I The Battalion Texas A&M University Slouch By Jim Earle “I’m highly concerned about our situation in Iran, we have a crucial football game over the weekend, inflation is spiraling upward, and now he wants to give us an examination on top of all this!’’ Congress’ leaders appear sat By STEVE GERSTEL United Press International WASHINGTON — Congressional leaders — Republicans and Democrats — seem to have nothing to fear from their colleagues. If there is to be a palace coup in January, the plans are a well-kept secret. One or two may be in trouble with the voters. But once that hurdle is cleared, their leadership posts are there for the asking. There will be one, maybe two, changes among House Republican leaders, but these are being dictated by retirements — not by an uprising among the serfs. All that is not surprising. In both the Senate and House, the pattern of the past indicates that leaders, once in place, do not budge on their own — except to move up — and are not put to the test by their followers. They — the leaders — may take this as a sign of loyalty and deep devotion. The chances, however, are that the reluctance to challenge an incumbent stems from a fear of the consequ- In 1959, Rep. Charles Halleck of Indiana ended the 20-year reign of Rep. Joseph Martin of Massachusetts as the House Republican leader. Six years later, then Rep. Gerald Ford of Michigan turned out Halleck. The House Democrats have been more tradi tional — brooking not even a few battles for the top spot. The last three speakers all served as House Democratic leader under their predecessors. The lineage is RayburnMcCormick-Albert- O’Neill. By KATHLEEN | Battalion R ’exas A&M Uni [e been working and patients in [part of a bion iperative educati icer research i lortunities bioi The battles come at the lower level, such as the one when the post of House Democratic leader opened in 1976. Rep. Jim Wright of Texas won in a field of four. was in the right spot when Mansfield n On the Republican side, the major came when Senate GOP leader Everett! (tentshaveparti< sen died in 1969 and when his successor,! ? s . tu y wa -^_f 1 Scott, retired in 1976. uston said Dr Scott, following a normal progression,! ^ ssor 0 f V eterin up from “whip. ” But the current Repul Texas A&M. leader, Howard Baker, came from outsidt 5 0 me students tc leadership circles. »ts which inv There should be only one race in the Ha ce, Flowers saic unless Wright loses the election. ce are genetic m House Republican leader John RliotSi/ithout 1 thesl; oig Arizona will seek the speakership if the R(j a bie to produce licans win control — which is highly unlikl mbat bacteria, but will not return as leader if they do Flowers said a g Reps. Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan and Michel of Illinois are going for that mt is created in mice, which ar ences. Like an animal, a leader wounded can be dangerous. And he has a great many options of making a colleague’s career less pleasant — a voice in committee assignments, scheduling of bills, perks and other favors. As a result, there have been few efforts in recent years to depose leaders. The Senate also shows no eagerness for coups at the top but there has never been a reluctance to dispatch the No. 2 leaders — especially among Democrats. During the 16-year reign of Senate Democra tic leader Mike Mansfield, a number of senators were elected his “whips.” In three successive elections, Russell Long of Louisiana was chosen; Long was beaten by Edward Kennedy and Kennedy, in turn, was ousted by Robert Byrd. Byrd, now the Senate Democratic leader. House and Senate Democratic leiL appear secure, although there are rami bygone s< never confirmed by him — that Byrdwoull be averse to having a new deputy in pk California’s Alan Cranston. Baker and his deputy, Ted Stevens of should be in good shape. They have Senate Republicans. But there persists the possibility that Bre Senate’s GOP conservatives may challei .. , > P v D „I ' -L seed and plant t Baker with a candidate from their own r possibly John Tower of Texas. Americans get serious about election issues By DAVID S. BRODER DES MOINES — In the course of a misspent 20 years on the political trail, I have attended dozens of Democratic dinners where the drunken din was such that no one, including the speaker, had any idea what was being said. Hubert H. Humphrey had standard advice for other Democrats going to such notoriously besotted affairs as the Philadelphia or New Jersey dinners. “You say, ‘Buzz-buzz-buzz- buzz— Franklin Delano Roosevelt! Buzz-buzz- buzz-buzz — Harry S. Truman! Buzz-buzz- buzz-buzz — John Fitzgerald Kennedy!” Humphrey advised. “And then you get the hell out of there before they start throwing rolls at each other.” However, recently I was at a Democratic dinner here where you could hear a pin drop. Sen. John C. Culver (D-Ia.), who is locked in a tough, close re-election campaign against Rep. Charles Grassley (R.Ia.), was winding up his speech to the party faithful in a rather remark able way. Instead of the standard Humphrey-style pep- talk, he was talking about arms control and the importance of reviving — not discarding — the strategic arms limitation treaty with the Soviet Union. And he was doing it, not by reciting data on warheads and throw-weights, but by reading a Japanese woman’s recollections of her experi ences, as a young girl, on the day the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Listening to the terrifying description of the effect of fire, blast and radiation on human flesh, written 30 years ago by that Japanese woman, now filling a basketball arena in the amplified voice of the former Marine and Har vard fullback, brought the hundreds of Demo cratic revelers to sudden silence — and full attention. It was a dramatic example of what could be sensed everywhere on the campaign trail last week: America is getting serious about this election. After all the demeaning distractions, the voters and candidates alike are finally be ginning to sense what is at stake. There was a similar experience earlier in the week, when Ronald Reagan toured the largely shut-down Jones and Laughlin steel complex in Youngstown, Ohio. Without impugning any motives, it’s a safe bet that the visit was sche duled simply to provide a teleginic setting for another Reagan blast at the regulatory and eco nomic policies of Jimmy Carter’s administra tion. But the reality overwhelmed the theatrics. Candidate and correspondents drove through acre after acre of rusting, abandoned buildings — looking a bit like war ruins themselves — that symbolized America’s decaying technolo gical and industrial strength. And when Reagan met with some of the re maining workers in the plant, they turned out to be, not extras provided by a Hollywood rent- a-blue-collar-crowd agency, but worried men with probing questions about the candidate’s readiness to commit government funds to the rehabilitation of this aging plant. Like the diners in Des Moines and millions of others across the land, they are remembering, now that the moment of decision is approaching, that there are terribly consequen tial choices to be made by the next President, by the senators and by the others to be elected next month. The press — which has gotten its share of criticism for the trivialization of the campaign — is also getting the message. James P. Gan non, the executive editor of the Des Moines Register, reprinted in his own paper a speech he’d made, criticizing the campaign coverage and suggesting that “instead of beng content to serve up only the charge and countercharge of the campaign trail, we can pose the questions that the candidates should be answering, and explain to the readers why the answers aren’t as simple as the candidates’ TV ads suggest.” Putting his doctrine into practice, Gannon has been running a series of front-page articles on the issues. Similar pieces are beginning to appear in papers from coast to coast. The Asso ciated Press, our largest news organization, did a Reagan interview recently that focused more sharply on the thrust of his policies than any thing that has appeared since the conventions. If Reagan and Carter are smart, they will sense this changing mood — and do the one thing that, more than any other, can still re deem this campiagn from travesty. They will meet face-to-face for a serious discussion of these issues. They can do it themselves, with or without Although we m matoes or snap 1 _ and better Dr. Samuel D. gricultural Extei ['stem, said peo :cause some f tl icli year in favoi “I think people he old varieties x pie today,” he si Cotner said pi ihrinking of the ybrids will be m ecause the gent wed. ' Many plants b< in their gene poo emoving some o lant. "As we impro' Cotner sai It is possible, fill make the pi IHA i arsoi Scions’ drinking prompts look at labor By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Demon rum, as we have learned from recent scandals, can cause con gressmen to succumb to venal or homosexual tendencies they might have resisted had they stayed sober. Does drinking also bring out collective bar gaining tendencies in individuals? Specifically, might non-union workers under the influence of alcohol vote for organized labor representation that they, if sober, would spurn? Such a question is implicitly raised in a case now awaiting a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board. Let’s look at the record: In a secret-ballot election conducted last Correction Two headlines in Monday’s Battalion were incorrect. On page 1, one headline reported, “Run-off freshman election today. ” The headline should theblessingofjohn Anderson or the League of have said “Tuesday,” rather than “today. Women Voters. Bob Strauss and Jim Baker could agree in one phone call on a date, a site and a neutral moderator. Without the distrac tion of a phony panel of press questioners, Carter and Reagan could sit down for two hours to talk seriously about where the coun try is and where it should be going. Americans are ready to listen. Freshman runoffs will be held today, October 21. Polling places are Harrington Center, the Memorial Student Center, Sbisa Dining Hall, the Corps Guardroom and the Commons. A headline on page 9 incorrectly reported the score of Saturday’s football game as 47-6. Baylor won the game 46-7. The Battalion regrets the errors. Aug. 7, employees of the Browning-Ferris In dustries plant in Grafton, Va., voted 14-10 to designate the Teamsters union as their bargain ing agent. The company then challenged the results, contending among other things that the voting was “affected by the consumption of alcoholic beverages in substantial quantities.” It seems that on the day of the election sever al employees attended the funeral of a co worker and later gathered at the home of the deceased’s mother. According to the testimony of the plant man ager, “Food and alcoholic beverages were served at this gathering, and, with one excep tion, everyone consumed the equivalent of at least four beers.” A few weeks ago, I might simply have gone along with the findings of Louis D’Amico, an NLRB acting regional director, who recom mended that the objections be dismissed. But that was before drunkenness figured in the defense of congressmen accused of taking bribes or making homosexual advances. Now that we know a few too many can cause tylefta •it. Col. Thomas 1 lecurity and Tra larking situatio ampus at the R iation meeting pf the Harringtoi A revision in t campus from d numbers will als ?resident Sherr An RHA com: their weekend crowdi otherwise upright lawgivers to stray from til tars, Balcar sail straight and narrow, the effect of elbot bending on labor relations seems to warn more study. D’Amico, perhaps borrowing a page ffomtli U.S. Supreme Court, reached his decision! narrow, legalistic grounds, rather than comi: to grips with the central issue. He dealt only with the technical question whether the employees in this instance actui: were intoxicated. “ ... even assuming, arguendo, thateachei ployee had consumed four beers, no eviden was either submitted or adduced to demon trate that any employees were, in fact, inch ated during the time they voted,” he wrote Thus the broader question of whether in ebriation would be grounds for invalidating union election was left twisting in the wind Perhaps the full NLRB will address thatissof in its review of the case. Meanwhile, ifyouhei a report that the House and Senate have vote! to unionize Congress, you will know the reasc: why. mpai is Warped By Scott McCullar The Battalion U S P S 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Dillard Stone Managing Editor Rhonda Watters Asst. Managing Editor Scott Haring City Editor Becky Swanson Asst. City Editor Angelique Copeland Sports Editor Richard Oliver Asst. Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Scot K. Meyer Asst. Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff News Editors Lynn Blanco, Gwen Ham, Todd Woodard Staff Writers Kurt Allen, Nancy Andersen Marcy Boyce, Mike Burrichter, Pat Davidson, Jon Heidtke, Uschi Michel-Howell, Kathleen McElroy, Debbie Nelson, Liz Newlin, Rick Stolle Cartoonist Scott McCullar Photo Editor Pat O’Malley Photographers George Dolan, Brent Frerck, Jeff Kerber EDITORIAL POLICY The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper op erated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily repre sent the opinions of Texas A&M University administrators or faculty members, or of the Board of Regents. Questions or comments concerning any editorial matter should be directed to the editor. LETTERS POLICY TEST SPECIAL Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length and are subject to being cut if they are longer. 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