oe ce pnts alah ee Ae a PG ee Pa Fallout Test Reveals Lukemia Upton—The modical team that has annually examined | 240 Marshall Islanders exposed to fallout from a 1954 hydrogen bomb test has reported the first identifiedcase. of feuke-.. ‘ mia among Ure islanders, - But the chief of the medical team, Dr. Robert A. Conard, 2 a . oid e - row tests confirmed he had acute myelogenous leukemia. ‘ ACRYLIC KNITS ab) “?ve. butt this bepe of leukemia can also ooour apontaneously.” The |. viotim has since been moved to the National Institutes ot t se - But Conard said, “the prognosis is not good. ” Mrs. Gail Bradshaw, a spokeswoman for the Abomic Ea i,| erry Commission, said yesterday that the leukemia viotiat’. - had been exposed to 175 rads (a measure of radiation). Un- “a der normal conditions, person’ are exposed to approximately | "2° 400 to 125 millirads, (Anmitticad is one one-thousandth of a . 7 “+ wad.) 7 Conrad said that a person’s risk of leukemia, normallyao "> about one in 20,000, is doubled with eaoh rad bo which he hasbeen exposed. The most frequent ailmant among the Marshali Talanders:" exposed to the fallout is ocourenoces of thyroid nodules. Mm. * me Bradshaw said there have been about 25 auch cases, including — two this year, and that in ali but three oases, the small tumore were benign. She said there have bean no fatalities among the | ‘. thyroid patients, all of whom were treated in the Us.Sundera > ” the sponsorship of0 the commission, A Daring Gambit Wins a¢ Battle: - Mount Sinai—The anny sbood oeremoniousty, awaiting Rs i: further orders from its high commander, Soott Dewey, 16, of - | Betie Terre. Would-be generats wabohed as Dewey directed. wis » his battle, while others fougtt battles of their own, | mes se Dewey had been Playing faidy conventional dhess in his. five previous games, But in this game, ho said later, hepsi|e is Mrenetet he wok! try amnoling cidterusd, Blo trad: puoved dn. ied qiteon's rook to the qian ati petition, "Bo Urea watching,’ Ea : the rook seamed a last piooe. Dewey’a opponent began abtack- .+..-...[- ‘+ ding, moving gut of decent position. The attack cost him the’. game and gave Dewey second place in the over-ald commeti-’ Ww Val. 4.69 y 169% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS HCl solids, prints, stripes. Many weaves & toxtures., 60" wide washabls. Full Bolts. Vol. Conard said “the extromely rara discase” is one of “soveral types of leukemias that oan be caused by radiations, - . Health Clinical Center in Rothosda, Md., for chemotherapy. - 7 . 40” wide, watable, great . for todays look. Full bolts. : . ¥ pra * . eo -_ SPY AVAILABLE tnan was brought to Brookhaven on Sept. 30, where bone mac- PRINTED ier 7_ .- * that there is no way to delermine whether or not the leukemia -,' was caused by radiation from the blast. Conard did say that ‘ there has been a high rate of leukemia oasea mong persone; exposed to fallout from the atomic blasts at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. ~ The leukemia patient is a 19-year-old male from the island-. of Rongetap, a neighboring island of Bikini, where the actual explosion was conducted. “While we were on the island our: examinations revealed that his blood count was low,” Conard avid, “During the next few weeks it dropped even lower.” The... - E - _ / of the Brookhaven National Laberabory here, said yesterday | + . 1. 7.00 : DACRON BATISTE AND DACRON Wii ' Completely washable, drip dry. F * DRAPERY AND: - BEDSPREAD FARK: "Printed antique satins, printed dac dacron ninon, leno weaves. Full bolts 45" wi PRINTED SLIPCoOy —& DRAPERY FAER * wid 2 yds. fo 20 yds. ieetat—march textures, mixtures, cottons, saile!s POLY FOAM -WEDGE BOLSTERS AB ab 2 IS - (Limit 2 toa customer} 72" WIDE F "60% worl, 50% raynn— full bolts maglolann fa fell you the easy way ‘ coate—pillawi—curtalni—hedspresdi—) than. | BRUSHEN Acowe: