Slouch vby Jim Earle “I’m sure getting tired of people asking me if I’m still wear ing my Halloween mask!” Dayan not done The surprise resignation of Moshe Dayan as Israel’s foreign minister leaves a major void in the 28-month-old coalition government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin (and) could also spark a crisis in the Middle East peace negotiations. The rift between the 64-year-old Dayan and Begin which precipitated the resignation centers around the issue of “autonomy,’ or self-rule, for the residents of the West Bank and Gaza. Israel agreed to self-rule in principle as the price for Egypt signing the historic peace treaty earlier this year. Nevertheless, it has become increasingly evident that Begin defines autonony as administrative control over local affairs, and nothing more. Dayan is to be commended for his tireless efforts on behalf of the Israeli people. His recent resignation by no means will mark the end of his distinguished career in public service. Bridgeport (Conn.) Post New concept for GSA In a move which could save taxpayers up to $226 million this year. Admiral Roland Freeman III, recently appointed director of the Gen eral Service Administration (GSA), has forbidden any purchase of new office furniture by or for any federal government agency until a com plete inventory of its furniture on hand has been completed and filed. GSA manages, or mismanages, some say, most of the buying of supplies and the construction and maintenance of buildings for the government. Efforts to uncover the extent of illegal practices have become mired in a morass of bureaucratic obstructionism. Admiral Freeman has brought a new concept to GSA, common sense. It is good management to require people to use what they have before they buy more. This approach clearly never occurred to the career bureaucrats. Texarkana Gazette the small society CbPM'T H^ITAT&T^ CALL by Briclcman /MY ArJCWElziAC’ !■$ ALWAYS Washington Star Syndicate. Inc. //■ ■ 2 Yfay The Battalion U S P S 045 360 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 216, Reed McDonald Building, College Station, Texas . 77843. Represented nationally by National Educational Adver tising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday from September through May except during exam and holiday Deriods and the summer, when it is published on Tuesday hrough Thursday. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester; $33.25 per . school year; $35.00 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 216, Reed McDonald Building, College Station, Texas 77843. United Press International is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Liz Newlin Managing Editor Andy Williams Asst. Managing Editor Dillard Stone News Editors Karen Comelison and Michelle Burrowes Sports Editor Sean Petty City Editor Roy Bragg Campus Editor Keith Taylor Focus Editors Beth Calhoun and Doug Graham Staff Writers Meril Edwards, Nancy Andersen, Louie Arthur, Richard Oliver, Mark Patterson, Carolyn Blosser, Kurt Allen, Debbie Nelson, Rhonda Watters Photo Editor Lee Roy Leschper Jr. (Photographers Lynn Blanco, Sam Stroder, Ken Herrera Cartoonist Doug Graham Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Regents. The Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students < as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. ' The Battalion Friday Texas A&M University y November 2, 1979 wl Analysis Bangladesh leader brings stability, a condition mistrusted by its peopk SOCIE1 You i and J By SUZANNE F. GREEN United Press International DACCA, Bangladesh — President Ziaur Rahman has declared war on the cataclysmic problems that led Henry Kis singer to dub Bangladesh an “international basket case.” Zia, as he is known in South Asia, has warned his cabinet of a “revolution to bet ter the lot of the common man” in Bangladesh. This month Zia called on his Bangladesh National Party to enact legislation that would change Bangladesh’s “colonial sys tem of administration ... radically ... to a people-oriented” one. Earlier he told his cabinet to “be prepared to make sac rifices.” Although Zia did not detail his plans for change, his impressive track record in tackling Bangladesh problems indicates he means business. Widely regarded as a man of quiet in tegrity, the 44-year-old president has taken first steps — self-help reform pro grams — to break Bangladesh’s begging bowl. Although a record $1.3 billion in foreign aid is expected to pour into South Asia’s poorest nation in 1979, government projects in food for work, education, col lective farms, family planning and wo men’s rights have begun to erode what one foreign economist called the “psychology of dependence.” Zia accomplished this year what most thought impossible: he kept the nation’s 90 million people from famine in a drought year. Exactly five years ago, nearly 50,000 Bangladeshis died in a drought not nearly as severe. Political observers now marvel that the same combination of political ne glect, poverty, bad water and land man agement and general lack of foresight did not produce a similar disaster in 1979. “Quite frankly we are mighty im pressed,” said one Western diplomat. Zia did much of the overseas shopping himself for 2.2 million tons of food grain (200.000 tons from the United States) im ported to meet the food production shortfall. Defying skeptics among international donors who thought he would never be able to get the food into the stomachs of the nation’s poor, Zia worked 20 hours a day to double the capacity of Bangladesh’s two ports to move 16,000 tons of food per day. To unclog the distribution system, he cut out a battery of corrupt middlemen to effectively stave off starvation in a record shortfall year. Corruption, which thrives in the world’s largest regular recipient of foreign aid, compounds the chronic food shortage and is a major rival for Zia’s attention. He started his drive at the top by declar ing his own modest assets and asking his government ministers to follow suit. Most political observers say it was an offer none could refuse. This year the usual devastating floods did not follow the drought. Instead there was record 18 percent inflation, astronom ical unemployment, a brain drain to the Middle East, power cuts that crippled in dustry, and a stubbornly growing popula tion. The