Viewpoint The Battalion Friday Texas A&M University February 10, 1978 Israel s Begin puts peace on hold The simmering dispute between the United States and Israel over whether President Carter was given an Israeli commitment not to establish new civilian settlements in occupied Arab territories is in large measure irrelevant to the central problem that the settlements — new or old — present. As a matter of international law, under the Fourth Geneva Convention, the settlements are illegal. As a matter of practical political reality, Israels insis tence on permanent retention of the contested sites places a formidable and probably insurmountable barrier in the path of peacemaking. As a matter of timing and good-faith diplomacy, the recent expansion of the settlements policy — whatever name is given to it — is largely inexplicable and wholly retrogressive. Now Israel faces the opportunity that it has long coveted — at least to begin making peace with its neighbors. And, confronted suddenly with the necessity for choice, confronted with a need to make good on its long-standing pledge that everything would be negotiable, Israel responds by saying that the settlements are established and irretnovable facts, and that their future is not within the purview of negotiations. And then, to underscore this stance and intensify the irritant, Israel proceeds to expand its physical presence in the occupied territory. There should be no doubt about the central importance of this issue. What is at stake in this controversy is not Prime Minister Menahem Begin’s ability to deal with his domestic political problems. As we see it, what is at stake ultimately and fundamentally is the sincerity and effectiveness of Israel’s commitment to work toward a just and realizable peace. Los Angeles Times Godbey campaign keys on name By JIM CRAWLEY Ron Godbey is the proud owner of two traits that voters look for when they vote for any candidate. First, the voter will look for a candidate that has a familiar name. This is a subcon scious function that most people don’t rec- Politics ognize. The second and more conscious voter clue is a similarity between the can didate and the voter. Godbey, an attorney and former Fort Worth TV meteorologist with strong name identification in the northern half of the Sixth Congressional District, is considered by many political observers as one of the candidates likely to make a run-off in the May 6 primary. In 1976, Godbey cam paigned against incumbant Olin E. “Tiger” Teague in the Democratic primary. Nearly 40 percent of the voters selected Godbey in 1976. Name identification is probably the greatest asset to the Codbey campaign. While he is knowledgeable on the issues and experienced on the campaign trail, it will be his years as a weatherman for KXAS-TV that voters remember. With half of the district’s voters living in range of KXAS-TV, this name identification will drastically reduce the amount of money Godbey will have to spend getting his name known to the voters. Godbey, 43, is trying to run his campaign on the shoelaces. While he collected only $17,000 for the 1976 primary, he ran better against Teague than any recent Democratic opponent. This time the campaign chest for Godbey will probably be expanded since the race is fairly open. Supposing Godbey gets campaign con tributions totaling $25,000, what can he do? According to Phil Gramm, another Democratic contender, it costs $30,000 to send a letter to every voter in the district. Gramm and his staff are in the process of composing letters to each voter. So by his opponent’s figures, Godbey may not be able to afford to send letters to all the vot ers. Political announcements are expen sive, especially in a district that is 200 miles l6ng and' coVers three major media mar kets. Handshaking is the only political adver tising that is cheap these days. But even the traditional handshake and kissing of babies can cost vast sums of money. To shake hands in every town in the district a candi date has to buy gas, food and lodging while on the campaign .trail. Godbey should also be able to attract votes from citizens looking for a candidate with a similar background as their own. Many voters want to see a congressman that would be able to sympathize with the constituents’ problems. Godbey may be the man that can relate to many of the district’s voters. He cites experience in many fields other than meteorology and law. He claims experi ence in teaching, the military and politics. Godbey holds a teaching certificate and has taught college meteorolgy classes. He is also a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve, coming up in the ranks from pri vate. The last Democratic primary was God- bey’s first adventure into politics. In that race against the now-retiring Teague, Godbey surprised many Teague backers by getting nearly 40 percent of the district vote. Godbey received an excellent turn out