[The M hi n D ttVol. LXXXIX, No. 21-S Ya a Thursday, May 31, 1979 6 Twelve Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents U' Hospital cautious in dispensing DES by ADRIENNE LYONS The drug diethylstilbestrol (DES), now known to increase cancer risk in the daughters of women who take it, was dispensed at the University's Health Ser- vice during the late 1960s and early 1970s as part of an experiment. DES still is dispensed at University Hospital as a "morning-after" contraceptive, but only under rare ircumstances, according to a nurse in the hospital's gynecology clinic. Executive Director of the National Women's Health Network Belita Cowan was quoted in the State News, Michigan State University's student newspaper, as saying that Health Service dispensed DES as a mor- ning-after pill ten years ago, even though the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) haji not ap- proved the drug. COWAN COULD NOT be reached for comment. According to FDA Consumer Safety Officer Joanne Narrone, the FDA does not recommend the drug as a morning-after pill, but it is still legal to dispense DES. "Using a drug for an inappropriate indication (a reason for which it was not intended) is within a doc- tor's practice," she said. DES is a synthetic estrogen. It was often prescribed to women during the 1940s and 1950s to prevent miscarriages. Research has shown DES to increase the risk of an unusual form of vaginal cancer in the daughters of these women. ACCORDING TO the State News article, Cowan was a gradaute student at the University and an employee of University Hospital during the experiment a decade ago. The tests were conducted to examine the possible use of DES as a morning-after oral contraceptive in emergencies, according to the experiment's final report. The article also stated Cowan claimed that 100 students were given.the drug and none were aware of its experimental nature. But according to the final report, 1,000 women were tested and all were informed that using DES as a con- traceptive was experimental, and that follow-up examinations were expected. Only consenting women See 'U', Page 2 DC-10 eng defects un in safety iil CHICAGO (AP) - The death toll from the crash of American Airlines Flight 191 rose to 274 yesterday as crews still labored at the disaster site to collect the bodies of the victims. The victims were so mutilated and dismembered bylast Friday's crash that 305 body bags have been used already and more will be needed, sear- chers said. Meanwhile, dozens of DC-10 jumbo jets lifted off again yesterday just hours after the wide-bodied jets were groun- ded for safety checks, but federal of- ficials said other DC-10s had failed to pass inspection. A "CONSCIENTIOUS mechanic'- who didn't like the way a metal cover was sitting on an engine pylon of a United Airlines jet discovered a crack that helped convince authorities of the need to ground all DC-10s, a federal of- ficial says. Officials of McDonnell Douglas, makers of the DC-10, have declined to discuss details of the pylon structure. They were asked what the bolt is made of, who makes it, and how the DC-10 engine mounting compares with those on its DC-8 and DC-9 aircraft. But McDonnell Douglas promised that a statement describing the way the engine is put on the plane, and the engineering reasons for it, would be provided. CAPT. ERNEST Burmeister, a United captain and a member of the National Transportation Safety Board team investigating Friday's American Airlines' DC-10 crash, said an inspec- tion of the United jet revealed a crack in a large steel plate that is a vital part of the engine mount. "We were just lucky a very conscien- tious mechanic was putting forth extra effort," said Burmeister, who did not identify the mechanic. He said a ground crew found the problem after completing its inspection of bolts and other mechanisms at the three attachment points where the pylon is connected to the bottom of the wing. BURMEISTER said the crack would have allowed the entire engine assem- bly to move beyond proper limits and could pbt extra strain on the bolts and ine mount covered spections other devices at the main attachment points. He said the crack would not have been discovered if the mechanic had not gone beyond federal orders to in- spect the mounting system. The FAA grounded the DC-l0s for in- spection on Tuesday because of "grave and potentially dangerous deficien- cies" in their engine mounts. THE FAA order removed from ser- vice 12 per cent of the available seats on See INSPECTIONS, page 2 Private gifts supplement U'fin~an'icial structure by JULIE ENGEBRECHT Tuition skyrockets. State ap- propriations decrease each year. And, the University increasingly depends on private gifts to maintain its reputation as a prestigious institution. Only ten per cent of the University's budget comes from private donations - 30 per cent comes from tuition, and about 60 per cent from the state - yet this year monetary private support is expected to reach $33 million. THE UNIVERSITY'S Director of Development Wendell Lyons prefers to call the University tax-assisted, rather than state-supported, because, he said, it must depend on private gifts and student funds as well as state allocations. Lyons said people assume the state provides for everything the University needs, and they tend not to give money for that reason. "A university like Michigan has got to raise more and more private funds if it's going to remain great," Lyons said. "Tuition will raise to the price where few can afford to come (to the Univer- sity). You can price yourself out of See DONATIONS, page 2 ALEXI BRUMBAUGH put on a broad brimmed hat to protect herself from the light rain yesterday as she hiked through the woods at the back of her land on Dexter Rd. She and other neighborhood residents say a six-unit apartment build- ing planned next to her property will endanger the woods. West side residents irate over planned apt. building By JOHN GOYER Any of the five massive developments proposed for the south side of Ann Ar- bor could indirectly affect virtually every city resident. But a six-story apartment building proposed for a one- acre lot near Dexter Rd. has raised the ire of a dozen neighborhood citizens. Neighborhood residents protested the plans at a City Council Public Hearing May 14. They claimed the apartment building, proposed for land owned by the Vitality Seed Company Pension Fund, would threaten wildlife and add to the trend of crowding more people on less land. "I WOULD JUST love for it to stay like this, but I know it won't. If they were going to put in a home there, then I'd say go ahead. But apartments, I don't want that," Alexi Brumbaugh said yesterday as she walked on her land next to the one-acre site. Brumbaugh, 78, has lived next to the land earmarked for apartments for 32 years. As she tramped through rolling brush, Brumbaugh pointed out the raspberry bushes, the apple and pear trees, and the wild grapes on her property. She also pointed out the shop- ping carts that had been dumped on the small wetland at the back of her land, as well as the debris on the property next to her own. BOTH BRUMBAUGH and Revella Woodson, 52, whose house is also near the proposed apartment building, blamed the dumped shopping carts on See WEST, Page 10