The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 25, 1980--Page 9 SENA TE APPROVES SHIPMENT India to receive uranium WASHINGTON (AP)-In a foreign policy victory for President Carter, the Senate voted 48-46 yesterday to permit shipment of 38 tons of enriched uranium to India, which diverted U.S. nuclear material in 1974 and used it to detonate an atomic bomb. The vote came after one of the most thorough and contested Senate debates in years. It was marked by personal and extensive telephone lobbying by President Carter, who suffered a sharp 7 setback last week when the House refused to go along with the sale. A VOTE AGAINST the sale by both houses was required to stop the tran- saction. Leaders of the drive to block the sales said that permitting them would "eviscerate" U.S. efforts worldwide to stop the spread of nuclear weapons 4 because India has refused to agree to safeguards aimed at blocking diversion of the fuel to weapons use. But backers of the sale argued that blocking the transaction would under- cut Carter's attempts to persuade India to accept international safeguards for its nuclear program and would alienate 4 ' the Indian people at a time of warfare and political and religious unrest in Southwest Asia. INDIA WANTS the low-enriched uranium to resupply the reactor at its atomic power station at Tarapur near Bombay. Carter overruled the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in authorizing the sale. In arguing for approval of the sale, the White House said no further sales t,,.,f will be permitted to India unless that }| country agrees to full scope safeguards off to a good sAP Photo on all nuclear facilities to prevent a start repeat of the1974 nuclear explosion. Both mother and newborn female were doing fine yesterday at Chicago's In debate before the final vote, Sen. Brookfield Zoo. Sandra gave birth to Shannon late Monday. The American John Glenn (D-Ohio) said the decision Giraffe baby stands five and one-half feet tall and weighs 158 lbs. would show the world whether the United States means to stand behind its goal of halting the spread of nuclear arms. "THE BOTTOM line is what is going to happen to the 111 non-weapons nations which signed the Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty," Glenn said. In- dia has refused to sign the treaty. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn.) said a decision permitting the sales would "call into question the strength and tenacity of our non-proliferation ef- forts" and said the NRC was right in saying that the issuing of licenses per- mitting the sales was illegal. Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) chair- man of the Foreign Relations Commit- tee, said a decision to block the sale could undercut Carter at a time of crisis in Southwest Asia and actually harm America's non-proliferation policy. passup j yourcance. Help revent -birth defects 'Common medicine may cure infertility From the Associated Press BOSTON-A new test shows that between 5 percent and 10 percent of in- fertile adults are barren because chemicals in their bodies kill sperm, but they may be able to produce babies if they take commonly available medication. One of the researchers who developed the test said the discovery may mean hope for hundreds of thousands of American men and women who are in- fertile. THE NEW TEST, developed by doc- tors at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, shows that some men and women are infertile because they produce chemicals called antibodies that destroy sperm. But with drugs called corticosteroids, these antibodies can be suppressed long enou h for pregnancy to occur. "This objective test may be used to identify and then to help manage infer- tility in patients with suspected an- tibody-mediated infertility," doctors wrote. The doctors administered the test to 614 infertile people, including 257 couples. They found that 10 percent of them-13 percent of the women and 7 percent of the men-produced an- tibodies that killed sperm. ______ I ~1 6" Our exclusiv e nightshirts are 25% off .3;. .4".'... X44V4 v, '. .i~. WO.., .A ..4.rd f ..4~4..'..*. f t -3ec ' rf asu6?tr CONTIEN N..1.r. f &dog 6&44tt c4aJdjG. Ours alone, this mandarin style with blue or Burgundy stripes on polyester-cotton flannel. Also, our own notch-collared nightshirt in blue or pink stripes on white cotton flannel, piped in white (not shown). Both in S, M or L. Regularly 22.00, each 15.99 Lord & Taylor, Fairlane-call 336-3100; Lakeside-call 247-4500; Twelve Oaks-call 348-3400; Briarwood Mall-call 665-4500. Sale ends October 9. W., I NAII It: Jill Mi 191 JIUR- I e s .a' I