Page 2 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APR. 7, 1976 Endorsements a vote for clean hands David S. Broder Jackson exhausted by Carter! J %F * e' ( ' rv Only three of the six executive positions of the Student Senate are being contested. Student body president and vice-president of finance each have three contenders and vice-president of student services has two. For student body president The Battalion endorses FRED McCLURE. Beneath his excess verbiage lies sound theory and good ideas. McClure is an impressive individual with a strong personality. He’ll be a definite asset in the students’ dealings with other schools and organizations. Of McClure ? s two opponents, Duane Thompson is un impressive and Richard Scruggs’ greatest attribute is his past non-inv6lvement with Student Government. Scruggs has some good ideas, but McClure is still the best choice. MILWAUKEE — It was the tag end of a miserable day of campaign ing, and Scoop Jackson was beat. His throat was sore, his head clogged, his eyes red and tired. As he slumped back in his airplane seat on the last leg of the journey, his raincoat pul led around him for warmth, the senator from Washington looked on the verge of exhaustion. Presidential primaries are tough on a man of 63, even one as fit as Henry Jackson. This day had been worse than most: an early-morning flight from New York to Milwaukee, then a switch to a chartered DC-3 and a six-stop swing from airport to airport, with a press conference and a quick pep talk to local union lead ers at each. It was a cheap way to establish a presence in a state where Jackson has neither the time nor money for much of an effort — a sideshow to the main event for him on Tuesday in New York. But jumping around Wisconsin skies in a DC-3 on a day of spring thunderstorms is no fun for anyone. At Madison, the next to last stop, the same charming youths who had heckled George Wallace in wheel- In the race for vice-president of finance. The Battalion endorses HAL BRUNSON. Admittedly, he’s been in volved in student senate since his freshman year, but he nonetheless shows the promise of effectiveness. His plans are not so long-range to be beyond his grasp; his view of his position is realistic and down-to-earth. Brunson’s opponents are Scott Gregson and Dan Kasper. Gregson admits unfamiliarity with too many major governing groups on campus to be an effective manager of student funds. Kasper is scared to death of University administrators, totally ignorant of his rights. To study the business affairs of the University, Kasper says with a sigh, “If you have to you could go to the records and see what they’ve done.” In the student services vice-president race, Troie Pruitt has definitely been out-classed by the energetic GREG BALL. Ball is a freshman and has not been tainted by this year’s unproductive, chaotic senate. He’s in touch with the every-day student and knows what he wants from his student service fees. Waggle’s car vandalized Of the uncontested races, all three, regrettably, are old-line senate members. Susan Rudd, running for vice- president of rules and regulations, lacks the force neces sary to represent students in campus policy matters. She feels the Board of Regents shouldn’t be bothered, refer ring instead to a nebulous “administration” little realizing the two are one and the same. The Battalion votes NO CONFIDENCE on this one. JERRI WARD, running for vice-president of external affairs has some good answers to campaign questions. That, however, might just come with practice, since she’s held the position for two semesters already. External affairs was one of the more active committees this year, but in view of how inactive the others were, that’s not saying much. Editor: This letter is directed to that per son or those people who vandalized my car Sunday, March 28th. My tire valves were slashed, and my antenna and side view mirror were removed. Why did it happen? Because I am female, and I am in the Corps. I find this turn of events disgust ing. The vandals were of college age, attending a university where stu dents are required to be of above- average intelligence to even be ad mitted. Those people were probably in the Corps, an institution based on the goal of producing soldiers, statesmen, and knightly gentlemen. Yet here, on this campus, there exists a group of people who can con ceive of no other way to express themselves than to destroy a per son’s private property. I ask those vandals this: What was your purpose? If it was to make me change my license plates, which read “WAGGIE,” it didn’t work. If it was to make me leave the Corps, it didn’t work. If it was to tell me that there are people who object to the presence of women in a formerly all-male institution, I was already aware of them. If it was simply to be destructive, you would be well ad vised to direct yourself to the nearest psychiatrist. You are badly in need of psychotherapy. Juanita A. Stubblefield routes would be