+ All Categories
Home > Documents > THEWORKAfTER 40'IEARS - Herbert W. Armstrongherbert-w-armstrong.com/magazines/plain_truth/Plain...

THEWORKAfTER 40'IEARS - Herbert W. Armstrongherbert-w-armstrong.com/magazines/plain_truth/Plain...

Date post: 26-Jun-2018
Category:
Upload: hoangminh
View: 216 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
20
THE "WORK" AfTER 40 'IEARS
Transcript

THE"WORK" AfTER 40 'IEARS

THE uMISSING DIMENSION"IN EDUCATION..•40 YEARS LATER

Personal from

F EW REALIZE the magnitude towhich this worldwide Workof God has grown. It is a ma­

j or-sca le educat ional programworldwide .

Actually, the Work started first ­in 1934 with one man and a helper,his wife.

The college, with an undergraduatecurriculum and students in residenceon campus, was founded in 1947 withfour students and a faculty of eight.Today there are three campuses andabout 1,300 students.

But , much larger in size andpower of impact, is the extensionprogram of the college. This is, initself, a huge industry worldwide . Itis an in-the-home educational ser­vice for all peoples .

On the following pages we takeyou on a tour around the world, toview pictorially, the facilities andoperations of this now major world­wide enterprise. Today the sunnever sets on our offices, plants , andoperations around the world . Ouremployed staff now reaches into thethousands, its expenditures into themultiple millions and still growingat a phenomenal pace .

It is the intriguingstoryof making themissing dimension in education avail­able to millions of people. It is thesuccess story of something neverdone before - of a huge educationalenterprise worldwide - seemingly in- .

credible, yet an accomplished andliving fact. And I didn't build oraccomplish it - no man could!

Here , in brief condensation, is thestory from its beginning.

I had experienced an uncommonearly training in busines s, in thespecific field of journalism and ad­vertising. This led to catching thevision of the missing dimension intoday's education. I had toured theUnited States as "idea man" forAmerica's largest trade journal tosearch out ideas successfully used inbusiness and in community devel­opment and social welfare . I hadpioneered in surveys, by personalinterview and by questionnaire, ob­taining, tabulating, analyzing, andclassifying information on businessand social conditions.

Through this intensive researchcovering many succeeding years inmy own advertising business, I wasbeing tremendously impressed withthe unhappy fact that even in theaffluent United States there was atragic dearth of peace, happiness,and abundant well-being.

I was aware also, of course , of thesickening conditions of poverty, ig­norance, filth and squalor, starva­tion, disease and death in the livesof more than half of all the earth'spopulation - in such countries asIndia, Egypt, and in so many areasin Asia, Africa , South America

not to speak of some areas equallywretched here in the United Statesand parts of Europe.

But WHY?To me it didn't make sense. For

every effect there had to be a CAUSE.I didn't know the CAUSE. Nor was itrevealed through education.

Then, at age thirty-five, I waschallenged and angered into an in­depth study of evolution and of thebiblical account of special creation.I studied the writings of Darwin,Lyell, Huxley, Spencer, Haeckel,Vogt. I researched into scientific evi­dence for or against the existence ofGod. From all sources, I found ab­solute proof, to me, of the existenceof God and the authority of theBible. I found absolute proof, to me,of the falsity of the theory of evolu­tion. And I found, of all places, inthe Bible the ANSWER to the ques­tion of all the world's evils.

I learned what it seemed neitherscience, education nor religion haddiscovered, that there is in living,inexorable motion an invisible spiri­tual LAW that regulates all humanrelationships. I learned through thisthe cause of all world ills.

The living, but invisible spirituallaw is simply the one WAY OF LIFEthat is diametrically contrary to theway humanity has been traveling. Itis the way of love instead of lust.The way of giving, sharing, serving,helping , instead of taking and accu­mulating in lust and greed. The wayofoutgoingconcerninsteadof incomingselfish desire. The way of courtesyand consideration instead of envy,jealousy, resentment, bitterness, ha­tred. The way of cooperation insteadof competition. The way of humilityand exalting God, instead of vanityand exalting the self. The way ofGod-centeredness, constantly ex­panding one's horizons, instead ofself-centeredness, shrinking one'shorizons constantly inward .

