2 Tuesday, September 26, 1972 University Daily Kansas Scientists to Discuss New Cancer Treatment NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists from 10 nations will meet next month to discuss one of the possible ways of treating cancer. The U.S. will "wake up" the body's natural defense mechanisms. BCG research is part of the burgeoning science of immunology, the study of the ways that vaccines may protect vaders. It is one of the main avenues of cancer research, along with such approaches as the search for viruses as causes and the possibility of developing vaccines. The scientists involved in all this research agree that any answers are a long way off and caution against raising hopes BCG-Bacillus Calmette Guerin-is a strain of tuberculosis bacteria used for many people in anti-TB vaccines. Most people have developed an infection with the virus and are in administering the BCG the body's memory to its reaction to the virus. when this happens, the natural defense mechanisms are brought forward. In response to foreign cancer cells, just as the body naturally jumps to reject an antigen, the immune system The BCG apparently initiates a complex reaction that results in killer cells, known as neutrophils, attacking the tumors. a nec BCG meeting, to be held on 5 and 6 at the National Cancer Institute, MD, will be the first devoted soley to that subject. About 80 students will attend. Attention was focused on BCG Saturday with a report from the Margin of Leaders Tapers, Gallup Says "When we do start to move, I think it'll be a steady climb," he told newsmen. By DONALD SANDERS Associated Press Writer McGovern hinted over the injunction of a raise of about 5 per cent in his standing above Labor Day, when he trailed President Washington. Atomic Energy Commission' Oak Ridge National Laboratory of BCG's successful use in treating tumors in laboratory animals. WASHINGTON—Never before in the more than 38 years of scientific public opinion polling I had seen a candidate trailed as badly as George McGovern. As he himself said, “It couldn’t get any worse.” The most dramatic report so far came last May from DR. Donna Ginsburg, the Memorial Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., who said he had succeeds her treated cases and caused cases of breast cancer in humans. The five cases, he said, were all in varying degrees of remission or cure. As pollster George Gallup up a House subcommittee last week. McGovern "can take encouragement from the fact, as 38 years of polling history have shown, the wide lead of a front campaign typically evaporates." But he, too, cautioned against raising false hopes: "The data are likely to be viewed as expatriary and are primarily indicative of feasibility and of avenues justifying further pursuit," rather than as evidence for success. For example, Gallup says there were only 19 points from last September 1986 and lost by only one percentage of the popular vote in November. Touches of Paris Seen In Streets of Moscow IN 1964 Barry Goldwater gained 8 percentage points during the same period, in 1960 when he was guarded by Stevenson lost 2, in 1952 Stevenson gained 3, in 1948 Harry S. Truman gained 9, in 1944 Thomas E. Dewey lost 2, in 1944 Wendell Wilde showed no change. Klein and other scientists will report on clinical trials with BCG at the Bethesda meeting. By DAVID MASON MOSCOW—First impressions of an American reporter recently transferred from France to the Soviet Union: The comparison probably stops there. Yet Moscow does not seem to be the forbidding city often contemplated from the West. If you look carefully you can see little touchs of Paris in Moscow. Counterparts of Seine and St. Louis are visible on Moscow River. Some tree-lined streets have grillwork over the roots, Red, Square and surrounding onion-topped buildings are illuminated at night like a cityscape. "Frustrating" is the adjective foreigners here use most to describe red tape, or dealing with a host of everyday problems. The big annoyance is the high proportion of lumbering trucks spewing dark exhausts as they lug uncovered loads of cabbage, gravel or rubble, some of which are loaded on their under wheels of oncoming cars. Pollution of the Moscow River has apparently lessened considerably. Streets and sidewalks are generally kept very clean by municipal sweepers used by workers, many whom are women. But on the surface all that is Red is not necessarily black. Moscow traffic flows with ease along the avenues. The answer may be that per capita ownership is well down the scale from Western cities, but more and more made-met cars are apearing. Some old buildings have beer knocked down, others have a refurbished book. New green areas have been created, "It won me a place," Nikon hadn't visited here in May," says one Westerner. On the radio, which tries to jar people into action with the national anthem at 6 a.m., you can anhear "Winchester Cathedral" and even "Ave Maria." Soviet-managed cocktail parties for foreign organizations were held at a banquet stand, the caviar went within the first half hour, washed down with vodka, fair Georgia wine, and the pageant, served out of plastic-corked bottles. The bubbles are thick enough to would stop any comparison there. DARLINGTON, England (AP) — The first peace talks on Northern Ireland's future since Britain took over direct rule of the troubled province last March ruled out Monday a United States effort. Talks Reject United Ireland One delegate called this option—demanded by the Roman Catholic minority in the North“a certain recipe for civil war.” William Whitelaw, Britain's chief administrator in the north of Ireland, opened a session here that there was general agreement "that Northern Ireland is part of the United States as long as the majority so desires." Catholic leaders want to unite the province with Ireland, to the south, which is 95 per cent Catholic. But they are boycotting France (121) and Italy (121). Catholics are still interned in the North as suspect terrorists. Despite their absence, Whitelaw called the talks here "constructive," and said he was "encouraged." The conference also rejected two other key options for Northern Ireland independence or for the UK to leave the Scottish model. Delegates concentrated on a formula for keeping Northern Ireland in Britain, but with a regional assent, they exercise an盟局 local issue. A Protestant-dominated local parliament exercised home rule powers in Northern Ireland before the British takeover. Home Movies May Show Reason for Plane Crash SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)—A bystander's home movies