Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, September 23,1983 ‘Scoop’ Jackson: the man by Steve Gerstel United Press International WASHINGTON — For almost four and a half hours, the Senate last week paid its final respects to Henry “Scoop” Jackson. The memorial was a moving tribute, heartfelt and genuine, which continued on and on in the Senate chamber until 38 senators said their goodbyes. They praised Scoop Jackson for his achievements, and they were many and great; they praised his political abilities, and they were many and great; they praised his attributes as a man, and they, too, were many and great. But, as sometimes nappens when col leagues try to capsule their thoughts for a departed friend, the small, personal re collections are forgotten. Yet often, they tell much about a man. The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member ot Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference Editor Hope E. Paasch Managing Editor Elaine Engstrom City Editor Beverly Hamilton Assistant City Editor Kelley Stnitli Sports Editor John Lopez Assistant Sports Editor Joe Tindel Entertainment Editor .... RebecaZimmermann Assistant Entertainment Editor Shelley Hoekstra News Editors Brian Boyer, Kathy Breard, Tracey Taylor, Kelly Miller Photo Editor Eric Evan Lee Staff Writers Brigid Brockman, Ronnie Crocker, Scott Griffin, Christine Mallon, Michelle Powe, Ann Ramsbottom, Stephanie Ross, Karen Schrimsher, Carol Smith, Angel Stokes, John Wagner, Kathy Wiesepape, Wanda Winkler Cartoonists Paul Dirmeyer, Scott McCullar Photographers Brenda Davidson, Michael Davis, Guy Hood, John Makely, Dean Saito Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting news paper operated as a community service to Texas A&M University and Bryan-College Station. Opinions ex pressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or the author, and do not necessarily represent the opinions oi Texas A&M University administrators or faculty mem bers, or of the Board of Regents. The Battalion also sen es as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography clas ses within the Department of Communications. Questions or comments concerning any editorial mat ter 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. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holi day 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 reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. 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. Although others touched on these things, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., made it the focus of his remarks — and in the process told much about Jackson, the pri vate man. Biden conceded he was not a friend of Jackson’s. To claim that distinction, he said, would be “presumptions,” citing the 30 vears in age which separated them. Nor were they compatible politically. They agreed on most domestic issues but disagreed on virtually every aspect of foreign policy. Yet, Biden related two stories that per fectly portray the tremendous impact Jackson had on him. Certainly, there must be others in the Senate who could tell the same. The first story begins the night before the 1972 Florida primary. Jackson, strug gling for the Democratic presidential nomination, was having dinner at the home of Sterlin Monroe in suburban Miami. Biden, then only 29, was in the area, trying for “some legitimacy” to prove to Delaware's voters that he should be their next senator. He and a more gutsy friend decided to crash the dinner. Here was Jackson, beat from cam- paigning, looking for a little relaxation, vexed by his inability to catch on, and contronted by a neophyte he did not know. “Come on in. Sit down. What’s the problem?” Jackson asked and fed Biden some dessert. Biden was elected to the Senate that fall but before he took the oath of office, his wife was killed in a car accident. “Who was in my office a week after I got here?” Biden asked. “Scoop Jackson, saying ‘Is there anything I can do for you?’ Jackson was not asking whether he could help get Biden his committees, which he had already done, but “he wanted to know whether or not he could help me.” Up for re-election in 1978, Biden was in trouble but, after fighting with Jackson over foreign policy issues for six years, could not bring himself to call for help. Jackson, however, called. He said, “What do you want me to do? You have got those guys from the right coming af ter you. What do you want me to do?” Then Jackson, unsolicited, came into Delaware and raised money among his friends for Biden. nearly as strongly” as he does now. He changed after a “long, long discus sion” with Jackson, who aLo urged him to and visit Israel, Eastern Europe centration camps the con- It was after this that Biden was “able to understand with any of the sense and depth of emotion that he, like me, a non- Jew, felt about what had happened.” Biden said, “Scoop Jackson changed a mv ooliti change e and major part of my political life and my attitude about a whole segment of society that I did not understand before.” Super-tech spy game not for fainthearted by Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer When ill-fated Korean Air Lines Flight 007 flew into Soviet airspace, it stumbled into the middle of a high-tech game of chicken played daily by the superpowers. The game is called electronic surveill ance, and isn’t for amateurs. From Eielson Air Force Base near Fair banks, Alaska, and Shemya Air Force Base at the Western tip of the Aleutian Islands, Air Force and Navy aircraft routinely set out on reconnaissance missions near or over the Soviet Union’s Eastern edge. Data collected on these flights (called ELI NT for electronic intelligence) accumu late in supercomputers managed by the Na tional Security Agency (NSA) at Fort Meade, Md., among other locations. In his Sept. 5 