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Terry McCann
1934 -
2006 |
"Now, let me tell you what happened.
Roger had a fundraiser at his house a couple of weeks ago. I was
invited. I couldn't go the full time. My wife brought me over for
a short period of time and then we sat down and we talked. Anyway,
he raised $100,000 for research. I don't know a whole lot of
people around here that's doing that.
And one of the doctors that I met
with most recently was Dr. Robert Cameron for a third opinion,
because he had some surgery that might be able to fix this thing.
And I'm not a very good candidate. I have got it pretty bad all
over the inside, so it has got hold me.
But my doctors have been giving me
hope -- 'Wait for the next new thing coming down. It's got to be
coming down.' That's what they tell you. And I asked Dr. Cameron,
'Is there anything new coming down? Because I don't have a lot of
time.' He said, "No." And I said, "Why?" And he said, "Well, all
of the money has gone to HIV. It's gone to lung cancer from
smoking. It's gone to heart surgery -- it's going to HIV. And
mesothelioma is the last in line."
I asked, "Why?"
"There's no money in it. 5,000
people get it a year," he said. We don't know how many millions
have died. And he told me that, you know, the pharmaceutical
companies really don't want to invest because the payback is too far
down the line. And I said, "It's a marketing issue, isn't it?" And
he said, "That's right."
And then Roger asked me to sit on the
board of this new foundation to raise some funds. And I said, "I
definitely want to do it. But I have to think about it first."
Because I had just resigned from Surfing America, the national
governing body for surfing, because I can't handle a lot of things
right now.
You know Roger better than I do. You
have probably faced him before. He is a pretty tough character.
I want you to know why this guy works
so damned hard and is so dedicated. It's because his father has
asbestos cancer. He got it about the same time I had. He's
probably in the same shape I'm in. So
that's what you are up against. It's in his heart and it's in his
soul. And I have to tell you, we didn't talk about this. And I feel
that he is probably a little ticked off that I'm even bringing it
up. But that's the way it is. And I feel in my heart that I have to
say this."
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Dr. Robert Cameron (Director of MARF),
Terry, Chris Hahn (Executive Director of MARF)
and Roger Worthington (Founding Director of MARF) at the MARF
fundraiser, An Evening with Chris Botti, September 2, 2005
(photo courtesy of Dana Point
News) |
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