s lie dav and a Sundii >n. singfl THE BATTALION Page 5 MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1978 campus activities Monday Aggie Allemanders Square Dance Club, lessons, 7-9 p.m., club dance, 9-10 p.m J , MSC Dance Arts Society, ballet classes, 7:30 p.m., 266 G. Rollie White SWC Basketball, A&M Ladies vs. Texas, 5:15 p.m., G. Rollie White Col iseum, A&M vs. 7:30 p.m., G. Rollie White Tuesday Robbins Aero Squadron, organizational meeting, 7:15 p.m., 501 Rudder Class of ‘78 Council, 231 MSC Herpetological Club, 7:30 p.m., 312 Nagle A&M Classical Piano Performance Group, origanization meeting, 7:30 p.m., 350 MSC Brazos Bowmen, Indoor League Com petition at Crockett Elementary School Gym, 7:30 p.m., practice begins at 7 p.m. Society of Women Engineers, 7:30 p.m., 203 Zachry Society of Automotive Engineers, 7:30 p.m., 342 Zachry Med Tech Society, 7:30 p.m., 100 Har rington Aggie Cinema, Gone With the Wind,” 8 p.m.. Rudder Auditorium Wednesday Student Senate, 7:15 p.m., 204 Har rington Bridge Club, 7:15 p.m., 212 MSC Dance Arts Society, 7:30 p.m., 266 G. Rollie White Thursday Great Issues, Tom McCall on "The Fu ture of Man’s Environment,” 8 p.m., Rudder theater Dance Arts Society, modern jazz classes, 7:30 p.m., 266 G. Rollie White Water Ski Club, 7 p.m., 601 Rudder KI.I.ES ri] J'J/ I <)4. il| MSC Videotape Committee Meeting Tuesday - Jan. 24 7:30 p.m. Rm. 352 of The MSC (Not Rudder Tower.) New Members are welcome. No experience necessary. We have our own equipment, so you can be creative or just have fun learning. * (<3l :hainp i band ■1706. ■autiW aturinj ims i les be- < train- iters at 15,000 offer- Busi- -'M >: aftoc >: >: x j; REVEILLE’S RESTAURANT Welcome Back Aggies! iky, k 1 i? AGG. TEXAS AVE. INN 1731 S. Texas Ave. , at preferw All l* ir point® ipots. Cd ne 846-038 Sill Expires Jan. 31, 1978 Located in Culpepper Plaza (Next to 3-C Bar-B-Q in College Station) < y | 8B ,> tt5* | ap«ay*afl >| By*aB |> ac* > S8C <| g{C ,> aB , *3iB || *a&* , aB**K < More Than Just a Name in a ime, “Jesus ... just a name that grew up with me,” is a line from a song that resembles much of my experience of the Lord Jesus Christ. In my early -childhood He was God to me; at 12 or 13 He was a very great man; and four years ago when I first went off to college, He became in my thinking an overplayed philosopher with unattainable goals. In spite of these thoughts, one day I met Him. Without meeting Him it is impossible to know Him for 'who He really is. Throughout -the years of considering Jesus, I could only form theories as to why He has meant so much 'for 2,000 years. No matter what theory I had conjectured, the questions I had always re turned unresolved. Who is Jesus really? Is He God or is He man? 1 was raised in Christianity and many people had spoken to me about the Lord. On several occasions I had been approached by gospel preach- ;ers. I never really listened to them because I felt that as far as theorizing was concerned I was as capable as any. I just didn’t realize how much alive and available Jesus was for me to meet and experience right then. When I had Jesus well fit into a theory that He was no 'more than any other man, a good friend of mine told me he had met the Lord. At first my natural reaction was dis gust. We were close friends and I feared that his “spiritual” experience would draw a line between our friendship. After a moments thought I realized that he wasn’t a fanatic but a very good friend I had learned to trust. I wondered: was his experience real or was he just deceived? I listened very care fully as he talked for over an hour and at his completion I walked away very troubled. There was no way that he would lie to me, I was sure of that. He didn’t seem deceived either. In fact, he appeared to be more clear about Jesus, a- bout life, and about reality than anyone had ever been. New theories would have to be thought of to account for what had happened to my friend. For the next five months I wrestled with what my friend had said. Often I would lie a- wake at night running the same arguments through my mind. Was Jesus a real person for me to meet as my friend had said? Were my theories concerning a person who was actually real? Often I would sigh and try to dismiss the whole question out of my mind, yet I was afraid to let the matter slip away so easily. If Jesus was a real per son, if He was as available as my friend had claimed, could I turn my back on Him? I had to resolve whether He was real or not — these questions contin ually plagued me. During this time I was living in Austin, working odd jobs and trying to express my ideas about God in the plays and poems I was writing. Every thing I wrote stood opposite of my friend’s experience. His meeting Jesus opposed my view that God was a thought, shattered my view that God was an energy, and eliminated my view that God was too far away and non Person-al to be met. After writing a forty page manuscript for a play called “For Heaven’s Sake,” I exclaimed, “This is my an swer to who God is,” but in actuality and from within