I found revealed what neitherscience, education, nor religion hadseemed to find there or to know ­the PURPOSE being worked out herebelow - the REASON why human lifewas placed here. I learned WHAT

2

man is, WHY he is, WHERE he is go­ing, and the WAY to this transcen­dent potential, of which educators,scien tists and theologians seemwholly unaware.

I found revealedthe factthat the veryfoundation of education to fit one forhappy and successful living is beingtotally ignored . That foundation isawareness of the purpose of life,knowledge of what man is, recogni­tion of the true values as opposed tothe false, and knowledge of the WAYwhich is the CAUSE of every desiredeffect. That knowledge is the dimensionthat is missing in today's education.

This new knowledge resulted in aseries of lectures in and near Eu­gene, Oregon , in the summer andautumn of 1933. Response wasspontaneous. Later, an invitationfollowed to speak on radio stationKORE. Frank Hill, owner, sug­gested a weekly program ex­pounding this MISSING DIMENSIONon his station. Thus, the first week in1934, The World Tomorrow programwas born.

The World Tomorrow was de­signed to assist and educate thoseseeking positive answers to the"unaskable" questions presented bytoday's tumultuous world condi­tions. It presents timely and chal­lenging commentary on chaoticinternational relations and insightinto world affairs. The analyses andanswers to today's world conditionsoffer a message of hope for thosewho desperately seek a better to­morrow.

In keeping our listeners abreast ofimportant world events, The WorldTomorrow television staff membershave, over the years, traveled farand wide to achieve on-the-scenecoverage. Firsthand informationand opinions are gained throughpersonal, in-depth interviews withworld leaders and those making to­morrow's headlines.

One month after The World To­morrow broadcast was born, ThePLAIN TRUTH, on February 1, 1934,made its most humble bow - an 8­page mimeographed "magazine"printed by use of a borrowed type-

. writer on a mimeograph, the use ofwhich was donated by the localmimeograph sales agent. I was thecompositor, Mrs. Armstrong ran thepress - by hand - and she kept themailing list by pen and ink.

That first edition consisted of ap­proximately 175 copies. Total cost,stencils, ink and paper, was proba­bly less than $2. The broadcastingwas costing $2.50 per week - $130per year.

From that almost infinitesimalbeginning, like the proverbial grainof mustard seed, the broadcastinghas expanded until it is worldwidereaching a weekly audience of 55million, and costing around five mil­lion dollars annually.

From that almost infinitesimalbeginning the publishing operationshave expanded into three majorprinting plants and one smallerprinting shop in Texas. On our Pas­adena campus alone, 3,600,000 let­ters were received and personallycared for in 1973 by our staff. In onesingle day over 50,000 letters werereceived. Our postal center employ­ees sent out almost 38,000 ,000pieces of literature in 1973. Thescope of our work makes us one ofthe largest mailing operations onearth.

Advertising space purchased inmass-circulation magazines aroundthe world brings the total audiencereached by our Extension Programup to an estimated 150 million!

I realize that a pictorial round­the-world journey, such as wepresent on the following pages, can­not give you the real and true un­derstanding of the actual size, scopeand power of impact of this pro­gram. If the reader has opportunityto visit in person one of these cam­puses or foreign offices, he will thenexperience this activity in its truedimensions . The pictures cannot doit justice. But view them slowly.Pause to absorb each picture. Readall the descriptive and explanatorymatter.

And remember, when opportu­nity comes for a personal visit, youare welcome. 0

. '

UTHE WORLD TOMORROW" BROADCAST...in the beginning

This Work of God was largely built bythe power of radi o broadcasting . Begin­n ing in January 7, 1934, a little overforty years ago , Herbert Armstrongmade his first radio program in Eugene,Oregon, on 100-watt-station KORE.W ith in eight years , the program wen tnationwide.

