letters for length. Craig McKenney Class of ‘96 style, and accuracy. Address tetters to: The Battalion - Mail CaH 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1111 Fax: (409) 845-2647