C e t t tYi N"ather ronight: Increasing clouds. .owin upper 20s. romorrow: Chance of rain or now. High in low 40s. One hundred six years of editoriailfreedom Friday November 22, 1996 6-YM r e y x r y n j "tY . --I IC GA VS. chigan at No. 2 Ohio State ium (cap. 89,841) -1 Scientists find cancer gene 'U' researcher heads prostate study that may increase survival Who: No. 21 Mi Where: * Stad When: Tomorrow ,12:10 p.m. . YMMINI. Television: ABC, Channel 7 Series history: Ohio State coach John Cooper is 1-6-1 against Michigan. But the Wolverines haven't won in their last two trips to Columbus. Tomorrow, Michigan has a chance to obliterate Ohio State's national championship dreams, as they did with a 31-23 win last season. , By Brian Campbell Daily Staff Reporter Scientists continued to chip away at the roots of cancer with the discovery yesterday of a gene linked to prostate cancer, which may increase survival rates through earlier detection. Researchers from the University of Michigan Medical Center, the Johns Hopkins University and the National Center for Human Genome Research (NCHGR) collaborated with Swedish scientists to dis- cover the location of a gene that causes men to be sus- ceptible to prostate cancer. "We collected a large number of families, each of whom had a history of cases of prostate cancer," said Dr. Jeffrey Smith, the chief author of the study and a research fellow in the University's department of internal medicine. "The goal was to identify a com- mon genetic cause." Researchers from the NCHGR and the Johns Hopkins University announced the findings yesterday afternoon in Washington, D.C. While the precise location of the discovered gene has yet to be found, the researchers have pinpointed it to chromosome 1 - a chromosome not previously linked with other diseases, said Dr. Kathleen Cooney, director of the University Prostate Cancer Genetics Project. "The hope would be to find the exact location of the gene," Smith said. "Beyond that, we'll be able to design tests that may benefit the men in these types of families. The tests would be able to tell if the man is or is not at risk and determine the best treat- ment." Cooney said that if prostate cancer is detected through proper screening tests, it is not difficult to treat. "Prostate cancer is treatable and curable if detected early, but when it's late in progress, it is not curable." she said. Researchers spent two years tracing the genomes of 90 families from Sweden and the United States. They looked for first-degree relations - brothers and fathers - who developed prostrate cancer at a young age. Among the families studied, one third were linked with a defective gene in chromosome 1. Smith said about 9 percent of prostrate cancer cases are estimated to be genetic. "With a disease like prostate cancer there is bound to be heterogeneous causes," Smith said. "We tracked entire genomes within each of the families to find an inheritance of predisposition to develop- the disease." Cooney said there were doubts among scientists See GENE, Page 2 ; I xperts ,redict a economic stability Dy Marc Lightdale Daily Staff Reporter en economists talk, people listen. nd this year, people heard a mes- sage of economic stability. At the 44th Annual Economic Conference, a host of speakers provid- ed their vision of the economic future to a largely academic and professional crowd in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Economics Prof. Saul Hymans, director of the Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics, delivered the o ening economic forecast in which he .icted along with other researchers that the gross domestic product will grow by 2.4 percent and 2.3 percent for 1997 and 1998 respectively. Both figures are relatively unchanged from this year's rate of increase. Hymans covered topics ranging from economic growth to interest rates to inflation. He said researchers believe the U.S. economy will continue to expand * a moderate rate during the next two . Unemployment is also expected to increase slightly through 1998. TMy job is to dope out what will happen as a result of economic policies jursued by the federal reserves," Hymans said. Yet, some of the people in the audi- ence did not agree with Hymans' con- servative outlook. Les Koska, an adjunct lecturer at the University's Dearborn campus, said he thought Hymans' view e economy was too pessimistic. There might be more growth than he is predicting," Koska said. "His model is heavily dependent on government spending. When government spending is weak, it pulls down his forecast." Public Policy graduate student Jon Roman said he does not want to put too much stock in the predictions. "lt equates to a weather forecast," Roman said. "it is very accurate in the iW future, but partly cloudy and sea- 0o06ble from then on."~ 'Blue Cross/Blue Shield employee John Katharopoulos comes each year to heal- Hymans' economic forecast and pays attention to the indicators for changes in medical care and inflation. "We come every year to find out what the U-M says," Katharopoulos said. "The forecasts are a bit conserva- tive. The economic events are hard to tdct, so I can understand why one W tothe conference."