opinion Septembefli Slouch By Jim Earle “No wonder that physical education course was so hard last spring! I just learned that it was not physical educa tion but physics!” Reasoning behind negative campaigns by Arnold Sawislak United Press International WASHINGTON — There is a story, un supported by anything but its persistence as political folklore, that Lyndon Johnson, then a senator, once instructed an aide to issue a press release accusing Johnson’s opponent of a perverted sex practice. According to the story, the horrified aide said: “But Senator, we haven’t got any evi dence that he does those kinds of things.” And, according to the story, LBJ grinned as wide as Texas and replied: “I know it. I just want to hear him deny it.” That story stays alive in part because it illustrates an extreme of “attack” or “nega tive” campaigning. The tactic is familiar and simple — attack your opponent and his re cord early and often. Keep him on the defen sive throughout the campaign. Those who use negative campaigning, and at some time nearly every politician has, al ways say it is necessary to inform the voters how bad a person or public official their oppo nent is. Those who are at the receiving end call it mudslinging, character assassination and distortion. Negative campaigning certainly is not new to American politics. It probably began dur ing the second term of George Washington, when the once-revered father of his country was suddenly was being called by his critics a “tyrant and dictator” and accused of having “debauched” the nation. Historian Stefan Lorant suggests it might have been that kind of rhetoric, rather than loftier motives of desiring to limit presidential tenure, that persuaded Washington to return to Mount Vernon after eight years. In any case, negative campaigning almost always has been with us. In 1980, with the so-called “independent” political action com mittees in full flower, it was credited with replacing a number of liberal Democratic senators, including George McGovern, Birch Bayh, Frank Church and John Culver, by New Right conservatives. Now comes V. Lance Tarrance, a political consultant and pollster of good reputation, with the word that negative campaigning is “most likely on the upswing in the United States” and offering some suggestions to can didates who intend to employ it. First, says Tarrance in a study for the con servative Free Congress Research and Educa tion Foundation, negative campaigning need not be based on personal attacks. “It can be rational and information- oriented,” Tarrance said. “Voters today tend to be repulsed by anti-intellectual negatives, but attracted toward information-gathering types of television advertisements or those which tend t^o point out sharp differences be tween the candidates.” Other tips: Negative appeals work best ear ly in the campaign period; negative cam paigning works best against incumbents; last- minute attacks should be used only as a last resort to save a losing candidate; and it may be best for challengers to avoid negative cam paigning themselves, letting “third party” or independent partisans do the heavy work. Tarrance thus provides a clear blueprint for any candidate who wants to go out and beat the stuffing out of an opponent with negative campaigning. What may be interest ing to watch is whether some of the people who lost in 1980 to candidates using the Tarr ance formula will in turn adopt the same tac tics in 1982. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Diana Sultenfuss Managing Editor Phyllis Henderson Associate Editor Denise Richter City Editor Bernie Fette Assistant City Editor Gary Barker Sports Editor Frank L. Christlieb Entertainment Editor Nancy Floeck Assistant Entertainment Editor Colette Hutchings News Editors Rachel Bostwick, Cathy Capps, Daniel Puckett, Jan Werner, Todd Woodard Staff Writers Jennifer Carr, Susan Dittman, Beverly Hamilton, John Lopez, Robert McGlohon Hope E. Paasch, Bill Robinson, Dana Smelser, Joe Tindel, John Wagner, Rebeca Zimmermann Copyeditor Elaine Fngstrom Cartoonist Scott McCullar Graphic Artist Pam Starasinic Photographers .. . 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My dear friend, thank you I finally stopped to pay attention to somebody last night — after they almost had to physically jerk my head around to make me listen. But that little event prob ably will make me feel extremely good for a long time. I was talking to a friend and listening with my ears but not my head. Only after she was beginning to get mad at me did I finally hear what she was saying. She basically was saying she was my friend and she cared. Now it may seem self-centered to want everybody on campus to know somebody cares about me — you may not give a damn, but I do. Because I remember a few times when I haven’t listened — re sulting in someone being pushed away from me. All because I didn’t pay atten tion. This made me stop and think of all the people I have had the good fortune to know. It made me realize friends are the single, most valuable asset a person can have. Friends can come in any shape or fashion. Now I don’t mean your casual everyday drinking buddy or passing ac quaintance. I mean people who honestly care about you and what happens to you. These are the kind of people who straighten you out when they think you’re wrong about something. God for bid anyone should ever say: “Shut up and listen for a change.” But these friends do that. And they turn around and say to call them when you need someone to talk to. And it doesn’t come out as a statement made in passing, but as am lion that makes you realizetheijL But maybe something friend I is be there when you need then, be to bend their ear about soe small as a romantic problem! thing as serious as the deatho one. Frequently, all theydoiij that all-important commodinf talked alxiut — listening. Who knows, maybe it oughu requirement — “Must have That’s obviously stretchingthinj, what, but most people probabli if they have bonifide friends.! | necessarily make me a betterpe because I have a friend, but itd me feel good about me. enough. So if you have anyone teik;| listen, then you know in w , think the people I'm ref emir-CP . who they are, but just in said it lately —thanks. So take a little bit of hartjt ! advice. Learn who your friendiir hold on tight. They could beJlA important discovery you everc^f HE'S VERY DEPRESSED SET HIS MIND OFF HIS TROUBLES m ** ,, ~^* TALK ABOUT || SPORTS OR ^ SOMETHIN^ J >• SAYu.DID YOU HEAR THE NFL IS&OINS ON STRIKE? Amoi Univ< Mono Letters: Student questions tradition HC man hour; Editor: I was deeply disturbed by the letter appearing in the Sept. 7 issue that criti cized students who didn’t follow tradi tions in last weekend’s game. The letter closed “if you don’t like the way things are then leave.” I came to Texas A&M to pursue a gra duate degree. I came largely because one professor recruited me. I came because I was convinced Texas A&M was a quality university where I could get the kind of education I desired. I did not come here just to follow some asinine childish traditions. To expect people to stand up in the hot sun without a hat to protect themselves is an invitation to heatstroke or something worse. In the third quarter, I saw paramedics helping a student who had collapsed. There is nothing wrong with tradition in itself. But when it flies in the face of reason (and good health), it ought to be changed. An insistance upon these kind of traditions will turn people away from coming to Texas A&M, not bring them here. As a student at this University, I want it to continue to be a quality univer sity. To do this, some things are going to have to change. In contrast to the “love it or leave it” philosophy, I would suggest “Texas A&M: Help it change or watch it die.” I have been a football fan for a long time. I have spent a lot of time and money going to games because I enjoy watching football. However it is apparent it is im possible to peaceably enjoy watching a game on a student ticket because that would interfere with keeping up with all the foolish traditions. William Jordan Graduate student Bootline rules Editor: In response to the article on bootline rules at the football games, we feel that this ring check is unfair. Our point is, some seniors cannot afford their senior ring right away and yet they are very spirited in the Aggie traditions. We understand the problem of seek ing out only the seniors to participate in this long-awaited privilege because we look forward to the privileges wheih our senior year will hold for each of us. In essence, what this ring check is am us doing is holding back more of theTVdead Ags” rather than letting a few Bac cle, p get by. Surely, there must be a^*' U system of making sure bootline hi ol ] while relati Flore Dynise McDana Berry s World Carolyn HanL Y ea . rs Debbie w; rK ht h % left o shad< food Flore stroo T yet b ly foi ©IMZbyNEA. Inc “Young man, smoking IN MY OFFICE will be PARTICULARLY hazardous to your health."