m H ATT ALIO ohlgemuthsa vas important led.” uts are fori middle orloi Jonethon Gits )t a friend of ngressional nt ' Wohlgemul ill have access o much comp! regulation is he dog lov ' a combin; and the re oe about how versity andk have been s a very ton; tea red up a ft ng it king tun tu risibilities, st of his writ; much," best con times 1 ;e o’clock in ave to be dn vriting.” he hardest] k is durinc MAIU&CALL unction players shouldn’t compared to ‘04 players n response to Jordan Meserole's Sept, ports column: 14 Meserole had the nerve to compare intramural ports with college football. That is quite wrong of him do. I know we don’t have the most spectacular team latuftthe country. Utah is a good team no matter who says ifferently. Plus, we are in a great conference. Meserole tas no place to tell our football team they don’t have any leart. There are plenty of walk-ons that play on the scout earn who love this game and don’t have very much ath- etic ability. But they play because they love it. is quite a sham for someone to compare this foot- all team with the Juction Boys. That was half a cerv ury ago. Plus, don’t you know that the guys who quit weren't good at all. Nobody missed them. The players hese days go through just as much heat, beatings and onstant running as they did in Junction. As you might know, many of the players at Junction iidn t like the movie because much of it was not histoh- :ally accurate. Any of the players now could have made it hrough Junction. These players only play each other and he coaches, which is the way it should be. I advise you o not question the team's heart before you know what it joes through. And that does not include intramurals. Jordan Chambers Class of2003 ight is llndii zrccs with] for it," he sa in initial ; can be stan. but tk suing it ned ig it out. nd stan mak aid. “It wo hat first wort' have am " ' f .' football have you played for Texas A&M? There are a bil- dents intcreJ py of BursciL release date» ven our own student body, will bash and criticize our m a book sirV wn team the second the opportunity comes up. How J Noble on ‘■ough is it to have heart when your own fans don’t even 1016(0 9 p.nEack you up? day duril After we got kicked by Utah, Alex Smith was on the son Aggie i lover of The Battalion. The Utes star quarterback on nd in ik ibifthe cover of The Battalion! I understand covering foot- Students should support earn no matter what Heart? It’s easy to sit back and write about what they’re [lot doing, and how much heart they do not have, have a question for the critics, how many downs of things that make A&M what it is today, and Aggie ootball is one of them. It just amazes me that people, mg red. the AT! f ball and other sports, but why put him on the cover of I our paper? A&M Football is still the best thing at this University. Here's a thought for the student body and the people who constantly put down our team: Where [is your heart? Arley Pustejovsky Class of2005 nhe Twelfth Man has lost much of the missing heart >lan and st Day! ■TEST jractice ican Medical Collegf ne print. ALIO FI EDS 5-0569 /OUR AD I Not so fast my friend (to steal a line from one If the three wise men of ESPN, Lee Corso). Let's I tart with the fact that shutting out Wyoming is omething that we should be able to get excited bout. The last time an opponent was shut out at (yle Field was Nov. 7, 1998. That is a span of five easons, or 33 home games, between shutouts. If anyone has lost heart since the days of Coach Bry- mt, you have to look no further than your illustration or your article, The Twelfth Man. We play as big a part n the team as the players. Kyle Field is our home, and : is not the dreaded place to play it once was. This iaturday would be a good time for the Twelfth Man o stand proud and show we have the heart to help lefend Kyle Field. This is our time to help take back (yle Field. This game is a good time to remind the old ;ies that Kyle Field can still be a place teams dread o play, how deafening it can be, how our team feeds iff of the Twelfth Man. Looks to me you challenged the vrong people with this article. The Twelfth Man needs o be challenged to step up and help to be the driv- ng force for our team. Also, the last team we shut out ^ lefore Wyoming was Oklahoma, with some very easy earns thrown in between the shutouts. Peyton Carter Class of2005 fomen on the front lines rould cause more deaths |n response to Jim Foreman's Sept. 10 col- ]imn: It is an indisputable fact that women are physically eaker than men, and men instinctively protect mem- iers of the weaker sex. Mr. Foreman sublimely dismiss- s these traditionalist claims, disregarding the fact that hese ideas have survived to become traditional precise- because their wisdom has been proven the world over iy