Viewpoint The Battalion Texas A&M University Wednesday May 27, 1981 se Seven m Collej The Dog Exi: Mother!] Slouch By Jim Earle TVe heard of flour bombs and soap bombs, but this is my first encounter with a soot bomb. Reagan operating R oose velt-s tyle By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — One of the earmarks of the flexibility in the American system of government is its ability, at certain times, to deal with public questions in a logical, deliberative fashion and, at other times, to postpone those questions until what appear to be urgently needed actions are taken. When President Truman proposed the Marshall Plan and the NATO treaty. Con gress paused to consider and debate the implications of a permanent American com mitment to the military security and econo mic prosperity of Western Europe. But when Presidents Roosevelt or Johnson were shoving through the measures that came to be called the New Deal or the Great Society, they did not ask Congress or the country to stop and weigh the overall advantages and risks of sharply expanding public-sector expenditures and the scale of government. Ronald Reagan is operating very much in the Roosevelt-Johnson style. He is pressing for action and postponing debate. No mat ter that inflation seems to be abating and the economy is rolling along with unex pected vigor; Reagan insists that his budget and tax cuts are needed to deal with “the worst economic crisis” since the Great De pression. No matter that the Soviet Union is hob bled by shortfalls in its agriculture and in dustry, is bogged down in Afghanistan baffled by the Solidarity movement in Po land; Reagan asserts that record peacetime increases in defense spending are needed to cope with the Soviet threat. I do not criticize Reagan for this. What he is doing is what strong and self-confident Pi •esidents before him have done. He is capitalizing on the momentum of his elec tion victory, the disarray of the political opposition and public support for his leadership, in order to push through as much of his program as possible before the inevitable second-thoughts about the wis dom of his policies occur. Like Roosevelt and Johnson before him, he is seizing the moment—knowing that the question is not if, but when, his leadership will be chal lenged. The American system permits such efforts to succeed but rarely, and Reagan is wise enough to recognize he has such an opportunity. But on this long holiday weekend, with things crawling to at least a temporary halt in Washington, it is possible to step back Warped ‘Bathroom agitators’ are issue Eugei Cliattanc names o Zales and vvat< 1982 \vh By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — At some point this summer the National Labor Relations Board is expected to hand down yet another far-reaching decision. This one reaches all the way down the hall to the men’s room. The question before the board is: Does suspicion that workers are holding union meetings in the men’s room give su pervisors the right to deny them access to the facilities? The armed services, as is well known, have been dealing for years with certain militant types called “guardhouse lawyers. ” But NLRB sources tell me they believe this is the first labor-management case to raise the issue of “bathroom agitators. ” Anyway, historic or not, an NLRB admi nistrative law judge, Walter Maloney Jr., has ruled in the negative on the question posed above. After a hearing last March in Brooklyn, Maloney held that “denying employees bathroom privileges in reprisal for their un ion activities” amounts to an unfair labor practice. But A.P.F. Electronics, Inc., the object of the complaint, has taken exception to some aspects of Maloney’s findings, of which the water closet confrontations were only a part. The company has appealed to the full board a Maloney order directing it, among other things, to “cease and desist” requir ing union activists to cease and desist using the men’s room. Here is a digest of the hearing record prepared by Maloney: Prior to negotiations on a new contract with the Textile Workers Union, shop manager Ronald Sartini “had occasion to speak” with two employees, Corso Palen- zuela and Jesus Ibarra, “while they were in the men’s room.” and unfavorable would receive an enee.” Palenzuela testified that PatrickCi dar, assistant shop manager, Freqiiri operatic: Anotl gold jew Pulsar. Moth the expt followed him to the bathroom, accuse! Fashions of holding meetings in the bathroom threatened to fire him if he continued: other de The i The C ane-pnc Subsequently, Callendar told Pale# served o “not to use the bathroom facilities after.” no charp Corn while th Freshly s "While management has the tioned right to insist that employeesde '^Giova working time to work, it cannot i certain non-work related activities! employees, such as disucssing sp milks. The h Franchisi ing work time, and single out otherps secret in “He asked these employees if they were holding a union meeting and accused them of being agitators. He also told Ibarra not to use the bathroom or else he would be fired on-the-job conversations for cense prohibition, Maloney wrote. He therefore concluded thatsucl tices as “denying employees bathro® vileges because they have engagedin activities’ have “close, intimate, adverse effect on the free flow ol The n ing Sear stores. Schin and Hof iiing stoi (ease no; Post ( if Harvc ebruar waps' from the frenetic pace of executive and con gressional action of the past four months, and note some of the large, unexamined propositions underlying Reagan’s program. When I say “unexamined,” I do not mean that Reagan himself or his aides are unaware of where they are going. Quite the contrary. The blueprint is exceptionally clear to those in control. But the propositions are unexamined in serious political debate. Jimmy Carter’s in firmities impeded such discussion in the