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THE MICHIGAN DAILY
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SORORITIES Find a home.
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Register for Rush:
CALL 663-4505
or FISHBOWL, Sept. 13-16--Noon-4 p.m.
MASS MEETINGE
Thurs., Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m.
third floor, Michigan League'
H EWLETT-PACKARD
Scientists dhg iito
new cancer clues
COLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y. (AP) - Who gets can-
cer? Why? What kind? Where in the body? When?
Clues to just such puzzles art Being presented at an
eight-day conference on Origins of Human Cancer that is
bringing specialists from 13 countries to the Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, a center for basic
research in biology.
SCIENTISTS "must continue to expect the unexpect-
ed. Maybe in the next week we may well wind the unex-
pected," Sir Richard Doll of the University of Oxford,
said of the searchfor cancer's causes.
What people eat may play a larger role in causing can-
cer than has been thought, said Doll. And the fact, he
said, cancers common in industrial countries are also com-
mon in developing countries "makes it difficult to believe
industrial pollution can be responsible for a major part of
cancers."
"It was once assumed cancer was an inevitable conse-
quence of aging," he said, but now it appears "aging per
se may be irrelevant,' with cancer being a matter of
local, long-term exposure to agents capable of causing
cancer.
IT IS ESTIMATED now that 80 to 90 per cent of can-
cers are caused by things in our environment, which
can include certain foods,' smoking, rediation and chemi-
cals, Doll said. If the guilty agents are identified, they
can be controlled.
As a source of new clues, "we are now beginning to
realize that several different factors may combine" to
produce cancers, Doll said.
IN THIS VEIN, Dr. J. W. Berg of the University of
Iowa said hot tea, hot coffee, or alcohol may play a role
in cancer of the esophagus, although none of them con-
tain any known cancer-causing chemicals.
Dr. James Watson, director of the laboratory here and
a Nobel Prize winner for his role in helping explain me-
chanisms of the genetic code of life, said the conference
would review all types of possible cancer causes: "We are
trying to take the human viewpoint," not just those of
environmentalists, virologists or other specialists, he said.
CALCULATORS
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662-4403
AP Photo
Dog gone
You couldn't exactly call Shotzie a champion water skier. But Shotzie takes to the wet stuff
anyway, shortly before the National Water Ski championships, held recently in Miami, Fla.
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Hewlett-Packard wrote the book on
advanced pocket calculators.
And it's yoursfre e!
Atlanta Rhythm Section: A
Rebel band in the South
Hewlett-Packard built the world 's first
advanced pocket calculator back in 1972. And
led the way ever since.
If you're about to invest in your first
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In it you will find such helpful informa-
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Get your free copy of "What To Look
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HEWLETT-PACKARD
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" 28 pre-programmed exponential, log and
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u se C) memlneis_
By United Press International ally, a house rhythm section
Macon, Ga., is the home of for an Atlanta recording studio
Southern rock just the same as called Studio One; owned by
Nashville is the home of coun- their manager, chief songwrit-
tryn t er and guiding light, Buddy
hAn t hatsjust as true now Buie.
that the Allman Brothers Band
has broken up as it was five or FOR YEARS, the Rhythm
six years ago, when Southern Section played only as backing
rock was just beginning to musicians for other people. But
happen. in the process, they learned
more about how to put a rock
BUT JUST DOWN the road 'n' roll tune together.
a few miles there's anotheri
town in Georgia that, while it The Atlanta Rhythm Section's
doesn't have quite the down- latest album, "Red Tape",
home honkye- tonk raunchiness is a certain contender for a
that Macon is known for, does lot of critics' year-end Top 10.
possess one of the finest bands Eight finely crafted but basic-
to be found in the South or any-' ally simple songs, ranging
where else. from an exuberant tribute to
That town is Atlanta. And the Texas music ("Jukin"') to a
band is the Atlanta Rhythm country - twinged lament that
Section, the black sheep of turns into a Southern - style
Southern rock 'n' roll. jam with an urban twist and
Up until, say, a little more includes a solo by bassist Paul
than two years ago, the Rhy- Goodard that's one of the best
thm Section was almost exclu- you're ever likely to hear.
sively a "studio band" -- liter- Yet only recently has the!
TONIGHT 6--8 P.M.
Saturday 8 a.m.-Noon
Furniture, plants, houseware, bed-
ding, antiques, books, records.
Kiwanis Activity Center
W. Washington and First Streets
Rhythm Section ventured out
onto the stage to confront an
audience built solely on the
basis of the records. At first, it
was difficult; there's a world
of difference between the iso-
lated intensity of the studio
and the barely controlled in-
sanity of lights, sound and fran-
tic activity that is a live rock
concert.
"WE'VE ONLY been a live
band for about a year now,"
says drummer Robert Nix, "and
it's really taken a conscious
effort to be a live band and a
recording band at the same
time. We learned the hard way,
that even if you get a hit re-
cord, you've got to be able to
follow it up on stage or you
die. You gotta boogie."
As for that "black sheep"
image, the Rhythm Section's
lead singer, Ronnie Hammond,
started it all a while back with
an indiscreet onestage reference
to the Macon-based bands. That
led to a fight with at least one
member of the Marshall Tucker
Band. And that, in turn, led to
the blackballing of the Rhythm
Section from Tuckerhshows.
Unfortunate, that, since the
Rhythm Section's tight, tune-
oriented music would comple-
ment Tucker's space-cowboy
jam sessions beautifully and
introduce a lot of Tucker fans
to a different form of Southern
rock.
But that's show biz.
jU *LKt IUMU11c'U.
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HP-21 Scientific. . +Fixed decimal, scientific or engineering
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8200.00
\ T Y U-M SCHOOL OF MUSIC Presents
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