xt712j68612m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt712j68612m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-02-28 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, February 28, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 28, 1973 1973 1973-02-28 2020 true xt712j68612m section xt712j68612m The

Kentucky

Kernel

One life

Vol.
Wednesday, February 28, I973

LXIV No. l0?

an independent student newspaper

Twelve pages

Three-year-old survives

maior heart surgery

Ity l)\\'ll) I’Rll-Il)
Kernel Staff “riter
Kt‘Vlll Ht‘ls‘t‘i), son of Mr and Mrs Sonny
ltrisco ot Versailles. looks and acts Just
about like any central Kentucky three
yearrold boy you‘d care to meet
He shouts and runs around the house He
”_]ll)i)(‘t‘ iabbei‘s" about what ever is his
current amusement ”is special interest is
his collection of ti‘icycles and toy motor»
Keyin‘s~ father. a natiy'e of
this interest in

cycles
Law reiiceburg.
y ehicles as he operates a sery‘ice station in

shares

Versailles

SINt'Ii Bllt'l‘ll. Key'in experienced
abnormal dey'elopinent He did not grow
well and suflered episodes of pneumonia
tin \ isitmg the family doctor for a check
up. it was diseoyered that Kevin had a
pronounced heart murmur At age seven
months Key‘m Briscoe suffered his first
heart failure
after that incident. Kt‘Vltl
referred to the l'niy'ersity Medical (‘enter
for further testsaiid diagnosis Physicians
that Key'in had two

Soon was

soon discoyered

distinct problems with his heart. not to
mention sey'eral important side effects.
l"irst. he had a narrowing of one of the two
maior arteries leading out ol the heart.
known as a the aorta.
Secondly. Keym had a scy‘ei‘e mitral in»

coarctation ot

sufficiency

tecause of the mitral insufficiency.
Keym was experiencing a lot of trouble
with his lungs; in clfect, repeated episodes
of pneumonia ’l‘he leaking \‘alye caused
high pressure in the \eins of the lung which
led to repeated attacks ol pneumonia The
heart. lll lurii. enlarged

IH 'I‘lll‘l 'I'l.\ll‘l Kt'\'ltl was 2’.
his condition had become considerably

years old.

worse Med ("enter physicians agreed that
ll be was going to il\‘(‘ he would have
mayor surgery to insert an ai'tifical heart
\ aly e. immediately

When an adult deyelops a problem with
the \alyes of the heart it is usually a burly
simple matter to replace the \alye The
mechanical deyices inaiiulactured for the
safe. reliable and simple

l)lli“l(l.\t' ill‘t‘

enough not to require constant attention

Universrfy of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

\n artificial yalye. similar to the one used to replace the take in the heart of
Key in Itrisco so that he could continue to the. is show n ahoy e in comparison to a

pencil in sile. lKerncl photo by John Hicksi

'l‘he \al\'e allows one way' blood flow' and
llitis controls blood pressure

when a child deyelops the same sort of
different
procedure is

problem. howeyer. it is a
The surgical
ioiiiples enough that

would prefer towait until the child reaches

situation
most physicians
nearly adult size before attempting it
\('( t)|tl)l\(. 1‘” Ms “the
surgeon told us. point blank. Key'in was
dy mg and the operation was the only thing
him Keyin is our only

Bi‘iscoe.

that could saye
child so we had to agree "

facet of Keyiirs
replacement

l-‘ortuiiatcly.
made

titlt‘

problem the yaly‘e

in just a little oyei‘ 2';
Kevin‘s heart
had enlarged almost to the size of a small
adult heart This made the use of a small
adult model heart \aly'e possible Ac»
cording to the cat‘dltrihttt‘itt'lt' surgeon who
performed the operation. “because of this.
he may llt‘\t‘t‘ ieed this y'aly‘e replaced,"

The procedure ot placing an artificial
\aly‘e in a small child is not new. but it is
still rare because of the risks iny'oly'ed it is
normally used as a last ditch effort and the
sur\ iyal rate is not \ery high "Although
this operation has been perfonned since

somewhat easier

years of life.