helpful. The two routes that I am most interested in seeing implemented are one that would pick up people from the back side of married student housing and one that would go around the perimeter of campus. Perhaps it would also be possible to establish a large parking lot somewhere away from campus and run a bus over here. It would be nice if these improve ments could be funded through a mandatory fee. If it is not possible, then I would be willing to pay a large fee (after all, parking permits are $36, besides gasoline and car maintenance) but only if the service was DEPENDABLE! Lois Reibach Twisted meaning STAN STANFIELD, unopposed for the position of vice-president of academic affairs, is straight-forward and knowledgeable. He appears well-qualified for the- office. Voter inertia The student turnout in Saturday’s city elections was deplorable. What does the future hold for our country when even students from Texas A&M, that bastion of patriotism and conservatism, abandon their rights in the democratic pro cess? Less than eight per cent of those registered on campus voted. The two student-dominated precincts, 10 and 21, averaged only a 21 per cent turnout. One suspects that A&M students have a very immature political conciousness, tending toward apathy. On May 1, there will be presidential, state and county primary elections. A statewide turnout similar to Satur day’s A&M student turnout would not be an example of representative government. Overcoming voter inertia is not an easy task. It takes a conscious effort by each individual to become aware of the candidates and issues, and to understand the implications of non-participation. Editor: In an article appearing in yester day’s Battalion concerning candi dates for yell leader I was quoted as saying that people wanted me to run because they wanted a civilian yell leader. It’s true that people told me that last year, but in writing the arti cle the reporter left out the rest of my statement, and in doing so com pletely twisted the meaning of what I was saying. Last year I told the people who encouraged me that if I ran for Junior Yell Leader I would run not as a civilian but as an Aggie. This year I am running for Senior Yell Leader as an Aggie who would represent a un ified student body, and not any sepa rate group within the whole. I find it most unfortunate that this omission should appear in the Battal ion on the eve of the election. Mark Pool Shuttle bus Editor: It seems that every day lately I have seen or heard complaints about the parking situation on and near campus. I believe the time has come to improve the shuttle bus system. Adding buses to the existing routes as well as including some new Cbe Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the university administration or the Board of Regents. The Battal ion is a non-profit, self-supporting enterprise operated by stu dents as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Jnc., New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. Editorial assistant Will Anderson Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester: $33.25 per school year; $35.00 per fuff year. All subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Mail subscriptions are $5.00 per semester; $9.50 per school year; $10.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The» Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. LETTERS POLICY Tetters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guaran tee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verifica tion . Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatched credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein are also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. Acting Editor Roxie Hearn News Editor T. C. Gallucci City Editor Jim Peters Contributing Editors Sandy Russo, Steve Gray Sports Editor Paul McGrath Photo Director Douglas Winship Staff Writers Carolyn Blosser, Ray Daniels, Pat Edmondson, Tony Gallucci, Lee Roy Les- chper, Jerry Needham. TODAY AND TOMORROW, VOTE FOR A CANDIDATE WHO BELIEVES IN... ACCOUNTABILITY OF STUDENT GOVERN MENT TO STUDENTS WITH INCREASED RE SPONSIVENESS TO THEIR NEEDS. IMPROVED MEAL PLAN SYSTEM WHERE STUDENTS HAVE CHOICE OF 1, 2 OR 3 MEALS PER DAY. BETTER JUSTIFICATION FOR THE UNIVER SITY’S SPENDING OF STUDENTS’ FEES AND CHARGES ASSESSED STUDENTS. EVALUATION OF TRAFFIC AND PARKING FINES AND COSTS OF TRAFFIC PERMITS. VOTE FOR SOMEONE WHO CARES V o T FRED M c dure 0 R STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT Pol. ad pd. for by F. McClure I few e ,idix j chairs and Arthur Bremer masks were at the airport to chant obscenities at Jackson. One of them managed to spit on the senator as he passed. To add insult to injury, when Jackson boarded his plane for the last leg, he found it boxed in by a 727 jet chartered by his rival, Jimmy Car ter. Not until a dozen staff members. Secret Service agents and reporters rolled the DC-3 backward, clear of the chartered jet, was