opinion Battalion/Page!| June 9, Slouch By Jim Earle * r cAfcLe- ‘Have you seen my armadillo?" Senator wants better GOP image by Steve Gerstel United Press Internationa] WASHINGTON — Sen. Bob Pack- wood, once a bit of political boy wonder, is now perilously close to 50 and in need of a cause to lead. The one he has chosen is most merito rious: to improve the Republican party’s image with blacks, hispanics, Jews and women. To achieve this goal, the third- term Oregon Republican wants to lead a drive against restrictive social and civil rights legislation. “I’m reaching 50 years of age,” he said recently. “I’ve been in the Senate 14 years and right now am looking at what I want to do with the rest of my life.* In a period when the Republican Party is terribly dominated by conservatives, the moderate-liberal wing is in desperate need of a strong leader. If he assumes the mantle, Packwood is in for a frustrating and very probably hopeless fight. In the past, the concept of a more open Republican party committed to social and civil rights has not been embraced by the GOP except in cheap rhetoric. Strong, well-known national leaders of the recent past such as Nelson Rockefel ler, Jacob Javits and William Milliken were frustrated. Packwood is not, at least not yet, in their class and the climate is much worse. The Oregon senator claims a “lot of senators” have indicated their support for his positions but are reluctant to speak out. “They say to me, Tm glad somebody said that,” Packwood said. At least Packwood is perfectly situated. The Senate is the showcase arena where conservatives are pushing the most re strictive social legislation. The Senate has already approved legislation which forbids courts to order school busing more than 5 miles or 15 minutes one way — tantamount to out lawing the practice. Packwood was the self-appointed Re publican leader opposing the sale of AWACs to Saudi Arabia. But to the dis gust of his allies on the Democratic side, Packwood turned out to be strong on talk and weak on the grinding work that builds majorities. And Packwood cannot get any help along the way from the White House. His brand of Republicanism is not in favor at the other end of the avenue and his recent potshots at President Reagan have shut down communications. It would help the Republican party to have an eloquent and effective leader for the small but still loyal moderate-liberal wing of the party. Packwood may not be the man. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Letters Policy Editor Diana Sultenfuss City Editor Bernie Fette Sports Editor Frank L. Christlieb News Editors Tracey Buchanan, Daniel Puckett Diane Yount Staff Writers Cyndy Davis, Susan Dittman, Terry Duran, Colette Hutchings, Hope E. 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United Press International is entitled 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. It’s 11 p.m. — do you know where your dogs are now? by Dick West held in the University of Maryland please, but they must kno T Traitor! P*-*»cc Tnt«>**natirknsal Si T*rY1Si Yi f tf \ f 4 by Dick West United Press International WASHINGTON — I don’t suppose we’ll ever see the day when we can keep teenagers at home at night simply by leading them to their rooms and com manding “Stay!” In fact, if strapped to a polygraph machine, I would have to confess I never had a dog that would go to bed at a decent hour either. The only dogs I ever owned roamed all over the house at night, barking at imaginary intruders, shedding hair on the parlor sofa and making waves for the Tidy Bowl Man. And my kids were equally trouble some. held in the University of Maryland armory. I don’t know which dog won what, but Willett gave me two booklets published by the contest sponsor, the maker of Gainesburgers and other canine goodies. The titles are “The Dog in Society” and “What Every Good Dog Should Know.” Substitute the word “child” in the appropriate places and you have publica tions a parent could find instructive, too. When I started questioning Willett ab out his line of work, he said: “I wish I had gotten involved in it sooner. I might have done a better job of raising my two daughters.” please, but they must knowwhatii want them to do " I told Willett the only thingni ever learned was how to bury theirs in a supper dish, a trick for whirl SC 01 lured needed no guidance. Willett, ever alert, obviously hai trained to recognize a dog food® cial cue when he hears one. “Good nutrition is a primere(|iiii 7 p' ni obedience training,” he said. “Doj [RRA ers should always think of thetotil roadv being of their pets.’ It was, however, the twobookl® ?XAS In the best of all possible worlds, kids and dogs would respond to the same di rectives — heeling, fetching one’s slip pers and refraining from chasing cars at a given signal. This sugarplum vision began dancing in my head after a talk I had with Steven Willett, director of the Eastern Regional Dog Obedience Championship recently Asked to elaborate, Willett, whose household includes a golden retriever as well as teenage girls, told me: really opened my eyes “In some extreme situations,tht ly dog may be the only means o! munication in a household,” “Family members under stress nil “Dogs and children are alike in want ing to know what’s expected of them. Kids are always testing their perimeters the way dogs are. Consistency is the most important element in training both. And the trainers should be