Page 10--Thursday, November 12, 1981-The Michigan Daily Prof allegedly threatened by student' By STACY POWELL questioned the student at the request A University undergraduate was of the professor. questioned Nov. 2 by the Univrsity Th Department of Safety in connection undenrfessor, who asked to remain with a class paper he wrote allegedlyu, saide does not believe threatening his professor. he is in any personal danger at this thaeAnn Ahirs s ytime and that the situation is under The Ann Arbor News said yesterday control. that criminal proceedings against the student are underway. However, ac- LSA Assistant Dean Eugene Nissen cording to the professor involved and said the process for investigating a Walter Stevens, director of the Depar- threat is a long one. A professor must tment of Safety, the case has not been go through hearing procedures to classified as a criminal matter. determine the accuracy of the alegations. "A decision may take a The Ann Arbor Police public infor- week to two weeks," Nissen said. mation spokesperson was unavailable for comment yesterday. Nissen said there have been about three or four faculty members STEVENS SAID his department allegedly threatened by students in has not filed a report with the Ann Ar- the past five years. "We should have a bor Police and that he is not aware of policy in place which allows a com- any other office that has filed mittee to' act swiftly in cases of criminal charges. Stevens said he harassment," he said. Cancer research New blood treatment shrinks tumors BOSTON (AP)- Large cancerous tumors can be shrunk dramatically by washing small amounts of the patient's blood with protein from a common bac- teria, according to a new study. The work may represent a ;unique approach to treating cancer, but doctors caution that it is ex- perimental and needs far more study. The, bacteria from which the protein is taken has been linked to a variety of ailments, including toxic shock syndrome. RESEARCHERS have used the new treatment so far on five victims of breast cancer, and in four of them, the therapy reduced the size of their tumors between 33 percent and 80 percent. Although the doctors are not sure exactly how the treatment works, they think it somehow activates a natural cancer defense system that exists in the blood of victims of the disease. The study was directed by Dr. David Terman at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. It was published in today's issue of the New England Jour- nal of Medicine. THE SPECIAL ingredient in this treatment is protein A, a substance found in the cell walls of the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus. When it infects the body, this common germ can cause a variety of ills, among them endocarditis, an inflammation of the heart lining, and osteomyelitis, an inflammation of the bones. It also has been associated with toxic shock syndrome, a mysterious and sometimes fatal ailment linked to tampon use. The doctors mixed protein A with cellulose and charcoal, then poured a sample of the patient's blood serum through it. The washed blood, put back into the patient, seems to go to work almost immediately. The patient quickly feels pain in her tumor and within as little as two days, the cancer cells begin to die. ALL OF THE patients treated so far had large tumors in their chest walls resulting from breast cancer, and all but one had had a mastectomy. Their cancer had relapsed after they had undergone stan- dard kinds of therapy. In.a single treatment, the doctors filter and replace as little as a fraction of an ounce of blood or as much as seven ounces. The doctors believe that patients with cancer have antibodies in their blood that fight cancer, but for some reason, these natural disease killers fail to work. GM workers show high cancer rate Swedish wildlife officials estimate that there are more than 200,000 elk roaming the country. Police statistics show that one acident in three on coun- try roads is caused by an elk or other wild animals. DETROIT (UPI) -- A study conduc- ted by University and General Motors Corp. researchers released yesterday revealed a colon-rectum cancer rate nearly three times higher than the national average among workers in GM woodshops. But researchers from the firm and the University warned the rate may be "artificially high" because of the close scrutiny given the ailments of the 5,007 participants. THE STUDY detected 26 cases of cancer among employees of the GM's workshops. Of those, nine were colon - rectum cancer, another three closely related. This is nearly three times the national rate. Of the group, seven were 60 years of age or older and two were retired. GM launched the $1.3 million study a year ago following a Sloan-Kettering Institute report showing an abnormal incidence of cancer among the pattern and model makers. DR. ROBERT Wiencek, who headed the research team that included University Prof. Victor Hawthorne, said no cause for the high cancer rate has been found. "We don't have enough data to link it to any specific item," Wiencek said. The rate may be artificially high. We may have found much more cancer than we would have found under nor- mal conditions." He stressed that the findings of the study are "preliminary" and that researchers will not know for several years whether the rate is a true reflec- tion of the incidence of cancer in the wood workers. HOWEVER, United Auto Workers Vice President Owen Biebersaid the union is "greatly concerned" by the study's findings. 'Although GM's study calls this a 'preliminary conclusion,' we find it alarming," Bieber said. "It obviously necessitates an all-out effort to pursue this matter vigorously and speedily." Nuclear threat discussed A- r ' "M r 1 BTZ SU PRESENTS in cooperation with UAC-MEDIATRICS (i: , tkim*Ac*,BnOmW (Continued from Page 1) Energy Agency to prevent idversion of nuclear fuels to developing countries. ZIMMERMAN spoke on the Soviet Union's nuclear capabilities and strategies. "The image of the monolithic charac- ter of the Soviet Union needs finally to be put to rest," Zimmerman said, ex-. plaining that the tendency to view the INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A representative will be on the campus THURSDAY NOVEMBER 19, 1981 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Campus Glendale, Arizona 85306 USSR as a united actor in foreign policy is inaccurate. "The threat lies in the political uses of their military force," Zimmerman said. He said the Soviets are increasing their nuclear capability "more with a view to affecting behavior, short of or without war. They want to manipulate perspectives with respect to world power." SINGER'S remarks focused on the threat posed by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union He prefaced his remarks with a call for* more extensive commitments to peace research. "There is not nearly enough systematic, rigorous,. quantitative research available," he said. "We are today victims of the collective ignoran- ce of mankind regarding international conflicts." According to Singer, both the United States and the Soviet Union are "highly pluralistic with clashing interest groups and inconsistent goal priorities." He said one of the driving forces behind proliferation is the ten- dency of the" two countries to regard nuclear weaponry as "the currency of diplomatic and political influence. "RATHER THAN deciding we are using, the wrong instrument (for political influence), we decide we need more-of the same instrument," Singer said. "We try to get a lot more mileage out of our military power. You end up discovering you never have enough." Singer's suggestions included selling the Soviet Union "four or five American Polaris systems to let .them know there's absolutely no way we'll strike first. "The United States has to makean absolutely unambiguous decision that nuclear war is not winnable," he said. ,I I PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A DOWARD W. KOCIHPRODUCTION AIRPLANE! Rw~nOBERT DAYS&gJULIE DAOEfEIVE ~[PROD14mRSJIM ABRA DAMS DAVID LUCKER JERRY LUCKER PR~ c aJNODUEDBYJ I ~~~~S REN X. oDcI D BYJIIYIIiRAHilAill ,) DAlVIUD LUUKER JLJERRY LUCil\LIADPARAMOUFNT PCUEo PGJ PARENTAL UIDANCE SUGGESTED GI COPYRIGHT c MCMLXXX 8Y PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED SOME MATERIAL MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR CHU.DREN See your Jostens' Representative. Date: Mon.-Fri. Aki