The f irst major international stepcame in 1953, nineteen years after the

rad io broadcast began . Powe rful RadioLuxembourg was added onc e week ly ,and Europe began hear ing The WorldTomorrow program . The picture aboveshows Mr. Armstrong during one ofthese broadcasts w ith Mrs. Armstrongat his side and Richard D. Armstrong,who died in an auto acc ident in 1958,at the controls.

By February 1961, The World To-

morrow was being broadcast over 100stations worldwide on near ly 13 mill ionwatts of power every week . With in twoyears the number of stations carryingthe program climbed to almost 150.

Today, 115 stations in the U. S.car ry the program , 56 in Canada and64 stations in other parts of the world ,or a total of 235 in English, besidesforeign languages.

3

, EARL Y 1953 The World Tomorrowprogram, with the voice of Herbert WArmstrong, was heard for the firsttime in Europe . Not long after, thevoice of Garner Ted Armstrong wasadded to the broadcast. He is seen,left, recording broadcast at a copper­mill, Duisberg, West Germany.

NEW TELEVISION STUDIO, Pasadena,California campus of AmbassadorCollege, from which most GarnerTed Armstrong telecasts emanate.

..

..

OARIER TED ARMSTROIO TELECAST...asit looks today

Now in its seventh year of production, theGarner Ted Armstrong telecast is carriedon 105 stations throughout the Uni tedStates and Canada, reach ing many of theim portant , highly populated areas . Theimpact of the telecast promises to be­come greater and greater throughout theremainder of th is decade .

In point of fact , the use of televisionbegan in 1955 when Herbert W . Arm-

strong f irst bega n speak ing on a regul arweekly televis ion program called TheWorld Tomorrow. But not unt il 196 6 didAmbassador College really plunge intothe television field w ith its f irst purchaseof TV equipment, an Ampex TV came raand video tape recorder. The f irst televi­sion broadcast, w ith Garner Ted Arm­strong , began May 1 1, 19 6 7 , onKWHY-TV, channel 22, Los Angeles.

Da ily telev ision began Ju ly 12 ,19 72 . Tod ay, th e Garner Ted Arm­strong program can be seen in theUn ited States on 56 telev ision stat ionsdaily, another 15 wee kly , and in Can­ada on 34 stat ion s weekly . From smallbeg inn ings , the television program hasbeco me a majo r arm of the Work ofGod procla im ing the good news of theworld tomorrow.

5

FIRST ISSUE of The Plain Truth ,below, dated February 1934, was cuton stencils by an ancient versionof Smith Corona typewriter, upper left.IN THE 1930 's The Plain Truth wasproduced by hand from stencilson a neostyle, right.THE ENTIRE WORK, includingpublishing facilities, was centereduntil 1947 in the 10 0 F Building, above(center windows, third floor) .LA TER DEVELOPMENT of pressleft, one of two Miehle V-50 verticalletter presses used to print bookletsand co-worker letters. Unfoldedprinted signatures of bookletWho Will Rule Space? are on thetable at left. (Approximately 1959.)

~~l · :: r. : \~~::~:~i · l!;<':;_ ':;~: .... . ~~J:~ ' •

tr. ry!m~7 ..,::.... ':;:...~ ;;;';:,: \.$·; ·~; ~ .. t t

:EIr~.::~~~:;:~~7 ~~~~~:~~~...~ ~ :.~~ : , t •

~... t a 1~ · ~t"" · - ,.,.- ~,,~:;:-~~

l~~~.:t:..~~~~: /~j. ~t .~r "'~i~ .r i ::.N.~ .. ; • ._. :, 1'. ·t .... lJ.

;;' r '''~ i-:1\ ,:=,

...:t . t o' .tr1Y~'4~:__!~': ~~~;\~

..... rx , c : ~~ .t~:". ~ . 14. -r.J ~ Il .

QaOlt -e :~ . .. ....-_:;1•• U"lOaU<I ""r:. n a u .".ell Kn' ~.",n. ::..~ ~c r..."

" ., ~.,-­'. l" ... ~...

