Synthetic Interferon . First tests in on genetic engineering product The Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 24, 1981-Page 3 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Interferon produced by genetic engineering shrank tumors in seven of 16 cancer patients, researchers said yesterday. The said they were encouraged that the substance was passing early safety tests,but that its effectiveness will not be proven until it is tested on a larger group of patients. Results of the study, which was in- tended only to demonstrate the safety of the snythetic interferon, were repor- ted yesterday by Dr. Sandra Horning of Stanford University. TESTS OF natural interferon, made by the body to fight viral infections, show it has promise as an anti neer weapon, but results of the firs few studies have been mixed, researchers say. The number of tests has been limited by the scarcity of natural interferon, most of which is obtained through a complicated process developed by the Red Cross in Finland. A course of treatment with natural *Police kill ^ y oneBrinks suspect,' arr est another It appears likely that the tumor regression was due to the interferon, not an impurity. -Dr. Sandra Horning Stanford University" interferon can cost $30,000, resear- chers say. SYNTHETIC interferon produced by genetic engineering can be made at far less cost, and it can therefore be tested on a large number of patients. The synthetic product is made by altering bacteria's genes so that the bacteria produces interferon as a by- product of growth and reproduction. INITIAL TESTING involved eight patients at Stanford and eight at the M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor In- stitute in Houston. All of the patients had advanced cancers. At Stanford, anti-tumor activity was spotted in one patient with breast can- cer, one with leukemia end two with lymphoma, said Horning. Three of the eight patients at Ander- son showed Tumor regression. That part of the trial was directed by, Dr. Jordan U. Getterman. THE RESULTS of the trial were par- ticularly significant because the inter- feron was 98 percent pure. Previous preparation had purity levels of about 2 percent, Horning said. Thus, it appears likely that the tumor regression was due to the interferon, not an impurity, she said. Horning said the side effects were the same as those for natural interferon: fever, muscle pains, fatigue, headache, chills and a decrease in white blood cells, the body's natural infection fighters. ALL SIDE effects proved reversible, Horning said. Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc., which produced the interferon in cooperation with Genentech, Inc. of South San Francisco, said a second phase of testing - to determine synthetic inter- feron's efectiveness as a cancer weapon - would likely begin later this year. The company, based in Nutley, N.J., cautioned that "the number of patients involved during Phase I is not large enough for a scientific evaluation of ef- ficacy." Horning's colleagues included Drs. Jedd Levine, Richard Miller, Saul RosenbergAnd Thomas Merigan. ', A"'iw'a";. . .s;.v... - .,:, .".." }5:il:ai:v±":'?:. ~ahX:S.i .. :'i{$}; aji^ ... ri .'vvr vy~,}v : i:r ..:. v:i }:.. S:}<......a. .h. NW YORK (AP)- Police killed one man and arrested a fugitive Black Panther in a shootout in New York City yesterday after the suspects were spotted in a car linked to a bloody $1.6 million armored truck holdup. The surviving suspect was identified by police as Nat Bur- ns, a member of the Black Panther Party who was indicted in 1968 on bombing charges and had not been captured since. Both men were wearing bullet proof vests, and one 9mm weapon was immediately recovered. Some of the bandits in Tuesday's robbery used 9mm weapons. POLICE SAID Burns was carrying $2,446. The car con- tained a loaded .38 caliber revolver, 161 rounds of M-16 rifle ammunition, 80 rounds of .44-caliber revolver ammunition, 75 rounds of M-1 rifle ammunition and a duffle bag with rifle parts, police said. Police probing the growing number of connections among the radicals, black terrorists and the Brink's robbers have raided several apartments in the metropolitan area, repor- tedly finding weapons, diagrams and "hit lists." At the same time, state police in Connecticut said they had detained four people for questioning in connection with the robbery and slayings. T OSE QUESTIONED in Westport included three men