v BtateX N ational THE BATTALION Page 5 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1980 W p m. »g at 6:30 7 p.m. ii Central Park may receive Give an ostrich for Christmas 27 miles of apricot nylon art hCULUj ISC^gjj United Press International ; ti’sincJpEW YORK — The artist who built a cloth fence across California and “wrapped” a million square feet of the Australian coast now wants to transform Central 1, 011 Park into a $4 million piece of art, using 27 miles of VtMARui saffron and apricot-colored nylon, in blmvmg structure that the artist named Christo proposes to build with 11,000 steel gates and miles of ! nylon, would wind through the park like a stream. &y s to. .«But first, he must get approval from the parks corn- ning con; missioner, who has “a lot of anxiety ” about the scheme. inanCluli IfChristo already has built a running wall of cloth over at St. \l: 24 miles of California countryside and “wrapped” a mil lion square feet of sea off the coast of Sydney, Australia, o Toanl«^ evera ^ 1110,1 tbs ago, he proposed his latest project to II [ )(> Gordon Davis, New York City’s parks commissioner. jPavis’ understandable reaction: “You’ve got to be kid- . .ping-” lt TflWhen Christo insisted he was serious, Davis told cutting: hjm, “You’ll have to do a lot of proving to me to convince 202 Fra me you’re not kidding.” ffum jufflChristo, a Bulgarian-born artist, has since been pro ving his intentions to Davis and a lot of other skeptics. He has been meeting with local community boards and at ^ PM bind marks commission members. Slowly, the decision is coming back to Davis, who expects to have a final answer within the next two months. “I feel just like before my first date in high school,” Davis said Monday. “I’ve got sweaty palms, a lot of anxiety, and a lot of ambivalence. ” What has Davis worried is not only the size of the project but its implications. “I accept it as a work of art of considerable significance,” he said. “But my considera tion is whether it’s good for the park. It won’t only be in the park ... it will be all over the park. “The park itself is a work of art, and he wants to put a work of art on it.” The size and complications of the project don’t seem to faze the one-name artist. His running fence in Califor nia involved 110,000 pounds of steel cables, 800 tons of concrete and 2 million square feet of nylon fabric. Christo also insisted it will not cost the city a penny. He plans to finance the $4 million in raw materials by selling sketches of his preliminary drawings of the pro ject and will erect it with the help of 1,200 unemployed youths who will be paid by Christo. The park will be transformed, if Christo gets his approval, for two weeks in October, 1983. oek dimi Radiation floods kill cancer United Press International BALTIMORE — A unique way of 30 p.m. fa JBivering high doses of radiation to t at 7 pc inoperable liver cancer is adding inonths to patients' lives by shrink- m. inRu: ing tumors, and doctors say the tech- Bbue may work against other can cers too. |: The treatment, developed by Dr. Stanley E. Order of the Johns Hop kins Cancer Center, floods cancer cells with continuous lethal radia tion for days or even weeks while °il'e^ “^paring normal tissue. -ainingCii The process capitalizes on increas ing knowledge about the body’s im- p m a t mune system disease defenses. Sci entists hitch radioactive iodine to an antibody that, when injected into the ii: blood stream, seeks out specific can- fcer cells but largely ignores the rest to eleett of the body. r Most of the initial experiments rank VV ^ ave been devoted to liver cancers World i^bat have progressed beyond the ||)ge they can be treated by surgery . , and for which anti-cancer chemicals will h ^ no t particularly effective, ayer sera Order reported on the develop ment at a news conference Monday ble, wroand said 11 patients have been tre- ld. Increatedso far. Eight received some be- turc willnefit, and dramatic decreases in pmor size have been reported in seven of the patients. Five patients are still living, one 15 months follow- :30p.Bi j n g treatment. it 7;30p» ig Centei People with advanced liver cancer normally live three to seven months after initial treatment. Order said the average length of survival follow ing the new treatment has been 11 months. In one woman, 38, a tumor that occupied 69 percent of the liver shrank following treatment so it took up only 18 percent of the liver. She lived 27 months following treatment before dying of cancer that had spread elsewhere. Order, whose initial work has been published in medical journals, said his medical team is now working on purifying the antibodies so they will zero in even more intensely on the cancer cells. This, he said, should give the tumor even larger radiation doses while diminishing radiation to surrounding tissue. Experiments also are beginning on inoperable lung cancer, a child hood nervous system cancer called neuroblastoma and multiple myleoma, a cancer of blood-forming elements. Order said that in theory, all forms of human cancer should be susceptible to this new form of therapy. But Dr. Albert H. Owens, direc tor of the Johns Hopkins Cancer Center, emphasized the new techni que is not a cure-all or “magic bullet” for cancer, but he said, “We are very excited about our initial observa tions.” "This is a brand new modality,” Order said. “It will take us a number of years to see how far we can go with this. ” United Press International DALLAS — At one end on the fiscal scale, men’s crew socks retail at $6.50 ($7.50 for women). At the other end, there is a ring — a very nice ring — for $295,000. Between those two extremes, there is all manner of rich and exclu sive items in the annual “Neiman- Marcus Christmas Book.” The “his and hers” gifts is where everyone turns first, and it’s a bit of a stunner this year: baby ostriches. “With ostriches in residence you could: have one-egg omelet parties, gather the shed plumes for decora tion, stage ostrich races, learn the original Watusi dance (derived from their flamboyant courting ritual), re vive quill pens for writing, turn them loose on the grasshoppers in the corn field, convert the eggs into decora tive items,” Neiman’s says. “Of course, if you’re a condomi nium dweller, you can add them to the collections of your favorite zoo or wildlife park.” The offered ostriches are a joint project of the Oklahoma City Zoo and the Monastery of the Holy Pro tection of the Blessed Virgin Mar Neiman’s says — despite the appearance of strength and har diness — they are disappearing from their last natural habitats in Africa. The price for a pair: $1,500. The price for a hollowed-out ostrich egg: $35. The catalogue has a few one-of-a- kind items. Mary. birds’ There’s a Martin guitar made from Brazilian rosewood, spruce, Abalone Nacre and gold that Neiman’s says has the sound quality of a seasoned instrument. “For those who know C.F. Mar tin’s craftmanship, this is a trophy at $9,500,” Neiman’s says. Across the page from the guitar, there is a limited edition of the book, “Coronado’s Children,” by legen dary Texas writer and historian, J. Frank Dobie. The book, filled with tales of lost mines and buried trea sure, is printed on handmade paper from Italy with 22 Karat gold illumin ated capitals, handmade Mexican bark paper covers and a leather spine. “Only 300 available, each,” Neiman says. The Bob Hope record collection combines three records and a photo- Espresso Coffee and Equipment. 3609 Place 846-4360 biography in a teak-framed cover box for $40. “This remarkable set, selected from the private collections of Mr. Hope, is a history of comedy in your hands,” Neiman’s says. “Forty-six famous people from past and pre sent join Bob in excerpts from radio, records, TV, film and live appear ances.” Bernard Kliban — the B. Kliban who draws the cat cartoons — drew the cover for the Christmas Book. It shows a caravan of camels, carrying rainbows tied to their backs, led by Santa Claus, under a night sky filled with gaily colored stars and meteors. 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