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                        SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                  PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a)
                    OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


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                         NORTHFIELD LABORATORIES INC.

                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

                              C. ROBERT COATES
                              ----------------

     (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if other than the Registrant)


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     3)     Filing Party: C. Robert Coates
     4)     Date Filed: August 20, 2002

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Press Release

SOURCE: C. Robert Coates

Zengen Sees Potential in Northfield's PolyHeme as Drug Transport Vehicle; Shares
its Interest with Independent Director Candidates Coates, Williams

LAKE FOREST, Ill., August 20 -- PolyHeme, the blood substitute under development
by Northfield Laboratories Inc. (Nasdaq: NFLD), has yet to win approval from the
Food  and  Drug Administration, but it already has its admirers, say Coates  and
Williams.  Among  them  is  Zengen Inc., a biopharmaceutical  company  based  in
Woodland Hills, Calif.

Zengen, which is focused on discovering, developing and commercializing products
to  treat  and  prevent infection and inflammation through  application  of  its
patented  peptide  technologies, is impressed with PolyHeme's ability  to  carry
oxygen and restore blood volume without the risk of transmitting disease.

"We  contacted  Northfield  about a year ago to explore  ways  of  marrying  our
technology  with PolyHeme, but we never got a response from the  company,"  said
James  Lipton, Zengen's chief scientific officer and chairman of its  Scientific
Advisory Board.

When  Lipton  learned that C. Robert Coates and Bert Williams  were  running  as
independent  candidates  for Northfield's board of directors  and  were  seeking
partners for PolyHeme, he made his interest known to them.

Lipton  said  he  is  intrigued by the idea of using  a  polymerized  hemoglobin
product as a vehicle for transporting drugs, particularly in cases of sepsis,  a
condition caused by the presence of microorganisms or their toxins in the tissue
or the bloodstream. "It might be possible for PolyHeme to be used as an agent to
deliver  our  anti-infective and anti-inflammatory medication. No one  has  done
this,"  Lipton  said. "Alternatively, Zengen's proprietary technology  could  be
used  as  an  adjunct  to delivery of PolyHeme, against possible  infection  and
inflammation.  Both  inflammation and infection are common  in  cases  of  blood
loss."

Lipton  also  likes what he has heard about PolyHeme based on trial results:  it
does not set off allergic reactions, and it is cost-effective to use.

The  scientist  said PolyHeme also might work well in situations that  call  for
massive delivery of drugs. "It's possible you could link this product with  beta
blockers, for example, to control bleeders," Lipton said.

He  noted  that  competitors are making headway but expressed  caution  about  a
bovine-derived product such as the one Biopure is developing. "We'd be happy  to
work  with Northfield. I still think we could do something beneficial together,"
Lipton concluded.

James  Lipton  has  held his position at Zengen since Jan. 1,  2000,  after  the
company's  merger  with  Abitis LLC, a biotechnology  research  and  development
company  he  co-founded  with  Matthew Lipton. He  holds  multiple  neuropeptide
patents. From 1966 to 2000, Dr. Lipton held positions at the University of Texas
-  Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, including professor of physiology  and
anesthesiology and pain management.

Lipton  currently  serves  as visiting professor of  internal  medicine  at  the
University  of  Milan Medical School in Milan, Italy. He has had  more  than  20
years'  experience  in  the  pharmaceutical industry  and  has  participated  in
numerous  research  projects funded by the National  Institute  of  Health,  the
Department of Defense, health foundations and state governments. Over the  years
Lipton has lectured frequently and written hundreds of scientific articles.

Raising  the  profile  of  PolyHeme is part of the action  plan  of  Coates  and
Williams. In addition, the candidates vow to:

     - Find  a  major pharmaceutical partner for Northfield to provide cash  and
       experienced management to get PolyHeme approved by the FDA;

     - Ask Northfield to partner with companies to extend possible  applications
       of PolyHeme as a transport delivery mechanism for other drugs;

     - Work  with the Department of Defense and the Homeland Security Agency  to
       explore the possibility of stockpiling  PolyHeme  as  a  safe,  effective
       blood substitute for emergencies;

     - Gain representation on Northfield's board as independent  directors;  and

     - Keep investors informed of Northfield news.


Contact Information

If  you  are  a  Northfield shareholder with comments, suggestions or  questions
about  receiving a Coates-Williams proxy for the Sept. 13 annual meeting, please
call Simon Goldberg of the Robert Coates Group at 1-800-295-0841, extension  240
or e-mail us at sgoldberg@rcoates.com .

SOURCE: C. Robert Coates