1 I i lAwis pe NATRo /WoltLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 19, 1995 - 7A Injection may replace oral polio vaccine The Whngton Post WASHINGTON - A panel of ex- perts recommended yesterday that the United States begin a slow transition away from oral polio vaccine and to the less risky, but less effective, injected polio vaccine. This new strategy would eliminate about half of the eight to 10 cases of polio caused by the oral vac- cine each year in the United States. It might, however, make parts of the American population slightly more vul- nerable to polio, should the infection ever reappear here. The last case of "wild" polio in the Western Hemisphere occurred in Peru, in August 1991. A small outbreak oc- curred two years later among members of an unvaccinated religious sect in Alberta, Canada, but that- virus was imported from the Netherlands by other members ofthe sect, and did not spread to the general population. The Pan American Health Organization last year declared the disease eradicated in the Americas. Polio virus usually- causes mild or symptom-free infection. In some cases, however, it destroys nerve cells in the spinal cord, causing permanent weak- ness or paralysis. Oral polio vaccine uses live but weak- ened virus - given in a few drops of sugar water - to stimulate immunity against the disease. In roughly one of every 2.4 million doses administered, the weakened virus undergoes muta- tion and "reverts" to its dangerous form, causing polio. Of the few cases of polio recorded each year in the United States, all are caused by the vaccine. The older form of polio vaccine em- ploys killed virus, and must be injected, not drunk. Some experts believe it is slightly less effective than the oral form. It also causes less "vaccination by con- tact"- a phenomenon in which people in close contact with someone who has recently gotten the oral immunization encounter small amounts of the weak- ened virus and, in effect, get a booster that enhances their own immunity. Unlike the oral vaccine, however, the injected one can't cause the disease. The debate over which vaccine to use now that there is little risk of polio epidemics in the United States has sparked heated debate among pediatri- cians and public health physicians. Proponents of keeping the oral vac- cine say that polio- still found in parts of Asia - is "only an airplane flight away" from the American population. SA u mormy. Not just guitar. ' r iJ-U to U o M. $35U Neg.Cal LOOKING FOR a loving home in which to 810/220-8266. place an expected baby? We're Montana MALE NON-SMOKING grad. stud. seeks writers with an adopted 2 year old daughter, male rmmte. to share large 2 bdrm. 2 bath eager to adopt a second child. Please call Dan announceme t apt. No pets.662-6438. or Margaret: 1-800/484-5846, and at the ROOMMATE PROBLEMS? Overcrowded tone: 6695. AP PHOTO A French U.N. peacekeeper hands orange juice to residents of Gorazde after the first convoy since last week's cease fire arrived carrying humanitarian aid. Bosma, Belgmde take step toward peaCe open offiCes House opens hea on g e U.S. language WASHINGTON (AP)- House Re- publicans opened hearings yesterday on legislation to make English the nation's official language amid charges from opponents that some of the mea- sures would harm children who speak another language. Education Secretary Richard Riley told a House education subcommittee it would be "sheer folly" to eliminate bilingual programs for children who don't speak English, as a version spon- sored by Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) would do. "Passing these bills is saying to chil- dren, and those who are struggling to learn English, that we don't care if they fall behind and fail," Riley said in a statement. Supporters of the bill with the most co-sponsors, introduced by Rep. Bill Emerson and Sen. Richard Shelby, say that measure would only affect the lan- guage of government and would do nothing to federal bilingual education programs. Emerson (R-Mo.)saidtheirbill would exempt essential services - such as those dealing with emergencies, health and the justice system - from the offi- cial English mandate on the federal government. But it would ensure that most government forms and documents would be printed only in English. A recent General Accounting Office report found that only a tiny fraction of the federal government's documents were in other languages, but Emerson nevertheless said it was wasteful to print items in, for example, Cambodian, Ro- manian, Portuguese and Ukrainian. "If we do not address this issue in a rational, forward-thinking manner, then we will be guilty of having allowed a new type of welfare to be institutional- ized: linguistic welfare," Emersonfsaid. Shelby (R-Ala.) said the bill would have no impact on a person's right to speak any language at home, at work or elsewhere. But he said government should lead by example in encouraging people to learn English. "The bottom line is that English is the language of opportunity," Shelby