I knew it wasn’t an answer at all. A week later, on Sunday morning, the phone rang — it was my friend. As I spoke to him the questions I had been asking myself stung like re opened wounds. Here was the empirical data that shattered all my theories. I knew why he was calling — he wanted to make Jesus real to me. I braced myself within waiting upon his arrival. Although I wanted the answers, I feared to know the truth. I knew if I really met Jesus my life would be changed. It would be very difficult to act oblivious to God when God was no longer oblivious to me. At my friend’s arrival I was cold within. I had decided to shut myself off from all reasoning, just to sit and pretend to listen as he spoke. As time passed my room mate began to inquire of my friend’s experience in becom ing a Christian. My friend began to speak directly to my room mate, seemingly ignoring my presence. Since the conversa tion turned towards my room mate I listened more intently — in fact too intently! The words he spoke tore down walls with in healed the open wounds, and answered all my questions. Eventually my roommate asked how he could meet this Jesus — 1 was subdued! We prayed to Jesus, asking Him to be real to us, to wash us of our past, and to live in us to be our life. What can I say to end? Theories are good food for the mind but there are questions, hungers, and thirsts deeper than our mind. Theories may aid to organize our small grasp on reality but empirical data, as always, will shatter any theory. Jesus is real — I met Him. Kerry Robichaux, soph. Modern Languages 845-2996 Paid for by Christian students on campus. WHAFSAH NSACAREER? Its different things fiodiffeient people. Of course, all employees at the National Security Agency have certain things in common: they are civilian employees of the Department of Defense; they are engaged in technical projects vital to our nation’s communications security or a foreign inteDigence production mission; and they all enjoy the benefits that accompany Federal employment. However, the differences between our career opportunities are just as interesting as their similarities. For example^ . . TO THE ELECTRONIC ENGINEER (BS/MS): An NS A career means delving into unique projects which can span every phase of the R&D cycle. An engineer may design, develop, test and manage contracts on communications, recording, and information storage devices and systems whose capacities and speeds are still considered futuristic in most quarters. TO THE COMPUTER SCIENTIST (BS/MS): It means applying his or her knowledge in a wide range of sub-disciplines such as systems design, systems pro gramming, operating systems, computer applications analysis, and retrieval systems. TO THE MATHEMATICIAN (MS): A career means defining, formulating, and solving complex communi- cations-related problems. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra and combinatorial analysis are just a few of the tools applied by the NSA mathematician. Interested in learning more about the difference in an NSA career? Schedule an interview with us through your Student Placement Office today. If we do not recruit on your campus, send a resume to the address given below. U.S. citizenship is required. NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY Attn: M321 Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755 An Equal Opportunity Employer m/f. EARN OVER %50 A MONTH RIGHT THROUGH YOUR SEMORYEAR. if you’re a junior or a senior majoring in math, physics or engineering, the Navy has a program you should know about. It’s called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate- Collegiate Program (NUPOC-C for short) and if you qualify, you can earn as much as $650 a month right through your senior year. Then after 16 weeks of Officer Candidate School, you’ll receive an additional year of advanced technical education, This would cost you thousands in a civilian school, but in the Navy, we pay you. And at the end of the year of trainihg, you’ll receive a $3,000 cash bonus. It isn’t easy. There are fewer than 400 openings and only one of every six applicants will be selected. But if you make it, you’ll have qualified for an elite engineering training program. With unequaled hands-on responsibility, a $24,000 salary in four years, and gilt-edged qualifications for jobs in private industry should you decide to leave the Navy later. (But we don’t think you’ll want to.) Ask your placement officer to set up an interview with a Navy representative when he visits the campus on January 24-27, or contact your Navy representative at 713-224-5897 (collect). If you prefer, send your resume to the Navy Nuclear Officer Program, Code 312-B468, 4015 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Va. 22203, and a Navy representative will contact you directly. The NUPOC-Collegiate Program. It can do more than help you finish college: it can lead to an exciting career opportunity. NAVY OFFICER. ITS NOTJUSTA JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE. i; 3 3 8 * D jn 7> I » n rrt 2: £ O o a