S LO U C H by Jim Ear,e ‘Before we settle in as roommates, could I talk you about a subject that we need to resolve?’ Opinion Wish we knew Two moves by the University — charging for a “home- away-from-home” football game and installing small car parking areas — generated negative student reactions. Charging $4.25 per student for the A&M-Brigham Young University game in Houston tomorrow makes sense. Many students who normally attend home football games will not be in Rice Stadium, and including the ticket price in the regular student book would penalize them. But the University should have made the policy clear last Spring, when students were buying the football tickets. As it is — finding out only in the last few weeks — the situation leaves students upset and feeling “ripped off. ” The University failed to communicate. In the other instance, communication continues to be poor. The special small car parking lot behind the Commons carries no warning signs — only by driving up to the entrance is it apparent that big cars cannot pass through the concrete barriers. At the lot behind Zachry Engineering Center, signs bn poles warn large-car drivers of the danger. The idea is wonderful — creating 88 new parking spaces. But again, the lack of communication creates frustration. Let us know what you’re doing, administrators, espe cially if it’s for our own good. Rabbit jump wrong In the mishap involving President Carter and a hostile rabbit, it is too soon to draw conclusions that would be fair to either of the principals. We take the President’s word for it that an amphibious rabbit tried to attack him while he was fishing earlier this year on a pond in Plains, and that he was able to repel the boarder by thrashing at it with a paddle. Unlike the President’s detractors, and they are many, we do not rush to the gleeful conclusion that even the animals of the field have had it with Carter and want to do him in. There is no evidence whatever that the rabbit knew that its prey was the President, or, if it did, that its criminous actions toward him were a form of political protest. It is known, however, that rabbits have a strong sense of territoriality, and this one might have tried to scuttle whatever was splashing around in its waterhole that day. That strikes us as the most plausible, and the least prejudicial, explanation. And we intend to let it go at that unless future revelations prove us wrong. Los Angeles Times the small society by Brickman iVe T<2 £>DT ■ZBL9A- iWi TO APMIT THAT T E=HTO>Y HOLJ^^WIF^'- Washington Star Syndicate. In £-7 The Battalion USPS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 wofds and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. 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Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Liz Newlin Managing Editor Andy Williams Assistant Managing EditorDillard Stone News Editors . .Karen Cornelison and Michelle Burrowes Sports Editor Sean Petty City Editor Roy Bragg Campus Editor Keith Taylor Focus Editors Beth Calhoun and Doug Graham Staff Writers Meril Edwards, Diane Blake, Louie Arthur, Richard Oliver, Mark Patterson, Carolyn Blosser Photo Editor . . .Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Photographer Lynn Blanco Cartoonist Doug Graham 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 Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Viewpoint Fold The Battalion • Texas A&M University Friday September 7,19 Broder Congress’ antics are more informative than the news, more fun than musicals by DAVID S. BRODER Washington — It is unlikely that anyone is going to syndicate a television show called “Welcome Back, Congress. ’’ Or that it would draw much of an audience if it were tried. Show business looks on Congress as an institution whose only utility is to provide a setting for dramas where people of am biguous character are subjected to unusual political pressures and sexual temptations. And generally succumb. The perfect movie or television political drama is titled “Elizabeth Ray Meets the Senator. ’’ Or maybe, “The Secret Life of a Legislative Assistant. ” It is only us inhabitant of the island Jimmy Carter calls Washington who really feel deprived when the occupants of the Capitol disappear for their August — or Easter, or Thanksgiving, or Christmas, or Washington’s Birthday, Lincoln’s Birth day, or Jefierson-Jackson Day — recesses. But for us the loss is real, and our relief at their return is genuine. Mostly, we are too embarrassed to talk about it, except among ourselves. But a real Congress- junkie begins to get nervous and irritable after going for more than 10 days without a Congress fix. So throwing caution to the wind, let me say. Welcome Back, Congress. And before you do anything to outrage me anew, let me tell you why I’m glad you’re back in town. First, the Congressional Record is the best unedited daily newspaper in the country. Items of marvelous trivia that no self-important publisher would ever allow into print adorn its pages in rich profusion. A lot of us would never know when Lithuanian Independence Day was com ing up were it not for the Congressional Record. But there, we will be told at least 20 times, in as many speeches and state ments, what its significance is. Redundancy is the Record’s charm. And in that context, it is a tragedy that it was not publishing when Andrew Young re