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Show 2 Hit Sail Lake Tribune, Sunday, October 27, lUtiJ Anns Control On Track, n Reagan Says (Milmui'd F roin A .lie ruled Nations to urge the Soviet nion to resolve tensions in the five I nations I Joes the Soviet Union share our music lion that true peace must rest on tfie right of all per, pies to choose then (Jest ms to grow and develop ee from inert ion and fear''" t tie We shall sec- in Ge- presufi id asked - lleu Reagan noted the U S intervention Gicnada two years ago and said a ores of ( ornrriunisi-bloadvisers, supplies of Soviet arms and secret treaties made with communist states were found there It showed the world tmw communist revolutionaries can hijack an entire country Reagan m c sud The president also noted that his talks with the allies pointed up cooperation in the fight against terrorism and drug abuse 'Our action two weeks ago to apprehend the Palestinian hijackers was not our last," Reagan promised, a reference to the IJ S interception of an Egyptian airliner carrying the Palestinian hijackers of the Achille I.auro ( counteroffensive at the United Nations last week, President Reagan will try to focus the nation's attention on his summit meeting next month with Soviet leader Mikhail S Gorba-- ( hev The president has done a lot of quiet thinking about the meeting with the Soviets," Reagan spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters on the way back from the president's three-davisit to New York "He has some strong and definite views about what he wants to achieve and the way he wants to go about seeking resolution of many of the problems "that exist between the two countries Reagan plans to express those views in a series of interviews with American and foreign Journalists He will deliver at least one more address before major foreign-policleaving for Geneva on Nov. 16 and about a dozen hours of formal and informal discussions with the new Communist Party chief Al the same time, administration strategy for making the talks produc y y So-vi- LiW system Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. says the American political .HI years, so shifts between liberalism and conservatism about every liberalism should he back in the mainstream by 1990 It takes people to make the eye les c hange and the system work, the author of "A Thousand Days John F Kennedy Pulitzer ( ollege in in the White House" said in a speech last week at Berry Rome. Ga As a result. Schlesinger said. President Reagans popularity is not conservatism. "F ar from bemg the start of sweeping and bold new ideas, this is the boilerplate of all conservative movements, he said Prize-winnin- President and Mrs. Reagan wave to reporters as they leave helicopter for the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md. on tive will he refined by aides, and Rea gan will be spending more time with his advisers in this period that they " call ' the run up to the summit Speakes said Reagan was "extremely pleased" with the three days he spent in New York cementing relations with the Western allies before going to Geneva the president used the time primarily to talk with allied leaders, it was during his address to the U N. General Assembly that Reagan reached for the limelight that has been focused on the Soviets in recent Although weeks proposal for a fresh start" in U S Soviet relations and a new formula for ending civil wars in Soviet-backeThird World countries, Reagan rearranged the summit agenda. which had been focused primarily on ways to reduce nuclear weapons arsenals With his -- d It was the beginning of a concentrated U S attempt to regain the high ground seized by Gorbachev with his arms reduction proposals and an engaging public style uncharacteristic of previous Soviet leaders Although administration officials caution against raising hopes about superpower relations by the use of words like "breakthrough" or "accord," both sides are complimenting each other's seriousness of purpose and desire for progress That became clearer by the addition of a Reagan meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze in New York and Fridays announcement that Secretary of State George P. Shultz will meet with Gorbachev in Moscow to pursue issues likely to come up at the summit. The deep differences dividing the two nations' leaders are still apparent, but the tone they use in talking about each other indicates a shift away from belligerance to a search for areas where they may find things on which they can agree. Speakes said Reagan will continue to press for legislation overhauling the income-ta- x system and setting deficit reduction goals, but he has no plans for more domestic travel campaigning for a tax bill or to raise money for Republican campaign chests long-lastin- Slate Deofficials sought to Saturday partment interview a sailor who officials said jumped from a Soviet ship in an apparent bid to defect, but was returned to the vessel by Border Patrol agents who thought he was a stowaway As the grain freighter Marshall Konycv remained anchored in the Mississippi River. U S officials were in touch with the Soviet Embassy in Washington. DC. said State Department spokesman Pete Martinez He s.ml U S officals wanted to interview ihe sailor in an environment where he could speak freely The sailor "may not wish to depart with his ship," said Charles Redman, another State Department spokesman. adding that "We are now seek" ing to determine his intentions Martinez and Redman, who spoke bv telephone, were in Washington. DC The unidentified seaman jumped into the river Friday while the ship was under way and swam ashore in an attempt to defect, but was inadvertently returned to the boat by Border Patrol agents who could not communicate with him and thought he wih a stowaway. said David II Lambert, district director of the U S Immigration and Naturalization