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skitahoe

03/30/21 3:23 PM

#365743 RE: j e d #365740

Thanks J.E.D.,

I knew she was quite wealthy, but hadn't heard of GBM deaths in her family before, it does make a difference in what's driving her. It makes me think that the only way she'd sell the company is if she were certain the buyer would continue to advance the science.

I would suspect that a partnership which left her in charge, at least for the immediate future would be more desirable. Once success was assured, she would have choices, retire, stay as Chairman of the Board, but give up the CEO position, or sell the company, but clearly success would have been achieved.

Gary

biosectinvestor

03/30/21 4:05 PM

#365746 RE: j e d #365740

Like many here, it is my sense, of her other options and her apparent commitment to DCVax that suggests to me that she is not in a hurry to sell. I think she would want to retain enough control to continue guiding DCVax to a more complete realization of its potential.

Or she’d need an ironclad commitment from a deep pocketed acquirer that this would be done. But I think the only way to be sure is to retain control of certain matters.

Papa9x

03/30/21 10:57 PM

#365778 RE: j e d #365740

Obituary
Philip W. Powers
(The father of Linda Powers. You can learn a lot about a person by learning a bit of their family history. A friend of the Powers family noted in the online condolence page that Linda was the apple of her father’s eye. Philip Powers was an extraordinary man from what I have learned. Papa9x)

“Much beloved father, grandfather and husband, departed this life on Wednesday, October 22, 2003, after a sudden bout of pneumonia and cardiac arrest. He had successfully defeated two prior cancers, and was waging a strong and successful fight against brain cancer at the time of his death. He touched and inspired all who met him, even only briefly, and was known for his quiet strength, generosity, and upbeat spirit. He will be very sorely missed by his family and friends. Philip Powers was born in Pittsburgh, PA, on March 21, 1925. His family moved to the Boston area in the late 1920s. He grew up in Newton and attended Newton High School. In March 1943, he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserves and subsequently trained at Parris Island, SC, where he set a range record in rifle marksmanship. After further training in electronics, Philip shipped out to Guam to serve with mop up forces in the Pacific. Thereafter, from 1944-47, he served in the occupation of China, at Tiensin (now Tianjin). He mustered out of the USMC in 1947, having progressed to the rank of Master Sergeant. Philip entered Harvard University in 1947, and graduated in 1951 with an A.B. in Economics. He pursued graduate studies in Industrial Management at Babson College in Wellesley, MA. Following graduation, Philip joined General Radio Company (a precision electronics company then headquartered in Cambridge, MA) as a Management Trainee in Manufacturing. On November 10, 1951, Philip married the former Lois Paterson Jenks, at First Church Congregational in Newton Center, MA. He met his wife while working at Chandler's Hardware store in Newton Center, when he was a student at Harvard and she was a student at Wellesley College. At General Radio, Philip served in a number of management positions, including as manager of the company's Bolton manufacturing plant. In 1965, Philip decided to launch his own business, and moved to Houston, Texas to do so. His family followed at the end of the school year in 1966. In Houston, Philip founded American Research Company, a management consulting firm. Over the next several decades, he and his company undertook advisory work in a wide range of industries, particularly mortgage banking. In the late 1980s, Philip began building an additional business in fine home construction, which he continued throughout the 1990s. Philip was the son of Thomas Broun Powers and Christine Record Powers, brother of Thomas Broun Powers Jr. and Anne Powers Ervin, nephew of Louise Fontaine Powers and Anne Powers, and a cousin once removed of Susie Blair. All of these family members preceded him in death. Philip is survived by his wife of 52 years, Lois and his devoted children: son, Philip W. Powers Jr., his wife Carol Powers and their children Sam, Evelyn and Christine Powers of Rowley, MA; daughter Linda F. Powers and her husband Bob Hemphill of Potomac, MD, and son Bradford B. Powers, his wife Kelley Powers and their children Collin and Erin Powers of Houston, TX, as well as his constant companion, Skipper, his West Highland Terrier. Powers' other daughter, Tara Fontaine Powers, died of leukemia in 1962. Philip was a longtime resident of Newton, Wellesley and Wellesley Hills, and a member of the Wellesley Congregational Church before moving to Houston, TX. In Houston Philip was a member of the Chapelwood United Methodist Church. In recent years, Philip was also a resident of Potomac, MD, and a devoted participant of Potomac United Methodist Church. Throughout his life, Philip spent summer holidays in Maine, first at a cabin on Burgess Pond in Livermore Falls that he built with his father, and for the last 24 years, at his house on Casco Bay in West Bath. A graveside service and interment will take place on Saturday, Nov. 8, 2003 at 2:00 p.m. at the family plot in Woodlawn Cemetery in Wellesley MA (781-235-7133). A coffee hour will follow the interment service at a nearby location. A funeral service was held on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2003, at Chapelwood United Methodist Church in Houston. The family welcomes all who knew or were touched by Philip Powers to join in celebrating his life at these services. Guests are encouraged to bring stories and memories of Philip to share at the coffee hour, as a gift to the family and a tribute to Philip.

Karlchen

03/31/21 7:35 AM

#365817 RE: j e d #365740

AGREED jed i am feeling excact the same. "feel" ? yes, because i dont know her outside nwbo, but i know wealthy people in general have totally different "targets" and Linda especially has "strong relation" to this awful cancer. (I wrote this often times before)
And, it seems to me, the way how she's fighting , shows this too.
My song:
nearly a quarter century,
we are bound for victory,
fighting gli-o-blas-toma,
our bodies biggest enemy.

MHill77

03/31/21 8:58 AM

#365828 RE: j e d #365740

Agree 100%

Happy to sit on my NWBO shares as long as it takes, and have a plan to hold most long past TLD.

Excited to watch all the upcoming events unfold in the coming months..

anders2211

03/31/21 9:56 AM

#365836 RE: j e d #365740

She is on a mission to beat this thing, no matter what is thrown at her. She had plenty of money before NWBO, and still has plenty--it's not about the money.



pff Im so relieved to hear that the rich can be trusted to not enrich themselves even further over retailers for they have already money enough lol hahaha

LP and NWBO are NO scam, but that argument has been proven to be a tinny bit naif given 20,000 years of human history dont you think lol