national Battalion/Page 7 July 6, 1982 - [New techniques drop risk: study Breast X-rays recommended United Press International |NEW YORK — A combina- i of breast X-rays and physic- ' al examination is the most effec- method of discovering feast cancer — especially tiny imors — in women over 50, a -year American Cancer Soci- ' etv study says. The society’s National Task :on Breast Cancer Control |id Sunday that earlier fears breast X-rays were the fcurce of many cancers have ken overcome through better l-ray techniques that reduced adiation. “There also is evidence that UlOIK | live , five-' Force < 'that screening with mammography — breast X-rays — can detect very small, localized breast can cers in women 35 to 49 years old, which in turn suggests the possi bility of better survival rates in this age group as well,” the study said. The program involved 280,000 women who signed up for annual exams. It was f unded with $8 million from the ACS and about $47 million from the National Cancer Institute. It found breast X-rays espe cially good at pinpointing tiny cancers. “Nearly 90 percent of the 3,557 breast cancers uncovered by the project were found by mammography,” the ACS said in its summary of the report published in the July-August issue of “CA,” an ACS journal sent to 400,000 doctors. Mammography scored espe cially high in discovery of the smallest cancers -— those which respond most favorably to treat ment. “It (mammography) alone accounted for 59 percent of noninvasive cancers which were identified,” the ACS said. A mammogram costs from $85 to $100, but the price may be higher or lower, depending on the radiologist’s lifestyle, his overhead and his fee-setting policies. “Recruitment of women into the project was highly success ful, due in part to media atten tion given to the former First Lady, Mrs. Gerald Ford, and the wife of the vice president, Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller, both of whom were successfully treated for breast cancer,” the report said. The project got off to a shaky start when respected cancer sci entists suggested the radiation from mammography might cause breast cancer in women who otherwise would not de velop it. “In the last few years, the diagnostic capabilities of mam mography have improved con siderably, while at the same time the radiation dose to the breast has been greatly diminished,” the ACS Task Force said. “The result is that with today’s technology, judiciously used and in trained hands, the likeli hood of developing radiation- induced breast cancer from mammography is small.” SHRIMPARAMA MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIGHT $5.95 FRIED SHRIMP OUR REGULAR $7.95 Platter with all the trimmings overnor’s mansion to be sold United Press International SACRAMENTO, Calif. — lifornia’s sprawling $1.4 mil- jn governor’s mansion — built Ronald Reagan but never ed —is headed for the auction lock. Buried in a package of state dget bills signed last week by Edmund G. Brown Jr. was clause putting the mansion on foi 'Cm the market, to be sold to the highest bidder. Without landscaping, unfur nished and often indelicately de scribed as the state’s foremost white elephant, the mansion covers 12,000 square feet of prime land overlooking the American River and is adjacent to a county golf course. It has two huge kitchens and eight bathrooms. It was built in 1975 on about a dozen acres in suburban Car michael, 12 miles from the Capi tol. The land was donated by friends of Reagan when he was governor. But the house was completed after Reagan left the governor’s office and Brown, labeling it a Taj Mahal, refused to live there. Some Republicans have bri dled at the order to sell the man sion, viewing it as a jab at Reagan, and there is talk of legislation to block the sale when lawmakers return in August from their summer recess. But Republicans are a minor ity in both houses and would have to muster support from Democrats to prevent sale of the mansion, frequently cited as a waste of money in Fiscally tight times. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Alfred Alquist of San Jose, author of the law ordering the sale, quietly pledged to Re publicans that he would carry a bill next month to reverse the order. But aides say he won’t be pushing hard to undo his law. HILL SEAFOOD ■A RESTAURANTl 4301 Carter Creek SUPER SUMMER DEALS! 22 injured in crowd as fireworks explode United Press International Twenty-two people were in- red by a Fourth of July fire- orks display that exploded on e ground and hurled aerial dets into a crowd of about 300 in Lakewood, Ohio. Most of the injuries at the laliewood accident were mincA' luttwo people had to be hospit- lized. John Weese, 7, of Lakewood, juffered burns on his right arm indwas in stable condition. Lar- yBadurina, of Lakewood, who |uffered burns and cuts, also as in stable condition. A Lakewood police spokes- an said sparks, apparently om a rocket being launched, jgnited others on the ground, ending them into the crowd. In other accidents related to diday fireworks, a 48-year-old |woman died in a fire in New Haven, Conn., and a New York _Jty teenager blew off his hand | trying to make a firecracker. Au- orities said at least 10 other eople were injured by fire- 'orks. In New York, Robert Joseph, 17, was in guarded condition Monday at Roosevelt Hospital here doctors amputated his hand Saturday night after a pipe bomb he concocted exploded. A fire set by Fireworks in Los Angeles damaged a section of the vacant Pan Pacific Audi torium, a city landmark slated for demolition, a Fire Depart ment spokesman said. 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