V IE WPOINT : The Battalion August 27,1981 - Slouch By Jim Earle “You see I would like to keep Friday afternoons open because I have a job at home, and Monday mornings are bad because that’s my meditation period, and afternoons after three have to be open for the checkers team, and I don’t concentrate well during mid-day, and. . . ” Dems: no direction to take except up By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — It is never safe to assume that the Democrats will deliver what they have promised, but there are some signs they are gathering themselves for a second stab this fall at functioning as a serious opposition party. As the saying goes, they have no place to go but up. In the first seven months of Ronald Reagan’s reign, the Democrats have been outhustled every which way. Reagan pushed his budget and tax cuts to passage over the opposition of the Democratic lead ers of the House, demonstrating time and again that the nominal Democratic control of that body was worth about as much as a Jimmy Carter campaign button. The Democratic responses to Reagan’s television speeches ranged from awful to sort-of-adequate. Except on Social Security and some of the environmental issues, they showed little ability to exploit the openings the administration provided. Perhaps as a result, their fund-raising lagged in a serious way. A compilation by The National Journal of the mid-year re ports to the Federal Election Commission showed that in the first six months of 1981, the three major GOP campaign committees collected $43.3 million and their Democra tic counterparts, $3.5 million. That is a 12-1 ratio. Liabilities of that size are not going to be overcome overnight. But the first step has to be for the Democrats to find their voice. And that they may finally be ready to do. After much patient behind-the-scenes negotiating, party chairman Charles T. Manatt has obtained the necessary clear ances from Democratic Senate and House leaders to go ahead with the long-promised party policy council. The announcement of its makeup and mandate will be made after Labor Day. The council will be no bomb-thrower. Out of deference to the sensitivities of Sen ate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd (D- W.Va.), the word “policy” won’t even appear in its title. It will be the Democratic Strategy Council. Under the relentless pressure of the Democrats’ self-conscious caucuses, it has grown in size well beyond the compact body of senior eleceted offi cials that Manatt first envisaged. A more venturesome and probably more substantive channel for opposition party thought may be provided by the Center for Democratic Policy, a new and unofficial organization which opened its Washington office this summer. The chairman is Terry Sanford, former governor of North Carolina and now president of Duke University. The operating executives are Ted Van Dyk and Keith Haller, both veterans of past Demo cratic campaigns, and the board of directors includes almost every familiar Democratic name, from Cyrus Vance to Barbara Jordan. With $350,000 pledged toward the first- year budget, the center has begun commis sioning policy papers representing a spec trum of views: Vance, Pat Moynihan and Harvard’s Stanley Hoffmann on foreign policy; 10 Democratic gurus on various aspects of the economy. By fall, Van Dyk says, there will be a steady stream of pap ers, serving as raw material for seminars in and out of Washington. Within two years, they hope to expand to the scale of the American Enterprise Institute, the conser vative think-tank that provided so many ideas and people for the Reagan administra tion. The third piece of this emerging Demo cratic pattern involves the much-maligned House Democratic leadership. Senior staff members, still smarting over the defeats at Reagan’s hands, are developing plans what they hope may be a coordinated assault on vulnerable administration policies. Their tool is one so obvious it tends to be over looked: the committee hearing. What they envision is something like this: A set of judiciary committee hearings one week on the wave of bankruptcies and corporate mergers. Banking committee hearings the following week on the effect of high interest rates on the housing industry and anomaly of huge lines of credit being extended to companies seeking to swallow competitors. Then, foreign affairs commit tee hearings on the sqabbles between the State Department and the Pentagon on American nuclear policy. Given the egos and feuds involved in all three of these ventures, they may never get off the ground. But there is at least a glim mer of life in the Democratic donkey. And these days, that’s news. The Battalion U S P S 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Angelique Copeland City Editor Jane Brust Photo E ditor Greg Gammon Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff Make-up Editor Greg Gammon StaffWriters 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. Opinions expressed in The Bat talion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Texas A&M Universi ty administrators or faculty members, or of the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Communications. Questions or comments concerning any editorial matter should be directed to the editor. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length, and are subject to being cut if they are longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must also be signed, show the address and phone number of the writer. Columns and guest editorials are also welcome, and are not subject to the same length constraints as letters. Address all inquiries and correspondence to: Editor, The Battahon, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. The Battalion is published Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during Texas A&M’s summer semesters. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester, $33.25 per school year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Build ing, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. United Press International is entided exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second-class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. ] Meeting seems anti-climactic Two StU' As I sat in a small meeting room at Texas A&M University’s Research and Extension Center in Dallas, I couldn’t help but think it a rather inappropriate setting to appoint a new University president. Eight regents already were seated at a conference table, a table much smaller than the one in their meeting room on the Texas A&M campus. An assortment of System administrators were milling about the meeting room and the sitting room adjacent to it. Press people kept coming in the front door, some of them hurriedly setting up television cameras. Several persons took their seats in rows of yellow chairs lined up for guests. The furnishings in the meeting room were attractive — a few plush chairs, sofas and wall hangings — but in no way as ele gant as the regents’ magnificent meeting room in College Station. Yet this was the setting where the re gents were to end their year-long search for a University president. Minutes before the meeting began, one Texas A&M official came over to me. “Have you ever had the opportunity to meet Dr. Vandiver?” he asked. “No, I haven’t,” I said. “He’s a tremendous man. I hope that after the meeting and press conference you’ll stay around to meet him.” Even before that meeting began, Dr. Vandiver had accepted the position. The whole affair was rather anti-climactic, and byT ists Coffee Breaks by Jane Brust yet there was satisfaction in that official’s praise of the new president. The regents took an hour to discuss the appointment. It took only minutes for them to reconvene in open session and make the appointment official. Those present now knew the new president’s name but we all had yet to meet him. Vandiver’s entrance to the meeting room was rather anti-climactic too. He gave his official acceptance of the board’s offer and expressed his appreciation shortly before his wife Renee entered the room to join him. As she thanked the regents for her hus band’s appointment it occurred to me that the two of them bear a striking resemblance to Ronald and Nancy Reagan. He is tall and tan with distinguished gray hair and a heal thy, bright smile. She is a petite and attrac tive brunette, complete with poise. The two of them were eager toi ifrnei those present at the meeting; they set |dita eager to begin their mission at Texas! is ^ University. tra And perhaps the faculty, staff, still and former students are eager for tit on get here, relieved that the presi >oolt search is over. In the next few weeks, the president’s Coke Building office wj preparing for a new boss to settle ini versity business. University workers busy getting the president’s mansi order for its new residents. In contrast to the small crowd small room in Dallas, there \\i| thousands of people attending the guration ceremony to be held in Ct I Station some time this fall — and mini I people will have a hand in planning; | inaugural festivities. There wasn’t a great deal ofcelel at Wednesday’s board meeting, and regents took a significant step for the versity. The celebration will come weeks ahead, but the significancew« apparent until the new president!) chance to settle into the business oil the president of Texas A&M Univei The regents have completed theirl appointing a new University presideiitly, official who spoke to me before the ■Itect ing, as well as the members of the believe Vandiver is a tremendous He is now in a position to do tremaj things for Texas A&M. tur lard: stef Network news needs gasp track' By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — According to a recent survey, many newspaper readers and/or network news viewers suspect that editors and reporters are holding something back from them. These findings appear to jibe with pre vious polls giving the news media low credi bility ratings. There probably are a number of reasons for this attitude, but I put most of the blame on television. Other types of programs have no trouble winning viewer confidence, I’ve noticed. In sitcoms and the like, audiences strongly identify with the characters, com ing to think of actors as real surgeons, lawyers or whatever. Yet when real repor ters broadcast actual events, doubts creep in. And some of this dubiety spills over onto print journalism. Part of the problem may be disorienta tion. Televiewers, as we are all aware, are accustomed to a certain amount of altitu dinal coaching. In sitcoms, for example, the laugh track lets the home audience know whether a wisecrack or a sight gag warrants a polite titter, a resonant chuckle or a full-scale guf faw. It’s a valuable service. A viewer at home would feel pretty silly falling out of his chair laughing at some line that only merited a few snickers. Home audiences have come to depend on this external guidance, but on news programs the cues are comparatively subtle. The relative importance of the day’s events may only be indicated by the amount of air time devoted to each. Such a system is open to editorial vagaries that can leave viewers feeling a bit confused. Although there may be technical argu ments against such an innovation, I would like to see the networks experiment with a “gasp track” similar to the ubiquitous laugh track. Why should a viewer sit beforffl) tube in a state of perplexity, nol whether a particular news item is si to leave him amazed, astounded, founded, flabbergasted, consternal simply a little titillated? After each report, as I envision producers would dub in pre-n sounds of people sucking in their emitting low whistles, exclaiming whiz” or muttering, “Well, Illbedai Thus a viewer would know immef whether he was expected to be a* agape, thunderstruck, spellbound d founded. I can’t guarantee that gasp-tracke« would always leave a viewer intellef and emotionally fulfilled, and hence' suspicion that something was beii vered up. But it should greatly reduce the his smiting his forehead and “Zounds!” when a deep sigh of relie appropriate response. (N Warped fiy Scott McCull