Jackson able to leave. There was strong symbolism in Jackson’s plane being pushed by hand to get around the sleek Carter jet. But Jackson is not much one to worry about symbolism. And now, as his plane lumbered toward Milwaukee, he looked ahead to what it might be like — the show down battle with Carter which he, like many others, expects to begin Wednesday, after starting the voting in Wisconsin and New York. Jackson admits to being puzzled by Carter, saying he’s “never had an opponent like him, never known anyone quite like him in politics. ” As Jackson tells it, the process of dis covering began during the 1972 Democratic convention in Miami Beach, when the governor of Geor gia volunteered to make the presi dential nominating speech for the senator from Washington state. The two men did not know each other well, but they shared a strong distaste for George McGovern, his followers and his policies. Jackson liked the idea of having “an attrac tive spokesman for the New South” nominate him. It was the morning after McGovern’s victory, as Jackson tells it, that he got his first surprise from Carter. The Georgian called him to inquire what Jackson thought Car ter’s chances of being elected as McGovern’s running mate might be. Jackson and Carter and their wives lunched that day, and the Jacksons felt by the end of the meal that the nomination and ambition of the gov ernor were much more complex and encompassing than they had previ ously calculated. As his ambitions have unfolded, Jackson finds himself the main re maining roadblock to the nomination of the man who nominated him for President four years ago. If a novelist had written this plot, he could not have provided a sharper contrast in the personalities. Jackson is the ultimate Washington insider: 35 years in the corridors of the Capitol, unrivaled in the manipulation of the bureaucratic-interest group- legislative game. Carter is the essen tial outsider, his main virtue in the eyes of his supporters his innocence of any involvement in that Washington power struggle. Jackson is perhaps the most literal-minded man in American politics, a lawyer who inserts every clause in every answer — to the point of excruciating boredom. He is blunt and often tactless, not content to call a spade a spade when he can raise someone’s hackles by calling it a blankety-blank shovel. He wants you to, know where he stands, whether you like it or not. Carter, by contrast, is a magician with words, weaving a spell with his language and rhythm of speech, building a mood-web that gathers people to him without their ever Hys knowing they are being piiMhr s is as elusive as Jackson is sU vvas fined. It is the classic confronti ween the slogging infantr politics and the dazzlingjell outcome seems obvious. Butj cannot see it that way. What he calls Carter’s “a sonality” — really, Carter’sij tap the deeper strains of i traditionalism, beyond the I most conventional politick worked in rural areas, in sir where Carter has been able| the voters personally, Jacks Carter will continue toil the small city’s primaries a caucuses, where the person is vital. “But in the nig, in| states,” Jackson says, “hec very far down the street witlt] ting involved in issues. “He didn’t do well sachusetts, and NewYorki* ing him. People in thosesta real problems. The recessl over for them, ’’ Jackson says f Carter to win, he mustbeaijj in that kind of state. The senator has a roadiwi own — from Pennsylvania a 27 to Indiana on May 4 to Ul on May 18 to New Jersey,0a.m.-n< California on June 8. Even] those states has union ethnic voters who compra Jackson calls his “lunch budaj stituency. For Carter to win the nontj he will have to work his those voters. Jackson, the minded plodder, sits upinl the DC-3 approaches Mil and says, “I’m damned if I V can do it.” (c) 1976, The Washington Post Dairti Queen Located on S. Texas 1 Ave. between K-Mart and Gibsons 7er, DEP ms. EE U * SPECIALS' WED. & THURS. 3 Tacos APRIL 7 & 8 99c FR/.-SUN. APRIL 9-11 HungerBuster, French Fries $1.09 MON. & TUES. APRIL 12 & 13 BeltBuster, French Fries $1.09 FAMILY NIGHT SPECIAL Every Wed. Night Hunger Buster, French Fries, Small Drink 5:00-11:00 *1.19 —~lub, OTOR 1:30-9 ^NIIA 3, 404 : USSIAI Ate ‘SAVE A BUNDLE Remember the old, Cash and Carry, money saving trick? Buy a pizza at the Commons Snack Bar and eat it there or I anywhere you wish. Prices are right, and the pizzas are g fGSY Stu 225- J^TERC Sing p, " h e folk U0c jgrarr Bicentennial Special Hamburger Pizza Sausage Pizza Pepperoni Pizza $1 OPEN Monday thru Friday 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. Saturday & Sunday 4:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. “QUALITY FIRST” NOMINATIONS FOR WHAT’S SMOKED, COOKED AND READY TO EAT FOR EASTER DINNER AND ISN’T THE EASTER BUNNY? ■ - Senior Class Sweetheart ARE AVAILABLE AT RECEPTION DESK STUDENT PROGRAMS OFFICE, M.S.C. UNTIL FRIDAY, APRIL 9th. Requirements: • Class of ’76 • Interview: Sunday Night, April 11