The Battalion Viewpoint Lo< August 11,1 Slouch By Jim Earle “You know that your diploma comes in a mailing tube. I don’t want to meddle in your affairs, but if I were graduat ing, I wouldn t leave that stage until I opened up that tube to make sure the diploma was there. ’’ Next in vogue: stereo knees By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Fashion notes from hither, thither and yon: HITHER — Knees are back in style, folks. According to reports from the fall fashion shows in Paris, some designers have lifted hem lines back above the knees in both daytime and evening creations. This probably is good news for the economy. One time-tested theory is that skirt lengths presage economic movement, rising when pros perity is imminent, falling when recessions are at hand. So the news from Paris could mean that Reagan’s budget and tax policies are about to pay off. What is not clear — or at least not clear to me — is whether broad knees will remain fashion able or whether women must return to the nar row knees of yesteryear. I understand the trend in men’s wear is back to narrow neckties and lapels. So my assumption is that narrow knees likewise will become de rigueur. THITHER — The latest thing in short shorts, reports Omni magazine, are “stereo hot pants. ” These garments are wired to a stereo speaker with a cord that relays music to a two-inch disc on the waistband. The inventor, David Lloyd, claims the resulting pulsations produce “an in credible tingle all over your body.” Lloyd says the biggest thrills come from clas sical selections such as the “1812 Overture. ” But I would think a real trendsetter in hi-fi hot pants would prefer the theme from “Star Wars.’ YON—Jogging up and down Pike’s Peak may require strict bodily discipline, but the jogger’s brain has a lot of time to wander off the trail. Edwin Paget, a retired speech professor, has fathered any number of errant thoughts during the 920 or so times he has jogged to the summit since 1919. This summer, while puffing up a switchback, Despite a of wet sprin promising. Ir weeks and so could result. the octogenarian jogger stumbled up);.. “Our crop of installing electric lights in womesWdue to the the It is well known that subtle ligktisito cotton wea enhances feminine charms, but upHBob Metzer, < poor dears have been largely depm:;tural Extensr ternal illumination. ■ “We startc Paget, according to word I have re® ’. n niost areas the 14,000-foot elevation, hasdesi©;, u h lls c apparel with the lighting built in tlllp Electric lighting in or beneathW| n *on’s crop thing can emphasize the most alliMj “\y e C urrei of their faces or bodies, " the profe : ' 350 pounds ol "Unlike the bikini, which revealH even g e t close erything, much of which is unattrae: conie anc l i ns permits a homely girl to reveal odIvs Boll weevil possibly in color. some produci Yes, and if she wears a Paget-litllil s ®™ e . oca ^ on pair of stereo hot pants she can whrrflijw*-* 011 ’ som soft lights and sweet music —thehilP 1 *^ a so cy of romance. Just make certain bothi;, so „ lern i are ‘ above the knees. Mjp problem rot, particula Metzer said. 1 COLUMBUS PWRKH- j se* P^OGcmeorE v////"""""/////"" /////////'"//SS////////}////////////////. IBlllilllPi w 1 Mondale ready to hit campaign trail again By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — The federally fi nanced transition office closed three weeks ago and the S'ecfet Service men departed. Six months after he left the public payroll for the first time in 20 years, former Vice President Walter F. Mondale is wholly a private citizen, one of those six-figure- salary Washington lawyers who attends sti mulating conferences on three continents. He looks terrific, tanned from a fishing expedition with his two sons. He is rested, relaxed, even a bit reflective. And he hopes the condition won’t last. By next summer, Mondale says, “Til be on the trail almost full-time,” campaigning for Democratic candidates in the mid-term election. His travels will be financed by a personal political-action committee that raised almost a quarter-million dollars be fore it sent its first direct-mail appeal last month. And after that, there will be the 1984 Democratic presidential derby. Mondale figures to be one of the early front-runners in a vast field that may include Sens. Ed ward M. Kennedy, John Glenn, Gary Hart and Joe Biden, Govs. Jerry Brown, John Y. Brown, and Hugh Carey, former Carter Cabinet colleagues Moon Landrieu, Reubin Askew and Robert Strauss — all of whom see vision of Rose Gardens through the aura of Ronald Reagan’s current halo of popularity. Mondale, for one, is convinced that the nomination will be worth the scrap. He says the massive tax-cut bill Reagan pushed through Congress in the past seven days will come to be seen not as his greatest triumph but as “his worst mistake. ” It will, he says, put intolerable pressure on the Fedeal Reserve Boards as the sole agent in the fight against inflation. The resulting persisitent high-interest rates will not only choke the American economy but “do more harm” to U.S. relations with the European allies and Japan than Russia could contrive on its own to accomplish. But aside from his gamble that Reagano mics will fail, it is far from clear just what Mondale sees himself — or his party — offering the voters. In an interview last week, just before he flew off to Aspen for a seminar on U.S.