THE BATTALION NEWS battalion 1 do something ore likely to t getting it done, Id obstruct tie •e bound tothiJ porters of tk nators that tk ' remain pliable t in stone,” said less administra- idment saidtk uld be trustedi: dents and noted or removing a; it. Additional:; nat the senaa tie authority branches, schedule of it respect eac ■e," said sena:- science ma ;aid the amet: i reflection alsaid Broci lions commit: science may that 66 perce heard about a e senate took ; to educate i >ut the matter, get them tocr: l that does a said, aellor Earl Ny eased with tk Opinion Friday, March 22, 2002 EDITORIAL Not Forthcoming Earlier this week, the Texas A&M Presidential Search Advisory Committee announced a short list of three candidates to replace Dr. Ray M. Bowen. The search committee will send its recom mendations to the A&M System Board of Regents. Unfortunately, the committee has been less than forthcoming thus far to the Aggie community. Reports have surfaced that an additional two candidates will be added to the short list. In the place of a straight answer is tricky, technical wordplay that neither denies or confirms that there may be other candidates. This is unacceptable. If the committee is still searching or intending to recommend further candidates to the Board of Regents, why was the short list released? The A&M presidential search advisory committee should clear up confusion about its choices immediately. If there are in fact other candidates the Board wishes to recommend to the Regents, the list should not have been released on Tuesday. To do so is misleading and a disservice to the candidates and the A&M community. Determining who will lead one of the largest public research uni versities in the country is a difficult and important task. Background checks, personal and professional evaluations and debate about who is best for the job should not be a public process. The committee should include and add as many appli cants as it wishes, but when candidates are named with a strong sense of finality, the issue should be settled. If this is not the case, what is the harm in saying so? The A&M presidential search advi sory committee should end the rumors immediately. To not be upfront is unfair to Aggies and the previously-named candidates. The committee should end the rumors — the integrity of the vital role in choosing the next president is at stake. THE BATTALION would alway ontact with sin Iter all, it is fa all this effort is )rward,"hes3sl less, a $500,ft 1 it was instated!) injured in tk pay for media vered by iiw vate donors an: id after the col Association o t e d i since tan i EDITORIAL BOARD Editor hi Chief MARIANO CASTILLO Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor News Editor Brian Ruff Cayla Carr Sommer Bunge Brandie Liffick Member Member Member Member Melissa Bedsole Jonathan Jones Jennifer Lozano Kelln Zimmer The Battalion encourages letters to the editor. Letters must be 200 words or less and include 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 submit- in person at 014 Reed McDonald with a valid student ID. Letters also may be S provided lit nailed to: 014 Reed McDonald, MS 1111, Texas A&M University, Cbllege Station, TX lowment. U843-1 1 1 1. Fax: (979) 845-2647 Email: mailcall@thebatt.com MAIL CALL v tree speech at its rafinest — politics The truth behind Big Event A guiltless society Arabs cannot deny involvement in 9-11 attacks A\ JONATHAN JONES recent poll offers a revealing look at the other side of .President George W. Bush’s war on terrorism. A USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll asked Muslims in nine Islamic countries a series of questions concerning the tragic events of Sept. 1 1 and the U.S. response to it. Some of the results are disappointing, but not necessarily sur prising. After all, one only has to view translations of Arabic newspapers or tel evision programming, even among U.S. allies such as Egypt, to learn about the elaborate Zionist and American conspir acies against Muslims. Over the past six months, European leaders have ques tioned and complained about everything from how the prisoners are treated to the direction and increasing scope of the effort to root out dangerous terrorist cells. Now there is evidence of the extent to which many in the Arab world are simply out of touch with reality. But America must continue to do what is right. Despite indisputable evi dence that the majority of the Sept. 11 hijackers were from Saudi Arabia, 86 percent of the Pakistani and 89 percent of the Kuwaiti respondents do not believe Arabs carried out the attacks. The poll found that overall, 77 percent of those in the nine Muslim-majority countries believe that U.S. mil itary action in Afghanistan is morally unjustified. If most of these countries are U.S. allies, who have Americans spilled blood to protect? The United States spends billions of dollars in defense to provide the country with security, and help ensure global trade, tranquility, and prosperity. In addition, U.S. soldiers have died in three separate incidents in the past decade to better the lives of Muslim people — in Kuwait, Somalia and Bosnia. According to the poll, 41 per cent of Kuwaitis have an unfavorable view of the United States. The United States must do what is right, no matter what other countries think. That means stop ping those who want to bring devastating hann to America before they get the opportunity. Religious fanatics blew up the World Trade Center and attacked the U.S.S. Cole, the Pentagon and several American embassies. The Muslim writer Amir Taheri wrote last October in The Wall Street Journal, “when pressed hard, some Muslim leaders admit that bin Laden is ‘part of Islam,’ but try to mini mize his place. Dali I Boubakeur, a French Muslim leader, says that bin Laden does not represent more than 1 percent of Muslims. Some comfort. That 1 percent means almost 13 million people.” America is, of course, far from per fect. The U.S. military is far stronger than any other nation, yet there is no effort to use that awesome force to con quer and rule the rest of the world. It is highly unlikely that any of the countries in President Bush’s “axis of evil,” or any totalitarian nation that might sym pathize with them, would wield such power with such restraint. If it is arrogant to say most of the respondents to the poll are wrong and seriously misguided, fine. Taheri believes that, “the Muslim world today is full of bigotry, fanaticism, hypocrisy and plain ignorance — all of which cre ate a breeding ground for criminals like bin Laden.” There are many good rea sons to continue the war on terror, despite other opinions. The safety of the United States, and those suffering under stifling societies like the former Taliban, depend on it. And the moral objections must end. Many in the Muslim world, perhaps a large majority, do not care for the United States. It is the