U r INCONSIDERATE SLOBS*/ THEY HAVE THE NERVE TD DIE OM DIFFERENT) mysa ALL THOSE 5)EVER TAPS CEREMOMl ES ARE Kl L-LIMG- Y STUDIES WELL r DIDN'T JOIN THIS select ELITIST GrROUP To WASTE MY TIME ON Opinion Creative listening: a dangerous game A mother makes her weekly phone call to her child at college. “Are you coming hoine this weekend?” “No, Mom, I’m going to study.” “Oh good, you’ll be home ’til Sunday.” That’s creative listening. Another instance — dangerous on a national scale — was explained by a pollster at a national convention of college students last week. In his example, the country and the companies involved were losers. Nicholas Tortorello, who worked for opinion researcher Lou Harris during the first oil crisis in 1974, said he was involved in polling for General Motors and Ford Motor Co. Gasoline lines in parts of the country were long, and people were concerned about their gas-guzzling cars. Tor- torello found Americans wanted small cars, but were scared of them. The cars couldn’t survive a crash, they thought. So the polling firm advised GM and Ford to push their economical cars and stress safety features. But GM refused to believe the poll, Tortorello said, and continued the same ad campaigns — for big cars. GM also dropped Harris as its polling firm. Ford, on the other hand, heeded the advice. The com pany changed its advertising for the Pinto — but didn’t change the fuel system. Thousands of Pintos were sold on the advertised safety features, but then one exploded on the “60 Minutes” TV show in living, dying color. And Ford, like GM, lost out to imports in the small car market. Creative listening didn’t work. the small society by Brickman The Battalion U S P S 045 360 LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and art subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. Tht editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and doe nttt guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must ht signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephont number for verification. Address corresjfondence to letters to the Editin'. The Battalion. Room 216. Reed McDonald Building. College Station. Texas 77H43. 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 x-riods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesday hrough Thursday. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester. $33.25 per school year, $35.(X) 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 Cornelison and Michelle Burrowes Sports Editor Sean Petty City Editor Roy Bragg Campus Editor Keith Taylor Focus Editor Beth Calhoun 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 The Battalion Texas A&M University Monday November 26, 1979 Broder George Bush gaining politically by imitating part of Jimmy’s style By DAVID S. BRODER ORLANDO — Ronald Reagan won the Florida Republican convention straw-vote, and John Connally finished second. But it was George Bush who surprised and im pressed the political professionals by finishing a strong third, only 74 votes be hind Connally among the 1,326 delegates. It was the latest demonstration of what may be the most under-reported signifi cant fact of the GOP presidential race. As almost every strategist for the ten Republi can candidates would affirm, George Bush has made better use of 1979 than any of his rivals. Indeed, the only two GOP contenders who have done what they set out to do this year are Bush and Reagan. It would not surprise many astute Republican insiders if they proved to be the finalists in next year’s competition. Reagan accomplished his goal simply by staying out of trouble, holding his lead dur ing a long period of noncandidacy, and broadening his already impressive base of support. Bush did what he said he would do on the day he announced, namely, “do better than you (in the press) expect me to do in every test that comes along.” He has done that by building the best non-Reagan organization in New Hamp shire, Iowa, Maine and other early dele gate-selection states, winning the conven tion straw polls in Iowa and Maine, and showing strength rivaling Connally’s in Florida — where Connally had concen trated his campaigning and Bush had not. Connally has raised more money and drawn more publicity than his fellow Hous tonian, Bush. But Connally has failed so far in his big test — overcoming the suspicions of Republicans about his party-switching and personal character. An NBC- Associated Press poll of Florida Republi cans shows Connally’s trust-to-distrust ratio is 2-1, while Reagan’s is 9-1 and Bush’s almost 7-1. Private polls show the same high “negative” elsewhere for Connally. As for Sen. Howard H. Baker, Jr., who still leads Bush by a wide margin in the public-opinion polls, his neglected cam paign organization switched managers again last week. He is so far behind organi zationally that there is growing doubt whether he will challenge seriously, or fall back into the overcrowded category of short-term Republican also-rans. Bush did what he did by copy-catting the tactics Jimmy Carter employed four years ago. He has worked full-time, out of the glare of national publicity, at organizing the states that choose their delegates early. Like Carter, he has used living-room meet ings, where he, his wife or one of his sons have been present, to build a network of volunteers whose commitment is not les sened by the fact that most of them knew nothing of George Bush when 1979 began. Bush has pursued that strategy, because he understands, as Carter did, that making such living-room conversions is the key to success in this kind of nominating system. But if his tactics ape Carter’s, there is one basic difference in their status. George Bush is as much of a respected insider in the Republican establishment as Jimmy Carter was a skeptically viewed stranger to the Democratic power-structure. As a former congressman, national party chairman and official in the Nixon and Ford administrations, Bush has a network of per sonal friendships that spans the ideological range of the GOP from Rep. Pete McClos- key of California, who challenged Richard Nixon as a “liar” in the 1972 primaries, to Dean Burch, who defended Nixon from the White House until the last days of 1974. It was Burch who introduced Bush to he conservative Floida convention delegates as “a man of universal acceptance and un sullied reputation, a man in his physical prime, a man for the Eighties.” Bush