Slouch by Jim Earle “My letter home came back saying it was undeliverable, and no forwarding address. Probably just a post office mistake, but then maybe ” Opinion Damn the rain Well, it looks like the game has been called for many freshmen because of the rain. Or maybe we should say. Deluge. In typical B-CS fashion, monsoon season blew in to delay Zachry’s construction crews from building Kyle Field. And as the water accumulated, the chances for comple tion foundered. So now we have it: Some freshmen must watch the first home football game on a TV screen in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Now, many of the old Ags paid hundreds for their tickets (they are supplying most of the cash for the expansion), so they deserve their seats. It’s just that one of the best things about being an Ag is standing with your compadres in the stadium “sawin’ varsi ty’s horns off’ and all that other stuff. We guess you freshmen have a right to feel bitter ... but please ... don’t shake your fist at God ... deluges have a way of starting again. Creative computing Our favorite word in yesterday’s Battalion was “betweealton. ” A close second was “onlyavshnwr.” But the staff can’t take credit for these two inventions. Our computer did it. It decided not to read some holes punched on a tape, threw in a few of its own, and gave birth to two new words. Dozens of other new words were bom, but proofreaders and staff — who prefer Webster’s words to our computer’s — found them and figured out what humans intended to put there. A couple, however, slipped through and were printed on the front page. In one case, in announcing that new Aggieland yearbooks are here. The Battalion computer coined the new term “betweealton.” What we meant was the place to pick up ’79 yearbooks is Lounge C between Walton and Schumacher residence halls. We still can’t figure out the other case. Only the computer knows. And it doesn’t always tell mere humans. the small society by Brickman WE- PfcJN'T A L&T4 IT TO OtetWCfTB. FlP&T Al*P &&& H&W HE HANPL&-S !T- Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. The Battalion USPS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY Letters 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 guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verification. Address correspondence to Letters to the Editor, The Battalion, Room 216, Reed McDonald Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Represented nationally by National Educational Adver tising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday from September through May except during exam and holiday Periods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesday hrough Thursday. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester; $33.25 per school year; $35.00 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 216, Reed McDonald Building, College Station, Texas 77843. United Press International is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. 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 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Liz Newlin Managing Editor Andy Williams Asst. Managing Editor Dillard Stone News Editors . .Karen Comelison 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, Nancy Andersen, Louie Arthur, Richard Oliver, Mark Patterson, Carolyn Blosser, Kurt Allen Photo Editor . . .Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Photographers Lynn Blanco, Sam Stroder, Ken Herrerra Cartoonist Doug Graham 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 The Battalion Texas A&M University Thursday October 4, 1979 Broder Voting in Florida called insanity; resembles ‘political Bay of Pigs’ By DAVID S. BRODER MIAMI — “I think,” said Alfredo Duran, “this whole thing is getting out of hand.” Duran is something of an expert on well-meaning projects gone awry. As a ref ugee from Fidel Castro’s Cuba, he went ashore with the Bay of Pigs brigade, and spent two years in the prisons of his native land after that fiasco. Released in 1963 with others in the brigade, he resumed his life in the United States, and a dozen years later took over his present job as the chairman of the Demo cratic party in Florida. Duran is a Democrat and he is also a democrat — a man who believes that the involvement of citizens in the decision making of a political party is the life-breath of the Republic. With others in the “reform” wing of the party, he set up a pre-presidential year party convention in 1975, as a vehicle for attracting new party workers and familiariz ing them early with the records and views of the people seeking the presidential nomination. Happily for Duran and his fellow- activists, that 1975 convention provided the occasion for Jimmy Carter to demon strate that