Charpak, Marcus win Nobel Prizes STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - An American won the Nobel Prize in chemistry yesterday for theories ex- *plaining such phenomena as how plants store energy from light, while a Frenchman won the physics award for an invention allowing a closer look into the heart of matter. Rudolph Marcus of the California Institute of Technology - a Canadian-born naturalized American - was honored for work involving the transfer of electrons between molecules. Georges Charpak, a OPolish-born Frenchman, was cited for his development of elementary particle detectors. Both discoveries were made in the 1960s and are used by researchers worldwide. Charpak told The Associated Press he had not expected to win the Nobel Prize for "a little thing" he invented 24 years ago. Since 1959 he has worked at CERN, the *European Laboratory for Particle Physics, near Geneva, Switzerland. His invention, the multiwire pro- portional chamber, "revolutionized the way to register elementary parti- cle reactions" allowing researchers to see in much more detail the be- havior of the smallest particles of matter, academy member Per Carlson said. The detector also made it possi- ble to monitor reactions on computer screens and track down single parti- cle trajectories within a pattern of a billion reactions. Earlier equipment only registered the occurrence of particle reactions without revealing where they happened. Carlson said Charpak's invention opened the door to some of the inner secrets of matter. * "Today practically every exper- iment in particle physics uses some type of track detector that has been developed from Charpak's original invention," the academy said. Marcus received his Ph.D where his theory is now described in university science textbooks, said James Fresco of McGill University in Montreal. The academy said Marcus' theo- *ries on transfer of electrons between molecules gave experimental chemists a valuable calculating tool. An electron transfer reaction is the simplest possible chemical reaction. Marcus' discovery has made it possible to explain things such as how plants store light energy, how corrosion occurs and how chemical luminescence - such as the cold .light of fireflies - is produced. The Michigan Daily- Thursday, October 15,1992 - Page 3 MSU president demands debate seats for students EVAN PETRIE/Daily Let the music play Three students - (from left) Mark Ocker, Chris Ghatak, and Eric Kozlowski - play instruments on a grassy patch next to the Diag. U-M English students become tecers troughDtri school by Chastity Wilson Daily Staff Reporter Every Thursday afternoon, students- enrolled in English 310, "Discourse and Society," commute to Detroit to teach. The U-M students lead photo, video, and drama clubs for fourth through eighth graders at the Dewey Center for Urban Education in Detroit, a magnet school available to preschool through eighth-grade chil- dren from any Detroit neighborhood. Children interested in the clubs either choose one as an elective course or are recommended by their teachers. Fifth grader William Thompson said he chose to be in the photo club because his older sister, who was in the club last year, interviewed and took pictures of the homeless. "My teacher said they don't have time for people who are going to be silly," Thompson said. The Dewey Center was founded on a "whole language" philosophy, which is "respectful of each child and where they are in their learning process," English 310 Professor William Alexander said. The pro- gram allows students to be involved in the formulation of their learning program, he said. "We're just here to facilitate," said Sarah Mendes, who works with the older drama club. The photo club takes pictures with 35mm cameras and develops the film. "They learn the technical and chemical aspects," said Kendra Lutes, a photo club facilitator. LSA junior Nicole Cooper, who also works with the photo club, said the kids suggested taking trips to the Wayne State Cultural Center. They were also eager to take pictures of things that are considered the "worst" aspects of the downtown neighborhood surrounding the school, she said. Cooper said she plans to encour- age the students to look at the pic- tures and find something positive. The older drama club - for sev- enth graders - writes, directs and performs a play at the end of the semester. Last year, the club performed at the Dewey Center and at U-M's Angell Hall. The children's suggestions for this year's production included a gangster-romance and a mixture of the Wizard of Oz and Christmas Story. The video club tapes events in and around the Dewey Center, using cameras donated by Panasonic. The children enter their tape into a con- test called Kid Witness