The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 24, 1967, Image 2

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    Egyptian Attack
Threatens Peace
Sound Off
The pyramids may last for another 2,000 years but
it’s doubtful that the word of the Egyptian government
could last 20 days.
Never before in history has a victor, in this case Israel,
been as patient with an enemy, which rearmed within weeks
of its total defeat, again spits hatred and threatens re
newed war in the Middle East.
Egypt’s sinking of an Israeli destroyer on Saturday is
the latest and most serious blow to a peaceful settlement.
The ship Elath lost 15 dead, 48 wounded and 38 un
accounted for, after being hit and sunk with a Soviet-
supplied Egyptian missile.
Just as Egypt has so often used the United States to
wrestle continued financial and military support while using
its oil as bait, so Egypt will undoubtedly and once again use
the United Nations as its propaganda soap box to the
world.
It has become standard procedure to blame Israel for
attacks, while Egypt periodically fires across the Suez
Canal with arms and United Nations support from Russia.
Britain has indicated it will reestablish diplomatic rela
tions with Egypt, apparently to persuade them to reopen
the Suez to British shipping. A sagging British economy
is forcing that once great power into compromise with an
unpredictable and irrational United Arab Republic.
Those 20 non-alligned UN countries who have been
trying to effect a peaceful settlement in the Middle East
and were trying to have the great powers meet next week
on the issue might as well pack their bags and head home.
With the victory gained in six days by Israel it now
seems unfortunate that the war might not have continued
another three days with the complete occupation of all
Egyptian territory and subsequent downfall of the Nasser
regime.
Egypt may soon have a new and rude reawakening.
Israel will not wait long for Egypt to bargain for peace
while they continue to attack Israeli outposts and shipping.
Without the oil it bargains with, Egypt would be ex
posed by most nations as a fraud to peace.
As the Jerusalem Post said about the recent attack on
the Elath, ‘‘it has hardened the feeling that there is no
real hope of achieving a peaceful solution in the area with
the present Arab regimes.”
Editor,
The Battalion:
The respectability and worth of
a community is often measured
by the sales personnel in various
retail stores and the efficiency of
its public workers. An outsider
considering moving to the Bryan-
College Station area would have
to attempt but one telephone call
and his decision would be easily
made for him.
In the past few months, our
radio stations have openly ad
vertised the efficiency of our Pol
ice Department. It is a shame
that other public servants can’t
operate equally as well.
Our telephone system is great
ly lacking in both facilities and
competent workers. The incom
petency that is met is a handi
cap to business, an aggravating
and unnecessary circumstance
in personal life, and a danger to
public safety.
To further emphasize these
accusations, I will state facts.
In my business, I alone spend
$30.00 to $40.00 on long distance
calls per week, and I am re
quired to record time and char
ges. Complete records include the
initial three minute rate before
the call is placed. Each time I
place a call and ask for this in
formation, the operator becomes
indignant and perturbed that she
has to call Houston.
On one specific long distance
call, I requested the initial three
minute rate and the operator told
me she would have to call Hous
ton. I told her fine—do so, and
she politely asked me to hold the
line. I proceeded to hold the dead
line to my ear for 22 consecutive
minutes I can’t help but think
that she had no intention of get
ting my charges and merely left
me for an easier task.
Very recently, I received the
culminating blow to my already
overloaded disgust for our tele
phone system. I was attempting
to place a personal call at 8:00
p.m. After waiting ten or fifteen
minutes (this is not an outlandish
exaggeration) for the operator
to answer the phone, she did. Re
peating myself twice on each per
tinent fact, she finally had it all
down correctly. Then with the in
nocence of a five-year-old child,
she stated there would be a de
lay of approximately thirty min
utes in placing my call due to
heavy traffic. Why, if they were
so pressed for time, didn’t she in
form me of her hardship at the
outset? I tried this same call sev
eral more times throughout the
night, and each time I received
the same treatment; i. e., the long
delay in answering, the repetitive
stating - of information, then the
information about the delay.
The danger to public safety is
the telephone company’s greatest
crime. The unnecessary and an
tagonizing delay in contacting an
operator could easily mean the de
struction of human life and pro
perty. The majority of parents
instruct their small children to
dial “O” in case of an emergency
and request the necessary facili
ties.
The utter disregard that the
telephone company possesses for
their public responsibility is an
apparent indication of their com
placency. This feeling of over
powering security needs to be
quelled and kept out of the com
munity.
