age 6 THE BATT7 MONDAY, MARC Lunch C. K. Krumbottz serves of sandwiches, burgers, s super salad bar Join u 2 p.m Mon through Fri. Our super I spread of n and get Vi f VISA 815 Harvey Roac C5. Sams WE’RE LO 1 POWER F MONTH FC HAVE DEC YOU CAN WRITE: WE’LL I NOT INTE GINEERIf A U.S. N/ the small society by Brickman xlLst THAT^ F/Lt^P WITH 6C&P N&W'Z - TJ-ST fZpAP THE APv'&ZT&EMEHTZ - Washington Star Syndicate. Inc. Opinion DOE is causing shortage Gasoline lines are back — in Florida, Southern California, parts of Alabama, and a few other areas. But there is no gasoline shortage. In fact, supplies are the largest in two years. And because of high prices and more fuel-efficient cars on the road, demand for gasoline is down. So why the lines? The answer is our old friend the Depart ment of Energy, which made the 1973-74 shortage worse than it had to be, which helped produce last spring’s long lines and which apparently plans to repeat its triumphs. The department hasn’t learned yet how to allocate gaso line effectively. It seems beyond DDE s wit, if that is the right word, to get extra supplies to tourist meccas and places that have had fast population growth, like Florida and Southern California. Industry sources say, and some candid souls at DOE admit, that the department s cumbersome allocation system prevents ample gasoline supplies from reaching markets that need them. Not that the Energy Department isn’t worried about the problem. Why, it has named a task force to study the system, and, says one member, “We hope to finish by June 1.” Lord knows how much of the country will be embroiled in gasoline lines by then. Scripps-Howard Newspapers Oil profits out of control A subcommittee of the House, pointing to industry profit margins on diesel and heating oil of 700 percent or so last year, claims heating oil and diesel fuel consumers were charged $3 billion more than government guidelines allowed in 1979, and that the trend is continuing. This was followed by demands that federal price controls be restored — something that is not likely to happen. Government attempts to keep oil profits within reason have failed. The Department of Energy recently decided not to pursue home heating oil overcharges of a penny a gallon, which have been going on for more than three years, reasoning that the amount is “insignificant. ” True, a penny a gallon doesn’t sound like much when heating oil on Cape Cod is at $1 a gallon and climbing, but the total represents something like $1 billion worth of extra money for the oil companies, a figure that is well beyond the peanuts stage. While the return to price controls might sound tempting, the resulting stabilization of gasoline prices would very like ly encourage an acceleration in use — after the motorist became accustomed to gas at $1.24 or so a gallon. But the profit margins enjoyed by the oil producers ex ceeds the federal anti-inflation limits of 13.8 percent, mak ing inflation-fighting controls seem ludicrous. The pet roleum industry claims it’s politics, but the fact is that a windfall profits tax has become mandatory. Cape Cod Times, Hyannis, Mass. The Battalion USPS 045 360 LETTERS POLICY MKMHKR Lettoth parents. n|hpathy an An important reform inifcshe must us gave women the right to file wIMWornen come tax returns, therebyspunsjfomse you m t‘.ini tlieir own wages. trust. VW're Despite these changes, who they ca complained that they could b Just a co because there were notenoudNqrthgate is and centers to care for theirdijyith a more they worked. The govemmenined Parent! expanding such facilities, bulfeThe recepti short of the need. racks of five But even if that aspect of fetrol informal could be solved, women would;.sums up the he saddled with household di Thy Pill, those employed hold part-thm Cyndi Fel cause they regard their dors istand a cou primary. outsixphom The answer, perhaps, lie. pie needing renovation of the system, sofe to set up an more men are employedpart-fej*' Sometim to share responsibilities withfei* 011 center wives. That may be a utopiand:sfo at s okay b may be the only hopeforsav here for, ss structure, which, in the nane|$P ett y Co progress, is threatened will] ithoughts a fc ante. j^Mununity (Lonnroth writes on soddissiJ?j*nning Ce Svenska Dagbladet, a Swedish 1 hepatic part of our c 1 try to have a: Feds trim costs in strange ways By DONALD LAMBRO United Press International In the continuing battle of the budget the “Washington Monument Syndrome” is being used persistently, and thus far suc cessfully, to resist any attempts to sharply cut wasteful federal spending. The syndrome is a little known device people in the bureaucracy and Congress use to combat efforts to cut deeply into nonessential government programs. As the story goes, when the Interior De partment, under a previous administra tion, was asked to submit a list of proposed budget cuts, officials came back with prop osals that began with cutting the elevator service in the Washington monument. While the story may be apocryphal, the technique is real — as taxpayers have wit nessed in recent weeks. want cuts? Okay, we ll give you cuts. We’ll start with Social Security benefits, then veterans, and, let’s see, there’s welfare and... Somehow the idea of