signed. There will be no way to recapture the prose that would have been printed there on that subject. One can only re joice, in anticipation, at the heights of un restrained oratory the Pope s visit will bring forth in its pages. The second good thing to be said about Congress is that it doesn’t change all that much. Supposedly this has been a decade of almost unprecedented upheaval in its membership and operations. But it is still the dithering, quirky, bemused and often-baffling Congress it was in days gone by. Nostalgia buffs love Congress. While is was away, we had to content ourselves with revivals of “Oklahoma!” and “Carousel,’’ those magnificent musicals of a bygone day. The revivals were wonder ful, hut when it comes to real corn, it’s Congress’s brand — not the Kennedy Center’s — that is as high as an elephant’s eye. The third good thing to be said about Congress is that nothing that bugs Presi dents as much as Congress does can be all bad. Presidents come to office thinking the world was born anew on the day they were sworn in. Congress knows better. It knows the same inaugural stand has been built C By- If this jotball tea Wilscz krsday ie fell’s fir-2 igie Clu t» About L 1 nd the fo -u lias, Jacol lurtis DicA ive a few- before, and it will he built again. OnC| gress’s front porch. Presidents all think they’ve mandate. Congress knows better, gress knows that there are a lot of® ) -m dates, some big and some little, ban U J out by the voters at election time. Sn should be honored and cherishedi some should be forgotten as quid]) f-v < possible. lucL. What Congress knows, and mostPn dents trake time to figure out, is thatj Unit* testing of mandates is what govern® WASH I and politics is all about. Resident J Members of Congress keep scorecj ^ Washi on each other in their minds evervij ing-planm they’re in town. They all keep score® Carte on the President, whoever he maybe, ounced W They’re often wrong about alotoli In a one- important things. But they’re hardlye Hoi wrong about each other. And in 20® lents will r years of listening to members of Conjn interi I don’t believe I’ve ever heard them trengthen astray in their collective judgmentd met President. ® e when ■ ngaged in Welcome Back, Congress. lexican oil locumente DICK WEST be United Secretary news con the na endown a WASHINGTON — The White House let it be known this week it has no inten tion of making public a photographic enlargement of President Carter’s encounter with a “killer rabbit” in Georgia last April. It indicated it felt the incident had been blown up enough already. “We’re afraid if we release the photo, the rabbit controversy over the next two weeks will receive more ink than the SALT treaty,” said press secretary Jody Powell. Perhaps the president’s belated renown as a rabbit fighter has been overplayed. But by stonewalling the matter, the White House only lends credence to the charge by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., that the bunny confrontation was subjected to “a sensational presidential coverup. To avoid a possible |labbitgate, the White House should release the transcript of an 18-minute tape recording of the pres ident’s conversation with Mrs. Carter on his return from the fateful fishing trip. Here, according to my sources, is the paraphrased version: Mrs. Carter asked the president if he had had any luck. The president replied (expletive de leted) that he had not caught anything to amount to anything. Mrs. Carter asked if they just weren’t biting. The president said he had had some pretty good nibbles but had been unable to land any big ones because of all the (exp letive deleted) distractions. Mrs. Carter inquired as to the nature of the distractions. The president replied that the main ex traneous element had been a (expletive deleted) rabbit. Mrs. Carter said she thought the presi dent had been fishing from a canoe or a boat or something. She said that if the president was out on the river, she did not see how a rabbit could have disrupted his Carter vs. the killer bunny: White Hm * 'J :en ( should release tape, avoid ‘Rabbitgate fishing. An alligator maybe. Or perhaps a water buffalo. But not a rabbit. The president said it was an (expletive deleted) rabbit all right. Of that much he was certain. Mrs. Carter asked what the rabbit was doing. The president said it apparenty was try- ing.to get into the boat. Mrs. Carter asked what lead him to that conclusion. She said she was aware that some rabbits were good jumpers but she had never heard of one leaping that far. The president said he had arrived at that conclusion because the rabbit was swim ming directly toward him. Mrs. Carter said she should have been able to figure that out for herself. She asked how the president had averted boarding. The president said he had wwM the rabbit with a boat paddle. Mrs. Carter said she could certii understand under the circumstances the president had not brought 1 enough fish for supper, they go out for dinner. Vhi Unite COLLIN She suggest ispute bet ion and tl ec<3u5e sf our inefficient "farming and overpopulation, •pie donT Let 'em skin^Jve eat Twmki£5 to that s the local c decided lourt. The dispi lembers c mrglarized Aiskey am ials said, fhiskey anc en because As a resu wanted to ting ha iwn. Officic Legion ed the of the 1 Letters America should look to its own people before taking in Vietnamese refugees