and a woman. State police said they received an anonymous tip that they might be connected with the robbery. They detained the four, who were traveling in two cars, one of which was pulling a U-Haul van. The cars were stopped on Interstate 95 shortly before noon by a large number of state policemen. No shots were fired. State Police spokesman Adam Berluti said the four had been charged with motor vehicle and minor drug violations. Because there was a question of their identities, and because it was an anonymous tip, the FBI was called in to help with questioning, he said. In Nyack, N.Y., meanwhile, a preliminary hearing was set for four people arrested on murder charges after Tuesday's aborted robbery, in which a guard and two police officers were slain. Three of the suspects are members of the Weather Underground, including Katherine Boudin, who had been a fugitive for 11 yeajrs. Swish! Sensei Takashi Kushida, Master of Aikido, demonstrates a form of the an- cient Oriental art at the University's Sports Coliseum yesterday. 'Trusteessa MS I ::'c}. ,.:: i. .,Yf" i ": " ;:a "i xK:. " < .. }> .:.. : 0 11-11, ,., .. .; .: ,..,. ., .4Y . nh:.. .. : .{ .....:.. .:...:: r of "'::." vrv: v:. fey }" :":. fbn, ry" 3}ri. t."; ".:t:ti":vT... .. "":ti"}}: ".i;.:}}: :""}f"}:ti"}}: :5>:ti': :?}:K"i "}: f.ti:.i>..i::.:..... .'"):. :5... ..f t' f1""': J,'.. .. :. \. "ti}F"vt::::::J..}i":;?J,}:: :?'}:: 'I;}{:::. "v..... r...t ...}.. ... :\r: n:"*v. v. : .tt : \. .. .. :: : .: } T 1 ! }t ti ... t :.:. ...v.. V..4.4. ...V:::V V: W.v v:.:^". v .K, :.} f ,. ..t:. ..}x4.. 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Yiti::::::;::'i,'.:: 7fi .. }x; Vii{: i{".:. .. .:........ }:4:i":6X.4,......:"}.\':Ii :hii.........': :'.'_":. :".v. n,.. i:"ti: .''Judge ru'le -s against abo'rti*on for it still in financial crisis KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP)- A coun- ty judge ruled yesterday that it is not in the best interests of an 11-year-old girl who is nearly 24 weeks pregnant to un- dergo an abortion. "The evidence is clear that if she does not Have an abortion, extensive coun- seling be made available .both prior ands after the birth of the child," Kalamazoo County Probate Judge Donald Halstead wrote in his nine-page opinion. BRIAN CAPLAN, attorney for the girl's father who had sought an abortion for his daughter, said he would not ap- peal the ruling. Halstead had been ordered by a federal judge to decide by close of court, Friday whether to order the abortion for the girl, who is pregnant by her mother's boyfriend. Halstead had twice declined to rule on the issue. In his opinion, Halstead said he found that "an abortion is not in the best in- terest of the minor child . . ." " "THERE WAS no dispute that psychologically it is a no-win situation for this little girl and she will require much therapy," the judge wrote. "There are no unforseen complications facing the minor child during pregnan- cy as she is in good health." Halstead made public the ruling in printed statements hahded to repor- ters., The deadline was set after attorneys for the girl argued that she was about to enter her 24th week, or third trimester, of pregnancy, the time after which Michigan law sets strict limits for doc- tors performing abortions. THOSE INVOLVED in the case describe the unidentified fifth-grade girl from Kalamazoo as confused about what she wants. She became a ward of the court in August, when Halstead determined that the mother had neglected her. However, the mother was granted temporary custody until the court proceedings end, and she refused to give permission for an abortion. The girl's father, an ex-convict who lives in Grand Rapids, favors an abortion. HALSTEAD HAD said he did not have the authority to rule on the question. U.S. District Judge Benjamin Gibson said Tuesday that Halstead violated the constitutional rights of the girl by not ruling whether an abortion would be in her best interest. A Kalamazoo group calling itself "Concerned Citizens for Children's Rights" called for Halstead to disqualify himself from the case because his name appeared on a list of supporters in an anti-abortion newspaper advertisement in May. The girl's attorney and her father's attorney are concerned that if Halstead rules against an abortion, they could not appeal the case soon enough so that a Michigan doctor would be willing to perform the abortion. The Michigan Supreme Court has ruled