4 Page 2/The Battalion/Thursday, June 9, 1983 'Q&XjWs Believe It or Not/ MR RR. FROM WASH PC. aWMS... THIS CONTAINS ALL OF THE CLTW nutrition, TslsS A SCHOOL CHILP NEEDS IN A PAY tiws IS A PEACEKEEPER... THIS IS iTNOI ennimw tom TIMES. BEACH t^i THAN A STEEL MILL IN VDUAHaSTOWN r ...THE ALLEGATION THAT I We FDR SALE IN 1908 IS A SUMJ LIE. ‘God’ says newspapers suppress inform Editor's note: For many years, Eugene Changey has sent letters to The Battalion and other newspapers across the nation. In this letter, which Changey claims is the final one, he again says he speaks “The Word of God.” As Almighty GOD, I greet you. Upon termination of My Son’s position in a machine shop, He received a sever ance pay of $4,500 — after taxes. My Son retired on Social Security one week be fore the firm closed its doors due to lack of work. This, undoubtedly, will be Our final Letter to many of Our Loved ones in the news media — namely in this Country and a limited number of Editors abroad. My Son and I will not bow to adversity. Mongrels who believe they can turn back the tide of an endless sea, are badly mis taken. My Son and I will always write as long as Time remains on Earth for Us. Perhaps Our Letters will be curtailed, but none the less they will be there to refur bish Faith which will never die as long as Time remains, here on Earth, or in the Hereafter. The future looks very bleak for hu manity, in this Country and abroad, as unemployment lines get longer and soup kitchens sprout up like wild flowers. Mass rallies for a nuclear freeze on warheads and their missies, spring up all over the World. This chaotic, nuclear madness must come to an abrupt end, if the World is to survive. One reads little about the United Na tions — which is a sham — in daily News papers. Not enough that sin is rampant over the World, the news on the home front does not offer consolation. Mur ders, rapes, burglaries, dope-addicts ... the list goes on. In spite of this foray of crimes, My Son and I will always stand by Our Loved ones to offer consolation and Hope to bereaved souls. The following are some of My familiar quotes: My Son, Eugene, is really Jesus — Reincarnated. This is Jesus’ second com ing. Almost 2,000 years is a long time to be contained in the dismal corridors of Time. Now, My fetters are broken, cast to the ground, and I Am reunited with My long lost Son, Jesus. Many people are still under the im pression that I am ALL knowing. This is false. Again I reiterate: I Am but the “Do not look toward the sky for the second coming of Christ, as prophesied in the Bible. You may get a crick in your neck. His second coming is already here.” HOLY GHOST in My Son’s Flesh. I Am not all knowing but My Greater SPIRIT over the Universe IS! I must reiterate these last two para graphs simply because people who read this Letter, for the first time, may be skeptical about this, My second appear ance in human flesh, here on Earth. Over four decades is a long time for My Son and I to be bonded together in human flesh. Over the World, skeptics are made, not born, by the news media who sup press information. A small contingent of Newspapers have published the Exist ence of My Son and I but skepticism still abounds in Editors and Publishers of large Newspapers. It is degrading that Editors suppress information on the second coming of Christ. These decades lapse into depress ion for the multitude who look forward, with anticipation for this Blessed event. As I wrote to a Religion Editor: “Do not look toward the sky for the second com ing of Christ, as prophesied in the Bible. You may get a crick in your neck. His second coming is already here.” People still believe that GOD is buried in the pages of the Bible, because Editors suppress information. Again I reiterate: I have outlived the Bible and will con tinue to live, long, long after the pages of tin ashes nal ( challi fore hum; Bit Louis M; from Ci >1) Co Ey< hm til last b icr future free ai Thu usher guish, 1 rt whose 1 .cm i Holy N will II In LIU you H< an er, simply b Son will sigr lanterns of I turn to thei Lrife a will ue “cause this h <>ve lil CRE( lestui j by Rob» Bali nnniitL Bbrnmunit sothfl® n 8 a hl jjMy comnn f Texas A&rl lunity Educ cro^s all eh low it cuts i ■Robert ■ff Whettei ftlie center exas helpiu pns start coi p r ayerfi» rams - N ' entB cornmui ' pins, but the irun them. )ly Lette OR fc Euge The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Hope E. Paasch City