drought caused food prices to soar and left 30 to 40 percent of the nation’s population — more than half of it rural but landless — without work. Those who are young and trained left for the Middle East and salaries they can live on. The foreign remittances they generate are a boon, hut the brain dnjCAPS A suited in breakdowns and cl#' the N pair of strategic equipment sucIm- 9 a. it P lan . ts - . .. FALL I The population, still steeped p, j n t lief that bigger families means perity, is booming, addingSOOi mouths every three months. Inheritance laws have divi into small plots that make i forms impossible, andcropsh tinue even when the rainisj And the bottom has fallen \|SC B/ market for jute, the nation’shg, Schul crop, so women bum it tot; Cath) -Entu Many observers believe« 003, 1 politician, will survive the SINGIN these problems generate I lution to success. He has effectively decimatedlj tion, leaving it politically imp But Bangladesh was weat.^ F? lence, and governments havtl|v . gone unexpectedly. “Stability is new to us,’’I Bangladeshi political scientiJ come to trust it, we fear we )OTBj to# \W& ■ HARD l hard l MSC BA ) feat in | > n g ar SOCIET Room ASSOCL | in I le Buildi “SUPER »■ the hi | 11 p.i HORSE1 ( horse i I handi< RIO GR. I luck b E1D-UL- V Koran \i Also, p activit OFF-CA Ramie I larrii •RANG] ; tures | ence 1 Susan B. Anthony dollar deflates i Susan B. Anthony was a great woman, and is deserving of all the honors that the country can bestow on her. But the mint did the pioneer feminist an injustice by placing her image on the new $1 coin. It looks like a quarter. It feels like a quarter. It has the heft of a quarter. And we live in mortal fear of giving one away as a quarter. Acceptance of the mostly-copper coin has been so poor that mint director Stella B. Hackel went to a convention of bankers in New Orleans to beg them to put more of them into circulation. Only 100 of the 9,000 delegates came to hear her speak — a fair measure of the bankers’ enthusiasm for her proposal. Hackel concedes that there is even more public resistance to the Anthony coins than there is to the infamous $2 bill, and she said the mint is thinking of color ing them brass or gold to make them more appealing. No, it’s the size that’s wrong. Even in inflationary times the dollaroui keep up pretensions, but the w thony coin deflates itself. We think that the mint shout of the 300,000 coins that are no«| lation and melt them downs metal, using $2 bills to fuel the] Los Angeles Times , COMMl v the fii •! Hand< Every PHA 5 Miller MSC. MSC CA 601, P ASSOC D : Aggie 1 BIBLE S : the A1 Letters 456 north area dorm diners agree: Sbisa meals leave much to be desired V Editor: After many empty bottles of Pepto- Bismol, we, the second floor residents of Crocker Hall and the north area dorms feel that the quality of food served at Sbisa Dining Hall leaves much to be desired. Specifically, Tuesday, October 30, the main course of the evening meal was labeled “grilled steak.” Whether these stringy uncooked pieces of decomposing mess were steak, or not, is still in doubt. This waste was not fit to eat! Upon completion of the meal, one could not help but be reminded of the gruesome details revealed by Upton Sinclair about the meatpacking industry in “The Jungle.” Several of our residents collected about one hundred uncooked steaks (?) and were shunned away by an uncaring Sbisa man ager after they were brought to his atten tion. Tonight’s meal was but the headline of a long list of vile items served at Sbisa. These include spoiled lettuce (unmistake- able by the brown tinge in the leaves), un cooked crust on many of the fried foods, desserts that are generally swimming in water, and hamburger patties that have reach “critical mass” (i.e. completely char-broiled). We realize that quality of food is much more expensive than our $500 board plans allow, but it seems that what we have could be prepared better. It is high time that something be done to improve the de sirability, and, if nothing else, revive the mere ambition to eat at Sbisa. To serve large numbers of people hot, home-cooked meals is next to impossible, but let’s not drive otherwise healthy stu dents to the “Quack Shack” with upset stomachs and uncontrollable diarrhea. — Ron Cormier, ’82 Editor’s note: Copies of this letter were displayed in 10 north area dorms for about 12 hours, and 456 signatures on 15 pages were collected. Right to know profits Editor: After reading Professor Bowers’ letter in Wednesday’s Battalion, several of my classmates and I had a good laugh at his apparently naive approach to return on in vestment (ROI). However, the disparity between his conclusions and those of Dr. Kiem are endemic to the use of ROI as a measure of performance. ROI is rather ambiguous and can be ap proached from several conceptual frameworks. It is of absolute importance that the analyst be consistent in approach when crossing industrial boundaries. Dr. Kiem is not known for making statements without verifying logical consistencies. True to form, his approach to the ROI of the two industries is logical and consistent. Professor Bowers, on the other hand, could be quite correct in his analysis; how ever, it is difficult to know for certain since he chose only to refute Dr. Kiem’s state ment and did not attempt to show oil com pany ROI under his method. Had Profes sor Bowers done so, it is highly likely that the two academicians would have come to similar conclusions. On the subject of biased reporting, I must point out that it is possible to editorialize without making explicit state ments. Implicit statements such as story choice, placement, and tonal presentation (commonly known as the Cronkite effect) are all valid forms of reporting bias. In conclusion, the public has a need and a right to know about profits of public cor porations. However, the “red herring” crawls both ways. — Michael W. Lambert, ’77 Correction In the stoiy on Texas Spill Technology Program! day’s Battalion, the word “P land” was garbled so thati |“Rhonde Island.” The Batt grets the error. W r Readers’ Fori Guest viewpoints, in additiofj Letters to the Editor, are weld All pieces submitted to Red forum should be: • Typed triple space • Limited to 60 charactersi| line • Limited to 100 lines THOTZ by Doug Grab Regu single double