8 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 30, 1995 Boy, 5, clears AIDS from body fIU Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - UCLA re- searchers say they have documented for the first time a case in which an infant infected with the AIDS virus at birth cleared the virus from his body by his first birthday. The child is now 5, healthy and shows no evidence of ever having been infected by HIV. Thereport, published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, confirms what researchers had sus- pected was possible but had never been proven - that the human im- mune system can fend off the AIDS virus. They hope to gain insight for developing an AIDS vaccine. "This tells us something very im- portant," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, di- rector of the National Institute of Al- lergy and Infectious Diseases, "that there are situations where you can get infected and clear the virus. There must be some mechanism available in the body capable of doing that. If we look carefully enough, we may be able to (find it)." Several similar cases have previ- ously been reported in the literature, but all have been dismissed as the resultof laboratory errors. Dr. Yvonne J. Bryson and her UCLA colleagues report they have used sophisticated molecular biology techniques to show without a doubt that the child was infected and that the virus has since disappeared from his body. The discovery is important, Bryson said, because, "If it happens once, particularly in an infant, it may hap- pen more often." The results, she said, may explain why 70 percent of infants born to HIV-positive mothers do not them- selves develop the disease. It also may shed new light on the mecha- nisms by whichsomespouses of HIV- positive individuals and some groups of African prostitutes are able to avoid infection. Bryson cautioned mothers of HIV- positive infants not to build up their hopes solely on the basis of her report. 0 0 Driver may have seen Simpson car Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - The limou- sine driver who took O.J. Simpson to the airport on the night of the murders conceded yesterday that he cannot be absolutely sure the defendant's Bronco was not parked outside his home at a key time. But he also agreed With a prosecutor trying to downplay other elements of his testimony. The driver, Allan Park, and an- other witness offered a confusing ac- count of the luggage Simpson trav- eled with on his way to Chicago shortly after the murders were committed. Park remembered seeing four or five bags go into the limousine, while a skycap said he saw only three at the other end. Prosecutors have suggested Simpson discarded one bag - which authorities believe contained a mur- der weapon and bloody clothes-but have not have not explained how or where that happened. In tracking Simpson's movements on the night of murders, prosecutors called Los Angeles International Air- port skycap James Williams, who checked in Simpson's bags. Simpson pleaded not guilty to the June 12murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. Despite extensive searches, authori- ties have never recovered the murder weapon or bloody clothes they believe Simpson was wearing at the time. Tes- tifying for the second day, Park stuck to the essentials of his testimony and re- fused to favor either side. Whether or not Simpson's white Ford Bronco was parked in front of his estate before 10:45 p.m. on June 12 is a potentially key question in the murder trial because prosecutors be- lieve Simpson killed his ex-wife and her friend at about 10:15 p.m., then rushed home in the Bronco. AP PHOTO The father of Mohamed Abderrahmani, editor of an Algerian newspaper, is comforted following his son's death. Analysts: Algeria trying to crush guerilla miovement -I Fall Semester Applications Still Being Accepted Discover England, France, Italy, Spain or Zimbabwe: m Earn academic credits while taking classes in your host .0 wjcountry language or English Your world doesn't have to end . Study for a semester, year or summer * Travelling seminars and field trips e Internships e Course offerings in African American Studies, Anthropology, Architecture, Art History, Communications, Language Studies, Management, Studio Arts, where your campus does. Women's Studies and many others... _____________________________________ " Over 200 Study Abroad Grants and Scholarships awarded each semester. SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS ABROAD .119 Euclid Avenue, Syracuse, New York 13244-4170 1-800-235-3472 315-443-3471 * DIPA@suadmin.syr.edu Eurka!I Heading Home this summer? Here's a great idea. 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Think Oakland University. 19I SriP eRin'.Mv I-i"l " 19.9 5 SSmnr ~n r i m e 26-Aiimist 17 Eary prngiu and Summer session reisraio beins in Los Angeles Times PARIS- A major Algerian crack- down on Islamic militants, which re- portedly resulted in more than 1,000 rebel deaths last week, appears to be part of an all-out government effort to crush the guerrilla movement and re- store order before elections later this year, analysts said yesterday. Even as news of the death toll in four Algerian provinces surfaced ear- lier this week, the Islamic extremists struck a highly visible blow in the heart of Algiers. Mohamed Abderrahmani, editor of the newspa- per El-Moudjahid, was assassinated, making him the 30th journalist killed in the 3-year-old insurgency. The government offensive, though not officially confirmed by Algerian authorities, would be the largest mili- tary operation against Muslim guer- rillas since January 1992, when the military-backed government canceled elections that the Islamic Salvation Front was expected to win. An esti- mated 30,000 people, many of them civilians, have been killed by Islamic guerrillas as well as government hit squads. "The government is increasing the pressure because it is thinking of the elections," said Ramdane Redjala, an Algerian political analyst in Paris. "It wants the people to feel safe enough in the streets to vote. But it also wants to show that its extremist opponents can be defeated." THEil IADR NTEMERS Fcm ISRAEL.. This week, Algerian President Liamine Zeroual began a round of new talks with opponents of his mili- tary-backed regime on the elections, which he has vowed to hold by the end of the year. Zeroual met with his predecessor, Ali Kafi, head of the independent war veterans, and was due to meet leaders of the main legal opposition parties later this week. In a move that could suggest a reopening of negotiations, the gov- ernment moved two leaders of the Islamic Salvation Front, Abassi Madani and Ali Belhadj, from jail to house arrest for secret talks, Algerian newspapers say. A similar move by the govern- ment last fall failed to break the dead- lock, and the men were returned to jail. But this time, eight retired Alge- rian army generals are drawing up a plan for national reconciliation and dialogue with the front, El Hayat newspaper reported. The Islamic front's armed wing has targeted security forces in its guer- rilla war with the Algerian govern- ment. But the government's primary target has been the more radical Armed Islamic Group, or GIA, whose opera- tives were responsible for the hijack- ing of an Air France plane on Christ- mas Eve and for numerous killings of journalists, intellectuals and foreign- ers. The Algerian daily newspaper El Watan, which is generally well-in- formed on security matters, quoted reliable sources yesterday as saying Djamel Zitouni, leader of the GIA, was among those killed in the recent government offensives in mountains west of Algiers. 0 r r lob apcuon 4 r' l i aplimc~iote 0 Spend three weeks as a volunteer working and living with Israelis at army bases or hospitals. pp N& g ANA PROGRAM INCLUDES roundtrip airfare, room & board, kosher meals, ticket valid for 180 days, tours & lectures. Frequent departures throughout the summer VOLUNTEERS FOR ISRAEL 330 W. 42ND ST. SUITE 1818 " NY, NY 10038 Tha program -past, presenta.and future - is partally subsidized by VFl and Ser - EL THE BRIARWO>OD RUN. 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