THE BATTALION MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1980 Page 5 nation Allies’ sanctions doubted Sam expects you to pay taxes by Tuesday iat if wi j I just start d. "It* es, elinum; - atically ij| j t means li. United Press International lexpectii; WASHINGTON — Benjamin we can'tp Franklin once said, “In this world, is gointi nothing is certain but death and taxes.” Tuesday, Uncle Sam expects you to square up on the latter, wmntt Nearly 93 million American tax- Jtyers are expected to have mailed in their returns to the Internal Re venue Service or requested an ex tension by midnight Tuesday. * ^ JR Two out of every three already ; T cl11 have done their duty, and the reward I I j has been handsome in many cases ? ” with refunds averaging $590.53 — lla ' up $100 from a year ago. Most people who get refunds tend to file early returns, however, and the chances are that those who have waited this long to file know they may have to pay Uncle Sam. “People who owe money generally file later,” said IRS spokesman Larry Batdorf. He also said there are some in teresting trends this year, judging from the approximately 60 million forms that had been filed by April 4. — More Americans appear to be using the short form. — The average refund is up 20.5 percent, probably because inflation has pushed up mortgage interest rates, medical costs and other allow able deductions. — More taxpayers seem to be turning to IRS analysts for help in filling out the forms rather than using outside tax preparation firms. — The $1 contributions to the presidential campaign fund, which can be checked off on the tax form, have increased by 10.3 percent this year. It may surprise some to know that the dread of the American taxpayer — the audit — claims relatively few victims. “We’ll probably audit about 2 per cent of the returns,” Batdorf said. But he warned that those in the high er income brackets, $50,000 and greater, have the greatest chance of being called in. The decision is left up to the agen cy’s computer, which screens all re turns. Last year, there were 2.3 mil lion audits. Of those, 133,000 tax payers found out they had cheated themselves, and not the govern ment. IRS Commissioner Jerome Kurtz, in an interview appearing in the Cancer therapy "shrinks tumors . Any am* pewriter ■ 592. ■curate. Ale Notary M )G0LD ings,»«; c. Room ping Cur* ,, Bryan I kmv lance for & 365/nioiitlt licelv W i.M54. : bednx® 1 , BILLS K 64Wm> :e way ’ES jroom W said Villa W Villa 822-7$ United Press International HOUSTON — In a promising new approach to cancer treatment, a Baylor scientist has developed a way W modify the body’s system of im munity and direct natural defenses against marauding cancer cells. The blood-processing technique so far has produced dramatic results in killing cancer cells and shrinking mammary tumors in two-thirds of the dogs tested. ; Still ahead, however, are critical experiments to see if similar results occur in human breast cancer. W “The step from dog to human is a giant step, and must be taken with great caution,” said Dr. David S. Terman, associate professor of medi cine at the Baylor College of Medi cine. ( “From the intensive studies now ongoing in dogs, we should be able to identify the mechanism of this tumor-killing effect,” he said in an interview. “With these findings, as well as with adequate demonstration of safety, we could then begin to con ceive of an effective way of introduc ing this to humans.” Important to the study is that Ter- man’s results, reported in February issue of the Journal of Immunology, have just been duplicated by origin ally skeptical researchers at the gov ernment’s National Cancer Institute located outside of Washington, i “We’ve confirmed his findings of this phenomenon,” said Dr. Albert Deisseroth of the cancer institute. “I’ve looked at this question scien tifically and I believe that the obser vation of tumor regressions induced by the treatment is valid.” Dr. Subhash Bansal, who origin ated the concept when he was at the Medical College of Pennsylvania, re ported two years ago that similar treatment reduced tumor size in a single human patient with colon can cer. But the patient later died of the disease. Terman collaborated with Bansal then refined the technique and fol lowed up with detailed studies to de termine why it works, its safety and the best ways to use the treatment. Even if the complicated technical process works in humans, resear chers emphasize considerable work must be done before the treatment can be considered a new weapon in the war against cancer. The technique involves running an animal’s blood through a centri fuge to separate cells from plasma, and then passing the plasma through a special chamber after which it is mixed with the separated blood cells and returned to the body. Immunoglobulin, a protein also known as an antibody, sticks to heat- killed strain of bacteria contained in the chamber. Antibodies are key members of the body’s defenses against foreign substances. Some scientists believe the body recognizes