Friday, March 27, 19877The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local ton Speaker: Foreign policy power tilts to Congress aifj I By Amy Couvillon Staff Writer he foreign policy power struggle IS now weighted slightly in favor of Congress and away from the presi dency, a former Texas A&M student who served as an assistant to the president told students Thursday night. ■I believe that that’s the way it (the power advantage) will continue tilt ing, toward Congress, if President Reagan’s strength does not return in some degree or fashion,” said Fred erick D. McClure, former special as- sisfmi for legislative affairs to Ron ald Reagan. ■“And absent the next president having the charisma, the charm, the character of a Ronald Reagan, the a ™mlarity and public opinion factor continue to be weighted in Con gress’ favor,” he said. ^^IcClure, Class of '76, in a lecture on relations between Congress and the president in connection with the April 1 MSC Wiley lecture series, said the roles of the executive and legislative branches are both compli mentary and conflicting. “As the commander-in-chief, the president commands the military,” McClure said. “But he would have nothing to command if the Congress Hn’t use its power to raise and sup- mds at rehe pfc L the Arrn / and t! ? e Nav y-” • ' ^■ne president is the negotiator — •raising evti™ v j sua j 0 f u n k e d miration States to foreign countries, he said, rs who have:* Congress has control over the irsal. Some purse strings because it can decide to dance man(li|W ro P r i ate money or levy taxes, ies fnr thrw T» us their relationship is tension- Kl and dynamic, he said. ■IcClure said his role as former e commitmfliKsidential adviser, combined with rk. There d . in order tod its, whose ion, work s: nney for the nally, studen:; cv want (AP) — A lawyer for plaintiffs in 1 alclass-action lawsuit against three state " t . e .y PWools Thursday filed a motion in federal ans givinguf C0lll t asking tj iat t h e Texas Department of ig Unikh; Menial Health and Mental Retardation be added sires; held in contempt of court, le. K^die state is under a federal order prohibit- ■ substandard care in facilities for the men- le expressioi tails retarded. le real world' i§\ttorney David Ferleger said he obtained e it sound li!:®° n hdential reports from the Fort Worth nave a camB te School reflecting “a pattern of degrada- t of the real M 1 - beatings, neglect and abuse.” umerous det [leers, pare; ers. Tm bet who take 12 n anything t. /. They’re proclaim, “Cti r life.” confenf coi is or spying' :’s because I ;| reak. Whatw r [’m ready tok table sched#' ■y I’ve beer.:. ^ was gc .ess this isjl elling me Iks; f I don't gel: j re another;; ! his other past position as former leg islative director of legal counsel for former Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, has given him a view of the two branches’ relationship. Historically, the president has had the most power in relations with other countries, McClure said. “George Washington first got onto this idea of having power,” he said. “He decided that it was a presi dential prerogative to be the leader “Attitude changes are needed in both the branches. ” — Frederick D. McClure, former Reagan assistant in terms of foreign affairs. His suc- cesors tended to embellish upon that theme, and a guy named Abe Lin coln probably invoked the notion of war power for the very first time.” Through the modern wars and! conflicts the United States has beem involved in, he said, the foreign-pol icy power of the president grew more, but recently, Congress has be gun to take a more active role, begin ning with the 1973 passage of the War Powers Act. “Since Vietnam, it has challeged the president’s preeminence,” Mc Clure said. “It has also appropriated unto itself the resources, the infor mation and the legal authority to en gage in the conduct of foreign af fairs on a comprehensive basis.” He said the current Iran-Contra affair makes a discussion of this issue very timely. “Given the events of the past four months,” he said, “it’s pretty clear that the lecture series committee must have used some sort of a crystal ball in selecting this year’s topic. In my view, your timing could not have been more perfect.” An important power of the presi dent, he said, is the power of per suasion. It still remains to be seen, he said, if Reagan can bounce back from his recent fall from popularity and credibility. “This power rests in the presi dent’s ability to induce others to be lieve (his policies),” he said. “Ronald Reagan used this power quite effecti vely during the first six years of his administration, even outside the for eign policy area. . . . Frankly, the jury is still out in the case of Presi dent Reagan and Iran.” McClure said Congress is using the ongoing congressional investiga tion of the Iran-Contra