The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 08, 1984, Image 2

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    —The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1984
Baby saved:
2-month-old girl survives unique bypass and CTE operation at Hershey Center
By MIKE KINNEY
Collegian Staff Writer
A world first in surgical technique
was recently used by a University
surgeon to save the life of a two-
Month-old girl at the University's
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.
"Medical history was made Dec.
20 when a heart-lung bypass was
used in conjunction with a common
trachea-esophagus (CTE) opera
tion," Carl D. Andrews, director of
University relations at the Hershey
Medical Center, said. "Despite its
name, the operation is hardly com
mon."
Expertise and equipment to treat
CTE are extremely rare but Aman
da Peay, daughter of Edward and
Patsy Peay of Morgantown, Ky.,
was fortunate that the Hershey
Medical Center has both, Andrews
said.
Amanda was born Dec. 4 with
CTE, an' affliction which occurs in
about one of every 50,000 births. The
disease causes the trachea to col
lapse everytime a breath is taken,
Andrews said.
Surgeon at Vanderbilt Hospital
in Nashville, Tenn., twice tried to
perform the operation without the
use of a heart-lung bypass machine.
Each time, the child went into car
diac arrest, Andrews said.
"When Amanda was born, the
doctor just thought she- had a
breathing problem," Patsy Peay
said. "They took her to Vanderbilt
Hospital over in Tennessee and
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Wednesday, February 8
CDPC seminars, Resume Preparation, 6th period; Interview Skills, 7th
period, Conference Room-McAllister Bldg.
5 O'Clock Playwright's Theatre, Whatever Happened to Fred Mac Mu
rray, 5:30 p.m., Pavilion Theatre. Also Feb. 9, 10.
' Alpha Phi Omega meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 75 Willard.
PSU Horticulture Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 108 Tyson.
Colloquy meeting, 7 p.m., Room 307 HUB.
Agricultural Mechanization Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 206 Ag. Engi
neering Bldg.
P.S. Stamp Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 207 Sackett •
P.S. Equestrian Team meeting, 8 p.m., Room 314 Boucke.
Smith Toulson, clarinet, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. Recital Hall.
Campus Bible Fellowship meeting, 9 p.m., Room 316 Boucke.
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Call 234.4725 for take-outs I%
X 4444-4.
What it's worth in terms of pay, dignity, respect and professionalism in Army
Nursing.
What Army Nursing means in terms of variety, travel, advanced education,
special training, benefits.
And how you qualify.
Before you decide which direction your career will go, or if you think a
change in career is in order,
call SSG Michael Metzer Collect
at 717-564-4596
from 9AM to 5 PM Monday through Friday.
4 Vftt*-,
Two-month-old Amanda Peay of Morgantown, Ky., survives a rare disease after undergoing a heart-lung bypass which
was used in conjunction with a common trachea•esophagus operation at the University's Milton S. Hershey Medical
Center in Deceinber. Despite its name, the operation, which was a world first, is "hardly common," the director of
University relations at Hershey said.
when they tried to operate she went
into cardiac arrest twice. They told
me Amanda would die in a few
days."
Amanda was flown to the Capital
City Airport in Harrisburg by an
ambulance jet on Dec. 16 and was
met by the Hershey Medical Cen
ter's Mobile Life Support Unit.
Upon arrival at the Medical Cen
ter, she was admitted to the Neona
tal Intensive Care Unit and placed
on a respirator. A three-day stabili
zation and diagnosis period pre
ceded the surgery, Andrews said.
Dr. Thomas V.N. Ballentine, las
CAN TELL YOU
HOW MUCH MORE
YOUR BSN IS WORTH
ARMY NURSE CORPS.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
ociate professor of surgery and
pediatrics and chief of the Division
of Pediatric Surgery, was called
upon to save Amanda's life, An
drews said.
On Dec. 20, Ballentine and a team
of surgeons at the medical center
removed a piece of the infant's lung
lining and used it to create a wall
between the trachea and the esoph
agus, Andrews added. '
The bypass machine does what
the heart and lungs normally would
do, he said. Ordinarily, surgeons
perform the operation with the pa-
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tient breathing and the heart pump
ing on its own.
Amanda was flown yesterday to
Vanderbilt Hospital and was listed
in guarded condition. She will need
the help of a respirator for a while,
AndreWs said.
