The Who says ‘goodbye’ see page 4 SWC Football wrap-up see page 12 The Battalion Serving the University community 76 No. 67 USPS 045360 20 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, December 6, 1982 ew heart poses ethical questions United Press International . Questions triggered by the first Khnanent implant of a man-made mean in a human being go like this: ■— Are the clicks from the plastic heaitin61-year-old Barney B. Clark’s chest the first ticks of an immortality lick? ■ — With science promising more man-made parts to replace worn out hi|man ones, is the conquest of mor- taliiv a dreamable dream? Or is the truly bionic human — a merging of person and machine — still just fantasy? The questions were put to experts in bioethics and medicine in the wake of the historic heart operation in Utah this week. “We have not crashed the old-age barrier,” said Dr. Amitai Etzioni, founder of the Center for Policy Re search and professor at George Washington University in Washing ton, D. C. Life extension through bionic parts such as an artificial heart is pos sible but don’t look for anything beyond about 120 years, Etzioni says. “We are a long way from replacing or rejuvenating the slow decline of the brain,” he said. “But I would not want to have doctors stop ex perimenting.” Dr. Paul Beeson, professor of medicine, University of Washington Medical School, Seattle, said the world’s first implanted artificial heart did not persuade him of man’s even tual immortality. Beeson, a distinguished geriatri cian and editor of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, said: “The body ages and dies. Eighty- five years seems a reasonable goal. Probably no one lives beyond 115 years. Beeson said the heart implanted the other day would be looked on as primitive 10 years from now. If it should become widely avail able, he saw no ethical problem with its use in appropriate cases. “It really is no different than a hip replacement,” he said. “The question on use should be — does it better the quality of life? “The man who had the first artifi cial heart implant knew the many risks and took the step because he wanted to live on for a few more months or years.” To Prof. Robert Paul Ramsey, emeritus professor of religion, Prin ceton University, the triumph that took place in a surgical suite in a Utah hospital did not signal victory over mortality. The idea that a person was dead when his heart was no longer beating in his chest was confronted years ago, Ramsey said. That was when people undergoing heart surgery were put on heart-lung machines so their bad hearts could be stopped, fixed, then started again. The heart-lung machines were per forming the work of the stopped heart. Besides, Ramsey said, the life cen ter has shifted from the heart to the brain. That is a result of the widely accepted Harvard Criteria for Death. This holds that brain death — flat brain waves on a brainwave machine — is death, even though a person’s heart may still beat. What bothers Ramsey is spending hundreds of millions of dollars to de velop the artificial heart. Ramsey said he had a doctoral stu dent who argued the money could be better spent on health promotion — selling people on the idea of jogging, for example. “She argued,” he said, “that this would produce more healthy hearts.” At the Kennedy Institute, George town University, the Rev. Richard McCormick, S.J., said perfection of an artificial heart to the point where it would be available to just about any one who could afford it raised serious social justice questions. McCormick, Rose Kennedy pro fessor of (Christian Ethics, said the question was — with finite resources, how should national funds be di vided. “How should this pie be split be tween health care and other priori ties,” he said. “And within health care, how much should be for spent for prevention and how much for crises. And, in the case of exotic, expensive technologies such as the artificial heart the question is — who gets what when all cannot get it?” “We don’t know how to handle our technology,” he said. “Take the re spirator as one example. Some are kept on respirators far longer than needed.” On the immortality question, McCormick said: “Where I come from, we’re on a pilgrimage and death is not an end.” See related story page 6 Keys to heart pumps give patients a choice staff photo by Octavio Garcia A chair for Monday night Julia Sullivan, a sophomore majoring in English from Humble, is not sitting on a real helmet. Instead, this is one of the Aggie chairs for sale in the MSC Bookstore. The chairs are made one at a time upon request by a California company especially for Texas A&M. The price of this one is $425 and it has already been sold. Justice gives views on abortion decision ■ United Press International [WASHINGTON — Justice Harry Blackmun, in an unusual television imerview broadcast