the small society by Brickman Washington Star Syndicate. Inc. Gens'- Candidate argues GOP should unite By DAVID S. BRODER DES MOINES — For sheer eloquence, there was no one in the Republican pres idential candidates’ debate here the other night who bested Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois. But Anderson was arguing a prop osition which Republican conventions have rejected consistently for two decades — even when it was propounded by such lav ishly financed progressive as the late Nel son A. Rockefeller. The liberal congressman from Rockford with the low-budget campaign argued that Republicans should be “pragmatic” enough to realize that their normal conservative approach has enlisted the support of only “one of four voters in the country. ” To become a majority party, Anderson said, Republicans must combine their “frugality and prudence” on fiscal matters with a demonstration that they are “com passionate on social questions.” That sounds like a sensible suggestion, but no Republican presidential nominee in a generation has sought to build a coalition with the kind of “independents and dis affected Democrats” Anderson has in mind those who support social reforms and civil rights. Republicans win many elec tions at the state level that way, but not presidential nominations. Yet it is obvious that there are “dis- afiected Democrats” of a somewhat diffe rent stripe who might be brought into a Republican coalition. One of them, Jeane Kirkpatrick, a Georgetown University poli tical scientist, has expressed the views of her group in a provocative article in the new issue of Commonsense, the lively scholarly journal published by the Republi can National Committee. Kirkpatrick is one of the leaders on the Coalition for a Democratic Majority, an assemblage of Humphrey-Jackson- Moynihan supporters who, as she puts it, believe that “the Carter administration has given us a brand of McGovernism without McGovern that is, at best, only slightly less objectionable than the authentic, original product. ” “We see its foreign policy as more wor ried about restraining the use of American power than about containing the new phase of Soviet expansionism, ” Kirkpatrick com plains. “Its economic policies (are) too punitive of business interests, too careless of labor’s concerns; its social policies . . too coercive and too subversive of such fundamental principles as merit.” The alternatives to Carter within the Democratic Party — Ted Kennedy and Jer ry Brown — are worse, Kirkpatrick says Are she and her friends then ripe for conversion to Republicanism? No, she says. “It is hard for people who care about politics to switch party,” and, besides, “Re publicans . . . remind us of corporate board rooms and country clubs.” So much, it would seem, for John Connally and George Bush — and probably for Ronald Reagan as well. Who then? Bob Dole talked in the debate of his -sponsorship of catastrophic health insur ance and of his concern for the handicap ped. But Dole is remembered by most Democrats as the slashing partisan who said all the military casualties of this cen tury resulted from “Democrat wars.” Howard Baker has drawn significant black support in his Tennessee races, and has sponsored a welfare-reform plan that meets some Democratic goals. But Baker organized the Senate filibuster that killed the labor-law reform bill and is no friend of the unions. Kirkpatrick’s article is evidence of the existence of a large number of disaffected Democrats. But it is equally proof that cov- nerting them to the Republican cause will not be easy. Thotz Bi/ Doug Graham The Battalion US PS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY LA’tttrs to the editin' should not exceed 300 words and are object to being cut to that length or less if longer. The ditorial 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 ptember through May except during exam and holiday riods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesday hrough Thursday. