* 4 Page 2-Wednesday, December 1, 1982-The- Michigan Daily In the land of the giants Two elderly Chicago women shiver against the cold as they pass by a storefront window displaying the tanned legs of summer. MSA urged against proposed Changes in U research policy Girl gets gift of d disease resistence BOSTON (AP) - Doctors have cured a baby girl born without resistance to disease and say the treatment offers hope for other children like her wh are forced to live in germ-free plastic bub- bles or face certain death. The key to the new approach is monoclonal antibodies, substances that zero in on the cells that have prevented these youngsters from being helped by bone marrow transplants. DOCTORS AT the Sidney Farber Cancer Institute in Boston have used the new procedure on a 4-month-old girl who had to live in a microbe-free world because she had no natural immunity to disease. "We believe that this is a cure for this child," said Dr. Ellis L. Reinherz. "That is why we are very excited." The youngster is now about 18 months old. "She has completely normal im- munity," he said. "It would be im- possible to distinguish her from any one else." AMONG possible beneficiaries of the new treatment is David, the so-called "bubble boy" who is the most famous victim of this condition. At Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, DAvid's physician has discussed the new treatment with the 11-year-old boy's parents. "It's an experimental procedure, and there are some very serious risks in- volved in it," said Susannah Griffin, a college spokeswoman. "So his parents have elected not to choose the treat- ment at this time." She said the parents, who have asked not to be identified, may be interested later "if results are more conclusive." REINHERZ said similar treatment may be useful for victims of a variety of diseases who would benefit from bone marow transplants. Among them are poeple with cancer, sickle cell anemia and thalassemia. A report on the Boston work was published in, the Oc- tober issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. The condition, called severe com- bined immunodeficiency syndrome, is the most devastating of all human im- munity disorders. Victims are born without any of the natural immune elements that are needed to resist disease. By ROB FRANK / Roger Kerson, hired by the Michigan Student Assembly to study military research done on campus, urged student government members last night to fight proposed changes in the University's guidelines restricting defense research. A key faculty research committee has recently suggested slight wording changes in the guidelines, which forbid professors from doing research which might lead to the destruction of human life. Members of that committee have -said the changes are intended mainly to make the policy more clear. BUT KERSON last nightwarned MSA members that the proposed changes could open the door to a whole range of military research and urged the students to officially recommend that the administration veto the proposed revisions. "The new proposal is weaker than the old policy and leaves out several key phrases," Kerson said last night. He asked MSA members to endorse the present wording of the guidelines and to urge the Regents to expand the restric- tions to cover all research, both classified and non-classified. The current policy applies only to classified research and the wording changes proposed by the Research Policies Committee would be the basis for a new policy that would apply only to non-classified research. MSA MEMBERS, however, voted to table their decision on the guidelines until they have a chance to read the policy and proposed changes later this week. Kerson said he would also like to see changes made in the way that con- troversial research projects are ap- proved on campus. Currently, the University's vice president for resear- ch has the final word on what research can be done, Kerson said. "It hasn't worked," he continued. "No vice president has ever cancelled a project. The University would be better served by a distribution of power." He suggested the creation of a special faculty-student committee to review controversial projects and decide which are appropriate. IN OTHER business last night, MSA refused to give money to the Univer- sity-sponsored radio station, WCBN, to finance coverage of the Rose Bowl. The radio station had asked for $1,396 to send two WCBN staff members to Pasadena to cover the game. The radio station would then tape play-by-play coverage of the game and broadcast it Jan. 10, ten days after the actual game. MSA members, however, argued there would be little value in such delayed coverage because several radio stations and a TV station are of- fering live coverage. