Page 8 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1978 Shala *s Shoes your fashion shoe store 707 Texas Escalation! Soviet military continues to grow M.S.C. Arts Committee PRESENTS eEXHIBlTlOAi AND SALE of G Firi£ c^/^r g pr nyfis FULL -COLOR REPRODUCTIONS OF MASTERPIECES ! * • - 'fc.cdur'inj 'the. ujorks of Ch-O-jO-ltj Peitt, MatiSSej Gaugui/Xj Va.n Goyh, Breughel Cezanne, Franksnthalerj Homer, Hlee, Ftcro, /ionetj Ffcgntte, PtcasrO) Hem brant, Renoir, Toulouse-L-a.utrec, U/geth, oncl others. over 1200 different prints and MASTER DRAWINGS TIME: October 9-13 9:00 am -6:OOpm PLACE: Main Concourse MSC $3.00 per print, $7.00 for any 3 United Press International SAN ANTONIO — The Soviet Union s accelerated military growth has made it equal to the United States in many areas and the Rus sians could gain military superiority in the future. Air Force Chief of Staff Lew Allen Jr. warned Thurs day. “It is clear that the Soviets place enormous store in military power,’ Allen told a luncheon of the Military Affairs Council of the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce. Allen, the highest ranking general in the Air Force, avoided saying the United States had fallen behind the Soviets militarily but warned it could happen unless America keeps pace in the future. He said the U.S. Air Force “is today the strongest and best in the world.” “In the past decade they (Soviets) have gone from a position of notable inferiority to one of notable equiva lency in many areas.” (Allen de parted here from his prepared text which read, “In the past decade they have achieved overall equiva lence with the United States.”) “They (Soviets) have tremendous momentum for continuing military growth and modernization, which could provide them with a margin of military superiority which would be dangerous for us and our allies un less we take the steps necessary to counter those trends.” Allen said that for more than a decade the Soviets had invested significantly more in armaments than the United States. “In the early 70s, the U.S. enjoyed clear-cut superiority over the Soviets in such areas as MIRV technology, strategic missile accu racy, and the quality of our tactical fighter force in Europe. Today the Soviets have closed the gap dramat ically in these and many other areas, thus adding significant quality di mension to the massive quantities of arms they have traditionally fielded. As a result, the Soviets are seen internationally as stronger relative to the United States than in the past.” He listed as “particularly disturb ing,” Soviet advances in accumulat ing and improving their strategic ar senal, and the fielding of three new fourth-generation ICBMs, a new bomber, and two new sea-launched ballistic missiles and new strategic submarines to carry them. “They have also steadily im proved their air and civil defenses, complicating our task of maintaining the assured retaliatory capability upon which our present deterrent strategy rests.” Allen said the Air Force supports the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with the Soviet Union and praised President Carter’s Camp David at tempt to bring peace to the Middle East. “We have not lost ground to the Soviets because of arms limitations, but because the Soviets have pur sued force modernization more ag gressively than we have under those arms limitations,” he said. t 2 Americans, 1 Swiss share ’78 Nobel Prize HOI "To continue to seek lowe ra . gate levels — while maintain verifiable and equitable baL does serve our national sen, Thus while we continue t contain the Soviet strategic n J u ddy threat through negotiation,w e ; u llen also continue to modernize 0uri Lrepfl strategic forces sufficiently maintain real and perceiveden, lence with the Soviet Union ’ United Press International STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Two Americans and a Swiss won the 1978 Nobel Prize for medicine Thursday for their genetic discoveries that could help in prevention and treat ment of cancer, diagnose the cause of birth defects and play a key role in the process of test-tube baby births. Sweden’s Caroline Institute an nounced the $164,777 prize will be shared by Drs. Daniel Nathans and Hamilton Smith of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., and Dr. Werner Arber of Basil Univer sity, Switzerland. The three were cited for their “discovery of restriction enzymes and their application to problems of molecular genetics.” The restriction enzymes provide the “chemical knives” that chop chromosomes into their component genes. The research of the three scien tists has been important to the study of how to prevent cancer, birth de fects and the study of the human aging process. It has been useful in the field of test-tube babies because it can detect possible defects in the egg before it is fertilized in the test tube. Nathans, 50, is director of the