The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 22, 1982, Image 8

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    national
Chrysler, UAW meet
for contract talks
United Press International
DETROIT — Chrysler Corp.
Chairman Lee lacocca met with
United Auto Workers bargain
ers Wednesday in the second
day of contract talks to explain
what the company planned to
offer in a new labor agreement.
spond to the Chrysler presenta
tion today.
The UAW has made it clear
that it intends to gain back $662
million in concessions made to
the company.
The session, expected to last
all morning, was closed to repor
ters. But UAW President Doug
las Fraser predicted “we’re
going to get a show — you know
we will if lacocca’s giving it.”
Union bargainers said the
new contract should include a
restoration of cost-of-living allo
wance payments plus job secur
ity for Chrysler’s remaining
60,600 blue-collar workers.
Fraser made the comment as
he walked in the bright sunshine
from the union’s bargaining
office across the Chrysler park
ing lot to the building where the
talks were being held.
No formal briefing was set.
The union is scheduled to re-
As talks opened Tuesday,
Fraser referred immediately to
Chrysler’s announcement the
day before of a $106.9 million
second-quarter profit. It was
Chrysler’s second straight quar
ter of black ink and its highest
profit in nearly six years.
“Your timing is just great,”
Fraser quipped.
The UAW in early 1981
agreed to Avage and benefit
freezes estimated to have saved
the company $662 million. The
union maintains the concessions
have placed Chrysler workers’
labor rates at $2.58 an hour less
than the $20 earned by workers
at Ford Motor Co. and General
Motors Corp.
The loss of COLA alone costs
workers $1,100 every three
months, Fraser said.
“It’s time to give (Chrysler
workers) the credit that’s due
and now they deserve equity,”
said Fraser following the open
ing two-hour session of bar
gaining.
He acknowleged, however,
the union was unlikely to get
back all its concessions “in one
fell swoop.”
[ CHIC
devoted
The
!victory \
No fire — just training
The fire trucks on campus, like this one outside
Harrington Tower, are not responding to an
emergency — they’re training for one. The
College Station Fire Department is testing the fire
pcxma
CHlKESe RES7JVUIUM7
NOOK BUFFET #3.98
Monday thru Friday — All You Can Eat!
SUNDAY EVENING BUFFET #4. 75
All You Can Eat! From 6 to 8 p.m.
SPECIAL DINNER #4.25
Peking - Szechwan & Cantonese Dishes • Take Out Ordei
OPEN DAILY:
11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
1313 S. College Ave.
822-7661
Students taking less math, science
photo by Susan Florcnti nine loss
iuligs.
■ “Whe
systems in the campus’ buildings this week; in hip hurt
addition, the tests are giving some new membersij Kyan
of the department a chance to familiarize
themselves with on-campus procedures. ^ ^
:rea<lv fo
Future may see fewer scientists
United Press International
NEW YORK — Young scien
tists may be scarce on the Amer
ican scene by 2000, and the same
is true for young mathemati
cians.
Numerous studies, experts,
and prognostications point in
that direction. Not enough sci
entists and mathematicians, they
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“Been to the new Bookstore?”
“Why? What do they have?”
“Everything.”
HAEF
c RECORDS
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TRICE BOOKS MAGAZINES ^
TPS-O
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
BRYAN
216 N. Main 799-2786
Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1
COLLEGE STATION
8008 Post Oak Mall.. 764-0010
Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m.
Texas State
» Of^ticae qc
Since 1935.
say, are in the pipeline right now
in the high schools or colleges.
The forecasters see this as an
ominous trend for the United
States, coming at a time when
the nation and the world are
rocketing into a technological
society. T he experts say that
even to survive in such a society,
people who who don’t make
their living at science or mathe
matics will need enough know
ledge in those fields to make in
telligent decisions about every
day life.
The National Society for
Teachers of Mathematics, the
National Academy of Sciences
and National Science Teachers
Association are among those sig
naling S.O.S. over the crisis in
science and math.
The latest report is in “Che
mical & Engineering News,” an
American Chemical Society
publication.
“A pair of long-brewing prob
lems in U.S. education recently
have achieved bona fide crisis
status,” the report said. “One is
that the public, by most objective
measures, is becoming increas
ingly ignorant of things mathe
matical, scientific and technolo
gical.
