The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, June 16, 1987, Image 2

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opl,lllollS • The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, June 16, 1987
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when you are suddenly confronted by an pilots to use "see and avoid" tactics. A )t5,.4. r.v , -.._r7 , ' • ( "'
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ner. With nowheiT to turn, a collision is there is "some sort of equipment break- 1 ' ,
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And so goes the fight for safety in Ameri
ca's skies. Until recently, the nation's air
traffic controllers and the planes they tried
to direct to landing strips were as blind as
they were overworked. In 1981, faced with
intolerable work hours, poor work condi
tions and unsafe equipment, air traffic
controllers struck for a safer workplace.
The action prompted President Reagan to
fire 11,345 controllers and the friendly skies
became suddenly ominous.
In an attempt to address the problems
that prompted the 1981 strike, air traffic
controllers decided to unite last week form
ing the National Air Traffic Controllers
Association.
The establishment of a new union once
again signaled the problem of overcrowded
airspace, but it did little to alleviate the
roots of the controller's problems.
Worthy
Words
.11; Collegian
Tuesday June 16, 1987
©1987 Collegian Inc.
Chris Raymond
Editor
Glenn B. Rougler
Business Manager
The Daily Collegian's editorial opin
ion is determined by its Board of
Opinion, with the editor holding
final ,responsibility. Opinions ex
pressed on the editorial pages are
not necessarily those of The Daily
Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The
Are you interested in becoming a columnist for The
Daily Collegian for Summer Semester 1987? If so, then
we are interested in hearing from you. You don't have
to be a journalism or English major to write for us, but
you must be currently enrolled as a student at the
University.
Columnists will be expected to write proficiently on
national and local issues currently capturing the
public's attention. What we want are ORIGINAL, well
written, well-researched and insightful columns (not
old high school term papers). They can range from
humorous to political (or can be politically humorous,
whichever you prefer). We ask that you be able to
present these issues in new and different ways that will
Never forget
It is only by remembering past conflicts, that tomorrow's unjustified wars can be avoided
"Only the dead have seen the end of war."
—General Douglas MacArthur quoting Pla
This column was supposed to be about
that Yuppie/DINK (Double Income No
Kids) presidential candidate Joe Biden. But
its too early in the race to start speculating
about who's got what it takes to run a
country. So I decided to write about some
thing else that's been on my mind lately.
. 0 9ifik
44414,
•V , 11.
The above quote is from Sunday's New
York Times Magazine. My apologies to the
writer William Manchester but that is just
too good a quote to leave out of a column
about war.
The reason I bothered to read that article
entitled "The Bloodiest Battle of All" was
‘`. . . and time and the' world are ever
in flight.".
William Butler Yeats
Pennsylvania State University.
Collegian Inc., publishers of The
Daily Collegian and related publica
tions, is a separate corporate insti
tution from Penn State.
Board of Editors
Managing Editor Jane Kopacki
Assistant Managing Editor Jim Higgins
Opinion Editor Megan Cuihane
News Editor
Eric Schmidt
Copy Editor
Ann Garrett
Sports Editor Bob Williams
Assistant Sports Editor
Stacey Jacobson
Arts Editor Ron Swegman
Science Editor Christine Kilgore
Graphics Editor Andy Capitos
Columnists Wanted
•
...0 A .L •
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iiiitia
Late last week, the Federal Aviation
Administration admitted there is a problem
in our skies enough of a problem to begin
reducing the number of flights and spread
ing planes out over some areas at certain
times during the day.
What's more, it demanded three additio
nal safety measures including requiring
altitude=reporting devices on planes, re
stricting flights by student pilots in "termi
nal control areas" within 30 miles of the
nation's most congested airports and re
quiring private pilots to file flight plans four
hours in advance.
It is heartening to see that the FAA has
finally recognized the severity of the prob
lem and has taken immediate measures to
solve it by decreasing the number of flights.
Customers may be temporarily inconve
nienced but America's skies will be a lot
safer for it.
challenge and amuse our readers.
The editorial/opinion page offers opportunities to
write creative and opinionated pieces along with a
chance to flex some of your mental muscle. If all this
excitment sounds right up your alley, you may be just
who we are looking for this summer.