in the northern part of the district and lost the Texas A&M campus precinct vote by only three votes. The Democrat believes the district needs a common man in its congressional seat. “Needed is a congressman who under stands you and your situation, a con gressman you can trust, a congressman who believes in old-fashioned honesty and a congressman who genuinely wants to see the United States of America remain the hope and the envy of the rest of the world for another 200 years,’’ reads the Godbey literature. Physically speaking, Godbey could be your next-door neighbor. He prides him self with the idea that he is just like any other resident of the Sixth. He doesn’t wear flashy clothes and doesn’t tiy to hide the fact that he is the oldest candidate in the race. The only apparent difference be tween Ron Godbey and the next-door neighbor is Godbey is running for a seat in the House of Representatives. Jim Crawley’s political column now will be published on Wednesdays and Fridays to provide more extensive coverage of candi dates. Letters to the editor Photo caption receives bad reviews Editor: Allow me to respond to the rhetorical question, “This is Art?”, utilized as a cap tion for the photograph of a sculptural com bine by Mr. David Vogel. (Battalion, Feb. 8, 1978). The answer is Yes! The question, incidentally, is at least fifty years out of date. —John J. McDermott Professor of Philosophy ...and again Editor: In last Wednesday’s Battalion the front page picture of the sculpture exhibit at the Architecture Building had a caption under it that read, “This is Art?“. I wish to address myself to this mentality: Yes, it’s true that beauty is in the eyes of the beholder. But art is more than pretty flowers and majestic landscapes. It is ideas expressed in terms of form, color, texture, sound and movement. The innuendo of your caption, “This is Art?”, not only limits the meaning of art, but perpetuates the aura of provincialism that prevails at A&M. I will confess that I don’t find the sculpture the cutest little thing I ve ever seen. How ever, I do respect the piece as a meaningful work of art, and the sculptor, David Vogel, as well. A&M began as a technical college with emphasis in the agricultural and mechani cal fields, (no quarrel here). But A&M Col lege grew in scope and numbers, and in 1963 acquired the name “Texas A&M Uni versity". Implicit in the word “university” is the assumption that the various disci plines work together to sustain a place of higher education. “University” comes from the word “universus”, meaning all together or the whole. (Consider: How can the heart function without a liver? The eye without the brain?) The lack of artistic awareness that seems to abound at A&M raise the question then, of whether A&M is truly a university or just a glorified trade school. Generally speaking, the administration has never been an avid supporter of the arts as a vital element of higher education at this University. And certainly not the new ad ministration. The responsibility, therefore, falls to more grass roots levels of influence, namely the students and the individual teachers. It saddens me that the Battalion, a student-run newspaper, does not ap preciate this realization. I believe the Battalion owes an apology to the artist, David Vogel, and perhaps to the ideals of higher education as well. —P.G. Fleer, 79 Editor’s note: This letter was accompanied by 27 other signatures of persons support ing the author’s sentiments. It was not our intention to degrade Mr. Vogel’s work, and it was unfortunate that the caption was run. The Battlion extends its apologies to Mr. Vogel and the arts. Shuttle great Editor: I would like to compliment the Univer sity and the student senate on providing a useful service to the students. I am referring to the new intra-campus bus system, which I found to be of great assistance during the rainy weather. With our campus now covering over 5,100 acres, it is high time we got buses to take us from places like Zachry to the ag riculture buildings across the tracks. Dur ing the rain, I was able to ride from Zachry to Rudder Tower and arrive on time and dry. Bus drivers should be complimented, too. These drivers cover the entire route in under 20 minutes,.and because of their promptness, and the efficient use of six buses, no one waits long. Persons who oppose the program point out a high cost and low student benefits. However, I feel the estimated $1.75 a stu dent per semester cost — which comes out of our fees — is well worth it. During baseball season consideration of expanding the route to stop at the new field would also increase student benefits. I see the intra-campus system as a neces sary asset to our growing University and this system should be continued. — Scott Burton, ‘80 Bad representation Editor: I’m mad and you should be too. Wed nesday night the student senate met and voted 26-24 to recommend that Student