cutting overloaded payrolls (which now costs $80 billion a year) and other areas where fat, waste, fraud, abuse, error, and extravagance exists never seems to occur to anyone. In the early debate over cutting Presi dent Carter’s proposed $616 billion 1981 budget, suggestions for cuts seem to be focusing disproportionately on major social programs. Indeed, the response seems to be: You When James McIntyre Jr., director of the Office of Management and Budget, un veiled Carter’s budget in January he told the news media, “I’ve looked through here again and again to find something we could cut without suffering adverse consequ ences, and I can’t find it.” However, the range of continuing gov ernment waste is there for everyone to see, and its elimination would harm no one. The government still spends about $500 million a year to make movies on every thing from outdoor camping to travelogues. Despite an estimated $40 billion deficit this year, $2.3 billion in revenue sharing is due states which last year had $4.3 billion in budget surpluses. Smaller expenditures run the gammut from $ KM),000 a year to provide members of Congress with masseurs in their Capitol gymnasiums to nearly $1.5 million to pro vide Cabinet secretaries and top military officials with private chefs. The government pays people to run automatic elevators. It wastes, according to its own studies, nearly $500 million annual ly on unnecessary travel. Needless consul tants contracts, which a Senate panel said improved not single program, cost hun dreds of millions of dollars a year. The Pentagon spends over $700 million a year to subsidize commissaries and ex changes so that officers, retirees in second career jobs, and foreign embassy personnel can get 20 percent to 25 percent off their groceries. The Census Bureau is spending over $1 billion this year to conduct the census even though General Accounting Office officials say it could be done for $400 million less. Meanwhile, the administration wants over $68 million for 11 regional commis sions even though President Carter last year said in an internal memorandum they we cater to i much as pos ; Services a but all three tests and Women’s Re were "a waste of time and This year the government issp® million on the U.S. TravelSeraB the OMB found was an unnecessfl that taxpayers “can no longenlw The $1 billion-a-year NationH Foundation conducts numerousilMMiMBH ity studies such as an S18,600feT iHK': U.S. synthetic ruber Indus $33,(KM) study on why people ical contributions. At least $5 million a yeans government chauffeured million for military servants; ami lion on a Youth Conservation0 administration says ‘'does i high priority needs of youths.” 1 ■ The areas of wasteful, unneffi low priority spending does noli _ hut the above serves to suggest'R may not have looked closely enw As one congressional budget si marked, “The first thing these® about is cutting social programs--* cle of government — when the) !® concentrating on the fat’’ Letters McCall’s actions within his rights Editor: I would like to comment on The Baylor Lariat controversy and, in particular. The Battalion’s coverage of it. First off, I find that the vast majority of the quotes and comments used in the Batt s “news” stories are all on one side. This is often referred to as biased reporting, and, I might add, bla tantly so. I am a Baptist and concerned about issues dealing with Baptist organiza tions. Yet I am very much in the dark about what the Baylor administration actually said and did. Try being objective and re port both sides fully even if you have a personal opinion. Now, your editorial, Viewpoint (March 5) I find to be inaccurate in its reporting of opposing views. According to the Baptist Standard (March 5), President McCall is reported to have said that students who pose nude and claim the Baylor name will face disciplinary action. The “and” is im portant. The “disciplinary action” is very clearly stated. McCall “says” he had not said those posing would be expelled im mediately as some media have reported. Baylor is a Baptist university supported by Baptist people — any student who attends should realize that whether or not they are Baptist themselves. To quote McCall again, “Baylor was founded and is operated by Texas Baptists to conduct a program of Christian higher education, and it has al ways been the policy of the university that no university publication expose a posi tion contrary to the Christian nature and purposes of the institution.” The reasons that Baylor is a private univeristy and not a public one is for the express reason that it may take a religious, moral stance. I support McCall’s action and agree with his stand on publisher’s rights. I believe that on any privately owned newspaper the publisher has the right to veto any editorial he feels is contrary to the staui ports. As McCall says (Baptist! March 5), this is a historical audit tion (as Roy Bragg slightingly publisher to take. McCall very(W that he does not object to b coverage and never stated thalM to review news stories. I would like to say to you, JM wait until you get out into the a § and try to write an editorialcritid®' publisher and see just how long®*' Glenn R. Bailt) jV Martha Jean Hi | Thotz By Doug Grok |