Following surgery, Patsy Peay
said: "This is like a dream, it's a
miracle,"
The Peays have three other chil
dren and reside in Morgantown.
Patsy is a homemaker and Edward
works weekends as a security guard
at a mine.
1. NEW REVISED CURRICULUM DESIGNED TO PREPARE STUDENTS FOR MIDDLE
AND UPPER LEVEL MANAGEMENT/ADMINISTRATIVE POSITIONS IN
CRIMINOLOGY/CRIMINAL JUSTICE;
2. THREE NEW FACULTY POSITIONS BRINGING, THE TOTAL FULL-TIME FACULTY
TO THIRTEEN; '
3. SMALL CLASSES ALLOWING FOR ONE-TO-ONE CONTACT WITH FACULTY, AS
WELL AS FLEXIBILITY IN THE DESIGN OF COURSEWORK;
4. EXCELLENT RESEARCH FACILITIES, INCLUDING THE PATRICK J. STAPLETON
LIBRARY, THE COMPUTER CENTER (OPEN 24 HOURS PER DAY), THE CENTER
FOR RESEARCH IN CRIMINOLOGY, AND THE CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE;
5. A NETWORK OF OVER 2,500 lUP GRADUATES IN CRIMINOLOGY ABLE TO ASSIST
IN CAREER PLACEMENT AND ADVANCEMENT AT LOCAL, STATE, AND
NATIONAL LEVELS;
.•
6. ATTRACTIVE ASSISTANTSHIP PACKAGES THAT TOTAL ALMOST $5,000 PER
YEAR; AND •
7. A SINCERE INTEREST BY OUR FACULTY TO HELP YOU BECOME THE BEST THAT
YOU CAN BE.
IF THE ABOVE SEVEN REASONS SOUND INTERESTING WE
ENCOURACE YOU TO INQUIRE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
PLEASE CONTACT US AT THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS:
Summer sessions abroad
to help educate teachers
AP Laserphoto
To teach educators about other July 15, will begin with a 10-day tour
educational systems, the College of of schools in the southwest suburbs of
Education is sponsoring two summer London, McKenna'. said. The group
sessions overseas, a professor of edu- will then attend a similar 10-day tour
cation said recently. in Durham.
The trips to England and India are Madhu S. Prakash, associate pro
open to public school administrators fessor of education and program
and teachers, and University grad- coordinator for the India trip, said it
uate students, Frank R. McKenna will be interesting to coMpare the
said
McKenna, program coordinator of the United States.
the session to London and Durham, India is trying to educate the gener-
England, said the program will in- al population in an underdeveloped
clude a daily lecture by a British country, a task which is difficult
educator and a tour of a wide sample because the money is not available,
of classrooms. Prakash said.
The tours will visit classrooms in The session in India will last from
both the public and private school July 17 to Aug. 6. Both sessions are
system, McKenna said. worth three credits
************ * * * * * * * * * * *
* The Fifth Annual Nittany Lion *
push-up/sit-up-a-thon
sponsored by Alpha Chi Omega sorority
* Start getting in shape now! *
*
* All proceeds to benifit the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation *
U• 154 *
************ * * * * * * * * * * *
SEVEN REASONS TO CONSIDER A MASTERS DEGREE
DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE STUDIES
DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINOLOGY
204 WALSH HALL
INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA 15705
Survey is not representative
of all freshmen, official says
A freshmen survey conducted with the results to say that this is a
by the American Council on gdu- representative view of the fresh
cation is unrepresentative of in- men class," he said.
coming freshman at the The survey's purpose is to follow
University, due to a lack of partici- the trends of• economic back
pation, the University's executive grounds, types of majors, and
director of Planning and Analysis attitudes and views on current
said. issues of incoming freshmen.
Greg Lozier said orientation. The distribution of the survey,
group leaders told freshmen they coordinated by the Office of Plan
did not have to take the survey and ning and Analysis, is administered
,as a result, only 40 to 45 percent of to freshmen during orientation
the freshman class participated. week along with other tests in the
"We're much less comfortable Fall. —by Beth Kay
The session, lasting from June 24 to
Graduate Studies
in Criminology
IN CRIMINOLOGY AT lUP:
Indian educational system to that of
Corning Soon
March 18
in the HUB Ballroom
—by Steve Wilson
kit. ?
r
, 1
) .•,
j.)