• · u1 en,· ~:-v .,

..-

6

THE AMBASSADOR COLLEGE PRESS...in the beginning

The PLAIN TRUTH had humble begin­nings . Envisioned by Herbert W . Arm­strong in early 1927, The PLAIN TRUTHdid not take f ina l shape until February1934 when abo ut 175 copies were re­produced on an old-fashion ed neostyleand mailed out to interested readers.

The " press" began w ith one bor ­rowed typewri ter and a mimeograph in

the office of the mimeograph sales rep­resentative . After a few months. pressequ ipment incl uded an antiquated sec­ond -hand neostyle, ancestor of themimeograph, and a second-hand type­w riter. The PLAIN TRUTH became apr inted publica t ion, pr inted by a Eu­gene , Oregon , job printer, by the Au­gust-September 1940 edit ion - st ill 8

pages . It stepped up to 12 pages,March-April 1942. In 1946 our fi rstreal "press " was purc hased - aDav idson duplicator, together with anold second-hand , hand-operated cutterand a t iny foldi ng machine which is st illin cons tant use. However, this print ingdepartment pr inted on ly booklets. fo rmletters, etc.

7

AMBASSADORCOLLEOE PRESS

...as it lookstoday

From such a modest birth , The PLAINTRUTH has grown and grown . In No­vember 1958, 175,000 were printed .Circulation reached 210,000 by Janu­ary 1960 , and 400.000 just four andone half years late r. By August 1964.the Ambassador College Press beganpub lication of The PLAIN TRUTH for thefirst time on our own new web -fedmagazine press in our then newly en­larged printing plant .

With the February 1965 issue, ThePLAIN TRUTH stepped out w ith a spar ­kling, ful l-color cover.

Circulation began to soar , and the1,000.000 mark was passed in July1967; by August 1969 circulat ion dou­bled again , and in 1973 total world­wide circulation of The PLAIN TRUTHpassed three mill ion monthly. The Am­bassador College Press acqu ired a hugeGoss P-50 in November 1969, enablingit to print upwards of 50 ,000 16­page signatures of The PLAIN TRUTHhourly .

In add it ion to mill ions of copies ofThe PLAIN TRUTH , the Work printed anddistributed seven million pieces of liter­ature throughout 1973. The Ambassa­dor College Press has grown toincorporate three major plants : Pasa­dena , Californ ia; Radlett, England; andNorth Sydney, Austral ia, and a smallerplant at Big Sandy, Texas.

8

AMBASSADORCOLLEGE

Never before has there been a collegequ ite like it. Beginning in 1947, adream of Herbert Armstrong began tobe fulfilled. In that year , Pasadena be­came the home of Ambassador College.By the 1959-1960 college year , enroll ­ment at the Pasadena campus reached245 full-time students, and in the fall of1960 another campus was opened inBricket Wood , near St. Albans ,England. A third campus in Big Sandy,Texas, was added in the fall of 1964.

Today , at the three sister campusesof Ambassador College , a total of1,280 students are enrolled. They arepioneers in a unique educational experi­ment. Many Ambassador graduates fillimportant posts in the worldwide enter­prises connected with the college 's Ex­tens ion Education Program .

The pictures on these pages are ofthe Ambassador College campuses . Up­per left is an aerial view, with the gym­nasium and track in the foreground , oft h e Bricket Wood campus in the" Green Belt " outside London . Lowerleft is the rolling terrain of the BigSandy campus, sloping down from theRoy Hammer Library . To the right, theLoma D. Armstrong Academic Center ofthe Pasadena campus, as seen from theOrange Grove Boulevard entrance.

AHISTORIC MESSAOEFROM HERBERT W. ARMSTRONOBecause this message is particularlyrelevant to crises confronting the worldtoday, we are reprinting it from the Aug.­Sept. 1970 PLAIN TRUTH in thiscommem ora tive issue.

A FTER TWENTY-FIVE years , I re­L-\. turned to the historic site of

the San Francisco Confer­ence . It was the 25th anniversary ofthe signing of the United NationsCharter - the San Francisco Com­memorative Meeting, 26th of June,1970.