lavish with praise. “Both pets and children are eager to iMPL Brazo on th< activit ISCC Roust other usually can relate via ail affection and concern fortheirpel been suggested that veterinariani be valuable members of comi family health counseling groups. Ah, yes. As the old saying goes, ly that paper-trains together, rt| together. A bill is pending which rules that hu man life begins at inception — making an abortion a murder. Other anti-abortion measures are in the wings. There are also moves to permit voluntary prayer in pub lic schools and efforts will be made to stop an extension of the voting rights act. It is a perfect time for Packwood to begin displaying his leadership. The question remains whether he can or will? Over the off-and-on nine months the Senate spent before finally passing the busing measure, it was Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn. — not Packwood — who did the leading. In fact, the opposition to the busing legislation was pretty much a solo job by Weicker except during rollcall votes. Although Packwood’s opposition to abortion legislation is well-known, clear, frequently enunciated and long-held, there have been other senators who took on more clearly-defined leadership roles for the Republicans. For many years, as the legislation be came more and more restrictive, former Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts carried the torch. Later, it was again Weicker. Unite NEW C entering try face tf grming eran d jl subcon “It’s 1 jere,” Ec pcomm Id hoc ualty r White o worf Janies, w iesses wh )f the inc IHEL mom 7J®> EVERMW else, III Public allowed to see both sides by David S. Broder WASHINGTON — Yesterday (Satur day), President Ronald Reagan made the last of ten scheduled weekly Saturday afternoon talks to the nation. An hour after he finished, the seven radio net works that carried his talk also broadcast the Democratic Party’s reply, delivered by Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum (D- Ohio). Strange as it may seem, this unre markable sequence represents a signifi cant breakthrough in the cause of public policy debate. These talks were, from ev erything I can learn, the longest sus tained exchange of views between spokesmen of the opposing parties, under near-equal conditions, in recent political history. Nor is this the only good news on this front. Twice this year, the major televi sion networks have afforded the opposi tion party the opportunity for quick re plies to televised addresses by the Presi dent, under terms that provided access to audiences of equal or nearly equal size. One came after the President’s State of the Union address, when GBS and NBC followed immediately with a half-hour film prepared by the Democratic Party, and ABC aired it with only a half-hour delay. The second came after Reagan’s April 29 speech on the budget, which all three networks followed immediately with the response by Rep. Richard Boll ing of Missouri, the Democrat’s spokesman. tent in seeking broadcast access, when they saw last year how effectively Reagan was using the air waves to build support for his legislature program in Congress. In one instance—confirmed by both sides—a turndown by a network news chief of the Democratic request for reply time was followed by a call to the network president from O’Neill and then by a call to the chairman of the parent company’s board from Byrd. On the third try, the Democrats got what they wanted. been no change of policy. ABC Ne« ecutive David Burke said, in a com typical of many others, “If theDe® think they have established a preo that every time the President speaks will reply immediately, they’re in land.” The result has been that on these occa sions, and on the past ten Saturdays, lis teners have heard two sides of the case, not just one. The quick relies have also meant a better dialogue between the par ties in the next morning’s newspaper stories. But if the policy has not changed practice seems different. In recent® under Presidents of both parties right of reply, the date, the time,# mat and—in some cases—even thed of the opposition spokesmen see® depend, not on the wishes of thef leadership, but on the whim of thei* 1 casters. Broadcast executives from the three networks with whom I discussed this his tory all said they were simply following their traditional policy of “fairness,” in according expression to contrasting views when the President is discussing controversial subjects. For understandable reasons, they were all eager to maintain that there has In those days, as an O’Neill aid marked, an opposition-party con! sional leader was apt to find himseli of a smorgasbord of responses, bro! ; two days after the presidential a# and given no more status than any® interest-group spokesmen invited! 1 network to comment. This year’s pattern representsaf; provement over that. The partie 1 political process and the public are 1 served by what has been happen# Congratulations are in order for both the broadcast executives and the Demo cratic Party officials who pushed very hard for what has been achieved. Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.), Speaker of the House Thomas P. (Tip) O’Neill, Jr. (D-Mass.), Democratic National Chairman Charles T. Manatt and their top public relations aides became both aggressive and persis- the small society by BrickmoJ WITH THi« INFLATW^U rte wife <2F eve? ©1981 King F««turM Syndicate, Inc. World right* reaarved.