~ One part of Hymans' speech that sparked debate concerned the trend of weakening productivity. Despite incesn capital investment and busi- ness downsizing, productivity is still decreasing nationwide. Hymans speculated that this produc- tion mystery is a measurement problem resulting from the government's failure to )duce an accurate estimate of growth. Chikashi Moriguchi, a professor from Osaka University in Japan, and University economics Prof Robert Barsky wound up the morning of the first day of the annual economic confer- ence. Moriguchi predicted that 1997 r' 1 . A - Teaching 'o tradition, Board to discuss legal strategies in closed meeting Sachiko Nakamura demon- strates the art of flower arranging as a part of "Japanese Day," which also includ- ed demonstrations of a tea ceremony, origami folding and kimono dress- ing. The event was sponsored by International Neighbors, which holds monthly "International Days" at the Zion Lutheran Church. The organization consists of 906 women currently living in Ann Arbor who hail from 81 countries. By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Members of the Board of Regents will meet in a closed session today, but they won't be sitting in their usual chairs. Instead, the regents will dial-in to the Fleming Building on a conference call to discuss "trial or settlement strategy in connection with specific pending lit- igation." _ the University would have violated the Open Meetings Act and Freedom of Information Act if there were closed meetings between the presidential candidates and individual regents. Circuit Court Judge Melinda Morris ruled against the University and issued an injunction barring all private inter- actions between the IEa A news release about the 4:30 p.m. meeting also explains that it will be closed to discuss m a t e r i a I exempt from the Open Meetings Act, which can We are not required to disclose content" - Lisa Baker Associate vice president for regents and candi- dates. The ruling also ordered that all meetings between the regents and the P r e s i d e n t i a l Search Advisory Committee be made public. In addition to Univer include meetings with the University's attorneys. "lt's to consider advice of counsel," said Lisa Baker, associate vice presi- dent for University relations. "We are not required to disclose content." The University is constantly involved in various litigation, including a case connected to the presidential search process. A judge's decision, along with state laws, recently forced the board to use an open search process to select Lee Bollinger as the next University presi- dent. The lawsuit - brought by The Ann Arbor News, The Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press - claimed that sity relations this ongoing case. the University also is currently involved in other litigation, but it is unclear what the board will discuss today. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said it's not uncommon for the regents to meet by telephone. "We do that from time to time if peo- ple are spread around the country," Baker said. Baker, who has served as regent for 24 years and recently lost a re-election bid, would not comment on the meet- ing's content. "It is a closed meeting because there are matters important to the University- and we can discuss them under the Open Meetings Act without disclosing them," Baker said. JENNIFER BRADLEY- SWIFT/Daily COURTING THE AM US AZ PFLAG Voters sparse at pols By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter The votes are in, the results are being tallied and soon everyone will know who won - but the question remains whether anyone cares. While the official results in the Michigan Student Assembly's representative elections will not be released until late today, one thing is for sure - turnout was low, even by MSA standards. "Turnout is going to be pretty low overall," MSA Election Director Angie Blake said last night. "Today didn't help much and the numbers will be low - that's surprising because there were so many candidates." Even Angell Hall, which has teemed with voters in years past, was far from crowded with students willing to cast a ballot. "When we worked last year, the line was out the door here at this time," said LSA sophomore Amy Gill, who worked at the Angell Hall MSA poll site yesterday. "Now it's really slow.": As fewer voters populated the polling sites, fewer candi- dates came out to further their cause. "Monday, Wednesday and Friday there are more classes so there are more people out those days," said independent LSA nl -;..1anvnpr It ..mc UP.thrP if . r a- connects gays, families By Ann Stewart Daily Staff Reporter Not all emotions are comfortable. But sometimes it takes a moment of discomfort to get people talking. Art senior Ryan LaLonde said the first time he brought his family to a meeting of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays "was extremely strange." "Sexual orientation has never been anything I've talked about with my family," LaLonde said. But after the meeting he said he was able to talk with his family about his sexuality as he never had before. His broth- er Scott said the experience brought them closer. "It was hard watching (people) cry and go through so many strong emotions," Scott LaLonde said. "But afterwards I felt a lot better." PFLAG is a non-profit organization that brings lesbians and gays together with their families and friends to create a system of support and advocate civil rights. It has chapters in 12 countries and 400 chapters nationwide. The Ann Arbor PFLAG chapter was founded in 1982. Chapter President Bob Edwards said the group has about 90 members and is "probably the largest per capita" chapter in the country. i 1I