Many who attended that confer­ence, where the Uni ted NationsCharter was drawn up, are notamong the living today . That in­cludes my wife, who attended theseveral-weeks-long conference withme. Once again, I was seated in abooth in the press gallery . And thistime, photographers and writers onThe PLAIN TRUTH staff were withme.

Once again , as in the plenary ses­sions a quarter century ago, it wasopened, not with prayer, but with amoment's silence - which lasted tento fifteen seconds. Once again, theanniversary memorial meeting wasopened on an optimistic note . Thepresiding chai rman said we werehere, 25 years ago, in a spirit ofoptimism ; and he expressed hopewe returned, now, with renewed op­timism.

Actually , the true state of affairsin the world was more accuratelyexpressed that same evening at thecommemorative dinner at the Fair­mount Hotel atop Nob Hill. It wassummed up by the Secretary-Gen­eral of the United Nations , UThant.

Secretary-General U Thant sum­marized 25 years of U.N. "progress"with these words: "Now we meetagain in a mood of uncertainty and

12

anxiety, with only the knowledgethat humanity is moving at an in­creasing speed in uncertain direc­tions, and that time is runningshort. . . ."

After 25 years of the United Na ­tions, its Secretary-General contin­ued : "Where has national interestled us? To an arsenal of ugly weap­ons, which cost humanity 200 thou­sand million dollars [$200 billion ] ayear; to the greatest historical dead­lock between Big Powers that theworld has ever seen ; to north-south,east-west , ideological, racial andeconomic cleavages ; to a belt of di­vided countries; to a series of smol­dering or active conflicts stretchingacross the globe."

World War II was the "war to endall wars." The United Nations wasthe world "peace effort" to preventfurther wars. What are the resultsafte r a quarter century?

There have been more tha n 50wars.

The U.N. has contributed to theshortening of four wars.

BUT -There is no evidence to show that

the United Nations has PREVENTEDany war!

Let me give you a few of thestatements I heard in the press gal­lery 25 years ago, spoken with greatsolemnity in opening plenary ses­sions:

Said Anthony Eden of Great Brit­ain: "... the work on which we aremaking a start here may be theWORLD'S LAST CHANCE."

General Jan Smuts of South Af­rica, whom I interviewed person-

ally : "If San Francisco fails, then Isee nothing but sta rk disaster beforemankind. . .. Scientific discoveriesha ve been made in this war whichmight mean the END OF THE HUMANRACE."

General Romulo of the Philip­pines: "This may be our LAST OP­PORTUNITY TO ACHIEVE PEACE."

And many other such sober, omi­nous warnings.

But after the plenary sessions, thedelegates - foreign secretaries, sec­retaries of state , high officials in theworld's great powers - got down toreal business in many private ses­sions. And then what happened ­25 years ago?

Here is what I wrote in San Fran­cisco then:

* * * *

This is Sunday, April 29, 1945. Itis a grave moment in history.

We are in the last days of WorldWar II. The Nazis are disintegratingon all fronts . It appears only a mat­ter of days, now. But already worldleaders are looking toward WorldWar III. This histo ric San FranciscoConference is the world 's effort toprevent it and bring in world peace ."The world 's last chance," says An­thony Eden of this conference.

Power Politics in Action

Never in the history of mankindhas anything like this taken place. Itis the grea test, most elaborate con­ference of world leaders ever held. Ihave had the rare privilege of beingone of the writers and radio com­mentators credentialled to the con­ference.

Here I have talked with worldstatesmen. Here I have been seeingpower politics in action. Here I havewitnessed something of the subtle,yet fateful arts , skill, and strategycalled statecraft and diplomacy - inliving action as instruments for self­ish national advantage.

In the plenary sessions of the con­ference we hear beautiful ora toryenunciating lofty aims of altruis mand world peace - to be prin ted innewspapers throu ghout the world

for public consumption. But the realsessions are behind locked doors ofcommittee council chambers, andthere the savage battle for nationalinterests rages fiercely.

Already I see the clouds of WorldWar IIIgathering at this conference.We learn of it in private talks withdelegates in hotel lobbies . The na­tions can have peace - if they wantit. But they don't want it. They wantgain at the expense of others.