Lincoln teachers propose arbitration
By MIKE NETHERLAND
Collegian Staff Writer
After meeting with state media
tors Monday, striking teachers at
Lincoln University proposed that
the faculty and administration sub
mit to binding arbitration to end the
six-day walkout, a faculty spokes
man said yesterday.
Almost all the 116 full- and part
time teachers of the Association of
University Professors went on
strike Thursday because contract
negotiations have been stalled for
more than two weeks. They have
been working without a contract
since last July.
The spokesman, Andrew Murray,
ic - A - 1:$ f- al
said the union is awaiting a re
sponse from the university about
the binding arbitration.
Sam Pressley, public relations
and publications director, said the
union seeks a 4 percent salary
increase retroactive to the begin
ning of the contract year Sept. 1.
The university has offered a 4 per
cent increase from Jan. 1 with a 6
percent increase for the next con
tract year, Pressley said.
The university offer, Murray
said, amounts to a 2 percent in
crease for the year but still lags
behind inflation. For the past 10
years, he said, pay increases have
been overcome by inflation, result
ing in "a salary range below the
average for high school teachers in
the Commonwealth."
The average salary for Lincoln's
faculty is $21,000, with full profes
sors earning $28,000, Murray said.
Murray, who has been teaching
religion at the , university for 34
years, said the students have sup
ported the strike. •
"They blocked the offices so that
the secretaries couldn't get to
work," he said.
Pressley, who did not comment
yesterday on the binding arbitra
tion proposal, expressed optimism
that the university and the union
will resolve their differences.
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Statue of Liberty:
Monument to undergo internal, external renovations
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON The Statue of Liberty, currently
undergoing badly needed structural repairs, will also get a
redesigned interior to better accommodate• almost 2
million annual visitors, architects for the project an
nounced Tuesday.
The architects promised that the additions will alleviate
the long lines and sweltering heat that now often greet
visitors to one of the country's most popular tourist sites.
- The additions include an improved spiral staircase that
will provide a better view of the statue's interior, a new
glass-enclosed elevator to take visitors from the bottom to
the top of the statue's 154-foot pedestal and a complete
cleaning of the interior to regain the original shiny copper
finish.
But the improvements will not include an elevator to
eliminate the arduous climb inside the statue to the small
observation platform in the crown.
Architects considered such an elevator, but the idea was
rejected by the National Park Service.
"People, 30 to 40 years after they visit, remember the
grueling climb and the park service wanted to preserve
that," said Richard Seth Hayden, a New York architect
working on the project.
Most of the work to improve visitor flow will take place
in the 15-story pedestal on which the statue rests. Ar
chitects plan to rip out three floors which block the view
inside the pedestal. A new glass-enclosed elevator along
with improved lighting will give visitors an unimpeded
view of the interior of the massive pedestal, the architects
said.
In the statue itself, the copper plates, which have been
painted, will be scrubbed down to the original finish. The
statue will retain its outside color of green, the result of
weathering over the years.
The renovation will add another viewing area at the
bise of the statue and improve the lighting so tourists can
get a good view of the interior without climbing the spiral
staircase. Only 30 percent of the visitors to the statue
actually climb to the crown, but currently that is the only
way to see the statue's interior.
A new handrail will be installed on the spiral staircase to
improve safety, and small rest stops which block traffic
will be replaced with larger rest areas. A wire mesh safety
cage which covers the current staircase will be removed
to improve the view. A small emergency elevator also will
be installed for transport of persons who become ill during
the climb. Currently, they must be carried down by park
service rangers in a sling.
The improvements should double visitor flow to 500
persons per hour, the architects estimated. In addition,
ventilation fans will be installed to cool the statue's
interior, where the temperature now often climbs above
100 degrees.
All, of the improvements are coming as part of a $39
million renovation project to correct serious structural
defects in time for the statue's centennial in 1986.
Workmen began erecting 300 tons of aluminum scaffold
ing in January. The architectural design work is being
done by the French-American Committee, a private group
of French and American businessmen. The committee
announced its plans for the visitor areas, which have been
approved by the park service, at a news conference
Tuesday.
The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1984-3