Saturday, said he resented being called a “butcher” and ; “murderer” for the historic 1973 de- Irision legalizing abortion. ■ “You can think of any name to call pomeone, and I have been called it — Butcher of Dachau, murderer, Pon tius Pilate, King Herod — you name it," said the author of the decision. | Blackmun made the comments in an interview with Cable News Net work as the court began its first sweeping review of the abortion con troversy in a decade. I Blackmun said he agonized over the decision that legalized abortion in the first three months of pregnancy. He noted he was denounced after wards in an avalanche of mail. The ruling became the prime target of the anti-abortion movement. The interview was the first inside a justice’s office on court matters; O’Connor gave a brief interview last year on another topic. Giving a glimpse into the secret workings of the court, Blackmun said the justices, including himself, are “prima donnas” and admitted “there are times when it gets a little tense.” “I’m sure that we all play hardball a little too much on occasion,” he said. “But if someone’s going to play hard ball with me, I’ll play hardball back.” Blackmun, 74, was appointed by Richard Nixon in 1970. He has been edging toward the liberal wing of the court. In recent months Blackmun has clashed with Justice O’Connor, appointed by President Reagan as the court’s first woman and newest jus tice. Blackmun noted O’Connor appears to have joined the conserva tive wing. “The justice is able, articu late,” he said. “She gives no quarter, she asks no quarter and she’s a fine justice.” Blackmun recalled accidentally brushing his hearing aid and causing a beep to go off during the court’s secret weekly conference. “I did it a second time and Justice O’Connor said, ‘I think the room is bugged.’ And Justice (John Paul) Stevens immediately supported her.” Blackmun said he mischievously said nothing until another justice saw him brush the device during cour troom arguments. “Then, of course, the secret was out and we all laughed about it.” United Press International SALT LAKE CITY — Artificial heart recipients will be given keys to turn off their life-support pumps in case they decide against living tethered to machinery, bionics pioneer Willem Kolff said. Such a key will be given to Barney Clark, 61, a retired Seattle dentist who became the first recipient of the permanent, plastic replacement heart Thursday. “If the man suffers and feels it isn’t worth it any more, he has a key that he can apply,” said Kolff, head of the University of Utah’s Artificial Organs Division, inventor of the artificial kid ney, and founder of the artificial heart program. “I think it is entirely legitimate that this man, whose life has been ex tended, should have the right to cut it off if he doesn’t want it, if life ceases to be enjoyable,” he added. “The operation won’t be a success unless he is happy. That has always been our criteria — to restore happi ness.” But Kolff predicted that Clark and future patients will find life enjoy able. “My guess is if they feel well, they will be delighted,” he said. “They will enjoy life possibly more than they have done before when they were ill. If you should be dead and you are given another lease on life, you look at that life with quite different eyes.” When Clark signed the consent form for the operation approved by the Food and Drug Administration, he was specifically given the right to withdraw from the experiment at any stage, including after the surgery. “Of course the only way to make the decision afterwards is to have the option of turning the juice off,” said Dr. Robert Jarvik, developer of the Jarvik-7 heart placed in Clark. Jarvik and Kolff discussed the phi losophical implications of the life extending heart replacement surgery in interviews Friday. Jarvik said the philosphers argued it would be impossible to fully inform a patient prior to the operation about all of the ramifications of living tethered to a 375-pound power unit that will severely limit mobility. “There are people who would say that for us to have a program that condones suicide is morally wrong,” Jarvik said. “But in practice, of course, the key has nothing to do with it. People can die in many ways and they are amazingly creative about it. “There is no way we could deny that patient his basic capability and, as far as I am concerned, his right to choose for himself,” said Jarvik. Rape, assaults reported by Patti Schwierzke Battalion Reporter A rape and two assaults were re ported on the Texas A&M campus Sunday night and early Monday morning. One student reported that she was raped about 11:15 p.m. near All Faiths Chapel. The suspect was de scribed as a white man with dark hair between 30 and 35 years old. She said he was about 6 feet 1 inch tall, weighed about 230 pounds and was wearing dark pants, a