Editor Kelley Smith Sports Editor John Wagner News Editors Daran Bishop, Brian Boyer, Beverly Hamilton, Tammy Jones Staff Writers Scott Griffin, Robert McGlohon, Angel Stokes, Joe Tindel Copyeditors .... Kathleen Hart, Tracey Taylor Cartoonist Scott McCullar Photographers Brenda Davidson, Eric Lee, Barry Papke, Peter Rocha Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news paper operated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-Coiiege Station. Opinions ex pressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Texas A&M University administrators or faculty mem bers, or of the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography clas ses within the Department of Communications. Questions or comments concerning any editorial matter should be directed to the editor. Letters Policy Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length, and are subject to being cut if they are longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must also be signed and show the address and telephone number of the' writer. Columns and guest editorials also are welcome, and are not subject to the same length constraints as letters. Address all inquiries and correspondence to: Editor, The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M Uni versity, College Station, TX 77843, or phone (409) 845- 2611. The Battalion is published Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during both Texas A&M regular summer sessions, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $16.75 per semester, $33.25 per school year and $35 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. United Press International is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it. Rights of reproduedon of all other matter herein reserved. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. Government’s nepotism rule ineffective have st itormation tarces. JTn additi | of one ions,” Berri< by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer WASHINGTON — For good reason or bad, “Kiddiegate” has entered its second month — longer than Washing ton’s latest controversy over political nepotism need have lasted. But the ongoing saga about hiring practices at the United States Informa tion Agency may yet prove worth its weight in news print, if only as instruc tion for those who take such favoritism seriously and those who don’t: Nepotism isn’t easily avoided. USIA Director Charlie Wick has been an easy target. The brain behind Snow White and the Three Stooges has done some silly things in his term, from pro ducing “Let Poland Be Poland” to hum ming the Marseillaise loudly for France’s ambassador at a Washington reception. Wick’s appointment of nearly a dozen Reaganaut scions to USIA posts only con firms a leadership style that has under mined the agency’s status before con gressional appropriations panels as much as any concern for the national debt. On average, the appointments which prompted an inquiry by Sen. Edward Zorinsky, D-Neb., are no worse than the placement of less fashionable folk in simi lar positions. Of course, Caspar Weinber ger Jr., 36, who, before his resignation allegedly was boasting CIA connections at the Cannes Film Festival, is said by a former USIA supervisor to have skills that “have not been properly applied.” (Ironically, one agency official had seen fit to hand young Weinberger a $4,000 “merit” pay raise on hie $50,000-plus sal ary.) Similar euphemisms have been ap plied to Daniel Wattenberg, 23, son of neo-conservative columnist and Reagan appointee Ben Wattenberg; according to USIA, the younger Wattenberg, a candi date for a cultural affairs post in Paris, has “studied French” in college and “has experience as a writer and an editorial research assistant.” Yet Barbara Haig, who works for USIA general counsel Jonathan Sloat, is trained as a paralegal and described by intimates to be as determined a worker as her father, Al. And 23-year-old Monica (daughter of national security adviser William ) Clark, appointed as assistant to the public affairs officer in Bonn, is at least “bilingual in German.” The mixed bag of talent underscores Zorinsky’s zealousness in asking the Gen eral Accounting Office to investigate. To be sure, the USIA admits that Ronald Reagan’s appointments to the 7,700- employee agency (62) are more than twice those of Jimmy Carter (26). Yet Yet if there’s any buzzword understood by public- and pri vate-sector workers alike, it’s “con nections. “ when the