Battalion O pinion Page 11 ‘Wednesday, September 30, 1998 udent football fans often abandon Aggie spirit at stadium gate DAVE JOHNSTON ilitantpWhere is nothing like ?Libecpotball to bring out the anti-'i'wnclary Aggie spirit. ^nani. Hhe spirit that yells at eofficiipe stupid girl in the next he : . : Son because she refus ed« g to “uncover. ” The spirit day lolialcannot understand ihly icB the jerk two rows in fane::bni will not “hump it” official Bcuss along with r the B\one else in the stands. The spirit that ificme:Bthe football players unprintable alonerHes because they always run the ball. iles.araHven E. King Gill would not stand for s, inc.|efcttitudes filling Kyle Field these days, nal Se;:B)otball is a sport. It is an entertain- dor4 jegt, and one the Aggies used to enjoy hosp ettrr than anyone else. Then they start- pmplaining, and today they continue g to ruin the fun for everyone else, ggie students are in no position to olain about the football team, because days the players are much better the fans. At least the players do not ;ted y ;avt halfway through the third quarter. riggecBver since the men of Kyle ended one )Tue ftht 1 longest home winning streaks in illing: bllege football history back in 1995, the ■ganizfBe fans have been grumpier than ever, iher ra heckle the players, empty the stands liiamcBtly after halftime and bad mouth the ity ic:Bh even though he is a better Aggie PalWB many of the students. Beople can say what they like about ,C. Slocum, but every Aggie can be proud of the coach’s accomplishments on the field. His accomplishments, not just his victories, deserve some attention. No matter what numbers adorn the score- board when the final whistle blows, when Slocum’s in control Aggies can still hold their heads up when they leave the stadium. The team has a more than respectable record, and team problems are minimal. At a time when legal trouble is com mon among college and professional ath letes, the Texas A&M football program has had very few extracurricular prob lems. Other universities have lost several players to academic or judicial problems, but A&M’s biggest news was a player lost to a “clerical error” related to a summer school course. It could be worse, and Slocum is one of the reasons it is not. The Aggie football team has had to en dure some tough breaks, and they do not need fans adding to their grief. Back in the days of the Southwest Conference when the Aggies faced op ponents like the University of Houston, students joked about how the team only seemed to score in the fourth quarter. Now as the Aggies face Big XII oppo nents like Nebraska, fans are annoyed if the game is not decided within the first 10 minutes. Fans need to cut the players some slack. There are elements of football more impor tant than the score. The team tries to have fun. The fans could take a lesson. The Aggie football team is one of the most graceful winners in col lege football. And they should be with all the practice they have. Fans do not see Slocum run ning up the score and embarrass ing weaker opponents. He un derstands the other team has family in the stands too. He tries to make sure everyone has an enjoyable time. Slocum has also stricken football’s ugliest play from his book. Toward the end of a game when a team is ahead in points and has possession of the ball, they usually try to waste the game clock and prevent the other team from making any last-minute points. When there are less than 45 seconds left in the game, many quarterbacks will kneel the ball — hold the ball and touch a knee to the ground, ending the play but running down the clock. This play eliminates any possi bility of an intercepted pass or fumble which might give the other team a shot at the end- zone. It is a heart-breaking play to watch if yours is the team with fewer points. This is exactly why Slocum’s Aggie team will not kneel the ball. He knows everyone came to see some football — not a team’s technical exploitation of the rulebook. Aggie fans need to keep a few things in mind. Ag gies never hiss other Ag gies. Cursing and ridi culing other Aggies is strongly discouraged as well. When a quarter back gets sacked, it does not help anyone when you question his parentage. A missed tackle on a wet field is not sufficient cause for shouting obscenities. Save the horse laugh for when the referees make a questionable call. Here is a hint, not every call that goes against the maroon jerseys is questionable. Remember, even if you are not enjoying the game, others around you might be. Win or lose, they are still the Aggie Football Team. That means each player is still an Aggie and - part of the spirit that can ne’er be told. Graphic by Brad Graeber/The Battalion Dave Johnston is a senior mathematics major. »ii4bortion choice creates victims bortion is an issue of one iit:M»-controver- \niericaB at has been i Buted, debat- affreysB^ argued would : m | before Roe e Wade ever fhe po'W its en - alsoe;* 6 into court. CORRIE CAULEY proce; •s in tlic jbout!!: done. A’. ive ter: f Dai linia ■nd an issue ( mdsei iat arches for resolution be- nsoees,^ 11 the heated screams of “Baby nr!” and “Keep your rosaries off ^ated81®varies!” is finally left in the s of the government, the government strives to. en- every individual the right to iberty and the pursuit of hap- |ss, then it has failed by re ting the rights of women over ghts of unborn