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July 10, 1981 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1981-07-10

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Page 4-Friday, July 10, 1981-The Michigan Doily
Ann Arbor woman
raped in her home

A 20-year-old Ann Arbor woman was
raped in her east-side home early Wed-
nesday morning after being bound and
gagged, police reported yesterday.
The intruder entered the woman's
home through the screen door after
sticking his fingers through a hole in the
screen and unlocking it.
THE VICTIM was sleeping on the
ground floor of her home, on the 3200
block of Chelsea, when the suspect en-
tered. He dragged her upstairs, blind-
folded her, gagged and tied her up and
then raped her, police said.
She sought treatment at University
Hospital, though she was reportedly not
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otherwise hurt, and was released later
that morning.
The suspect is described as a
muscular male in his late teens, of
average weight and height.
Wednesday's rape was the second in
less than two months in Ann Arbor. A
month ago, a University Hospital em-
ployee was abducted at gunpoint and
raped near hospital property.
The victim had reportedly been war-
ned by her assailant that she would be
killed if she tried to scream for help.
She attempted to resist once, police
said, and was choked "nearly to uncon-
sciousness."'
Police still have no suspect in the
case.
Advances
made in
cancer
treat ment
(Continuedfrom Page 1)
are with placing the catheter for proper
distribution of the drug."
Niederhuber explained that since the
liver is a highly vascular organ, the
surgeon must spenda great deal of time
in dissection to achieve proper
placement of the catheter.
Despite the obstacles, Niederhuber
maintains that approximately 85 per-
cent of the patients afflicted with liver
cancers respond to therapy and most
return home to lead active lives.
"I THINK IT will proveto be a viable
way of treating patients," said
Niederhuber, "but it takes a well-
organized program and a dedicated
staff to manage something of this
magnitude."
According to Niederhuber, the
University researchers are currently
working with three other institutions to
begin the implementation of more
pump implantation programs-the
University of Chicago, the University of
Alabama, and the Sloan-Kettering Can-
cer Institute in New York.
The infusion pump announcement
came on the heels of another important
medical breakthrough by University
researchers-the successful develop-
ment of a new radioactive tracer com-
pound which can detect, for the first
time, potentially lethal tumor's in the
body's adrenaline-producing tissues
(see story in tomorrow's Daily).

In Brief
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press International reports
Prime Minister Thatcher
'lashes out' at rioters
LONDON-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher lashed out at urban rioters
yesterday, calling their actions a "spree of naked greed." Her government
was considering drafting a new Riot Act to deal with violence that has
broken out in English cities for six straight nights.
In a heated session at the House of Commons the prime minister's com-
ments were greeted with repeated shouts of "You stupid woman!" by Labor
Member of Parliament Eric Heffer, who represents a constituency in Liver-
pool.
Over the din of shouts and jeers, Mrs. Thatcher rejected opposition Labor
Party charges that her conservative economic policies and record unem-
ployment were to blame for the rioting that spread to the city of Manchester
Wednesday night.
The battle, which started just before 1:00 p.m., appeared to be renewal of
the seven-hour running fight Wednesday, which Chief Constable James Ad-
nerton called "guerrilla warfare."
House votes to temporarily
shelve plans for MX bases
WASHINGTON-The House voted tentatively yesterday to shelve, at least
temporarily, plans for a network of MX mobile missile bases in the Western
desert.
By voice vote, the House adopted an amendment by Rep. James Hansen
(R-Utah), blocking the Defense Department from spending money on the
MX basing plan until President Reagan has made up his mind about it.
However, Rep. Marilyn Lloyd Bouquard (D-Tenn.), who was presiding,
ruling that the House will have an opportunity to take separate roll-call vote
on the issue when it completes action later this week on teh $136 billion
military spending authority bill, of which money for the MX is a part.
A panel appointed by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger is reviewing
former President Carter's recommendation to shift the missiles around
among a network of shelters in the Great Basin of Utah and Nevada.
Tax cut battle continues
WASHINGTON-One Senate Republican leader declared yesterday the
chamber will no longer wait for the House to move on a tax cut, while
another invited compromise with the Democrats across the Capitol. But a
spokesman for the president declared there's no room for that.
It was a day which produced conflicting signals from the administration
and its Republican allies controlling the Senate-and a new round of feuding
between the White House and House Democrats.
In a message delivered by deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Reagan
again warned there won't be a tax cut this year if House Democrats don't
"get moving."
And there were new fireworks between the executive mansion and House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, who dismissed as "hogwash" the president's
claim earlier this week that the nation won't geta tax cut this year unless the
administration's plan is sent to his desk by early August.
Reagan attacks fraud, waste;
appoints new comptroller
WASHINGTON-In a double assault on government fraud and waste,
President Reagan appointed a new comptroller general yesterday and
dispatched his "junkyard dogs"-a revitalized corps of inspectors
general-to root out violators.
"Go get 'em," exhorted the president at the close of a ceremony at the
White House.
Introducing Charles A. Bowsher as his choice to be comptroller general,
the president said he "has the expertise of an insider with the perspective of
an outsider. He will need these qualities in great abundance."
Bowsher, managing partner of a Washington accounting firm, is replacing
Elmer Staats, who retired. The appointment, which must be confirmed by
the Senate, is for a 15-year term.
The comptroller general heads the General Accounting Office, the in-
vestigative arm of Congress.
Mediterranean fruit fly
devastates California produce
SAN JOSE, Calif.-With aerial spraying banned and the federal gover-
nment ready to quarantine some California produce, workers armed with
powerful pesticide pressed a vast ground battle yesterday against the
voracious Mediterranean fruit fly.
Sources at the Agriculture Department in Washington said the federal
government has decided to quarantine products infested by the medfly in
California, but no details of the quarantine order were immediately
available.

4

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