course of the fall campaign and no critic has had the platform from which to challenge the Reagan policies since Election Day. But do not doubt that such a rest is coming. It is guaranteed by the very sweep and boldness of the policies Reagan is rushing through. Consider some of the propositions implicit or explicit in the Reagan program, and ask yourself if any or all of them can long escape serious, skeptic al examination. To support the Reagan program, you must believe with him that: — Alnost every disruptive and disturb ing development in the world reflects Soviet scheming or power-wielding: — Federal taxes and regulations are the main barriers to economic growth, and fed eral spending is the main cause of inflation: A radical reduction of the f ederal role in the economy is the only way to energize the economy and stabilize its growth. — There is a natural harmony between the interests and inclinations of business managers and their employees, customers and neighbors: Freeing the owners from government restraints will automatically work to the benefit of everyone who deals with them. — State and local governments are more efficient and equitable in their distribution of public funds and services than the na tional government: Therefore, turning program responsibility back to them will both save money and increase public satis faction . — In this new environment, individuals, families and private organizations can be relied on to replace government in a wide variety of roles, ranging from support of the arts and scholarship to the financing of re tirement: Social needs, and not just private consumption desires, will be best satisfied by a major shift of resources to private hands. These are just a few of Beagan’s major propositions. Everything in our history suggests that, sooner or later, they will be tested. Questions like these can be post poned, but they cannot be safely ignored. as gone ombinei Americai Suppc y and t irected Adkisson j sit\’ Syst< The s [against h gents, p mce on ; genuine < enormou Also ol jgricultu n the pri "Whil. lontrol c corded,” Dems play ball on social security b iroductii ntegratc ive of tl ithin “a he of m By JERELYN EDDINGS United Press International WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats joy fully took a chapter from last year’s tax de bate to make the new Republican majority buck President Reagan on Social Security. They employed the same tactics Repub licans used in September to push Demo crats — then in the majority — into a prem ature stand in favor of tax reduction. It was uncomfortable for Democrats then, since the GOP presidential nominee was the one promoting the popular tax cut idea. It was equally uncomfortable to Republi cans last week. Their own president had recommended the unpopular Social Secur ity plans against which they rebelled. The Senate delivered a unanimous jolt to Reagan’s Social Security proposals by vot ing against “precipitious and unfair” cuts in early retirement benefits and against re ductions that go deeper than required to make the system financially sound. Republicans obviously preferred not to take the action, but could not avoid it with out looking unsympathetic to the nation’s old people. In September, on the day candidate Reagan first endorsed a three-year 30 per cent tax cut, Republicans proposed it on the Senate floor. Democrats defeated it, using terms like “irresponsible,” “slapdash,” and “infla tionary. ” Concerned about looking like they fa vored high taxes, Democrats met hurriedly and declared they would propose their own “responsible” tax cut. The action put them on record in favor of some type of tax reduction, and committed them to drafting a plan. May 20 was payback day. Mindful of the growing public concern about Reagan’s Social Security proposals. Democrats proposed a “sense of the Con gress” resolution that would have put the Senate on record against the administration plan to reduce future benefits. It contained scathing political attacks on the president’s plan and charges that the plan was outright unfair. Republicans, calling it a “two-bit amendment, accused Democrats of de magoguery and narrowly beat back the me- But then, to show they didn't waf tired people treated unfairly, the Ref ropdair cans proposed their own resolution ile and one did not contain the harsh pJl S Much attacks on Reagan, hut it also rebuffedl pur maj of his proposal. 1 “ ies< Tongues firmly in cheek, Dei® Althoup praised Republicans for seeing the 1$ j’ Ies< j t recognizing a good idea — in fact,for? ^ sc , ai osing a measure that lifted some of Wantbrc very own phrases. I ecd sei “I won’t accuse you of plagiarism, Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., 1 don’t accuse me of demagoguery.’ Democratic leader Robert Byrdof Virginia also was sarcastically mous. He said he certainly would# the GOP resolution “two-bit” — he'flaid even vote for it. .mum im “We v In It was just like last year, but thist® Democrats had fun. The used their®: ity status effectively, which they hi managed before, and they enjoyed# vote to rebuff Reagan was 96-0. By po earns, ir bey beli Nosing The E ayeai 'at farms. By Scott McCullar The Battalion L S P S 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congres LETTERS POLICY Editor Angelique Copeland City Editor janeG. Brust Photo Editor Greg Gammon Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff News Editors Marilyn Faulkenberry, Greg Gammon, Venita McCellon StafTWriters Bernie Fette, Kathy O’Connell, Denise Richter, Cartoonist Scott McCullar Letters to the Editor should not extyed 3#^, length, and arc subject to being cut if they air editorial stall reserves the right to edit letters I length, but will make every effort to maintaintlK intent. Each letter must also he signed, showlffw and phone number of the writer. 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