i Thursday, September 19, 1985TThe Battalion/Page 13 World and Nation SHOE r KNOW, RPR VEAR6 lj| I'VE WAT£P EPITING HOUR COUUMN... — HATEP REAPING IT, WATEP REREAPIN6 IT, WAT£P6?£I2££T)W6IT... by Jeff MocNelly fT B-UT LATEL.^ I'VE K BEEN WARMING T2> THE TA£K- Reading ability of 17-year-olds getting better Roger Metzger’s CBduebotwet <^nn RESTAURANT & BAR “Country Cuisine” 301 BLUEBONNET HILLS BRENHAM, TX 77833 (409)836-464 2 Highway Between Chxr, r) oii Hill and Brenham Or ClassifieB 845-k Weinberger: U.S. subsidizing military buildup of U.S.S.R. Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Soviets have been much more successful than previously thought in stealing Western technology and as a result, “we are subsidizing the military | buildup of the Soviet Union,” De- I fense Secretary Caspar W. Wein berger said Wednesday. Weinberger released a study as- I setting the Soviets have targeted | specific American defense contrac- ! " tors and universities, are acquiring I thousands of technical reports that are not classified but are useful and are diverting high-tech equipment designed for one purpose but which can be used in weapons programs. “By their own estimate, more than 5,000 Soviet military research pro jects each year are benefiting signifi cantly from Western acquired tech nology,” Weinberger said at a news conference. The report said that while com prehensive figures are not available, IMELOFU ngtobt ids... g people (etics, ft can do ich. I'm orj achieve vej help soi -vhai ro’ 've had.' the Soviets estimate they saved at least $640 million in 1980 alone on selected military research projects by obtaining Western technology. Neither Weinberger nor Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle, who later briefed reporters on the study, would elaborate on the sources used to measure the Soviet effort. But the report, Perle said, should lead to efforts by the United States to “even up” the number of Soviet diplomats allowed to operate here compared with the Americans in the Soviet Union. The United States and its allies should also consider “a sys tem of blacklisting” to prevent Soviet agents who are expelled from one country from gaining posts in an other allied nation, he aaded. Perle said he would recommend that President Reagan not discuss any broader scientific and educatio nal ties with the Soviets when he meets with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in November. The study was described as the product of a special Technology Transfer Intelligence Committee in cluding officials from the Pentagon, the CIA and 20 other U.S. agencies. Much of the general information in the study was disclosed previously. But it gave what it called more exam ples of how the Soviets collect infor mation and products and what they do with such technology. Although the Pentagon believes it is now doing a much better job con trolling access to technical docu ments, NASA, the Patent Office and the National Technical Information Center remain key sources for the Soviets, Perle said. “What we are hoping to achieve . . . is to sensitize the scientific and tech nical community to the fact that there is a very large and well-orga nized Soviet apparatus that has tar geted scientists and engineers and universities and the like for military purposes,” Perle said. Associated Press WASHINGTON — The reading ability of 17-year-old students im proved in the past four years after a decade of stagnation, but 9- and 13- year-olds have stopped making pro gress, a federally backed testing agency said Wednesday. At all three age levels, pupils read better now than in 1971, the Na tional Assessment of Educational Progress reported, and the bii gains have been registered by bl and Hispanics. But “The Reading Report Card,” a study based on tests administered to 250,000 school children over the past 14 years, also dramatized the big gap remaining between minori ties and the white majority. The average black and Hispanic 17-year-olds can read “only slightly” better than the average white 13- year-old, it said. It graded reading on a five-step scale — from rudimentary to basic to intermediate to adept to advanced. Secretary of Education William J. Bennett said, “We are not raising at present a generation of illiterates.” But he expressed concern that al most 36 percent of the 9-year-olds have not acquired the basic compre hension skills needed to succeed in third- and fourth-grade work, and that 40 percent of 13-year-olds and 16 percent of 17-year-old students lacked the intermediate skills “to handle much of what is studied in a sixth-or seventh-grade class.” The 17-year-old students were the only age group to improve their per formance over the 1980 assessment. Only 5 percent of the oldest stu dents reached the highest rung on the reading ladder, the advanced skills. Bennett said. kfL NOTICE TO TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY STUDENTS Piftformation has been made public by Texas A&M University nts, families, and other interested individuals. jcational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974", the following an may be made public unless the student desires to withold information. S name, address (local and permanent), telephone date and place of birth, sex, nationality, race, iassification, dates of attendance, class schedule, awarded, awards or honors, class standing, previous ;ion or educational agency attended by the student, •i name and address, sports participation, weight and f athletic team members, parking permit information, ograph. to withhold any or all of this information should fill out, opriate form, available to all students at the Registrar's ian 5 p.m. Friday, September 20, 1985. R. A. Lacey Registrar CONT/1'51 LtfNSES ..wt ... purposes, rene saici. skills. Bennett said. Federal official says 1 in 4 young adults has tried cocaine Associated Press erlully addictive drugs known. that use of cocaine, unlike other il- of the University of Michigan Associated Press WASHINGTON — A series of drug abuse studies released by the government Wednesday inciicate more than one of every four young adults has at least tried cocaine, a top federal health official said. Dr. Donald lan MacDonald, head of the federal Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration, said cocaine “is one of the most pow erfully addictive drugs known. “For years, people thought co caine was harmless — a so-called ‘recreational drug’,” MacDonald said. “Now, we know the truth: co caine can be a killer. Emergency room admissions associated with co caine use tripled between 1981 and 1984. The number of deaths asso ciated with cocaine also tripled.” Michigan researchers reported that use of cocaine, unlike other il licit drugs, tends to increase among young people after they graduate from school. “Overall, we find a disturbingly high proportion of young adults in America place themselves at risk of developing a dependency on this highly reinforcing drug by taking the initial step of 11 ying it,” Urs. Pat rick O’Malley and Lloyd D. Johnston MY ADS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT.. o matter what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. Right now, dur-* ing International Classified Adver tising Week, is a great time to put the Classified to work for you! Get started with U RENT M Installing a new starter. A simple and inexpensive task...with the right tools. Without the right tools a new starter becomes expensive. Towing charges. Mechanic bills. Markup on the parts. You know the story. Let U Rent M help. 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