Injustices to Minorities

Yes, the efforts to form a worldPEACE-ENFORCING government hereare proving, in themselves, a contin­uing contest, punctuated by con­stant strife.

The firebrand here is Stalin's topman, Molotov. I've attended pressconferences here where protestingrepresentatives of Lithuania, Latvia ,and Estonia cry out against graveinjustices forced on their people bythe overpowering Ru ssian boot.Three million from Lithuania havebeen tom from their homes andfamilies and deported to Siberia!

In a private interview with Con­stantin Fotich , pre-Tito ambassadorto the U. S. from Yugoslavia, Ilearned that 30,000 small-farm own­ers in Yugoslavia have seen theirhomes and farms confiscated byStalin's puppet government. Someof these remain on their farms asslaves, some have been driven toSiberia - many have been "liqui­dated" - killed!

I do not see peace being germinatedhere, but the seedsofthe next war!

Success of the United Nations' ef­fort for world peace requires com­plete HARMONY between the BigThree. But if America and Britainare to achieve harmony with Russia,it is already apparent it will have tobe at the cost of justice in thesmaller Baltic and Balkan nations,and Poland. And if the rights ofthese helpless millions are to betrampled upon with impunity as theprice of peace with Russia, THEN WESTILL HAVE NO PEACE!

There can be no real peace untilwe have justice for all. To achieve

that, Uncle Sam must stand up asthe stem and determined championof the rights of these helplesssmaller peoples.

World Oblivious toRussian Crimes

And to do that would sacrificeharmony with Russia and risk an­other war. Peace, it seems, can beachieved only if Russia can eat hercake and have it, too!

The world seems blissfully igno­rant of the colossal crimes Russia iscommitting against these smallernations she is occupying and annex­ing. But I have talked, here , withofficials and representatives fromthese nations and learned, firsthand,with shocked indignation, the trueand cruel facts.

There is the biblical statement:"Except the Lord build the house,

they labor in vain that build it."Here at San Francisco I see littlepuny men in exalted positions set­ting out to build a great house - avast edifice, a HIGH TOWER that willreach to the HIGH HEAVEN OF PEACE!But God is not building this house!

God has not so much as been in­vited into this conference. At theopening plenary session I was sur­prised , as I looked down from thepress gallery, to observe SecretaryStettinius, instead of opening thedeliberations with prayer for God'sguidance, call, instead, for a minuteof silence for meditation! You see,Mr. Molotov and the Russian dele­gates do not believe in God, and ifMr. Molotov were insulted, therecould be no peace! But neither canthere be peace without God!

The United Nations Conferenceis producing nothing but strife andbickering and is destined from itsinception to end in total failure. Yetworld leaders are pronouncing it theWORLD'S LAST HOPE - with the onlyalternative ANNIHILATION OF HU­MANITY!

Human Nature the Causeof Wars

Peace "cannot be manufacturedhere below." Man alone of God's

creatures can choose to serve andlove his fellow men. But he canchoose, also, to hate his fellow men.In every man a struggle constantlypersists between his higher facultiesand lower inclinations - betweenobedience to law and servility to ap­petites, passions and selfishness. Un­less this lower nature is kept undercontrol, it breaks forth in violenceand disorder.

It is human to be sensitive aboutsecuring one's own rights, while dis­regarding the rights of his neighbor.So men are tempted to lie, steal,and kill in order to get what theywant.

With men left to themselves , theirbaser inclinations unrestrained, withselfishness given free play, there canbe no peace or order in this world.Man's mind and will are too weak.The downward impulses of hisnature are too strong .

The two great commands - LOVEtoward God, and LOVE towardneighbor - point the only path topeace.

