. - Pagp 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 15, 1986 Discovering new cells 'U' alumnus wins Nobel Prize in medicine By ELIZABETH ATKINS with wire reports University alumnus Stanley Cohen has been named a co-winner of the Nobel Prize in medicine for discoveries of "growth factors" in human and animal tissue, officials announced Monday. Cohen, a biochemist, will share the $290,000 cash prize with Italian-American biologist Rita Levi-Montalcini. Their discovery of proteins regulating cell growth "opened new fields of widespread importance to basic science," the Nobel Assembly of Stockholm's Karolinska Institute said. "THE 'GROWTH factors' involve a new class of molecules that stimulate new cells to grow," Cohen said. "We discovered the new growth factors in the nerves and epidermis." Members of the committee which chose the winners said the discovery may lead to better understanding of such disease states as developmental malformations, degenerative changes in senile dementia, delayed wound healing, something else." COHEN was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and earned his bachelor's degree'at Brooklyn College. He 'I lucked out. I made (the discoveries) while I was studying something else.' -Stanley Cohen, 1986 Nobel Prize winner Colorado in Boulder and Washington University in St. Louis. He currently teaches in the Department of Biological Chemistry at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Cohen is the sixth University alumnus to win a Nobel Prize, according to Sue Burris, assistant editor of "Michigan Alumnus" magazine. Others are Thomas Weller, 1954 Nobel in medicine; Marshall Nerenberg, 1968 Nobel in medicine; Samuel C. C. Ting, 1976 Nobel in physics; Lawrence Klein, 1980 Nobel in economics; and Jerome Karle, 1985 Nobel in chemistry. Levi-Montalcini is director of the cellular biology laboratory at the National Council of Scientific Research in Rome and is considered one of Italy's leading scientists. and tumor diseases. The growth factors may also prove useful in repairing skine and the cornea after surgery or burn injuries. "I lucked out," Cohen, 63, told reporters in Nashville. "I made (the discoveries) while I was studying earned his master's degree at Oberlin College. Cohen graduated from the University of Michigan in1949 with a doctorate in biological chemistry. Since then, he has taught at the University of Learning TooRM Need Help Studying? (Who doesn't) 'Designated donor' blood banks fuel fear, some say Learning TooIT" is a computer program to help college students study. It incdrporates principles of cognitive psychology to help students learn any subject, from philosophy to engineering. 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Send Order to: 2540 Pittsfield Blvd. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (Requiredfor charge order) Or Telephone: 313/973-0612 (for information or credit card orders only) UM ' HEALTH & FITNESS CAN YOU HONESTLY SAY THAT a SCRUPPLES DOES YOUR HAIR? /r. i I! H & ay M.Loyd f SALON 555 East William Tower Plaza Suite10Go1G /lam 313/995.5)33480 By STEVE BLONDER New "designated-donor" blood centers are springing up across the country in response to the public's growing concern over the purity of the nation's blood supply, but Red Cross officials say the service is impractical and fuels unfounded paranoia about contracting diseases. Dr. Joseph Feldschuh, president of Daxor Corporation, which started the first designated-donor blood Fitmess center 12 years ago, said the blood in the programs is stored at minus 120 degrees Fahrenheit until the donor directs that it be used. It takes about an hour for the blood to thaw, he said, and the center is open 24 hours a day. THE COST is $150 per year. Part of the reason these centers have emerged is that the public does not know that all blood is screened for disease before it is used. Red Cross Public Relations Officer Norene Peterson said the fear that it is possible to contract hepatitis or AIDS from blood transfusions is unfounded as long as blood centers carefully screen all donated blood. "There is no danger in using blood from a Red Cross blood bank," she said. "On all of the blood that is donated, we do syphilis, hepatitis, and Htlv 3 (AIDS virus) tests." DR. JERRY Grey, medical director of the Blood Bank at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, said that "no medical evidence exists - to suggest that blood from directed donations is safer than blood from volunteer donations." Feldschuh, however, said there is a significant risk of receiving infections from blood transfusions provided by a general blood bank. "The safest blood you can get is your own blood," he said. "With blood banks, there is a problem with the screening. More tests are available than are being used." Feldschuh said that of the 200,000 cases of hepatitis