Very truly yours,
Richard M. Owen, Jr.
900 Park Place
College Station
Lecture To Be Presented
In Architectural Building
Bulletin Board
The MSC Bridge Committee
will start beginners and advanced
bridge at 7:30 p.m. in the Art
Room of the Memorial Student
Center. Play starts at 8 p.m.
USED
CLIFF’S NOTES
25c/Semester
Pay 75^, get 50^ back
at the end of the
semester
at
LOUPOT’S
North Gate
The Entomology Faculty-Stu
dent Wives Banquet will be held
at the Chicken Shack at 6:45 p.m.
in the Banquet Room. For reser
vations, call 846-2150.
The Pre-Medical Pre-Dental
Society will have Dean Gene Pow
ell, Dr. Robert White, and Dr.
Sam Kolman of the University
of Texas Medical Branch at Gal
veston as guest speakers in Room
113 of the Biological Sciences
Building.
Dean Clarence Zener of the
College of Science will present a
mathematics colloquim concern
ing “Recent Contributions to Geo
metric Programming at 4 p.m. in
Room 207 of the Academic Build
ing.
An Engineering Lecture on op
portunities in urban systems will
be presented Wednesday in the
Architecture Auditorium.
John P. Eberhard, National
Bureau of Standards official, will
address the Texas A&M engi
neering faculty, students and the
public at 3:30 p.m., announced
Engineering Dean Fred J. Ben
son.
The director of the bureau’s
Institute for Applied Technology
has had extensive experience as
an industrial consultant, practic
ing architect, MIT lecturer, pres
ident of a prefabricated building
manufacturing firm and cor
porate research director.
Eberhard studied architectural
design at the University of Illi
nois and received his M.S. in in
dustrial management at MIT on
an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship.
He was research director for
the Sheraton Corporation of
America, with application of new
technologies his field. The reg
istered architect and National
Council Certificate holder became
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion
are those of the student ivriters only. The
Battalion is a non tax-supported non
profit, self-supporting educational enter
prise edited and operated by students as
a university and community newspaper.
origin
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for
lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not
credited in the paper and loca
blished herein. Rights of repi
lerein are also reserved.
d-Class postage paid
repub
otherwise
pu
matter herein are
nes cred
er and local news of spontaneou
publication of all othe
at College Station, Texas.
.Lindsey,
Members of the Student Publications Board
College
ng ; Dr.
d Hal Taylor, Col-
News contributions may be made by telephoning 846-6618
or 846-4910 or at the editorial offioe. Room 4, YMCA Building.
For advertising or delivery call 84&-6‘
ers
ehai
consultant to Dr. J. Herbert Hol-
lomon, assistant secretary for
science and technology, in 1963
and has remained with the U. S.
Department of Commerce.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Rex Bailey,
loctl manager of the Southwest
ern States Telephone Co., was
contacted to see if he had any
objections to the publication of
this letter in The Battalion. He
strongly objected to the reference
of complacency by the telephone
company. He cited the construc
tion of a Direct Distance Dialing
system and the addition of a Cen
trex system on the A&M campus
to be completed next September
to contradict Mr. Owens’ last
statement. A telephone company
official will contact Mr. Owens
soon, according to Bailey.
Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 24, IS
READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS
■ tu
NEW!
Wollensak Portable,
Cassette Tape Recorder
Easy-loading cassettes play/record up to 90 minutes each.
Battery power. Portable. Remot,e-control dynamic micro
phone, “Scotch'' Brand Tape Cassette, and exclusive
Wollensak carrying case to hold recorder, microphone,
extra cassettes • 4-position function switch • Solid-state
circuitry • Dependable capstan drive • Professional-type
VU meter • High-efficiency speaker. $74.95
BRYAN RADIO & T. V. SERVICE INC.
1301 South College Phone 82 2-4862
Bryan, Texas
Sh<
(
—c
—I
—1
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irman ; Dr
Arts; F. S. White,
Titus, College of Ve
lege of Agriculture.
len
^... David Bowers,
College of Engineerin
terinary. Medicine; an<3
are: Jim
of Liberal
Robert S.
The Battalion, a student newspa]
Collei
■, and holiday periods, Se]
May, and once a week during summer school.
publisl
Sunda;
Texas A&M is
y, and Monday,
per i
Station, Texas daily except Saturday,
nd holiday periods, September through
Mail subscriptions
full
tax. Adve:
77843
are $3.60 per semester; $6 per school
subscrip
s tax. Advertising rate furnished on re
The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas
yeai
sale
r; $6.50
ta:
per full year. All subscriptions subject to 2%
Advertising rate furnished
request. Address:
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
isco
Francisco.
