THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. MAY 1R. 111117 Lfononucleosis Overworks the Realm of Res A U L *ltll i *tlZ 1, ~UO4 larch By The Associated Press NASHINGTON-Just 751 years er the birth of Christ, Pope charias wrote of a stronge in-, tious jaundice spreading across nrmany. Doctors didn't know for 'e what caused it. [oday, 1,200 years and an age i medical marvels later, what is bably the same disease is own to circle the world. Doctors 1i don't know for sure what uses it. They used to call it jaunisse des Tips, or kriegsikterus, or just in jaundice. Today they would )bably call it infectious hepati- of mononucleosis. But they uld know as well that it is only e of a block of troublesome ail- nts that mimic each other and ,unt the community life of man- These diseases are probably used by viruses, but no one can d the viruses. They infect hu- mans, but apparently can't be passed on -to experimental ani- mals. The names are familiar: in- fectious hepatitis, serum hepatitis, infectious mononucleosis, and probably others. But they are like a distant and mysterious uncle who drops in to visit, but has no known address. Scientists believe that there are two-well, at least two-viruses that cause hepatitis, one for infec- tious hepatitis and one for the serum disease. The trouble is find- ing them. Hauting the men who search for the virus of infectious nononusle- osis is the case of the common cold. They used to think that the comon cold was caused by just one virus, too. But now it seems likely that 150 different viruses produce colds. They wonder ,in searching for a virus in infectious mononu- cleosis if its many symptoms are not also caused by many viruses. The hepatitis agents-whatever they are-are very hardy. Serum hepatitis can resist 140 degrees fahrenheit for as long as 60 min- utes. It can lurk on otherwise sterilized instruments or utensils. Small amounts of blood can trans- mit the disease on a tatto artist's needle, a drug addict hypodermic, or a blood transfusion. Infectious hepatitis inhabits the blood and the feces of an infected person. It can be passed on by in-. jection or by oral routes. Typically, a child picks it up at school and brings it home where haphazard sanitary habits spread it through; the family. Or an infected person who handles food in a restaurant spreads the disease wholesale. Or people drink sewage-contaminated water, or eat shellfish from sew- age-polluted shoreland. Some men who handle chimpanzees imported for research purposes have been infected, leading some researchers to believe that the chimpanzee can carry the disease. More than half of the victims of hepatitis are children or young adults. There appears to be a high degree of immunity in older peo- ple, although cases can be severe when they occur in upper age groups. Mostly hepatitis is a mild disease, with little chance of severe after effects. But it can kill, too. One in 1,000 cases is fatal. Ironically, even in this day of modern medicine, the best a doc- tor can do for his patient is to put him to bed, order plenty of rest, and a diet designed to sup- port the recovery of the patient's liver. The liver is the target of the disease. One of the signs of hepatitis is liver damage. But the liver is a remarkable organ, and has the power not only to heal itself, but to regenerate its dam- aged parts. Doctors can help protect an ex- posed person with gamma glo- bulin, the blood fraction that con- tains antibodies. This blood frac- tion from people who have had hepatitis can offer a share of someone else's immunity and may even make a specific case milder. Immunity is one of the prime reasons for believing there at least two heptatis viruses. A person who has had infectious hepatitis is not immune to serum hepatitis, and vice versa. The practiced eye of the doctor, backed up with laboratory test, is the only way to diagnose the disease. The diagnosis is not easy because the symptoms, even the jaundice, often seem like some- thing else. One of the prime "somethings else" is infectious mononucleosis. This is a disease of many faces- and some think it may be many diseases as well. It has the sorb throat of diphtheria, the stiff neck of convulsions of meningitis, the stomach pains of appendicities, or pleurisy, or worse. It may present the cough of severe respiratory di- seases, or the rash of secondary syphillis. The lymph nodes may appear enlarged as they do in leukemia, and the white blood cell count is high as well. One