children. Ihese rights, discussed in the aration of Independence, are [enable. They are this nation’s ding principles. They exist man, woman, child and even nborn. Monday evening, Carol ett, a former abortion Rider, spoke at Rudder Theater Vc|< gpehalf of the Brazos Valley ■ • vlhalUion for Life, Texas A&M’s liolic Student Association and !gies For Life. j Is a former abortion clinic ler and manager, Everett has en this issue as few have. Her ac- j fit of the deceit and horror in- | [the doors of abortion clinics is ligh to make any woman con- Iring an abortion think again, iverett gave examples of clin- s that set up their own hotlines, ith “counselors” answering Ines, trained to “sell” abor- |s. She described the steps tak- n by counselors to manipulate ebroken women that called eking advice and support. In her book, A Walk Through nnbortion Clinic, she writes of le counselors, “They lie to Inen. How many women ojild have an abortion, if they [them the truth?” Everett gave vivid accounts of how each girl was lured one by one to take the bait and seek their services. And she gave examples of all the worst-case scenarios. Pro-choice activists argue the other camp always uses worst- case scenarios to build their case. But even one worst-case scenario is too many. Abortion advocates argue some clinics genuinely care about the women for whom they pro vide service. But they never tell you just how few there are. The abortion industry is not a movement of people interested in protecting the rights of women, it is a business that exists for the purpose of making a profit. Everett recalled making a com mission of $25 for each client she was able to convince to have an abortion. She said at one time, she and her co-workers found a way to allow for the physician to perform 12 consecutive abortions in order to maximize their daily commission. Just as the pro-life representa tives tend to use the worst-case scenarios and religion to defend their views, pro-choice activists use the instances of rape and incest. These instances are certainly the bulk of controversy that surrounds the issue of abortion. However, they account for only a small num ber of the abortions performed each year. Rape and incest are only seven percent of the 886,000 abor tions performed annually. The ma jority of abortions are those per formed as a method of birth control or those performed to “fix” a mistake. When Everett countered this argument, she admitted these in stances are tragic. A pregnancy resulting from this experience is horrifying. However, pregnancy is only temporary, and though it might seem traumatic to carry a baby to term, upon delivery the baby can be given up for adop tion. And although many victims of this circumstance find it diffi cult to accept that a child con ceived in this way should be giv en birth, to end the life of this unborn child is only to create an other victim. Abortion only creates victims, not solutions. Unfortunately, many women look to abortion to solve their problems. By having an abor tion, they believe the existing prob lem will cease to exist with the ter mination of the life developing within them. However, they fail to recognize that they, too, have be come victims, victims of a haunt ing con science and years of emo- ^ j§ tional pain. But there are alterna tives to abortion. Alterna tives with out vic tims. And allowing abortion to contin ue be cause it is consid ered a woman’s right, does not. make it acceptable. We have heard the excuses, is my choice.” “It is my legal right.” “Don’t impose your morals on me.” They were the same excuses given to defend slavery. Abortion will always be a sub ject of great controversy. It will continue to inspire heated debate and remain as a contentious issue on the moral conscience of society. But like slavery, it can be stopped. It no longer has to exist as the answer. Carrie Cauley is a senior journalism major. Everett generalizes clinic motives T JENNIFER JONES Graphic by Brandon Bollom/The Battalion It he abortion industry — a veritable marketplace where lives are bought and sold like loaves of bread. Or so pro-life advocates such as Carol Everett would portray abortion providers. Everett, a former abortion clin ic owner and manager, spoke Monday night in Rudder Theater about what she perceived were the ill-ef fects of abortion and how abortion had be come a primarily money making industry. But Everett’s logic, along with much of pro-life rhetoric, relies heavily on overgeneralization, giving a grossly skewed view of the abor tion issue. Everett spoke, for example, of the clinics she worked for and managed. She described visiting sex-education classes as a repre sentative of her clinics and then watching her phone ring off the hook with teenagers looking for in formation on birth control. Little did these women know they were being provided with faulty condoms and low-dose birth-control pills that would only work provided the woman took them on a strict schedule, and even then the effectiveness was only questionable. Alcohol death faults individuals In response to Stewart Patton’s Sept. 28 column: I find it distressing that Patton blindly stereotyped thousands of groups of students at thousands of schools across the nation. Pat ton must feel confident in his abil ity to discern universal truth from single, isolated events. Scott Kruger’s death in Massa chusetts was tragic