Page 2-Thursday, October 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily Highly cultured. N BRIEF Complied from Assoctlted Press and United Press international reports Concentration camp guard may lose citizenship WASHINGTON-Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti yesterday urged the Supreme Court to allow stripping 73-year-old Feodor Fedorenko of his American citizenship because he concealed his service as a Nazi concen- tration camp guard. Fedorenko was a guard at the notorious Treblinka death camp in Poland-a fact which he concealed on his application for an American visa in 1949. Fedorenko's lawyer argued that he served involuntarily at Treblinka and did not guard the gas chamber. Six Treblinka survivors testified that Fedorenko shot, beat and whipped prisoners, however. According to his lawyers, Fedorenko is now in hiding because of threats. Man holds up TV station CINCINNTI-A man who said he shot his girlfriend and wanted to blow up a traffic court building took over a television station in downtown Cincinnati early yesterday and held police at bay with a semi-automataic rifle for nearly 12 hours before he killed himself, police said. James Hoskins, a graphic design artist and martial arts enthusiast, for- ced his way into the studios of WCPO-TV at 2:05 a.m. and held seven station employees hostage for about 1% hours. After Hoskins gave them his key, police went to his apartment and found the body of Hoskin's girlfriend, Melanie Finley. Police also found 25 guns, silencers and machine tools to manufacture siencers. The apartment building was evacuated, along with a nearby building that housed downtown police department offices and traffic court. A bomb squad found a bomb in the court building and defused it, accor- ding to Officer Tom Kellison. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK PHYSICIST SHELDON GLASHOW, winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize for physics, speaks yesterday to a crowd of more than 800 at Rackham Auditorium. Glashow is currently a professor at Harvard University. NOBEL WINNER VISITS 'U': "0 Physicist Y I6 By MARK SCHUMACK "Once upon a time there was copper and lead and rocks and trees and other stuff," said Sheldon Glashow, winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize for physics and a pioneer in the search for the principles behind the "other stuff." Glashow, who spoke at Rackham Auditorium yesterday to a crowd of more than 800, has helped confirm the link between two of the four fundamen- tal forces in the universe. The four for- ces are: gravity, electromagnetism, and the so-cafled "strong" and "weak" forces. PHYSICISTS believe Glashow's research will help lead to the Grand Unified Theory, which could tie together three of the basic forces: elec- tromagnetism and the weak and strong forces. The latter two involve the decay and cohesion of atomic nuclei. A large "underground swimming pool" in Ohio will be the key to confir- mation of the GUT, according to Glashow. The Ohio project, of which the University is a part, consists of obser- ving the behavior of protons in a recon- structed mine shaft filled with water. Scientists believe that the decay of protons will provide important eviden- ce supporting the GUT. The fourth force, gravity, will be more difficult to incorporate into what Glashow called, "The Theory"-that is, the ultimate link between the four for- ces. IN AN INTERVIEW before his lec- ture, Glashow noted that gravity is an extremely difficult force to evaluate because it is only relevant "for very large things or very small things." He added that "some new major theoretical breakthrough" is needed for gravity research. Glashow, a physics professor at Har- vard University, punctuated his speech with lively anecdotes which drew laughter from the crowd., Applause filled the auditorium when he called Harvard the "Michigan of the East." The physicist is also credited with the discovery of the "charmed quark," one of six types of particles scientists believe form all other matter. ONE IN FIVE A REFUGEE MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)-The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. reports that in the East African country of Somalia about one of every five inhabitants is a refugee. Ethiopians have been fleeing across the border of their country into Somalia in increasing numbers in the past 12 months to escape famine and civil strife. According to the U.N. figures, there are nearly 750,000 refugees living in camps in Somalia while nearly a half milltion others are sheltered outside the camps. Heat-related deaths high ,, ,. during summer 1980 WASHINGTON-The final toll from this summer's heat wave is 1,265 deaths and nearly $20 billion in damage; the National Oceanic and At- mospheric Administration reported yesterday. Only three other summers in this century have taken more American lives in heat-related fatalities. Most of those who died from the heat were either elderly or poor and, lived in non-air conditioned homes or apartments, said the agency. Missouri, with 311 deaths, had the highest toll in the nation, although, other states had higher temperatures for longer periods.4. The highest reported heat-wave death toll for this country was the 9,508. fatalities of 1901. The only other years with more heat deaths than this sum; mer were 1936 with 4,678 fatalities and 1952 with 1,401. 