' Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, May 31, 1983 Extensive use of pill may cause cancer Slowly but surely staff photo by Peter Rocha The students who had to register for classes on Monday may have thought time was standing still, but this photo taken with a one second exposure shows otherwise. At least these people are inside G. Rollie White Coliseum. The line for registration wound back around the swimming pool. Car wrecks church, fire damage results ' United Press International torium. HOUSTON — Police were Investigators said the driver seeking the driver of a car that of the car apparently was unhurt slammed into a church Sunday because he or she lied the scene and caused a pre-dawn fire that of the Airline Assembly of God destroyed the church’s audi- Church fire. United Press International A new study suggests a possi ble link between prolonged use of the birth control pill and a type of melanoma, the Universi ty of California, San Francisco, recently reported. The study, supported by funds from the National Cancer Institute, presents users of oral contraceptives with a new dilem ma when it comes to weighing risks of the pill against benefits. The report on research by Dr. Elizabeth Holly and associ ates has been accepted for publi cation in the Journal of the Na tional Cancer Institute. In view of the possible impli cations for users of the pill, the epidemiologist was asked what she would recommend to a daughter who wanted to use the birth control pill? “I would say weigh the risks against the benefits,” she said. “If you must use the pill, don’t use it for long, no more than five years. Generally, I would recom mend that a younger woman try to use another form of birth con trol,” she said. 0toom -Jfe- ■3»- Serving Luncheon Buffet Sunday through Friday | 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. £ | Delicious Food Beautiful View Open to the Public e “Quality First” vast** ^ i ^SOURCES oundoniy Mils nr i f ■ ' Read Phil Gramm’s mind. The thoughts of Phil Gramm, Congressman and economist, on inflation, deficits, the Chrysler bailout, hospital cost containment, and other important public policy issues. Preface by Vice President George Bush. A Fisher In stitute publication. □ "Economic analysis of the first order ... a consistent and courageous adherence to the principles of a free society . Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman. □ the ROLE OF GOVERNMENT IN A FREE SOCIETY A COLLECTION OF SPEECHES AND ARTICLES BY PHIL GRAMM. □ For a catalogue of other Fisher Institute public policy studies, write: The Fisher Institute, 6350 LBJ Freeway, Suite 183E, Dallas, TX 75240. Available in paperback @ $7.95 from Texas A&M Bookstore, Memorial Student Center, in College Station. Different advice was given by Dr. John A.H. Lee, who was asked the same question. Lee, a skin cancer expert, is professor of epidemiology at the Universi ty of Washington School of Pub lic Health in Seattle. He led a symposium on melanoma at the recent First World Conference Cancers of the Skin. “I don’t know that I would advise against use of the birth control pill,” he said. “There is the matter of risks and benefits, of trade-offs. “I would be most concerned that she be sensitized to the early signs of melanoma so she could spot it at an early stage. And that she had a doctor who knew that, too,” he said. Lee said when melanoma is caught at the early stage no one should die from it. He said a mole that enlarges or changes color often marks the early stage of melanoma. He suggested people on the birth control pill should be on the lookout for such changes. When one is noted, the next step is to see a doctor who is able to interpret the meaning of the alterations, Lee said. A bleeding mole is a third sign, but Lee said it is foolish to wait for that. In the United States 2 percent of cancers are accounted for by melanoma. The kind Holly found possibly associated with prolonged use of birth control pills is known as a superficial spreading type. It stays in the outermost layers of the skin for a long time. That is a characteristic that makes it easily treated by surgery when spotted in the very early stages, according to Lee. Holly’s study involved 87 Washington state women, rang ing in age from 37 to 74. The women were diagnosed as fering from malignant ma between 1976 and 19ii| The epidemiologist anii associates, Noel S. WeisiB!j Jonathan Lift;, also from University of Californias Francisco Departmentoflf miology and Internal! Health, interviewed tht women, asking about pi and reproductive history The women’s historiesi compared with those of women, a random sample s the same area. Holly said she found- women who had taken control pills for five yearsot ger had superficial spret melanoma than women win not take the pills. Her report said theincit cancer rates were even pronounced amongwomei had used the pill for lOyei longer. No effect was fe among women who had the pill for less thanfivec The scientists also I higher incidence of c among women who had first child after age 30,a mon observation amongt| miologists probing for con factors in the backgrourt: cancer patients. “This finding, together the link to birth control suggests that hormone i lances might playaroleins ficial spreading melane Holly said. Senators compromise on polling booth bill United Press International AUSTIN — Senators on opposite sides of a bill to allow voters to take written aids in the polling booth reached a delicate compromise on the measure Saturday, averting a filibuster that could have hopelessly mired remaining Senate busi ness. The dispute developed over Senate approval of a bill to re peal a state law which prohibits voters from taking written guides into the voting booth with them. The bill, authored by Rep. Debra Danburg, D-Houston, and already approved by the House, appeared on its way to final approval when Sen “Buster” Brown, R-Lake son, raised the threatofai ter against the measure, The bill was given tens approval on a voice vote the Senate rejected two a® ments which would have the bill applicable only in state’s most populous coun / a Di exj tivi To the vel Im To adc al a enc hui leai the me V Fo visi prc for phy dis< the riai fro hoi hist dui PI Th mg We Inr ally inf< If 3 col nal ENJOY EATING WELL, BUT HATE TO COOK OR BUY EXPENSIVE FOODS? {BEEFSTR0GAN0FF ^— AND MORE! SWEET AND SOUR PORK S CLAM CHOWDER * SWISS STEAK / Now you knoi4«« RETORT PACKAGING was invented by NASA to feed astronauts in space. Only 5 MINUTES in boiling water to cook — NEEDS NO REFRIGERATION! EXPENSIVE? $2.00 can feed 1-2 people. Call for free samples. After 5 p.m.: 775-2111 or 822-5523 United Press International! d Do Americans taketoorM sleeping pills? 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