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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 66

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
66
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE MARCH 23, 1958 Detection Can Save Lives 432 Attend Tax Seminar At Medford A Tax Seminar, believed to be the first of ita kind to be held Efforts Stepped Up to Find Cancer Test by a bank in the Greater Boston area, waa held by the Depositors and mnder Dr. EldneT Farber It 1-arr, nrcfstnr RIntr.aT TTar-UruSt CO. Of Jiedfora at 1U Dsn-; IAN MENZIES La ft year 4S.000 different drag! medical researchers together in wert tested th.s country to this medical war against major If wck aould detected try and find ene which might be disease. Children'. Cance, Research Foun.

v.rd. on the relationship of hor-55 HiRtl Medord- dation. mones to the lifa cycle of the The tax seminar attracted about i i432 Mrifr)rd husinemmen nri 1 earlier seanr nor live could be the answer. The program Is being directed mainly through fundi from the laved. Several have showed protniie are now beir.g further tested.

Researchers at Boston University! weir wives. and Tuftt are also workir.sr in this 7" Thij year another 40,000 chem- Xew techniques are being used 1 ederal and itate tax require- r'pTt Uf if i go tnrougn tut vast to PnhIi in surgery to catch cancer In its testing programs in which private CHEMOTHERAPY Some 83 early stages, such aa sue af tha commissioner if corporations and percent of the total funds will be heart-lung machine at Tulane taxations, and George H. Lemay. devoted to this research which is University in cancer In the limb. chief of the intelligence division which receives money from Con-IT ess.

This year's appropriation ru 156,000,000. industry it p.ayir.g a large part. There la tome criticism cf this method by certain medical group but 4ber researchers believe In addition tome 13 000.000 is' 'ice in Massachusetts. sy up their effort to find a SuapJa test which will reveal all forms of cancer. What ii being fought it something limilar to the Schick blood test for diphtheria or the tuberculin tet The current Papanicolaou test although extremely useful, if only good for two areas cf cancer, lung and uterus.

The earch for a simple diagnostic test, however, will be only Because too cowerfull chemicals hof. devoted to research by the Amer-i in Boston, and elfewhere. Drs. attorney, introduced the If1? 1" ika," Calce.r JSoci'tT, ad "other Charles Huggmi and Jack D. Mc- can kill bone marrow which pro-! speakers and served as moderator.

u7 jmuuon oy jntuviouai private iouq- Canny have done notable research duces blood, as well as killing the! HealeT explained Federal and blotici i and thr tragi wticfc Rations and groups. fat the University of Chicago in cancer, new ideas are being tried1 Laurence P. Harrington, presi- have saved lives. Tne National Cancer Ir.stttut'!. hormones and other chemical, here.

dent of the bank, opened the semi- They feel no Bsstibla axDroach researc? money will be five- One has recently shown encourag-i Experiments hav been tried In nar and Paul G. Counihan. the cne line of attack in the r.ouid be left untried. pronged ten year. Otner research jing results.

Staking out bona marrow while state requirements and procedures' ciawive iromai a5auii on cancer Many leading medical scientists teea s-nuiariy tut- iJiAU.MJSIS Some six percent the chemical is sent through the to the audience. Lemay amplified! ver undertaken in thu country, believe in fact that tha cure or total runos will go toward seefc-'body to kill the cancer, then remarks and discussed cancer will come through tome1 cALhES OF CAACEK Soma 30 ing a simple diagnostic test for all turning the bone marrow later, "the reorganization of the Internal as yet undiscovered chemical or Frr.t of the total will be de- forms of cancer. But at the present time there Is Revenue Service and the methods combination of chemicals. voted to research in this area. This WHAT IS CANCER Some 33 no large amount of bone marrow; being taken to identify tax The drugs which showed promise mcludes investigation cf viruses, percent of funds will be spent on available from storaee banks.

'evaders, as a result of list rears mass mog, food additives, smoking, etc. this type of research which is be- Should this method be proved! Among those attending were More thaa $64 million la being pent on research alone to solve this fiddle who origin are to the baa af life Itself ita Tha aatlook Is ptimifrtie. testing are now undergoing further 1" leading work on viruses In ir.g carried out across the nation, feasible, however, it could be used William A. Cummings, chief of the DEPOSITORS TRUST COMPANY TAX SEMINAR to R. John Barbo, director; Laurence P.

Harrington, chairman of the board and president; Anthony R. Cataldo, vice president and director; George H. Lemay, chief of the Intelligence Division of the U. S. Internal Revenue for Massachusetts; Joseph P.

Healey, State Commissioner of Corporations and Taxation, and Paul G. Counihan, the bank's attorney. clinical tnais for toxicity 73 cancer is cemg Gone Dy Piooei ims oeais wit.1 the very base of to destroy many forms of cancer, state income tax division; John E. clinical ctnteri throughout the Pze winning chemist. Dr.