and frighten ing, but hardly representative of the national Greek system, and it should not be used to define and belittle students at Texas A&M. By Patton’s rationale, one could say all police officers enjoy beat ing motorists considering the Rod ney King tape. This condemns each of us for our group’s per ceived behavior, no matter how in accurate that perception might be. Patton addresses a serious is sue that deserves the careful at- This was how her clinics packed their halls with scared, pregnant teens who were then talked into high-priced abortions by counselors skilled in the art of persuasion. No one can condone these de plorable practices, but neither can these actions condemn abor tion as a whole. Simply because Everett’s clin ics were disreputable does not mean all abortion providers co erce women into having abortions only to make another buck. Organizations such as Planned Parenthood do not generate the bulk of their revenue from abor tions, but rather through other medical services such as the sale of birth-control devices. In fact, of the 77,027 medical-service vis its to Planned Parenthood of Houston and Southeast Texas in 1996-97, only seven percent were for abortion procedures. Everett recounted horrifying tales of women who died because of poor treatment at abortion clin ics, tales of abortions provided by unlicensed individuals resulting in infection and painful death. Although these are tragic sto ries, they nonetheless represent a minority of cases. The dubious practices of a few cannot be gen eralized to the majority of abor tion providers who care, like other medical practitioners, about the health of their patients. Pro-lifers point to tragic exam ples of women who die as a result of an abortion and rail that no one warns these women of the abortion-related heath risks. They never mention, however, that women are at a far greater risk of death carrying a pregnancy to term, almost 11 times more so, than from having an abortion. No woman should be forced to risk her life carrying a child to term, and spouting frightening tales of unsterile equipment and botched abortions is unnecessary and misleading. MAIL CALL tention of all students, parents and administrators. No young person should ever be put in a dangerous position to gain acceptance to any group. I only ask that the next time Patton learns of deplorable group behavior, he does not use the Opin ion Page to indict us all. Matt Schroeder Class of '99 Starr investigation serves Americans In response to the Sept. 25 article, “Bond: Starr misusing laws:” I read with interest Professor Jon Bond’s assertion that Judge Starr has misused the special prosecutor laws. Bond overlooked the fact Attorney General Janet Reno and a three-judge oversight panel authorized Starr’s investiga tion. Starr is not acting as an in dependent agent, and no one is above the law. If President Clinton committed In Everett’s speech, she ex pressed her deep regret over having an abortion herself at the age of 28. “My first thought was, T’ve killed my baby,”’ she said. Everett came to believe, as some women do, she made a choice that was not right for her. There is a natural mourning over the loss of a child, whether lost to miscarriage, abortion or untimely death, but that does not mean because a women grieves she made the wrong decision. Everett’s husband convinced her abortion was the best choice, and she came to resent him. The key here is she was forced, persuaded to give up a baby she was not prepared to relinquish. The decision to have an abortion should never be considered lightly. But just as Everett was forced into an abortion, no woman should be forced to give birth to an unwanted child. Everett also characterized pro life advocates as “the only ones having babies.” This, by far, is one of the most distorted visions of the abortion issue. In the midst of inflammatory language the meaning of choice is distorted — the choice to carry a baby to term, the choice to raise a baby or give it up for adoption, the choice to have an abortion. In a perfect world, there would be no need for abortions. But in a perfect world there is no rape and no incest, the pill always works and condoms never break. Adoption, although a noble de cision, should still be a choice a woman is not forced to do. There are few guarantees in this world. But one guarantee all children should have is that at one time they were loved, valued and, above all, wanted. And that is a guarantee children born into a world without choice could never have. Jennifer Jones is a senior psychology major. perjury in the Paula Jones deposi tion or in his Aug. 17 appearance before the grand jury, then he has committed a crime, and the House is obligated to take action. Remember the words of a wise man: “What we tolerate today, our children will embrace tomorrow.” Is that what we want for our country? David Kent Chairman, Republican Party of Brazos County The Battalion encourages letters to the ed itor. Letters must be 300 words or less and in clude the author’s name, class and phone number. The opinion editor reserves the right to edit letters for length, style, and accuracy. Letters may be submitted in person at 013 Reed Mc Donald with a valid student ID. Letters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1111. Campus Mail: 111.1 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: batt@tamvml.tamu.edu