he had built a statewide organi zation in Florida, fully capable of challenge ing the man who had won the Florida pri mary in 1972 — George Wallace. Carter’s victory in the November, 1975, convention straw vote helped raise the funds and mobilize the support that gve him his deci sive win over Wallace in the March, 1976, Florida primary. The parlay was completed when Carter became the first Democratic nominee to carry Florida in 12 years. But, Duran’s four-year-old brainchild has turned into a monster. “We had ex pected this to be just one more thing we were doing to create enthusiasm in the party process,” Duran said. “And now it has become an extraordinary event, quite beyond our control.” Indeed it has. Draft-Kennedy forces, led by two of Duran’s former colleagues, Mike Abrams and Sergio Bendixen, began mobilizing months ago to embarrass Carter at the scene fo his 1975-76 victory, as a way of pressuring Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) to run. Now that Kennedy is leaning visible toward a candidacy, the Kennedy forces nationally have deter mined to make the Florida caucuses a show of his strength — lest he be the one to be embarrassed. And the Carter backers have responded in kind. The result is that both sides are mobilizing dozens of imported organizers and will spend at least $500,000 between them in an attempt to dominate the Oct. 13 county caucuses, where about half the del egates to the Nov. 16-18 state convention will be elected. (The other half, consisting of elected and party officials and their ap pointees, are expected to be overwhelm ingly for Carter, following the lead of Gov. Bob Graham (D), Duran and most of the others in the Democratic hierarchy.) On both the Carter and Kennedy sides, the Oct. 13 caucuses are being treated as the first battleground of 1980 — even though they have nothing to do with choos ing delegates to the national convention next August. It is insanity, as Alfredo Duran under stands perhaps better than anyone else. Lest it be thought that Duran is denounc ing his own creation because he fears a Carter defeat, let the record show that his prediction (which he may or may not re gret) is that Carter will “win by a small margin among the delegates chosen in the three big counties down here — Dode, Broward and Palm Beach — and will take at least 55 percent of the delegates in the rest of the state.” The insanity is that the caucuses are grossly distorted mechanisms for measur ing candidate support across Florida. There will be only one voting place in each county. That means there will be an enor mous premium for the side with the best logistics. Nancy Abrams, a Carter or ganizer here, claims triumphantly that, “I have tied up every bus in DadeCoinili the President). If the Kennedy people to move their voters by bus, they’re to have to rent them from the Panhaii The voting system — prescribe^, time when no one expected 10, to be mobilized in Dade County alone now predicted — would intimidate a, but a fanatic. The Dade ballot will list more names — of Carter and Kennedy bad* third-force “freedom of choice group, and independents. The aspt delegates will be listed alphabeticalk not grouped as candidate slates. An will have to mark at least 141 name; not more than 188 names, in De or the ballot will be thrown out. Inlm imd Palm Beach counties, withllCu delegates, repectively, the process*? almost as harrowing. No one is sure how long it willti individual to get into the hall and\«t how long it will take to count then afterward. It has all the earmarks of a politicals Pigs. And Alfredo Duran, who survival real Bay or Pigs, cannot be blamedfo;i ing his head as he sees what is (c) 1979, The Washington Post Company a Gr< for Graduati foreign cor through th The Ful working on careers in I The grar East and o The grar courses, li\ surance, d< To be eli U.S. citize speak the 1 doctoral de Appilcat: Services O grant, the s plans to do Cat gets Veterinar A&M Unive reliable mel fish from dis inch fingerli By bathir liquid soluti cine with fe stock can be ral virulen veterinary Lewis. If approve irmers wou ioak fingerli roducing i where they i vaccine can plained. Perfectior »p several Texas A&M tnent of Ag atfish farr ^generating r ncome, acc iculture De The last rimed at cc (jrrakc Men’s T-Shirts Complete Russia probably glad summer Olympics are at hoif s see viu The way things have been going for the Russians on the defection front lately, the Kremlin is probably (counting itself doubly blessed that the 1980 summer Olympic games are to be held in the motherland rather than in some alien but enticing coutry where one, two or more of its ath letic citizens might decide to follow the recent examples of various dancers and ice skaters and permanently