matter as a forum through which to question fo- riegn policy quite closely. “Sure, they’re wanting to get to some answers,” he said, “in terms of who did what to who and at what time and who knew about it, but by the same token, it allows Congress to control the foreign policy debate, be cause they can be critical of the pol icy as well as the process.” The current struggle between Reagan and the Congress over aid to the Contras is the beginning of the battle, McClure said, adding that the Congress’ new basis for power is likely to spill over into the United State’s future dealings with Israel and Iran. But McClure said Congress and the president must learn to compro- Frederick D. McClure mise and cooperate more it toriegn policy is to work. “Attitude changes are needed in both the branches,” he said. “The Congress must agree that it can not and should not exercise detailed control of policy of military opera tions, in other words to assume exec utive branch functions. “And the executive, on the other hand, must accept the reality that Congressional diffidence ana the passivity of an earlier era will never return. The executive’s personal and institutional working relationship with Capitol Hill must be strength ened, through continued consulta tion and cooperation. “The problem is, where is the line drawn?” contempt motion against MHMR Thief takes master keys to Hart Hall By Robert Morris Staff Writer A Hart Hall dorm resident re ported that two master keys were stolen from the dorm’s staff room early March 16. The keys were apparently taken between March 13 and March 16, said Bob Wiatt, direc tor of the University Police. The student told University Police he saw a first floor window open early Monday morning. He entered the hall and found that the door to the staff room in the basement had been forced open and the keys had been taken from their box, Wiatt said. Tom Murray, assistant director of student affairs, said the entire building would be re-keyed within the next three weeks at a cost of $2,500. The money will come from an account students pay $15 into when they lose a dorm key. The decision to change the locks was delayed with hope the missing keys would be found ear lier in the week, Murray said. There have been no reports of theft, Wiatt said, but one room was vandalized March 19 with no sign of forcible entry, which would indicate the key was in volved. Currently there are no sus pects, but an investigation will continue and the campus police are keeping close watch on the dorm until it can be re-keyed, he said. “The horror of being locked up at the insti tution (in Fort Worth) is that you never know whether you will be next in line for a beating or left to wallow in filth,” Ferleger said. The filed motion coincides with a consul tant’s report given to U.S. District Judge Barefoot Sanders that alleges mishandling of clients and a lack of training at state schools. In a 66-page report delivered Wednesday, sociologist Linda O’Neall said she visited state schools at Fort Worth, Denton and Austin last August and found “flagrant violations” of personal dignity, neglect, unnecessary re straint and almost no social-skills training for patients who spend their days engaged in “non-productive and self-abusive activity.” Ferleger’s motion, filed with Sanders, al leges that workers at the Fort Worth school who abuse retarded residents are given lax discipline, that workers lie to cover up abuse, and that abuse often is not fully investigated. “We can’t trust the state school to police it self anymore,” Ferleger said. “There has been a court order saying that you can’t abuse peo ple, you can’t beat them up and neglect them. And that’s been violated in dozens of cases in a year and a half.” He said he will ask Sanders to fine the state an unspecified amount. He said he also plans to ask the judge to appoint a monitor to work full-time investigating abuse at the facility. The report said the residents are overly re stricted; young and handicapped retarded people spend a great amount of time walking about aimlessly or staring into space; and per sonal dignity is violated by such occurrences as coed showering for adolescents. Clarification In a front-page article in Thursday’s issue of The Battal ion, information received from both Carolyn Adair, director of student affairs, and Louis Meneg- hetti, Traditions Council chair man, indicated that sale of T- shirts protesting senior finals had been ended. However, sources have revealed that sales contin ued Thursday on a private basis. 'he Battalion housandsut lution oflDii ands ofyouti >n whenthet iigressional Ivadorwhen eminent rs”? n the above edly stated I ist — nor doc ■vith the type 1 ja over thep intent is is are al facts onto! also «andanista, . ds is Int to play 3 manage his ter? 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