Monday, March 31, 1986 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan 0 ft By The Associated Press News D eport predicts no slowdown in Soviet weapons production WASHINGTON - Soviet leader Mikhail Gor bachev's ambitious strategy for modernizing his nation's troubled economy isn't likely to slow plans for building new military weapons, accord ing to an assessment by two major U.S. intelli gence agencies that was released Sunday. Soviet military leaders generally support Gor bachev's economic plans, although that backing could wane within two to three years, according to the CIA and the Pentagon's Defense Intelli gence Agency. The CIA DIA report was made March 19 in a classified meeting with the congressional Joint Economic Committee. A declassified version was made public Sunday by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., a member of the panel. The study noted that since Gorbachev came to power in March 1985, he has announced plans to overhaul and modernize the Soviet economy. "Gorbachev's plans call for boosting eco nomic growth through massive replacement of outdated plant and equipment and an emphasis on high tec hnology industries," the study said. Achieving his goal would "require record growth in the machinery allocated for moderniz ing Soviet plant and equipment," it said, noting that the machinery is produced by the same sector of the economy that builds military hardware. "Gorbachev's economic policies appear to command widespread political support" even among the military because military leaders agree that industrial modernization is necessary and because defense programs likely won't be hurt in the short run, the report said. The study also noted that the rate of Soviet military spending has generally shown little increase since 1975. But Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger has responded by noting that while the rate of increase may have slowed, the Soviet military starts from a much larger base, meaning that even small increases in spending produce large numbers of new weapons. census u rider way Time to stand up and be counted to gTO TrJensus Bureau is .about sending its forms to about 48,000 households across the nation. Although the official census remains more than four years in the future, the agency is already struggling with the logistics of counting nearly a quarter-billion Americans, and learning as much as possible about them. The current test centers on the questionnaire: what to ask and how to get the most accurate and complete response. Trying to decide what questions to include in the 1990 count, the bureau has held 65 hearings across the nation. At least one meeting was held in each state. In addition to the census of population and housing, proposals in this or past years have ranged from counting the nation's dogs and cats nabTfsV"" neDle's religious beliefs and sex The most controversial or intrusive items are easily rejected by census officials. They won't ask sexual preference or religion, for example. "The census is more than just a count of the population. It is a chance for us to take stock of ourselves as a people and successfully meet future local and national challenges," Census Director John G. Keane says in a message to households receiving the test questionnaires. The basic census information is collected because it is required in the Constitution, which directs that the people be counted every 10 years for the purposes of reapportioning the House of Representatives. I ft w ' M M. I 1 'Just a dancer gone bad...' Spring breakers go on rampage PALM SPRINGS, Calif. Thousands of ram paging youths on spring break hurled rocks at police, ripped clothing from women, publicly exposed themselves and dumped water into open-top cars on Friday as they shut down this desert resort's main street, police and witnesses said. "You try to arrest one, and you have 500 all over you for it," Police Sgt. David Goodwin said of the mob along Palm Canyon Drive. Thirty people were arrested, mostly for drunkenness, assaulting an officer and failure to disperse, he said. Members of the crowd sprayed Mace and threw rocks, bottles "and just about anything else the crowd can get their hands on" at offic ers, he said. Palm Springs, 1 10 miles east of Los Angeles, has long been a popular spot for students to gather during Easter break. A crowd of young men surrounded two women in an open Ferrari convertible Friday afternoon, said Associated Press photographer Douglas Pizac. "They started tearing their (the women's) clothes off," said Pizac, who intervened. He said the women, who were wearing T-shirts over two piece bathing suits, were crying and pleading with the men to stop. "One had her top torn off and the other had part of her bottoms torn off," said Pizac. "I asked them if they were all right after they started driving away, and one of them said 'I'll never be the same again.' She was driving with one hand, keeping her clothes over her chest with the other." L Actor James Cagney a tvo NEW YORK James Cagney, who won an Oscar as the song and dance man of "Yankee Doodle Dandy" but earned his place in movie history as the pugnacious hoodlum of such clas sics as "The Public Enemy" and "Angels with Dirty Faces," died Sunday. Cagney, 86, who suffered from diabetes, had been in declining health in recent days. He was released from Lenox Hill Hospital last week, where he had been treated for a circulatory ailment, and died at his Dutchess County farm north of New York City. Marge Zimmerman, his manager and confidante, said then that he was returning to his farm in Stanfordville "to be among the surroundings he loves." On Sunday, she would only say that he had died. She refused to give other details. Cagney had suffered a minor stroke in 1977 after being hospitalized for anemia. It was, in part, because of his health "The doctor says 'keep the man busy,"' Cagney recalled that he emerged from 20 years' retirement to star in "Ragtime" in 1981. Cagney's career spanned six decades. He outlived the other great Hollywood heavies: Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson and George Raft, all of them his co-stars. Asked in 1984 how he wanted to be remembered, Cagney shot back, "I don't want to be remembered at all." Then he paused, gave a big stage wink, and smiled. He drew ovations for a wide range of roles including mobsters in "The Roaring Twen ties" and "White Heat"; the neurotic ship captain in "Mister Roberts"; Lon Chaney in "Man of a Thousand Faces"; and George M. Cohan in "Yankee Doddle Dandy," the role for which he won his only Academy Award. The Cagney stance balanced on the balls of the feet, shoulders forward, fingers snapping or fist smashing into opposite palm and staccato delivery became a favorite of impersona tors. But one of their most common lines was a fraud, according to Cagney: "1 never once said in a film, 'You dirty rat!'" When he retired in 1961 alter appearing in 62 films, Cagney was still the wiry, 5-foot-8 ban tarn; when he returned to the screen in "Ragtime," the jutting jaw was encased in jowls, the legs moved slowly but the electricity still was there. Stardom came with Cagney's fifth film. "The Public Enemy" in 1931, in which he dodged live ammunition no special effects in those days and shoved half a grapefruit into the face of Mae Clark. For much of the next two decades he was one of Hollywood's top box office attractions, and when he went into restaurants', diners often sent grapefruit to his table. can 34 Nebraska Union J409 R St.. Lincoln. Ntb. WStS-0443 Editor Managing Editor News Editor Assoc. News Editor Editorial Page Editors Wire Editor Copy Desk Chiefs Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Photo Chief Night News Editor Advertising Manager Publications Board Chairperson Professional Adviser Readers' Representative Vicki Ruhga. 472-1766 Thorn Gabrukiewicz Judi Nygren Michelle Kubik Ad Hudler James Ropers Michiela Thuman Lauri Hopple Chris Welsch Bob Asmussen Bill Allen Osvid Creamer Jell Korbelik Sandi Stuewt John Hllgert. 475-4612 Don Walton. 473-7301 James Sennett 472-2538 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters ana Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday througn Friday. The public also nas access to the Publications Board. For information, contact John Hilgert, 475-4612. Subscription price is $35 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St.. Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE 68510. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1935 DAILY NEBRASKAN J A rYl It, TJVW- M : ft 1 I I ax &Ay .n c 1 .ves N D1 0 wm