Without government over men ,therefore, we could not have peacebetween individuals. But, as we risein the scale of human relations , theproblem of peace and good orderbecomes more complex, yet the so­lution remains the same. If themaintenance of peace and order isdifficult between man and man, if itis more difficult between citizen andgovernment, it is most difficult of allbetween nation and nation! The ba­sic conflict is the same as before ­human nature - but the stakes arehigher. In the international realm ,the selfishness of human naturereaches its ' lowest level. Nowhereelse are the temptations to greedand lust for power so nearly irresist­ible. National selfishness is morethan the sum total of the selfishnessof individuals.

Just as individual man cannotcontrol and resist the downwardpull .of his passions and nature, sothese NATIONS, swayed by NATIONALselfishness greater than the sum to­tal of the selfishness of all individ­uals, cannot control these ambitions

13

and lusts for power and inter­national aggression.

"Except the Lord build the house,they labor in vain that build it." TheUnited Nations organization willfail. It is doomed before it starts!

* * * *

That is what I wrote in San Fran­cisco, Sunday, April 29, 1945 ­more than a quarter of a centuryago!

I had seen so much savage bicker­ing and angry struggle for selfishnational advantage, I think I wasstirred to some heat of indignationas I wrote.

I remember one press conferenceheld by the American Secretary ofState, Edward Stettinius. We pressrepresentatives were kept waitingsome 40 or 45 minutes, as I remem­ber, before Secretary Stettinius en­tered the room. He had beendetained by Mr. Molotov of theU.S.S.R. in another meeting . Heburst out, in an off-the-cuff ex­planation, with indignation at theunfair, unreasonable and antago­nistic tactics the Russian had usedin detaining him.

I remember the 'scene as the chiefdelegates of the "Big Three" powersarrived at the Opera House for theopening Plenary Sessions. Mrs.Armstrong and I were standing onthe steps just above the front side­walk when a Cadillac limousinerolled to a stop. Out stepped SirAnthony Eden, smiling and hand­some. The news photographersasked if he would pose for a picture.

"Certainly," he smiled.It was the same when Secretary of

State Stettinius arrived, also hand­some and smiling.

Then two Cadillac limousines "rolled to a stop. Out of the first carleaped"seven uniformed men. I'm notsure now, but I believe they werearmed. They dashed to the rear doorof the second car, and, with three orfour more uniformed guards leapingout of the second car, formed adouble line before the rear door.Grim and scowling, Mr. Molotovstepped out between the two uni-

14

formed lines. Then the whole proces­sion walked stiffly and unsmiling ,with Molotov completely sur­rounded by his guards, up the steps.

I attended a special Molotovpress conference . He was the same.Belligerent, unsmiling, accusing theUnited States, praising the U.S.S.R.

What an opportunity for theUnited States to have championedthe rights of those smaller down­trodden, ill-treated countries be­tween East and West Europe - Es­tonia , Latvia , Lithuania, Poland,Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Yugo­slavia. The United States was by farthe strongest military power in allworld history then . We had theatom bomb. Russia had no nuclearweapons . If the United States hadstood up to Russia IN STRENGTH andgiven its demands, the Kremlinwould not have risked war. But wehad lost the pride of our power. Weweakly submitted to Russia's de­mands' and threats.

And as a result the United Na­tions has become virtually a Krem­lin SOUNDING BOARD forpropaganda before the world.

The world COULD have peace - ifmen in power in the great powerswere willing to sacrifice selfish na­tional interest and personal aggran ­dizement, and if giant powers likethe United States were willing to usetheir power to defend the rights oftrampled-over little nations.

But men in power are human,swayed by human nature. They arenot willing. And so, where do we gofrom here? Is humanity SELF­DOOMED? The answer is emphat­ically NO!

The answer is to be found in ourintriguing booklet, The WonderfulWorld Tomorrow - What It Will BeLike. It's sent gratis, of course. In ityou are going to take an astonishedglimpse into a new world - as it willbe in just ten or fifteen short years.I'll count it a privilege to send thisalong to you, if you haven 't read italready. These problems will besolved, after all. Personally , I lookforward in faith and confidenceand so should you. 0

THE "MISSIIODIMENSION"

BROUGHTmmPLEADERSWORLDWIDE

A new dimension of the Work of Godbegan in 1968 when Herbert W . Arm­strong began meeting with high-levelworld leaders at their requ est. br ingingto their attention the same announce­ment that Jesus Christ brought to theworld nineteen hundred years ago .

