The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 14, 1972, Image 4

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Page 4
College Station, Texas
Friday, April 14, 1972
THE B ATT All THE
Pit
Establish telephone network
Ad hoc committee reports on military builduf
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. hP) — A
handful of antiwar activists,
drawn together in the past week
by the escalation of hostilities in
Indochina, has established a tel
ephone network to monitor the
buildup of American forces.
Operating from offices of oth
er antiwar groups to which most
of them also belong, the Ad Hoc
Committee on Military Buildup
has supplied to news media since
last Saturday detailed information
on the buildup of U.S. forces in
tended to counter the current
North Vietnamese offensive.
Information provided by the
committee, and later confirmed by
independent sources, includes
movement of ships, men and
planes from bases in Florida, Vir
ginia, California and Hawaii and
stepped-up activity at bases in
the Philippines and in Japan.
The Pentagon will not confirm
troop movements. Some of the
group’s information cannot be
confirmed. But much of it has.
The information disseminated
around-the-clock by the antiwar
activists comes from sources at
coffee houses and antimilitary
movements near military bases
in this country and abroad. Much
of the material is supplied by
draftees and other military men
who privately tell antiwar activ
ists everything they know, the
committee says.
“We are doing this so people
will know what is happening,”
one committee member said.
“If they know the real truth,
maybe they’ll know what we are
really doing about Vietnam.”
Running a telephone bill to
what they say is more than $8,-
000 in a week the committee says
U. N. conference aims
to help poor countries
SANTIAGO, Chile <A>> _ Thou
sands of delegates from 141 na
tions assembled Thursday for an
other try at ending the awesome
disparities between the world’s
rich and poor.
President Salvador Allende of
Chile told them the poor countries
of the so-called Third World have
drastic problems.
The occasion was the opening
ceremony of the third U.N. Con
ference on Trade and Develop
ment—UNCTAD III. The confer
ence, held every four years, first
assembled in Geneva in 1964 at
the urging of the world’s underde
veloped countries, which were dis
satisfied with the existing U.N.
structure.
Covering a wide range of fi
nancial and economic topics,
UNCTAD III is a forum to seek
ways for the world’s wealthier
countries to aid their poorer coun
terparts in speeding up their de
velopment and raising the living
standard of their people.
UNCTAD, however, is a con
sultive body and has no power
to enforce recommendations and
decisions.
In a speech of more than an
hour, Allende said that if present
international systems do not
change, 15 per cent of the people
in the Third World will die of
hunger.
The underdeveloped countries
went away generally disappoint
ed from the New Delhi UNCTAD
conference in 1968, after no dra
matic concessions were won from
the rich countries in such areas
as preferential treatment for
manufactured goods from under
developed nations.
But Allende, a Marxist who has
pledged to lead his under-develop
ed country “down the road to so-
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cialism,” expressed new hope for
the success of UNCTAD.
“It is clear to all that the fi
nancial conceptions of the post
war period are tottering,” he de
clared to the several thousand
delegates and observers in the
modern new assembly hall built
especially for UNCTAD.
“The now or strengthened cen
ters of political and economic
power are generating striking
contradictions among the indus
trialized countries themselves.”
it has learned that 25 ships, 486
planes and 30,650 U.S. military
men have been sent from bases
around the world to Indochina.
The committee came into being
last Saturday when George Stein,
a newsman at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology campus
radio station, read a news account
of a transfer of men from a Kan
sas base to Southeast Asia.
Intrigued by the story, Stein
notified friends who were gath
ered in Portsmouth, N.H., for a
New England convention of per
sons who operate coffee houses
and generally support antiwar
movements in areas around mili
tary bases.
From that meeting, Stein and
six others obtained telephone
numbers of people involved in
similar antimilitary efforts at
most U.S. bases in this country
and in Thailand, Japan and Ha
waii.
From there it was simply a
matter of putting together the
telephone network.
Ed Murray, one member of the
Committee, was asked whether
the group’s activities left it open
to criticism that it was perform-
By TH
The I
■13th d
ing a disserve or aiding U,S.t
mies.
Murray said committee»
hers “will not give out, m
we want to accept, any typ Sowners
classified information. To thea s|start th
of our knowledge, everytli
we’ve given out is unclassilia 86 gam'
He said it was the commiSi walkoui
belief that they had not distrii
ed any information which*: after
aid the enemy, contending: 1 tween
feel they probably know ijchicagi
more than that.”
“We’re getting it out to
people,” he said. “This war:
to end and we’d like to see;
people end it in this election'
Bulletin Boon
Tonight
The Computer Science F:
Club will hold their annuali*
at 5 p.m. at Pavilion 3 at It
Park. Bring a covered dish; dii
will be provided.
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFll
The Church..For a Fuller Life..For You
MIL''
locked
ball A
off chi
Ti
to
Here is one of those great epigrams of
my favorite philosopher — Dad! Or was it
Mother? It’s hard to remember for sure.