MEMBER
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
EDITOR CHARLES ROWTON
Managing Editor John Fuller
News Editor Jerry Grisham
Sports Editor Gary Sherer
Copy Editor Bob Palmer
Editorial Columnist Robert Solovey
Photographer Mike Wright
MSC TOWN HALL
Artists Showcase
presents
The Lyric Art String Quartet Of Houston
with artists
Fredell Lack — Violinist
Albert Muenzer — Violinist
Wayne Crouse — Violist
Shirley Trepel —- Violincello
performing selections from the works of
Joseph Haydn
Bohuslav Martin u
Maurice Ravel
“Lyric Art Quartet hailed on superb performance . . .’
—Daily Press-
-Newport News, Va.
“Throughout the evening the strings sang together with admirable
precision and unity . . .”
—Houston Post
‘One of the most outstanding musical programs of the season . .
—The Scarsdale Inquirer, N. Y.
Memorial Student Center Ballroom
Wednesday, October 25, 1967
8:00 P.M.
Student Activity Card and Town. Hall Season Ticket holders will be admitted
upon presenation of their card (and ID) or ticket at the door. There are
NO RESERVED seats for this performance.
OTHER TICKET PRICES (Tickets Available at the Door)
$2.00 for adults
$1.00 for all students
r
Launch an Exciting Career as an
Intelligence
Specialist
Comprehensive Career Development Plan for College Graduates Helps You Grow
Swiftly into Positions of Responsibility and Exceptional Challenge.
The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) is a
unique, independent organization serving diverse in
telligence requirements of the Department of Defense.
We are active in many areas directly or indirectly
related to national security . . . probing not only
purely military conditions, trends and forces, but
also pertinent economic, social, cultural, physical,
geographic and scientific factors.
Each year we seek out qualified individuals for
DIA’s entry level Career Development Plan. This is
a program designed both to equip you for a responsi
ble and challenging permanent career position, and
enable you to complete most or all requirements for
an advanced degree.
DIA College Program for
BA/BS, MA/MS Graduates in
Area Studies
Geology
China
Library Science
Far East
Marine Engineering
Latin America
Mathematics (majors, minors)
Southeast Asia
Meteorology
USSR
Naval Architecture
Civil Engineering
Nuclear Physics
Computer Science
Photogrammetry
Economics
Photo-Interpretation
Electronic Engineering
Physics
"Languages (majors,
Structural Engineering
minors)
Transportation
Forestry
Urban Planning
Geography
*For overseas program
As is evident from the list above, there are career
opportunities in many fields and disciplines at DIA.
Your salary at entry into the Career Development
Plan varies, dependent upon your degree level and
grades, but all participants follow essentially the same
program.
THREE-MONTH ORIENTATION COURSE
All college graduate recruits attend a three-month
Intelligence Orientation Course. Its objectives are to
orient the trainee to the Department of Defense gen
erally and the Defense Intelligence Agency specifi
cally, with particular emphasis on the role of civilian
analysts in the military intelligence community.
Following completion of this course, trainees are
assigned to substantive areas of work related to their
disciplines. At the beginning of the second year, you
will be selected for a specific assignment leading to a
position as permanent member of the work force.
OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCED STUDY
All trainees are eligible for educational programs
leading to advanced degrees. These opportunities—*
plus many additional training opportunities—may
be provided either during or after normal working
hours (or both).
You will find that the advantages of a career at DIA
are many and varied, including the liberal fringe
benefits associated with Federal employment. Our
locations (the Pentagon and nearby Arlington, Va.)
afford your choice of city, suburban or country living
. . . and a wealth of recreational, cultural, historical
and educational attractions are within a few min
utes’ drive.
And by no means least, you will derive much satis
faction from contributing personally to the achieve
ment of vital national objectives.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS SOON!
VISIT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE NOW
. . . to arrange an interview with DIA representatives.
If you wish, you may write DIA headquarters for addi
tional literature. Note: All applicants must be U.S.
citizens, subject to thorough background inquiry and
physical examination.
DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
Civilian Personnel Division, Room 2E239, Pentagon, Washington, D. C. 20301 ■ An equal opportunity employer M&F
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Sclw
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