NOTICE One new lecture section of Geology 101 (MW 3-4:15 PM) with 7 laboratories Sections 542-548 has been opened. Laboratories are scheduled as follows: Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, January 13, 1988 542 M - 8 -10:50 543 M - 11-1:50 544 T - 11-1:50 545 T - 2 - 4:50 546 W - 11-1:50 547 W -11-1:50 548 R - 2 - 4:50 For more information 2451 (8:00 am - 5:00 call pm). 845- Scientists: Lasers may cleanse blood of infections, AIDS virus fi CD ETC SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR rncc STUDENTS WHO NED MONEY FOR COLLEGE Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. • We have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. • Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. • There’s money available for students who have been newspaper car riers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders, non-smokers . . . etc. • Results GUARANTEED. B L.. CALL ANYTIME For A Free Brochure 1 •800.782.8303 •4 n WASHINGTON (AP) — A Bay lor medical research team, financed in part by the Pentagon’s star wars anti-missile program, has concluded that lasers can be used to cleanse do nated blood of the deadly AIDS vi rus and other infectious agents. Dr. James L. “Les” Matthews said in an interview that his team had demonstrated that the combination of a non-toxic dye and laser light could destroy a number of viruses in blood — including the AIDS virus — without harming the blood itself. The team was from the staff of the Baylor University Medical Cen ter and Baylor Research Foundation in Dallas. The procedure for now remains an experimental one and has been tested only on a small scale in the laboratory, Matthews said. But with follow-up work, he said, it appears the laser-dye procedure could be “But we are confident now the (laser) exposure system does kill the AIDS virus (in the culture). ” Dr. Jaines L. ‘‘Les'’ Matthews, Baylor researcher Two children die after fall through ice 4W Victors ° splits . Wecia\S; FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL C41 COLOR PRINT FILM ONLY STANDARD 3 1 / 2 x5 SINGLE PRINTS 12 Exp. $1.99 24 Exp. $2.99 15 Disc $1.99 36 Exp. $2.99 OFFER GOOD JANUARY 15-20 1988 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES AT GOODWIN HALL & THE TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE IN THE MSC BOWIE (AP) — Two children who fell through thin ice into a North Texas pond died after being underwater as long as 35 minu tes. Doctors tried for two hours to re vive them. Timothy Williams, 9, and Amanda Bell, 8, were pulled from Joy Farm pond Monday evening af ter frantic efforts to Find them in the cold, deep water, authorities said. Doctors pronounced the youngsters dead shortlv alter 9 p in. at Bowie Memorial Hospital. Police officer Patrick Walters said he found the children after wrap ping a rope around his waist and dropping through one of the holes in the ice. Wallers said he “felt something on my lower leg” as he lowered himself through the hole. “I pulled it, and it was one of the kids,” he said. Walters called for help and had the child in his arms when some thing else brushed against his leg. It was the other youngster. The children’s mothers searched the area with flashlights before help arrived, said officer Gary Whitaker, the first person at the scene after the police dispatcher received a call at 6:10 p.m. After the children were brought to the bank. Department of Public Safety Trooper John 1 ellizzari ad ministered cardiopulmonary resus citation. used to cleanse blood at a “flow rate” of about a pint every 15 minutes — sufficient to allow its use by blood banks. That, in turn, could offer blood banks a virtually foolproof means of guaranteeing the safety of their do nated supplies. According to Matthews, the laser system so far has been tested on flowing blood containing the herpes simplex virus and on a flowing cul ture medium containing the AIDS virus. In those tests, measurements have been completed demonstrating the viral agents were completely de stroyed, he said. Blood containing the AIDS virus has also been put through the sys tem, but no measurements have been made after that type of experi ment to confirm the AIDS virus was completely killed, Matthews said. “But we are confident now the (laser) exposure system does kill the AIDS \irus (in the culture) and also that the presence of blood doesn’t interfere with the effectiveness of the system,’’ he said. greater extent than surrounding tis sue or cells. If the dye-laden tumors or cells are then “irradiated” with laser light, a little-understood chemical process is set off that destroys the viral cells, the researcher said. Matthews said he and seven col leagues began their work by experi menting with the dye-laser killing combination on the herpes simplex virus in a standing culture. Experiments then were begun us ing the laser on herpes in a culture medium as it flowed through a tube; then on flowing blood with the herpes virus, and then on flowing culture mediums with the AIDS vi- “However, we have additional tests to perform,” he said. “We re gard this as a model system that we propose to develop further. Our guess is that it will take at least three years, and maybe up to five years at the most, to refine.” The new procedure, under devel opment since 1984, takes advantage of the fact that tumors and certain viral cells absorb or retain dyes to a The tests with the herpes virus, which serves as an excellent model, demonstrated the laser-dye combi nation can provide “a 100 percent vi ral kill without seeing any evidence of damage to the normal blood el ements,” Matthews said. Besides the herpes and AIDS vi ruses, the technioue also has been successfully testeci on measles and another virus known as CMY, or cy tomegalovirus, Matthews said. A scientific paper written by Mat thews and his team explaining the work was published Tuesday in “Transfusion,” the journal of the American Association of Blood Banks. Defense Department officials had disclosed the research three months ago in discussing beneficial “spin- oir programs, but Mattfo dined interviews pending : i tion of the paper) He * speak Monday. AIDS — acquired immurj ciency s\ ndrome — is a fat that cripples the body’s protect itself against infect) cure has been found. AccoJ the Centers for Disease CoJ AIDS epidemic in the L'nitel has just surpassed the 50i mark. 1 he disease can be trail through tainted blood dJ and for that reason, the Rt| and other blood-collectionc lions now routinely screen nated blood for the virus. Recent medical researchit-j howev er, it is possible forail show no sign of the diseaseft months af ter he is first expo*! I : i< - possibility that n associated AIDS mav result! blood unit . . . that tested | makes it imperative that as effective means of viral killinj veloped," Matthews’ pape:[ “The system reported heitj promise as an effective apprj this problem.” | Matthews said the Perl Strategic Defense Initiativei| zation is providing Baviorr $500,000 a year for wort | blood-cleansing si tidy other projects involving then application ol laser technolot also are being explored fort The Star Wars funding! crucial in the ef fort to refiuec blood-cleansing system bed will allow the researchers w ith a device known as a ltd iron laser, Matthews said. Such a laser can be tuned] duce beams of concentrated! different wavelengths and! vastlv simplifying ex peril! said. 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