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Get one today, prices start at *29,95 At your Bookstore In electron** 606-4)31 4 inter/national From Associated Press reports Senate sets King holiday WASHINGTON — The Senate accorded Martin Luther King Jr. the nation's supreme honor on Wednesday as it passed 78-22 and sent to Pres. Reagan a bill establishing a national holiday in the name of the slain civil rights leader. Reagan has promised to sign the bill, which designates the third Monday in January, starting in 1986, as a legal holiday in King's name. Final congressional action, sought for years, came more than 15 years after the civil rights leader was assassinated. King's widow, Coretta, and his son, Martin III, watched from the Senate gallery as the climactic roll call was taken. The family was ac companied by singer Stevie Wonder; Benjamin Hooks, presi dent of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; and Joseph Lowry, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference that King founded. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., told the Senate that King "deserves the place which this legislation gives him beside Washington and Columbus. In a very real sense, he was the second father of our country, the second founder of a new world that is not only a place, a piece of geography, but a noble set of ideals." Earlier Wednesday, the Senate, shrugged off a number of bitter end attempts by conservatives to derail the legislation. King, a Baptist preacher who emulated Mohandas Ghandi's creed of non-violence, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. He was slain in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, 1968. Space base to stop war WASHINGTON — Pres. Ronald Reagan said Wednesday night that the cost of a plan to build a space based missile defense system has been greatly exaggerated, and defended his interest in the system by saying that if nations build defensive systems, "then nobody's going to start a war." r Administration sources have said Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger has recommened to Reagan that the United States develop a system that would cost $18 billion to $27 billion over the next five years. Reagan last March asked for a plan to advance U.S. defensive capabilities. The Pentagon has said the proposal has been sent to the White House. The president said at a news conference that he had not seen the report. But, he said, referring to news reports about it, "I am fascinated with reading all about it...and I can tell you that no one has sug gested any such figure in the billions of dollars that have been proposed.” However, the figure was in one of the four options prepared for Reagan, according to administra tion sources who spoke on the condition that they not be iden tified by name. The recommendations were reached after months of scientific study and policy analysis stemm ing from the president's speech on arms control on March 23. In that address, he called for a study of a space-based military concept. U.S. sweeps Nobel prizes STOCKHOLM — American scientists won the 1983 Nobel prizes in physics and chemistry Wednesday, completing the first U.S. sweep since 1976 of all the prestigious science awards. The announcements by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences continued an American dominance of the science prizes since World War II. Laureates announced Wednes day were astrophysicists Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar of the University of Chicago and William Fowler of the California Institute of Technology, who shared the physics prize, and Henry Taube of Stanford University. Chandrasekhar and Fowler, the second pair of astrophysicists ever to win the Nobel Prize, were honored for pioneering work on the evolution of stars. Taube won for identifying the process through which sub atomic particles called ions jump between molecules, helping to ex plain how plants make food, how batteries work and other common chemical reactions. All five were honored mainly for work done decades earlier. Chan drasekhar, whose best-known work was 50 years ago when he predicted the existence of dying stars known as white dwarfs. Col leagues at the time discounted his theory, but astronomers have since proven not only that white dwarfs exist but they are among the most common in the cosmos. Before World War II, Americans had won only six physics prizes and three in chemistry. Since 1943, U.S. physicists have won or shared the Nobel 41 times and chemists 23 times. Looks better than Selleck TEL AVIV — Penniless and disowned by his mother, lonely Antonio the 2-year-old orangutan desperately needed $12,000 to buy himself a companion. So he called on his friends for help and went to work modeling sportswear. Antonio's $1,000 fee, added to contributions from animal lovers and his zoo, enabled Wilhelma, a 4-year-old female orangutan from the Frankfurt, West Germany, zoo, to move here this fall. The ape's tale began sadly. His mother rejected him soon after birth * not uncommon among animals when they are in captivity and don't have more experienced companions to learn from. He had to move in with his keeper, Yigal David of the Tel Aviv-Ramat Gan Zoological Center. He grew up bottle-fed and in diapers. But man, however solicitous, is no substitute for the love of a good orangutan, and An tonio became lonely. The zoo found him a friend across the sea, but the price for Wilhelma was too high for the center's budget. Then David spot ted a newspaper ad saying "chim panzee needed to appear in advertisement." "We called them up and said we didn't have a chimp but we could offer an orangutan on a one-time basis," David recalled. Antonio was teamed up with Heli Goldenberg, one of Israel's top fashion models, and was dressed in a jogging suit. ». =Si1 Track Town Pizza The only thing that surpasses our pizza is our personality! FREE DELIVERY 484-2799 Hours: Mon-Fri 11:30 a.m. - 1 a.m. Saturday 1 p.m. - 1 a.m. Sunday 1 p.m. - 11 p.m. Delivery Hours: Mon-Fri 5 p.m. - 1 a.m. Saturday 4 p.m - 1 a.m. Sunday 4 p.m. - 11 p.m. Track Town Pizza 1809 Franklin Blvd. Your campus pizza store