re- searcher even suggested that' in earlier days some of the spon- taneuos cures reported in leukemia might actually have been mis- diagnosed and might have been cases of infectious mononucleosis. Now doctors can recognize in- fectious mononucleosis by a strange and characteristic blood cell pattern. Certain of the white blood cells-the lymphocytes-in- crease in number and some be- come swollen. Researchers still debate how in- fectious mononucleosis is passed on. Some say it is passed on by passionate kissing, and some think it is the eating utensils of an in- fected person that transmits the disease. The incidence of mononucleosis is on a long-term rise--and may strike as many as 10,000 victims a year. Infectious hepatitis seems to be on a seven year cycle-and the next peak is due next year or late this year. Normally is strikes 50,000 Americans a year. There is still hope that research- ers somewhere might find a re- search animal that can contract either of the two look-alike dis- eases. And when they do, they will have set the stage for the defeat of both of them. In lieu of an experimental ani- mal for hepatis work, researchers have with great care worked with human volunteers-keeping always in mind that the disease can be fatal, especially in older people. Just this month, pediatric re- seachers in New York City report- ed another test on human volun- teers--this time carefully screened children whose parents agreed. It turned up some remarkable re- sults. It clearly identified two separate infectious hepatitis agents-one that looked like what had been described as infectious hepatitis virus, and one which seemed to be serum hepatitis virus. Dr Saul Krugman, who conduct- ed the experiments, found a strange twist, however. The serum hepatitfa was also infective oral- ly-something only one long-for- gotten experiment had suggested. With confirmation by other re- searchers, it could show that serum hepatitis exists in the pop- ulation by a low-grade, person-to- person infection, independent of injections and blood transfusions. A k Senate Fo Review Lrug Rates Citizens' Committee Cites Irregularities In Nationwide Prices WASHINGTON () - A Senate aquiry into competition in the harmaceutical industry began esterday with one witness urging n FBI investigation into "unbe- evable price spreads" for drugs anging as high as 4,000 per cent etween the cities. The witness, William F. Had- on, spokesman for a New York itizens group, accused the in- ustry of conspiring to keep prices igh and called it "the last of 4e robber barons." And another witness, Dr. John S Holloman Jr., told the sen- tors he resents attempts to con- ince him and other doctors that rugs sold under their generic other' than trade :names are un- Defense Defens of the industry was of- red by C. Joseph Stetler, presi- pnt of the Pharmaceutical Man- racturers Association. He said chances of a new drug arviving research and tests be- re it can be marketed are 1 in 00 so the successes have to pay >r the failures. The cost of re- larch, STO1b Aai'd; runs up to million dollars daily. AIaddop, the first witness before e Senate Small Business Com- ittee's Monopoly subcommittee, chairman of the Citizens Com- ittee for Metropolitan Affairs, 1c., of New York. He described as a non-profit, non-political vic foundation organized in 1965 keep watch on municipal fairs. 'Payoff' File "As a starter," Haddon said, "I Wggest the FBI look into the G12 le of cretain drug companies. his is the secret 'payoff' file ed for public officials overseas." And he described as shocking survey his committee made of ices paid by major cities for i different drugs. One example he cited was that OW York City pays $9.45 for 500 blets of meprohamate, a seda- ye known by the trade name of Iltown, while Atlanta, Ga., pays 1.20 for the same amount of the ug. Within Cities And there are differences within city, Haddon said. He cited the ice paid for a trade-name drug mg used to treat chronic arth- is-820 per cent greater in one ew York City drugstore under its ode name than under the gen- ic name in another store. He said drug firms propagate he false and malicious argument at drugs sold under their gen- Ic name are unsafe" and this ghtens Americans into paying gher prices. It is up to the Food id Drug Administration to' re- ive the argument oer whether" e drug industry claim is valid, i added. His committee's survey, Haddon I id, showed that the average ode-name prescription c o s t s ore than double that