centuries of war. Like it or not, war is about killing — and women, how- ver tough, cannot battle against hardened fighting men. he media glorified Jessica Lynch as a war hero ,but he was never shot and never returned fire! Now she is wised to make millions off a book while her comrade-in- rms, Pfc. Patrick Miller — a true hero — did return fire and goes unmentioned! Americans need to rethink this issue and realize that laving women serve in direct-action combat handicaps wr military and will result in an unnecessary loss of life. Justin Allison Class of2005 Opinion The Battalion Page 11 • Wednesday, September 15, 2004 Pace Deiscn • MATT RIGNEY For peace and posterity? France must stand against terrorism to uphold democracy CINDY MCREYNOLDS S ince the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2002, critics have denounced the Bush doctrine, saying unilateral preemptive war is unnecessary and wrong that America’s pursuit of a cowboy foreign policy is actually the root cause of terror- ^ V- 'y Wk * sm ‘ F renc h President V> Jacques Chirac ^JP IHL threatened to V y ■ use every tactic, including a U.N. veto, to prevent an Iraqi invasion. Chirac hoped to protect his nation from Islamic terrorism by proving to the terrorists that his nation is sympathetic to their cause. However, as negotiations for the release of two French jour nalists captured in Iraq drag on, one thing has become clear: The French policy of appeasement has not sheltered its citizens from the hatred of terrorism. On Aug. 20, Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot were kid napped by members of the Islamic Army in Iraq, who demanded the repeal of a French law banning Islamic headscarves in schools. This tragic event is exactly what the French have been trying to avoid with their years of stagnant diplomacy, their avid opposition to the War on Terror and their generally pro-Arab policies. Therefore, French officials were shocked to learn that their best efforts had failed to secure the goodwill of the terrorists. French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said, “Their kidnapping is incomprehensible to all those who know that France ... is a land of toler ance and of respect for others.” But his incredulity is misplaced, since tolerance and respect mean nothing to those who only understand brute force. In the words of Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, “Neutrality doesn’t exist, as the kidnapping of the French journalists has shown. The French are deluding themselves if they think they can remain outside of this. Today the extremists are targeting them, too.” Terrorists arc not rational, reasonable people. Men who would kidnap and murder a non-combatant do not understand or accept compromise. They are not willing to live in peace with those who merely tolerate their extremism. As long as France continues to allow non-Muslims to worship freely, permits the existence of nude beaches and otherwise deviates from the terrorists’ concept of piety, they should expect to be targeted. Yet, the French continue to blame America for the actions of terror ists. The French-lraqi Friendship Association accused U.S. forces of endangering the lives of French journalists by launching military opera tions south of Baghdad. And Mohamed Bechari, head of the National Federation of French Muslims, said “the U.S. and Iraqi forces don’t want this release.” To claim that the United States wants to see the French hostages killed, whereas the terrorists are just looking for a safe place to let them go, is nothing short of ridiculous. Yet it shows how far the French are willing to go to excuse the atrocities of men who see human life as meaningless and freedom as the great Satan. 9/11 proved that a see-no-evil foreign policy provides only an illusion of peace and no real security. Today, all nations, including France, have only two options. They Brandi Dunn • THE BATTALION must either succumb to the wishes of the terrorists by ultimately model ing themselves after Iran and Saudi Arabia, or they must be willing to take a definitive stand against terrorism. France acted on this principle when it correctly refused to repeal the headscarf ban. But it is incon sistent to stand up for a domestic law while allowing the terrorists to dictate foreign policy. The goal of terrorism is not any single domestic or military achieve ment. They do not seek money or power in the traditional sense. They seek the annihilation of the Western way of life. Because of this. Presi dent Bush has argued that only by actively defending America against those who seek her destruction can any lasting peace be achieved. If France truly stands for “Fratemite, Egalite and Libcrte,” it should join the United States by defending those principles at home and