Ser-- n ice 'The Border Patrol didn't under- stand what was going on and didn't realize he was trying to defect and brought him back to the ship." L;.m-- t ci t said in an interview w uh a newspaper the Times Pieavune, the States Item . Crystal Gayle and her husband. Bill Gatzimos. are expecting their second child early next spring. Gayle, sister of Loretta Lynn, said she will take time off from country music singing to prepare for the birth daughter, "We had so much fun with Catherine (their we re really looking forward to our second." Gayle said Tribune Wire Services iMarking Way to Centra U. S. Lists - Treaty Violations by Soviets terms of the unratified Salt 2 treaty' ICBM by deploying their new According to the State Department's listing, the is a double violation of the treaty once, because it is the second new missile that the Soviets have deployed when they are allowed only one new type, and second. because the warhead is so small that it could be quickly converted into a multiple warhead system The Soviets have denied the is a new missile, claiming that it is a permitted modification of the older missile WASHINGTON (UPI) The Reagan administration has marked the approaching Geneva summit by publ lishing a long list of alleged treaty violations by the Soviet Union covering everything from germ warfare to new ballistic missiles. SS-2- arms-contro- SS-2- 5 During the week, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger added to the State Department's list by confirming that the Soviets had violated the SS-2- 5 SS-1- 3 The Soviet Embassy placed a ad tn The Washington Post Friday, among other things, denying any violations and charging that the United States is preparing for the summit by distorting the Soviet position "real lads are being presented in a crooked mirror and attempts are being made to spread doubts in the world about the sincerity of the Soviet Unions intentions " The Soviet ad also explained the advantages of the Soviet's latest proposal for a 50 percent cut in strategic weapons On the list of the State Depart $28,000 full-pag- e - ments allegations - 'irricam; Nele Posing Throat to Hawaii ONOLlLU (UPI) - A hurricane was issued Saturday for the of Hawaii as Hurricane Note, driven by winds to 115 miles an hour, drifted toward the islands from about 500 miles away The center of the hurricane was 510 miles southwest of Honolulu and moving north northeast at 10 to 20 mph. the National Weather Service said Neles strongest sustained winds near the center were 90 mph with gusts to 115 mph Hurricane force winds of 74 mph or more extended about 50 miles trom the center, the weather service said, and gale force winds of 39 mph or more extended 115 mph from the center e c Instructions from their Residents were warned to take mediate satotv measures lip & swi: fir Salt Cakr tTnbtinf jo. th i ! I' L sou need informal inn, want sports s ires, have a nesss siorv nr feature sou want to talk about? Is sour paper missing? t)o you want to liM uss a lussifu'd or display advertisement? ) r n u Assoc lerted Press Losem-ot- i in the Soviet sailor walks the deck of the Marsr.all Konyev Mississippi River. A crewman apparently tried to defect. f SGltjlr fH cl GmJ toil, Cjncl I t they would he designed to ti II students how they an doing how tiles ring'll impl'i'.p and ssti.it aca di one itnj frii i't interests they hi pursue I hesi tests would ho designed not io select not to sor tout hut to help might M Am Ig s.iut ly l&'l put omj einnx 7 ibunr Son South !! if SiJUtjO t, tli 14) prr fTtion ukr ri. aot kino fit till ( loss urt I'ld i 'hijnr 'tv, Utrjl MERES WHERE TO CALL !( jr 4 If lA'fifr s one , r ril'd is k ff j He stressed that the ness tests would not repld'e more traditional exams like the VhoiaMie Aptitude Test the muUpie-home exam administered hv FTS end taken by about a million college bound stuc dents a year A second spi aker Theodore R Sizer chairman of Rrown University's education department unveiled an esen more sweeping testing proposal which he called a Sec undury School la ivirg Exhibition Ihe exti.liileil) he saiu would ae-- t ; i' ii cl . he a iiial c iminalii n la.il a take s oluril a ,1s as young as age 12 as an alii rnatise was of earning a high si fit ii iliplom i thijnr on1'Of ussunif , on r soon did f tr,rJ f Jilr A ft !o Uni . In ' t (, foil, 1,. a U y bh (pf O' mi hi Vf or J1 Vftr,ipoi.ta iM U' lip, .! s,fi g ( 1 IJI " y v r.p y n. Sizer, whose 1984 book Horace's Compromise" is one of the most w ide-lcited education reform documents, said the proposed exam might c (insist of conventional tests as well as essays, demonstrations of a students exerachievements, problem-solvincises, and an oral interview Such a national exam is a ' frightening idea." Sizer admitted It could end up dominating 'he standards and content of seconders sc hool education It would be extremely expensive to design and administer II might he open to endless lawsuits And il might spaw n a w hule new Imi earn in an educational world .dreads smothered in administrative mac tun erv. N , S duo lift - n ur y f ,,r n ur. ' G'lPt rOO I' Olds I nt (jt n fll.ff 12-Year-- mono oi tit u- ,, ji( tin , l ttf lit too ij t POSV&STfW 'ill1' t! j 'i 'ri'ti SfRt H4 n,oh( t S )H Computer Testing Paves IVay to College for Such tests would not be anything like the achievement or ap'itude tests now used to grade select or evaluate students D'I2J7 200 Msin Ardm rl'j, s inlumr 5 .til L.ikr I Telephone Numbers fa im- USPS4B3-600014 second The aim of the new program, named "Project Jessica" alter the daughter of an FITS executive. is to devise "helping tests." compuexams that might not ter-based even have scores v viola- The Soviets are maintaining an offensive biological warfare program, in violation of the 1972 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. The department has charged that the Soviets are manufacturing anthrax