10—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 27, 1981 i Military communication towers raised despite protests By DON WATERS Associated Press Writer WASIIINGTON, D.C. A network of spindly. 299-foot towers intended to help military communications survive atomic attack is sprouting across the country, dogged by attacks by anti-nuclear activists and some local officials. The target is the Ground Wave Emergen cy Network, or GWEN, whose first 56 tow ers the Air Force hopes to have in place and ready for testing by the end of this year or early 1987. Opposition has centered on the argument that a tower intended to help keep the military command structure viable after a nuclear strike would make an attractive target for a Soviet ballistic missile and thus imperil nearby residents. Those battling the $BOO million, multi-year program, also said it gives the illusion that a protracted nuclear war can be fought, indeed won. The nearly two-year effort to thwart the program has been especially strong in ac tivist, academic communities on the East and West coasts which the Air Force, with the guidance of a computer model, chose as hosts for the towers. In Amherst, Mass., home of the Universi ty of Massachusetts and Amherst College, 74 , • Try the Sampler! • Your favorite 3 toppings for the price of 1! izzy: // Expires 8/29 . /86 one coupon per customer one coupon per customer Personal ir 12" Pizza for Only $2.99 'Whole wheat dough available :A l rit2Cll 11 __James Pizza Si one coupon per customer U I I • -444444)'-liCskit) • ;$4lllllPr l' ? $1111111°-.4Cil it' )-441C)C ; Sfr-44( ' 014111.' 41(41C415P.-7 4 -**--t‘ *' • eieti*; S e - G .-- '-4 1 0•. % ' ' 'i * *-• ...- _ - • 'i ••• 1 • --, • r iii) c) • ''?: ~ ^ ' •• .‘, it. .4 , 40 . \ ' C‘% '% ... . A'