that a physician who aborts a fetus able to survive outside the womb can be charged with manslaughter. EAST LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan State University Board of Trustees refused a, faculty request yesterday to lift the state of financial crisis declared at the fiscally troubled school last winter. The MSU Faculty Council earlier in the week voted to ask that the crisis declaration be cancelled, saying it has, left a cloud hanging over the university which has affected morale, and the, "tone" of the institution. THE TRUSTEES, in turning down the request, said merely declaring the crisis over would be a cosmetic move that would fool no one. "In my judgment most of the things we've done couldn't have been accom- plished without the declaration of finan- cial crisis," said MSU President Cecil Mackey. MSU has ordered temporary and in- definite layoffs, closed departments an)d taken other steps to trim spending to conform to reduced income. IN A RELATED matter, student government leaders appeared before the board, offering to contribute 10 per- cent of their stipends to the university if Mackey would do the same with his salary. The president declined com- ment. And John Bruff, chairman of the board, reported the school's breakaway alumni association is nearly $260,000 in debt and has a "very poor chance of surviving. The association and university of- ficial shave been negotiating over a possible reconciliation. HAPPENINGS u'to investigate death of N. Campus raccoons HOMECOMING Mudbowl, SAE vs. Phi Delta Theta, at the corner of South University and Washtenaw, 10a.m. Casino Party, University Club, Michigan Union, 8:30 p.m. FILMS Mediatrics-The Great Santini, Nat. Sci., 7 & 9 p.m. Alternative Action-3 Days of the Condor, MLB 3,7 & 9:15 p.m. AAFC - Mr. Mike's Mondo Video, MLB 4,7 & 10:20 p.m. AAFC - National Lampoon's Disco Beaver From Outer Space, MLB 4, 8:40 p.m. Cinema Guild - The Front, Lorch Hall Aud., 7 & 9:40 p.m. Cinema Guild - Marquette Park: Parts I & II, 8:40 p.m. Cinema II-Tess, Aud. A, Angell, 6 & 9 p.m. PERFORMANCES Eclipse - Concert, Bob James, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Ark - Friends of Fiddlers Geen, from Scotland. Loud songs and low humor, 1421-Hill, 9p.m. For info, call 761-1415. School, of Music-Contemporary Directions Ensemble-Carl St. Clair, conductor, Rackham, 8 p.m. Organ Conf.-Recital, Mary Ida Yost, Pease Aud., EMU, 8 p.m. MEETINGS Gray Panthers-Simulation Game, "Taking a Risk in the Later Years," 3 to 5 p.m. at the Ann Arbor "Y." Grad. Christian Fellowship-Mtg., Michigan League, 7 p.m. For info, call 662-8860. A' Go-Club-Mtg., 1433 Mason Hall, 2-7 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS School of Metaphysics-Tasyer's Dinner, 6 p.m. $5 admission, 1029 Foun- tain, call 996-1363. Hillel-Mincha-Seudah Shlishis (light meal), 6:10 p.m. at Hillel; Meekreh, Keg Party, live music, 9:30 p.m. at Hillel; Jewish grads, Party, 721 Church No. 2, 9:30 p.m. Indian Students Assoc.-Diwali function at Clague School. Nixon Rd.. 6 The University will investigate the actions of two University employees who allegedly killed several raccoons at a North Campus housing complex Thursday, a spokesman for the Univer- sity's Plant Department said yester- day. According to one resident of the com- plex, Northwood ,V, the University maintenance personnel killed the rac- coons in a garbage dumpster near the complex, with pitchforks and sledgehammers. GROUNDS Maintenance Manager Doug Fasing said yesterday that the University investigation will probably reach a conclusioni next week. North Campus Family Housing Director Richard Tarrier called the in- cident "very regretable" and stressed that the University did not authorize the killings. "We've never had anything like that happen before and you can be sure it won't happen again," Tarrier said. Raccoons have become a problem in the North Campus area, Tarrier said, and the University has contacted the Department of Natural Resources to find a method of ridding the complex of raccoons without trapping or killing them. 1981 HOMECOMING University Club Union Saturday, October 24,8:30 $2.00 Admission includes: A French Riviera Casino A Trip to the Rosebowi in Pasadena A German Octoberfest Video Highlights of: Mudbowl Parade Pep Rally M ICHIGAN THE CENTER OF THE WORLD- Subscribe to the Michigan Daily D was I. every Its -. _.-_ ___. T . . --- --- - --._ n , MnndlnvI 1 I U I... A