Page 4-Wednesday, May 20, 1981-The Michigan Daily IR A bomb kills 5British soldiers 4 From AP and UPI BELFAST, Northern Ireland-IRA guerrillas set off a 1,000-pound land mine beneath an armored troop carrier yesterday, kiliing all five British soldiers aboard in a huge explosion near the home of IRA hunger striker Raymond McCreesh. The blast was the worst single attack against the British army in Northern Ireland since 1979 and the first fatal at- tack against British soldiers since IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands died May 5. WITHIN HOURS, mobs of Roman Catholic rioters took to the streets of Belfast and Londonderry, hijacking buses and setting fires. In Roman Catholic West Belfast, a bus was hijacked, emptied of its passengers and set on fire, Police said. The attack heightened tension throughout the province as McCreesh and another hunger striker Patrick O'Hara, both 24, entered the 59th day of their fast to death to press demands for political prisoner status. McCreesh was said to be in a semicoma and was ex- pected to die this week. A statement issued by the Republican press center in Belfast on behalf of the outlawed Irish Republican Army's South Armagh brigade said, "The IRA claims responsibility for the land mine attack." "BRITISH soldiers should realize that the English public and the English politicians do not give a damn about their lives," the statement said. "You are fighting a war which you cannot win. Guerrillas hiding on a wooded hillside set off the explosives, which were plan- ted in a drainage culvert near a bridge that carries the Belfast-to-Dublin railway line, the army said. An IRA statement said 1,000 pounds of ex- plosives were used and the land nine- like device was detonated by remote- control wire as the six-wheeled, 10-ton Saracen personnel carrier passed over. The known death toll in the 11%12 years of sectarian bloodshed is at least 2,189, including 38 this year. The British ar- my, which has more than 11,800 troops serving here, has now lost 342 regulars, plus 112 members of the locally recruited Ulster Defense Regiment. Bomb found at U.N. as threats continue NEW YORK (UPI)-A fake bomb was found at the United Nations and new bomb threat forced the evacuation of the 71-story Chrysler Building yesterday in the fourth day of a New York City terror spree that has killed one man and frightened thousands of tourists, commuters and office workers. Five bombs-all believed planted by Puerto Rican nationalists-have been found since Saturday. Bomb. threats have numbered in the hundreds and sent polce racing on wild goose chases around the city. - ~Ar~ bo "- SWIMSUITS and SLEEVELESS DRESSES HOURS: M-F: 10-4 S: 10-1. 1149Broadway ACROSS FROM KROGER Come In and find a Bargain MAYOR EDWARD Koch, who has labeled the bombers "madmen" who should be executed, urged residents to stay calm. He vowed the police would "protect the people in this city" and said his ad- ministration had as its "highest priority" the apprehension lf the "scum" responsible for the reign of terror. Police, who found two live bombs and tracked hundreds of threats from cranks Monday, said they had received two dozen bomb threats by noon yesterday. ONE BOMB threat forced office workers in the landmark Chrysler Building on East 42nd Street to leave their jobs, another caused a brief panic at Penn Station at the Long Island Rail Road, while a "ticking package" caused travelers to leave the Eastern Airline terminal at Newart Airport. The Puerto Rican Armed Resistance claimed responsibility for the Kennedy airport blast, two other bombs found at Kennedy and two more mailed pipebombs that were found and defused at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations and the Honduran Consulate. In Brief Compiled frm Associated Press and United Press International reports Pole wants flight to U.S., threatens to bomb embassy WARSAW, Poland - A Polish citizen demanding a flight to the United States threatened yesterday to blow up the U.S. Embassy but was over- powered by police en route to the airport. The bomb proved to be a fake, but the embassy was evacuated for an hour. Stanislaw Kosciuch, 39, wearing a crash helmet and walking with a crutch, was carrying an attache case he said was filled with over 6 pounds of dynamite wired to explode. "I think he was unable to cope with the fact that he was on a small disability pension and there was rationing of meat and sugar," said consular officer Nick Lauderdale. "He wanted to go to the U.S.to work on a farm. He was convinced that we could get him on a plane and out of the country without a passport," Lauder- dale said. U.S. ships with nuclear weapons violate Japan law TOKYO - Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki grappled yesterday with a new foreign policy crisis over a report by a former U.S. ambassador that U.S. ships bearing nuclear weapons have regularly visited iapan. Investors, up- set by the controversy, dealt the Tokyo market one of its worst setbacks ever. In 1968, Japan, target of history's only nuclear attack, banned production, maintenance or introduction of nuclear weapons on its territory. Local officials told the U.S. Navy to cancel a good will port call by three ships later this month because of the nuclear controversy. One of the three vessels, the USS Waddell, was among U.S. ships-that Japanese fishermen claim sliced through fishing nets last Friday. U.S. officials countered the alleged damage most likely was done by a Soviet cruiser shadowing the convoy. But the Soviets insisted either American or Japanese ships were at fault. Customers locked out of failed savings & loan bank CHICAGO. - Passbook customers were turned away yesterday at the locked doors of a small Southwest Side savings bank whose failure has for- ced the federal government to step in and repay depositors for the first time insa decade. Some official said the failure was evidence of the extent to which high in- terest rates are pinching the nation's savings and loan institutions. Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. director Brent Beesley said Economy Savings & Loan had been speculating in Government National Mortgage Association securities, a practice he said is "very uncommon and very dangerous" for savings institutions. "It can be referred to as interest rate roulette," he said. Beesley said the bank's doors would remain closed until officials finished an inventory of accounts. Deposits up to $100,000 are protected by insurance that guarantees recovery, plus interest, officials said. "We hope to start issuing checks to depositors by this weekend, although it is Memorial Day weekend," he said. Traveler cheeks worth 1.5 million stolen in Australia SYDNEY, Austrialia - American Express checks worth $1.5 million have been stolen from a Sydney post office, police said. They said the checks were in U.S., British, West German and Swiss currencies and were destined for banks in New Zealand and Australia. They were unsigned and would be easy to cash, police said. The theft oc- curred May 14 and was reported Monday. Family of slain officer sues Saginaw police BAY CITY, Michigan - The family of a former probation officer has filed a $25 million lawsuit against the city of Saginaw and its police chief, claiming the officer was the victim of a "cold-blooded execution, conspiracy and cover-up" by Saginaw police officials. Attorney William Street filed the suit Monday in U.S. District Court at Bay City on behalf of the family of Oliver "Bruce" Moorer. He said the suit was filed to ensure a full and fair accounting of responsibility for Moorer's death. Moorer, 41, was fatally shot April 25 by Saginaw police officers who were searching for marijuana at his home, police said. Pre-Med & Vet Students Also Health Professional Students and Science Majors Are you interested in studying to become a physician or veterinarian? We are now accepting applications for study leading to degrees in both Medical and Veterinary Medicine. Courses taught in English. Program under guidance of American Dean utilizing American curriculum. Transfer students accepted. Semester begins July and November 1981. For more information, a catalog and application form, write: University of Dominica School of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine 350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 3405, New York, NY 10001