that tumor cells, at least for some kinds of cancers, are foreign to the body and that the immune system produces antibodies to attack specific tumors. But, the theory goes, the proteins serving as the tumor identification markers —- the ones the antibodies recognize — are released in large numbers into the blood stream by the tumor cells. The antibodies then are swamped by this influx of marker proteins, called antigens, and never make it to the tumor. The immune complexes — the antibody-antigen combination — stick to the bacteria in the chamber and are removed from the blood. It may be that antibodies are produced or freed to go ahead and attack the tumor cell itself. One key question is why the pro cess works in some animals but not in others. Terman and his co-workers report progress in resolving that issue and expect to publish their findings and additional results later this year. .11 I Sun Theatres ITS 3t ! ■ _ j 846-9808 2 1$ i 333 University 846-! The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Fri.-Sat. No one under 18 Ladies Discount With This Coupon BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS USED GOLD 'WANTED KYLE 3,2^ Cash paid or will swap for Aggie Ring Diamonds. w diamond brokers international, inc. w 693-1647 Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 latest issue of U.S. News and World Report, said taxpayers fail to report about 10 percent of their income — costing the government $13 billion to $17 billion. He said the IRS will conduct addi tional audits this year of returns from persons who are self-employed — people he described as the tax agen cy’s primary compliance problem. Taxpayers caught off guard by the April 15 deadline will be granted a 60-day extension “simply for the asking,” the IRS said. The first refund checks were to have been mailed Friday, but the Treasury Department postponed the mailing until Monday because it wanted to make sure it had enough money to cover them. Recipients should begin to receive the checks Tuesday. United Press International WASHINGTON — America hopes its West European allies will decide by next week to join in econo mic sanctions against Iran, Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christ opher said Sunday. But two key senators expressed doubts. Christopher, appearing on ABC’s “Issues and Answers,” said the allies may act on the U.S. request for sanc tions when the European Economic Community foreign ministers meet April 21. “We’re looking for actions from them at this point, not words,” Christopher said. “We’re talking ab out what good allies and good friends do for each other when there is trouble.” But, in a separate interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” Sen. Frank Church, the Foreign Relations Com mittee chairman, said he believed the United States has lost “the lever age we used to have” to get the allies to go along with sanctions. “We’ve lost our economic clout, we’ve lost our place in the economic market place, and we haven’t lost it to any part of the Communist world,” said the Idaho Democrat. “We’ve lost it to Germany and the Japanese, our trading partners, so- called. ” Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., said he supported President Carter’s latest moves but felt it would have been wiser for the president to line up allied and even some Third World support before acting. Jackson, who chairs the Senate Energy Committee, agreed with Church “the oil weapon” may make the allies hesitant about joining in sanctions. “We should be prepared to share whatever (oil) cutoff should occur,” he suggested. “The Iranians need desperately to sell that oil. And clearly our allies should help in every way possible.” Christopher said the allied ambas sadors had a “very disappointing meeting” with Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr in Tehran. Their reports to their home govern ments that Iran had no plans for re lease of the hostages “certainly ought to encourage (the allies) to take the kind of economic sanctions we re asking,” he said. Even without allied support, Christopher said, other nonmilitary options remain open. However he added, “I think the fact is if we are not successful with these sanctions that are in place now, if the allies don’t join us, if the subse quent nonmilitary actions we might take don’t work, then we’ll have to consider other options and they will be less attractive than the options which are open to us.” ATI'S • High Quality j • Quick Service t • No Mlnimums • Large Orders g ** •LegalSize4V>C OVERNIGHT RATES — 44 DURING THE DAY Reductions & Dissertations Collation & Binding&PatUBng WE HAVE A XEROX 9400 - THE BEST COPYING MACHINE IN THE WOAUW Kinko’s Graphics, Inc. 201 College Main St. f713184e-9508 ggfgll s * ggyg gggg 3) Your Uhiversily /Ufs Proqrarn Thirfy-four Seasons of Theafer a4 Texas AcM based on a sfory fc c ^^t^cfers by Damon Puny an •A MuSiCAV- «f MoApm/ APRIL 15, l 6f 17 ; 18j 19 8 fxm. - PUDDEP THEATER Tickets at MSC Box Office OU AT THE DOOR ACM STUDENTS *2 OTHERS *3 MPgMPMMPVi