Body President Robert Harvey resign his office. Speaker of the Senate Bobby Tucker said, “One thing many people seemed to be hanging on was the feeling of the senate... I feel like our voice has been heard.” Tucker is wrong. The senate voice has not been heard. One-third of the student senate did not attend the meeting. Twenty-seven of the people we elected to represent us did not have the decency or responsibility to attend this important meeting. Those 27 votes easily could have changed the recommendation of the se nate. This emphasizes a problem in America as well as at Texas A&M. We elect people to represent us, to be our voice in govem- ment, and then we forget about them. We let politicians walk all over us. They spend our money and vote on matters the way they feel. When Americans do not communicate with their elected officials, then the most important aspect of democracy fails. The two Texas senators have the highest rate of absenteeism in the entire senate. Every time these two men miss a session of the senate, we are not being represented, and the money we pay them is wasted. The reason I am outraged with absen teeism in the student senate is that this is where we students learn basic democracy. If we do not care about our representation in college, then we will not care about our representation later. Student senate members were not elected because of their popularity. They were elected to make decisions that affect everyone at this University daily. If you care in the slightest how University policy affects you, then find out who your repre sentative is, and make sure he attends sen ate meetings. If he does not, make sure he hears about it. It is his responsibility to attend all meetings, and if he does not, you are the one who loses. It is your duty and right as a citizen to check up on elected officials, from student government to federal government. Any time you oppose the actions of an elected official, write a letter, or make a telephone call. You may be suprised with, the results. If the average citizen will let his elected representatives know now he feels, then democracy can work. Otnerwise, democ racy is simply an idea. — Keith Taylor, ’80 Correction Editor: In my letter, printed in the Feb. 9, 1978 issue of the Battalion, I inadvertently omit ted a few words from a quote. The quote was taken from the University “Blue Book.” My letter read, “...at the time of elections and at least a 2.000 grade point ratio for the preceding summer terms... The quote should have read, “...at the time of the election or elections and at least a 2.000 grade point ratio ‘or the preceding regular semester or the two preceding summer terms...” I sincerely apologize to everyone con cerned with the issue. The omission by no means affects my arguments as the perti nent portion was correctly quoted. — Owen D. Massey, ’79 Slouch by Jim Earle “GETTING THE FLU IS BAD, BUT WHAT GETS TO ME IS IT HAD TO HAPPEN ON MY TIME, ON TH’ WEEKEND!” Top of the News Campus Spring Award forms available Application forms for Spring Awards Programs may be obtained from the Student Financial Aid Office, Room 310, YMCA Building, applications must be filed with the Student Financial Aid Office no later than 5 p.m., March 1, 1978. Late applications will not be ac cepted. Last day for Who s Who State Snow closes many Texas schools Many Easterners moved to Texas to bask in the much touted Sun belt weather after years of suffering through blizzard conditions during winter. But such logic wore thin Thursday as north Texas was blan keted with several inches of ice and snow. Freezing rain and snow flurries once again snarled traffic throughout populous areas of north Texas and forced the closing of most schools in Dallas and surrounding sectors. The ice even forced officials to cancel, of all things, an ice hockey game in Dallas. W ednesday morning, Amarillo was the coldest cits in the state with a 13 degree reading. The warmest temperature was 50 degrees at Brownsville. Nation Actor questioned as ‘Strangler Police traced a telephone call from a babbling actor who apparently was exhausted or drugged and arrested him Wednesday on suspicion of being the Hillside Strangler of 12 women and girls — but there is little evidence he is the* killer. Ned T. York, 37. was booked on suspicion of murder. York passed out while being questioned, giving contradictory and incoherent replies. Detectives waited for him to awaken to resume questioning. York has appeared in minor television parts, including a role as a villainous male nurse on a “Starsky and Hutch episode last year, according to the show's producers, but is little-known in the entertainment business. After searching Yorks home, a police source said, "We didn’t find a thing — the place is clean as a whistle.” Daughter given sight hy parents Eileen Billington’s parents gave her an extraordinary gift — ber eyesight. In 1972 she lost her vision