Viewpoint The Battalion Texas A&M University Wednesday May 20, 1981 Slouch By Jim Earle T believe you've solved the sun problem. Squirt!' Reagan buying time on foreign policy By HELEN THOMAS United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan, has managed to keep his domestic program of massive federal spending cuts on center stage, but in the foreign policy field he is still feeling his way. The policy so far has been marked by ambiguities and contradictions with no apparent overall direction. A hard line vis- a-vis the Soviets appears to be the hallmark, but even that seems vulnerable to other pragmatic requirements. Reagan’s overall goal was to wipe out any perception of U.S. weakness in the world. One of the first moves was to make it clear that human rights is no longer a major con sideration in foreign policy as it had been in the Carter administration. After talking tough to the Soviets for some three months, Reagan carried out a campaign promise and lifted the embargo on sales of grain to Russia that had been imposed by President Jimmy Carter after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Reporters pressed White House officials for a reason for the switch: What has changed, they asked, to cause the one pressure point against the Soviets to be eased? A lessening of an immediate prospect of a Soviet invasion of Poland was cited as one of the reasons. But the most telling motivation was Reagan’s campaign pledge to farmers to remove the embargo, and the administra tion’s new farm bill that needed support on Capitol Hill. Then there is El Salvador. At one point, the administration has focused so much attention of the civil strife in that small Car- ribbean country that it was being viewed as another potential Vietnam. But it is now on a back burner. The administration’s policy on nuclear arms control remains murky. White House counselor Edwin Meese recently said that Warped Pentagon lacks imagination By STEVE GERSTEL United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan’s military budget swept through the Senate unscathed and untouched, leaving the im pression that the document was without a flaw. The vote was 92-1, a margin reserved for times of war (except Vietnam) or the older days when matters of the military under went only cursory scrutiny in the Senate. Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon, the lone dissenter, issued a statement decrying the cost (136.5 billion) of the bill. And there was the predictable grumb ling about waste, costs and the failure of NATO allies to do their share. Overall, however, there seemed to be genuine agreement that the Pentagon needs all the hardware the legislation au thorized. And hardware there is: the MX missile system, a new manned bomber, a pair of battleships, a nuclear carrier, cruisers and all sorts of planes and tanks — enough to make any general or admiral happy. And the debate — what there was of it — centered on these weapons and weapons systems, as it always does. So, it was not surprising that a speech by Sen. Gary Hart, DColo., made its way into posterity with almost no notice. For those who still insist on remember ing that Hart was campaign manager of George McGovern’s ill-fated presidential peace campaign, it is well to note that since coming to the Senate, he has become a voice worth heeding in the arena of military affairs. In effect, what Hart told the Senate was that the time has arrived when the military debate must shift from the “more-is-better vs. less-is-better” theme to one dealing with “what history suggests is important to winning wars” and the “art of war itself . ” Hart found a lack of this reasoning the “great deficiency” in the bill which he nevertheless supported. He said it provided “more of the same: more of the same general kind of ships, planes and tanks we have been designing and buying for decades. ” And Hart said, the bill again equates capability on the battlefield with kill prob abilities derived from highly structured tests. “In contrast,” Hart said, gests a few different characterisli might seek in the development! equipment.” Among the shifts Hart offered I sideration: —Emphasis on a change inweapt creates a new situation for the enemj said making a plane or tank lOpercen ter than the previous one does mI| great problems for the other side, —Greater stress on quantity, evel expense of quality. Hart said that titty mans in World War II had thebestf plane and tanks but the United Stataj Soviet Union had more. —Accent on weapons that \ war” and are not so dependent ono maintenance. Hart said the defense debate inGs and the Pentagon has “simply failedtil on what wins wars.” The Colorado Democrat pred I however, that the trend will decade and Congress will “focus lj Gradu: management, funding levels and 05 the services wants, war itself . ” and more on thi [i advice KWPpBSKS? The »jores to under cor [tioii has I Idevelopei Muare-fo' The fo illenkai Hobly Toot and Name; announce Inc. of C the United States is not bound legally or morally to the SALT I or SALT II pacts with the Soviets. SALT I has expired and SALT II was not ratified, but over the past 10 years the United States has said it would abide by the spirit of accords to limit super power nuclear arsenals. While Meese was making his statement, Secretary of State Alexander Haig was announcing in Rome that the United States will have talks with the Soviets later this year on the question of reducing medium range nuclear missiles in Europe — some thing that Soviet President Leonid Brezh nev ardently seeks. Rowney was on the SALT II negotiating team under Carter. He denounced the pact, quit the team and lobbied strongly in the conservative camp to line up enough votes in the Senate to defeat it if it ever came to a vote. During the campaign, Reagan described the nuclear arms accord as “fatally flawed” and claimed it put the United States at a strategic disadvantage. As for the Middle East, the perennial tinderbox, Reagan is rising to a crisis situa tion with the old Kissingeresque shuttle diplomacy. He has sent veteran diplomat Philip Habib to Lebanon, Israel and Syria to try to enhance an uneasy truce. Like all of his recent predecessors, Reagan has found that there are no easy answers to the problems in the Middle East. His decision to sell sophisticated radar planes and equipment to Saudi Arabia caused such an uproar from Israel and members of Congress, he has had to put off until next fall any move to win congression al approval. The administration these days has a stock answer to most foriegn policy problems: “It is under review.” The diplomatic translation means it is buying time and trying to figure out what to do. the owne li complex. "We a ! be annou , Collectc ! artist wh I Remingt horse th; lew boc the Texa “H.W Lovers make better joggers By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — One of the most recent fitness surveys, of which America is blessed with great abundance, purports to show that jogging makes people better lovers. Studies of this sort sometimes raise ques tions as well as spread enlightenment. This one started me to wondering whether the reverse also might be true — that is, whether loving makes people better jog gers. I don’t have the facilities to do full blown scientific investigations. I did, however, re search the question as best I could and my findings indicate there is indeed a correla tion between improved jogging ability and an active love life. Lest someone be tempted to bestow a prize on this project, let me make clear at the outset that all of the joggers mentioned in the study are fragments. If you lumped together parts of the case histories of four joggers to form a single entity, you would have a composite. What I did was take one jogger and split him into four case histories. Some cases show how stepped-up loving makes better joggers. In others, the vice is versa. First Case — H.R., 29, swizzle stick in spector. Subject was a lackadaisical jogger. So poor was his form he never once ac quired blisters, bunions or strained ten dons. One evening, subject visited neighbor hood massage parlor. He was smitten by an attractive female attandant, became a steady customer and eventually began shar ing an apartment with her and two other girls. Subject now has chronically cramped thigh muscles, torn knee cartilages, spa vined ankles and collapsed metatarsal arches, and runs in marathons. Second Case — J L., 57, consultant. Subject started jogging several nights a week at the YMCA. Two laps were enough to have him panting and wheezing louder than other joggers on the track. One night, subject’s jogging aspirations were heard by Hollywood talent scout. Now subject has new career breathing on as com ige Mi aylor’s The mu: Caylor c The] .color pit an intre West Te thor anc Harv sound tracks for X-rated movies Third Case — K.B., 38, punchkeytj i 0 w bei ator. Subject’s wife left home, complaf armed ii that she and husband were athletical >aid. compatible because of his tendency to! ( ^kl fault during tennis games. ^ught a Subject began jogging in nearbypj J I s kill the lonely hours. ^ om ^ One day, subject happened to jojj aFrederl tennis court where estranged wife wasp ! in gCayl ing. His sensuous stride filled her' ? est ed ( overpowering emotions. Nowthereis ,® ac " er of reconciliation. Fourth Case — R.P., 23, doorbells hlimpoi man. Subject strongly desired to! ‘“one meaningful relationship with older# ^ considering girls his own age immatori rather flighty. Subject took up jogging and seek- age overnight. Now has his pick off® ttfU companions old enough to behisAuntf riet. >jn By Scott McCullar The Battalion MEMBER I SPS 045 .’460 Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress LETTERS POLICY Editor Angelique Copeland City Editor Jane G. Brust Photo Editor Greg Gammon Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff News Editors Marilyn Faulkenberry, Greg Gammon, Venita McCellon Staff Writers Bernie Fette, Kathy O’Connell, Denise Richter, Cartoonist Scott McCullar EDITORIAL POLICY The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspaper operated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-College Station. 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