from blood transfusions reported each year, 60,000 are serious, and 10,000 tol3,000 result in death. "Although the risk of AIDS is low, no foolproof test exists to fully screen out the disease," he said. TWO CASES of AIDS resulting from blood transfusions were recently reported, but both occurred before blood centers began checking donations for the AIDS virus. Greg MacGregor, director of public information at the New York Blood Center, said one out of every 250,000 transfusions leads to AIDS, and 8.3 percent of all transfusions causesyhepatitis. "However, you have a 10 percent chance of getting hepatitis if you stay overnight in any hospital regardless if you receive a transfusion," he said. Neal Fry, the Red Cross's regional representative of donor resources, said programs like Feldschuh's "would have the effect of shooting community blood programs" because the number of donors to general blood banks would decrease if people use the designated donor program. FELDSCHUH countered that programs such as his will actually help solve the current blood shortage. "Right now only three percent of the population donates blood," he said, and blood left over from designated donor programs is given to community blood programs. "Also, we serve to lessen the burden on community blood programs by making less people dependent on them." Fry also criticized the programs because the blood cannot be used in emergencies since it takes so long for it to defrost. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS El Salvador death toll rises SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-With the official death toll nearing 1,000, rescue workers continued their search for survivors of the earthquake that devastated El Salvador's capital. President Jose Duarte late Monday put the number of known dead from Friday's disaster at 976. He said 8,176 people were injured and that tens of thousands left homeless were left living in makeshift tents and shacks in streets, parks and fields. Among the newly listed dead was Harry Jacobson, 73, a native of Racine, Wisc., and owner of the Gran Hotel San Salvador, the third American known to have died in the quake. Jacobson died in the wrechage of his own building, rescuers said. On Monday, rescuers pulled three more survivors out from the Ruben Dario building. The two women and one man were quickly wrapped in inflatable bags to simulate the pressure on their bodies during the days of entombment in order to prevent shock. Four days of blistering heat have enveloped parts of the downtown area in the stench of decomposing bodies, but tired rescue workers expressed hope they might find other survivors. "We always believe there is the possibility of people being alive," said Urs Ochsenbein of the Swiss rescue team. Serial killer attacks transients LOS ANGELES-A serial killer apparently has begun to prey late at night'on drifters and other lone men on streets throughout the city in a fast-developing case that one detective says has victims "popping up all over the place." Homicide detectives were trying to determine whether two more bodies found Monday-including the brother of All-Pro football great James Lofton-might be the same person tentatively tied to nine other killings, said police Lt. Dan Cooke. The first killer, the so-called "Southside Slayer" who also remains at large, has been targeting prostitutes in south-central Los Angeles. There is no apparent connection between the two crime sprees which, together, have taken the lives of more than two dozen people, Cooke said. One notable difference between the two serial killers is the rate of the deaths. The 17 Southside Slayer murders began just over three years ago and have been sporadic, with some killings separated by months of inactivity. Michigan mandin jungle QUITO, Ecuador-A father prepared to bring the body of his son back to the United States after a quest for Incan gold turned into a nightmare of death in a South American jungle. Crews searching the Los Lianganates mountains on Monday found the body of David Groover, 37, of White Cloud, Mich. An Ecuadorean hired. as a porter, Edison Cristobal Guevara, 20, was found alive in the same area and hospitalized in the town of Pillaro. Groover was on of two Michigan men who became lost in a jungle while on an expedition earlier this month for treasure and artifacts, family: members said. Bill Johnson, 37, of Rockford, Mich., remained hospitalized yesterday in Quito with an arm injury and suffering from exhaustion and dehydration. "They're recuperating and are doing fine;" U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Pamela Corey said yesterday of Johnson and Guevara. Corey said David Groover died of hunger and exposure. Pre-school enrollment rises WASHINGTON-- Enrollment in kindergarten and nursery schools is at record levels as births edge upward, a trend that