The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 28, 1982, Image 18

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    national
Happy birthday
staff photos by Peter Rocha
Senior Jim Frisch’s friends help him celebrate his birth
day a day late (right) by throwing him into Rudder Foun
tain Tuesday. Frisch, a forest management major from
Austin, had worn a suit Monday so his friends waited a day
to honor him.
Carter: Autonomy
for the West Bank
last accord item
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Former
President Jimmy Carter says
now that the Sinai peninsula has
been returned to Egypt, the last
item on the agenda of the Camp
David accords is autonomy for
the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
“The only thing left to do on
the Camp David agreement is to
move forward on autonomy,”
Carter said Monday on ABC’s
“Nightline.”
“ There is no confused or du
plicating agenda anymore. Now
there is one major item on the
agenda, and that is autonomy,
an ultimate resolution of the
West Bank.”
Carter said the absence of
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat, assassinated last year,
marred the return of the Sinai to
Egypt on Sunday.
“Sadat not being there left a
vacuum which it would not have
been possible to have Filled,” he
said.
“I believe that the leaders of
both nations (Egypt and Israel)
are willing now to move aggres
sively to resolve the other major
issue, which is autonomy.”
He said the Camp David pro
cess calls for the establishment
of an independent body to make
decisions on the region, the
withdrawal of Israeli troops
from the region and ultimate re
solution of autonomy in Five
years.
But, Carter said, the next step
of negotiations must call for
absolute security for Israel.
The former president also
said the Reagan administration
had not pursued the goals of the
Camp David process vigorously
enough.
Carter stressed throughout
the interview that the accords
reached in negotiations with
Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and Sadat re
main the best framework for
peace in the Middle East.
“The Camp David framework
is still there, it provides for nego
tiations with Syria, Palestinians,
Jordan,” he said. “It’s a good
compromise hammered out
over very difficult negotiations
for a long period of time.”
Now You
Know
United Press International
The longest sermon on record
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Battalion/Papf
April 28, II
NASA center
uses military
in ‘test group
United Press International
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — The
Marshall Space Flight Center is
serving as the training ground
for a small group of military en
gineers who could one dav be
armed forces astronauts.
The work of the 13 officers —
12 from the Air Force and one
from the Navy — is not de
scribed as training by NASA
spokesman Dave Drachlis.
“It’s more like familiariza
tion,” he said Monday. “They
are becoming familiar with the
space environment.”
Six to eight of the 13 have
worked in Marshall’s neutral
buoyancy simulator, a gigantic
water tank in which hardware
and men are suspended to simu
late the eff ects of weightlessness,
for a two-month period in 1980
and again this year.
A spokesman for the Air
Force’s Space Division in Los
Angeles, Lt. Col. Geoff Baker,
said the officers, mostly captains
and majors, are part of a test
program that could lead to a
military manned space ilight en
gineer.
The space shuttle Columbia is
expected to carry a military car-
f ;o on its fourth flight scheduled
or late June. However, there
are no immediate plans to man
the shuttle with mibl
nauts, even thoughn
spacemen have
grounds.
Air Force personnel
many of the later ski
moms, however. Thostl
slated for military m|
are said to involve Htfj 7C Mn
ployment for
early warning and naiij
“The purpose of tlnl
to give the engineeni]
feel of space envina
Drachlis said. “Theyara
for testing hardware t
training.”
But Baker said ihe.tl
is considering forminjjJ
corps of military spaas
ists that would be in da
Air Force cargo ania
space aboard theshutlie
nited I
“The NASA astra
i ontinue to drive then
said. " NASA is training J
spat e (light specialisiil
only reasonable thattheil
ment of Defense doll) he lommai
Baker said there v, t warned a !
t landestine about the Id be long;
eis ‘What thevarei' threatenei
test group," he said, ainfs air an
He said the Id will a disputed i;
sarily be amongtho t yy e ire g e . (
the first Air Forcegro tron , ] me ;
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