The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 02, 1986, Image 12

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    “Call it Love”
Charity Tennis Tournament
April 6,1986
The men of Moses Hall and the women of Alpha Chi
Omega sorority are hosting a tennis tournament to
raise money for Cystic Fibrosis and Easter Seals.
The tournament will be held at the TAMU Tennis
Center on Sunday, April 6. Must be 16 years of age.
TAMU intermural rules will be followed in all games
and prizes will be awarded.
There are five divisions: women’s singles, men’s sin
gles, women’s doubles, men’s doubles and mixed
doubles. Entry fee is only $4 per person ($8 per dou
ble team). Players or team must bring own tennis
balls.
Name
Address Phone
Division: WS, MS, WD, MD, Mixed
Age Amt enclosed ....
Our schedulers will be in touch to let you know the time and loca
tion of your first game. Deadline for return of entry form: 5 p.m.
April 4, 1986.
Return to: Tennis Tournament
P.O. Box 2844
College Station, TX 77841
or 274 McFadden Hall
Page 12/The BattalionAVednesday, April 2, 1986
Wiley
(continued from page 1)
the people to take part in the plot,
the scheduled date of the assassina
tion, and the assassins’ training site
as compiled through intelligence re
ports. Carter said Khadafy then as
sured him there would be no assassi
nation.
Ambrose labeled Vietnam “the
most disastrous of all our interven-
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tions.
He said he thinks the United
States was drawn into that conflict by
“an absence of a sense of limits,” say
ing “6 percent of the world’s people
cannot control the rest of the world
or grant to the rfest of the world
peace, happiness and prosperity.”
Ambrose also said the nature of
America’s victory in World War II
has left the nation with a legacy.
“That left us with this legacy , the
feeling that we can always come up
with a final solution to a problem if
we put our minds to it,” he said.
“This, it seems to me, is dangerous,
impossible, and it raises false hopes.”
On the subject of relations with
the Soviet Union, Ford said Soviet
domestic problems could be used as
an American bargaining tool.
“Look at Soviet oil production,”
Ford said. “It’s fallen off in the last
couple of years.
“And the precipitous decline in
crude oil prices is going to hurt the
Soviet Union more than any other
nation in the world, including Tex
as,” he said, drawing a laugh from
the audience.
“Secondly,” Ford said, “Soviet ag
riculture has been and is a failure.
And the net result is they’re losing
their capability to feed and clothe
their people. The Soviet Union is
facing an economic crisis, and we
should put pressure on them and . . .
get concessions from them militarily
and otherwise.”
Ambrose replied that the Soviets
are holding to their price in oil and
still selling it to Eastern bloc nations
for $25 a barrel.
“With regard to this business of
managing the decline of the Soviet
Union,” Ambrose said, “that’s what
they’ve been saying to each other (in
Washington) since 1945.”
Ford answered that as Eastern
bloc nations’ economies worsen, so
also will that of the Soviets.
At a news conference held earlier
Tuesday, Carter and Ford said the
United States’confrontation with Li
bya in the Gulf of Sidra had both
positive and negative results.
Carter said, “I think both sides
have claimed a big victory in the Si
dra Gulf. Khadafy got exactly what
he wanted.”
That included personal publicity,
popularity at home, worldwide at
tention drawn to his cause, elevation
to the same level as the leaders of the
superpowers, and a cementing of
relationships with his allies, Carter
said.
“Three or four months ago, Kha
dafy was an outcast in the Arab
world,” he said. “Now, it would be al
most impossible for an Arab leader
to condemn Khadafy.
“At the same time, I think that
President Reagan has cemented his
popularity in our own country. A lot
of people wanted to see Khadafy get
a bloody nose.”
Ford said the Libyan conflict dem
onstrated the superiority of U.S. mil-.
itary hardware as compared to So
viet equipment.
“Now you can say that the Li
byans, if they were the operators,
didn’t know how to use it,” Ford
said. “But there were, I’m sure, some
instances where Soviet advisers . . .
were operating this equipment.”
Both former presidents said dur
ing the conference that an increase
in American troops in Central
America is not a certainty.
But Carter predicted that more
American troops would be in Cen
tral America in two years than there
are now.
On the subject of South Africa,
Carter said President Reagan’s con
structive engagement policy is per
ceived by much of the world as one
which condones apartheid.
“We ought to make it clear to the
rest of the world that we are in the
forefront of condemning apartheid
in South Africa and calling for its de
mise,” Carter said.
Ford replied, “The record is very
clear. President Reagan totally op
poses apartheid.”
Ford went on to say that adher
ence to the Sullivan principles by
American businesses doing business
in South Africa is the best way to
help that nation’s black population.
The Sullivan principles is a code
followed by over 100 U.S. companies
operating in South Africa. The code,
in part, requires signers to ban seg
regation in workplaces, treat all em
ployees fairly, provide equal pay for
equal work, use more nonwhite
managers, and urge other South Af
rican companies to support equal
rights for blacks.
Police Beat
The following incidents we
reported to the Texas A&M Uni
versity Police Department
through Monday:
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• A gold nugget ring withtw
diamonds was stolen from a room
in Me Inn is Hall.
• A drawing lx>ard, calculator
and other items were stolen from
Henderson Hall.
• Five bicycles were stolen.
• Two wallets were stolen.
BURGLARY OF A BUILD-
1NG:
• A stiver-colored replica ofa
jet was stolen from the Militan
Sciences Building.
HARASSMENT:
• A woman in Clements Ha!
reported that obscene noteswert
being slipped under her door
She also reported receiving tele.
IVol.
someone:
phone calls from
breathing heavily.
ARSON:
• A man in Davis-Gary Hal
reported hearing two explosion!
in the dormitory. After timber
investigation, the man found a
pile of flaming newspapers in a
second floor bathroom. The man
said he found withtn the newspa-
per live 12-gauge shotgun shdb.
which didn’t contain pellets.
ASSAULT:
• jjk. woman reported thatjld of
while she was sitting in a nwmin l s j c lei
the Physics Building, a man ap-1 ( | Mik
proached her. pushed a whippedjledult
cream pie into her face and left 111 ad n
the area. Ldustri.
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