THE BATTALION Page 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, April 19, 1972 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle Northern offensive tests Vietnamizatk QUANG TRI, Vietnam UP) _ The North Vietnamese tanks that burst across the demilitarized zone 20 nights ago have either been knocked out or are in hid ing. The human-wave infantry at- Foreman speaks at Law Day “It’s the same old story — As soon as games letter!’ and the big dances are over, I get a the football ‘Dear John’ Kapp ppa Delta Pi to Mu Chi chapter at install A&M Houston attorney Percy Fore man will be guest speaker at the Law Day USA Program May 1 at A&M. Foreman, internationally known defense attorney, will speak at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. The program is sponsored by the Brazos County Bar Association, Tom Giesen- schlag, president. A reception will follow Fore man’s talk. Mrs. Thelma van Overbeek of Bryan is chairman of local Law Day activities. Included is presen tation of the annual Liberty Bell Award, given to a community member in recognition of out standing service performed in keeping with the spirit of the U. S. Constitution. Law Day was established by presidential proclamation 15 years ago to remind citizens of the responsibilities to seek orderly and constructive solutions to the serious concerns of our times Giesenschlag said. Bulletin Board Kappa Delta Pi, national honor society for education students, will install Mu Chi chapter at A&M Thursday, April 27. Dr. L. L. Ort, Kappa Delta Pi president of Bowling Green State University, will install 53 char ter members and chapter officers. He will present the charter to President Jack K. Williams. Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr., vice president for academic affairs and Dr. Frank Hubert, education dean, are also expected to be present. Thursday The A&M Motorcycle Club will meet in. the Memorial Student Center at 7:30 p.m. The Cepheid Variable Science Fiction Club will elect officers and hold an auction at a 7 p.m meeting in the Physics Building, room 305. Plastic people Students preregistering for fall classes will not find the procedure much different. There’s an extended version of the vehicle registration form, a couple less computer cards and they still take that lousy two-second snapshot of you for the ID card. They still herd the mob through this checkpoint and that one like a semesterly cattle drive. It looks a lot like an induction center. It is one, of sorts. Students, you are all urged to take stock of the situation here. Something very strange is happening, and most of us are unaware of it. What do you do when you cash a check, check out a book or try to get something to eat? You show that ID card. That piece of plastic with the six-number sequence and several holes punched in it IS you, for all the university knows. The picture and the signature are for your benefit, to try and make you feel you aren’t a walking computer card. They are of no use to the computer. The Computer—people suddenly become very straight and ponderous when the subject comes up. They know it controls their fate, their fees, whether or not they’ll get credit in Basketweaving 408. We are all numbers without names. What we need are names without numbers. Cbe Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is miUf, only. The Battalion is a non-taa- supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter- May, and once a week during summer school. prise edited and operated by students as a university and ~ community newspaper. rri , . • . j -r, . r 1 The Associated Press, Texas Press Association LETTERS POLICY The Associated Collegiate Press Letterj to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school and no more than 300 words in length. They must be year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 6% si true d although the writer’s name ivill be withheld bv saies tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address; signed, aiinougn uic wiiiei s name win uc wiuineia uy The u atta i ion> Room 2 17, Services Building, College Station, arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to Texas 77843. Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, ” 7 . , , , : : 7 77 7 c n.,rr., r 77vir The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for C.allege suuion, l exas //CHJ. reproduction of all news dispatchs credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous \ origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim matter herein are also reserved. Lindsey, chairman ; H. F. Filers, College of Liberal Arts ; Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr., College of Veterinary Medicine ; Dr. W. E. Tedrick, College EDITOR HAYDEN WHITSETT of Agriculture; and Layne Kruse, student. Managing'Editor ^ Doug Dilley „ . . .. ,, , . T ,. , ^. .. , . . . News Editor Sue Davis Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising TT'mt™. ToRn Cnr-irlr. Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San sports lAUtOI . .. - J ^ 10 Francisco. Assistant Sports Editor Bill Henry LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Homemade Pizza (Do it yourself) Short Movie On Israel & Holyland April 21, 1972 Starts at 7:30 p. m Friday Night FREE BAPTIST STUDENT UNION tacks that saw upward of a thou sand enemy soldiers rushing the guns of sandbagged government base camps have ceased. But in other ways, the North Vietnamese general offensive in this far north region grinds on. Officially, the situation is called a stalemate, but in the context of the dramatic military events of past weeks, stalemate means only that the enemy forces have stop ped moving forward. They are staying in the same positions they reached three days after the attacks began. They hold about 10 miles south of the DMZ, and they don’t look as if they are ready to leave. “We keep killing them, but they stay,” said the commander of the northern region, Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, in an interview. The general added, “Militarily, they made a mistake. But we know this is not a military war but a political one. They seek not statistics but politics.” The North Vietnamese have sent their troops into meatgrind- er operations before. The political aim this time seems to dramati cally demonstrate that President Nixon’s Vietnamization program has failed. But Hanoi also has settled for something less than immediate tactical goals in battles past. The minimum the Communist planners seem to be seeking in this north ern front is the demoralization of the regular South Vietnamese di visions based here, with the con sequent collapse of security among the population and an in crease in the inflluence of the clandestine Viet Cong. Hanoi’s goal of sending its in fantrymen victoriously storming Quang Tri City seems improbable if assessmerits of allied officers are valid. The official reading of the situation is that most North Vietnamese units are too bloodied to launch anything but a token attempt. But while this maximum goal may be unreachable, the North Vietnamese remain in a strong position to achieve the minimum goal of demoralization. The green South Vietnamese 3d Division literally ran from its dozen fire bases and encamp ments along the DMZ when Ha noi’s forces attacked March 30. Two regiments are unsteadily still on line, but the brunt of the de fense is being handled by Viet namese marines and rangers. Top American officials in the north say Hanoi continues to push supplies and equipment into the South. “I know that he (Hanoi) will not leave willingly. He will have to be pushed right back,” commented one American. The problem is, who will do the pushing? With other fronts opened up around the country, particularly around An Loc, and potentially in the central highlands, the Sai gon government is known to be reluctant to push a counteroffen sive in this sector. Saigon does not want to be fully committed to a push in the north, and then to find another enemy front opening somwhere else. This accounts for the painfully slow rate of progress here. The marines and rangers are pushing only a mile or two over the bar ren hills on either side of High way I that snakes up i, to embattled Dong Ha, I The longer the Nortti’J ese have to consolidate! sitions, the harder ftejl to push out, particuli'EASHI NT the lack of helicopter:Hd ass is northern zone. ■ffered Hanoi’s forces oventStestim o won back the territory iary Corr ROBERT TRAVEL ingly carved out of therm;, api> and the DMZ over thtifelock American infantry anjlrd G. The real test of VietiJfeeneral seems to be whether tilut a W1 Vietnamese forces car jmptly territory back. 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