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, 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified) 20 Clltheroe Advertiser & Times, March 26th, 1998 expert about flower arrangmg . "■


YOU can help the local branch of Marie Curie Cancer Care and at the same time have a good time by supporting two events being held over the next few days. On Saturday, a Drive


. A | • '


be a Tarmac rally stage on the international


loop, in which people will be able to experience the thrill of being strapped into a full spec,


of Your Life event is being held at Oulton Park Racing Circuit. It will feature exotic and historic sports cars, a rally car, Army vehicles, the AA and emergency service vehicles. There will also be a


rally car powersliding around the bends. An event of a more


TIM HARVEY


Jaguar XJ220, a Lam­ borghini Diablo and a Dodge Venom. A gold pass, costing


911 or a Lamborghini Diablo. You can have a go at driving a heavy goods


£100, entitles the holder to seven rides or drives. You could be driven


around Oulton Park in a Peugeot 306 Gti6 by British Touring Car champion Tim Harvey, accompany factory rac­ ing driver Steve Cole in a TVR or be a passenger in a Marcos Mantis Challenger GT, Porsche


' vehicle, “sign up” for the Army for the day and drive one of its special vehicles or take to the circuit with a police advanced driving instructor, having the chance to drive a couple of laps yourself. Not only will gold


sedate nature, a major floral demonstration, is being held at the Cente­ naries Theatre, St Mary’s Hall, Stony- hurst, on Tuesday. Entitled “The World


Awakens”, it will feature Gareth Bell, who is a member of the National Association of Flower Arranging Societies and has his own shop in Accrington. The event starts at


7.30 p.m. and tickets cost £7-50, which includes refreshments. For tickets and fur­


pass holders be able to have a go round the cir­ cuit, but there will also


ther details of both events, contact Pat Dar­


ling on 01282 453000.


Y o u r h e lp a r e a l ly g


f o r t h e M a r i e


THIS year the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity is cele­ brating its 50th birthday with a Golden Daffodil


ni is supporting the fund-raising. She, like many other people, has seen the need for the charity's work at first hand. The big effort is now reaching


Campaign "This Life" star Daniela Nardi-.


ADVERTISING FEATURE


its busiest stage - and every penny raised goes towards various aspects of the fight against cancer and its potentially devastating effects on patients and their fami­


lies. There is an army of fund-raisers


10,000 strong helping to raise money, with some staffing nearly 200 Marie Curie shops all over the country. Marie Curie is Britain's biggest cancer charity. So buy a daffodil, an interna­ tionally-recognised symbol of


new life and new hope, to show your support. Or b e tte r still, make a donation to swell the funds.


M a r ie C u r ie Cancer Care


And if you smoke, do yourself


and everyone else a favour and give it up - some studies attribute over a quarter, or even nearly a third, of cancer deaths to the habit. The Marie Curie Nurses net­


work looks after more than half of patients ill with the disease at home, entirely free of charge. Last year's to ta l was nearly 23,000, but the charity also has


its own hospices, some 11 of them throughout the country. They


Founded by a woman who won a Nobel Prize twice


RADIOTHERAPY can be a life- saver in cancer treatment — and so Marie Curie Cancer Care is named after its inventor. She is often thought of as French,


but actually came from Warsaw, and was the youngest of five chil­


TIM HARVEY in action on the track.


dren. Marie Curie is the only person to


have won the Nobel Prize twice, for physics in 1903 and chemistry in 1911. During the First World War, she helped treat the wounded at the


front. Her death occurred in 1934 and


she is buried at France's national shrine, the Pantheon.


took 4,600 patients last year, making the charity the biggest hospice bed provider after the National Health Service. More than half of all cancers -


there are 200 different types - are curable, and this figure is creeping up as the years go by due to effec­ tive research in which Marie Curie plays a big part. Childhood cancer deaths have more than halved in the past 20 years. A well-equipped research centre is complemented by an education


Name: Organisation: (If applicable)


Address:


I would like to donate £5 I I £101 I £201 I Other amount £ ................................................ ............................ Please send your donations to Marie Curie Cancer Research Appeal, 8 Ormerod Street, Burnley BBII I PE (Cheques made payable to Marie Curie Cancer Research)


t o m a k e i t


department training doctors, nurses and other health profes-


sionals. This is vital work, as one person


in three develops cancer of some sort, and one in four dies from it. Only heart disease claims more


lives in Britain. Smoking is associated particu­


larly with cancers of the lung, mouth, gullet, cervix and bladder, and heavy drinking too is a risk


factor. On the other hand, it has been


proved th a t , eaten generously, fruit and vegetables can protect against the disease. Lifestyle changes can make all the differ­


ence. The sun is more and more


recognised as a danger — skin cancer is now the second most common among men and women. There is great hope for the


future on cancer diagnosis and treatment and every little bit of money helps. So please, support


the daffodil campaign. Donations Pledge Forms


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