Page 2^6 Battalion/Friday, August 3, 1984 Opinion Smoke-filled politician! disappear from scene By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — Probably no smoke-filled rooms will be needed to secure the renomination of President Reagan at the Republican National Convention in Dallas this month. Which may be just as well. “Do not smoke in a confined space” heads the list of etiquette tips compiled by Norman Sharp, president of the Ci gar Association of America, for the 1984 campaign. The first smoke-filled room to fig ure in the presidential nomination process actually was an elevator. Buttonholed by a newspaper re porter in front of an elevator at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York, Harry Daugherty, who later served as Warren Harding’s campaign man ager, predicted that his tiger would emerge as the GOP nominee from a deadlocked convention. The decision, Daugherty pro|jl esied, would be made by 15 oif v party leaders, sitting around a bigi. ble, “bleary-eyed with loss of sleep® perspiring profusely with the exaf sive heat.” Sure enough, the first dayofbaioB ing passed without any candidateti ceiving the necessary majority,!® Daugherty’s prediction came tnlj more or less as f orecast but with i| smoke-filled room thrown inforgwi measure. The year, however, was 1920,til month was June and the conventil city was Chicago. Today, hotel root! generally have better cooling andve® tilation. Moreover, if Harding came life in Dallas, GOP king-makers, gardless of what price they paid: their cheroots, probably would be: bidden to sit in the non-smoking tion of the room. K S< Administrative decisions a matter of politics Forr L< There’s always a lot of talk about the “real world” in universities; how college life differs from the so called “dog-eat-dog” existence we must enter upon grad uation. The cam pus is viewed as se- cluded, like a prolonged sum mer camp. Yet while we hyperbolically specu late about the distant lands of danger, real-world type cannibalism goes on right under our noses, in the Texas A&M University System. That cannot be construed to mean the system is either bad or good, but only that it is “real”; that the faculty, staff and administrators all work in jobs where they deal with employers and employees. People are hired and fired, mistakes are made, political moves become policy, and jealousy, in competence and general brown-nos ing play a big part in what becomes of the University and its offshoots. Just like anywhere else. Were students to peer critically at the inner-workings of the University, Letters: Check cashing policy chided by employee Editor: Thanks for the very informative column written by Kari Fluegel. I agree with her, and wish to let the Uni versity know that I am disturbed by the new rule of no payroll check cash ing at the Coke Building. I am One of the few who do not use the banks in this area, so every payday I cash my payroll check at the Coke Building. If check cashing is discontinued at the Coke Building then other arrange ments should be made for those of us who need to cash our payroll checks at the University on payday. Please take into consideration a spe cial cash line for payroll checks for those who need it. I, for one, would greatly appreciate it. Gladys M. Smith Secretary, TAMU Biology Dept. Student disturbed by library noise Editor: To all students who use the MSC Browsing Library: I go to the Browsing Library almost every day. I go there to read. How ever, many students seem to go there for the express purpose of tapping their peticils against the nearest avail able solid, resonant object. People lis tening to the headphones do this a lot. They often drum their fingers and hum along with the rhythm, too. I find this intensely distracting. Pleas^, if you must fidget, do it at home. After you’ve got it out of your system, by all means c’mon over and be quiet with the rest of us. We’ll all be quiet together. Gosh, what fun. Ross Miller they might use it as a crystal ball. It might teach them what to expect. The myth of canine cannibalism, or at least its exaggeration, could be brought into perspective for a student with open eyes. Dogs don’t really eat dogs, but they do fight a lot. Almost as much as peo ple do. And when people work to gether, ambition often leads to aggres sion. Whether the problem of aggression at Texas A&M is worse or better than other places is irrelevant. It exists; studying it can slap reality into even the most idealistic of minds. And waking up from an idealistic dream can only help. There are reasons for this aggres sion; reasons why politics pervade ad ministration. Consciously or unconsciously every administrator eyes his boss’s job, waiting for a crucial mistake. He displays himself (or she displays herself) in as favorable a light as possible to the kingpins at the top, taking up the slack in his performance with whatever personal selling he can get in on the side. And all the while, consciously or unconsciously, he knows some subor dinate is salivating for his job. This is, at best, a simplified general ization. Some organizations aren’t very political. Some make the Republican Party look like a class exercise for po litical science. And the workings and underlying psychology, regardless of the scope, are usually exponentially more complex. Does this sound sinister? If so, don’t work for IBM. Or GM. Or Milford’s Pet Shop, for that matter. Try the Peace Corps. At least there when you feel you’ve been shafted, you’ll have the natives to comfort you (if you’re not one of their shafts over a fire). If you’re guiding your career to ward administration, there are still a few quirks you should know about. People who make big decisions have to answer to big bosses. And everyone has a boss. At Texas A&M the regents pay homage to the former students and the state of Texas. Politicians bow to voters, corporate giants woo cus tomers. The whims of these overlords —vot ers, customers, states and students — usually guide the administrators in their decisions. There are times, how ever, when a decision will be unpopu lar regardless of its direction. You, the administrator, then have to ride out the storm of criticism with confident ..HEALWMS HITS THIS BAIT THEN, WHEN HE GETS TO THE SIDE Of lUfc EOKr, HU HIM WITH IMfcCEPlH CHARGES... 