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Letter bomb sent to Thatcher LONDON- A letter bomb mailed to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher got past security and burst into flames inside her 10 Downing St. residence yesterday. Four similar incendary devices sent to the House of Commons of- fices of opposition political leaders and a government official were defused. An Irish nationalist organization and an animal rights group both claimed responsibility for the Downing Street package. Mrs. Thatcher was holding a meeting in her study on the floor above the explosion and was uninjured. Her office manager, who was examing the package in the mail room when it burst into flame, was slightly scorched on one cheek. The packages at the House of Commons were intercepted and safely defused, police said. Scotland Yard officials said the Downing Street device was "gunpowder- based and designed to burn rather than cause a big explosion. Officials at the Downing Street residence, the British equivalent of the White House, said incoming mail is electronically scanned and there was no chance of the package having reached the prime minister unchecked. Post Office spokesmen declined to discuss screening procedures. Ma Bell says rate hike needed DETROIT- Michigan Bell Telephone Co. yesterday asked the Public Ser- vice Commission for a record $451 million rate increase, predicting even higher costs for consumers if the request is denied. If approved, flat rate residential rate increases would range from $5 a month in Detroit to $6 a month in the smallest outstate exchanges. Tollboth calls would go from 20 cents to 25 cents-among the highest in the nation. Michigan Bell Vice President Frank Zimmerman and Communications Workers of America Vice President Martin Hughes defended the proposed rate increase at a joint Detroit news conference. Jennifer O'Neill and husband arraigned on weapons charges WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.- Actress Jennifer O'Neill, who accidentally shot herself with a revolver October 22, was arraigned with her husband yester- day on charges of criminal possession of a weapon following a secret grand jury indictment. Both pleaded innocent in Westchester County court. The couple refused to speak with reporters on their way out of the courthouse. Miss O'Neill, a gun control advocate, was charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree, a misdemeanor offense. Lederer was charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree, a felony offense. Authorities said Lederer was charged with a felony because of a previous conviction in 1976 of four counts of possession of stolen property and illegal possession of a forged motor vehicle identification. He served nine months in the county jail. 1 Suspect in Tylenol poisonings arrested by Los Angeles police LOS ANGELES- A mechanic wanted for questioning in the Extra- Strength Tylenol poisoning deaths was arrested yesterday in Los Angeles af- ter he contacted FBI agents voluntarily, authorities said. Kevin John Masterson, 35, walked into the FBI office in West Los Angeles on Monday afternoon and said he was willing to be interviewed about the Chicago-area poisonings, said FBI spokesman John Hoos. Masterson was questioned, detained overnight, then turned over to Los Angeles police, who arrested him yesterday at FBI headquarters on an out- standing warrant from Illinois on an unrelated matter, Hoos said. Authorities who searched Masterson's rooms in Chicago in October found two Tylenol capsules and two bottles labeled poison. Investigators suggested that Masterson had a grudge against two of the retail outlets where the poisoned Tylenol was purchased. Hoos said he did not know why Masterson came to the FBI office, nor would he comment on what Masterson said during interviews. In Chicago, Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner said at a news con- ference that Masterson "made statements to various people that he was in- volved in the cyanide killings. . ." But he also characterized Masterson as "apparently the kind of person who says a lot of things that are not true or that he does not mean. He is not a suspect.. . he is someone we want to talk to because of the things he said." Masterson was held without bail on an outstanding warrant for possession of marijuana and was scheduled for arraignment on that charge today, said police Lt. Keith Ross. Positive economic signs for Oct. WASHINGTON- A key barometer of the nation's future economic health rose a slight 0.2 percent in October, the sixth gain in seven months, the government reported yesterday. Commerce Secretary MalcolmBaldrige said that although monthly gains are piling up for his department's forecasting gauge, the Index of Leading Economic Indicators, the increases have been smaller than those preceding previous recoveries. "I believe that the prolonged lag this time, and the relatively slow rise in the leading indicators as well, was caused by the persistence of high interest rates into the summer," Baldrige said in a statement. But he added that he thoughtinterest rates now had fallen enough to finally make at least a modest recovery happen. Climbing stock prices and a revised 16.9 percent surge in October's building permits offset sharp drops in new orders to keep the index on the positive side. The index is a composite of 10 separate indicators that move ahead of