NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 10, 2001- 5A Vaccine ma hel poor AIDs victims The Washington Post PHILADELPHIA - A vaccine that is not even 50 percent effective could nevertheless change the course of the AIDS epidemic in Africa under certain circumstances, according to predic- tions made here at the conclusion of a scientific conference. A poor AIDS vaccine would have to be used by nearly an entire population to have any benefit. However, even with less-than-complete coverage, such a vaccine could prove useful if already-infected people had access to antiviral drugs, which reduce a per- son's likelihood of transmitting the virus to someone else. On the other hand, if people were to greet the arrival of a modestly effec- tive vaccine by increasing their risky sexual behavior even a little, all benefit would disappear. "We don't need a perfect vaccine to have a public health impact. Even one that is only moderately protective could control the epidemic," said Ronald H. Gray, of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, who created a mathematical model that tested the effects an AIDS vaccine would have on Uganda, one of the worst-hit nations in Africa. In the Rakai district of Uganda, about one in every 900 acts of hetero- sexual intercourse results in a new infection with human immunodefi- ciency virus (HIV). As in the rest of Africa, this is the main mode of virus transmission. Each infected person in Rakai infects an average of 1.34 other people before he or she dies. That is called the "reproductive number" of the epidem- ic, and if it can be reduced to less than 1, disease transmission will abate and, theoretically at least, eventually burn out. Gray and his colleagues calculated that a 50 percent effective vaccine would have to be taken by everyone in Rakai to tip the reproductive number below 1. A 75 percent effective vac- cine used by half the population would do the same thing. Even a 25 percent effective vaccine used by three-quarters of the popula- tion would drive the number below 1 if already-infected people received antiviral treatment at the stage of dis- ease recommended by guidelines from the Department of Health and Human Services, Gray calculated. Such treatment does not exist in Africa now. But with deeply cut drug prices and the United Nations' recent decision to create a global fund to buy AIDS drugs for the developing world, the possibility is not entirely out of the question. Seattle mohawk I Groups plan for next vacancy Anti-abortion groups lobbying for next Supreme Court Justice The Washington Post The fight for the next Supreme Court vacancy is taking on a new sound, if not exactly a new tone. To persuade the Senate to support an anti-abortion nominee when the pivotal court seat becomes available, a coalition of conservative groups is delivering more than 20,000 baby rattles to Capitol Hill offices. The slogan: "Shake the nation back to life!" The rattle is intended as "a noisy reminder of the little ones who, because of abortion, will never live, love or laugh on this earth," organizers say. The campaign is accompanied by a sing-song television commercial fea- turing frolicking toddlers on the Mall who cry and disappear when the Supreme Court approves legal abor- tion. "In order to seechildren protected again in our lifetime, we must fill every single vacancy with a pro-life justice," said Janet L. Folger, director of the Florida-based Center for Reclaiming America. Conservative groups supporting the campaign - which has raised and spent $2.2 million, according to Fol- ger - include the Family Research Council, Focus on the Family, Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Forum and Chuck Colson's Prison Fellowship. Individu- als are encouraged to pay $25 to send a rattle to a senator and an accompa- nying letter to the White House, urg- ing President Bush to nominate an abortion foe. A separate anti-abortion advertising effort began in Philadelphia, spon- sored by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The poster and radio campaign, costing $500,000, raises questions about legal abortions late in pregnancy and notes that the health of a mother or child is not a factor in the majority of abortions. I JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Seattle resident Jason Johnson relaxes Friday afternoon outside The Seattle Experience Project, a museum dedicated to rock and roll. Slavery reparations top issue at Racism Conference DURBAN, South Africa (AP) - African rep- resentatives have joined African-American activists in encouraging delegates at the World Conference Against Racism to adopt a final dec- laration that calls for an apology for slavery and