News, Alexander said. in 1990, they en- tered a tape of the Mandela Day March in Detroit, he added. "Very few English departments have an outreach course," Alexander said. "The way this program fits into the English department is that it's like a creative writing course - the students help others create their own literature." "This is the best type of English class," Mendes said. "It's a learning experience for both groups." EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Michigan State University's interim president said yesterday he might move to block the final presidential debate if at least 300 students don't get tickets. Gordon Guyer said the 42,000- student university would rethink its role in hosting Monday night's de- bate if it doesn't hear soon from the Commission on Presidential Debates. "It wasn't an ultimatum," uni- versity spokesperson Terry Denbow said. "It was just a statement of our priorities as an educational institution. "Dr. Guyer believes sincerely that this is an event for students. It's an educational event on a college campus. It would be hypocritical not to let students see it." Tickets to the last televised tangle between President Bush, Democrat Bill Clinton and independent Ross Perot have been a hot issue on cam- pus since the debate was announced. Guyer has pressed the Commission on Presidential Debates for 300 student tickets, and some 4,100 students already have signed up for a ticket lottery. "I hope there's student involve- ment. After all, this is a university," said Kathleen Stuart, a university employee who helped hoist a large "Debate '92" banner yesterday. But debate organizers have said all but 900 seats in the university's 2,500-seat Wharton Center will be blocked off because of logistics and security reasons. Many of those seats are expected to be occupied by polit- ical party VIPs and generous debate donors. "We would hope everyone would show us a little patience," said Bob Neuman, a debate commission spokesperson. "It will be worked out. It's always a difficult thing. There's only a limited number of tickets." Denbow said Guyer was assured by debate panel co-chair Frank Fahrenkopf, a former chair of the Republican national party, that the request for student tickets would be discussed yesterday afternoon. "We're confident that we'll get at least 300 student tickets, if not more," Denbow said. But he added: "(Guyer) said if there's less than 300, he'd have to wonder how we could justify hosting this event." Students lucky enough to get tickets will have to subject them- selves to routine Secret Service background checks. Denbow said Guyer has promised to sit with stu- dents during the debate if fears of rowdiness has officials reluctant to include them. Students without tickets might get a chance to watch the debate on a giant television screen in the univer- sity's 14,000-seat Breslin Center. Details were still being worked out yesterday. Preparations for Monday night's debate continued yesterday as 'Dr. Guyer believes sincerely that this is an event for students. It's an educational event on a college campus. It would be hypocritical not to let students see it.' - Terry Denbow Michigan State University spokesperson Michigan State readied for what would be its first visit from a presi- dent since Theodore Roosevelt came to town in 1907. Some 2,000 campaign officials, journalists and debate panel mem- bers are expected to converge on the East Lansing campus and on Lansing, the state capital. That crush is expected to begin Friday after Thursday night's presi- dential debate in Richmond, Va. Political analysts say Clinton is certain to win election WASHINGTON (AP) - Halfway through the debates and three weeks from Election Day, many political analysts believe the presidential race is essentially over and Bill Clinton has won. GOP leaders across the country say it will take a bolt of lightning for President Bush to win and suggest his only shot may be to follow Vice President Dan Quayle's lead and be more combative. "America has decided. It's Clinton," said Henry Graff, presi- dential historian at Columbia University. He cites trends in Gallup Polls going back to 1936 to bolster this assertion. On the eve of the second presi- dential debate, GOP advisers seemed hard pressed to suggest what Bush could do to turn things around. The GOP party line, repeated yesterday with different degrees of enthusiasm by Republicans: Bush should follow his vice president's example and step up his attack on Clinton's character and trustworthiness. Dan Quayle in Tuesday's vice presidential debate repeatedly sug- gested that Clinton was incapable of telling the truth. Clinton is so far ahead in the polls "he has reached the comfort level," said Rothenberg. "We are