general business conditions by one to six months. Vol. XCIII, No.68 Wednesday, December 1, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 by mal outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375!; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. A 0 0 P, 0 UAC Soph Show'82 presents Bye, Bye, Birdie! &I UM Reagan says he will wait on tax break (Continued from Page 1) nuclear waste disposal, a revision of the bankruptcy laws, and immigration and regulatory reform. ON MONDAY, the president had spoken enthusiastically in Los Angeles about advancing the tax cut from July 1 to Jan. 1, contending it would be a strong stimulant to the economy. But after hearing arguments from the GOP leadership Tuesday morning, Reagan said he was concerned that such a move would increase the already large federal budget deficit. But to delay the cut past July 1, he said, would be "directly opposed to what is needed to restore the economy." REAGAN, Senate Republican Leader Howard W. Baker of Tennessee and House GOP leader Robert H. Michel of Illinois faced reporters at the White House a day after Congress convened its post-election session amid concern about the nation's 10.4 percent unem- ployment rate and calls for legislation to create jobs. Congressional leaders told Reagan last week that the tax cut speed-up was not very popular in Congress because of the potential deficit problem. Moreover, Democrats have urged that the July tax cut be dropped altogether to help bring down the deficit, which budget director David Stockman repor- tedly is forecasting at $180 billion to $190 billion this year. Baker said he expected the final step of Reagan's three-year tax reduction plan to survive after "a difficult fight." HE SAID HE had recommended "that we not attempt to advance it," but Baker said Reagan had heard con- trary views from members of the GOP congressional leadership. Michel said some concern was ex- pressed at the meeting that to raise the speed-up issue coild open the door for opponents to push for the abolition of the tax cut. "As the debate continued and political issues came up, he (Reagan) felt it was better to protect it 'than change it," said the spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater. wI 0 Magazine reports Israelis killed Russians in jet strike WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli forces killed 11 Soviets in Lebanon when the Israelis destroyed one of their own downed aircraft in an effort to prevent its highly secret equipment from falling into enemy hands, Air Force magazine reports in its December issue. The magazine, published by the unof- ficial Air Force Association, quotes Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle and intelligence sources as providing this information. THE BRIEF article says that Perle "recently disclosed that the Israeli Air Force, during the conflict with Syrian forces in Lebanon, lost an aircraft carrying highly secret Israeli- developed ECM electronic counter- measures equipment." It says that the Israelis, "determined not to let the equipment fall into enemy hands, mounted a strike to destroy totally the downed aircraft on the ground." Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 Perle was quoted as 'saying that, by the time the Israelis arived over the wreckage, there were "already Russians on the ground pulling out pieces" and that, as a result, the Israelis "got the Russians" as well as the downed plane. The magazine said it learned from "reliable intelligence sources" that 11 Soviets were killed in the Israeli raid. POI I -notes. Students nabbed in tunnels At 2 a.m. Monday, three University students were apprehended by police in the steam tunnels underneath the 500 block of State St. An alarm under the Museum of Art alerted security of- ficials to the scene. The students were released pending an investigation. -Tom Miller PM i 0 Editor-in-chief. Managing Editor. News Editor . Student Affairs Editor University Editor Opinion Page Editors Arts Magazine Editor Associate Arts Magazine Editor Sports Editor. Assoc iate Sports Editors Photoaraphy Editor. DAVID MEYER PAMELA KRAMER ANDREW CHAPMAN ANN MARIE FAZIO MARK GINDIN JULIE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON RICHARD CAMPBELL -BEN TICHO 808 WOJNOWSKI BARB BARKER LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK BRIAN MASCK Joe Ewing, Paul Helgren. Steve Hunter. Chuck Joffe, Robin Kopilnick. Doug Levy. Tim Mokinen, Mike McGraw. Larry Mishkin, Lisa Noferi. Rob Pollard. Dan Price. Jeff Quicksilver. Paul Resnick, Wendy Rocho,. Lenny Rosenb um, Scott Solowich, John Tayer, Judy Walton, Karl Wheatley. Chuck Whitman, Rich Wiener, Steve Wise. BUSINESS Business Manager JOSEPH G. BRODA Sales Manager . . KATHRYN HENDRICK Display Manager .. ANN SACHAR Finance Monager SAM G SLAUGHTER IV Assistant Display Manager ...-PAMELAGOULD Operations/National Manager .....: LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Manager KIM WOOD Soles Coordinator E ANDREW PETERSEN rlsife aA erP&AM i.ILLE RY THE PROJECT COMMUNITY Income Tax Assistance Program c t t . y I I 1