India mourns dead leader, Hindus riot The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 1, 1984 - Page 5 Physicist urges moon colony establishment (Continued from Page 1) security men, UNI said. The second, identified as sub-inspector Deant Singh, was shot and wounded, and a third guard, who did not fire any shots, was arrested, UNI said. Earlier reports said the sub-inspector had been killed and the constable wounded. USTINOV, WHO described the scene inside the Gandhi compound as "total chaos," said he was told by a high- ranking security official that one of the Sikhs was a longtime bodyguard who had been moved from the post as a security risk "but she missed him and asked for him back again." The Ustinov camera crew was waiting in the Gandhi garden, about 80 yards away, and heard but did not see the attack. Several hours after the shooting, an unidentified telephone caller told The Associated Press in New Delhi: "We have taken our revenge! Long live the Sikh religion!" POLICE NOTES Man robbed A 26-year-old Ypsilanti man was robbed at gunpoint on the 500 block of East Liberty at 12:00 a.m. Tuesday morning, Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Sumala said yesterday. The victim was sitting in his car on the street waiting for a friend. A man approached the car, and asked the vic- tim for a light for a cigarette. The man then produced a handgun, and deman- ded money, Suomala said. The victim attempted to leave the car, but was struck in the face several times with the butt of the gun, Suomala said. The thief left the scene with an un- determined amount of cash, a wallet, a watch, a ring, and a coat. The victim was treated for minor injuries at Beyer Hospital in Ypsilanti, and was released a short time later. The incident is currently under police investigation, Suomala said. Pot stolen A small amount of marijuana, stereo equipment and a small amount of cash were stoen during a break-in on the 600 block of East Madison, Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala said yester- The break-in occurred sometime between 6 p.m. Sunday and 1 a.m. Mon- day, Suomala said. The intruder gained entry into the house by removing a screen from a window, he said. The items were valued at ap- proximately $105, Suomala said. - Molly Melby ASKED WHO he was, the man said: "This is the action of the entire Sikh sect." He then hung up. The fallen prime minister was rushed three miles to the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, India's best hospital, where a team of doctors worked on her fruitlessly until 2:30 p.m., putting her on a heart and lung bypass machine and giving her blood transfusions. Hindus enraged by the assassination of Gandhi took to the streets of the capital armed with staves, rocks and firebombs, and more than 200 people were reported injured in northern India as news of her death swept through the country. POLICE SAID at least 42 shops and 117 vehicles were set ablaze by the rioting mobs, and at least 236 injuries were reported. Witnesses said rioters stopped vehicles, pulled Sikhs out and beat them. In Washington, President Reagan visited the Indian embassy hours after Ghandi's death to express his "shock, revulsion and grief" (over the assassination. ) "We have lost a friend," Reagan told Ambassador Shankar Bajpai. Reagan named Secretary of State George Shultz to head the U.S. delegation to Gandhi's funeral later this week. WASHINGTON (AP) - Nuclear physicist Edward Teller urged the United States yesterday to establish a colony on the moon in 10 years to obtain continuous, unimpeded observation of the Earth for "peacekeeping." "It would be nice to have a dozen people on the moon as soon as possible," Teller told scientists and engineers at a conference focusing on lunar bases and space activities in the next century. "I believe that surveillance of the Earth, permanent continuous sur- veillance that is hard to interfere with, is an extremely important question - important to us, important for the in- ternational community, important for peacekeeping," he said. Teller, a Hungarian-born scientist of- ten called the "father of the hydrogen bomb" - a term to which he takes ex- ception - said there have been proposals to guarantee observation facilities by treaties. "Treaties not only can be broken, treaties have been broken," said Teller, who headed the team that developed the hydrogen bomb in the 1950s. "It's better to have observation stations which are not easy to interfere with." Lunar colonizers should create moons for the moon by rocketing two huge boulders into orbit, Teller said. "I would like to take the biggest chunks that I can get off the moon and put them into lunar orbit," he added. Those "chunks" would serve as plat- forms for Earth monitoring instrumen- ts. "If the moon and these two additional satellites are available for observation, then we can have a continuous watch on all of the Earth," the physicist said. Teller suggested that 12 people, ser- ving up to three months, should make up the initial colony. "At least half of them coming back to Earth should get Nobel Prizes, and pretty soon we would be out of Nobel Prizes," said Teller. The main practical result of a lunar base, Teller said, is to use it as a station for refueling rockets with oxygen and hydrogen for trips farther into space. Hydrogen, not yet found in abundan- ce on the moon, might have to be delivered from Earth. Oxygen for propellant can be "boiled" with ex- tremely high heat from the iron oxide that is moon rocks, Teller said. Associated Press Fake Fritzes Not even presidential candidate Walter Mondale can hide from Halloween pranks as he is surprised by members of the media wearing Mondale masks in Louisville, Ky., yesterday. I 1 1 c 1 1 i Scientists isolate key gene (Continued from Page 1) Now, Davis said in an interview, prevent organ rejection. researchers "should be able to define "If you want to manipulate the im- what T cells see and why they see it ... mune system, you have to know what We've been able to do this kind of thing molecule you have to alter," Tonegawa with antibodies for years, but we said in an interview. "If you don't know haven't had anything like that for T what the molecule looks like, there's cells." not much you can do." In separate studies in the Nov. 1 issue TIlE HUMAN immune system con- of Nature, Tonegawa and Davis report sists of T lymphocytes, which attack that the new gene they have found is foreign or diseased cells directly, and responsible for the so-called alpha other white cells called B lymphocytes, chain, a string of amino acids that is which produce antibodies to attack in- one of two principal components of T fectious agents. cell receptors. Much is known about anti-bodies In March of this year, Davis and Dr. work, but very little is known about T Tak Mak of the University of Toronto cells, said Mark Davis, the leader of the simultaneously reported the discovery other team reporting the new of the beta chain gene, the other prin- discovery. cipal component. What Crucified Jesus? ELLIS RIVKIN Author and Professor at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion speaks about the impact of church-state relationship during the time of Jesus upon revolutionary and non-conformist groups. FRIDAY, NOV. 2 - 3:00 P.M. MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING, ROOM 2 812 E. WASHINGTON Sponsored by HILLEL NEAR EASTERN STUDIES PROG. ON STUDIES IN RELIGION e 4nnouncing Martys TENTH ANNUAL SALE Everybody Saves 10% to 100% at "Marty's" Men's and "His Lady" Shop for Women Daks of London Austin Reed Corbin Ltd. 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