of the av- age generic prescription. Phone 434-0130 4xA sO CARPENTER RUDA IRST OPEN 7:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN DOW-L&LW4 DISCUSS LEGISLATION: State Governments Pressure Congress To Share Federal Income Tax Revenue --Associated Press WILLIAM F. HADDON, spokesman for a New Y ork citizens group, holds up a consumer drug chart. . The chart shows nearly a 4,000 per cent differenc e between the prices of drugs in certain cities. Had- don testified yesterday in a hearing before the S enate Small Business Monopoly Subcommittee in Washington, urging that the "robber barons" of t he drug industry be the object of a probe by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. RECRUITING WAR: uiness Vies f Person0nel ~With Draft, Graduate SchoolsN By The Associated Press CHICAGO-After half a century of contributing to the federal in- come tax coffers, the individual states are clamoring for a share of the money. More than 30 states have dis- cussed legislation seeking to get Congress to return to the states a share of the monies collected in personal and business income tax. Ten states have enacted reso- lutions urging the federal body to consider the plea. The resolutions are varied and nonspecific. Constitutional Convention But even if three-fourths of the state legislatures passed such res- olutions, they would not be bind- ing on Congress. If this were a proposed constitutional amend- ment, Congress would be obliged to call a constitutional convention if 34 states requested such a call. Then, if the convention agreed on an amendment, 34 states would have to ratify it. This device never has been used, Many states led by pro-Johnson legislators are in favor of the plan, but oppose it presently as a drain on the administration's pipeline of dollars to Vietnam. The state resolutions call for re- bates of 5 to 10 per cent. Shafer Plan Gov. Raymond P. Shafer of Pennsylvania, a Republican spear- heading a drive to promote a con- stitutional conventions in many states. Shafer advances no spe- cific method for the federal state tax sharing system but would leave that to the amending convention.I The Pennsylvania House passed the goverior's plan with unam- mous GOP support, and near to- tal opposition from Democrats who contend the state should levy taxes if it needs more revenue. The constitutional convention formula was rejected by the Geor- gia Senate after the House ap- proved the plan and called for a 5 per cent rebate. The Senate feared that an empowered con- vention could expand its scope to rewriting the entire Constitution. State Approval The Shafer plan was also ap- proved by the Texas House which provided a 5 per cent return of funds, South Dakota overwhelmingly passed a resolution asking that Congress enact a tax sharing plan by a "fair and equitable" method. The resolution specified no per- centage. Democrats said the 10 per cent plan would return to South Dako- ta $13 million annually, but a per capita system of rebate would net three times as much. North Dakota, Minnesota, Mon- tana and Colorado also passed resolutions. North Dakota includ- of such returned funds among the states be based not only on the population of each state and te total federal income tax paId by its citizens, but also the tax ef- fort which the state makes to pro- vide its own programs." Vermont is the only Eastern state to enact a resolution.'Gov. Phillip H. Hoff, a Democrat, sees tax sharing as a major tool to strengthen the states, but says it will have to wait "until the cessa- tion of hostilities in Vietnam." The bulk of support for the tax split idea centers in the north central end mountain states, but the population base rebate would divert the largest amount of funds to New York and California. Gov. Ronald Reagan favors the 10 per cent plan but the Califor- nia Legislature adjourned without the introduction of any resolutions calling for it. Californians paid $9.68 billion federal taxes in fis- cal 1966. .r . ": 41Y".1Y : 111'.Y::.Y tY.1 >StY.'Y.".'::: t:: ttY t^.Y Y.t 'i WS: YN.11VhY. YS N V. YJ " '1}" k "'7.'i::ti": .l ": .:'..1 t :° J.\t:':::,;.X." , 1:" .':'::ti"::":: '.tt:"....h... . :{t .1 ..'P.'Y'}.. "Y.:' .'C' J ........................ "... ..::.Y .1 1.1.1:': ". .1Y: t.""J: .. .{. ..1. ". . Y.VY t, t 1 '" t ' Y. :':Y:ti'.... :tt. '.1Y: ". 11Y:."::tt11Y ":.1": .f ...i.'"-11.1" . ;i' Lt'.,M1 :'tM1 ::. ............:::: r::::.^.:"......... .:::.v.1.^:....":::..:...........vY."