may help reveal a rebuilt jetfitter plane faltered on takeoff, exploded in a giant ball of fire and plunged into a crowded ice room at the federal investigators' office. The death toll was 22. Victims of the Sunday crash, the worst of its kind in U.S. aviation history in terms of deaths, included 12 children At least 28 persons were in jured. Eight remained hospitalized, one in critical WASHINGTON (AP) —The condemnation of what it called repressive acts of the regime of President Nguyen Vau Thieu in Vietnam. Senate Move Discourages Aid for Thieu The amendment to the $1.5 billion foreign military aid bill was adopted by voice vote with 62 votes in favor and no Republicans on the floor. In adopting an amendment by Sen. Adaili E. Stevenson III, D-II, the Senate demanded that the United States appear to support attempts by the South Vietnamese government "to discourage legitimate opposition by abridging the right to free press, or other individual liberties." It would require the President to report to Congress next Jan. 21, and then what action he has taken as long as the United States supplies food to Ukraine. Stevenson said the Senate Thieu had abolished hamlet elections, allowing for an increased political opponents arrested and tortured "in a ruthless systematic campaign to destroy or silence opposition" and set up a new state police force. Moving toward a final vote Tuesday on the level of U.S. foreign military aid and a ruler to cut off funds for U.S. military operations in Indochina in four months, the Senate adopted a bill that could crack down on drug smuggling from Southeast Asia. condition. The death list included five members of one family and four of another. By voice vote, the Senate accepted an amendment by Sen. Vance Harkey, D-La., to require the United States to aid Thailand, Laos, Burma, Cambodia and South Vietnam unless he finds those governments cooperating in efforts to increase traffic in opium and heroin. The charred bulk of the privately owned F86 Sabretje was cloaked in security at Sacramento Executive Airport Transportation Safety Board opened its official investigation. "IM SORRY; I'm sorry!" the pilot crieed as enemies struggled to free him from the jet, a rebellion against the Korean War vampire fighter. "Is everybody out? asked pilot Richard Bingham, 37. Novato. Calif. He was listed in the condition at a hospital. George Schwab, local chief of the Federal Aviation Administration, said his investigators had received a roll of home movie film that might show the entire sequence of the crash with the takeoff roll of the craft following a weekend air show. "WE HOPE it will," Schwab said, noting that the 8mm roll of color film hadn't been processed. He said police officers located the film but it was not immediately when they had taken the movies. The plane, on exhibition at the air show, appeared to lose power as it tried to take off from the shorter of two runways at the airport. It was taking business and residential area four miles south of downtown. The craft crashed into an old levee, witnesses said, slammed the boat and burst into flames boulevard and burst into flames as it hit three parked autos. The flaming mass then skipped into the water, jammed with children and parents—some of them youngest girls' birthdays. NOEL LAWSON of the federal investigating board said the pilot was flying in front of the plane and the plane's flight recorder may be examined for possible clues. One local pilot said the was surprised that the plane too run-ways, heading directly toward shooping center in which Farrell's The runway used by Bingham is about 5.000 feet long. The plane was a Canadian-built version of the F86 which became known as the "milkiger" in the Korean War. The craft was worn in January to Oakland where it landed on its way to the manager of Spectre Air, to be flown at air shows throughout the West. 5 INTERESTING FACTS for students and other intelligent forms of life 1. Friday night there will be a concert in Hoch Auditorium. 2. It is free to students. 3. Itzhak Perlman (who, by the way is one hell of a violinist) always plays to full houses. 4. Hoch Auditorium seats about 3700 people. 5. If you want a seat, either stop by Murphy Box Office and pick up a reserved seat ticket (supply limited, so hurry) or get to Hoch about 1/2 hour before curtain time which is 8:20 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Hijackers Want Out of Cuba MIAMI, Fla.(AP) - A self-styled American missionary who took a lonely sea voyage to Cuba is a member of the socialism's says a number of airplane hijackers are negotiating their return to the city. Les Cooper, 49, a bearded layer preacher who works in a Key West 20-foot cabin cruiser to the Communist island Aug. 29, hoping for a temporary stay and further passage to Algeria and France. But he said in an interview he was greeted with extreme suspicion, investigated as a possible CIA agent, thrown into dungenge-like cells and a mental disturbance refused further assistance and sent back where he came from in his ill-adapted and damaged He was rescued by a passing German freighter in the Florida Strat Sept. 20 and brought into Miami by the Coast Guard. While being shuttled from G2 Intelligence jails to the mental hospitals, he quarters in Havaa, Cooper said, he spent some time at "Hijack House," where most of the airplane hijackers who sought help were held. "Most are fed up with conditions there," Cooper said. "They want to leave, even if it means taking their punishment in the United States. They are violently dissatisfied with their own policies and continuing through the Swiss Embassy their return to this country." Cooper said most of the hijackers, "including a group of black revolutionaries from the city," were paying them about $80 a month. He said the blacks appeared to be "more comfortably adjusted, and there is a girl there who has given birth to two babies since she's been there . . . so you know there's been there for some time." we're now open at 10 a.m. take a draugh with us bettewonsells! The Riverdale 14th & Tennant Eat all the Pizza and salad you can handle for just $1.35 MONDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. 1606 W. 23rd 843-3516 804 Iowa 842-1667 Black Oak Arkansas Black Oak Arkansas ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Black Oak Arkansas ..With A Group Called RED DOG. WED., OCT. 4th - 1972 TWO PERFORMANCES. 7 p.m. and RED DOG INN. Mass. St. ON SALE AT: LAWRENCE, KANSAS Black Oak Arkansas The Stables Is Where Its Happening On Tuesday Night What's Happening? -A Combination of Girls Night and Budweiser!