Wednesday, November 5, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 'Warped by Scott McCullar O...0-KAV, THOSE... THOSE,(sh\f f)£ERV ICES PEMA/VI>EP.- ...vJE'LL PO IT... Waldo by Kevin Thomas Ildo AND THE SOCK. BLEW up fw SPACESHIP HOPING TO kill THE WYC30R-BEAST. BUT |$T£AD FIND THAT HE HAS ■DUOWED them INTO THE |sCAP£ POD... 6% of American families headed by single parents ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — More Regf thm one-fourth of American fami- USFlK s with children — and more than No. :R) percent of those that are black — ■ere headed by a single parent last ■ar, the Census Bureau reported cem Tuesday. wouka “One of the most significant ithhrci anges in family composition over i cul the' past 15 years has been the sub- thtoflt.intial growth in the number of lerei one-parent families,” the bureau id wil'd- I Dr. Harriet P. McAdoo, a profes- ■r of social work at Howard Univer- Hty. said a major factor is that ■omen are having children and get- f ting married later — or not marry- i|g at all — and that marriages are more likely to end in divorce. ■ As a result of these changes, she rs [ o said, “children are being raised by mtwBeir mothers for a significant num- Supr ber of years of their lives.” In addition, she said in an inter- isesfo vjew, there are a substantial number iptioit in 1 of out-of-wedlock pregnancies among both black and white women. A separate Census Bureau report on fertility last June said 20.2 per cent of white births and 74.5 percent among blacks were out of wedlock last year, as the stigma surrounding unwed mothers lessens. Researchers at The Urban Insti tute suggested that young women are no longer rushing into wedlock once they become pregnant. In stead, they are considering their fu tures, including whether the father is good potential husband material and how marriage will affect their educational and economic outlook. Of 33.4 million families with chil dren last year, 8.8 million — 26.3 percent — were one-parent groups, compared with 12.9 percent in 1970, the bureau said. The report said 60.1 percent of black families with children were maintained by a single parent, up from 35.7 percent 15 years earlier. For whites, 20.8 percent had one parent, more than double the 10.1 percent of 1970. The overwhelming majority of single-parent families are headed by women, accounting for 4.9 million of the 5.7 million white, single-par ent families and 2.6 million of the 2.8 million that are black. While still growing, the rate of in crease has eased somewhat. Single-parent families jumped by 48.7 percent from 1970 to 1975, but rose by 26.9 percent from 1980 to 1985. Among blacks, the rate of increase declined from 55.5 percent to 32.5 percent. Among whites, the growth rate eased from 44.2 percent to 23.4 percent in the two Five-year periods. Dr. McAdoo said much of this fading increase is a result of the ag ing of the post-World War II “baby boom” generation. up laiF j us ! Lay group blasts Catholic statement NEW YORK (AP) — A pro- j posed bishops’ statement on the I U.S. economy is conf used about economic rights and puts too much emphasis on the state to Hielp the poor, a prominent Ro- i man Catholic lay group said Tuesday. The critique came a week be fore the bishops are to take final action on their widely discussed pastoral letter, “Economic Justice | for All.” Calling the letter one-sided, the lay group said the bishops “turn too readily to the state to di rect economic activism, to create jobs, to determine foreign aid.” The lay critics also denounced the bishops’ call for money to be diverted from defense spending. It is “seriously misleading” for the bishops to favor this “without say ing how we could do so without making ourselves and our allies vulnerable to military blackmail or worse,” they said. An underlying theme of the letter “appears to be a vision, not of justice based on liberty, but of an equality of income and wealth,” the critics said. “That concept of equality is in compatible with respect for liber ty,” they said. Chromosome defect shows link to dyslexia PHILADELPHIA (AP) —A form of dyslexia that may affect one out of every 100 Americans has been linked to an inherited chromosome defect, researchers said Tuesday. Based on a study of 16 families with a history of dyslexia, scientists concluded that one out of three in herited cases of the reading disorder is linked to a defect on chromosome 15, one of the 23 paired chromo somes that carry human genes. The finding, published in con junction with the annual meeting of the American