Wen-cancer the cell itself which in! The pace of research and the'Sullivan, Federal supervisor of country. staniey at tre university cancer goes wild. calibre of medical scientists taking small business loans in Massachu Already people are being cured eertain types of cancer byi broad chemotherapy attack or Chicago. (Here viruses are not MISCELLANEOUS Three per-part in the joint effort all adds! setts: Henry Craft, treasurer of the surgery in combination with 11 telr'Z directed oy tne -ationai t.ie same ijpe mat cent oi money. This includes re-; up to an exciting and optimistic Medford Cooperative Bank; Earl radiation.

Cancer Institute's Cancer Cnemo- one thinks of in Asian fhU search which might have aomeloutlook to mastering the mysteries Munro, president of the Medford bearing on cancer such as the im-'of cancer. Savings Bank: John B. Kennedy, Robert Barclay, treasurer, West the Depositors Trust R. John Through tha se of drugs per-aPT National Committee fns suffennir from leukemia. td by Dr.

Sidney Farber, director Other prominent work in the'portant and fundamental work! This concerted effort has devel- city manager of Medford: George: Medford Cooperative Bank; An- Barbo, director of the Depositors aneer of the breast and prostate of the Children's Cancer Research cause of cancer is being con-ibeing done by Dr. Carroll Wil-joped within four short years. P. Hassett, city clerk of tnony R. Cataldo, vice president cuirusi co.

nd Hodgkin's disease have been Foundation, Boston. ducted by Dr. Shields Warren in freatly improved snd given addi- But chemotherapy is just one of! his Cancer Besearch Institute at lional years of life. 'the research lines which has drawn New England Deaconess Hospital billion in 1960 with tha added capacity of the jet fleets. Thia "Airline Indnstry Needs Creative Selling Now" represents an increase of 43.6 per snlt in a nrofitable load factor to i cannot stand on percent volume.

Imaginative and dynamic mer- Sl.9 billion for new aircraft for at both mbrton's stores help pav for the jets," he says. We must create new business and i "For 20 years the industry has, a lot of it" Sternberg said, avoided fare increases and at thei An understandine of the rela' cent," lie says. "Even to hold our own or equal our present load factor, in thesa next three years, the industry must increase its revenue passenger mile sales to an average rate of 3.3 billion a year more than 37.5 per year increase over the aver effort will go farl delivery by 1961; commitments toward solving the economic prob-which were necessary to keep the lems now facing the nation's air United States air transport Indus-transport industry, according to try in the forefront of world air Waiter Sternberg, senior vice pres- progress. BACK l.i, U4 ecrtSTCN STST TATJCK. if same time Jias absorbed rising! tive capacities of the new jets may labor and other costs with the be reached by a comparison of the economies produced by increases' seat-mile-per-hour capacity of the in volume." Sternberg and the DC-8.

Each of the TOMORROW 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M. men saies ana puDiic re-i lations cf National Airlines.

Sternberg, veteran airline sales age increase of 2.4 billions from "But the low costs produced by, latter will produce more thani950 to 1957," says Sternberg. from executive, is credited with volume cannot produce low fares three times the capacity of a DC-7. one of the country's largest collections! "Higher speeds and larger passenger capacity of the new jet aircraft to be delivered in the next three years, ill combine to increase greatly the industry's inventory of available seat miles which mast be sold to produce revenue passenger miles and re- must again broaden our sales outlook in search for new customers to fill those seats and produce the revenue passenger miles vital to continued progress," he declares. pioneering volume merchandising of Florida Summer package vacations with National's "Millionaire's Vacation on a Piggy Bank "The airline industry needs creative sellir.e more than ever he- uniess enougn oi me prouuet is according to Sternberg sold." Therefore in the face ofi "Industry figures show an esti-the capacity-cost ratio we face to- mated production of 39 9 billion day and to an even greater ex-lavailable seat miles in 1957 and tent will face in the jet age wea big jump to production of 57 3 says Sternberg. "Revenues have not increased as fast -as operating costs which have risen I at a pace which now threatens to, LI 15 1 0 wipe out profits.

I till DIlX "The airlines can be proud of OPEN 9 to 1:30. Fridays Till 9 P.M. II II I I I I II I I I I II II II II V. the performance which increased I 1 1 the eight billion revenue passenger Smiles flown on domestic trunk i lines in 1950 to a total cf 25 billion OI VI II Ct iiiiTOflwe asKeororii iUlsaJUllllMJ in 1957, he points out. "This represents an increase of 17 billion i passenger miles over a seven year period, at an average rate of in crease of about 2.4 billion per BBD year." "However," says Sternberg, "most airlines now face new com- I petition on their routes.