Anyone interested in becoming a columnist for the
Collegian should stop into our offices in 126 Carnegie
building to pick up an application. Completed applica
tions should be returned, along with two typed samples
of your writing, to Opinion Editor Meg Culhane by 5
p.m. on Friday, June 19th. NO LATE APPLICATIONS
WILL BE ACCEPTED. Questions may be directed to
Meg Culhane at 865-1828.
because my father, like Manchester, is a
veteran of the same conflict Okinawa.
Without going into details, the Pacific island
of Okinawa was to be the last stop for
American forces in World War II before a
massive invasion of Japan itself. Beginning
in April, 1945 the struggle lasted 82 days and
over 200,000 American and Japanese sol
diers lost their lives fighting it.
The "bloodiest battle" proved a decisive
victory for us but the massive invasion of
Japan was scrapped when two atomic
bombs were dropped there in late summer
of that same year. The bombs made it clear
that an invasion would not be necessary and
the course of history, as well as the methods
of war, were changed forever.
The island of Okinawa is nothing new to
me. Ever since the first time I opened up an
old ammunition box of my father's (besides
his heavy wool uniform and dog tags it is, I
believe, the only souvenir he brought home
from the war) and shuffled through the
stack of pictures that he had stored inside,
my curiosity about Okinawa and war itself
has been insatiable.
To this day two of the pictures in that old
green box are pasted vividly in the forefront
of my memory. They are of dead Japanese
Photo Editor Cristy Rickard
Assistant Photo Editor Dan Oleski
Board of Managers
Accounting Manager Amy Constantine
Office Manager Kelly Moffatt
Assistant Office Manager Jan Miller
Sales Manager Joe Palastro
Layout Coordinator Michele Morrison
Marketing Manager
Dante Orazzi 111
Complaints: News and editorial com
plaints should be presented to the editor.
Business and advertising complaints
should be presented to the business
manager. If a complaint is not satisfacto
rily resolved, grievances may be filed
with the Accuracy and Fair Play Commit
tee of Collegian Inc. Information on filing
grievances is available from Gerry Lynn
Hamilton, executive secretary, Collegian
Inc.
soldiers (at least I think they are Japa
nese). Now, I'm not talking about the kind
of dead soldiers you see in John Wayne war
movies like "The Sands of Iwo Jima," or
"The Green Berets." No, I'm talking about
mutilated, decaying corpses that probably
smelled as rotten as they looked.
Looking back, I wonder why my dad _
never took those pictures and hid them
away in his sock drawer, or pulled them out
of my tender young hands when I picked
them up. But now I'm beginning to under
stand why he let me see all of the old
pictures; including the ones that depicted
frightened old Japanese men and women
hiding out in caves as well as the dead
soldiers.
He wanted me to see how war really was;
how fear and death really looked. Sure his
stories about that faraway island are real,
but like his uniform, old and out of fashion,
they cannot possibly communicate the real
horror he and his fellow Marines experi
enced. Thanks to those pictures I think I've
been given a more realistic view of what
war really is like.
A more recent account of what a more
recent war was like is given to us in the
movie "Platoon." The very first scene of
reader opinion
Ways to cope
Flipping through a fashion magazine of the 'Bos, it is
obvious to anyone that exercise, fashion, dieting, and
beauty are all influenced on the majority of men and
women in our society today. However, many women in
particular find that by conforming to the "in things," they
are better accepted by society and are happier with
themselves.
This is the process of socialization in which many
individuals acquire those modes of thinking, feeling, and
acting that are necessary to participate effectively in the
larger community (Light and Keller 1985). Often, howev
er, women become so obsessed with their socialization, in
addition to other problems they may have to face, and
resort to. more drastic measures in order to belong. , Two
examples of this desire for perfection are the eating
disorders of anorexia and bulimia.
There is no easy explanation as to why many women
today are facing these eating disorders. Major contribu
tors to them are the different influences in our society
today and the values we have created. In many women's
battles against sexism, they encounter the different sex
roles expected of them and sex role stratification (or the
ranking of one sex as superior to the other (Light and
Keller 1985)). Many times, accompanying this battle
comes low self-esteem generated by not meeting some
standard of society and in turn, many women become
anorexic or bulimic, ironically violating one norm that
of health which our society values greatly in order to
conform to another.
While the behavior of the women suffering from these
eating disorders may be far from normal, it is important
to be aware that these eating disorders are serious
problems that more often than not are very difficult to
cure. In an article by Allan Mazur on beauty trends in
America, Mazur states:
"Women are under more pressure than men to conform
to an ideal of beauty because they quickly learn that their
social opportunities are affected by their beauty, and a
sense of beauty (or lack of it) becomes an important facet
of a young woman's self-concept."
