Monday, August 29, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 Foreign firms take over companies Warped by Scott McCullar MERRITT, r WAS WCWPEKItfG IF YOU'P COME ON MY COOKING SHOW AND MAKE SOME OF YOUR COOKIES. I ME? YOO WANT M/ COOKIE RECIPE 0^ THE COOKING SMOW? I'D LOVE TO. WAIT A MINUTE. NOBODY EATS YOUR COOKIES.. WONDER WHY SHE WANTS 'EM ON THE COOKIM& SHOW? L HELLO, TODAY WE’LL SHOW YOU A COOKIE RECIPE YOU CAW USE IN YOUR KITCHEN THAT ACTUALLY KILLS ROACHES. Waldo by Kevin Thomas THE BACK TO SCHOOL SOUND OF AGGIES LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO PARK... HOUSTON CITY LIMIT THE BACK TO SCHOOL SOUND) OF FRESHMEN PRACTICING DORM YELL5. THE BACK TO SCHOOL SOUND OF STUDENTS GETTING THEIR FEE SUP.. New study may put Texas on top of health research GALVESTON (AP) —University of Texas researchers will soon launch a study they hope will estab lish the state as a national leader in minority mental health research. Backed by a $2.5-million federal grant, researchers at the UT Health Science Center in Houston and the UT Medical Branch in Galveston have set up the Texas Minority Men tal Health Research Center, sched uled to open Thursday. Targeting equal numbers of His- panics, blacks and whites, center re searchers will fan out in the Houston and Galveston area and across south Texas in coming months, said Fer nando M. Trevino, center director and UTMB associate professor of reventive medicine and community ealth. i They will interview 1,000 or more adolescent school children picked at random for a two-year study and fol low members of 150 or more fami lies in a three-year investigation. Among other things, scientists hope to determine the incidence of psychiatric problems among minori ties, whether current diagnostic pro cedures are appropriate for mi nority patients and now to provide good mental health services to mi nority groups. “The results of these research projects will provide essential infor mation which will allow policy-mak ers, health educators and health care providers to more effectively ad dress the needs of minority popula tions in the United States,” Charles E. Holzer III told the Houston Chronicle. “One of the things I hope will come out of this is that (Texas) legis lators will become increasingly aware of the importance of mental health services and of the difference they can make with a greater commit ment to such services,” Holzer said. Holzer, a UTMB associate profes sor of psychiatry and behavioral sci ences, and Robert E. Roberts, a UT Health Science Center professor of behavioral sciences, epidemiology and international health, are co-di- rectors of the new center. The Texas scientists competed with researchers at 21 other univer sities for the prized National Insti tute of Mental Health grant. “It’s a big first for Texas,” said Trevino. “It’s something we hope will put mental health research in the forefront in Texas and put Texas in the forefront in the na tion.” Texas is near the bottom of the list of states in expenditures for mental health services and provides vir tually no such services for children, Holzer said. DALLAS (AP) — A growing num ber of U.S. defense electronics com panies have found themselves de fenseless against takeover-hungry defense contractors, a newspaper re ported. More than a dozen U.S. defense electronics companies have been ac quired by other companies since Au gust 1987, including four of Texas’ largest defense equipment manufac turers, the Dallas Morning News re ported in its Sunday editions. The level of takeover activity also has raised national security questions among some U.S. defense exec utives, who fear too much of Ameri ca’s defense technology base many fall into the hands of foreign own ership, although the Pentagon re views each foreign takeover. “It’s interesting there have been foreigners picking up companies in areas that are relatively sensitive,” said Byron K. Callan, defense elec tronics analyst with Prudential Bache Capital Securities in New York. “It could emerge as a broader na tional issue,” he said. “And it’s inter esting to see the Defense Depart ment allow some of these (takeovers).” Most of the buyers have been manufacturers of aircraft, tanks and other big-ticket military items that expect an increasing number of Pen tagon contracts despite tightening pursestrings. As defense spending slows down, the military is increasingly upgrad ing existing equipment with electro nics. The latest Texas company to fall into a takeover tug-of-war was Varo Inc., based in the Dallas suburb of Garland, that makes night-vision sys tems, power systems, missile launch ers, laser-targeting devices and ad vanced military microcircuits. Varo last week agreed to be ac quired by Imo Delaval Inc., a Law- renceville, N.J., instruments and controls manufacturer, for $ 113 mil lion. An unfriendly suitor, United Scientific Holdings PLC of London, however, said it was prepared to of fer at least $ 117 million. James F. Gero, chairman and chief executive officer of Varo, said he believes foreign companies are at tracted to the U.S. defense market because of several factors, including the fact American firms offer state- of-the-art technology. re you new to the Bryan- College Station Area? Have you moved to the Brazos Valley within the past 18 months to two years? 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