Editor: With this letter I would like to initiate a discussion about that certain group of South East Asian refugees known as The Boat People. Let me make it clear that I am com pletely in favor of foreign aid and all ac tivity that has made the American Red Cross such an admirable organization. But let us look at some interesting details be fore we open our homes and businesses to the boat people. Who are the boat people? The vast majority of them are Vietnamese. It seems odd, and interesting, to note that some 30,000 Vietnamese refugees have fled to Laos already. Taking into account the modes of overland travel available to these people (their feet) and the geograhical re lationship between Laos and Vietnam, a startling and ironic point is made. land, Burma, China etc. doing for them or their problems? After all, those countries share racial, political or cultural likenesses with the Vietnamese which westerners do not. These 30,000 plus refugees are North Vietnamese! They spent 21 years fighting the French and ourselves for a doctrine of their own choosing. Now they are aban doning it for our own. Why are France and the United States the leaders in taking in these people? What are Russia, Laos, Cambodia, Thai- It is true that there are Vietnamese ref ugees fleeing Vietnam South of the 17th parallel but remember - think back to the recent unpleasantry which made irrespon sible demonstration such a stylish thing for sweethearts like Joan Baez and Jane Fonda. (After all, nobody saw them in a bunker at An-Loc.) Think back to the thousands of VC operating freely in South Vietnam. Wfj remembered the Alamo, the Maine, Harbor, and I’m sure not going to! the Vietnam War. The boat people doll in horrible surroundings and need lit But do you want horror? Go to Arlinjl Cemetery. Who will help them? In closing, I would just like to those American people who can member grieving families to focus ont own needy people — in Appalachia, aged, sick, unemployed and so on — fore we offer the Vieg Cong the foodonl our mouths. —Ronald C. Buccbi, F WASHINGTON buthe Carter campaigns despite opposition, assures us it’s no act of bravadk by HELEN THOMAS UP! White House Reporter WASHINGTON — Sometime this fell. President Carter will announce his plans to seek re-election. The only uncertanities are where and when. And over on Capitol Hill, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy’s aides are letting it be known they believe their boss is running. In fact, nothing the Massachusetts Demo crat has done in the past several weeks has served to detract from the growing im pression that Kennedy has positioned himself to oppose Carter. Authoritative sources say Carter simply got a smile from Kennedy when the Presi dent informed him that he planned to seek re-election and requested the senator’s “absolute, aggressive and enthusiastic support.” The president publicly concedes he has discussed in somewhat vivid terms how he will contend with Kennedy if he runs — “I’ll whip his ass.” Carter also told a group of Florida editors last week: “I have never let the identity of... opponents in a political cam paign deter me. And if I should be a can didate and if Senator Kennedy or Gover nor Brown or anyone else should decide to run against me, then I believe that I would triumph, to express it in more diplomatic terms.” Carter notes that in the last presidential campaign he was not stopped by his belief that Kennedy and former Alabama Gov. George Wallace would be his opponents for the Democratic nomination. It’s apparently not an act of bravado. He has said he originally decided to seek the highest office after meeting Kennedy and the late Sen. Hubert H. Humprey and de ciding he was as “smart” as they were. As Carter’s 1980 campaign style begins to emerge, he seems to be rejecting the notion that the Rose Garden and the White House would provide a suitable political platform. To run against Washing ton, he has to at least get out of town, although there are times when he will use the Oval Office such as the two-hour tele phone “call in” show on National Public Radio on Oct. 13. His trip down the Mississippi River aboard the stemwheeler Delta Queen, an eight-day voyage that included some 40 speech-making stops, was a preview of Carter’s stump style. The crowds, warm handshakes and the overall happy atmosphere — people some times waited for hours in the rain to see him — were heady stuff for a president in search of votes. Carter also plans to continue his “town meetings,” where he probably gives his most impressive performances. (Some ob servers believe he likes them because often gets “soft ball” questions to slaiud of the park.) He also apparently has found sod merit in knocking the “national press’ si is stepping up his contacts with out-j town editors whose questions he usual praises for being more in tune witlitl country. In the past few weeks, he has tried reach different constituencies and to more conciliatory to their concerns. Atl Labor Day picnic. Carter offered an old branch to the big labor organizatioi which are supporting the Kennedy n tional health insurance program overC# ter’s more modest and slower-paced goal The popularity polls may have bottomj out at their drastically low point as in tl Truman tradition, but Carter seems toll lieve that he can overcome the handled of being the target for all the nation’s woes c Csss m