THE BATTALION FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1975 Page 5 AGGIELAND FLOWER & GIFT Come in 209 University or call 846-5825 for individually designed corsages. New specialties for your 1975 Foot ball Mums. INTERSTATE 7^^ UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPP-ING CENTER 846-4714 & 846-1151 "Deliverance” at 2:45,7:15 "Clockwork” at 4:45, 9:20 DELIVERMICE DOES II DCHIII! Deliuerance JON VOIGHT BURT REYNOLDS The two most controversial films of our time!!! CINEMA II “Stardust” at 2:30, 6:00, 9:35 “Aloha” at 4:25. 8:00 Remember when skirts went up and hair came down? Remember when all the girls were screaming for the Beatles? Remember when things] weren’t just great, they were groovy! TijSS ,H — On their first date, they I lovers and fucdtivesi. KTAM RADIO & ABC Interstate Theatres invite you to two trips thru Time i Space as Buster Crabbe stars in the Original Flash Gordon & Buck Rogers Saturday at Midnite $1.25. UNCENSORED! SENSATIONAL! J MOST AMAZING SPECTACLES / EARTH INVAOtP}. m rrrTrri 111 t t tV Israelis raid, kill refugees Associated Press Israeli warplanes strafed and roc keted a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon Thursday, killing two persons and wounding five, Lebanese officials said. They said the attack was on the Borgholieh camp eight miles north of the port city of Tyre, and that it was the third Israeli air raid on the teeming settlement in the last two weeks. The Tel Aviv command gave no details of the raid except to say it was directed against suspected guerrilla targets and that all planes returned safely to their bases in Israel. The Lebanese Defense Ministry said the attack lasted 20 minutes. Earlier in the day Lebanese gun ners fired bazookas at an Israeli pat rol across the border. The fire was returned and there were no re ported Israeli casualties. In another development, Egypt shut down the Voice of Palestine in Cairo. On Wednesday, the net work’s Baghdad station claimed there had been an assassination at tempt on Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, a claim refuted by the Egyp tians as a lie. In northern Lebanon, Lebanese soldiers began manning a buffer zone between Moslems and Christ ians in an attempt to end week-long bloody clashes. The major fighting has been bet ween Moslems from Tripoli, 50 miles north of Beirut, and the Chris tian town of Zagharta, five miles from Tripoli. Moslem irregulars attacked the Christian hill village of Beit Mallat earlier Thursday, and police said two persons were killed. Casualties in the week-long clashes stood at more than 100 killed and 250 wounded. The clashes reflect traditional tension between Moslem and Christian factions in Lebanon, heated up by the presence of 250,000 Palestinian refugees. The Moslems support the guerrillas. Many Christians do not. In Geneva, the United Nations congress on crime prevention adopted a report expressly dropping political terrorism from the list of crimes requiring stricter interna tional control. The report was passed without vote by the 99-nation plenary meet ing. Israel dropped out of the meet ing after Yasir Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organization was invited to attend as an observer. Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 Mideast dangers THE RED LI0S 3606 COLLEGE AVE. DANCING BEST PIZZA IN AGGIELAND NO COVER CHARGE BEER & SET-UPS GAME ROOM Monday Special: 40c bottle Beer (All Day) Americans face terrorism Associated Press BUFFER ZONE, Sinai Desert — Landmine explosions and ter rorist bullets — these are some of the dangers American civilians may face when they come to the Middle East to help enforce the latest Israeli-Egyptian truce pact. Under the accord worked out by Secretary of State Henry A. Kis singer, still to be approved by the U.S. Congress, up to 200 American technicians are to operate electronic listening posts in the Sinai Desert in a new United Nations buffer zone. Five hundred Swedish U.N. sol diers have been manning part of the old buffer zone a few miles away for more than a year. The Swedish de sert veterans say life might be tough for the U.S. civilians. “There are landmines all over the place,” says a Swedish captain, bouncing through the sand and heat in a desert patrol car. Rows of deadly explosive charges, Israeli and Egyptian, lie a yard on each side of the car and stretch as far as the eye can see. At least five U.N. soldiers were killed in the Sinai last year by exploding mines, despite safety paths cleared by Polish army sap pers. “Nobody knows how many mines there are in the buffer zone, ’ says Lt. Col. Nils-Goran Staf of the Royal Guards, deputy commander of the Swedish contingent. “But there are millions of them.” “We can avoid the mines — they are marked on maps,” says a Swedish private. “But we can’t map the scorpions or mice, and we have a lot of both.’ The Swedes haven’t lost a man yet to a scorpion bite, but Data about Middle East insufficient, says official Associated Press WASHINGTON — U.S. intelli gence agencies predicted before and even after the 1973 Middle East war broke out that there would be no large-scale war. Intelligence summaries released by the House Intelligence Commit tee said that the White House “watch committee” reported after Egypt attacked Israel Oct. 6, 1973, . “we can find no hard evidence of a major, coordinated Egyptian- Syrian offensive. ” The watch committee, a special crisis committee of the President’s U.S. Intelligence Board, called the military invasion in progress an “action-reaction situation.” The Central Intelligence Agency reported the day before the war started that Egypt did not appear to be preparing an attack. The De fense Intelligence Agency reported three days before the attack that it did not expect a major confronta tion. The conclusions from top secret reports were released by the com mittee. Earlier, a former State Depart ment official testified that he tried to notify Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger of imminent hostilities the night before the war broke out but Kissinger’s staff “did not want to trouble him in New York that even ing” with the information. Ray Cline, former director of the State Department’s intelligence bureau, told the House Intelligence Committee that by the time word was relayed to Kissinger, the war already had started. Cline also said such areas as the Middle East were getting insuffi cient intelligence attention because Kissinger and former President Richard M. Nixon were focused on the Soviet Union. “The system wasn’t working very well, Cline contended. “And the reason was that people were not ask ing it to work and were not listening when it did work. ’’ Other officials told the House committee that the U.S. intelli gence community officially con cluded in a postmortem study that the 1973 war was an “intelligence failure” with no major agency flatly predicting in advance that war would erupt. Fund drive begins Texas A&M University kicks off its fund-raising efforts on behalf of the College Station United Fund and Bryan-Brazos County United Way Monday when volunteer workers meet for final coordination and dissemination of campaign material. The 4 p.m. meeting in Room 226 of the Memorial Student Center will be a joint kick-off session with officials of the College Station Un ited Fund. Dr. Haskell Monroe, A&M dean of faculties who is heading this year’s campus drive, said university campaign will support both the Col lege Station and Bryan-Brazos County drives. “Emphasis this year will be on personal contact to insure that everyone has an opportunity to con tribute to the highly deserving or ganizations which rely on the drives for financial support,” Monroe noted. wi ARE NOW OPEN AND INVITE ' YOU TO COME SEE US. Open Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00 Qierok ^ OF CALIFORNIA AND e—rretrU Tootcveori AND HANDBAGS AND MUCH MORE! 3725 E. 29th • 846-2761 Town & Country Center $./iiUman ST/ieafaei L tew/ril manor East '^Theatres in fTlancx East mall 823-8300 HAPPY HOUR $1.50 till 6:30 5:45-7:45-9:45 me story Buford Pusser wanted told, -PART 2 iwim TALI jPQ| MMUTAl CUIOMCr WCC(S!!o| STj In Color {m«i t . ti mt, rot Iw lt««>|t(1* 5:35-7:35-9:35 See Peter Sellers as inspector Clouseau In “the RETURN Of the Pink Panther’ | Gl GENERAL AUDIENCES . AGES ADMITTED 4 7:10-9:20 ’"'Wintteliion Sean Connery Candice Be Brian Heilti & Joiin Husior n rp Wniier, and Dutciefl Dy John MiitiiS Ptotucei) by He<&J3i!t •Use .ryG'.T^n PG|P*flfclfTAL GUIDANCE mESTfD; Fllned IB Psna.Tv MC'IQCCU ■• •■'O ^-l IhiitHf! AntustR BaKsaa jtl. MARIO MORENO POE MIS PIST0LAS „ BOA ITU an EASTMANCOLOR . MICUEl M DELGADO they keep their first aid kits handy. The Americans will be stationed seven to 11 miles east of the present buffer, in the bleak Gidi and Mitla mountain passes, but the passes have their minefields, too, and scorpions abound all over the Sinai. A deadlier danger could be the Palestine Liberation Organization, whose newspaper has urged Arab patriots to shoot the Americans as “an enemy target.” It would be difficult for a Palesti nian terrorist to penetrate the re mote truce pact zone, and U.S. offi cials say the Americans will be out of guerrilla gun range. But the technicians likely will be sightseeing and living off duty in Egypt, where they would not be immune to sniper bullets, or in Is rael, where Arab raiders have staged nine bloodbaths. The Swedes live in tents in the sand, with no air conditioning, drinking water bottled in Lebanon, or hauled by truck across the Suez Canal from Egypt. Officers wash their own laundry in plastic buc kets. They watch the cease-fire lines with German Shepherd guard dogs, and with binoculars from 15 oven like tin lookout posts, some of them 100 yards from the Egyptians or Is raelis. U.N. troops from Finland, Gha na, Indonesia and Senegal guard the buffer zone to the south under the same conditions. The Americans — Kissinger says no more than 75 at a time — won’t work with dogs or binoculars. They will keep watch on military move ments from sophisticated stations full of secret electronic gadgetry. ^DOOyp ^/AT^ el and P^oller* SlsiELte Pooh’s Park 1907 Texas College Station DANCES Sept. 12, Friday 8 to 12 Dennis Ivey (Before Midnight Yell Practice) Sept. 13, Saturday 9 to 1 Bill Dearmore (After The Game) K C Hall Farm Road 1373 Bremond, Texas 1.50 1st HR iiaTTCEHiBBi Call For Times TuEUPATRAloircS AV^U |asii|u 6 ft. 2 in. of dynamite explodes into action. SKYWAY TWIN i East Screen At Dusk Lenny’ Plus Midnight Cowboy’ (R) East Screen At Dusk ‘Billy Jack’ The Trial of Billy JacH Starring DELORES TAYLOR and TOM LAUGHLIN Panavision 0 jr-» PARENTAL GUIDANCf SUGCISTED - | Soma mat*-.a> not 'ain't tpR-nufi From Warner Bros ^rjnjijjyrycations Company Call For campus "L'r v . 844 45)2 the most highly acclaimed film of the year “the ‘la dolce vita’ for the 1970’s:’ — (udlth crist, new york magazine warren beatty julie christie • goldie hawn jj^j JUSTRICTID "SSM Special Saturday Midnight ‘Happy Day’s’ Plus Angie Baby’ (X)