16—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 11, 1980 Nobel eight STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Ten Nobel Prize win ners, eight of them Americans, received their awards from King Carl Gustav of Sweden yesterday amid traditional pomp. The 1980 laureates stepped forward one by one to receive their prizes before a white-tie audience of 1,700 in the Stockholm concert hall. Swedish colleagues of the laureates made speeches in tribute to the work. The king presented the Nobel insignia, diplomas and medals to two American physicists, a British chemist and his two American co-laureates and a Frenchman and two Americans who shared the medicine prize. The prizes' stipends this year amount to $212,000, a record in the 79-year-old Nobel series. The literature prizewinner, poet Czeslaw Milosz, was the first in Nobel history to be represented in the au dience by two ambassadors one from his native Poland and the other from the United States, his adopted homeland. The memorial prize in economics a late addition to the awards established by the will of dynamite inven tor Alfred Nobel was received by University of Pen nsylvania professor Lawrence Klein. The American laureates in physics, James Cronin, 49, of the University of Chicago and Val Fitch, 57, of Princeton University, were awarded the prize for their findings in atomic particle research. - The chemistry winners were Britain's Frederic Sanger of Cambridge University, who became a two time recipient, and Americans Paul Berg of Stanford and Walter Gilbert of Harvard. Gilbert and Sanger independently developed &e(( li ni a& - site Iks 4$ .scrvi4 IFI C 4 --- MN MI EN NI UM NM MO MN NE 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 I' Colorado I Seahawk I Classic I I- I I ------ - NE I EN NMI EN EN MI INN NINI OEN Ell NE EN MN INE EN NM NM INN 1111 lIMI INS INN lIIN MI MI NIIN 1111 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - * Bouquet I Petite I Unique I so INN ININ INI INNI NM I= 1 ........... .. .. .11.. -------- II MN NE = MN MN INN NO Traditional Starlight Today's Your Last Chance Pick your favorite Art Carved class ring. Cut it out. Keep it with you for a while. Get an idea what it's like to own the ring that says, "I did it!" Then, have the genuine article fitted by the Art- Carved representative visiting campus today. You'll have our newest selection of ring styles to choose from and a specialist who will make sure the fit is. perfect. Plus, there are some incredible Art- Carved offers to cut the cost of your class ring . . . Tenn State TooK§tore on campus © Art Carved College Rings required. Master Charge or VISA accepted Deposit laureates receive prizes; Americans win awards Traditional ceremony held in 'Sweden Cut Cla Any way you cut it, today is the best day to select your Art Carved class ring! PITA -..,, ..:,...,..r,....,•,;..a..4\ 'qci.)--td ART RVE,D .:„ ,i st.... ..: , 'COLLEGE RINGS . . . SYMBOLIZING YOUR ABILITY TO ACHIEVE. methods for determining the sequence of the com ponents of DNA, the raw materials of heredity. Berg is known as the father of the new recombinant- DNA technique, which researchers are using with bacteria to produce human hormones. They hope it may provide breakthroughs in the fight against cancer and in other fields. Sanger received his first Nobel in 1958 for explaining the structure of insulin. Medicine co-laureates Jean Dausset of, France and Americans Baruj Benacerraf of Harvard ands George Snell of the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, were praised by Prof. Georg Klein, himself a renowned cancer researcher. The three scientists i have thrown new light on "the immunological orchestra," Klein said. He said their findings have great medical and biological significance, especially in the field of organ transplantation. Earlier yesterday in Oslo, Norway, peace prize win ner Adolfo Perez Esquivel of Argentina was hailed as "a champion of non-violence in the struggle for human rights" as he received his award. Prof. John Sanness, the chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, praised Perez Esquivel as an exam ple for others who non-violently struggle for social and political liberty. The ambassador of Argentina, which has been accused of human rights violations, boycotted the ceremony. Lars Gyllensten, the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy paid tribute to literature winner Czeslaw Milosz, a poet at the University of California at Berkeley. A few of Milosz' friends from Poland were CUT your ties with the past during our "Great Ring Exchange!" Trading your old 10K gold high school ring for a new Art Carved college ring could save you as much, as $9O. CUT the cost of a traditional or contemporary Siladium ring to just $74.95 a special Art Carved "Ring Week" discount up to $2O. CUT a smashing figure with a women's class ring from our exciting new "Designer Diamond Collec tion." ,7hree