4 m mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Page 2-Tuesday, February 1, 1983-The Michigan Daily LADIES DAY IS EVERY DAY r1 r at the :111dorm residents * CROSS-EYED MOOSE & FLIPPER McGEE'S * blame W. O ad fc IN BRIEF )(1d - 2 FREE tokens LADIES: Bring in for visiting us & this coupon Tues., Feb. 1 2 more with first and Receive $1.00 Purchase 10FREE tokens! f m mm mm m =mm m m ma m m mmmmmmmmua JOB JOB OPENINGS OPENINGS campus information center The Campus Information Center is taking applica- tions for student information assistants for Spring/ Summer and Fall, 1983. We are looking for students who know the campus well, and who want to help others know U-M better. The jobs include gathering, organizing, and giving out information to students, visitors, and others. Applications and more complete descriptions are available at CIC in the Michigan Union, or call 763-INFO. Applications are due by February 18. (Continued from Page 1). Health and Safety, said an analysis of food samples from the Seafood Newberg served Thursday evening found no food poisoning bacteria. Health examiners were unable to test the tacos or burritos served at lunch as there weren't any left. "As far as we know, people just have the flu," said Housing Food Service Director Lynford Tubbs. "Because of the close proximity of the dorm living situation ... they are just spreading it around." HEALTH SERVICES Director Caesar Briefer said that a virus was the likely culprit of the outbreak, since the illness involved more than one kind of food and since some people had fevers. But heyadded that it was "possible the virus spread through the kitchen," and that the large number of people affec- ted at the same time was "a little unusual." vStudents who had the illness aren't so sure of the explanations University of- ficials have given. LSA sophomore PatrickhDoyle, a West Quad resident, said he is "pretty sure that it's food poisoning because of the number of people sick all at the same time." Doyle said he knows of 15 to 20 Michigan House residents who became ill. "I have strong doubts it's a virus," said Barbour resident Lisa Mark. "And if it's food poisoning, I'm upset because I think it's negligence on the part of the cafeteria people. I know they serve outdated food. If they were more careful, then things like this wouldn't happen," Mark said. Associate Housing Director Norm Sunstad said that the cafeteria kit- chens "are inspected at least once a year, and the staff members are carefully trained in sanitation." Sorority eXpells bulimic (Continued from Page 1) sorority, wasn't convinced. "She'd get better, but then she'd get resentful and spiteful and tell her roommates she hated them," Hewitt said. Jan. 23, the sorority invited Eithel Sech, a senior psychiatric counselor from University Health Services to discuss bulimia with the house. Kilinski was not present. "The counselor strongly recommen- ded that she move out," said Hewitt. "We felt Marilyn couldn't possibly get better in the house with everyone looking over her shoulder." THAT EVENING Kilinski first heard of possible sorority action from three friends in the house. "They just said if you don't do - something right now you're going to be out of the house," she said. The story culminated one week ago when Kilinski was allowed to present her case to the sorority executive coun- cil. "She basically said it wasn't fair and asked that we give her another chance," said Hewitt. After hearing Kilinski's arguments the 10 members of the sororities executive committee voted to ask her to leave. KILINSKI voluntarily quit ZTA Monday. "it was dumb to have them vote," said Kilinski, "after only a crash course in bulimia." She feels that the sorority should have let her stay in the house with only a change of roommates, and claimed the disease imposed on no one. But Hewitt disagreed. "We had to lock the kitchen door (to keep her from taking food), and the bathroom wasn't always cleaned up," she said. "Putting me out sure puts a hole in the theory that sororities are sisters and will always help each other," Kilin- ski said. Zeta Tau Alpha members claim that in the future, they will turn cases such as Kilinski's over to a neutral body which will hear both sides. "It's too emotional an issue," said Hewitt. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Counties may lose federal funds because of dirty air WASHINGTON- The Environmental Protection Agency Threatened yester- day to halt federal constructin and highway funds to 111 counties in 31 states, because their air is dirtier than government rules allow. The areas with excessive air pollution stretch from New Hampshire to California and even include part of the U.S. territory of Guam in the Pacific. The agency said 33 additional counties fail to meet other federal requirements, including passage of local laws or publication of regulations. They face similar funding sanctins. Reagan administratin critics, including Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo) promptly accused EPA officials of being overly aggressive in an attempt "to build resentment against the Clean Air Act so Congress will weaken it." California - expecially the pollution-plagued southern part of the state- has by far the largest number of dirty air counties with 19, according to EPA. The numbers of Michigan counties facing federal penalties for failing to meet national pollution standards has dropped from 31 to just part of Wayne County. Pennsylvania's lon est school strike ends after 8 days Nearly 1,400 students in Pennsylvania's California Area school district were back in class yesterday marking the end of one of the nation's longest public school strikes. The feeling of many students was expressed by a first-grader skipping across the lawn of an elementary school, yelling, "Hurray, we're going back to school." A settlement was announced Sunday night by William Hannan, who served as a factfinder earlier in the dispute and nearly resolved it Jan. 18. The 82-day California Area walkout about 30 miles south of Pittsburgh was the longest public school strike in Pennsylvania history. Rebel forces take over Salvadoran city of Berlin San Salvador, El Salvador - Leftist guerrillas overran most government positions in the eastern city of Berlin early yesterday despite government bombing and strafing raids, witnesses and military sources reported. Berlin, an industrial center of El Salvador, usually has been spared fighting during the 39-month civil was betweer the rebel forces and the U.S.- supported government. Heavy fighting reportedly persisted during the day with at least two U.S.- made A-37 Dragonfly warplanes attacking rebel positions, witnesses said. Guerrillas began their attack Sunday on the city of-30,000 people, located on a strategic mountain 70 miles east of the capital in Usulutan province. Ambulances rushed at least nine wounded civilians to the neighboring city of Santiago de Maria, about seven miles to the east, on Sunday. The guerrillas' Radio Venceremos clandestine broadcast station said 19 civilians, including 15 children, died in the government bombings, but the report could not be independently confirmed. Telephone communications with Berlin, the third largest city in Usulutan, were cut off early yesterday. Israelis kept from W. Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon - Lebanese army troops turned back Israeli patrols trying to enter West Beirut and a Palestinian refugee camp yesterday, ap- parently to search for guerrillas that attacked an Israeli patrol, Lebanese of- ficers reported. They said the Israelis heeded the Lebanese orders without a fight. Lebanese police reported 15 people killed since Saturday in fighting bet- ween Christian and Druse militiamen in the hilltop towns east and south of Beirut. This brought to 115 the total number reported killed i Christian- Druse fighting in the central Lebanese mountains since November. In the troop withdrawal talks, Irael and Lebanon reported subcommittees "achieved progress in narrowing different views over various issue." But in the semi-weekly plenary session, the chief negotiators clashed again over security arrangements, normal relations between the two countries and the multinational peacekeeping force in Beirut. Interferon used to control kidney cancer for first time HOUSTON - Human interferon has been used successfully for the first time to control kidney cancer, a highly lethal type of tumor that previously hadn't responded to any kind of therapy. Doctors at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor In- stitute reported in the February issue of the journal Cancer Research that 12 of 19 kidney cancer patients who received massive doses of natural inter- feron experienced favorable results. Interferon is a protein the body naturally produces in response to viruses. Some other diseases, including chronic leukemia and cancers of the breast, lymph glands and bone, have been found to be sensitive to interferon, said Dr. Jordan Gutterman, leader of the team conducting the study. All of the patients had cancer that had originated inthe kidneys and spread to the lung, liver or bones, or all three. Gutterman said "a significant number" of the patients in the 12-month study experienced a reduciton in the size of tumors or a halt in tumor growth or spread. The doctor emphasized that the findings do not mean the disease can be, cured at this time. EXbe AIEId1I§& Bailg Vol. XCIII, No. 100 Tuesday, February 1, 1983 The Michigan Daily is eaited 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 mail 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. 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