said. Rep. Ed Pastor, an Arizona Demo- crat who chairs the Congressional His- panic Caucus, said generations of im- migrants have understood that learning English is vital to succeed. Pastor noted that more than 95 percent of Americans speak English, and said the issue ap- peared driven by political concerns. "I cannot help but feel that we are not looking at a real issue here but perhaps one that has been artificially created to divide our country and promote a short- term political gain," Pastor said. The subcommittee's chairman, Rep. Randy Cunningham (R-Calif.) said there would probably be more hearings before the panel begins seriously con- sidering any of the three bills and one proposed constitutional amendment currently before it. COVERED PRKG. Wanted east side of campus. Call 669-0266. Will pay $60/mo. DISNEY BAHAMAS cruise: Overbought S to bli 7 days- 49. per person. FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800- 263.6495 ext. F55982. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1 Greencard ram available. Tel 818/882- 9681#2 1 Stagg St. Canoga Park, CA 91306. LAVA LAMPS, CANDLES and other ex- dorm room? 3 fern. soph. need 4th for great apt. @ Church/Hill. $340bno. 741-0758. TENANT NEEDS APT, mate for separate bdrms. High grade unit. Edge of campus. Good credit only. 665-8825. o d *ente a in SWM 6'4", FIT, attractive, professional, varied interests, seeks fit, intelligent, charm- ing lady 20-25 yrs. old for dating & poss. relationship. Write to PO BOX 87973, Canton, MI 48187-0973. Seli it . . ,find it! Te Daily Classifieds! TIOS DELIVERS Ann Arbor's best Mexican style food. Call 761-6650. Tios Mexican Restaurant 333 E. Huron. F otic gifts for a catalog write to Fountain I Enterprises 548 South Highland Box 148 54 Memphis, TN 38111. L& ss ~31 YEAR OLD attractive professional male s eeks an attractive Muslim female 20 to 30 ]]_years old for a long term serious relationship. Ilf DOTOR'S Everth fo -read th m D y, respond to P.O. Box 4053 Mount a4uarium Next to Putt-Put Gof o ==6 Q it ' GPleasant, Ml 48804. Washtenaw. 434-1030. SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Pushed by American diplo- mats, Bosnia and rival Yugoslavia inched toward peace yesterday with an agreement to open offices in each other's capitals. Liaison offices would represent the highest level offormal contact between the two countries since Bosnia broke from the Serb-dominated Yugoslav federation 3 1/2 years ago, triggering a rebellion by Bosnian Serbs. U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke an- nounced the deal in what he said was his last swing through the area before crucial peace talks among Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian leaders begin Oct. 31 in the United States. Holbrooke said yesterday's accord did not mean mutual diplomatic rec- ognition between Bosnia and Yugo- slavia, which now consists only of Serbia and tiny Montenegro. "This is a small step on a long and difficult road," he said after meeting Bosnian government leaders in Sarajevo. No date was given for when the offices would open. U.N. officials said aweek-oldtruce negotiated by Holbrooke appeared to be holding, although sporadic fight- ing persisted in northwest Bosnia. Each side blamed the other. Holbrooke arrived in Sarajevo from Belgrade, the Serbian and Yugoslav capital, after talks with Serbian Presi- dent Slobodan Milosevic. He said part of his mission was aimed at "getting the cease-fire fully imple- mented and respected." "It's in place, but there are a lot of violations in all directions," Mllsevic said. He headed for Croatia for talks with President Franjo Tudjman to make sure the Croatian army does not upset the peace process by marching into eastern Slavonia, the last bit of Serb-held terri- tory in Croatia. Serbs there revolted in 1991 after Croatia seceded from Yugoslavia, but the Croatian army last August retook most of the land they had seized. Flush with that success, Croatian troops have threatened to retake eastern Slavonia as well, and have been in- volved in fighting in Bosnia, in alliance with the Sarajevo government. A stable truce is crucial to the upcom- ing talks, where the warring sides must finalize a division of Bosnia between the Bosnian Serbs and a Muslim-Croat alli- ance, and work out how they will share power in a future government. Ifthey succeed, an international peace conference would follow in Paris. A final settlement would be policed by a NATO force, possibly including 20,000 U.S. troops, as well as troops from non- NATO countries such as Russia. .1 N WEfII #___,._I4WSEmfEE_16#ES FNi.4l lash Niy .t" H6 15 IS EINOUS! EMEM5,fE DI C 1 HI DOES HE SEEM 50001, t!IE OUR NfWViJ 0OEkE- a the01CHI house... f{E WANT TO BE IN o110! WEL ANT 1L E T LIKE A I A Bt, MN iTOR"'FOR PART(E$.5 I 'C IN OR N NEC ATIVE DRINK A LIFAO w ;:W0A MW N LOTEHO! IFLENE r"'; }ALL 'IN F~vO FAC (.'IE J:~i -D. SAY AYE! . If -.--- TH9 CANADIAN P" - L.EA(-SUE AND wB't U T --' - Ai IM22'1 1L alil'T B0 0 ° I. Chicka doube. w fit d rHere.' I AlI