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester; $33.25 per sch«x)l year. $35.00 per full year. Advertising rates furnished 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. •cond-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 Roy Bragg Associate Editor Keith Taylor’ News Editor Rusty Cawley Asst. News Editor Karen Cornelison Copy Editor Dillard Stone Sports Editor Tony Gallucci Focus Editor Rhonda Watters Senior City Reporter Louie Arthur Senior Campus Reporter Diane Blake General Assignment Reporters Richard Oliver and Andy Williams Staff Writers Nancy Andersen, Tricia Brunhart, Mike Burrichter, Angelique Copeland, Laura Cortez, Meril Edwards, Carol Hancock, Kathleen McElroy, Debbie Nelson, Steve Sisney, Robin Thompson Chief Photographer Lynn Blanco Photographers Lee Roy Leschper, Sam Stroder 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 ;nerg The Battalion Monday Texas A&M University January 14, 1979 Americans not sure which foreign country to hate today By DICK WEST Many citizens find themselves in the perplexing position of not being entirely sure which foreign country to hate the most in the world today. Official policy itself apparently has not fully crystalized. Seeking some guidance in this matter, I contacted a highly placed source in the office of the deputy vice assistant associate under secretary of state for national emnity. “At the moment,” he confided, “we are tilting toward Russia. I would say you could hardly go wrong if you directed the main force of your disaffection in that direction. ” I said, “That’s going to required a rather abrupt shift in momentum. My anti-Soviet animosity has been in a holding pattern even since the onset of detente, and I’m not certain I can get the pressure built back up to Cold War level. Could you give me something odious to focus on?” “Glad to,” the enmity expert graciously replied. “A good way to start getting work ed up is by seething over the Soviet inter vention in Afghanistan, where they have installed a pro-Russian puppet govern ment.” “But Afghanistan already had a pro- Russian puppet government,” I pointed out. “It’s a little difficult for me to fly into a rage over the overthrow of a pro-Russian puppet.” r “Concentrate on it a little harder,” my mentor advised. “Remind yourself the pro- Russian puppet overthrown by the Rus sians was not as pro-Russian as the puppet they brought in as a replacement. Also let yourself be provoked by the menace of Soviet troops in that country.” “I think I’m beginning to feel it,” I said, voice rising. “Wherein does the chief menace lie?” “The chief menace is to Iran. Once pock ets of Moslem resistance have been elimin ated in Afghanistan, Soviet troops will be in position to move across the border into Iran.” “Now I’m losing it again,” I said. “No country that threatens Iran can be all bad. If Khomeini is overthrown by Soviet troops, he will be getting what he holly well deserves.” “Tush, tush,” the emnity official admo nished, which is the way they talk at the state department. “You must not allow the hostile feelings you harbor toward Ii temper your sense of outrage over the newal of Soviet aggression.” I said, “I’m just spitballing now, pose the Soviet troops now in were to invade Iran, overthrow Khomeini regime and release the ican hostages being held in Tehran, how would we feel?” iuke “In that event, we might have toreo: our priorities,” the official admitted, xibility is the watchword in the e office. We have to keep our optionsope You, of course, are free to let yours pathy flow in any manner your choose. Ci I intend to adopt a wait-and-see attitudr my age, these sudden changes in aniine can be hard on the spleen. Parochial schools flourish in France despite government aid to state system United Press MONROE, La. latus symbol th wimmingpool, tin ad the videotape For only $1,000, ents promise to asohol productic ackyard. Fred Huenefeld )emocratic Party ien Tuck, a nati\ iaturday they wil ride the gasohol f iroduce 200 to 400 i day. Tuck said the pi Afgha!is|inveiled next Frid !rence, is financt rivate capital ar 1 mswer to the ene: 'The projections fuck said. “Natu money out o s almost a byprot ause this is somet done in this co Huenfeld and T iovernment Bar market the plants being built by Ma Marlin, Texas, plants already hav ibey hope to sell : The plant cons boiler that transfer -such as corn, si AN By FRANCOIS DUPUIS PARIS — Sylvie Lucaire, a young Pari sian mother, had such bad memories of her religious education that she once rebelled against all authority by joining a radical extremist group. A few months ago, she withdrew her two children from public school and enrolled them in a private Catholic institution run by nuns. She is somewhat ashamed of herself, but she is no different from a growing number of French families that are abandoning a system of public education for which their grandparents fought bitterly to defend around the turn of the century. Like most French, these families are not particularly pious, and many might, like Sylvie Lucaire, express anticlerical views. Yet they are increasingly critical of public schools that lack discipline and are fre quently disrupted by both student and teacher strikes. Above all, they resent the