abroad. Cindy McReynolds is a senior electrical engineering major. Zell Miller's convention speech tarnishes his career as Democrat JONATHAN SMITH ell Miller, a Demo crat from Georgia, f set the political world on fire during the Republican National Convention when he voiced support for President Bush. Actu ally, Miller did a good bit more than just praise Bush; his speech also at tacked Kerry’s character. Even though this sort of political displace is good for show. Miller’s flip-floppery on the issue of Kerry hardly makes him a reliable source. In his speech, Miller screamed, “No pair has been more wrong, more loudly, more often than the two senators from Massachusetts: Ted Ken nedy and John Kerry.” He also claims that voters get from Kerry a “yes-no-maybe bowl of mush that can only encourage our enemies and confuse our friends.” This rhetoric is a far cry from what Miller said when he introduced Kerry on March 1, 2001 at Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in his home state of Georgia. Just three years ago on this day, Miller said, “John Kerry has fought against gov ernment waste and worked hard to bring some accountability to Washington.” Does that sound as if he is describing the same “bowl of mush”? During this dinner, Miller praised Kerry for fighting “for balanced budgets before it was considered politically correct for Democrats to do so.” In this comment, Miller actually praises Kerry’s mild conservatism. He told everyone there that, basically, he agreed with Kerry. “John Kerry has been more wrong, more weak and more wobbly than any other national figure," Miller said. By virtue of years of agree ment with Kerry, Miller has shown that he him self is “wobbly.” Almost worse than Miller’s flip-flopping on the issue of Kerry is that he distorted Kerry’s record to make him seem like an anti-war nut. In truth, Kerry in the last decade has agreed with Republicans regarding the military on many issues. The B-2 bomber, which Sen. Kerry opposed, was also opposed by former President Bush. In 16 of his 19 years in office, Kerry hasn’t opposed an annual Pentagon appropriation. That doesn’t sound like a senator who is weak on defense. Miller also accused Kerry of wanting to “outsource our national security” by always playing nice with the United Nations. This ignores the fact that Kerry voted for go ing to war with Iraq. In fact, in Kerry’s own convention acceptance speech, he stated “I will never give any nation or international institution a veto over our national secu rity.” Yet while Bush proudly defies the international orga- nization, Kerry wishes to go against it only if necessary. This sort of thinking is what America needs if it is to repair the dam age done to its image around the world during Bush’s presidency. When accusations ran out, Miller began to rely on a recent Republican scare tactic to advocate Bush’s presidency. Miller calls Bush “the man I trust to protect my most precious possession: my family.” This implies that Miller thinks his family would be more likely to die of terrorist attacks under Kerry. This ignores the fact that more Americans have died under Bush’s first term from terrorism than in both of Clinton’s. In fact, Miller does his best to build up the monster he called terrorism in his speech. Ter- ln the end, Miller has allowed his years of credibility to be damaged by an incorrect and fiery convention speech. rorism is not nearly the killer in America that heart disease or pneumonia is. When we hype the danger of terrorism like Miller has done, terrorists are better able to achieve their pri mary goal: to negatively alter the United States. Kerry realizes that terrorism is important, but that the economy, education and America’s im age are of equal importance. In the end. Miller has allowed his years of credibility to be damaged by an incorrect and fiery convention speech. Miller allowed the Re publicans to bash Kerry without getting their hands dirty. The Re publicans allowed Miller to hog the spotlight one more time be fore he retired to Florida. At the beginning of his address, Miller asked, “What has happened to the party I’ve spent my life working in?“ The facts show that Miller’s party (and Kerry’s) hasn’t dramatically changed in the past three years, but Miller has. His re- fusal to change his party like oth er conservative Democrats such as the former Sen. Strom Thurman proves that Miller has other motives for remaining a Demo crat in title. As a Republican, Miller would just be another voice in the crowd, yet as a Demo crat he is able to get upon the national stage once more. Americans must decide for themselves if they agree with Miller’s assessment of Bush, but the facts don’t agree with Miller’s condemnation of John Kerry. Jonathan Smith is a junior history major.