dark windbreaker and cowboy boots. There are no suspects in the case. Another female student reported that she was assaulted about 1:25 a.m. in a dorm room in the base ment of Mosher Hall by a black man about 25 years old. She described the suspect as being about 6 feet 2 inches tall, weighing about 175 pounds and wearing a beige sweater with rust stripes, tight black pants and thick high-heeled shoes. Another Texas A&M student, who delivers pizza for Domino’s Piz za, reported that he was assaulted in Cain Hall about 1:10 a.m. When the student arrived at room 306C Cain Hall to deliver a pizza, he discovered that it was a custodial closet. As he left, two black men assaulted him. They both had cloth bags over their heads and wooden clubs in their hands. One man was about six feet tall and weighed about 190 pounds. The other suspect was described as being about 6 feet 4 inches tall and weighing about 240 pounds. A police officer walking in the parking lot of Cain Hall said he saw the Domino’s Pizza box and insula tion thrown out of a window in Cain Hall. The University Police are now examining the box for fingerprints. Minorities underrepresented at A&M by Bonn Friedman Battalion Reporter The story of minorities at Texas A&M University is one of differing perspectives. Some say the Universi ty is doing everything it can to re cruit minority students. Others say programs to recruit minorities aren’t working fast enough. University officials said they are | working to recruit more black and [Hispanic students. On Dec. 2, 1980, Acting Univer- jsity President Charles H. Samson re- Ileased a memo that outlined ways to increase minority enrollment at Texas A&M. Three days later, the Board of Regents held a special meeting. During that meeting, they passed a resolution that said: • The University System has [been, and will continue to be oper ated in such a way as to help over come the effects of past racial discri mination. • The University also should strive to maintain an annual in crease in the number of minority students, and submit a plan that will tell how this can be done. In his book “Minorities in Higher Education,” education researcher Alexander W. Astin said the percen tage of Hispanic undergraduates at Texas A&M makes it the most underrepresented university in the nation. According to Astin’s figures, 12.4 percent of all students in Texas col leges and universities are Hispanic. At Texas A&M, only 2.3 percent of the students are Hispanic. Blacks are underrepresented at Texas A&M by 9.1 percent, Astin said. His figures show that 9.8 per cent of all students in Texas are black, while only 0.7 percent of the Texas A&M student body is black. Astin’s figures include only uni versities that he designated as flag ship institutions — those that re ceive a large amount of research grants and place many of its gradu ates in powerful government or in dustry positions. In most cases, Astin chose one flagship institution per state, with the exception of California, where he included three, and Texas, where he included Texas A&M and the University of Texas. But Astin’s figures are at least three years old — the Texas A&M student body is now 3.75 percent Hispanic and 1.25 percent black. Some of that increase may be attributed, at least in part, to com pliance with a report from the De partment of Health, Education and Welfare that outlined conditions that minority students face in the South. The HEW report was released in the summer of 1981, after the re gents’ plan was released. The report said Texas didn’t comply with Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Acts, which stated that discrimination in federal programs is prohibited on the basis of race, color or national origin. Texas was required to submit a desegregation plan for the state’s universities. Each university system within the state was asked to submit its own plan. Texas A&M’s plan called for an increase of 105 black and 135 Hispa nic students in 1982, and 525 black and 675 Hispanics by 1986, The state plan, which was submit ted to the Department of Education in the spring of 1981, has not yet been approved, but Texas A&M already has started to implement its part of the plan. The ethnic enrollment for the 1982 fall semester included 441 blacks and 1,355 Hispanics. The fi gures were compiled by the regis trar’s office from admission applica tion forms that usually are filled out by students. The results show an in crease of 58 blacks and 178 Hispa nics over 1980 figures. The increased enrollment of black and Hispanic students is large ly a result of efforts by the Office of School Relations, the director of the office said. see MINORITIES page 12 inside Classified 8 Local 3 National 7 Opinions 2 Sports 13 State 4 What’s up 11 forecast Today’s Forecast: Clear skies through today. High of about 65, with tonight’s low in the 40s.