Census Bureau officials say will shortly reverse the long-term decline in elelmentary school enrollment. "In 1985 there were more children attending pre-primary school than ever before," including 2.5 million tots in nursery school and 3.8 million in kindergarten, the Census Bureau reported yesterday. "Parents are enrolling their children at earlier ages for the educational benefits," explained statistician Rosalind Bruno of the Census Burea. "The increase in kindergarten and nursery school enrollment in the 1980s because of increased population indicates an imminent reversal of the long-term trend of decline in elementary school enrollment," she wrote in the Bureau's annual report on school enrollment. . Enrollment in pre-schools has grown significantly since 1965, even in the face of the so-called Baby Bust, when birth rates declined sharply. The low number of births in the 1960s and 1970s was balanced by a rapidly increasing share of children who were sent to nursery school and kindergarten. Blanchard irks flood victims LANSING-Official estimates of Michigan's agricultural flood damge 'jumped to nearly $289 million yesterday while politicians debated the best way to help farmers who lost this year's havests. A Republican state senator and the GOP candidate for governor promoted outright grants as an alternative to Democratic Gov. James Blanchard's zero-interest disaster loan proposal. And some farmers complained that Blanchard was wrong to limit assistance to farmers who suffered weather-related losses. "I think flooding is a poor way to weed out farmers to go out of business," farmer Jim Greenhoe of Carson City told GOP gubernatorial candidate William Lucas. "Being a bunch of farmers we have no pull in Lansing." Disaster officials yeaterday boosted their official Michigan flood damage estimate to nearly $400 million, federal coordinating officer Ron Buddecke said Blanchard had said farmers pushed to the brink of bankruptcy for reasons other than severe weather damage should not qualify his proposed special loans at zero interest with no payments until the fourth year. Vol. XCVII - No:30 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; S35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. 14 ( I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ? Boost Yourri oe Bran Power (Th helh a. 14 { - Y If you're up against long hours- and tight deadlines, there's now -- a safe, healthy way to keep yourself going when the going gets tough. Aminotrate is a balanced combination of 15 free form amino acids designed especially for students. Amino acids are the building blocks needed to maintain strength and good health. Aminotrate supplements your body's own process by supplying your brain with the extra boost it needs during prolonged periods of intense concentration. Aminotrate can: 1 I I I 1 I. 1 I MSA critiques Yale code (Continued from Page 1) streamline the campus community." The assembly "hopes the situation on our campus never be- comes as unjust as yours, and Alpha Xi Delta would also like to welcome the following pledges: Julie Gendich Lynn Gettleman Megan Shannon Reflections on Beauty Achieving Beauty Through Education supports you in any efforts you may take to change your current system," the letter said. The University Council, the body that has been working for more than two years to write a code at this University, is currently addressing the issue of civil liberties and political dissent. THE ASSEMBLY also de- layed its formal response last night to the Emergency Procedures-the part of the proposed code dealing with violent crimes-because the Student Rights Committee did not finish the response. Members are "working on it at the pace that the document demands," said commitee chair Ken Weine. Weine said he hopes the re- 'cnn 'rull he rach by next TuesC- Editor in Chief...........................ERIC MA1TSON Managing Editor....................RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor..........................JERRY MARKON City Editor.............................CHRISTY RIEDEL Features Editor .............AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: FranincAlen, Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Brian Bcoet, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, John Dunning, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Jim Hershiser, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Steve Knopper, Philip I. Levy, Michael Lustig, Andy Mills, Kery Murakami, Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Susanne SkubikNaomi Wax. Opinion Page Editor......................KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor........HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Tim Huet, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Mooney, Caleb Southworth. 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