Smallpox shots made students sick by Derek Rose New York Daily News Healthy college students injected with the small pox vaccine in clinical trials have developed aches, pains and fevers that laid them up for days. The symptoms have been temporary, but they un derscore the dangers of the vaccination strategy un der consideration by the Bush administration, ex perts say. Unlike other vaccinations, smallpox immuniza tions involve injections of a live virus called vaccina that can cause flu-like symptoms, rashes, sores and more serious ailments. In extremely rare cases, the vaccine can kill. "You get swelling, you get tenderness, you can get pain, you may get chills," said Dr. William Schaffner of Vanderbilt University in Nashville. "Getting a smallpox vaccine is not like getting a teta nus shot" As the White House considers reintroducing the inoculations 30 years after they were stopped, the National Institutes of Health is sponsoring a study of the smallpox vaccine at Vanderbilt and three other research centers. Because vaccina supplies are limited, the study is aimed at determining whether a diluted version is still effective. The vaccination involves 15 pricks in the upper arm with a needle injecting the vaccina virus. A pus-tilled scab develops within a week that must must be kept covered to avoid spreading the virus to other body parts - or other people. The dressings also must be changed daily and the scab monitored carefully. Study participants said they developed symptoms in about a week, ranging from nausea, fatigue, itchi ness and pain where they got the shot. “At one point I was like, ‘Just cut it off, just cut my arm off! Be done with it!” said Elizabeth Forrester, 26, a Vanderbilt doctoral student vacci nated Oct. 14. “It just hurts, it aches and it's not fun.” Forrester missed a day and a half of work a week after being immunized, but others' symptoms were less severe. Dr. Patricia Winokur of the University of lowa estimated that about a quarter of the 218 people vac ! 'dnaleid BPwofk'6t ichodl.' A few ‘flossed two 61 ' *th& Peninsula O n .Presque lsle_ Pennsylvania 9464) Tuesday- All U Can Eat Wings 5-10 Only $9.99 Thursday- College Night 10% off food with College ID Saturday's i Specials Specials Special Presque Isle Location ONLY 836-WING Supreme Court enters debate over affirmative action on campus by Shannon McCaffrey Knight Ridder Newspapers The Supreme Court set the stage Monday for what could be a landmark ruling on affirmative action, agreeing to decide whether universities can use race as a factor in admitting students. The high court in recent years has chipped away at government affirma tive-action programs dealing with such things as government contracts. But it has not spoken on the use of racial pref erences in higher education in more than two decades, which leaves legal experl wondering how it will rule. At issue is whether the University of Mich gan in Ann Arbor and its law school violated the Constitution by rejecting white applicants while accepting minority students with lower grades and test scores. If the high court strikes down such public university programs, it would be a near-fatal blow to the use of affirmative action, which was conceived of as a remedy for discrimina tion. If it supports the university, it could pro vide a blueprint for how such programs should work. James Cott, associate director of the NAACP's Legal Defense and Education Fund, called the pending challenges to affirmative action, both involving the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, the "most important civil rights cases to come before this court in a quarter of a century." The high court's rulings in the Michigan cases will apply directly only to public col leges and universities. But experts say all schools, public or private, that use race-con scious admission policies are likely to take cues from the high court’s ruling. "Whatever the court decides, it will have a profound impact on who goes to colleges and graduate schools in this country. It will have a profound impact on the face and complex- (s Specials Specials mawrnjL Ti Til llMllil Ifl 'mMVIPWS f®RV9 Friday, December 13, 2002 “Whatever the court decides, it will have a profound impact on who goes to colleges and graduate schools in this country. It will have a profound im pact on the face and complexion of higher education. ” -Mark Rahdert, a constitutional la w professor and associate dean at Temple University's Beasley School of Law in Philadelphia. ion of higher education," said Mark Rahdert, a constitutional law professor and associate dean at Temple University's Beasley School of Law in Philadelphia. The white students who were turned away claim they were discriminated against in vio lation of federal civil-rights laws that ban race-based bias, and the Constitution's guar antee of equal legal protection. The univer sity says its intention was simply the enhanced educational benefit that comes when students of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds live and learn together. The law school case involved Barbara Grutter, a businesswoman who was denied ad mission to the Michigan law school in 1996 when she was 43. She claims that minority applicants received preferential treatment, and she still wants to attend law school at Michi gan. In the second case, which involves under graduates, Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher argue that they also were denied admission because of race. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled in favor of the University of Michigan's law school in a 5-4 decision handed down in May. The court heard argu ments in the undergraduate case but has yet to rule. The high court's decision to hear that undergraduate case before the lower federal court had ruled is unusual. ! Urine your bktxtts, ttvough • imoklxnay ayatem of actors* * Mid inaJjftM predictions about you! Chooaea ruport torn throa dßfeiwif categories; ! IS THIS A GOOD YEAR FOR YOUR LO||| LIFE? ■ WHAT ARE THE BEST YEARS FOR MARRIAGE? iWHEN ARE YOU DUE TO COME INTO SOME ■MONEY?. I WHY DID YOU CHANGE JOBS LAST YEAR?. ■DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SOME PEOPLE ARE {AFRAID OF COMMITMENT AND OTHERS ALWAYS PUT I WORK BEFORE LOVE?. ... ni!}!tiisooooo tmvt-sw j"A$ a dent, I have been consistently amazed at the accuracy of the predictions iusing this system* ■Peter Hammond- producer Entertainment tonight PRICELESS INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR FUTURE IN A MATTER OF MINUTES! jmygm weamm f'-M sumrcmniDAiT IDV* CMOS-ta MOBS OESTW CAW*.« mSESr IY&kK student discounts available* dwoM to ankr 1 rapart«lso.oo efm»* to ontor 2 raparti«tao.oo chooMtoantor 3 rapdrfc»f 130.00 ‘Mf S 3 for (tapping Ibitt® The Behrend Beacon Attorneys for Grutter called on the Supreme Court to clear up confusion from its 1978 ruling on affirmative ac tion. In that case, Allan Bakke, a white man, was turned down for admission to medical school at the University of Cali fornia at Davis while minorities with lower scores were admitted. The school reserved 16 percent of its admission slots for minorities. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that such racial quotas were imper- missible. But Justice Lewis Powell wrote in a separate opinion that schools could con sider race as long as they did not use quotas. Universities often have used the late justice's opinion as a benchmark for affirmative action. It also has been criticized as vague. Grutter's attorneys said there was a "sharp and substantial disagreement in the lower courts about the lawfulness of using race and ethnicity as a factor in admissions to achieve a ‘diverse’ student body." They noted decisions in the U.S. Court of Appeals’ sth and 11th circuits that ruled against affirmative action plans at public uni versities. University of Michigan President Mary Sue Coleman said overturning the Bakke ruling "could result in the immediate resegregation of our nation's top universities, both public and private." Terry Pell, president of the Washington based Center for Individual Rights, a conser vative public-interest law institute that is rep resenting the white applicants, acknowledged that minority enrollment dropped sharply at flagship public universities in Texas and Cali fornia after race was eliminated as a factor in admission. But those numbers are rebound ing, proof that racial preferences are not needed to secure minorities’ educational op portunities, Pell said. . The court is expected to rulp by the end pf June. ——————— T Page