Slouch by Jim Earle OcTZA'D “It sounds like a good idea, but if you do call a press conference to announce that you will not be a candidate, do you think anyone will care?” Opinion Hail to Hotard Hall They call it the Hotard Hilton, and it’s the crummiest dorm on campus. What is weird is that its residents love it. It must be a perverse kind of pride that inspires them. Maybe they love it because it’s so low-rent that the rooms don’t even have phones. Or maybe because the rent actu ally is low — the lowest on campus. Whatever their attachment, the residents were alarmed when they learned the University planned to close the dorm this spring for renovation. Evidently the University had a change of heart. On Thursday residents were told they could stay in the dorm. According to Dr. John Koldus, vice president for student services, the administration decided to keep the dorm open after Hotard residents expressed concern about the closing. Residents would rather live with noise from nearby con struction and wait until summer for fixing up their dorm. Besides, what’s a few more months? Hotard hasn’t been significantly changed since it was built in 1939 to house food service workers. It is named after J.C. Hotard, who was supervisor of food services from 1937 to 1944. It cost about $75,000. During the 1940s, workers lived four to a room. One area of the dorm was reserved for Anglo-Saxons, another for Blacks and Mexicans, and a few rooms were partitioned off for maids. Food service workers occupied all of Hotard until late 1962, when students began moving into the dorm. Hotard has been fully occupied by students since 1971. And they will be able to stay in the dorm this spring. Congratulations. the small society by Brickman WHAT^THEr PU T£>Uf£ ? Washington Star Syndicate. Inc. /o~3a 'r5f 2 ’i The Battalion u s p S 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 Editin', 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. 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, Debbie Nelson, Rhonda Watters Photo Editor Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Photographers Lynn Blanco, Sam Stroder, Ken Herrera 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 ca The Battalion Texas A&M University Tuesday October 30, 1979 Broder Democratic clans evaluate each otha using migratory campaigners’ reports By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — One of the features of the fight now beginning for the Democra tic presidential nomination is the unusual degree of knowledge each side has of the political strengths and weaknesses of the other. The Carters and the Kennedys are thought of as separate clans, but there has been enough migration between the two camps to make each of them privy to what the other might prefer to consider privilege information. I am not referring here to dark secrets of the past, but rather to tactical tendencies, personnel strengths and weaknesses — the sort of information one professional sports team acquires when it picks up a player from another. Jimmy Carter’s pollster, Pat Caddell, for example, has his business base in Bos ton and did some polling in 1976 for Ted Kennedy’s Senate campaign. Two of the top Carter operatives in the recent Florida skirmish, John Rendon and Jerry Vento, are acquistions from the Kennedy camp. There are many others in policy jobs in the Carter administration who worked closely with one or another of the Ken nedy brothers in the past and know their way of operating. But Kennedy has equally good sources of inside information on how Carter did it in 1976 — and how he is likely to try again. Carl Wanner, the top political aide in Kennedy s office, took leave from his union job in 1976 to help set up the elec tion — day voter turnout operation for Carter in the key industrial states. Gerard P. Doherty, the Boston lawyer who is sure to be one of the senior Kennedy opera tives, ran New York state for Carter in 1976 — with Kennedy’s blessing, of course. Mark Siegel, coordinator of the draft-Kennedy operations, monitored the 1976 Carter campaign from a senior staff job at the Democratic National Committee and worked 18 months for Hamilton Jor dan at the White House. Without necessarily attributing the views to the above-named gentlemen, it is possible to note something rather interest ing about the attitudes of the two camps as the struggle begins. Each of them seems sublimely confident of the ability of its candidate to out- campaign the other. And each of them thinks it has spotted a fairly serious gap in the other’s preparation for the game. The Carterites believe that Kennedy will be sharply handicapped by his lack of experience with the new rules of nominat ing politics, including the limitations on campaign spending and the intricate re quirements for delegate-selection. “He and his people haven’t played this game since 1968,” said one Carter strategist. “They’re used two writing a check for whatever they have to spend, and hiring whoever they want to hire. But this is a game of limited money and lots of volunteers, and it’s going to seem very strange to them.” Whether that is the case is open to ques tion. Certainly, the Kennedys have never had to skimp for money in past campaigns. But Steve Smith, the prospective cam paign manager, is — among other things — a dam good businessman who should know how to stretch a campaign dollar and stay within a budget. The effective mobilization of volunteers has always been a major element of Ken nedy politics. As for the technicalities of the new delegate-selection procedures, Carl Wagner and Mark Siegel probably know them as well as anyone in the coun- try On the Kennedy side, the belief is that, smart as the Carterites have proved them selves to be in organizing delegate cau cuses, they lack the skill and sensitivity that it takes to