address to the nation, President Reagan admitted that a recon naissance jdane had trailed KAL 007, but it had returned to Alaska prior to the Soviet attack. Meanwhile, U.S. military aircraft also traverse Soviet airspace, just as the Rus sians so ours, to test the range and frequen cy of radar on the ground. Although satellites and radar installa tions in Japan and other countries are undertaking an increased surveillance bur den, the U.S. is soon expected to make additions to its elctronic squadrons. For example. E-systems, of Dallas, is developing a pilotless drone that will be able to accomplish any number of tasks be fore its likely destruction by anti-aircraft missiles. Israel demonstrated the drone’s capabilities during its confrontation with Syria in Lebanon last year. America’s investment in electronic sur veillance technology, for which the Reagan administration is seeking $4.7 billion in 1984, may seem worth every penny after last week’s air atrocity. Yet it might be heading the U.S. and the Soviets toward more deadly, unnecessary incidents in the furture. As James Bamford, author of “The Puz zle Palace,” a book about the NSA, said last week, “The truth is that at any moment this whole game of electronic surveillance can blow up. It gets more risky day by day.” Footnote: On Nov. 8, 1981, a Soviet Aeroflot jetliner traveled over the Trident submarine base at Groton, Conn., and Pease Air Force Base in Portsmouth, N.H. Last March 4, a Cubana passenger jet flew over Griffiss Air Force Base, the home of a squadron of cruise missile-carrying B-52s in Rome, N.Y. The State Department de nounced both intrusions. *** Remember the rough treatment Vice President Bush received in West Germany last June from punks marching under the West German peace movement’s banner? As north Rhein-Westphalia state police have discovered, the rock-throwing youths in Krefeld weren’t all that they seemed. Among those rioters subsequently arrested was an undercover agent working for West German counterintelligence (Ver- fassungsehutz), whom state authorities termed one of the “most active troublemak ers” during the violent demonstrations against Bush’s Krefeld visit. *** America’s leading gun owners’ group won the championship last year in an obscure but important political spending category: election-related communications by an organization to its members. According to the Federal Election Com mission (FEC), the National Rifle Associa tion spent more than $800,000 of its treas ury funds on literature, get-out-the-vote and other efforts made on behalf of or against federal candidates. The NRA’s total accounted for 36 per cent of all spending last year, the FEC re ported. Letters Peace won’t be achieve through disbanding Isrea The second story Biden related dealt with Israel, an issue on which he “felt not Editor: As a concerned Jew and American I have been following the Middle East crisis all of my life. It is difficult for me to believe that there will never be peace in my country or in that region of the world. It is even more difficult for me to believe that there are still people in this world who think that the only way peace can be achieved is by disbanding the country of Israel and expelling the Jews from that re gion. Peace can only be achieved by having intelligent, well-educated men and women sit down to form a compromise that would benefit all people in that region. Camp. David is a perfect example of such a peace move. However, rattling rockets and shouting out media-fabricated cliches such as those displayed by the Palestinian students on this campus last year is no way for peace to be achieved. Nor is reminding students of the so- called “Israeli massacre” in Lebanon last year appropriate either. Especially since Israelis did not massacre anyone in Leba non, rather the Lebanese Christian Militia did. But, of course, this is just a fine point that can easily be overlooked in lieu of the fact that Israel is always the aggressor and Israel is always at fault. The PLO never once bombed civilian occupied towns in Israel nor have they attempted to unite the Arab world and the world in general to help “push the Jews into the sea. ” The PLO never killed school chil dren, never disrupted an Olympic game killing innocent athletes, and the Arab world never once attempted an all out attack on Israel during its Holiest Holidays. The Arab world did not denounce Egypt for signing a peace treaty with Israel, and Syria never backed out of peace talks which would have required the signing of a peace treaty. The PLO and Syrians are not firing at peace keeping forces in Lebanon and not one United States marine or any other sol dier has fallen in recent months at the hands of the PLO and Syrians. Of course, the list of things that the PLO and Arabs have not done to Israel, innocent Jews, and United Nations peace forces is endless. The thing that really bothers me is that the Arab world sends their children to school here for an education. Instead of using that education for the benefit of achieving peace those children return to their countries and continue the same old futile fight — a fight that no side will ever win and a fight whose only result are the multiple deaths of innocent civilians, Arabs and Jews alike. Stephen Weiss ’84 Decide for yourself Editor: I recently read an article in the Fall ’83 edition of Nutshell Magazine entitled “Hard Sell Religion.” I would advise people to read this article for the sake of fairness to the writer Rasa Gustaitis. What Gustaitis says about the Lexington Church of Christ in Boston and other chur ches and organizations may be true. I can not say otherwise, for I’ve never attended them. (I wonder if Gustaitis does, or ever did). I can say that the article was strongly biased and quite manipulative in stating its opinion against religion in general