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Boys and girls are supposed to be different

Walter Patterson Herald ColumnistWalter Patterson Herald ColumnistWhen I was a senior in college, I discovered, much to my chagrin, that I was short a required physical education course.  I used every ploy that I could think of to get out of the course, but to no avail.  The college was determined that I take the course, and since it was offered at a convenient time that worked well with my schedule, I did the only smart thing that I could do and enrolled.
When I arrived for the first class, I discovered that a “graduate assistant” would be conducting the class – not a coach or a PE teacher.  “Graduate assistants” sometimes begin to think too much of themselves.  Most of them are young and inexperienced and can be abusive to their underlings, in this case the freshmen students and the lone senior- me.
Time moved on, and I tolerated this “jerk” for about half the semester.  He was a football player who weighed about 240 pounds, and he was all muscle.  One day he took us to the running track, and once we arrived, he discovered that he had left his notebook.  “Patterson, go to the gym and get my notebook.  Turn your shirt around so that you will look like you are coming back,” he said.  I heard some of the girls snicker. For some strange reason, I was in a defiant mood, and I didn’t move.
“Did you hear me, son?” he yelled.
“I heard you, big boy, and you have an option here.  You can send someone else for the notebook or better still, you can go yourself.  It’s your notebook,” I responded.
With that he charged at me like a defensive tackle going for a quarterback.  I didn’t move.  He stopped about five feet in front of me.  “You can go get the notebook or one of us is going to get a tail whipping,  he said, his face growing red with anger.
I would be lying if I said I could have won the fight.  He was big, strong, fast, and he had the weight advantage, but I was willing.  
Sometimes that’s enough.   I mentally prepared for the fight that I knew was not going to end well for me.  “Come on over here and get your tail whipping,” I replied, my eyes focusing on his chin.  I was going to throw that first punch at his chin.  Beyond that, I didn’t have a plan.  I heard the girls gasp.  Violence was about to unfold right before their very eyes.
Just before I uncorked the “chin shot,” I heard him mumble, “O heck, I’ll just do it myself.”  With that, he disappeared into the gym.   Fortunately, I did pass the course and graduate.  Believe it or not, the football player treated me with respect from that point forward.  We were never friends, but we co-existed for the remainder of that final semester.  The freshmen girls seemed impressed, too.
I tell this story to say this:  People, and especially boys, have changed since I was a youngster.  The American feminist has asserted herself into almost every walk of life, and frankly, boys have been neglected.  
Schools have neglected boys for years, and even the Supreme Court has ruled that women’s sports and men’s sports must be financed equally.  Women have been encouraged by feminist to go out for football or other contact sports although they are not physically adapted to take the vicious hits that boys are.  The military has been forced to put women in combat roles even though women are weaker physically and simply do not have the stamina of a male soldier.
If you watch TV, you may think that women are the only ones who contract diseases and die.  We hear endless public service announcements to fight breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and other diseases common to women, but there is not even   a midnight message about masculine diseases – especially those that affect boys between the ages of 12 – 18.  It’s a though these young people don’t exist.
Unfortunately, we have created a generation of “Metro-men.”  Many are sensitive, caring  and smart, but somewhere along the way, that masculine edge, that natural aggressiveness, has been diluted.  Many are confused about their role in society and are often timid and withdrawn.  The feminist have changed them into something they were never intended to be.
The natural boy-hood aggression that makes boys different from girls is slowly but surely being bred out.

 
Letters to the editor

Dear Editor,
The decision by the present school board not to renew the teaching and coaching contract of Mr. Archie Carlyle was a planned and calculated act of politics. This kind of thing has been happening for years.
They didn’t follow policies or procedures in this matter. The state’s report on the district asked the board to stop interfering in this kind of situation, but it seems they didn’t get the memo.
My mother always put her 11 children first in making decisions for their futures. It is clear this board did not do that.
Mr. Carlyle’s only crime was putting his students first. I feel like Jesus, when he told the people at the well, “He who is without sin cast the first stone.”
I and the 800 people who have signed the petition calling for Carlyle’s return can find no fault in his dedication to our community. We are being laughed at across the state, and on Facebook and Twitter.
Our community is losing faith in our ability to work in a productive and successful district. The Yazoo Herald’s sports editor called it a “travesty.” I ask the question, where are all those Christian folks, his co-workers, his pastor and his fellow church members?
Where are the athletes, past and present, and most of all where are the parents? He has mothered and fathered when you were unable to make it to a game or on the road, giving your children heart-to-heart talks of motivation and encouragement both in the halls of our schools and on the streets of this community. Now he deserves your support in this critical matter.
This affects us all, black and white, because the future of our community is at stake. I am asking everyone to show as much concern about this matter as they do during election time.
Mr. Clifton Jones, I sat on the school board when you and your wife in a 3 to 2 vote were denied what you rightfully deserved. When you first ran for alderman you were the only politician I ever spent an entire day with, walking the streets because I believed in you. When I ran for mayor as an independent, I endorsed McArthur Straughter in the primary. Many people thought I was crazy, but I was exercising my rights.
Mr. Aubry Brent Jr., I followed you from Vicksburg to Belzoni and saw people commit perjury to defeat you. When citizens support a candidate, they want something in return. As a citizen with the 800 petitioners, we are calling in our wager. Just get the record of the board of that decision, which is public record. Check the timeline of the action, and you will be amazed. Next month you will appoint or reappoint a board member, but before you do we deserve answers.
If you find me wrong I will come back and sit before you and the school board and give a public apology. Everyone deserves their day in court, and Mr. Carlyle certainly does.
What you do or don’t do will determine the caliber of teachers and coaches willing to come into our community and work with our children.

Johnny Staples

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Home Editorials Boys and girls are supposed to be different