The Michigan Daily--Friday, October 20, 1978-Page 3 Lung cancer in women increases 50% of f paperbacks I j r'~~ irtYOU SE W VS {kVM CALL DAJIa Take ten On October 20, 1968, Jacqueline Kennedy and Greek shipping magnate Aristole Onassis were married in a Greek Orthodox ceremony, possible jeopardizing theformer first lady's standing in the Roman Catholic church because Onassis was divorced. Also that day, Madalyn Murray, self-proclaimed "spokesman for the American atheist community," attacked the wealth of churches and more specifically their corporate dealings and tax-exempt status during a speech at Hill auditorium. "Churches make a profit on everything," Murray claimed. In New York alone, she estimated "over eight billion dollars worth of property is owned by churches." appenings. .. . .. Hola! Today starts with the American Association of University Women's annual Used Book sale at 9 a.m. in the Union Ballroom-.. . also at 9 starts today's Gay Lifestyles Workshop with the "Justice is Blind" panel in the Union's Pendleton Room . . . noon brings today's Gay Lifestyles Workshop film, "Gay USA," in the Union lobby.. . also at noon at the Guil House is a luncheon, side show and discussion of the 11th World Festival of Students and Youth which was held in hanava, Cuba . . . the film "Weekend Athletes" will be shown at Whitney Auditorium in the Student Education Building at 12:10 p.m..,. Mrs. Robert Griffin will speak on the role of women in politics at Betsy Barbour at 1:45. . . Rep. Perry Bullard will take his life into his hands to eat at Markley at 4:30, followed by a brief speech and question session at the Concourse Lounge from 6:30-8. . . The Huron Valley Group of the Sierra. Club will be showing several nature films in the basement of the Ann Arbor Public Library at 7:30-subjects include America's national parks and the Great Lakes . . . the Chamber Choir will perform at Hill auditorium at 8 ... also at 8 Dr. Jim Zogby will speak on "Camp David and the Palestinians" in the Multi-purpose Room at the UGLI . . . Charles Rqsen, pianist and music scholar, will give a concert in the Rackham Lecture Hall at 8:30. . . and finally Charlie Murphy, gay folk singer, will perform at 9 at Canterbury Loft . . . Adios! Of pumpkins and peanuts Linus has been vindicated: The Great Pumpkin is alive and well'and victorious in Half Moon Bay, a coastal community south of San Francisco. The monstrous melon, weighing in at 297.5 pounds, was declared winner of the annual Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival that began on Wednesday. The proud pumpkin-owner from Petaluma, Calif., Frances Collings, beat his nearest competitor by approximately 160 pounds of pumpkin pie. Those whose aesthetic taste runs more towards appreciation of squash may find that this year's 348-pound winner the answer to their vegetable fantasies. Have no fear, though, these vegetal aberrations are not attempting to take over the world-just San Francisco. On the outside. . . look for slightly warmer weather with a high in the low 60s. Low will be in the low 40s, with partly cloudy skies all day. WASHINGTON (AP) .- Lung cancer, by far the deadliest of the three most common cancers, has increased dramatically among women in this decade, according to a major new statistical report published yesterday. The report, prepared by the National Cancer Institute, indicates the increased rate of lung cancer in the United States and rising death rates from the disease are largely responsible for a growing number of cancer cases and deaths generally. THE ONGOING, 5-year-old study is the first of its kind undertaken and is expected to begin yielding more comprehensive and reliable data about variuos cancers and survival rates from them in coming years. The institute said the new figures, when compared with the last major cancer survey conducted for 1969-1971, indicate that cancer cases generally have been increasing 1 per cent to 2 per cent a year since 1970, whereas the lung. cancer rate among 'white women has risen 8 per cent a year and among black women nearly 10 per cent. There have also been substantial increases in the incidence of uterine or endometrial cancer among women, but in general that is not considered as deadly a disease. PREVIOUSLY noted declines in the rate of cervical cancer in women and stomach cancers among men and women appear to be continuing, the figures show. While the statisticians say it is too early to predict long-term survival rates and trends 'based on the new study, they have made some provisional calculations to indicate the how deadly the common forms of cancer are. Colon and rectal cancers, breast cancer and lung cancer are by far the most common lalignancies in humans, occurring nearly twice as often as any other form of the disease. For those types, the report shows, -.only 12 per cent of lung cancer victims survive as long as three years, whereas nearly four out of five women stricken with breast cancer are still alive three years later, and about half of those diagnosed with cancer of the colon live at least three years. Earl Pollack, the statistician who heads the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results program that produced the new figures, said they don't ekplain why some cancers are increasing, while others are on the decline. The SEER study is based on data collected from 11 areas around the country, representing slightly more than 10 per cent of the total U.S. population. S ID BOO SHO E K P WEST / .nto LI 113 w Liberty used, rare, &out-of- print books (313) thur.& fri. eves 995- 4891 til 9 hr-s: mon.- sat. 11-6 THERE ARE PEOPL E OUT THERE THEY LIVE IN PLACES LIKE CHAD, MALI, TOGO, BELIZE,BENIN.. ,GABON, RWANDA AND FIJI. IN AFRICAASIALATIN AMERICA. THEY LIVE IN AMERICA,TOO. IN CROWDED CITIES,FORGOTTEN HILLS. THEIR DREAMS ARE COMMON, NEEDS BASIC: FOOD AND WATER,HEALTH AND HOUSING, JOBS,... AND YOU, .,TO HELP AS A PEACE CORPS OR VISTA VOLUNTEER. Sign-up at Placement Office 3rd Floor Student Activities Building Representatives available for interviews October 25, 26 & 27 p$VISTA r by Wayne Cable Stephanie Smith _ Eckankar seminar d ยข et oi n. begins in De troit By MARK SANFORD How do you put into words love, freedom, and inner joy? For Amy Bodian, Ann Arbor representative of Eckankar, this is largely a rhetorical question. While she may have problems expressing these broad concepts, she has no trouble relating how she happened to acquire them. For her and other followers, the 'answer lies in Eckankar, the Path of Total Awareness. ECKANKAR is a spiritual- educational path of awareness which teaches that an individual is more than a physical entity. It teaches that Man is a soul capable of reaching beyond the physical limitations of time, space, and energy - while experiencing a state of religious awareness through the teachings of soul travel or out of body experience. "I came to a point in my life where I has a particular inner experience; where I recognized that Eckanker could give me the personal freedom and liYnitless awareness of other parts of myself and the universe that I intuitively knew I could have," said Bodian. 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