hold the competing factions of the Democratic coalition together through a long campaign. The risk that many ofCartersferJ may not understand “how to l«?jr Democratic factions from '" other, or at least from killingyou,'^ Kennedy man put it, strikes this^ as a real one. But there is an ii footnote to that point. The one man in the Carter cm skill in handling the Democratkijj the Kennedyites do admire is [ Strauss. They saw Strauss as [ man weld the Democrats tog the 1972 debacle and hold themti for victory, despite the waveringjj ter’s 1976 general-election camp^I Kennedy would have beenlal Strauss had devoted himself to i East diplomacy in 1980, rathertlal nation politics. But, ironically, lie(J handled his relations with Straussiij the same way that Carter bungMSsJ relations with Kennedy. Strauss is an antagonist Kennd not need, for he knows both then ing procedures and the Democtiil tions. And he plays by the old-jJ Kennedys respect: Don’t get null (cj 1979, The WwJiingta Post Company Famed Rudder OUT OF the west he rode... CAUSING- HISERY, PAIN, ANGUISH, ere. Sui Schwinnhund 'Bad BraVces " Raleigh A+M. By The ima remember* beat up cover. Dey tall skinm V of build <3w~a.r\arvi Dick West Can a hot-dog lover find happ with a habitual hamburger eatd By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — A Brooklyn psychiatrist. Dr. Leo Wollman, has under taken a study of personality differences be tween people who habitually order ham burgers at fast food counters and those who religiously stick to hot dogs. The need for a research project along this line has been apparent for a long time. Wollman’s findings, I expect, will be applied primarily to marital relations. The mating game, as it is now played, is woefully lacking in scientific exactitude. All too often, couples contemplating mar riage and not entirely sure whether they are suited to each other are forced to rely on such unreliable guidelines as astrologi cal charts. If one of them is, say, an Aries, and the other a Gemini, that is supposed to tell them something about their chances of hit ting it off in wedlock. Which is ludicrous on the face of it. Dates of birth couldn’t possibly be as meaningful in match-ups as ascertaining whether both have hamburger per sonalities, or both are hot dog types, or one is one and the other the other. If I may speak from experience for a moment, in me you find the classic ham burger temperament. I have a hamburger for lunch at least twice a week; hot dogs no oftener than once a year. The woman I married, while not totally averse to hamburgers, will, when pre sented with an option, almost invariably go for the hot dog. Something that is reflected in these predilections makes for matrimonial un rest. Wollman presumably will discover what it is about a hot dog fancier that puts him or her on a collision course with a hamburger aficionado. And the world will be better off for it. Pending his report, there are some gen eral observations that can be drawn with at least as much validity as anything you will find in the Zodiac. The archetypical hot dog devotee? 1 bit unstable, impulsive and incite part their hair on the wrong side, ture indecisive, they are apt to , over which condiments and gam© | Sw Unk assist^t b y'90 Irbetj v Parking ] Can die. lake tur Ifansv t>or Hamburger enthusiasts likely to be steady, dependable, sote too predictable and utterly charmiiii : a strong penchant for grace unde:' What you call your basic hot dog freak tends to be a romantic, with a flair for ad venture. Probably the main reason he or she is drawn to hot dogs is because nobody knows for sure what is inside them. Hence, they have an air of mystery about them. (Nobody knows for sure what is inside a hot dog lover either, for that matter.) By nature resolute, they kno» they want (mustard, pickles and: and go after it. Conceivably, Wollman’s study 1 ; produce a formula under w burger and hog dog personalitiesc£ together in harmony. Meanwhile,]? 1 ' at your own risk. I Letters Pressure on football coach to win is disturbing to 17-year Aggie fan Editor: Last week’s report that some of our alumni are again putting an uncomfortable amount of pressure on our football coach is most disturbing. It is symptomatic of a disease that is all too prevalent at major universities. We are so obsessed with the game of football that we have forgotten that it is just that — a game. Never was this more graphically displayed than last year when Emory Bellard felt forced to resign. Ugliness was the theme of that week. “Make Emory a memory,” they said. From the comments that students made to the Battalion on the day he resigned, it appeared the man was deserving of the gallows because our passing game was in sufficient. We treated him like the scourge of the community when all he had done was lose a couple of football games. Letters to the Battalion in recent weeks have served as frightening reminders of that behavior. I have followed A&M football for 17 years and feel we have every reason to be proud of this year’s team. Playing the 11th toughest schedule in the nation, they have improved from week to week. They have consistently added to their offensive re pertoire and continue to play a good de fense. And with any amount of luck on a sprinkling of plays, they would now be in the Top 20. But it seems beyond our ability to ap preciate a game as being exciting and well-played. Instead we focus solely on the outcome. Alumni and students alike treat a loss as a personal affront and at- their own dignity had somehow bet: ated. My only hope is that we treat!." son better than we did the lasted’ — Paul ^ THOTZ by Doug Grok' HOW'S THE LEFTOVER RECYCLlNCr PRO ORAM OOIW O, SV*6TY? ^AV/FUL, TSOSS. AFTER THE 10’ 1 ' TIME ITS SERVED, OUR FRIED CHICKEN IS DECLARCD a crime against HUMANITY UNDER THE GENEVA ACCOt