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Show The Daily L'tah Chronicle, Wednesday, October 14, 1965 NEWS BRIEFS FROM UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Economist blasts Reaaan CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Nobel Prize-winn- er Professor Franco Modigliani blasted President Reagan today for the "disastrous federal deficit" and called for a tax hike and a reduction in military arms spending. "The deficit offsets the savings of people and leaves less money for investment," Modigliani, who today won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, told a news conference. Modigliani, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said, "The tragedy of the deficit is much greater than I expected in the late 1950s when I didn't realize the full damage it could do." "President Reagan is wrong to stick by his hard and fast rule of refusing to raise taxes and should cut the fat from the arms budget." Modigliani said awakening to a phone call from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences informing him of the Nobel Prize "is the best alarm clock I've had in a long time." SLC bombings kill two SALT LAKE CITY Separate bomb blasts just hours apart Tuesday killed a man in his downtown brokerage and a woman in the home of the victim's partner, police said. Killed in the 8 a.m. (MDT) blast in the doorway of a sixth floor office in the Judge Building was Steven Christensen, the business associate of the owner of the bombed home, said police Lt. C.W. Gray. The woman killed in the second blast apparently picked up a box left on her front step with her name written on it "uSi tU V U illlC 3i 111411 s puw jai J "We believe there's a definite connection between the said city's (explosion) and this one here (in the home)," Salt Lake County Sheriff Pete Hayward. Sheets and Christensen were business associates in a financial counseling firm that had reportedly suffered serious financial problems in the past year. The second explosion ripped through the Sheets home Salt Lake Gty suburb of in the upper middle-clas- s Holla Jay at 11:20 a.m. At least eight bomb threats were telephoned to local media outlets, spurring police bomb squads to search downtown office buildings. No bombs were found and Gray said most of the calls could probably be written off as pranks. Raging fires in Malibu M ALIBU, Calif. A small air force of water-droppi- ng planes and helicopters Tuesday battled fires propelled by blow-torc- winds through canyon scrub to surfing h in two da-- jump their fire lines. The brush fires destroyed at least a dozen homes and w ere blamed for the death of one man who died of a heart attack while using a garden hose to douse blames licking communities virtually cut off from the rest of Los Angeles. Malibu, threatened by fires racing through coastal canyons, was cut off as raining ash and smoke choked off access roads including the Pacific Coast Highway, which was closed for the second time since Monday. Classes at Pepperdine University, where some students spent the night on beaches below their campus apartments, were canceled. The California Air National Guard's 146th Tactical Airlift Wing was put on alert to assist in dropping fire retardant should the 14 blazes that blackened 20,000 acres toward his home. The largest of the fires burning out of control for a second day was northwest of Los Angeles in Ventura , Count)-- where two blazes early Tuesday merged into one firestorm that scorched 10,000 acres and leveled 12 buildings, including six homes and two trailers in the Wheeler Canyon area of the Ojai Valley. Buchanan supports Nazi WASHINGTON White House communications chief Pat Buchanan met with a colleague of an accused Nazi war criminal Arthur Rudolph and indicated he supported giving the former NASA scientist his citizenship back, a Jewish group charged Tuesday. The Justice Department also is investigating two other German scientists w ho worked with Rudolph on the U.S. Saturn 5 space program for possible war crimes at a Nazi rocket factory where thousands of slave laborers died during World War II, supporters of the two men said. Rudolph, who played a key role in the nation's space program in the 1960s, was accused by the department's Office of Special Investigations of forcing slave laborers to build 2 rockets at the underground Mittelwerk factory. He voluntarily left the United States last year after telling investigators he was aware that many of the laborers died of maltreatment. The World Jewish Congress said Buchanan met June 25 with Eberhard Rees, a German rocket team member who succeeded Wernher Vron Braun as director of NASA's Marshal Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. "Rees emerged from the meeting claiming that Buchanan had indicated his support for restoring Rudolph's citizenship," said Israel Singer, executive director of the group. V-- WEATHER by Edward Tects Wednesday; The sunny days continue with the highs reaching 65 and the low dipping to 35. Thursday: Mostly sunny and warm with a few high 0 and the low around 35. clouds, high aMtafefor 65-7- Research Study o New oral antibiotic "Ofloxacin" for the treatment of major and minor skin infections. 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