(‘ontiiiued on Page 3. ('ol. 1

tudents empty $13.9 million from pockets

By RUN MITCHELL
Night News Editor
UK students spent about $13.9 million in

Duh...

Inside:
Fear and

faith

Lexington last year according to a report
from the Office of Institutional Planning.
The report. compiled last summer was

The annual quiz howl got off to a
flying start Tuesday night as three
games were played. iKerm-l photo

by Phil (il'oslloltgl

They want your blood at the S(‘ ballroom
lpage 4i and basketball player Jim An-
drews is schizophrenic (see Sports on page
Tl. After that consider if Bibles should be
given out in school tpagc l2)

researched and w i'itten by Herbert I.
l.y ons, associate protcssor of business and

James H Donnelly'. .lr .
professor of business and

Terrence McMahon. a

econoiiiics_
associate
economics. and .l
research assistant

The purpose of the study was to deter-
mine the economic impact of the
l'niyersity on the community. including all
faculty and student spending

'I'lll‘? (H ER \l.l. spending total by the
l'iiiy'ersity coiiiiiiunity' added $78 8 million
to local business \olume This was about
til it percent of local business \(llllltlt‘.

ltesidcs the faculty and student spending
figures. the report included comments on
the future of the community and how it is
expected to esiiand economically

'l'hc Lexmgton Standard Metropolitan
Statistical ,\rea_ which includes all ol
Fayette t‘ounty. is the fastest growing
area iii kentucky . according to the report

'l‘lll“, SIM million student e\penditure
found by esamining si\ different
'l'hese factors were the students
tireck
organixation housing the oil campus
students. rentals by off campus students.

was
lactors
hytiig iii dorms. at home. or In

business yolunie generated by commuting

students. fraternity and sorority pur-

Outside:
Un-drip
day

chases. and. the impact of non-Greek
student organizations
The breakdown in

\\.‘l.\

the various areas

The 1”...)17 students bring in dorms. at
home. or in (lreek houses spent about $4.8
million locally

The H.494 students il\’lt‘l§l in off-campus
housing spent around $3 million.

tiff -caiiipus students spent $5.2 million
on miscellaneous purchases for the year

Fraternities and sororities spent some
STILooo About 8t) percent of this went for
local goods and seryices

v'l'llli \.\lt)l'\'l‘ ol business by the (if)?

students commuting to Us, was a little
oyer S1 ltHltlti

The local spending by non tircck
student organi/ations amounted to $216300
during the year lflTo-Tl

\\ Ill-i\ 'l‘lllf ICXI’I-I\l)l'l‘l RIC estimates

Mr [K faculty and staff were applied to
their estimated disposable income. the
estimated contribution to local business
\olimie was $19 3 million lor the year

These figures were arriycd at through
dilterent channels within the
and by appraising the ex-
penditures within the local community,

many
l‘iiiy ersity

’l‘oday will be cloudy and warmer with
highs iii the mid 40‘s. Tonight will be
decreasingly cloudy and cooler. Rain”? Not
likely tlnly a to percent chance today
going down to 3 percent tonight.

 

  

 

The
Kentucky
Kernel

Established tutu

Mike wines Editor in Ctuet

Mike Tierney. Managing Editor

Larry Kielkopt. Assocuate Editor
Katie McCarthy Ron Mitchell, Steve Swm Night News Editors

Joel lakem Arts Editor

Dan Rhea, Day News Edttor
John Hicks. Photography Editor
Charlue oitkinson, Sports Editor

Editorials

Editorials represent the ODIHIOHS ot the editorial board, not the Unwersity

CLEP: Are these reform's fruits?

ane again. we have evidence that
academic relorm is a great con-
versation piece. but a pretty lousy
activity to participate in.

