,, The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 11, 1978-Page 3 SALK TO TEST NEW DRUG: ', ', r-- c5 r Multiple sclerosis aid possible A Lilly spokesman said Salk asked APOLIS (UPI)--Feeral drug the substance, initially developed by his Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical EACH PERSON participating wi ave given Dr. Jonas Salk, the Salk in his California facilities, would manufacturer to refine the substance cautioned against over-optimi helped conquer polio, per- be successful in treating humans. Salk "and make it suitable for preliminary While there may be a chance of test a new substance he also developed the first successful vac- animal studies." , Shedden said there also is INDIAN officials ha man who mission to ll be sm. suc- is a Reminders not wanted When God got around to handing out business acumen, Los Angeles concessionaire Blake Coleman must have been tending shop. Blake sent us a letter the other day asking us to spread the good word about some hot items he had for sale - Rose Bowl patches, buttons, pennants, and hats. Yes, now you can relive Michigan's crushing, emotionally-draining defeat by snapping up some of Blake's left-over pieces of memorabilia. Well, Blake ole kid, we're not altogether sure your stuff is going to go over real big here, especially since you omitted the one thing people around here really could use - hankies. Israelite for a day Do you have a flair for flamboyant rhetorical flourishes? Ever have a hankering to haggle over heavy issues, of world-wide importance? Have friends ever described you as the diplomatic sort? Well, even if the an- swer to all of these questions is "nay," you still could be one of seven lucky souls chosen to go to New York this spring to participate in the Model United Nations Conference. For the first time, Michigan is sending a seven-person delegation which, as it turns out, will represent Israel. So, if you want to go, you better get your "defensible borders" straight from your "secure boundaries." If this perks your interest, all you have to do is trot over to 6618 Haven Hall and pick up an application. Deadline for ap- plications is Jan. 18. That sardine rag Remember back in September when there was a problem with students and dorm space? You'll recall that there weren't enough rooms for the people who signed dorm leases - even the economy triples were occupied. The University ended up converting lounge space to room space in some of the dorms. Well, you might think the space problem has been mitigated with the new semester and people dropping out and all that. But not so, says Acting. Housing Director Robert Hughes. Thougl 'final figures haven't yet been compiled, Hughes estimates that dorms here still remain about 138 over capacity. Happenings*... will keep you hopping today ... you might drop by the Fishbowl or the Michigan Union lobby between 9 and 5 today and check out the art print sale being held by the Mad Hatters Tea Party to benefit the Child Care Action Center of the School of Education ... at noon, two free films, "The Women's Health Movement" and "Janie's Janie" will be shown in the South Lecture Hall of Med Sci II ... munch some lunch and then go hear Dr. Loren Platzman jaw about "Estimation and Control of Finite Probabilistic Systems" at 4 in Room 229 of the West Engineering Bldg.... and if that sounds a bit dry, you can trot over to Room 1042 in the East Engineering Bldg. and listen to Stanford Prof A.E. Bryson discuss "Guidance Logic for Automatic Aircraft Approach and Landing," that's also at 4 ... things pick up again at 7:30 when'the Project Outreach mass meeting is held in Hill Auditorium ... also at 7:30, the Ann Arbor Commit- tee for Human Rights in Latin America will hold a mass organizational meeting at Guild House, 802 Monroe ... a slide show entitled "Atomic Power and the Arms Race" will be shown free of charge at the Friends Meeting House at 8 ... and finally, the movie "Malatesta" will be shown for free at 9 at the Max Kade House in Oxford Housing ... that's all, folks. developed for treatment of persons suf- fering multiple sclerosis. Eli Lilly & Co., an Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical firm, is providing the test materials to the Salk Institute at 'la Jolla, Calif. Dr. W. Ian Shedden, vice president of Lilly Research Laboratories, cautioned persons suffering from the paralyzing neurological disease against false hopes because of the testing. SHEDDEN SAID scientists probably will not know for several yars whether cine against polio. RESEARCHERS say one in every 20,000 Americans suffers from MS. The disease usually is contracted by persons about 35 years old and progresses 20 to 25 years until the vic- tim dies from an infection. "Presently, there is no effective treatment that offers any longtime hope for cure or provides any assurancs the patient won't have a progressive deterioration," Shedden said. THE FOOD AND Drug Ad- ministration within the past few months gave its approval for limited clinical tests in humans. Lilly officials identified the sub- stance as myelin basic protein-taken from a pig's nervous system. The testing on a handful of patients with MS will be conducted by three West Coast neurologists, Shedden said. possibiity of no improvement. "The agent that Lilly and Salk have been working with has shown some preliminary effectiveness in treating this condition in animals," said William Cairns, Lilly's director of public relations. However, he said animals never develop MS, but do have- a similar condition. Shedden said scientists must try to establish a relationship between the condition in animals and MS in humans. Reporter's killers get death sentence PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Two men convicted of