to keracotonus, a disease that turns the rounded cornea into a cone. But two years ago Mrs. Billington’s mother died of cancer. Her eyes were removed and brought to Wills Eye Hospital in Philidelphia where one of her corneas was trans planted into her daughter’s left eye. Last Saturday, Mrs. Billington’s father died of heart failure. His eyes were removed and rushed to the eye clinic where, on Sunday, one of his corneas was transplanted to bis daughter’s right eye. It will be several weeks before she knows if the new transplant has taken, or whether the new cornea will be rejected or infected. “I have lots of optimism," said Mrs. Billington, “but it's just too early to predict the future.” World Sadat briefs foreign leaders Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, saying he was still optimistic about working out a peace agreement with Israel, hopscotched from Britian to West Germany Thursday to brief leaders of those countries on bis talks with President Carter in Washington. Sadat spent an hour talking with British Prime Minister James Callaghan in London before leaving for Hamburg, where he met West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. He told a news conference at London’s Heathrow Airport he believed his talks with Carter were a success and a Middle East peace agreement still can be worked out. Sadat reportedly received private assurances in Washington that Egypt will receive U.S. weapons for the first time. Weather Cloudy and cold today with continued cloudiness on Satur day. High today upper 40’s, low tonight low 30’s. High tomor row upper 50’s. Winds from the north at 5-10 mph, becoming southeasterly this afternoon. Cloudy and cool with showers on Sunday. 1 l Today is the last day for Who’s Who students to sign up to schedule their pictures for the 1978 Aggieland. Deadline is 5 p. m., and sign-ups are at Barker Photography Studio. The second installment hoard pay ment for the 1978 Spring semester is due on or before Feb. 17. The amount is $143.05 for the 7-day board plan and $128 for the 5-Day Plan. Please pay now either at the Fiscal Office, Richard Coke Building or the Casher’s Office in the main lobby of the Rudder Center, toavoid penalty. Millions for asbestos workers More- than 400 workers exposed to asbestos dust have been awarded an unprecedented $20 million in an out-of-court settlement in Beau mont, but they still face health problems and possible death. The agreement reached Wednesday settles the largest personal injury suit filed against the federal governmant. However, the problems may not be over for the 445 workers exposed to the cancer-causing agent at a Tyler manufacturing plant. The workers originally sued for $100 mil lion. Officials of the Texas Chest Foundation said that as manyas300of the 1,000 people who worked at the Tyler facility at various times could die of cancer. The foundation, which was in charge of a medical didgnostic program for the plant s former workers, said they will experience their worst health problems 15 to 30 years after exposure. The suit was filed against the government because the workers said it was the government’s responsibility to ensure safe working conditions at the factory. r The Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the tcriter of the article and are not necessarily those of the I 'niversity administration or the Board of Re- f’ents. The Battalion is a non-profit, self-siip/tortinfi enterprise operated by students as a university and com munity newsftaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verification. Address correspondence to Letters to the Editor. The Battalion. Room 210, Reed McDonald Building, College Station, Texas 77H43. Re present t*d nationally In National Educational Ad\er- tising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. The Battalion is published Monday through Fridav from September through May except during exam and holidas periods and the summer, when it is published on Mondaxs, Wednesdays and Fridays. , ''w Reed McDonald Building. College Station. N United Press International is entitled c.hW™ use lot reproduction of all new s dispidcl«i\s Rights of reproduction of all other mallei livri'jl' Second-Class postage paid at College SlalitMt.'' MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Marx Alkv I lomex Editor Managing Editor Sports Editor Nexvs Editors M Assistant Managing Editor Citx Editor Campus Editor Reporters Boggan. Mark Patterson. 1 . Carx W elch. Stott Perkins. I Photographers Susan Webb I Cartoonist |) hiz \«" Hox !.«•: Mail subscriptions arc $16.75 per semester: $33.25 per school year: $35.00 per full xear. Adxertising rates fur nished on request. Address: The Battalion. Room 216, Student hthlicatums Board: Boh (.’. Rogers. Clid* Joe Arredotulo. Dr. Cary Halter. Dr. John ^ 1^- Robert Harvey: Dr ( 'barb s Mc('andh%s; Dr. ( Ehillips: Rebel Riec. Director of Student Pul'll Donald C Johnson