Opinion Page 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 12, 1984 c< (contin No solution to DWI issue One person killed by a drunk driver is one person too many. That point is not debatable. How to reduce drunk-driving fatalities is debatable, and there are no pat solutions. Legislators are trying to help. Tougher DWI have been enacted in many states. Mothers Against Drunk Drivers is increasingly visible in its at tempts to save lives. The drinking age has been a favor ite target of those groups in the last few years. In 1981, the Texas Legis lature raised the drinking age from 18 to 19. The latest move for a higher drinking age — nationwide — is from President Reagan and members of the House of Representatives. The House voted Thursday to withhold a portion of federal high way funds from states that don’t raise the drinking age to 21. States that don’t have a drinking age of 21 by 1987 stand to lose 5 percent of their 1987 interstate highway funds and another 10 percent in 1988. This measure smacks of blackmail, but it’s the same measure used to enforce the 55 mph speed limit. If it’s really a “national epidemic” —as Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa. says — then raising the drinking age isn’t the answer. Much more is needed. But there are no set answers. We had five different answers from the five members of the Editorial Board. We unanimously support stricter DWI laws and strict enforcement of them. Our unanimity, however, ends there. Some members of the board be lieve the age should be 21, no ques tions asked. Others feel stricter DWI laws are enough. It’s an emotional issue and an issue of safety. It’s also an issue that raises a number of questions. Statistics have been quoted in the defense of a higher drinking age. But one of the questions that must be asked is whether DWI laws also were tightened at the same time as a higher drinking age was instituted. Figures can be misleading when more than one factor is involved. A question of maturity also is raised when you study legal ages for other activities: 17 for R movies, 18 for voting and draft registration, and marriage ages differ from state to state. Legislators have attempted to pass open-container laws. In Texas an open-container law was rejected, but the city of Corpus Christi recently passed its own open-container law. Another aspect to consider — sen tencing. A Brazos County District judge said earlier this year that tough laws don’t guarantee tough sentenc ing. Although there are no wrong or right solutions to the drunk driving problem, perhaps all the talk will achieve one thing: awareness. That is the key to eliminating the problem. — The Battalion Editorial Board The Battalion USPS 045 360 Meiutjcr of Tc*x;is Press Asmk iaiion Southwest Journalism CoiifcrciH'c The Battalion Editorial Board Relxrca Ziminerinann. Editor Hill Robinson. Editorial Page Editor Shelley 1 loekstra. 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I hereby renounce. labor, the poor, and rntnonties. bn i to buy a Cadillac and i ali-v an alf white country dut brewing at 35,000 feet LIKELIHOOD : ASTRONOMICAL By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate SCENARIO 2 : MON ONE MISSES HIS FU6HT TO SAN FRANCISCO... SCENARIO 3 - HART PROMISES EVER/SINGLE UNCOMMITTED DELEGATE THE VICE PREStPENCV SCENARIO A ...WlU'toU do IT, IF NOT FOR ME, FOR OUR NATION? LIKELIHOOD : SLENDER. 1 LIKELIHOOD : VERY HIGH, 1 L1KEUHOOO : ABOUT AS HI6H AS HART GETTING THE NOMINATION. American pleasantries confuse foreign people By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate The trouble with foreign people in this coun try is that they take everything Americans say lit erally. I have a French friend maned Michel Bernheim. I met his the other day on the street, and after the usual chitchat about Paris I said, “Give me a call some time.” ‘Hasta manana,’ and Americans say, ‘Let’s have lunch,’ which in our country means, ‘Don’t call me, I’ll call you.’” The next day he was on the line. “Bonjour,” he said, “It’s Michel. You said to give you a call.” “I did?” “Qui, don’t you remember? I spoke to you yes terday on Pennsylvania Avenue.” “I didn’t mean for you to give me a call right away. I was just finding a nice way to say goodbye to you.” “Then you don’t want to talk on the telepho ne?” Michel said, “I didn’t mean to bother you.” “You didn’t bother me. I’ll tell you what. Let’s check in with each other and have a drink one of these days.” “That would be great,” Michel said. I was sweating out a column the next day when the door opened and Michel stuck his head in. “Now what?” “I’m just checking in to see if you wanted a drink.” “Can’t you see I’m busy?” “I can see that now, but I couldn’t before I checked in with you.” “I can’t think of anything to say, frankly.” “But you asked me to call you.” “You’re right, Michel. Look, Im terribly busy right now. Let’s have lunch some time.” “I would like that. When?” “I’m not sure. Why don’t you give me a holler? Two days later I heard someone calling