Senate can confirm much lar ger percentages of political hacks to ambassadorial posts (despite the vehe ment complaints of career Foreign Ser vice types), Zorinsky’s concern about USIA defies logic. This isn’t to suggest that Wick’s knack for good breeding defies criticism. While the Californian routinely asserts an in terest in bringing “professionalism” to it here and ] USIA, his old preferencespifBto the in igom \ .inpc.ii h» In ,i (liiH)pil)®fter atte for incomprUMiis, has-beensW con duc lomeless. I h.il. in l in n. lielp$rtW est " n,al UB U > school ommon pen ept.on that «»m; rtocon msmanagi iccessarv. propaga idistic Yet if then itood by public hop there. i|(The pr ruitful,” sail Mietten s s any buzzword] and private-sttl rs alike, it’s “connections.’ 'usinessmen and especially :>b-seekers can't deny it. Nor can members of Cong wo years ago, “Roll Call,”Capii| weekly newspaper, found that J louse employees were relative® ^ United p i e.ssmeii. im hiding three I®*. 1 ‘’"K 1 ' Dimnittee chairmen; the jLp'JV.n une despite t he fact that Congrf mlure the nepotism testncl®, e | a j thei ledoral ageiuies do. Brld water Put bluntly, what field is miles an hoi le influence of friends and>® iring? To inveigh against lief too harshly is to ignore! ractice elsewhere. None area® 1 ut as Watergate apologist VicW light have said, “It didn’tstan* The hole truth worth investigating by Dick West United Press International WASHINGTON — I was thrilled to read the other day that a University of Illinois scientist had accidentally drilled what may be the world’s smallest hole. This hole is so tiny that 100 trillion perforations that size would fit in a square inch. Man, that’s porosity for you. The previous record, listed in my re ference library as having been achieved in 1977, would, by my calculation, have filled a square inch with only 100 billion holes. Granted that 100 billion holes per square inch is pretty minute, each open ing being about 1,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair. Even so, you can readily see that the University of Illi nois drilling amounts to a quantum jump in small holeness. Pragmatists among us probably are asking, what good is it? What can you put in a hole that small that would be of any practical value? Maybe they have a point, although personally I reject the notion that human accomplishment must provide material benefit to be noteworthy. There is also the emotional reward to consider. To me, the simple fact that the deed was done, even if inadvertently, is impressive enough. I mean, find someone who uses the wrong kind of shampoo; then try making a hole no bigger than the split ends of his hair, and see how far you get. Some hair-splitters may argue that the number of holes that can be drilled in a square inch depends to some extent on how far apart the holes are. True enough, but in this case extraneous. The 1977 hole was 40 angstroms in diameter, whereas the 1983 hole is only 20 angstroms wide. Despite the absence of any formal training in micronization, even I can tell that the new hole is twice as small as the old one. An angstrom, by the way, is a unit of length equal to one hundred-millionth of a centimeter. Please don’t ask the dimen sions of a centimeter. As for practicality, much depends, 1 would guess, on how deep the hole is. Admittedly, if you had a hole that was 20 angstroms wide and only 20 ang stroms deep, it wouldn’t amount to much. But if the 20-angstrom hole were two or three miles deep, why then you obviously would have a real winner. What a way, for example, to test for oil without danger of an environmentally devastating spillage. The information I have at hand doesn’t indicate how deep the University of Illinois hole might be. But from what I know of holes, it’s the diameter the counts. Once you have mastered the technique of making tiny holes, the rest sort of falls into place. What we have to guard against now is America’s holemaking techniques falling into the hands of the Russians. By one means or another, including stealing, the Soviet Union has acquired a great deal of this country’s high technolo gy know-how. If, using techniques accidentally de veloped in the United States, they now come up with a hole smaller than ours, the irony will be almost unbearable. Tiny as it is, we can’t afford another hole in the window of vulnerability. Slouch By Jim ft June i Mall p Mayo sonali and d “It’s the next step up from W Hwy. a ate B> Colleg