miss the plane home. It’s bad enough from a propaganda standpoint to abruptly cancel the visit of the Moscow State Symphony to the United States, as the Russians did the other day, but of an ill-disguised fear that maybe the second clarinetist, the third violinist or perhaps even the entire brass section would use the opportunity presented by the trip to slip onto the fulltime payroll of the Boston Pops. How much more humiliating it would be if anxieties over possible defections led to an entire Olym pic team being told that there’s no place like home, and that’s where you v With the games in Moscow, theifj count of the Soviet team at the end I competition ought mercifully to agree^ the head count taken at the beginnif A small thing, to be sure, butyoulj your victories where you can find tlief Los Angeles Times Letters Student body president urges all to put up with construction hassles Editor: Aggies: Construction projects — more steel, more concrete, more crowding, fewer parking spaces — seemingly is a trend at A&M. Besides all that, construction areas are always fenced off so were forced to walk around the site, taking up more of our pre cious time. We gripe about the fences, the mud, and the detours, but rarely pay much attention to the progress of the building itself. At least five or six major buildings have been constructed since my freshman year. Machinery and crews spent countless hours on each one, but I wasn’t all that concerned. We all know that Kyle Field is a different story. It has been the center of attention. I’ve been watching anxiously anticipat ing this football season when, as a senior, I could see the fightin’ Aggie team winning on the Astroturf. Well Ags, the U of H game is quickly approaching, and no, the stadium won’t be completed. However, we still should be playing in Kyle Field, which means more to our football team than most of us know. The stadium expansion has not progressed as well as expected. The con tractors set their goals for completion, and have tried diligently to meet them. Hope fully, more of the stadium will be finished for our use during the upcoming home games, but in the meantime Aggies, stu dents and former students, will have to be understanding of the situation at hand, and sacrifice accordingly. With approximately 19,000 student seats available, we won’t all be on the track, but as tickets are distributed on the seniority basis, a sizable number of Freshmen will likely have the option to either stand on the track, watch the game closed circuit, or receive a refund for their U of H game coupon. It’s obvious the stadium expansion has the typical problems of any construction project. There is no solution to the seating problem that will please everyone, and I’m convinced that we will not benefit from a conflict over temporary seating arrange ments in Kyle Field. Being a member of the strong 12th Man is just part of being a Texas Aggie, and I’m confident that our selfish interests won’t detract from the true purpose of the 12th Man — backing the fightin’ Aggie team. Gig ’Em. — Ronnie Kapavik Student Body President No U.S. leadership leaders in congress concerning the 2,000- 3,000 Soviet troops in Cuba seriously erodes my confidence in our country’s leadership. It is sad to observe the seem ingly bipartisan rush to capitalize on a'sen- sational, yet obviously minor issue, in view of the numerous critical problems facing our nation today. None of the many contenders for cham pionship of this issue have even suggested that the Soviet troops in Cuba in any way endanger the security of this nation. Yet at the same time these same members of Congress hold this issue up as the sole rea son for refusal to consider the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties. Regardless of one’s opinion on passage of the SALT treaties, it cannot be denied that their care ful consideration is vital to our national ence of Soviet troops in Cuba rani linked to passage to the SALT treaties*! it represents a new and hostile attito® the part of the Soviet Union. Howfli|? relatively small number of Soviet M 1 the duration of whose presence even* CIA reportedly does not know, represei 11 ) significant new Soviet hostility? It is sadly apparent that our ] Congress have seized upon an artific “red scare” issue in. order to duckt!u responsibility to tackle the more ( decisions on issues critical to ourcounH? interests and security. I hope the Araeif public will not accept the contention^ 2,000 troops in Cuba are more import the balance of world power than theW tion of nuclear weapons. Editor: The current uproar eminating from our interests. Senators Church,' Jackson, Baker and others in Congress contend that the pres- — Tim Ml \ Graduate Studt Thotz by Doug Grahm Rt