Perhaps our society needs to re-evaluate the values we
have created, especially for women, and place more
emphasis on personality and capability, rather than
sexuality and beauty. It is important for we as individuals
of our society to be aware of our ideals and the effects
they have on others. For many women, anorexia and
bulimia are ways of trying to deal with some of the
pressures created by our society.
Are you angry at a recent editorial,
article or column printed in The Daily
Collegian and are your friends are
thoroughly bored with the fact that
you've rehashed it at dinner for the
last three nights in a row.?
Don't bore your friends or ruin a
good dinner, write a letter-to-the-edi
tor and let others in Happy Valley
know what's on your mind,
The Daily Collegian welcomes let-
Karen Grossman
Please Write
ters from students, faculty, staff,
alumni, and area residents concern
ing current issues and ideas locally,
nationally or internationally.
All letters should be typed, doubled
•spaced, and no longer than two pages.
If you believe a topic merits more of
an in-depth statement then you may
submit a forum. Forums also should
be typed, double-spaced, but may be
up to three pages long.
Author or authors should include
the movie shows actor Charlie Sheen and
his buddies stepping off a transport plane
and into another world called Vietnam.
Through the dust kicked up by propellers
Sheen sees essentially what is representa
tive of any war. He doesn't see sharp
looking soldiers preparing to go home to
happy parades and smiling girlfriends.
Rather, he sees black bags being piled on
luggage carts. Yes the soldiers are going
home but parades will be more like proc
essions and the girlfriends, he knows, won't
be smiling.
Only recently has the American public
come to a tiny realization of what the war in
Vietnam was really like. Documentaries,
movies, talk shows, and monuments ac
counting the war are a dime a dozen these
days. But unless our veterans constantly
remind us of what it was like to fight for
nothing they could understand and come
home to nothing they could celebrate, then
we can and will very well make the same
mistake again.
History, as most of us well know, often
times does repeat itself and it's scary to
think that it may only be a matter of time
before our leaders decide it is time we flex
our right arm of democracy in another
Don't be fooled
From reading articles in The Daily Collegian s and
hearing people - talk, it has become clear to me that most .
white people on campus and in the entire United States for
that matter do not believe that racism is still widespread
and growing. Well, it is. The reason you don't see it is (1)
it's not directed toward you (2) apathy on your part and
(3) it's covert.
No one is going to come into your room and burn a•
paper cross like they did at the Citadel in South Carolina.
No one is going to burn a wooden cross in front of a white
sorority like they did in Alabama. No one is going to
protest outside of your home for your family to move like
they did in southwest Philadelphia.
The vast majority of white people on campus and in the
United States have better things to do than worry about
something which is not going to affect them directly. This
is called apathy.
You cannot take an injustice that has spanned centuries
and expect to deal with it by passing a few laws. That does
not make everything alright. Common sense says that if
you were a racist with power in the '6os, chances are you
are now a racist with even more • ower in the 'Bos. Laws
don't change, people do. They only affect the way people
act in public.
Few white Americans realize how covert _racism can
be. You must forget the old stereotypical view of a racist
being a southern "redneck" who dons a white hood at
night and runs around with a noose in his hand mouthing
racial slurs.
Today's racist could wear a three piece suit, always
smile in black faces or could be a business executive who
does not promote blacks beyond a certain level.
A racist could be an ad executive who doesn't use black
models for a covergirl ad, but can find enough blacks to
shove into a singing and dancing restaurant commercial.
A racist could be part of a newspaper that covers the
ongoing raging debate concerning the pros and cons of
circumcising infants, but neglects to cover a major black
event like the Miss Black Penn State ceremony. Could
these be racist acts? Could be.
People have to realize that racism affects everyone.
Whether he be a professional, with his 2.8 kids, a dog
named Buffy and a loving wife. When the river of
advancement for blacks is dammed, all you get is a
stagnant pool. And a stagnant pool is only good for:
breeding disease and death.
Whether you see it or not, believe that racism is here,
there, everywhere. It hides like the cancer that it is,
growing until it makes its presence known. And all it does
is bring misery to everyone.
name, ID number, local address and
telephone number on each letter.
Writers should submit their letters in
person to the Collegian office in 126
Carnegie during business hours, 8:30
a.m. - 5 p.m.