him self is conservative in his economics, hard line in his foreign-policy views, but is link ed by family background and education (Greenwich, Kennebunkport and Yale) to the party’s affluent, progressive eastern wing as well. It is far too early to computethei Bush’s winning the nomination. Hi tests are still ahead. His viewsln been subjected to serious scrutim press or rival candidates. Hisspetd often. ing — though vastly improved year’s living-room practice —is; which he is only now gaining persos there fidence. He remains an unknown to tlie public, although that condition is certain to change dramaticallyinj Corps two months, when the Iowa ar( Silver Hampshire contests will likelycalap fuesda into prominence. But his two losiu f or for the Senate in Texas have the reputation — deserved or n, being a candidate who has ahardtii ing a lead or responding toastiffcoi tack. Reagan will not he easily dislodj far. Bush has avoided challenginghi ctly and Reagan has seen noneedl undercut Bush. All that is sti But Bush is on the verge of bin) “George Who?” question, as Cartes "Jimmy Who?” four years ago. Thai he set out to do, and that is whatmai — in the eyes of the party pros- who has gained the most from 197 (c) 1979, The Washington Post Comp* Cor come a [ No om growth periem could ] bility c “ft s said, people dent g< creasec people " Bi so. creasec Cade bo pants, would neficial The Volunti zation i and pe ceremc ex / Since / mplovet ion — aff men The 1 isociatic ccordh iatioti t ted wit endorse Ijferests, b i with u j Accord Bation wi |ith, bee hy labor I Local Jim Philli Hifferenct ffinion. Fi Bre as soi Isecond, 7 Htide, rat [ Dues a Between arc $13 pi Vienna treaty calls for embassy protection Ayatollah ignoring legalities open to him ' The TPl that no s ill/ its n [ l979 cot reaffirm ■ion pre Clement |’ PEA Hughes Iran and the United States are bound by three international conventions and one bilateral treaty that were designed to pro tect the immunity of diplomatic and consu lar personnel. The most explicit is the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Rela tions, formulated in 1961 at a United Na tions conference and signed by all nations. It opens with the statement that “peo ples of all nations from ancient times have recognized the status of diplomatic agents. ’’ The safety of diplomats is express ly addressed in Article 29: “The person of a diplomatic agent shall be inviolable. He shall not be liable to any form of arrest or detention. The receiving state shall treat him with respect and take all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on his person, freedom or dignity.” When a nation believes that a diplomat has abused this protection by conduct offensive to the hosts — when an embassy, in the Ayatollah’s words, has become a “nest of spies” — two remedies exist. The host country can declare diplomats persona non grata, and order them expelled. It can also turn to an optional protocol to the Vienna Convention, which obliges signa tories to submit any disputes to the Inter national Court of Justice at The Hague. These legal formulas obviously meant lit tle to the Ayatollah at the start of the cur rent confrontation. But they were well understood even by the Iranian govern ment he had appointed and which resigned when he refused to let it protect the Amer- , Americai ican Embassy in Tehran. RespectB i m j n j im law continues to protect all Iranian* mats in the United States. Audits ipposing even nations sympathetic to Iran’srf if strikes tion have condemned the seizure^ j tages to press a grievance against tk hat no st ited States. The trick now is to enc« (the Ayatollah) to submit his A against the Shah and the United SB the World Court — as soon as therei ing hostages are freed. The New York Times West By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Just about every night on television this past fortnight there have been scenes of Iranians burning American flags in front of the U.S. Embas sy in Tehran. All of which has made me realize just how much my mind has been affected by the energy crisis. So conditioned by fuel shortages have I become that televised shots of Iranians burning American flags aroused my conser vation instincts as well as my animus. No precise figures on the amount of energy derivable from flag combustion are available. I would estimate, however, the Iranians have wasted enough this month to heat a city the size of Cincinnati for 24 hours. Iran is fuel-rich, of course. It exports, as we know, vast amounts of surplus pet roleum. Even so, it cannot completely escape the deletrious consequences of let ting so much energy go up in smoke. On the tube, at least, flag smoke appears loaded with pollutants. What those embas sy demonstrations might have done to the air quality index in Tehran can only be guessed. As I was watching a demonstration the other night, I fell to wondering whether Iran is a flag-producing nation or whether it must import the banners the radical stu dents bum. If the latter, there must be concern among Iranian leaders as to whether the supply lines are dependable and whether a flag shortage might be in the offing. Thus far, I have seen nothing to indicate the ayatollah has ordered any programs to make Iran less dependent on foreign flags. It seems unlikely, however, that so small a country could continue to consume flags at current rates indefinitely. At some point soon, I look for the Iranian government, or what passes for a govern ment in Iran, to resort to flag rationing. Even then, the shortage is almost certain New energy source is being wastel Iran may have to ration U.S. flags to drive up the price beyond what the aver age Iranian student demonstrator can afford. Apart from the pollution and inflationary aspects of flag burning, it should be borne in mind that the current rampage in Iran coincides with a return to veil wearing by many women in that country. Cloth used to make flags obviously could be used to make veils, and vice versa. So unless there is a sudden outbreak of veil burning, the supply problem is become ever more pressing. I’m not suggesting the United Sti to do anything about this as longas are being held. But if at some future America should wish to cool therevoli ary fervor in Iran, a flag embargo the answer. Without some othercoi flags to incinerate before the tele" cameras, those student radicals mi[ come dispirited enough to go hacktO 1