We reler to the series ol~ t‘l.l‘2l’
it‘ollege Level Examination
l’rogrami tests ollered last 'l‘hursday
by the [K t‘ounseling and 'l‘esting
(‘enter

l'nder a contract with Educational
Testing Service ol l’rinceton. N..l..
the center otters some :to exams in
basic courses ranging lrom biology
and chemistry to psychology and
statistics. Students perl'orming well
on the $13 exams can place them-
selves out ol’ many of the lower—

Corrections

.\londay"s "L'p from the Pedestal”

(‘olumn incorrectly stated that part of
clinic
included applications ol'

women‘s "sell-examination"
services
“unpasteurized yeast"
lor yeast intections.

Actually. more yeast might only
worsen the problem, The correct
phrase should have been "un~

élS Ll

remedy

pasteurized yogurt . ”
’l‘his lorum incorrectly reported in

.—, ‘l
I’.

loll

I'm ready—-

 

wheel me in!

division requirements they proless to
despise so much,

liast 'l‘hursday was the monthly
testing date Nine students showed lor
the exams. raising the yearly total to
lilsl.

Sadly. t‘l.El’ seems to he lollowing
the much-heralded pass-tail option
and the Bachelor ol (leneral Studies
program into the dusty archives ol
student relorm 'l‘hat‘s regrettable
because t‘l.l€l’ is potentially the most
worthy ol the three in terms ol the
benelits it has to oller students and
administration alike

Both pass—tail and the HHS still
suller the stigma ol being "dill

its editorial ot' 'l‘hursday. Feb. 27
W‘Was a rise in dorm lees
necessary"."‘t that 18 percent ol the
recent rise in room and hoard costs
would linance security and
renovation projects in l'K's proposed
co-ed dorm.

l’art ol that sum will actually be
used tor security increases in other
dormitories. as well as the coed

experiment.

  

 

LettersJ

 

Asks better
cheerleading

l have endured the last ballgame l can
liaylttg to watch the sorry excuse tor a
cheerltutding squad that [K has the
wonderlul lortune to possess It seems to
me that a university with an enrollment of
.3o_ooo could get more than tour good
cheerleaders. two ol which need not look
alike 'l‘heii' great repertoire ol tour so-
called "cheers” do not do much to
motivate the crowd

.-\t one game. I noticed that not once did
they all do the light song “dance”
correctly. which they get to practice at
least seven times per game It they were
more worried about cheering than who is
looking at them, the crowd might be more
cooperative in yelling in organized cheers

I. personally. laid it embarrassing when
cheerleaders like the ones lrom Indiana or
even Somerset ('ommunity (‘ollege come
to l'K It gets 3‘“ tty '~;‘z.’l A‘v‘ti 'tti' .‘t"“~ ’l

boos the cheerleaders and sits down lor
"two bits" when it had been standing. both
ol which happened at the l'K».\liss State
(tame

l-‘or those ol you who may criticize and
say. “ll she thinks she can do better. let
Let me assure them that l have
enough sense not to run lor cheerleader

(yiitliia \. Fuller
.lunior——- \i'ts and Sciences

Counters Comment
on dorm life

Since when is college “supposed to turn
ltt~yeai‘»\.B..\l." tor
example».

ll~‘ 'l‘llli Vietnam war had been
tunded in such a way. l doubt it' it
would have progressed beyond
1964 Thus. it we divorce Social
security trom the integrated
lederal budget. we find that the
human resources sector actually
comprises 37 rather than 47
percent ol the total

.\nother item ot interest under
the heading ot “human resour»
ces" is the appropriation tor the
\ eterans Administration which is
$117 billion It would seem that
one moment ot sober retlection
might cause us to realize that
\eterans payments are really the
tinal costs ot wars past
'l'heretore it we deduct veterans
“benefits" trom human
resources and place it in the
military sector where it more
appropriately belongs. we find
that: iti the human resources
ligure is reduced to 23 percent or
less than onetourth ot the total
budget. and 121 the military
portion [wars present. past and

’l'lll-Z K|~i\'l'l ( KY Kl‘Ilt\l:Il.. Wednesday. February 28. 19725—2!