Due to a large volume of letters, we
cannot guarantee that all will be
printed. Opinion Editor Meg Culhane
reserves the right to edit letters for
length and also hold letters that are
judged libelous or in poor taste.
needless conflict in which we don't belong.
A quick visit to any veterans hospital
would probably make even the toughest old
soldier want to break down and cry. A
veterans hospital is where many men live
out a good part of their adult lives because
the war, some war, robbed them of their
legs, their arms or their minds. My Uncle
John lived a great part of his life in a
veterans, hospital because, after spending
World War II in a foxhole dodging bullets
and shrapnel he came home to dodge the
demands of a society with which he was
never quite able to cope.
"One war has led to another and another
and yet another, and the cruel fact is that
few men, however they die, are remem
bered beyond the lifetimes of their closest
relatives and friends," Manchester writes.
Sad but true, he's probably right. Howev
er, we must have hope and most of all we
must not forget. Because forgetting the
phrase "No more Vietnams," may very
well be our ticket to many more Vietnams.
Jim Higgins is a senior majoring in jour
nalism and is the assistant managing editor
of The Daily Collegian.
Jeremiah Townsend Jr.
freshman-engineering
Court says impact on victim's
family cannot be considered
By JAMES H. RUBIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. In a major setback for the
victims' rights movement, the Supreme Court ruled
yesterday that the impact of a murder on the victim's
family may not be considered when a convicted killer
faces a possible death sentence.
By a 5-4 vote, the justices overturned the death sentence
for a Maryland man convicted of brutally killing an
elderly couple.
The court said the jury that sentenced the man to be
executed may have been inflamed by evidence that the
couple was dearly loved by family members who said
they were devastated by the murders.
Gene Patterson, representing a coalition of victims'
rights groups, said the decision "is a slap in the face to all
victims of violent • crime. It's a major setback to our
movement because in essence the ruling says the rights of
convicted murderers take precedence over the rights of
innocent victims."
Victims' rights organizations argued unsuccessfully
that society has a vital stake in meting out the harshest
penalties in retribution for the harm done to families of
those killed.
In two cases involving free speech, the court:
• Unanimously declared unconstitutional a sweeping .
Los Angeles International Airport ban on free-speech
activities aimed at preventing distribution of leaflets and
solicitation of contributions inside the terminal.
• Ruled that cities may not make it a crime to
"interrupt" police officers in their work. The 8-1 decision
struck down a 1956 Houston ordinance.
In the victims' rights case, the court did not say
whether its ruling applies retroactively to other death row
inmates who were sentenced under laws that permit
Lobbyist Deaver faces trial
Appellate court denies appeal on perjury charges
By JAMES ROWLEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.O A federal
appellate court ruled yesterday that
lobbyist Michael K. Deaver must
stand trial on perjury charges, refus
ing to accept his appeal of a pre-trial
finding in the case.
The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled
that Deaver could not appeal the trial
judge's denial of his motion to dis
miss the indictment on the ground
that independent counsel Whitney
North Seymour Jr. had no authority
to prosecute the case.
Lawyers for Deaver, a former top
aide to President Reagan, said in
advance of yesterday's decision that
they planned to take any adverse
ruling to Chief Justice William
H. Rehnquist.
Deaver had sought to have the
appellate court rule on his challenge
to the constitutionality of the Ethics
in Government Act, which provides
for judicial appointment of indepen
dent counsels.
But the court refused to accept
Deaver's appeal of U.S. District
Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson's
decision, saying the lower court's
ruling "is not a final order, and
therefore is unappealable."
"We find no reason. to make an
exception in this case," the court said
in the order for Judges Harry Ed
wards, James Buckley and Stephen
Williams.
Deaver, who resigned as deputy
White House chief of staff in 1985, is
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charged with five counts of lying to a
House subcommittee and a federal
grand jury that investigated his lob
bying business for possible ethics
violations.
The trial had orginally been sched
uled to begin June 8, but Deaver's
appeal forced a postponement while
the issue was being considered in the
appeals court.
Normally, pre-trial rulings by
judges are not appealable. But Deav
er, arguing the serious nature of his
constitutional challenge, contended
that the court should make an excep
tion to this procedural rule.
The appeals court also rejected
Deaver's request that it issue a so
called mandamus order to Jackson,
directing him to reconsider his pre
trial ruling.
"Mandamus is an extraordinary
remedy to be invoked only in drastic
circumstances," the court said.
