4 Page 4-Saturday, April 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M! 48109 Eight-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Malaria may resurface as a national health menace Vol. LXXXIX, No. 156 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan i Malaria, a disease that seemed virtually extinguished 15 years ago, has staged a virulent world- wide come-back and health authorities worry it could once again become a menace in this country. "We are concerned about the possible re-establishment of en- demic malaria," said Dr. Ronald R. Roberto, deputy chief of the Infectious Disease Section at the California Department of Health Services. "It is not very likely, but we have to consider it." CALIFORNIA, with about a third of the nationwide incidence, of the disease, reported 226 cases last year-a jump from 115 in 1977. All were imported by travelers or immigrants, especially from India and Central America. Malaria is transmitted by the Anopheles mosquitoes. In 1974, three Californians were infected by local Anopheles, alarming public health authorities. Once the malaria - arasite is established in a mosquito population, it becomes a local menace. With further spread of the disease abroad combined with fund cutbacks in mosquito control programs here, 'the malaria hazard has grown. Gene Kauffman, manager en- tomologist of the Sutter-Yuba Mosquito Abatement District, said a 50 per cent funding decrease in the wake of Proposition 13 will require his staff to work longer hours, taking compensatory time off during slow seasons. Funds have been cut back in most Central Valley districts, though the climate is right for both malaria and sleeping sickness. MALARIA WAS brought into this country during the last cen- tury. It killed many Native Americans and plagued Califor- nia gold miners. It disappeared as an endemic disease in the state during the 1930s and in its last stronghold, the South, after World War II. The threat of its resurgence now reflects a world-wide trend. Within the past 15 years, the in- cidence of malaria has increased a hundredfold in some countries. The global malaria-eradication campaign launched in 1955 by the World Health Organization (WHO) seems to be coming to a dead end. Many of the malaria- bearing mosquitoes (43 species) are now resistant to major insec- ticides. About 356 million people live in areas where mosquito reisitance has slowed anti- malaria efforts. IN ADDITION, the disease organism is increasingly resistant to Chloroquin and realted drugs used for prevention and treatment. Epidemiologists fear the time - which they predict is bound to come-when mosquito and parasite resistance occur in the same place. The an- cient scourge will then leap ever further beyond control by the methods that seemed so promising 24 years ago. The WHO campaign relied on a paramilitary-style strategy in which DDT was the chief weapon. Teams of sprayers were dispat- ched to even the most remote villages of some countries to douse the inside walls of dwellings where mosquitoes tend to rest after drawing blood. The spraying was repeated periodically, and within five years the disease seemed on the way out in many areas. But the spraying led to DDT build-up in mothers' milk, and killed small animals and fish as runoff dispersed the toxins. The DDT also killed lice, fleas, and flies for a time, until they developed a reisitance. MORE AND MORE spraying was required. Normal mosquitoes died, with those that tolerated the poison proliferated. Malaria epidemics began to break out once again, aften around poorly maintained irrigation projects that produce. standing water where mosquito larvae hatch. Meanwhile, heavy use of pesticides on irrigated crops, especially cotton, speeded up Anopheles resistance. One of the most serious epi- demics in the world, according to WHO officials, is raging in Turkey where extensive irrigation canals were built as part of an agricultural develop- ment project in the Adana plain. Between 1974 and 1977, the num- ber of cases jumped from 2,877 to 115,385. The immediate future looks gloomy, according to a report prepared for the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP). But the failure of the pesticide-focused attack on the disease has revived interest in alternatives that, though more subtle and difficult, seem to offer the greatest hope of success at a minimal environmental cost. China has reported great suc- cess with a comprehensive con- trol program combining en- vironmental methods with modern insecticides. SOME CANALS in Chine have been put underground and covered with roads or crops. Paddy fields, canals and ponds are stocked with carp and smur, two edible fish. The carp eat the mosquito larvae. The her- bivorous amur clears pond fringes, exposing larvae to wave and wind movement, sunlight and predators. In 1973, tens of thousands of people in Shantung province straightened the cour- ses of four tortusuo rivers to reduce mosquito habitat and con- serve water, according to a By Rasa Gustaitis report by Professor Kung Chien= chang, chief of the department of medicine at Shanghai Hospital, and Dr, Huang Shen-chi, deputy director of Hupeh Provincial In: stitute of Parasitology, Wuhan: More recently, 1,120 canals and ditches were cleared up and 1,474 pits and river turnings refilled. Though the danger is not great, that the disease might take hold in the United States, where mosquito control is highly organized, American travelers will be wise to take precautions when going to countries where malaria is prevalent, according to entomologist Richard Garcia, at the University of California's Division of Biological Control ii Berkeley. Among the most promising biological control agents now being developed, according to Garcia, is a bacillus that will kill mosquito and blackfly larvae but appears harmless to the en- vironment. The blackfly, which has a fierce bite, injures domestic animals and is a nuisance to river fishermen in temperate zones. In central and tropical American and in Africa, it bears onchocercaisis, a lung disease that also causes blind dness. If tests with this bacillus cons- tinue to show promise, it could be available within a few ye'ars for, dispersal in water systems, Gar- cia said in an interview. However, Garcia stressed,. "this is just one tactic. It is not a solution. If you use one thing only, reisitance will most likely develop to that, too." 0 'Do his subsidies discourage him?' Rasa Gustaitis associate editor of News Service. is anw Pacific Nukes too dangerous -- v _. T'S NOW ABOUT two weeks since the near-tragic accident at, the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor in Pennsylvania generated widespread public concern in the safety of nuclear