luturer in reality constitutes 43
percent ot the integrated lederal
budget

ln closing. there are a couple ot
other comparisons that are worth
viewing First is a comparison ot
the NEW appropriation with the
appropriation ot the Defense
ltepartmcnt. Virtually all ot’ our
military spending goes through
the ltepartmcnt ot l)etense and
nearly all ol the real human
resources spending goes through
new What we tind here is that
lor every dollar allocated to NEW
roughly $2.153 goes to (letense The
ltol) appropriation itselt has been
increased $4 7 billion. despite the
niiichproclaimed end to the
Vietnam war

Finally. a comparison ot the
\.\.\'.\ and lil’.\ budgets is
enlightening The NASA tigure
has actually been increased by
Sioii million over last year. even
though the manned space tlight
program has been terminated
\,\.\\ now receives a billion
dollars more than the l‘Il’.-\.

'l‘his is particularly ironic when
we consider that the EPA is that
agency charged with preserving
intelligent lite on this planet. an
avowed goal ot the ad
ministration

Reed Ruchman graduated
from UK in December with a
RA. in political science. He is
a member of the Ne w
American Movement and the
Lexington Peace Council

Old line politician
on the road again

tributors. eat their tood and kick
them in the ass. you don‘t belong
in politics. It‘s the only way you
can survive. Money is the
mother‘s milk ot politics and I've
sucked every teat in town "

 

 

 

 

 

Jess must not only contend with
his public past. but with a l.os
.\iigele.s electorate that has
learned to liye well enough in the
smog so that it gives no .ip
pearance ot interest w hen he say s
he knows how to get the money to
build a monorail on top ot the
\t‘lttllt'a l"ieeway Mittteplaee
within himselt he iieyertheless

linds the vitality to keep moving.

Alter leaving the campus he
delivers a load ol verbal en-
thusiain on a ltotarian luncheon.
and then is ott miles and miles
away to talk to to very ancient
people in an old tolks home
"Ladies and gentlemen." he
begins with them. “do you ever
get the teeling lite has passed you
by "”

lle recovers trom that. and
passes out the door without
hearing several members o1 his
audience ask what he does tor a
li\ ing ht'ttltt thei e he moy es on to
pick up a check trom the
'l'eanisters. and then to a l't‘lA
basketball game. ending the day
iii tront ot the timed .\l‘tl.\'t.s
'l'heater in Westwood 'l‘hey‘re
playing “The Heartbreak Kid."
and Jess has to compete tor the
attention oi the people on the line.
in tront ot the ticket ottice. with a
deal mute beggar and a street
acrobat who pertorms bounding
high leaps and then passes the
hat

"'l‘hats one way to attract
attention.” Jess says. "I could
stand on my head ” ltut he keeps
sticking out his paw until there
are almost no more paws to
shake " \tter this campaign. I‘ll
need a shrink to get my ego
ieiiitoiced. ' he remarks “I won
to iii a row . only I lost the last one
and untoi'tunately in politics
batting .iyerages doiit count "

topyiiglit. 11!? ‘.. the Washington

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.IlIlIt‘lI l’u\\r-I'.\

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WANT ADS!

 

 

 

  

Three-year-old survives surgery

ioiitiiiiieil ti'oin Page I

lttl'iti. Kevin was the youngest patient that
has had the replaeement at

physieian added

“'l‘lll'. \li-II'I‘ Iii-tore the operation.”
Key His mother explained. “the iloetor told
us that l\'e\in might not live. but not to
He said it
('an‘t

lilanie oiirsel\es
those things that
slillli'llllli's ”

(in her 38.

l'K." the

was one ot

taken to the
operating room and plaeed on a heart lung
mat-lime so that eireulation through the
heart would be arrested The surgeon then Mr
plat-ed a mitral valve in Kevin‘s heart.
.\lthough he will need another operation
lit a lew years to eorreet the eoaretation of

Kevin was

the aorta. he is behaving like any normal
three year old .\tter three weeks
reeouperation at the Med t'enter. he is
now at home

KI'1\ |.\ LIKICS to talk about his tieker
the valve during normal operation make