Page 14AThe Battalion/Friday, November 1, 1985 MSC CEPHEID ai 7:30 p.m. ai nee presentation at 2 i “THX*11S8” m 701 Rudder. DATA PR0CES3ING MAJSfA^jcuwnit^ * 1 will have a CDPJReview 8:30^12 iis l56 Blocker. ; . IT TAZZ RAJVOj will ' ^ At 4 n-m in M5if^ TAMU SPORTS CAR CLURi will have Autocross Registra tion at 9 a.m. in Zachry parking lot. Entry fee $5 members, $8 non-members. , ; a' ' ^ > \] A'"?:; ''■> " ^ A || Heart recipient gets possibly fatal illness Associated Press HERSHEY, Pa. — A man who re ceived a human heart after living for 11 days with the Penn State artificial heart has an inflamed pancreas, a potentially fatal condition, a medical spokesman said Wednesday. Anthony Mandia, who underwent a heart transplant on Monday, was listed in critical condition and was downgraded from stable to unstable, said Dr. John W. Burnside, a Milton S. Hershey Medical Center spokes man. Doctors had detected elevated lev els of a digestive enzyme, amylase, produced by the pancreas before the transplant. After the level kept rising, an ul trasound scan of the 44-year-old pa tient’s abdomen showed swelling in the pancreas, and doctors said it in dicated inflammation. “It’s very serious; it’s unex pected,” Burnside said Wednesday night, adding that pancreatitis is po tentially fatal. Doctors had “no real good idea” why the condition developed, he said. To treat the condition, doctors are collecting and draining stomach se cretions through a tube, are not al lowing Mandia any solid food and are maintaining “careful fluid man agement.” Mandia, 44, is on a respirator, and was placed for a time on kidney di alysis because of diminished urine output and elevated potassium levels in his body, doctors said. Carl Andrews, another hospital spokesman, said the heighteneef po tassium level could stem from the drug Mandia is getting to prevent his body from rejecting his new heart. In Pittsburgh, Thomas J. Gai- dosh, who survived four days on a Jarvik-7 artificial heart, was listed in serious condition, an improvement over Tuesday, when he was in crit ical condition. Study: Oral contraceptives don’t increase cancer risk Associated Press WASHINGTON — A major study involving more than 4,000 women found that young women who used oral contraceptives are at no greater risk of developing breast cancer than those who never used the pills, researchers reported Thursday. Scientists from the federal Cen ters for Disease Control and the Na tional Institutes of Health said the findings of no increased breast can cer risk were true regardless of the age at which women started using the pills or how long they used them. “For women less than 45 (years old), pill use for the last 20 years has had no effect on the aggregate rate of breast cancer,” said Dr. Bruce V. Stadel of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Devel opment, the study coordinator. The study results, published in the Nov. 2 issue of the British medi cal journal The Lancet, contrast with those of two smaller studies pub lished in 1983 which said there was increased breast cancer risk asso ciated with pill use. The issue of a breast cancer-birth control pill link has been a point of disagreement for more than a de cade, with conflicting studies point ing either way. An editorial published in the jour nal said the new study, despite its size, may not resolve the issue. There may be a long latency pe riod bef ore any increased breast can cer risk from contraceptive use be comes evident, said tne editorial, and future studies are needed. Hostages will not be surrendered (continued from page 1) in Tunis. But Buckley’s body has not been found, and American officials have said they cannot confirm the claim. Musawi said in an interview Wednesday that he was not involved in the kidnappings or in Islamic Ji had. But his group shares some of the strident anti-American philoso phy of the shadowy extremists and nas similar links with Ayatollah Ru- hollah Khomeini’s revolutionary Iran. “I’m against the kidnapping of in nocent people,” he said in nis heavily guarded home in Baalbek, an an cient Roman town in the Syrian-con trolled Bekaa Valley of east Leb anon. The five missing Americans are a journalist, an academic, a librarian, a Roman Catholic priest and a hospital administrator. The American hostages are: • Peter Kilburn, 60, of San Fran cisco, Calif., librarian at the Ameri can University of Beirut, missing since Dec. 3, 1984. • The Rev. Lawrence Jenco, 50, a Roman Catholic priest of Joliet, HI., kidnapped last Jan. 8. • 1 erry Anderson, 38, chief Mid dle East correspondent for The As sociated Press, a native of Lorain, Ohio, kidnapped in west Beirut on March 16. • David Jacobsen, 54, of Hunt ington Beach, Calif., director of the American University Hospital in Beirut, abducted May 28. • Thomas Sutherland, 54, of Fort Collins, Colo., Scottish-born dean of agriculture at the American Univer sity, on leave from Colorado State University. He was kidnapped June Detroit troubled by Devil’s Night arsonists Associated Press DETROIT — At least 175 fires broke out Wednesday night despite increased efforts by the city and ci vilian volunteers to keep Devil’s Night arsonists from celebrating an other rite of destruction, the mayor said. Mayor Coleman Young said the blazes, which were reported to police between 1 a.m. and 10 p.m., were down 29 percent from the 248 fires reported at the same time last year. “I expect that we turned the cor ner on tnis,” Young told reporters at Detroit police headquarters. “It’s been a real mass effort of volunteers. We think it (the city’s crackdown) has been a success.” Young had canceled all leaves for 4,400 city police officers and 1,280 firefighters and put trash collectors, meter readers and even political ap pointees on patrol. “It’s hot, real hot. That’s what we’ve been hearing,” said a fire de partment dispatcher in suburban East Detroit. “They’ve got all their engines and ladders committed. It’s keeping them (Detroit firefighters) very busy. They haven’t called us, but we’re waiting,” said the dispatcher, who did not give his name. Resident Michael Clark said he put out a small fire in a vacant lot across from his home on the city’s east side about 6:30 p.m. “It ain’t like it used to be,” said Clark, 31. “We used to call this ‘gar bage can night.’ We go around and turn over garbage cans, throw eggs, soap up windows, stuff like that. When you start burning up houses and garages, it’s crazy.” The night before Halloween, tra ditional time of youthful pranks, ex ploded into an orgy of arson in De troit two years ago. Overtaxed firefighters answered 553 calls in the 48 hours before Halloween 1983. One person died in the fires that year. CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER 40 LANES League & Open Bowling Family Entertainment Bar & Snack Bar 701 University Dr E 260-918< 24 HOUR COPY STOP OCX 31 -NOT 3 'S Moonftgtrt Madness Marathon 201 College Main 846-8721 Address for Success • Convenient Southwest Pkwy lo cation • Peaceful setting • 1 Br/1 Ba and 2 Br/IVs Ba We’ve got your apartment home and we’ve got your price! Come in to day! Limited offer! Office hours: OakwoodAph M-F 8:30-5.00 696-9100 ^ Number One in Aggieland the Battalion Friday, Saturday and Sunday Friday, Saturday & Sunday take an extra 25% off the clearance price of selected items now marked down at Dillard’s. HERE’S HOW IT WORKS Original price Marked-down price Take an additional 25% off You pay only: $60.00 $29.99 (-) $ 7.50 $22.49 Shop early for best selection. Sorry, no mail or phone orders. Dillard s