The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 25, 1981-Page 3 U.S., Soviets schedule talks *on control of nuclear weapons l NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE ... YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE RUBBER TREE's WIDE SELECTION OF CONTRACEPTIVES AT LOW PRICES! - Send $5.00 for a ppd. variety pack of 12 condoms or write for a descriptive MAIL ORDER FORM for condoms, foams, jellies, books, posters, and more! THE RUBBER TREE (206) 633-4750 UNITED NATIONS (AP)- The United States and the Soviet Union an- nounced yesterday that negotiations to control nuclear weapons in Europe will begin Nov. 30 in Geneva, the first tangible result of high-level U.S.-Soviet talks here. A joint statement said they -would "spare no effort" to reach agreement, lthough U.S. officials said privately he negotiations likely will take many months, if not years. THE TALKS will be the first signific- nat negotiations between the Reagan administration and the Soviet leader- ship after months of harsh rhetoric between the two superpowers. Agreement to begin the talks came. during the four hour meeting here Wednesday between Secretary of State Alexander Haig and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. They are to meet again Monday. The joint announcement said, "Both sides believe in the importance of these negotiations for enhancing stability and international security and pledged to spare no effort to reach an appropriate agreement." PAUL NITZE -was named the chief U.S. negotiator. Considered a hardliner on dealing with the Soviets, the 74-year- old Nitze helped negotiate the first Strategic Arms Limitation Agreement in 1972, but he opposed the unratified 1979 SALT Ii accord. The new negotiations will be known as the Theater Nuclear Force talks. The Soviet side will be headed by Am- bassador U.A.Kvitsinsky, most recen- fly assigned to the Soviet Embassy in West Germany. President Reagan told Leonid Brezhnev, the Soviet leader, in a letter Tuesday the United States wants "significant, verifiable reductions in nuclear weapons . . ." U.S. negotiators are likely to demand ironclad verification procedures for any agreement. THE JOINT announcement said the discussions will be aimed at control of nuclear arms, but didn't specify what nuclear arms would be covered, in- dicating the exact scope of the talks' hasn't yet been agreed on. The United States and most of its NATO allies hope to emerge with an agreement to' control medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe, and favor initially limiting the talks to those missiles. The Soviet Union, on the other hand, wants a broader focus, to include other European-based nuclear weapons, such as U.S. aircraft. WHILE MEDIUM-range missile talks are not on the level of SALT negotiations, they are considered part of the overall SALT process, or framework, U.S. officials say. A Defen- se Department official said earlier this week the administration may make proposals for a new round of SALT talks within the next six months. The NATO decision to start deploying the U.S.-made missiles in two years, coupled with the administration's decision to start manufacturing the neutron warhead, has sparked major protests in West Germany and created political headaches for Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, NATO in 1979 agreed to deploying 572 Pershing and cruise missiles to counter the Soviet installation of medium-range SS-20 missiles targeted on Europe. But the members have insisted on a U.S. commitment to hold the arms talks with the Soviets in hopes the Soviets will remove their missiles and the U.S. missiles won't be needed. Dept. MMD 4426 Burke Ave. N. Seattle, WA 98103 a non-profit project of Zero Population Growth-Seattle I r -N (fr Ibe - Me--al ., p 1 99j II Nill .,{i Ill a College Board plans new exam WASHINGTON (AP) - The College Board, long ark arbiter of the top achievers in the nation's high schools, aid yesterday it wants to set the inimum skills all college-bound students should possess. One, board official said the organization may design a new test rivaling its college entrance examination, the Scholastic Aptitude Test, to measurethose minimum skills. It does not have such a test yet, he said. THE BOARD - a non-profit group of ,500 colleges, schools and education ssociations - announced plans for a I 10-year drive called "Project Equality" to boost high school standards and prepare more minority students for college. , Conferring with more than 400 educators over the past year, the board said it found a consensus on six basic academic competencies needed for college. They are: reading, writing, listening and speaking, mathematics, reasoningand knowing how to study. The "basic academic curriculum," whether a student is bound for Harvard or a community college, also should in- clude courses in English, mathematics, foreign language, history or social studies, natural science and the visual and performing arts, the board said. IN THE YEAR ahead, after further discussions with educators and curriculum experts, the board plans to offer a more detailed definition of what students should have learned in those courses. Since "the content and difficulty of high school courses, even though bearing the same label, may vary widely from school to school," the board said, it is essential to define "what students should have accom- plished in those areas in terms of lear- ning outcomes rather than simply number of years studied." College