poised for a substantial Clinton win." Bush is about 6 points down in Iowa. That's better than nationally, but "at this point I'll have to concede that things aren't going as well as they should be," said Richard Schwarm, Iowa GOP chairperson. Republicans have long since written off California and Illinois and Bush is way behind in the tradi- tional battleground states of Ohio, New Jersey and Michigan. Graff, the presidential historian at Columbia, says history suggests that the race usually begins to firm up by Labor Day and that polls taken after mid-September almost always accurately reflect the outcome. Graff projects that Clinton will win by about 11 points. The most recent Gallup poll shows Clinton at 48 percent, Bush at 33 and Perot at 12. "No one has closed that large a gap and come back to win in the his- tory of the poll," said Frank Newport, editor-in-chief of the Gallup Poll. "Is it possible for Bush to stage a comeback? It's not out of the ques- tion that the gap could be closed, but it would be a new record," Newport said. Correction Democratic Presidential Candidate John Kennedy proposed the Peace Corps on the steps of the Michigan Union in 1960. Ryan Sittler was the seventh pick overall in the 1992 National Hockey League entry draft. p 1 Student groups 9 A.I.D.S Coalition to Unleash Power, meeting, EastEngineer- ing Building, Baker-Mandela Center, 7:30 p.m. Q Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers, technical luncheon, Electrical Engineer- ing and Computer Science Building, room 1311, 12:30- 1:30 p.m. D Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship, Natural Resources Build- ing, room 1040,7 p.m. Q Islamic Circle, meeting, Michi- gan League, 3rd floor room C, 6-7 p.m. " Korean Student Association, meeting, Michigan Union, Welker Room, 7 p.m. O Newman Catholic Student As- sociation, Liturgical Formation Seminar, 7p.m.; Parish Pastoral Council,7 p.m.; Saint Mary Stu- dent Chapel, 331 Thompson St. 0 U-M Pre-Med Club, speaker meeting, Michigan Union, Anderson Room, 6:30 p.m. U U-M Sailing Club, meeting, West Engineering Building, room 311, 7:45 p.m. : U-MShotokan Karate,practice, CCRB, small gym, 8:30-10 p.m. U U-M Snowboarding Club.vol- exhibit, Ann Arbor Public Li- brary, 343 S. Fifth Ave., lower level Multi-Purpose Room, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. U Career Planning and Place- ment, Choosing Your Major, CP&P Room One, 4:10-5 p.m.; Employer Presentation: The Rand Corporation, CP&P Con- ference Room, 3:34-4:45 p.m.; International Affairs: Career Options and Graduate Programs, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 6-8 p.m.; The Law School Personal Essay, CP&P Program Room, 4:10-5 p.m. U "Environmental Racism - The Legacy of Columbus," panel, sponsored by the Ella Baker- Nelson Mandela Center for Anti- Racist Education, The Ann Arbor Community Center, 625 N. Main St., 7:30-9:30 p.m. U "Focus on Michigan," photog- raphy contest, City of Ann Ar- bor Parks and Recreation Department, photos accepted until December 1, 1992,contact Irene Bushaw 994-2780 U "Japanese Beliefs about Chil- dren," Brown Bag Lecture Se- ries, Lane Hall, Commons Room, 12 p.m. U Martyn Wyndham-Read, per- 2009, 12-1 p.m. Q Norman Rush,reading and book signing, Borders Book Shop, 303 S. State St., 7:30 p.m. Q Russian Tea and Conversation Practice, Slavic Department, MLB, 3rd floor Conference Room, 4-5 p.m. Q "The Birthday Party," U-M De- partment of Theatre and Drama, Trueblood Theater, tickets $10, call 764-0450 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., playing through October 25 U "The Christopher Columbus Follies: An Eco-Cabaret," The Program in American Culture, Power Center, 8 p.m. Q U-M Pro-Choice Action, lec- ture, Michigan Union, Ballroom, 7:30 p.m.; meeting, MLB, room B 137, 7:30 p.m.; video, Brown Bag Lunch Series, West Engi- neering Building, room 421, 12 p.m. Q Womancircle, Guild House Campus Ministry, 802 Monroe St., 7:30 p.m. Student services Q Safewalk Safety Walking Ser- vice, UGLi, lobby, 8p.m. -1:30 a.m.; Saf; walk-Angell Hall, Angell Hall, %,mputing Cen- Llook o t inthe they really work!) TIE MICIIIGAN DAILY GET THE FACTS GET THE DAILY C GET THE FACTS 764-0552 GET THE DAILY fi GET T HE FACTS more GET TIIE DAILY info' GET THE FACTS GET TIlHE DAILY NEWS .SPORTSe ARTS OPINION & PHOTO TheBlRTI4PA7 by Harold inter "The more acute the experience, the less articulate its expression." Trueblood Theatre (located in the Frieze Bldg) Oct 15-17, 22-24 at 8 PM Oct 18, 25 at 2 PM Tickets are $10 Charge by phone: 764-0450 Student seating is $6 with ID. Tickets on sale at the League Ticket Office In the Michigan League. U-M SCHOOL OF MUSIC Department of Theatre and Drama j COOKIES Come in and try our delicious new 1 " SOFr PRTZS I