0 Callaghan resigns from Labor party, Healey to run II STUDY MEDICINE In W.H.O. Listed FOREIGN MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR JANUARY SEMESTER DO NOT DELAY! CALL/WRITE I.S.P.S. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT PLACEMENT SERVICE 572 Dundas Street London, Ontario N6B 1 W8 (519) 433-1973 wins Nobel Prize All natural, creamy, full of fruit BREYERS' Realyogurt at its-best. (continued from Page 1) enables economists to "roll with each helping people." He said Klein still event and do a new forecast. The im- maintains a close association with the portant thing is to have a system that is University. already ready." According to Hymans, Klein con- Among his other accomplishments, tinued to develop the econometric Klein served as an advisor to Jimmy models after he left the University. Carter during the 1976 presidential When asked about the models, Klein campaign, and has remained an unof- said they are "good tools for dealing ficial consultant to the administration. with the uncertainties of life." The use He served as coordinator of Carter's of such econometric models, he said, economic task force and has often met with Carter advisors on a project to revise the Consumer Price Index. DIFORIO NAMED Ragnar Bentzel, a Swedish economist NEW YORK (AP)-Robert G. Diforio and member of the economics selection has been appointed president and committee, said Klein's current project publisher of New American Library. dubbed "Link," is his "crowning The appointment is effective Jan. 1, achievement." 1981. Diforio will be responsible for all The project, begun in the late 1960s, of NAL's book operations, which in- aims at coordinating econometric- cludes mass market, trade paperbacks models of various countries to help in and hardcovers, forecasting international trade and capital movements, academy officials Pease Join the Cr" said. Among other things, the models can S O O Ashow how oil price increases influence inflation, employment, and trade balance in difference countries. THRU SATURDAY LONDON-James Callaghan resigned as leader of the deeply divided opposition Labor Party yesterday, leaving its right and left wings to battle for control of Britain's socialist movement. The decision by the 68-year-old former prime minister not to run in the party's annual leadership election Nov. 4 is seen as enhancing the chances that another moderate will win. In January, the party will decide on a new leadership electoral college expected to favor the left. Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey, 63, the right's front- runner, immediately announced he will seek the leadership. At least four other contenders, all to the left of Healey, are expected to run. Mechanics end 3-day strike Bus mechanics and maintenance workers in suburban Detroit yesterday voted on a second contract proposal to end their 3-day-old strike but transit officials in St. Louis, Dallas, Boston and Lynn, Mass., still sought solutions to their labor problems. About 47,000 commuters outside Detroit were left with limited service when the 160 members of the United Auto Workers Local 417-mostly mechanics and maintenance men-walked off the job and drivers would not cross their pickets. Detroit has a separate bus system and was not affected. At 5 a.m. yesterday, after an all-night bargaining session, the union's negotiators reached a second proposal and unanimously endorsed it. Chicago police department to vote on -unionization CHICAGO-Amid allegations of a sweetheart deal between the mayor and the Teamsters union, 10,008 policemen in the nation's second largest city vote today on whether to unionize and who should represent them. Five organizations, including the Teamsters, are battling to represent' policemen and women below the rank of sergeant. Squabbling, name- calling, and picketing broke out this week among the Teamsters, the other police organizations and officials of the police department. The Teamsters, angry about what they call anti-labor propaganda passed out by police officials, picketed the city's Navy Pier on Tuesday in an attempt to close down preparations for an art show. QJIt Lirbigan BDat-IV Volume XCI, No. 37 Thursday, October 16. 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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