But, anyway, it isn’t true. The older I get
the more I realize that there are some who
can tie their own neckties but still aren't
men.
Maturity is not measured by what you
can do. It is measured rather by your reasons
for doing—or not doing—things you can do.
Think that sentence through once more.
Your son will become a man when he has
sound reasons for doing one thing and not
doing something else, even though he could
have done either.
It is in the character-molding and spiri
tual growth which the Church provides that
both youth and adults discover the soundest
motivation of life. In worship and religious
training we embrace the reasons that will
prompt our courageous decisions as Chris
tian men and women.
Copyright 1972 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia
Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society
Sunday
John
14:1-6
Monday
Matthew
28:1-8
Tuesday
Luke
24:1-12
Wednesday Thursday
Luke Luke
24:13-22 24:36-49
Friday Saturday
John Acts
20:19-29 1:1-11
CALENDAR OF
CHURCH SERVICES
A&M METHODIST
-Sunday School
-Morning Worship
9:45 A.M.-
10:65 A.M.-
6 :30 P.M.—Campus & Career Class
6 -.30 & 6 :00 P.M.—MYF Meetings
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
Sunday Mass—9, 11 A.M. & 7 P.M.
(Folk Mass)
Weekday Masses—5:15 P.M.
Saturday Mass—6 P.M.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th East and Coulter, Bryan
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Holy Day Masses—6:15, 7 P.M. & 12:15
Confessions—Saturday 5-&, 6:45-7 :15
..—Priest
10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School
5 :00 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :46 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Servic
7 :00 P.M.—Preaching Service
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
9:15 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship
7 :30 P.M.- -Evening Servic
10:30 A.M.-
9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School
11 :00 A.M.—Sunday Service
11:00 A.M.-2 P.M.—Tues. Reading Rm.
8:00 & 10:00 A.M. Worship
9 :00 A.M.—Bible Study
6 :15 P.M.—Young People's Class
6 :00 P.M.—Worship
7 :15 P.M.—Aggie Class
9:80 A.M.—Tues. - Ladies Bible Class
7:15 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study
7 :00-8 :00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room
8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Homestead & Ennis
9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :60 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Young People
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
305 Old Highway 6, South
FIRST BAPTIST
9:30 AM—Sunday School
10 :46 AM Morning Worship
6:10 PM—Training Union
7 :20 PM—Evening Worship
6:45 PM—Choir Practice & Teachers’
meetings (Wednesday)
9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worsl
6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7 :30 P.M.—Evening Worship
ST. THOMAS’ EPISCOPAL CHURCH
warm-
pressh
I slated
rence.
I Mar
are cc
Jfi/L, 3,
BRYAN, TEXAS
502 West 26th St.
PHONE TA 2-1572
Campus
and
Circle
Theatres
College Station
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
University
National Bank
NORTH GATE
Sure Sign of Flavor
SAN IT ARY
Farm Dairies
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
BRYAN
• HARDWARE
• CHINA WARE
• CRYSTAL
• GIFTS
STUDENT
PUBL1CATI!
The
Exchange
7:45 PM—Midweek Services (Wed.)
Southside of Campus
, The Rev. Wm. R. Oxley
10 :00 A.M.—Sunday Service
7 :00 P.M.—Adult Service
305 Old College Road South
SECOND BAPTIST
710 Eisenhower
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School
Service
ng Union
11:00 A.M.—C
.—Sunday
.—Church
,—Training
Rector,
Phone 846-6133
Sunday Services—8 :00 A.M., 10 :00 A.M.
6:00 P.M.
Church School—10 :00 A.M. Sundays
Canterbury Group—11:15 A.M. and
6:00 P.M. Sundays
A.M.—Sun. Breakfast - Stu. Ctr.
9 :46 A.M.—Church School
6 :30 P.M.—Trai:
7 :30 P.M.—Church Service
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :00 P.M.—Sun. Single Stu. Fellowship
7 :16 P.M.—Wed. Student Fellowship
OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN
6 :45 A.M.—Fri. Communion Service
Wesley Foundation
8 :30 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at
Worship
9 :30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All
Holy Communion—1st Sun. Ea. Mo.
GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
2505 S. College Ave., Bryan
An Independent Bible Church
9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School
10:60 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:00 P.M.—Prayer and Bible Study
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
Hubert Beck, Pastor
9 :30 A.M.—Bible Class
10 :46 A.M.—Divine Worship
Bible <
O :46 A.M.—Divine Worship
6 :00 P.M.—Worship Celebration
7 :30 P.M.—Wednesday, Discussion
Group
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
3205 Lakeview
9 :46 A.M.—Bible School
v :4b a.m.—Bible School
10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :00 P.M.—Youth Hour
7 :00 P.M.—Evening Worship
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
CHURCH
North Coulter and Ettle, Bryan
9 :30 A.M.—Sabbath School (Saturday)
11:00 A.M.—Worship Service
7 :30 P.M.—Prayer Meeting (Tuesday)
Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
BB&L
BRYAN BUILDING &
LOAN ASSOCIATION