Society of Human Ge netics in Philadelphia, should allow better detection of afflicted individ uals, said Herbert Lubs of the Uni versity of Miami, one of the study’s authors. “In a few years, we could probably predict at birth which child will have dyslexia,” Lubs said in an interview. Such children could then be given special training to help them cope with the disorder, in which the brain seems unable to correctly process se ries of letters or numbers. Although dyslexics are of normal intelligence, they often fall behind in school or are misdiagnosed as learning im paired, he said. The finding is also important be cause of the light it sheds on the workings of the brain, Lubs said. “It enables you to show that one gene is affecting a specific brain function and its development,” he said. Lubs said he believes that most dyslexia is inherited, but researchers do not know that for certain. Among Americans who suffered from dyslexia were President Wood- row Wilson and Vice President Nel son Rockefeller. Dr. Albert Galaburda, a neurolog ist at the Harvard Medical School who studies dyslexia, agreed that most dyslexia is inherited. But he said it is wrong to assume therefore that there is a specific gene that causes dyslexia. “It may be there is a gene that sets up changes to make a brain vulnera ble and let it show dyslexia under certain circumstances,” he said. Galaburda estimated about 10 million to 20 million Americans, suf fer from what can strictly be called dyslexia. Some estimates say that dyslexia strikes as many as 15 percent of Americans, Galaburda said, but those estimates include children for whom the reading disability is part of a larger problem of learning disa bilities. James Kavanagh of the govern ment’s National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Md., said that heredity “surely doesn’t account for all read ing failure, but it does account for some.” Proposals from Mexican leader suggest change in election laws MEXICO CITY (AP) — Sweeping political reform proposals presented Tuesday by President Miguel de la Madrid would allow opposition par es to gain at least 50 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, although one ever could win a majority. The proposals de la Madrid of fered to the Chamber would assure that his Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, retains the control it has had since the party was founded in 1929. The revisions, if approved as ex acted by the PRI-dominated Con- ress, would revise Mexico’s election ode for the first time since 1978 vhen the Chamber was expanded by 00 seats reserved for minority par- |ies. The chamber would be expanded from 400 seats to 500 seats under .the new proposals. The conservative National Action Party, or PAN, Mexico’s major op position party, has charged for years that Mexico’s election code and post election grievance policy favors the PRI. PAN leaders were not available for comment on the proposals Tues day, a spokeswoman at party head quarters said. But the Excelsior na tional news service quoted opposition leaders generally as dis missing the revisions, saying the pro posals “cannot be called political re forms because they benefit only the PRI.” Under de la Madrid’s plan, 300 of the 500 seats in the lower house of Congress would be reserved for can didates winning a majority in their districts. 1 he other 200 seats would be dis tributed proportionally among all registered political parties. The PRI could win as many as 50 of those. But the plan states that “the ma jority party (the PRI) will at no time lose the majority in the Chamber of Deputies.” The PRI controls the 100-seat Senate, the Chamber of Deputies, all 31 governorships and the presi dency. De la Madrid’s proposals, offered during a time of widespread crit icism of the ruling party, especially in the northern states where the PAN has more strength, would re quire the use of transparent ballot boxes instead of the cardboard or translucent boxes now used in most elections. Off Campus Aggies GENERAL MEETING WED., NOV. 5 6:30 PM 102ZACHRY Take a study break!! Come to MSC Political Forum’s GENERAL MTG Wednesday, Nov. 5 8:30 p.m. 502 Rudder ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ HVGE XAaz aho Yoo kjeepTHe THRTYcop.". Q>0 oz VlTCHEZS (d OOT/LES Of BUD on ICE X 1‘H Suites - all VaV : 'MZZk'E rmw ‘T-shirts TRisBees Fosters muts +. modE (! 303 W. UNIVERSITY • 846-1616 TM The FIvina Tomato Brothers & The Flying Tomato are registered trademarks © 1986 Flying Tomato Inc. 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