." :.YSYX..".: .... ........u...t....t.1"'.vI.Y. A1..t.1 n..t. {1S1Y.U::A. .a1 :. .:.. ni5$4 n t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 3::; ":.4':.44::': f::.'.":.":::.".Y: ':.: ::" ":: C4 .".'.4 " V.LY.M "1:::. 5 .. .....t": f 4:":: ". 4. .. y44" r R' k."" 4S444V 4 W. : r :' \,}}:}}::Y ": :1{': } }: :ti ::"}"t:::'}:., ..\.. ". : R.. .4; .. y.1 . .V ,.1 ..V.'. " J.'V '. '" :. 4'h" .".1{1 4 Y v..l'fJ "ti{y, ': .4 a.f... . :ti"t :': :::"i}}'t : !}CJ}""'}" 4Y:.:"} ': J".:: v'4":14YJY:'1.". .h'. ;.T... ....Ya "::4 ....."".Vr'r.:.4 ".4".4W::.. .....t...ru.rl.^'!!. ..1.........A....h.A.1.4'"."::!...1".4'.L..:K.n..n".....tL....... ...h4.r..:1 :" K1 .:.4 r. :.. arr.. e. s: The Daily Official Bulletin is an official pubicatior of the Univer- sity of Micngan for which The Michigan liatly assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TVPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satirday and Sunday. General; Notices may be jiublished a maxi- mum of two times on request; hay Calendar items appear once only. Studentorganization notices are not accepted for pulilication. For more intormation call 764-9270. T UESDAY, MAY 16 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"Managing the Unsatisfactory Per- former": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Second National Symposium on Ra- dioecology-"Energy in Man's' Environ- ment: Past, Present and Future Prob- lems": Rackham Lecture Hall, 9 a m. General Notices Zoology Seminar: On Wed., May 17; Dr. Beatrice Mintz, senior member of the Institute for Cancer Research at Fox Chase, Philadelphia, will present a seminar on "Gene Regulation of Dif- ferentiation in Mammals," at 4 p.m. in Aud. D, Angell Hall. This seminar is co-sponsored by the Department of Zo- ology and the University of Michigan Cancer Research Institute, Doctoral Examination for James Howard Case, Mathematics; thesis: "Equilibrium Points of N-Person Dif- ferential Games," Tues., May 16, Room 243 West Engineering, at 4 p.m. Chair- man, R. M. Thrall. Computing Center Course: The Com- puting Center announces a short course "The Use of the IBM 360/67 MTS 8ys- tem, including Fortran IV." Fri., May 26, 1-5 p.m., Room 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Registration not necessary. Inquiries may be addressed to Prof. Bernard A. Galler. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Mobil Oil Corp., Niles, Ill. - Mktg. Reps., BS/BA ay major, also ME. IE, ChE degrees. Operating Trng., BS/BA/ MBA with any engrg. kgd. Acctg. Trng., BS/BA Acctg., Econ., Finance Process and Plant Engrs., ChE, IE, EE, ME at BS or MS levels. Oil Field Production, some as above. Financial Analyst, MBA Finance, Acctg., or Econ. Research & Dev. Chemists, any level Cheib. degrees. Ideal Industries, Inc., North Central, III.-Senior Mechanical Design Engr., 10 yrs. design exper, with BS in ME. Product Mgr., any degree. Field Sales Reps., 5-8 yrs. exper. Sales Trng., de- gree pref., no exper. Field Sales Engr., some exper. Dept. of Admin., Bureau of Mgmt., State of Wisconsin '- Administrative analysts in budget planning offices. Completed MA or coursework equiv. In poll. sci.,;bus, ad., or public'ad. Management Consultants, Cleveland, Ohio-Manager of staff selection in management consultant firm, as a con- sultant, will be responsible for all pro- fessional recruiting at industrial and graduate school levels: 27-35 yrs. old, grad degree pref., personnel exper,. with recruiting. .Topco Associates, Inc., Skokie, Ill. - Corporate Manager of Personnel for service industry to leading supermar- ket companies. MBA in Indust. relations, 3-5 yrs. In personnel mgmt., or BA/BS degree in Bus. Ad. with 5-7 yrs.Aexper. Defense Atomic Support Agency, Arm- ed Forces Radlobiology Research Insti- tute, Bethesda, Md.-Research Physicists in Particle Accelerastors, Nuclear Phys., and Radiological Phys. PhD degree. * *w For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. 