“The other, related to the
first, is a current and worsening
shortage of persons competent
and willing to teach those sub
jects to students in elementary
and secondary schools.
“The two have been lumped
into one official crisis — the cri
sis in pre-college education in
science and mathematics.”
At a National Academy of Sci
ences conference on the subject,
Paul DeHart, emeritus profes
sor of education, Stanford Un-
viersity, California, said:
•Only 34 percent of U.S. high
school graduates have finished
three years of mathematics. Of
those, only 8 percent have taken
calculus, which is taught in only
31 percent of the high schools.
•Fewer than 20 percent of the
graduates have had three years
of science. Most seniors have
had a course in biology and 37
percent have had chemistry. But
only 19 percent have had phy-
•If you narrow the study to
only those students in pre
college courses, who make up
about 40 percent of the high
school population, the figures
are only somewhat higher. Fifty-
five percent had had three or
more years of math; 41 percent
have had three or more years of
science.
•Among the 60 percent of
high school students who pur
sue general or vocational
courses, only 20 percent have
had three years of math and just
about 10 percent have had three
years of science.
JRyan
King w
Kon.
K'lt be<
be able t
KlheC
in the ft:
tht m thi
K'loda
Ky wer
math on the Scholastic Achic
ment 1 cst (SAT) declinedfrotKThe (
502 in 1963 to 466 in 1980.T!!K™ n g
top score on the test is 800,ilK )re ^ a
lowest possible, 200. Allen
Another sign: the proportioKd r< y* (
of students scoring more thjBLa^ 05
700 points on the SAT mathttsK 611 ^
skidded 15 percent betraB v * st0
1967 and 1975.
Still another: national asseHThe c
merits of science achievemeni-p (,n d-
made in 1969, 1972, and lyk'core
and measuring 9-, 13-, and l'P- on d •
year-olds — showed continuinjK'As it
drops in achievment with (liHstake
biggest declines among 1 7-yeaiK lc h-hi
olds. KBuckr
“Although there’s room InKtheir
debate about how much scienctKh his
math education is enoughorakB eou t
out how good it should l)fB xt f lvc
there’s hardly ^nv yrmimpuKhs an
There are other signs point
ing to a lessening of the quality
of science and math educatiion
in high schools. Mean scores in
anv argumesB
that the science and math sutKhaCoi
structures of U.S. elenientanK^ str
and secondary education attBi™. ov
crumbling,” Ward
Chemical 8c Engineering New
Chicago bureau, says.
Worthy, «l| n Fy
llhe A
TOTAL PERFORMANCE
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^ Open Monday-Saturday 10-9 Sunday 12-9 p.m.
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Farmer seeks help
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693-7878
United Press International
DES MOINES, Iowa — A far
mer seeking to win back the
affections of his estranged girl
friend paid $7,500 to a psychic
who told him to wash with a
tomato and push needles into
matchsticks to rid himself of evil
spirits, police say.
Police say the man, 27, also
was told to sleep with the tomato
and a shoe under his pillow as
part of the ritual on how to re
kindle the old flame.
“Tliis definitely is ii weinlj
case,” detective Ron Warnesail
Tuesday. “We only got wordot]
it after the lovestruck (anrt|
realized he was getting talq
and reported the case to staid
officials.”
The farmer told police hew
in shock when he lost the affec
tions of a woman he had been
seeing. He called the psychic Iasi
September after he saw hei tele
phone number listed in a news
paper advertisement.
The Best Pizza In Town! Honest.
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1406 Texas Ave. Down from Gibsons
WE DELIVER
846-3412
Mr. GattFs Pizzamat
AFTER 5 P.M. — MIN. $5.00 ORDER
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DIETING?
Even though we do not prescribe
diets, we make it possible for many to
enjoy a nutritious meal while they
follow their doctor's orders. You will
be delighted with the wide selection
of low calorie, sugar free and fat free
foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa
Dining Center Basement.
AGGIES!
Douglas
Jewdry
10% AGGIE DISCOUNT
OPEN
Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM
QUALITY FIRST
ON ALL MERCHANDISE
WITH STUDENT ID
(Cash Only Please)
We reserve the right to limit
use of this privilege.
Downtown Bryan (212 N. Main)
and
Culpepper Plaza