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Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Build ing, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. Steve Thomas dignity, whether you were wrong or right. The Albritton Bell Tower is a good example. The press and the public, with some exceptions, were ready to offer the regents up for sacrifice be cause they thought the money could be more equitably spent. I also thought it was a travesty; a genuine waste of good, American currency, because there were so many other things we needed. Then a professor reminded me of a similar controversy when, a few years ago, the University decided to spend some big bucks on landscaping, be cause Texas A&M “resembled a con centration camp.” Everybody and their Scottish grand mother screamed “wasted money!” Now, of course, we all brag and ram ble about how pretty the campus is. He said the bell tower will be tradition within a few years, and at no cost to the University. I awkwardly capitulated. But administrators can’t capitulate, and very often can’t give rock-hard fi nancial reasons for what they do. A strong-sell political front is sometimes their only salvation, if there is any. This should not elicit pity, though, because administrators are paid to take pressure and make tough choice like ditch diggers are paid to work: the hot sun. And will be fired if tto don’t (or, at least, they should be Their mistakes can’t be excused bt cause of the glitches that go with lit job. Still aspiring to administrationPOix more little hint. Hard work is m enough, though you’ll never get am where without it. There are peopif who work far above their salary's it quirements, both in hours and perfoi mance, who never advance a step (an: though some like it that way, logical' some don’t). The formula for ascen sion, caustic as it may sound, boili down to one word. Politics. The people who know the system and how to maneuver with it, makeit and those who don’t, don’t. You havt to work hard to climb a mountain,bu; you also have to know how to mourn tain-climb. Discouraged? Don’t be. Analyzt your life and relationships astheyam now and I think you’ll find the game! are similar. Only the stakes are differ ent. Steve Thomas is a seniorjournalism major and a columnist for The B ion. Ui NOR Carter « tor Bert general dale’s E paign ir Monda through Lanci and vio aldine F paign s\ this wet dale’s h Lana ticket ft n BEIl hooded nades r off an , Thursd cockpit terrifyi deal. The Pr< L Olympics just a job for television scouts BEN prosea day sai< books t case b Henry By ART BUCHWALD Columnist for The Los Angeles Times Syndicate Not everybody at the Los Angeles Olympics is there for fun. Seated in the bleachers, making notes and rarely smiling, are scouts for almost every ad vertising agency in the world. Their dream is to find another Bruce Jenner or Mark Spitz to push their products for the next four years. I asked Morgan Whiteley, who has been scouting every Olympics for the last 20 years, what he looks for in an Olympic star. “I don’t care how high he can jump or how fast he can run, he has to have credibility with the public to sell razor blades. Other people may be looking at his legs, but I’m looking at his face. Some athletes never look properly shaved.” “Are you only looking for a gold medal winner who can sell razor bla des?” “No. I’ve got a list of clients who want to sign up this year’s stars. But the competition is rough and amateur athletes are now wise to how much money there is to be made in going for the gold. Every time you approach one on the field he refers you to his agent. Endorsements don’t come cheap any more. I could sign up a four-man relay team eight years ago for what it cost me for one lousy amateur boxer this year.” “I assume that you’re only inter ested in gold medal winners.” “That’s the ticket. You’re not going to get anyuone to buy Wheaties from a guy who finished 25th in the mar athon.” “Are you out scouting the swimmers as well?” “Of course. Everyone likes swiiH’ mers. I’ve got a bathing suit client who is willing to pay $100,000 for an American breast-stroke champion." “That shouldn’t be a problem.” “It is if she doesn’t look good in a bathing suit. Unlike most people who watch swimmers when they’re in the water, I have to look at them when they’re walking around the pool. Just because you’re a champion breasi stroker doesn’t mean you have a champion’s chest.” “I don’t imagine everyone who wins a gold medal is on your shopping list. “That’s true. You can forget scul lers, archers and volleyball players They don’t even make goo American Express Card commercials. What you’re looking for is a star. Nobody cares if an equestrian rider drinks milk or not, or whether a cyclist uses under arm deodorant. What I really want isa y 4 ft., 6 in. gymnast who can carry a 35- | pound computer through an airport : terminal.” “Have you ever signed an athlete and been disappointed?” “I had a case the other day. I signed up a 350-pound weightlifter to kick the hell out of the luggage we rep- ? resent to show it could take a beating Then he took a test and they found out he was using hormones.” “What a blow,” I said. “Fortunately it wasn’t a total loss We also handle a large pharmaceutical \ company which was looking despera tely for someone to endorse their ster oids.”