4 9 By The Associated Press NEW YORK-The pressure of the draft and the lure of graduate school are intensifying competi- tion among the nation's business firms for June college graduates. An Associated Press survey found some hard-pressed firms hiring women for jobs previously filled by men. They are offering starting salaries nearly double what they were 10 years ago and 3 to 15 per cent higher than last year, Some companies offer to sweet- en the pot with memberships in private clubs, and some offer deals yn cars. Most give trips to the ,ompany plant or headquarters. More and more stress the contri- butions young employes are mak- ing in solving major problems in order to make them feel needed. Intense Recruiting "Recruiting has been more in- tense this year than ever," said Chet Peters, vice-president of Kan- sas State University. He said companies need more men because of increasing de- fense contracts, but at the same time the manpower pool is cut >y the draft and graduate schools. "This doesn't leave very many to enter the market," Peters said, Numerous Offers Sam Walters, personnel man- ager of Gates Rubber Co., in Den- ver, Colo., said he knew of some seniors who had received 15 to 20 job offers apiece. Engineering graduates averaged 12 to 14 job offers, reported a spokesman for Ling-Temco-Vought in Grand Prairie, Tex. "Somebody's bound to go away empty-handed," said John Hall, manager of Southeastern recruit- ing for General Electric. E. F. Rosadino, Southern New England Telephone Co., college employment supervisor, said re- cruiters found that out of 1000 seniors graduating from Yale, only 44 are going to work for private Dmpanies, the {rest choosing the service, graduate school or gov- ernment. Graduate School In Boston, 80 per cent of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology seniors are headed for graduate school. So are 40 per cent of the graduating class at the University of California at Los Angeles. In Seattle, the Boeing Co. said it is hiring more women as the supply of available males dimin- ishes. Sun Oil Co. in Philadelphia has expanded its recruiting efforts to include 24 women's colleges, look- ing particularly for women for mathematics and computer-relat- ed programs. More Women Most companies reported they were offering women the same pay as men. But some firms, such as Shell Oil Company in Los An- geles, reported they paid women less in some fields. "We are not going to fill male jobs with females,55 said Rosadino of Southern New England Tele- phone, What companies are seeking most are accountants, any kind of en- gineers, and chemistry, math or physics majors. The emphasis on technical fields extends to teaching. The Seattle public school sys- em reports it is short industrial arts, math and science teachers. But it has 400 to 500 applications for 25 spots in English and Social studies. Competition is sharpest for elec- tronic and engineering graduates, reports Joseph Scully, UCLA placement director. Engineers' average salaries may start at, $665 to $740 a month. Business graduates are offered $575 to $650. A senior at Northwestern Uni- versity, Evanston, Ill., seeking a job with an advertising agency or marketing firm for $10,000 or $12,000 a year, said that "most of the firms I've talked to have offered salaries in that range." At the University of Missouri, spokesman George DeWann says recent journalism graduates are asking about $130 a week. Some' offers are about $115, he said. Both companies and colleges re- port 1967 graduates are more will- ing to travel and less likely to look for jobs near home. HELD OVER! FELLINI'S LA DOLCE VITA UNCENSORED IN ENGLISH (not subtitles) Ann Arbor, Michigan 710 S. -ifth Avenue 761-9700 CINEMA 11 PRESENTS Melina Mercouri and Anthony Perkins in JULES DASSIN'S PHAEDRA (1962) FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 and 9:15 P.M. Auditorium A 50c Angell Ball ORGAN IZATION NOT ICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Deutscher Verein, Kaffeestunde: kaf- fee, kuchen, konversation, Wed., May 17, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Lec- ture-discussion, Tues., May 16, 7:30 p.m., Union Third Floor Conference Room. Rev. Donald VanHoeven, asst. pastor of Universty Reformed Church, "Chris- tian Dynamics of Self-Actualization." I I "You won't find more than 10 ed the 10 per cent provision. Min- per cent that say they want to nesota asked for 5 per cent and stick around their home areas," called for "no strings attached" to said Ronald Rain, a Trans World the rebate funds., Airlines recruiter in Kansas City. Montana asked that "allocations #f . I, II - DIA L NO 2-6264 mmeammasmmmamsm RECORD-BREAKING ird WEEK V. T1 247 TO STATE SAT. HEATRE rf Collingwood MAY 20 LEDO, OHIO Admission $2.75-Reserved Seats $4.25 IN CONCERT JULIAN "CANNONBALL" ADDERLY A MIfn THIS WEEKEND! Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8:00 p.m. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre will present COME BACK I-: . ® rN A- A& r tN - w A IS TOOMUCH.. FOR ONE 130 JAMES BOND! 4:05 6:20 N;;; 9:00 I i I