Herbert Armstrong has met with theleaders of such Asian and Near Easternnations as Japan. the Philippines.South Vietnam. Indones ia. Ind ia. Ne­pal. Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon). Thai ­land . Lebanon and Israel.

Besides meeting with kings . primeministers and premiers. Herbert Arm­strong also met with Emperor Haile Se­lassie of Ethiopia. in June of 1973 andEmperor Hirohito of Japan . in Decem­ber1973 .

Photo (top right) shows Mrs . IndiraGandhi of India meeting Herbert Arm ­strong for the first time in December1970. Photo (bottom right) shows Em­peror Hail e Selassie and Herbert W.Armstrong upon their first meeting.

In coming months. Herbert W. Arm ­strong is beginning special personal ap­pearance campaigns in Saigon andManila where hundreds of dignitariesand th ousands of oth er people w ill hearhim speak.

PERSONAL APPEARANCE CAMPAIGNSThe first personal appearance cam­

paign conducted by this Work occurredin the summer of 1933 when HerbertArmstrong spoke in person to an au­dience packed into a 35-seat school­ho use in Eugene , Oregon .

But the personal appearance cam ­paigns did not become a major thrust ofthe Work unti l 1970, when 15 ,000people heard Garner Ted Armstrong inNashville, Tennessee.

16

The campaigns " exploded" in 1973 asover 30 cities were vis ited . M inisters ofthe Worldwide Church of God an­nounced the good news brought byJesus Chr ist to audiences in such placesas Melbourne and Perth, Austral ia; Sas­katoon , Saskatchewan, Canada ; Seattle,Wash ington ; Pittsbu rgh , Pennsylvan ia;Auckland , New Zealand; and Honolulu ,Hawa ii. In 1973 a tota l aud ience of120,000 people saw the campaigns.

In 1974 , campa ign project ions callfor about 40 campa igns , includi ng sixby Garner Ted Armstrong , which w illreach a cumulative audience of wellover 200,000 people. Photos above il­lustrate campa igns. A welcome is ex­tended from Bossier City , Louisiana . Incenter, inset, Garne r Ted Armstrong ,accompanied by his w ife Sh irley, makesa recording wh ile fly ing en route to apersonal appearance campaign.

Ambassador College telephone linesprovide fast person-to-person servicefor new listeners who want to subscribeto The PLAIN TRUTH or receive adver­t ised literature, or who desire a visit byone of our local representatives .

This nationwide service is only a"phone call away" from anybody liv­ing in the United States. The WATSline (toll free outside Alaska, Californiaand Hawaii) was officially inauguratedin June 1973, and since that time over50,000 telephone calls have come in ,ninety percent of those from peoplewho haven't contacted this Workbefore.

If you wish fast personal service , call(1) 800 423-4444 or (1) 213577-5225if you live in nontoll-free areas .

FreeLiterature

WorthWriting For

Here are answers to vital questionsabout life itself. For over 40 years we

have been publishing informativebooklets-all offered without cost

or obligation. We'd like to share thisimportant understanding with you .

WHY WERE YOU BORN?Why was humanity placed here on

earth? Here is the answer that sciencehas not discovered and that

religion has overlooked.

ENDING YOUR FINANCIAL WORRIESIndebtedness and the problem of

inflation can be solved.

HOW TO STUDY THE BIBLEHere's a systematic method for under­

standing the scriptures.

In addition we offer the :AMBASSADOR COLLEGE

CORRESPONDENCE COURSETwelve practical , easy-to-read lessonsexplain the proven biblical answers to

life 's most fundamental and puzzl ingquest ions. There are no assignments to

send in. You review and evaluateyour own progress at home.

.To request any of the literaturementioned above, simply fill out andmail the detachable card inside themagazine. No charge or obligation.

P.S. Do you have a friend who would beinterested in learning more about the

Bible? Why not tear out the card frominside the magazine and give your friendan opportunity to request a free lesson?


Recommended