world’s most effective protector of democracy, freedom and liberty. Let them continue in delusion, if they so wish. But when McDonald’s golden arches rise over Kabul, the Afghans will be clearly on the road to recovery. Overall, U.S. influence and protection of free and democratic countries is a necessary part of global security. Jonathan Jones is a senior political science major. ADRIAN JATTALION A home for the homeless ilng-s >iano D 1 3 this- lresponse to Rolando Garcia's )/larch21 article: Caytie Sarandis, election com- issioner, was quoted as saying, lot one of my candidates has preached me concerning the sue of First Amendment rights." lese are not her candidates, id this is not her election. Last me I checked these candidates we running for student govern- lent positions. Sarandis also iid, the commission can regu- itehow SGA chooses its leaders lithout the First Amendment mstraints that may apply to the diversity. I find it hard to elieve that the SGA is above the institution of the United States I America. This is a public uni- ersity and this is still America. interpretation of "Who's your addy? Me.", is that Dubberly /ants to be a father figure, and at if elected he will watch over is constituents and protect us. lis quote "Pimpin' for the best amn class pimps are also pro- ictors of their constituents. And if !e want his protection we just lave to vote for him. I fully sup- jort Dubberly's decision not to ake down his flyers. I am also lisappointed that more than 30 fthe 125 candidates in the elec- on altered their materials for arandis' approval. I would roudly vote for anyone who will land up for his own rights, ecause he will most definitely land up for mine. Henry Thomas Class of 2004 In response to Richard Bray's March 21 column: The main goal of the Big Event is to say thank you to the entire Bryan and College Station com munity for having the patience and courtesy to put up with all of the long lines and traffic night mares caused by 45,000 Aggies. Both those who are financially stable and those who are eco nomically disadvantaged feel those detrimental side effects, and thus anyone of any econom ic background is eligible to have students come out to their resi dence and have some work done for them. Although some Aggies feel that the Big Event is not aimed at helping out those in the commu nity that are from an economical ly disadvantaged background, it in fact is. The Big Event specifi cally targets several areas in BCS that really need to be cleaned up, and sends committee mem bers out to those areas to hand out job request forms to door-to- door residents. Big Event is aimed at everyone in the Bryan-College Station community, but we slightly skew it towards those who live in depressed areas. Big Event encourages community service for all of Bryan-College Station and we will help out any resident who asks for it. Matt Brennan Big Event Committee Member Class of 2002 Gay or not, parents will provide love for orphans homosexual parents are more likely to become homosexual themselves. This consensus, found among groups such as D uring last week’s “Primetime” inter view between Diane Sawyer and Rosie O’Donnell, there was little MELISSA FRIED talk about the moral impli cations of homosexuality. Instead, the interview centered around a more public issue: the personal interests of the 568,000 children floating through America’s foster care system and a particular little boy, Bert, in Florida. Bert was nine weeks old when Steve Lofton and Roger Croteau took him home. Like the previous three chil dren they took into their foster care, Bert was HIV positive and not wanted by other families because of the stigma and fear of AIDS. Ten years later, Bert no longer tests positive for HIV and is deemed “fit for adoption.” Lofton and Croteau, the only parents Bert has ever known, want to adopt him. But, by Florida law, they cannot, because they are gay. Although some Florida lawmakers suggest otherwise, being gay does not make someone a bad parent. While there are many contrasting opinions of what makes good parents, there is a universal agreement that all parents should pro vide their children with love, protection, guidance and stability. Unfortunately, rather than considering the life of a child passed through the circulatory mess of the foster care sys tem, the current debate focuses on whether gay couples are able to provide children with the same caring and healthy family life that the “traditional” family unit provides. Any parent, gay or straight, willing to assume the respon sibility of a foster or an adoptive parent role, is someone to be commended rather than condemned. Often, as with Lofton and Croteau, these couples take home a child no one else wants. Lofton and Croteau’s altruistic ways have pro vided Bert a steady home life — one that is uncommon to other children still being cycled door-to-door. Every morn ing they help Bert and his siblings get ready for school, and in the evening they help them with homework and prepare them for bed before the entire routine starts over. Florida lawmakers are wrong to believe that a heterosexual couple could better perform these universal, parental tasks. There also is the ever-popular argument that children of The American Psychological Association, the National Council for Adoptable Children and the Child Welfare League of America, is not true. The argument that children of gay couples will lead a certain sexual lifestyle is like saying children of bankers will be bankers or children of prostitutes will be prostitutes. By making such a blanket statement, we are not giving children enough credit. Children attend school, watch TV and read books. Each medium portrays the “social Any parent gay or straight, willing to assume the responsibility of a foster or an adoptive parent role, is someone to he commended rather than condemned. norms” and reinforces the ideas of society at large. True, the child will be exposed and less sensitive to an alternative lifestyle, but if the parent has created a stable and caring environment, the parent’s sexual orientation plays no harmful role in the development of the child. It is wrong for a child to be subjected to the anguish of the foster care system when there are families available who are capable and willing to take them into their home for the love and attention that they deserve. It is doubly wrong for Florida politicians to allow their own homophobia to prevent children from being placed in a home, especially when other heterosex ual families have cast them back into a system they are desper ately trying to escape. “I don’t think America knows what a gay parent looks like: I am the gay parent.” And thus begins Rosie O’Donnell’s crusade to save a little boy she hardly knows, but, with three adopted children of her own, whose circumstances she can understand. Melissa Fried is a freshman international studies major.