Many new and larger aircraft have been added to the air transport fleet illiilPI 1 i The consequence is that industry wide load factors, or the percent age of seats sold to tnose available for sale, have begun to ji here it is again! X. go-everywhere fyj 89th Yar him toeatioi Because of these new aircraft, air transport industry figures compiled by the government show that each month since July of 1957, the If! under FERDINAND family wnhlp A i load factor of the domestic trunk-lines has been lower than in the same month of the previous year," envo RtomheriJ "ATaintaininff mnA PhoM IA 7-1000 increasing the load factor is essen-j for htli any ti jrtir hirni furnishing iriblemi, season's foremost ft fashion drastically VV Wl price-smashed right when I i jtiai to a profitable operation and the continued progress of a sound, i healthy industry." "Now we are facing the big upward step into the jet age which looks considerably steeper at pres- ent than it did a little more than a year ago," Sternberg state. I As of Jan. 1. 1957, the airline Industry had committed a total cf to wear 1 it most! I designed to relieve back trouble Chess Notebook By LYMAN BURGESS Samuel Reshevsky, grandmaster of chess, will give a simultaneous exhibition at the Boylston Chess Club this afternoon beginning at 2:30.

Reshevsky is winding up his transcontinental tour and has been, as usual, remarkably successful. He has lost but four games in about 800 played. Last week Reshevsky notched scores of 24-0 and 30-0 on successive evenings at Fordham and Yeshiva. Reshevskv is said to be consid- ering competing in the Interzonal -S jTa j'yr rJr A Vr- 'A YX nriiiifliHifflfflhri Wyf. y.

tournament. Bobby Fischer, U.S. champion and Reshevsky qualified as American representatives. He-rt ia the latest on Fischer Bobby, in outpointing Reshevsky for tha United States championship at the age of 14, eclipsed anything previously accomplished at that in chess history name Morphy, Capablanca, Reshevsky himself, Pomar cr anybody you like! A reporter found Bobby shy! outside of chess. When questioned he shruss his shoulders, mumbles an answer in words of one syllable! and moves away.

He enjoys skat-: ing and skiing, but not school. keeps me away from He is 1 only an average scholar. not good at One of his teach-! ers said, "He never seems to be 1 properly attending. His thoughts built-in bedboord and doyMeoiIJll Sl'll'ik A ICATHtR FOR IVIRYONII A UATHW "i are always far away, on cness. When Fischer won the cham pionship, a reporter asked him, did i adjust to NL5 I I acme I i he now consider nimseu tne strong-! est Dlaver in the U.S.A.? "No." he trt white, a tn a COCOON STUES I ilssOt arhfMiSt SfiOC aTiffy aMH-o SvftvfS ,) t'f" lVSTOl)i kKMiXt itTMf5t I ot it fhls funtotdc collection cf I I toothtf cootl (fy imat pe tl I I ttwlllifif.

ft color oil ot bftoMiiolmg Coote youts eoily1 replied, "one tournament does not 'mean a lot." After a pause: "Maybe Reshevsky is better." Arthur Bisguier, former American champion, and William Lom-bardy, junior world champion, were the U.S. representatives in the recent Championship of the Americas tournament at Bogota. Panno of Argentina won. Lom-bardy tied for second and Bisguier tied for fourth. Here is a Bisguier win from the Bogota event No.

171 Queen's Gambit Declined JBedboarcl keeps Ui''j JCM spine straight. vrfngi rl Ml flof board. aZxT ill VI A Biuuicr Bumcru Biwuler Huroerei 21 BxN -Qi KI 122. P-KS i iONUSI BONUSI ji nit 55 mm mn 3. N-VihJ 4 B-Ni f-BS OxP P3 KK KB! .3.

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i CH NxNid I 1.1 Uri Also SIMMONS Famous BEAUTYREST hi hi K3 N4 N.I vjS K-M IT 1,4 a. II KB 40. hi Ad Klack resigned. JARK TREE Com In and see BACK CARE and BEAUTYREST in cur up-to-the-minute SLUMBER SHOP one of trie most complete selections of bedding to be seen anywhere. Plenty of Fret Parking in Municipal Parktng Lot 2 Minutes Walk to Store 2260 WASHINGTON ST.

conveniently located at Dudley St. F.TTA nmmanufi Students Oiler Play Saturday NOfTr STATION o' Po'k UCK (AY s' 8jtk PiKk.ng Oo'og. tritn'mf A fairy story pla, "The Princess in the Sleepme Wood." will be 5 Jot! eented by students of Emmanuel CHARGF. 8UDGf OR lAYAWAY vclfge Saturday, at tht Children's Wueum. Jamaica Plain at 2.30 pjn mis ii ii i-J.

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Pages Available:
4,495,484
Years Available:
1872-2024