colonialism and initiates reparations. Since the conference began Friday, one African representative after another have given speeches blaming the slave trade and colonialism for the underdevelopment of their countries. Some demanded only apologies, while others wanted cash. "Slavery should be remembered not only as an appalling tragedy, but also as a factor which, for centuries, deprived Africa of her human and nat- ural resources," said Enoch Kavindele, the vice president of Zambia - who is also representing the African Union, the successor to the Organiza- tion of African Unity. He said the union "calls for the establishment of an international compensation scheme for victims of the slave trade and a development restoration fund to provide additional resources for the devel- opment of countries affected by colonialism." Members of the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus have attended the conference since it" began on Friday, condemning President Bush for not sending Secretary of State Colin Powell, and demanding U.S. reparations for slavery. "The treatment of blacks in (the United States) has historically been deplorable, and while steps have been made to better the racial climate, noth- ing as been done to compensate those who have been wronged in the process," Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Georgia) said. The Council of Europe announced Monday that its 43 nations had agreed to help fund a new African development program to help compen- sate for colonialism and slavery, but those funds would be provided outside the context of the racism conference. The draft of a final declaration for the confer- ence, which will end on Friday, includes five paragraphs calling for such reparations in one form or another. Two paragraphs call for explicit apologies for slavery and colonialism. A consensus on a final draft has not been reached yet. Chess master claims Bobby Fischer playing on Internet LONDON (AP) - A British chess grandmaster is convinced that Bobby Fischer, one of the game's most leg- endary and elusive figures, is playing again - anonymously on the Internet. "I am 99 percent sure that I have been playing against the chess legend," Nigel Short told The Sunday Telegraph. "It's tremendously exciting." Fischer, an American, fascinated the world by winning an epic battle against a lussian, Boris Spassky, in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1972. Then he disappeared, only to re-emerge from retirement in 1992 for a controversial rematch against Spassky in Yugoslavia. Fischer won, and then disappeared again after U.S. authorities accused him of violating sanctions imposed against Yugoslavia by playing the match. Short, who unsuccessfully challenged Garry Kasparov for the world chess title in 1993, said rumors began circulating last year that the American champion was anonymously playing others in quick, three-minute games at the Inter- net Chess Club. Short said he was skep- tical, even after his friend, Greek grandmaster loannis Papaioannou, claimed to have played Fischer. A few weeks later, Short said, he was approached by someone who identified himself as an intermediary for "a very strong chess player ... who wished to preserve his anonymity." The intermediary gave Short a special code word and arranged a time for a future game. They played eight three-minute games. Short was crushed. "I never confronted my opponent with the question, 'Am I playing Bobby Fischer,"' Short conceded. But during subsequent games, Short said he asked other questions, and the answers all seemed like they could only come from one man. "He was obviously very familiar in a gossipy way with the major figures in the chess world of the 1960s - Fis- cher's period of greatest activity," wrote Short. "He was polite, he was funny, and clearly an American, to judge from his spelling and pattern of conversation" i eu°"y Learn More About the Peace Corps Join us for a Peace Corps Information Meeting And Video Wed., Sept. 12, 7 to 9 p.m. Int'1 Ctr, Rm. 9, Michigan Union, 603 E. Madison St. Interviews: Drop by the UMich Peace Corps Office (Interna- tional Center), or call the Peace Corps Campus Recruiter at 734-647-2182 to schedule an INTERVIEW! http://www.peacecorps.gov www.DcltaU.Org * www.JoinDcltaU.org * www.FourWord.org Do you and your friends have what it takes.. CO LD P REV E NT ION STUDY PARTICIPANTS NEEDED TO I-ELP EVALUATE INVESTIGATIONAL DRUG Ilivid/uals: -Must be at least 18 or older -Must be available this Fall and Winter -Will need to* have blo(d draws/throat cultures/pregnancy tests Qualified Particinants Receive: -Lp to $210 for 6-7 visits OR an electronic diary (your choice) * Friendship * f , at ' ' ." * Culture