Board President George Han- ford said the project "is not an attempt HAPPENINGS- HIGHLIGHTS Open auditions for Offenbach's operetta, "La Vie Parisienne,' will be held today at the First Baptist Church, 512 E. Huron. Persons wishing to audition are asked to come at 8 p.m. with sheet music of a song they will sing. Directors are seeking actors and dancers, as well as vocal talent. FILMS School of Public Health-The Killing Ground, 12:05 p.m., SPH Aud. II. AAFC-American Gigolo, 7 & 9p.m., MLB 3. Alternative Action-The Caine Mutiny, 7 p.m.; The Big Sleep, 9:15 p.m., MLB 4. Mediatrics-Adventures of Robinhood, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Cinema Guild-Melvin and Howard, 7 & 9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall. Gargoyle Films-The Paper Chase, 7 & 9 p.m., Rm. 100, Hutchins Hall, Law School. Cinema II-The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Second Annual World's Worst Film Festival-The Terror of Tiny Town, 7 p m.; I Changed My Sex, 9 p.m.; Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, 11 p.m., Michigan Theater. PERFORMANCES The Stage Company-Hold Me, 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State St. Professional Theater Program-Mirandolina, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Ark-Concert, Jim Ringer & Mary McCaslin, 9 p.m., 1412 Hill St. SPEAKERS Center for South & Southwest Asian Studies-Bag Lunch, 'Dr. R. K. Naidu, "Obstacles Which Beginners Face in Religious Training," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. University Health Services and Public Health - Fumio Ito, "Current Developments in University Health Services in Japan," 2:30 p.m., Rm. 3001, SPH, Vaughan Bldg. Guild House - Ali Safavi, "Revolutionary Iran," noon, 802 Monroe St. Transportation Certificate Program - Lepnard Woodcock, 2 p.m., Hen- derson Rm., Michigan League. Center for South & Southeast Asian Studies- John Whitmore, "The Past as a Force in Southeast Asia's President," 3-5 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Room. Rudi Foundation - Swami Gopalananda, "Freedom Beyond the Mind," 3:15 p.m., Michigan Union Kuenzel Room. Wholistic Health Council - Robert Svoboda, "The Hidden Secret of Ayur- veda, 7:30 p.m., 602 E. Huron. Astronomy - Gunther Elsta, Solar X-Rays, 8:30 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall. MEETINGS Duplicate Bridge Club - Individual Club Championships, inexperienced duplicate players welcome, 7:30 p.m., Michigan League. International Student Fellowship - Open to all foreign students, 7 p.m., 4100 Nixon Road. Lowbrow Astronomers- 7:30 p.m., 5006 Angell Hall. MISCELLANEOUS WCBN-The American premier of John Cage's new work, "Empty Wor- ds," readings based on Thoreau's writings. 12-hour live broadcast live from Hartford, Conn., 9:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m., 88.3 zfm. Chinese Bible Class - University Reformed Church, 7:30 p.m. International Folk Dance Club - All levels, 8-9:30 p.m., Michigan Union. CRLT - Faculty workshop, "Stress Management, 7-9 p.m., Registration required. Call 763-2396. to establish a single national curriculum." It will be up to schools, colleges, teachers, parents and studen- ts to carry out the drive for higher stan- dards, he said. THE PLAN IS a response to the erosion of scholastic standards charted by the steady decline in SAT scores. The average verbal score on the multiple choice test, scored on a 200-to- 800 scale, has dropped from 478 to 424 since 1963. The average math score has dropped from 502 to 466. 'U' prof speaks to Con gress on media regulation The government may eventually have to decide once and for all whether to engage in public-interest regulation of broadcast media, or to cease from any such regulation entirely, a Univer- sity professor told a Congressional sub- committee. Prof. Lee Bollinger, a specialist in First Amendment theory at the Univer- sity's Law School, said the advent of new technologies such'as "videotext" and "teletext" news dissemination-where newspapers' contents are actually broadcast on a Svideoscreen-raises unusual questions on First Amendment rights and media regulation. IN THE PAST, said Bollinger, the courts and regulatory agencies have followed a dual policy regarding First Amendment issues-leaving the print media virtually unregulated, while establishing rules for "fairness" and "reasonable access" requiring a diver- sity of views over the airwaves. But Bollinger said widespread use of "videotext" would actually combine print and broadcast media, and could raise complicated free speech questions. "We will feel compelled to choose whether or not to regulate at all. "THOUGH IT IS difficult now to see how that choice sould be made in the distant future, the presumption should be, I think, against, rather than for, total regulation," argued Bollinger. Total regulation under those circum- stances would be risky because "we might lose in the process that intangible but nevertheless vital sense within the press of being independent, and to some degree 'unaccountable' to anything but its own journalistic standards." IN THE MORE immediate future, Bollinger said he doubted that the widespread availability of cable television today would significantly alter present government regulation of broadcasting. Instead, he said, the courts are likely to continue the trend of "affirmative" regulation of broad- casting, designed to promote broad- casting in the "public interest." 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