"There are no such extraordinary
circumstances presented here."
The ruling marks the second time
in a week that the appeals court has
sidestepped constitutional challenges
to the ethics law.
Last week, it sent a similar chal
lenge by Lt. Col. Oliver North back to
U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robin
son Jr. with instructions to rule on the
case without deciding constitutional
issues.
The former National Security
Council aide is challenging the au
thority of independent counsel Law
rence E. Walsh to force him to give a
sample of his handwriting to the
WE TAKE
SUMMER
ERIOUSLY
SURF CLUB
ER & SURF CLUb COOLER
consideration of the impact of a killing on the victim's
family.
Most states permit judges and juries to weigh the
emotional, financial and psychological impact of a crime
on the victim and family members. But it is not clear how
many states apply that rule to cases in which the de
fendant faces the death penalty.
Monday's ruling applies only to capital punishment
cases.
Justice Lewis F. Powell, writing for the court, said
allowing the jury to hear about the impact on the family of
a murder victim can only inflame jurors and result in "an
arbitrary or capricious" sentence.
"One can understand the grief and anger of the family
caused by the brutal murders in this case," Powell said.
"But the formal presentation of this information by the
state can serve no other purpose than to inflame the jury
and divert it from deciding the case on the relevant
evidence concerning the crime and the defendant."
Also, he said, such victim impact statements raise
irrelevant questions about the victim's standing in the
community and his or her relationship to family mem
bers.
The death penalty may be imposed because of "the
perception that the victim was a sterling member of the
community rather than someone of questionable charac
ter," Powell said.
And, he said, someone might receive the death penalty
merely because family members are willing and able to
articulate their grief. •
Joining Powell in the majority were Justices William
J. Brennan, Thurgood Marshall, Harry A. Blackmun and
John Paul Stevens.
The dissenters were Chief Justice William H. Rehnqu
ist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Byron R. White
and Antonin Scalia.
grand jury investigating the Iran-
Contra affair.
In that case, the court ruled that
Robinson had erred by holding North
in contempt of court for refusing to
obey the subpoena without first con
sidering his challenge to Walsh's au
thority.
The major difference in the North
case is that Walsh, unlike Seymour,
accepted a parallel appointment as a
special prosecutor from the Justice
Department.
North contends that that appoint
ment, made in response to an earlier
challenge to Walsh's authority, is also
invalid. The appeals court ordered
Robinson to consider the validity, of
the parallel appointment before con
sidering any constitutional issues sur
rounding the statute.
Deaver, meanwhile, has accused
the House Energy and Commerce
investigation subcommitee of calling
him to testify merely to determine if
he would commit perjury.
In court papers filed in the case,
Deaver charged that the subcommit
tee solicited his testimony only to see
if his answers squared with informa
tion already in possession of the pan
el.
Deaver's lawyers filed the brief in
opposition to the House subcommit
tee's motion to quash his subpoena
for records of the panel's investiga
tion.
The subcommittee, which referred
allegations of perjury by Deaver to
Seymour last summer, cited congres
sional immunity from the subpoena.
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AN 1
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111 ~
Space
Continued from Page 1
maintenance, scientific study,
and crew health maintenance,
Goldberg said.
In addition to studying pre
flight training, Goldberg is also
looking at on-board training to be
conducted during the nine
months it will take a spacecraft
to make the 40 million-mile trip to
Mars.
Training may also be required
while astronauts spend time on
the surface of Mars, a period
generally expected to last at least
six months, he said, adding that
manned flights to Mars could
begin by the year 2030.
The need for specific training
requirements comes at a time
when astronauts are receiving
larger loads of responsibility, he
said, adding that astronauts must
often train for several years be
fore they can be selected for a
mission.
"Mission control cannot simply
take over the vehicle you must
have astronauts to do that," he
said.
"There has been a change in
philosophy going on at NASA. In
the past, astronauts have not
liked having their performance
measured they've always been
almost god-like," he said. "Now
they're treated more .like real
people, and the new breed of
astronaut is accepting that."
Goldberg said although train
ing requires astronauts to be en
gaged in simulated situations and
emergencies, it is impossible to
prepare for all possible situa
tions.
"We realize .we can't train for
every possible contingency," he
said. "There are always unex
pedted circumstances and condi
tions ... You can't, for instance,
train for exact environmental
situations and conditions," he
said. "We just can't fully dupli
cate some situations, but we do
our best."
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