biological weapons in a military lab near Sverdosk. where an accident infected a large number of people four years ago The department also renewed charges that the Soviets have used mvcotoxins - "yellow rain" in Laos. Cambodia and Afghanistan However, officials said there has been no new yellow rain eases reported in the last two years - The Soviets have violated the Limited Test Ban treaty several times by permitting the "venting" d radioactive matter into the atmosphere The U S list said "The Soviet Union has likely violated the Threshold Test Ban Treaty of 1974" by exceeding the 150 kiloton explosive power limit. Although the United States has not ratified the treaty, both sides have stated publicly they would observe its limits Oml'emue Target Student of the Future When future NEW YORK i.Mi liooldnldten take tests, they might not be graded, they 11 um.' computers rather than No 2 pencils, and some who pass certain exains might even be allowed to graduate from high school js young as 12 yeais old Tnuse and other futute prospects in educational testing were discussed Sc' ur day by leading educators at the Educational Testing Service's Inula lonal (onference on The Redesign " o! 'I esmg tor the 21st ( enturv To hi ini' some of those usions to e, ilits FIS President Gregors It ii ig aiinoiinc ed that Hie Irmieton N .1 based test maker was creating a v in million fund to develop a new i operation of leMs h" the sear 2onp of Soviet tions .r si amp''n. a Phyllis George says shes happy to be back in Kentucky after brief and not too successful run on "The CBS Morning News "I'm actually happiest in sweats, shorts and sneakers with no makewith my family. up and my hair tied back, at home in Kentucky for a story on interviewed was She told Parade George magazine women beauty secrets of the world's most glamorous "I want to look together, the former Miss America said, hut not " like I fussed a lot to get there superiors time the unidentified seaman jumped ship, the newspaper said Richard, an agent for Universal Shipping Agents, Inc . a St Rose company, said he received a call from the Rorder Patrol late Thursday telling him a sailor had jumped from the deck swum ashore Richard said he was ordered to put the sailor hark on the ship I Science Center W Williams, whose career began in stand up comedy on the est Coast, and Hudson. The On Popeyc Moscow as films such in has appeared "The World According To Garp " He is wort .ng on a screen adaptation " of Saul Bellow's book, Seize The Day The ship remained at anchor Saturday at Belle Chasse, a small port town downriver from New Orleans, but Redman refused to say whether it wns being held there "The Soviet ship is free to leave when we have satisfied ourselves about this individual's intent. he said Redman said a State Department official and a Soviet Embassy representative were in New Orleans and that the department wanted to speak to the sailor "We will do what we always do in such cases, we will interview him in an environment where he can express his will," Redman said According to Sunday's Times Picayune, Thomas Richard, a shipping agent handling the ship's passage, said that on Saturday he escorted Soviet Embassy officials aboard the ship, which was en route to Reserve. La to pick up grain Richard said the Soviet officials refused late Saturday to allow an interview to take place until they had Friday's attempt was the has been honored by The Harvard which bills itself as the country's oldest humor magazine "This is the closest thing to an award I'll ever get. W illiams told a crowd of about 750 this week at the ceremony at Harvard University s "There are objective preconditions for the establishment of fruitful and mutually beneficial cooperation in various fields "It is the conviction of the CPSU that the policies of both powers should be oriented to mutual understanding rather than hostility, which is fraught with the threat of catastrophic consequences for the Soviet and American peoples and other nations " In another section devoted to struggles between "the forces of progress and the forces of reaction" in the world, however, the United States came in for harsh criticism. "The imperialism of the United States is the citadel of international reaction." the draft asserted. "It is first and foremost from it the United States that the threat of war emanates " The partys draft program charged that the United States pursues a policy of 'diktat by trying to dominate other nations, supporting repressive regimes and discriminating against countries that oppose U.S. policy Apparent Bid to Defect Foiled by Border Unit - NEW ORLEANS (AP) g Robin Williams Soviet-America- I'hyllis George Robin Williams Arthur Schlemngcr Jr said. Reagan Will Attempt to Focus Nations Attention on Summit WASHINGTON Ali Following the launch of his public relations ft Continued From At president from 1964 82, by asserting that economic problems in the 1970s and early la8us were caused largely by failure to mane policy changes in time In the section on relations with capitalist stales, the draft said the party will geek development of international detente as an essential stage on the road to a com irehensive security system "The Communist Party of the Sovi et Union stands for normal and stable relations between the Soviet Union and the United States of America in inpresupposing ternal allairs, respect for each oth ers legitimate interests, recognition and practical observance of the principles of equal security, and establishment of the greatest possible mutual trust on this basis," the document I ti s Y Cooperation I ' Spotlight: Draft Endorses US., Soviet - opv jImm loiw Mr Ho Sod f 'Ufa) r,r hr ii Ji d 0 n i, SB .0 JO mo SS (Jtift d A .i, r lo. yo 0 VfJU'f Sb ? .lull ."i m JjnlM I'JV I ih ( ,i n H I Hisp.ii. s(, dill , Wn 1 MIA s Mil Alls JIT. 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