and Christianity specifically. Not all churches that claim Christian doctrine as their base know what true Christianity involves. If the churches and other organizations of which Gustaitis spoke operate as he claims, then I must say that I agree with him. Even God allows man freedom of choice. Many times persuasive tactics are decep tive, and the Bible, on which true Christ ianity is based, speaks against such a man ipulative use of words. (I Corinthians 2:1- 5). God is (and/or should be) important in everyone’s life. For every man dies; and if one believes in life after death, heaven and hell, then it is only common sense to decide where one will spend eternity. However, if one does not believe in life after death, I urge him to reconsider. My plea to those who read Gustaitis’ article: please do not completely “tune out” the Christians or other groups on campus; hear what they have to say and decide for yourself. Christopher King ’85 More ticket earnings Editor: The Texas A&M University Police De partment has really missed the point con cerning parking regulations. Ticketing for not having a parking sticker fully affixed to the vehicle window, is somewhat inade quate. There are three new regulations which would greatly improve this situation: 1. Ticketing for crooked parking stickers. 2. Ticketing for air bubbles between the sticker and the vehicle window. 3. Ticketing for having a dirty veto window. With these new regulations, it would technically possible to ticket almost eve vehicle parked on campus. Justthinkofj increased revenue that these regukiu would contribute! Let’s see what this revenue w amount to for one year. Ten dollarsatii multiplied times 10, (XX) vehicles multip times 215 days that the university is in S' This total amounts to approximately billion a year, but $10 for each oft! ^ violations is somewhat inadequate (or 1 crime that is being committed. This be raised from $10 to $100, which u greatly increase the revenue to S2; a year. Mike ) $220 hi Prisoner learns love Editor: I wrote this letter mainly because! §J ■ that if someone out there who is freecd see that someone that is in here, incanl ated, could still retain his lovefom then anyone can. I have a degree but I had much tola ^ R onn j e c, still. I am currently serving a oneyeard ~ '■ ~ on term in the infamous Attica prisoii Fhe College S by Steve Tl Battalion Rep Despite a lack of lity and polish, C , guest conductor rated Chicago jrchestra, created bformance in Ri |rium Thursday r For an orchestr; |r, however, the ] is not up to par. Plagued with t ns, imprecise at ivenly woodwind chestra conveyed ork" and dispar ( most of the cor Don’t misundi Jint of this review 'dilelfseethed with ft fn.The string sect le instrument, m< and with prec isters of quick, c [es and Navarro expressiveness namics. Again and agai icendo and i#vements created calm, pressure length and sof irm of thrilling c pn Richard Str; a” soon was lullei flow that captur audience until CM n • ity 1 ttnin Battalion Sti uncil accepted tl of the city’s cot DWI. I will be released in April of neit and return home to Texas. r 't_ Since 1 have been here, I havewitnes n Thursday mg! abuse and cruelty beyond descnptionJ ^ ^ , e[ ^ ()r listened while grown men have criedtk unt ^. ypimai she selves to sleep due to sheer lonelinessi The city’s compre even saw a young man attempt suicidt guide to admit cause his girlfriend left him foranotk vise growth and 1, too, have suffered great lonelinessi he city over the n depression hut have learned someth® Mayor Gai here that no college textbook or classrti lounce ^ t() t ^ e aH could have possibly taught me. r r P a ; ts of th P a I have learned that love is muchstro®^ 1 ? pj^ner ' than hate. With love, one has purpose!, ,[ remained to 1 meaning in life. With hate, one merely ie plan was suppe ists around the borders of life. Eachdi xipulation studie look into hundreds of faces thatarefl siayo suggested t with hate and bitterness and thistmlyi idopted in its ent dens me. as - Life lost its meaning to me when! the meeting s turned home from the Viet Nam w ^deration to ado] i.i . ... ttthe animal shelte served there for two years with the 11, ie shelter , s boa Airborne division. L I have wasted over 12 years of m)l Halter, a mem through drinking and escaping my rcs]lrd, said that since sibilities. I had family and friends theaM— Now, I’m all alone but havefoundl| peace and contentment within ray When I am released and come back b on April, I will come home muchwisHtj more important than that, I willcometo | with the attitude that I owe life a not vice-versa! 1 have no way of knowing if this lij will he deemed worthy of printing, that if just one other person could real message then it was worth writing. rne o i “ . Vi Alfred John Grenff in Attica, New I 1 These Texas i viewed and se the most se officers they ft done for their Hospitality enjoyed . Tom Blac Tom Carls Editor: The University of California Club of Texas, which coordinated thd vities for the UC alumni and friends" attended the Aggie vs. Cal footballyn | wishes to thank the student body ford'I j < hospitality and courtesy. IVlSClClC The Board of Directors of the f ' eeived a number of favorable comm from individuals who attended Cal supporters commented on thecouil extencled to them by the Aggies durinSl after the game. To all Cal supporters J an enjoyable day. Again, thank you for the Aggie W j«4!arey Cob Co-ChairpT L , ^ Cal vs Aggie FootbalK| Damian C< lohn Spell icott Ellio lark Graj Slouch p re § hilsc by Jim EarllameS Sho John Greei Aftergradualion, as a Navy of Ktendal. rNavy operates the most ad the Nuclear Navy get th luniors and Seniors who q> To qualify, you must be a U.i calculus-based physics with a Contact Lieuten I nuclear engineei about all your c “I’ve found that for some reasi | it makes studying easier. ”