my name from the sidewalk. I opened the window in my office and Michel was down below. “Michel, you’re driving me nuts. You can’t take everything we Americans say as gospel. The only reason I said ‘Let’s have a drink some time’ is be cause I wanted you to stop hollering under my window about having lunch together.” “All you have to do is tell me you don’t want to see me,” Michel said in a hurt voice, “instead of asking me to meet with you all the time and then breaking the date.” “What in the devil are you shouting about?” I yelled down to him. “You said to give you a holler when I wanted to have lunch. How about today?” “I’m busy today.” “Well, when can you have lunch?” “I’m not sure. I’m tied up for the next three weeks.” “Why did you tell me to give you a holler when I wanted to have lunch if you were so tied up?” I felt badly. “You’re right. I feel terrible about the way I’ve treated you. Our problem is that we’re so used to saying goodbye to each other with a promise we’ll get together soon, that no one in this country expects the other person to keep it. We wouldn’t be able to get anything done if we had lunch with everyone we accidentally met on the street.” “Michel, you’ve been around long enough to know when an American says, ‘Let’s have lunch some time,’ he doesn’t necessarily mean it. It’s a pleasantry. You French say, ‘Au revoir,’ the Ger mans say, ‘Auf wiedersehen,’ the Spanish say, “I understand,” Michel said. “But if you change your mind, you have my card and you can call me.” “I don’t have your card, Michel. That’s an other thing you don’t understand. When Ameri cans exchange business cards with each other, they usually throw them away when they get ho- Just when the airlines have started to money they are faced with a new crisis. Ho* you keep non-smokers from doing bodily to smokers on airplanes? There was a time when non-smokers satin front of the cabin and just gritted their i« when smokers lit up in the back. But this is no longer the case. Non-smokefi now becoming militant and the CAB is worn that a full-scale riot could break out between two groups while a plane is in flight. Harvey Weiner, an airline consultant, haste working on the problem. “Our research indicates that cigarette smoit are afraid to fly and that’s why they puff so® on planes. The airlines can’t afford tolosetki business. “At the same time we’ve discovered non-s® ers have a fear of cigarette smoke, and becomt olent when locked in a cabin at 35,000 feet*] cigarette smokers. The airlines need them well. My job is to find out how to keep then groups from killing each other.” “That’s not an easy assignment,” I said. “Everything I’ve recommended so far has with resistance. The first solution I came up*? was to have two flights going to each destinatio! One plane would be reserved for smokers as one for non-smokers. The FAA objected beaiB it would double the amount of air traffic ini skies, which could be even more hazardous people’s health. “Then I suggested that non-smokers only permitted to fly on even days, and smokers odd days of the week.” “That sounds like a perfect solution. Who® jected to that?” “Frank Borman of Eastern Airlines. Hesa the reason people fly is they want to get to (tie destination as quickly as possible, and if theyk to wait 24 hours for their day they would takell train. “Another idea I came up with wasfortheai lines to divide the smoking and non-smokingsti tions of the plane with a locked fireproofsief door between them. “That sounds reasonable.” “The major airlines turned this one downk cause it would mean adding an extra lavatory board, which would displace two seats.” “Airlines hate to use up space for lavatories planes. So where are you now?” “I think I’ve come up with a reasonable con promise which may not satisfy the hardlinesmol ers and non-smokers, but would at least prev the two sides from resorting to violence. I’mpit posing that every flight be manned with feder; marshals armed with tear gas grenades. In of a riot between the two groups the marshai could quell it with tear gas before it got out® hand.” “That might do it,” I said. “If the non-smoken have the choice between cigarette smoke andtei gas they’re not going to start any trouble.” “I have one more idea if they won’t buy federal marshals. The main cabin would belt served for non-smoking, but we would have trap door in the middle of the aisle so if someoK wanted a cigarette, he could slide down intotk baggage compartment and puff away to lit heart’s content.” would Mondale must upgrade character DiBact cidental t tisement the Texa McCaw d up when ley asked could dis ing of th< advertise the prop< Blatch timate of crease be the franc McCav rate inc as to $9.50 $9.50 fee posed irn of the inc cannot bi nalized, 1 said, a n would be Any r, proved b; The r< needed < that the munily C dally low put each Bacco sai< A rate order to and quali “We w have ada< penses to DiBacco s “Once get our he correct tl exist ther don’t kno ticipate w will see th getting a ey.” DiBacc the comp