OPINION Thursday, August 3,1989 Unpopular politician are hard to come by ir Every now and again it occurs to me that Sen. Phil Gramm might be just enough of an ideologue to prove useful: he’s such a pushy little squirrel he’s made himself thoroughly unpopular with his colleagues. But a politician will ing to be unpopular is hard to come by and a man ready to throw a spanner into the works occasionally can be worth his weight in awful legislation killed. Molly Ivins Syndicated Cote The trouble with Gramm is that so far he’s always been on the wrong side. And now he’s on the right side for the wrong reason, and what’s even more confusing is that he’s on the wrong side of his ar gument. Ispon 'and J Aug. Tr Then the junior senator fromTi took a fit and is now holding _ r whole works. Theoretically, Grant | c i ass SPtS&f)'/ One giant editor’s note Gramm is trying to stop the S&L bail out bill, and the immediate consequence of that move is to further stretch out the process and to cost everybody more money — $20 million a day. It would be worth the cost if Gramm had a good al ternative bill, and a chance to pass it. standing for fiscal responsibfc working against the effort toexem[)! S&L bailout from the provisk® Gramin-Rudman. Except even Gramm votes to exempt stuff Gramm-Rudman — he voted toea a $4.1 billion expenditure jusl Thursday. In ticipz Com Ch A&M Firen firefi part : ■ of tlx “T I "Man This summer has been a hot one, es pecially for The Battalion’s opinion page. Save the whales. Save the trees. Nuke the trees. Add a crossword puzzle to the page. Go to Iran and run ads for terror ists. I’ve heard it all this summer. We were bombarded with so many flag-bur ning letters that I had to abort (excuse me, I mean burn) some of them. But that’s OK, these are the controversial is sues and opposing viewpoints that make people turn to page two. [uliette