power. As the possibility of a meltdown in the reactor was finally eliminated, proponents of nuclear power argued the ability to prevent disaster in this case proved that nuclear energy is a safe solution to the nation's energy crisis. On the other hand, anti-nuclear activists have insisted the near disastrous accident at this plant shows there is no guarantee that nuclear power is safe. But an obvious question was posed: What would the government do to sof- ten public criticism and fears of the danger of nuclear power? That question was answered this past week by the Nuclear Power Regulatory Commission (NRC) who announced it would impose stricter safety standards on the operating nuclear plants in the United States. At the same time, the commission strongly vowed it is not contemplating recommending "any new reactor shutdowns at this time." President Car- ter backed up that statement by issuing his own, arguing that it was not possible to abandon nuclear power in the foreseeable future. The President also appointed an 11-member com- mission to find the answers to what 'happened at Three Mile Island. Howeyer, it is clear from the statements by the commission and the President that the Washington bureaucracy still views nuclear power as the solution to the nation's energy problems. The President indicated that the commission investigating Three Mile Island would report on how lessons of the accident "can strengthen safety standards, better design techniques and also operating procedures to make safety better in the future." But the government seems to be tur- ning its back on the accident at Three Mile Island. The steps taken to insure that the currently operating nuclear power plants are made safer are necessary to safeguard the public's welfare. The government, however, does not seem to feel that nuclear power must be abandoned within the next several decades. It can make the safety standards stricter but it will be unable to guarantee complete safety from a meltdown. After all, wasn't Three Mile Island supposed to be a safe nuclear reactor? Carter and the NRC must come to the realization that nuclear power has to be gradually phased out in this coun- try. The government should instead turn its efforts toward developing alternative sources of energy. NASA needs better public relations to end skepticism The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has recently made in Neil Ar- mstrong's immortal words, "one giant leap for mankind" after another. In the past few months, the Pioneer-Venus unmanned mission to Venus and the Voyager spacecraft orbit around Jupiter have given scientists the most spectacular and detailed pictures of Venus and Jupiter. These two probes have given NASA officials significant knowledge about the composition By Timothy Yagle evolutionary processes will make our own planet's future easier to understand. Since the partially-ignorant American public (due to NASA's mediocre public relations effort) desires only immediate benefits from our nation's space program, people have become disillusioned with NASA. Scientists will soon be receiving detailed pictures and valuable information from Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and Improved surgical techniques, space-suit-like garments for neurologically-handicapped peo- ple and more efficient record keeping due to sophisticated computers, are just a few exam- ples of advanced technology. New space programs also generate jobs for otherwise job- less engineers and technicians. NASA has contracted and sub- contracted a plethora of com- panies for specific work on to help alleviate some of the problems here on earth. Members of the local chapter of the L5 Society, a knowledgable organization devoted to the ad- vocation of colonization and ex- ploration of outer space, say we had the technology to build the colony 10 years ag, but the only obstacle to launching such a program was, and still is, Congressional funding. CONGRESS HAS been the biggest thorn in NASA's side sin- ce it formed in 1958. Believing that their constituents see no immediate and tangible benefits from space exploration (especially from the Apollo program). Congress doesn't adequately fund NASA. "They brought back a bunch of rocks from the moon. "Why didn't they bring back something important?" people complain. After studying those rocks, weknow more about the moon than we ever did, which gives scientists clues to the ear- th's origin since the earth and moon were formed around the same time. Just as a footnote, scientific gains from the Apollo program could fill your average college textbook. One of the intangible benefits of the space program's exploration of interplanetary space is simply the thrill of knowing we can ac- complish it. That may sound ridiculous, but one can lend some credence to this idea. Man is innately curious and is in constant pursuit of knowledge, if only for its own, sake. We now know that man can - live in space for extended periods of time (more than 80 days thanks to the Skylab missions), can go to the moon and return safely, and can uncover in- triguing clues to the origin,> evolution, and future of our Solar' system. But, to reiterate, the real: problem NASA has is expressing how beneficial the space program has been and will con-,' tinue to be. And, even though there are no manned missions exceptr i '1 I I - ..a . - - - I 7 I The Space Shuttle, above, will serve as NASA's workhorse for the rest of this centuryIt will be the main transport vehicle for the proposed space colonies along with maintaining and repairing presently orbiting satellites. 111k I 11 i Il of these two planets-more than ever before. But so what? Will these discoveries benefit the average American? Will the "incredible advancements of science" as NASA has dubbed them, make society any better for Americans? Will they stifle this country's soaring inflation rate? THE UNITED STATES has spent (some say wasted) billions of dollars on our space Uranus. But these discoveries are seen by Americans only on their evening newscasts.Most of the technological benefits won't. be noticeable for many years. The benefits that are noticeable now include the modern cash registers, liquid crystal watches, and wafer-thin calculators. But these luxuries have not convinced Americans that space ex- ploration should be one of our high priorities. programs like the troubled space shuttle. They have practiced this method ever since the Mercury program. NASA IS APPLYING all the technology it reaped from Skylab and the Apollo program, to a con- cept that became a near reality only within the past decade-space colonization.- Mankind is currently in the midst of two tremendous social programs: overpopulation and .1 nl ---- -U-- -_