expectatic McCaw ta of cable ] College S mated th months f'< system ba first class < “Obvio scribers b what is gc it with n< new,” Dil evaluating placing it 1 , I By DAVID S. BRODER Columnist for The Washington Post Writers Group WASHINGTON — Candidates view the presi dential primary season as a torture course, test ing them against each other. For party poli ticians, the bottom-line question is simply the identity of the person who will head the ticket in the fall campaign. Voters have a different perspective. For us, the primaries provide clues to the character of a pro spective President and the condition of the party with which he proposes to govern. What did we learn about Walter Mondale and the Democrats from these months of travel and travail? And what does that tell us about the com ing campaign against President Reagan and the Republicans? The past campaign did not reveal “a new Mon dale,” but it dramatically highlighted the central paradox of his political character that had been buried in biographical detail. From first to last. Mondale has been pushed to the top of his profession by the hands of other politicians. At the critical stages in his career, Hu bert Humphrey identified him as a prgtege, two Minnesota governors appointed him as attorney general and senator, and Jimmy Carter selected him as his running-mate. This year, it was the same. The first votes Mon dale got for the nomination came from his col leagues in the congressional caucuses last winter, and the last came from other politicians on Capi tol Hill and the state capitols, responding to his phone calls for help last week. Without the sup port of 307 of the 568 “super-delegates,” he would still be scrambling to nail down the prize. The paradox is that Mondale is intensely com petitive and aggressive in his dealings with other politicians — as Gary Hart found out to his shock this spring. He is tough in the clinches. That comes as no surprise to politicians of both parties in his home state, who saw him maneuver his way past other aspiring young men, or to Republicans on Capitol Hill, who know him as an intense par tisan. But the toughness of Mondale’s attacks on Hart showed a side of his character the public had not previously seen. Politicians accept and respect those paradoxi cal qualitites, because most of them possess them to some degree themselves. In the inside world of politics, there is honor and success awaiting the person who builds alliances but pushes hard for his own causes. Mondale is the purest product of that world to emerge as a presidential nominee since the public began dominating the selection process through the primaries. He is more truly a “politicians’ pol itician” than the introspective Richard Nixon, and far more of one than the incumbent or his predecessor. That is both his strength and his weakness in the coming campaign. 1'he mass of voters who will decide between Mondale and Reagan tend to look for other qualities in a President. Those qualities are eloquence, an appealing personality and, most important, a large-minded vision of the nation’s future. They are qualitites the public sees in Reagan. For Mondale to have a chance against the incum bent, he must begin quickly to demonstrate that he possesses them, too. Otherwise, his own strat egy for the general-election campaign will almost certainly rebound against him. There is no secret about that strategy. Mon dale hopes to win by mobilizing the base of tk Democratic Party — the farmer-labor constitu encies he grew up with at home, the blacks and Hispanics, the elderly and the economically inst cure, the peace groups and other progressivt forces — directly through his campaigning, and indirectly through the alliances he has built wild their leaders and other politicians throughout to career. To mobilize their support, he plans an aggres sive, close-quarters attack on Reagan’s leadership and on Republican policies. It is an attack he will launch with far more personal pleasure, and fai less compunction, than he showed in cutting down Gary Hart — and he was not at all inhibited about that. But unless Mondale establishes the “presiden tial” qualities Reagan is already seen to possess that strategy is almost certain to fail. If he is seen simply as “the politician” kicking the shins of “(to President,” then he will quickly be in trouble Without building a sense of personal trust and projecting an inclusive vision of the national fu ture, he risks being labeled divisive. That threat is underscored by the picture the public has received of the Democratic Party in the primary campaign. It is of a party facing foul ways. Most of its traditional constituencies sup ported Mondale. The blacks followed their own course with Jesse Jackson. The younger, moreaf- fluent voters looked to Hart. The Southern mod erates and conservatives stayed on the sidelines having lost their spokesmen and candidates early. The weeks from now through the mid-Jul' Democratic convention will test whether Mon dale can unite his party.