The Michigan Daily-Thursday, August 14, 1980-Page 5 Egyptian gov't official opens Romanian talks By The Associated Press Egypt's foreign minister opened a mission yesterday to Communist Romania, which has mediated between Israel and Egypt in the past, but Saudi Arabia's crown prince said peace with the Jewish state is an "illusion" and the time for moderation has ended. The trip to Bucharest by Boutros Ghali, minister of state for foreign af- fairs, came amid growing signs that Romanian President Nicolae Ceausescu was renewing his Middle East efforts, which include a possible summit meeting here between President Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and a call for an international conference as part of a "global political solution." IN A STATEMENT to the official Saudi press agency reacting to the Israeli decision to make a unified Jerusalem its permanent capital, Crown Prince Fahd said, "An urgent closing of Arab ranks has become foremost on the list of Arab priorities." Fahd said moderation has failed to "benefit" the Arabs in their struggle against Israel and they could not be blamed if "we took the matter in our own hands and rose to defend" their in- terests. "Hasn't the call - on Arabs and Moslems for a long and persistent holy jihad (holy war) become the only an- swer to this Zionist religious and racist arrogance?" he said. THE CROWN prince indirectly called on Egypt to admit failure in its peace effort with Israel and withdraw from talks on Palestinian autonomy in Arab lands occupied by Israel in the 1967 Middle East War. The crown prince indicated his coun- try was trying to arrange an Arab summit meeting to achieve a unified stand on Jerusalem. The statement was the strongest yet from Saudi Arabia, generally con-. sidered a moderate influence in the Middle East. In Washington, State Department spokesman David Passage said: "The United States doesn't accept, nor has it ever accepted, unilateral national legislation dealing with Jerusalem." This is the planet... In this satellite photo, released yesterday in Washington by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, an extraordinarily cloud-free picture of Earth is shown. The photo was taken last week, while Hurricane Allen roared through the Gulf of Mexico towards Texas. Study shoWS in nity can be transferred BOSTON (AP) - By isolating and in- jetting an obscure substancefrom the blood, doctors have shown they can transfer imunity to disease from one person to another - a discovery that may have many uses in preventing illness. The material is called "transfer fac- tor," a part of the white blood cells that protects people from getting measles, mumps, and many other diseases more than once. ALTHOUGH researchers have been experimenting with transfer factor for years, doctors at the University of Arkansas conducted the first major test, of the substance as a method of preven- ting disease. They found that it prevented chicken pox among children with leukemia, youngsters at high risk of severe com- plications from this common disease. Dr. Russell Steele, who directed the research, said transfer factor may eventually be used to prevent many other hard-to-control diseases caused by viruses, bacteria, and fungi. Among them are tuberculosis, mononucleosis, hepatitis, and herpes infections. HIS STUDY, conducted on 61 children, was published in today's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Charles Kirkpatrick of the National Jewish Hospital in Denver called the results "impressive" and added, "This report suggests that transfer factor may provide an alternative method for immunization against certain infec- tions for which no effective vaccines are available." In their study, the doctors randomly injected the children, none of whom had had chicken pox, with either transfer, factor or an inactive substitute called a placebo. OVER THE next two years, 15 of the children in the placebo group were ac- cidentally exposed to chicken pox by relatives or playmates and 13 of them contracted the disease. However, 16 of the children who had taken a single shot of transfer factor also came in contact with the disease, and only one of them got sick. Transfer factor is sometimes described as the immune system's memory. "When you extract transfer factor from white blood cells, you take out all the memory to foreign antigens that the person has ever encountered," Steele said in an interview. "You have the memory for measles and mumps and millions of things." WHEN THE substance is taken from one person and given to another, the recipient acquires all of the donor's immunities that have built up over a lifetime of exposure to germs. Steele said one of the first practical uses for transfer factor may be in protecting cancer patients. Since these people's natural immunity has been weakened by drugs, such common ailments as chicken pox and penumonia can be fatal. But vaccines may also make them dangerously ill. Transfer factor was discovered in 1955 by Dr. H. Sherwood Lawrence at New York University. Doctors are not sure exactly how transfer factor works. but Steele said it attachecs itself to Tolymphocytes, newly formed white blood cells, in the recipient's body. The doctor said that one drawback of using transfer factor may be that allergies, a defect of the body's immune responses, may also be passed on when the suhatance is iniected 219 S. Main, Ann Arbor (313)996-2808 Quality Books at uncommonly low prices Qur ENTIRE STOCK OVER 1800 TITLES 40.900/o OFF