Show Page 2 Student Life Friday April 1 1977 Oufscfe The Valley Soviets reject arms limitation AP Soviet leader Iwrnd I Brezhnev rejected MOSCOW Ameru an nuclear arms control proposals Wednesday shattering the latest eff'Tt to sign a new strategic arms limitation treaty Secrelarv of State Cvrus K 'ance who had waited three days for a and a resjsnse to his SAI T proposals said both a comprehensive m re limited approai h had been offered but the Soviets did not find either one acceptable ance dened the proposals had been turned down because of Soviet criticism He said the unhappiness over American human rights Russians reieited both proposals because ' they did not coincide with wfa' 'Lev consider to be an equitable deal The Carter administration has stressed its commitment to human rg'-’- s around the world and Brezhnev has warned publicly that L’ S cTita ism of nternal Soviet affairs could interfere with arms talks and o'her efforts to improve relations between the two countries c i e said he had been unable to reach even his minimum goal of se’tir up a format Air continuing SALT talks He said he would bring the arms control matter up again in May at a meetrg w itn Sov let Foreign Minister Andrei A Gromyko Probably in Western Furope But Brezhnev is the only single leader who would ru rmallv be able to accept American SALT proposals and Vance noted the Middle Hast and dher items'' would also be on the May agenda He told reporters he had had a one-homeeting with Brezhnev with the Soviet leader doing all the talking” and proposing "nothing new i r their side e had said he would stay in M oscow longer if progress on the trpu’v pr 'sisals warranted it but planned after the Brezhnev meeting to eave for Western Furope Thursday morning on schedule ur Eating cigarettes instead of swats P — Kenneth Hightower the Hl'MF Mo who gave two pupiLs the choice of paddlings announced Thursday he will give up his job and end of the school year in May Two teen-ag- e boys became violently ill after high school principal or eating cigarettes turn to farming at the eating nine cigarettes apiece rather than be paddled for violating a rule against taking tobacco into Hume High School The American Civil liberties Union has said it plans to file a damage suit on behalf of the boys with the possibility that Hightower could be a defendant The school board backed him up when mothers of the two boys sought his removal for enforcing the tobacco rule 522 USU students donate Males go topless iAPi SAN FRANCISCO Calif APi — Five thin rings have been delected surrounding the mysterious planet Uranus and scientists said W ednesday they constitute the first major structural discovery in the soiar svstem in 50 years Ur’il the sighting from an airborne space laboratory earlier this mor’h and followup confirmation by earthbound astronomers Saturn was believed to be the only one of the solar system’s nine known planets to have such rings Details of the finding were discussed by researcher James Elliott m an interview "The possiblity of the rings had been vaguely speculated before but the discovery caught everyone by said Elliott’ an surprise" astronomer at Cornell University Elliott said he and his coworkers at the Ames Research Center here were studying the stars around Uranus the seventh planet from the sun from the laboratory aircraft 41000 feet above the Indian Ocean when the abrupt sighting was made The rings had not been discovered before he explained because the light reflected from the planet is usually so bright it obscures lesser reflections from the rings But on March 10 the planet’s position on the nightside of earth provided the right light conditions for detecting the rings Elliott said the rings are similar to the rings around Saturn but much thinner Much more research remains to be done he added ' We don't know why they are so thin” he said “They are only a few miles thin and the thickest one is 30 to GO miles Saturn’s rings are thousands of miles thick "We can’t really tell what the rings are made of" he said “One good guess would be some type of ice One theory about Saturn’s rings is that they are made out of snowballs" One possibility he said is that the rings are composed of material present during the formation of solar system that never coalesced into moons or are remnants of a moon He also said the discovery of the rings could have a major impact on current knowledge of Uranus Presently scientists believe Uranus is four times larger than Earth and has a surface temperature of 300 degrees below zero Fahrenheit It is 1 7 billion miles from the sun After the National Aeronautics and Space Agency teams first reported the rings observatories around the world were asked to confirm the sighting Existence of the rings since has been confirmed from observatories in India and Australia planet VIEW PlutoTm'610 the9oUr sstem blood at USU The ke to achieve Jev were 1 amount would thanks iTu)® jjj? lucky to f?o over v here at USU £ Aggie Review editor Co mi a win honors andstudents Sagers and USU Ray Cornia Val have received Review was lucky lot ff l?ood recog- 1 nition for their journalistic achievements from the Society of lYofessional Journalists SDX In regional competition me and it' of stu- put a lot tips before about go-g- o :! dancers By 00© r S H Buckle Jeans Qlh© — BaQogQ - ! aSALE B©ir ROUGHOUTS Regular J24S now $34°° WATER BUFFALOS !' WESTERN SHIRTS NOW100U Rag SH OO NOW $44°° Rg 5750 fun to shop at M0DHTAIH PLACE IX DOWNTOWN it ® m of CACHE VALLEY MALL George earned fa These are the first SDX awtf to tie received by members fa student chapter of SDX wtudi been on campus only two yen women 40 fa o urpnse to be recognized things he has done -- -- Tuesday night "This is a first for the West Coast" said Sgt 1st Class Iieo Meneghetti manager of the NCO club at the Army post He said the club regularly featured female workiM of hours Sagers said cartoons the award He said nity Sagers and Uomia took third place awards Sagers won her award for editing the student magazine "Aggie about the HA I enough to bn liters forma's dent newspapers magazines cartoonists photographers sponsored by the journalism frater- Ask and ‘“a yells or lewd shouts when the two topless dancers gyrated on the state at the crowded officers' club at the lYesidio of San Francisco Instead the performance by duo the prespiring bikini-cla- d attracted lots of squeals and giggles On stage were Terry Jaume and Robbie Para both males who performed for $10 an hour plus i dlSC°Very dnv There weren't many raucous Rings around Uranus MOL NT AIN "The need for blood is never easing In L'tah and Idaho and parts of Nevada and Wyoming 150 units are needed to serve 50 she said hospitals daily Salt Lake bases the blood The American Red (Yoss at USU the second time this year for blood donations successfully obtained a 5X) unit quota as it also did in October and ‘A total of 522 students ( ache Valley residents donated their blood in this drive — just a few less than the total of the last drive" said nurse Rothwell head of the drive 'Volunteers from Cache Valley work for the Red Cross m these drives The blood unit comes up from Salt lake each day of the three-da- v drive to transport the blood The blood truck is always on the road someplace transporting the blood" Rothwell said Our blood unit truck travels the intermountain states of I’tah Nevada Idaho and southwestern Wyoming Our nurses travel along with the truck and work shifts to take care of the donating” she said PARK e”hEdSTok |