Locationso tom Garn of C er ollege- e. itB fir; & bask , Ave-. P q rkwao Stioppinj Ginter- in the audience and the ceremony was covered on Polish television. Gyllensten said "disruption and breaking up have marked Milosz's life from the very beginning. In both an outward and inward sense he is an exile writer." He described the laureate as a "very intellectual writer but also a very sensual writer. . . .Strong pas sions but also strict discipline and unerring perspicaci ty mark Milosz's work," he said. Lawrence Klein, 60, was the ninth American in 12 years to win the economics award, set up in 1968 by the Swedish Central Bank. A leading analyst of economic fluctuations and policies for three decades, he has built econometric, or mathematical-statistical models for such analysis and projections. On behalf of the Swedish Academy of Sciences, economics professor Herman Wold hailed Klein's "pioneering and wide-ranging work." Nobel Foundation chairman Sune Bergstrom spoke of the spirit of internationalism that characterized Nobel's will and praised the process of selecting the winners. "We can be proud of the manner in which the prize groups have carried out their delicate work, indepen dent of attacks of varying nature and validity," Sune .said. The comment was taken as a rebuttal to criticism of certain selections,, In London, for example, the Sunday Times argued recently that the literature award should have gone to Britain's Graham Greene. The awards ceremony in the flower-bedecked con cert hall ended with the'Swedish national anthem. It was followed by the glittering Nobel banquet. ****************************-*** Open till 9 Mon. thru Fri.; Sat. till 5:30 MUST RAISE ,',..A,SH SALE suiT eLEARaNCE Every Suit Must Be Sold! Sizes 36 Short to 44 Extra Long Prices Starting at S 109'0 ALL BRAND NAMES REDUCED! *Vested and non-vested models .Two and three button styles FORCED SALE Kalins Clothing is forced to dispose of entire stock of brand new fall arrivals. Only during a crisis of this type forces a retailer to sell inventory fast can you find these true values. Savings to 50%. Kalins must raise cash and there are no restrictions. The entire stock must go in order to deal with present economic conditions. Brezhnev gives plan for Gulf area peace NEW DELHI, India (UPI) Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev proposed a five-point "peace and security" plan for the Persian Gulf yesterday and left the door open for the eventual withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. The Soviet leader's package amounted to a call for the West, China and Japan to keep their hands off the Persian Gulf. He made no reference to the Polish crisis. Brezhnev said if Afghanistan's neighbors established a "good neighborly agreement with the Afghan government, prerequisites will emerge for the full political normalization of the situation, including withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan." By Afghanistan's neighbors; Brezhnev was clearly referring to Pakistan, where some of the Moslem rebels resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan have taken refuge. In an earlier 80-minute meeting: Brezhnev and Indian Prime Minister In dira Gandhi failed to resolve their dif ferences over Afghanistan. There was no sign the Soviet president made any pro mises to withdraw the Russian occupa tion army, which according to Western estimates numbers some 85,000 men. Occasionally mopping his brow under the glare of television lights, Brezhnev, 73, stood for over 30 . ininUtes next to Gan dhi as he addressed a session of the In dian parliament. "We want a normal, calm situation to be established (in the Persian Gulf)," SINCE 1936 128 S. Allen Street, State College iisn. IP CLOTHING • CLOTHING Brezhnev said. "We propose a doctriit: of peace and security. These are not mere words. This is our actual policy. "We propose to the United States, to other. Western powers, to China, Japan, to all states that display interest, that agreement be reached on the following mutual obligations: He warned those countries not to set up foreign military bases in the Persian Gulf area and on the adjacent island, not to deploy nuclear or any other weapons of mass destruption there. "Not to or threaten to use force against the countries of the Persian Guy area and not to interfere in their internal affairs. l .. • "To respect the status of non-, alignment (of Gulf states) and draw them into military groupings with the participation'of nuclear. powers. "To respect the sovereign right of ,the states of that area to their naturto resources. "Not to raise any obstacles or me threats to normal trade exchanges and to internationally share Gulf sea lanes.'i Brezhnev, whose state visit ends toa day, said, the plan would guarantee tbe sovereignty and security of the Persiar) , Gulf. However, its timing suggested the. 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