reduction of educational levels to the lowest common denominator. Of 12 million French school children, nearly 2 million now attend private schools. And the overwhelming majority of them go to some 10,000 Catholic primary and secondary schools. Very few French kids attend the kinds of private boarding and day schools that exist in the United States and Britain. The proportion of those quitting the pub lic system would undoubtedly be higher were it not for the fact that parochial schools, already bursting at the seams, are turning away candidates. The director of St. Elisabeth’s, a Catholic school here, reported the other day that she could only accept 200 pupils out of 500 applicants this semester. Father Bernard Faivre, principal of a Jesuit high school, says: “The demand for admission is so great that we could double the size of the student body. ” The same refrain is echoed in provincial towns like Soreze, in southwestern France, where a Dominican school is now jammed after having been half-empty for more than a decade. Much of this change stems from the anar chistic atmosphere that first pervaded the public schools during the spring of 1968, when Paris students escalated their grie vances into a sort of cultural revolution that degenerated into riots. One legacy of that upheaval has been a rise of violence in the schools. There is nothing here that quite com pares with the blackboard jungles of Amer ica. But for French parents, who expect their children to behave in class, even rare cases of violence are shocking. Such cases are becoming common in the sprawling suburbs of big cities like Paris, Lyon and Marseilles, where kids packed into huge schools insult, teachers, scribble obscenities on walls and prowl in the hall ways, interrupting classes. A couple of months ago, in a suburban high school near here, a 12-year-old boy killed one of his friends with a knife. The incident, which might have escaped public notice in New York or Chicago, made head lines in the Paris newspapers. And it contri buted to the panic of French parents, who have traditionally regarded schools to be as quiet and orderly as churches. Like public schools everywhere, those here in France are overcrowded, with the result that teachers are hard put to offer pupils much attention. Parochial schools, in contrast, appear to be model institu tions. Their classes are small, with never more than 25 pupils. They do not hesitate to fail children whose academic performance is below par. And they demand strict obedi ence and good conduct. Unlike public schools, for example, Catholic establish ments forbid kids from chewing gum. Paradoxically, the parochial schools have benefited significantly from laws passed by a government that is supposedly dedicated to the improvement of the public educa tional system. Unlike 1960, religious schools received only minor government subsidies and had to rely for funds on tuition paid by pupils. About that time, however, France was flooded by a wave of youngsters — the consequence of a soaring birthrate that fol lowed the end of World War II. The government faced the choiceofo | strutting new public schools and trai: teachers to staff them, or financing]® ) hial schools that had plenty of room accommodate the emerging generatto took the latter course, mainly to«« Come s ment o Under this year’s budget, Franc parochial schools will be subsidizedtol tune of $2.5 billion. That is only lOpeit of the country’s total expenditure on edn ( tion. But it is ample to cover the cost! teaching the 16 percent of the school-: population that attends Catholic ML tions. hours 1VIOIV.-FH SAT.: 10 SUN.: l-s visa & j For one thing, parochial school tead are usually members of religious oi who work for lower wages than pi school teachers. In addition, their pay fees of about $250 per year, makes up the deficit. Examination scores prove that thei gious schools are successful. While bn more than half of public school kidsp tough baccalaureate test that markst! of their secondary education, all handful of parochial school pupils mak For more and more French parents,) alone is worth the sacrifice of their principles. GDOftMS I HATE THESE LONG LINES AT DELAYED REGISTRATION, BUTUHAT REALLY BUGS HE 15 THE COLD inPERSONAL MATURE OF THE UHOLE THING. UHAT5 Ym SOCIAL SECURITY NUfABER? Ogt-M-GT^oI YOU DON’T mil) IF I CALL YOU I ALWAYS LIKED THOSE NUmERS, BESIDE THE UHOLE NUMBER SEEHS SO FORAAL. NOW, FILL THESE OUT 4 AND TAKE THUS OVER TO A1ISS 70/MND AAYISAY, IT5 BEEN A PLEASURE PROCESSIWS YOU. I WOULDN’T MIND 11 IMPERSONALITY IF THEY DIDN’T ACT LIKE THEY WERE BEING SO PERSON! ABOUT IT