first-degree murder in the 1976 car-bomb slaying of news- paper reporter Don Bolles were sentenced yesterday to die in the gas chamber. Max Dunlap, a 48-year-old 1-hoeni, contractor, and James Robison, 55, a plumber from suburban Chandler, were found guilty Nov. 6 of murder and conspiracy in the bombing. Prosecutors asked that they be sentenced to death. THE DEATH of Bolles, whose reporting specialty for the Arizona Republic was crime, brought a team of broadcast and newspaper report- ers and editors to Arizona to investi- gate orgapized crime. Their report was issued in May. Robison was convicted of detonat- ing the bomb which exploded under the newsman's car as he was leaving a midtown hotel parking lot. Dunlap was convicted of arranging the murder. They were both sentenced to not less than 29 years or more than 30 years on the conspiracy charge. JOHN ADAMSON, 34, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder charges in'January 1976 and impli- cated Dunlap and Robison. Adamson faces a prison term of 20 years. In a statement to the judge before the sentence was imposed, Dunlap broke into tears as he said, "I'm innocent." The defendant said he had written his daughters telling them "never be ashamed, my only guilt has been working for a living and for my fellow man." AS FAMILY members broke into sobs, Dunlap said, "you'll never be able to take my free spirit. It is innocent. "And to my lovely wife, Barbara, I love you very dearly." Robison, speaking in a deep, clear voice, told the judge: "They (the prosecution) were successful in getting a jury to agree to their theory. It remains a theory - nothing more." Robison also charged that "the attorney general and Phoenix Police Department will use this as an excuse to never confront the ones who committed this crime with John Harvey Adamson. I'm innocent." BEFORE PASSING sentence, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Howard Thompson said he considered reports by two court- appointed doctors and found that Dunlap was mentally competent. "Mr. Dunlap has been competent all the time." The defense had, sought to delay sentencing pending a hearing on Dunlap's mental condition. His attor- neys had argued that it had deterior- ated since his conviction. Thompson said he examined the records of both men and found "no mitigating circumstances calling for leniency." LARRY DEBUS, attorney for Dun- lap, told the judge, "This trial has been a sham and a fraud." David Derickson, court-appointed attorney for Robison, said "this has been a mockery of justice," and the death sentence was "an exercise in judicial murder." Thompson said an appeal would be filed automatically as required by state law in death penalty cases. The two were expected to remain in the Maricopa County Jail pending the appeal. To the milk, march! Two Soviets rocket towards space link-up MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union yesterday rocketed two cos- monauts into space to rendezvous with two colleagues who have al- ready spent a month aboard the Salyut 6 space station, Tass reported. Successful docking of the new cosmonauts would mark the first time four men have been placed aboard a Soviet space laboratory at the same time. "THE SOVIET news agency said cosmonauts Vladimir Janibekov and Oleg Makarov blasted off in Soyuz 27 at 3:26 p.m. Moscow time (8:26 a.m. EST). Already aboard Salyut 6 are flight commander Yuri Romanenko, 33, and flight engineer GEORGY Grechko 46, who were fired into orbit in the Soyuz 26 spacecraft Dec. 10 and linked up with Salyut 6 the following day. Grechko took a walk in space Dec. Daily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceeding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more informa- tion, phone 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1978 Daily Calendar Department of Industrial and Operations Engineering: Seminar, Dr. Loren K. Platzman, Bell Laboratories, Chicago, Ill.: "Estimation and Control of Finite Probabilistic Systems", Wednesday, January 11, Room 229 W.E., 4:00 p.m. 20 to check'the space lab's ports and reported them working order. docking in good IF THE SOYUZ 27 flight follows previous patterns and the docking maneuver is successful, Janibekov and Makarov should join the other two late today. Janibekov, an air force lieutenant colonel and com- mander of the spaceship, is making his first space flight, while Makarov, a civilian and flight engineer, flew betore on Soyuz 12 in 1973. TASS SAID after the docking the four cosmonauts would carry out joint research and experiments. The agency said Soyuz 27's sys- tems were functioning normally and the two new cosmonauts were feeling well. William S. Hart'S 1925 TUMBLEWEEDS Hart's final and finest West- ern thriller based on the Ok- lahoma larid rush. An au- thentic American classic with some of the, wildest riding ever seen on film. Silent with partial sound. THURS: BIRTH OF A NATION CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH AUD. $1.50 The general hails the heifers We've had macho singers crooning about automobiles and glamor- cusly slinky movie starlets cooing about perfume, but now an Hollywood ad executive has come up with a new twist. Opting for what might be called the authoritarian approach, one Chuck Blore has whipped up, and stars in, a series of TV spots which have a General George Patton type giving the folks at home some fire and brimstone on the manly subject of, uh, milk. In one commercial, the general raises a glass of milk and toasts "all of you who have helped make milk the all-American drink" - a few dozen dairy cows. In another spot, "Patton" urges men to drink cow juice at every meal and then barks, "If you won't do it for yourself, do it for The Ann Arbor hilm ooperative TAJ3lf'-UT IWadnodav..DJanmuarv 11