-Soviet relations, Mondale repeated the statement that he had made in a post-election interview: “We (Democrats) were sounding awful stale.” He says he has read and traveled widely these last six months, in an effort to refresh his own thinking: eight days in Europe, including a long look at NATO and its de fense theories; an energy seminar with oil men and investors in California; many con ferences on the domestic economy. In the fall, he is going to China, Japan and Korea. Deliberately, he says, he has spent much more time in the South and the West, with conservative economists and businessmen — looking at key issues from a perspective other than the one he learned as a disciple of Hubert Humphrey and Jimmy Carter. But the differences are not yet apparent in Mondales’s public utterances. His speeches have been given to “safe” audi ences, the National Education Assn, and the Urban League, at the L.B.J. School in Austin and Brandeis Unversity. In them, he tips his hat to the current fashions. “Progessives have learned some lessons,” he says, but the lessons are the obvious ones: Inflation is important and regulation burdensome. “Where govern ment has been clumsy, or expensive or in trusive — we should make government better. ” But, mainly, he defends the causes he has always defended: nutrition and child care programs, education, legal services, civil rights, voting rights, aid to Israel. His answer to the dilemmas of Social Security is the same as it was in the last campaign: “That Social Security check — and the way is is figured — should be as sure as the sun coming up in the morning.” It remains to be seen how close Mondale will come to meeting that standard. In the meantime, there is a possible clue to his hesitancy in breaking new gound. It is found in the lines with which he would up his most important and best-received speeech of the last six months, the one he delivered to the Urban League convention in i u * y ’ “We can now prove,” he said, “that we weren’t as bad as they (the voters) thought we were, and that the other crowd is worse than we thought they would be.” NENtoiUVAt A farmer cc >il into his trac itudying the s> nend it. At It “There are vegetable oil iuccessfully a: short periods 1 ’exas A&M 1 tent Center, nn effects o “Also, the s mt not in ano ith one oil, si lother crop. Engler said inch as diese ion during er Available. “From a fax ilant or harve If we ha' Imports, for ex 'veil. “At this poi ■ “echi Where have all the Dems gone? By ARNOLD SAWISLAK United Press International WASHINGTON — It passes amazement to see how fragile Washington status can be. As, for example, Democratic Sens. Ed ward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Henry Jackson of Washington. Two years ago, there were a lot of people who expected Kennedy, the man who was going to carry out the mission of his fallen brothers, to be the 1980 Democratic pres idential nominee and possibly president in 1981. John Kennedy has come to?” Ronald Reagan and the Republicans are on a roll, as they say in Las Vegas, and Democrats everywhere seem to be in re treat. This is especially true in the Senate, where the Democrats are only three votes shy of a majority but haven’t made a dent worthy of a BB on a piece of legislation since the national debt limit was increased last winter. A week ago, Kennedy made the news for the first time in months by holding up the August Senate vacation period by objecting to a final vote on President Reagan’s tax bill on a Saturday. He was at Cape Cod at the time. Five years ago, there were a lot of people who expected Jackson, who was chosen as the most influential member of the Senate in a 1976 straw vote, to be the Democratic presidential nominee and possibly presi dent in 1977. A week ago, Jackson got in the news by complaining that Kennedy had caused everyone a lot of trouble by holding up the Senate’s August vacation. He almost mis sed the rollout of Boeing’s new jetliner be cause of the delay. All of which explains why some Demo crats are asking: “Is this what the party of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman and It is true that some of the Senate’s best- known Democrats such as George McGovern, Frank Church and Birch Bayh were given their walking papers last fall. But Kennedy and Jackson are there. So is Russell Long of Louisiana, who was sup posed to be the most powerful member of the Senate only a year ago, and Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who was the majority leader, and Paul Tsongas, who did a lot of talking about the need for a “new” Demo cratic thrust after the elections. Where are those fellows? When it came time to chose Democrats to rep dent Reagan just before the taxculj was Sens. Bill Bradley of New je{ Daniel Patrick Moynihan ofNewl| spoke for the party. Estimable t but where were the heavy Democratic Party? To suggest that the Democrats!! because they no longer control the j convenient, but not very convince Everett Dirksen, whose fate it*! Senate Republican leader durint | which the GOP could have helditj in a broom closet, always manaSj heard from. So did Republicanle! ward Baker during the most 1 of Democrat dominance in the i A long time member of onel Democrat’s staff said recently ‘ T | in a panic. He always gets years before his term is up, butno* state of hysteria. ” Maybe that’s where all the I have gone. Warped By Scott McCullar c The Battalion U S P S 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Con ere s LETTERS POLICY Editor Angelique Copeland City Editor Jane Brust Photo Editor Greg Gammon Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff Make-up Editor Greg Gammon Staff Writers Bernie F ette, Kathy O’Connell, Denise Richter, Cartoonist Scott McCullar Letters to the Editor should not exceed $| length, and are subject to being cut if they are editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters l‘'I length, but will make every effort to maintain^ intent. Each letter must also be signed, she" 1 ' and phone number of the writer. Columns and guest editorials are also welw |#! | not subject to the same length constraint*‘j Address all inquiries and correspondence to: Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&^| College Station, TX 77843. 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