Department of Microbiology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He has been at Johns Hopkins since 1962, but in 1969 was an American Cancer Society scholar in the Department of Genetics at the Weizmann Institute in Re- hovoth, Israel. He is married and the father of three. Smith, 47, has been at Johns Hopkins since 1967, apart from a one-year sabbatical at the Univer sity of Zurich Molecular Biology Department in 1975. He is married and the father of five. Arber, 49, is married and has two children. He was a research as sociate at the University of Southern California Medical School from 1958-59, and was visiting inves tigator at the Molecular Biology Department of the University of California in Berkeley from 1970-71. He was appointed professor of microbiology at the University of Basel in 1971, where he works at the Biozentrum sponsored by the state and Switzerland’s largest phar maceutical industries. “I’m absolutely delighted,’ Nathans said Thursday at the Johns atclH a ordt| (rime. Davil Kt of r ilannel i ■ L iirothc'l iad foil msinesl “I dil ilanniq lid. “Cull lied, eople Hopkins School of Medicine I’m delighted to share it with., close colleague Hamilton SmitiiM^er of course with Dr. Arberi provided the groundwork for study. ikin-di\| rowneJ McCil mrth cl bich □ igtobl “I got kind of busy veryi denly,” said Nathans, who added had learned just moments 1. that he was named as one old ® nev ’ ( | men to win the prize. "I really must run now I ha get to the lab,” he said. The Medicine Prize, the world’s top achievement, is the ond of six Nobel Prizes awards 1978. Last year, three Amerii shared the medicine prize, bars been bestowed jointly 37 since the awards were first gi\«| 1901. A week ago, the Sw Academy gave the Nobel priziftaynes’ literature to the Polish-AimaiKk Yiddish-language author in-mber Bashevis Singer. lour que Hayni iieCron Whistleblowers get | protection under act MSC AGGIE CINEMA United Press International WASHINGTON — The 1978 Civil Service Reform Act, now awaiting a presidential signature, represents almost all the changes President Carter had requested — and a bit more. The act will bring a sweeping re form of the federal civil service — for the first time protecting “whistleblowers,” allowing workers to be fired for rudeness or ineffi ciency, and providing promotions for other reasons than length of serv ice. While seeking the presidency. Carter campaigned strongly on the need for changes in the civil service that operates and sometimes stalls the American bureaucracy. He said when he became presi dent he found the situation even worse than he had thought, and the bill was one of his top priorities. Jules Sugarman, vice chairman of the Civil Service Commission, and Wayne Granquist of the Office of Management and Budget, spelled out for UPI Wednesday their as sessment of the legislation. At present, an employee can be fired only if the government proves with a preponderance of evidence that the dismissal would promote the efficiency of the service. Under the new law, the govern ment must have only “substantial” evidence that an employee was un suited for his job — for instance, that he or she failed to perform a mony r allace jmony i Fort \\ I The dt lispidon (thorities critical element, such as a .secret-loned V who couldn’t take shorthand. Joney fe Or if a superv isor makes four [ing him. ports in one year of an emplow McCro being discourteous or rude til month member of the public, the governm ployee can be fired. Irovision. An employee would not neces let, whic ily be fired for receiving fourcit jp in tri; complaints. The supervisor wotlHayne have to rule on the validity oftlietftcCrory Carter got even more protet Fimity 1 than he asked for “whistleblowwftange ft At present, a whistleblower is pc IcCrory tected only if he or she report ey John violation of law. Under the refbn robably the whistleblower will be protect! McCrc for reporting gross mismanagemeii [e initiat waste or anything that “endanpe a 8 e the national health or safety. 1“®“ th The whistleblowers will j F °the guaranteed anonymity and will l /^ok able to make their complaints eitk Med uj to the new Merit Systems Prol«F* ne ve tion Board’s special counsel ord P un tar of the new inspector generals. F. ar 'v A separate bill that Carter sigwi F Thursday creates 12 inspectors 0 wl eral, one each for most Cabineti partments, the scandal-ridden Co l a oec eral Services Administrationandts p am Veterans Administration. f j n 1 Wc Service Calculators BOTHER’S BOOKSTORE 340 Jersey — At the Southga |f Friday, Oct. 13 — 8 p.m/ Saturday, Oct. 14 — 8 & 10:30 p Rudder Theater Coming Soon Pink Panther Weekend Citizen Kane Seven Samurai CARROLLS BASKET! AND WICKER 707 Complex 846-7847 WICKER backgammon WICKER n TRUNKS DISCOUNT TROPHY] AND ENGRAVING MON.- 1/ SAT ' FRI. 0 9:00- 9:00- J [T 1:0° 5:30 / 215 S. MAIN 822-5923