4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Fridc Transplant patient listed as fair By GEORGEA KOVANIS A two-year-old girl - the nation's youngest heart transplant recipient - still shows signs of rejecting the new organ, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. According to John Woodford, a spokesman for the University's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, results of a heart biopsy released Wednesday showed the girl is still rejecting the heart although her circulation is good and her heart is beating strongly. THE GIRL, whose name has been kept - secret at her family's request, received the new heart during a six- hour operation June 20. Doctors prescribed massive doses of anti-rejection medications to curb the rejection she was experiencing earlier this month. Now, however, doctors are waiting to see if the rejection will gradually halt itself, without large doses of drugs, said Woodford. "THAT'S THE planned course now, to see if it will just gradually stop," he said. "If you looked at her, you wouldn't know this is a sick child or one who had been sick," he said. According to Woodford, the girl has gained weight since the operation. SHE WEIGHED 16 pounds before the transplant and now weighs 24 pounds Woodford said. However, doctors are now trying to keep her weight under control so undue pressure will not be placedon the heart. "Her mother said they're trying to control her appitite a bit so she doesn't get too much of a weight gain before she can exercise," Woodford said. "They're going to try to control the ice- cream intake," he added. According to Woodford, doctors had allowed the girl to eat all the ice cream she wanted because she was recovering from surgery. WOODFORD SAID the girl's parents feel that she is awareof her newheart. When doctors ask if she likes her new heart, the girl nods her head and says See HEART, Page 7 I I I Ribbut Associated Press Brandon Marriott tries to steer his bullfrog back onto the race course during a frog-jumping contest held in Troy, Kansas Wednesday. Several frogs were accidentally squished by anxious racers stomping their feet to hurry the frogs towards the finish line. Loreh IHall (Continued from Page1) original plans to totally upgrade Lorch Hall. A complete overhaul of the elec- trical and plumbing facilities is still in the works. The most ambitious project for Lorch is the addition of an extra floor above the mezzanine currently over the main staircase. Additional space will come due to the high ceilings in the building as it now stands. The problems with attracting poten- tial bidders have not fazed Spreadlin, who insisted that the situation still "has not delayed the projected finish" in September of 1985. SO THE economics department will stay exiled in its place for at least a year while the once bustling halls of Lorch Hall will become silent. Formerly the home of the Architecture and Design Department, Lorch Hall will no longer renovation plans stalled provide the variety of wall decorations changes in offices and space, but this for those stuck in CRISP lines. summer finding space for everyone has "Moving out was not our idea, but we become a project. Bill Dergis of Plant certainly will have more space," said Extension realizes that some major Katherine Bodary, an administrative confusion could take place when the assistant in the women's studies depar- students attempt to find their old depar- tment. "It's never easy to move an en- tments in an empty building. tire department, especially for the "Things are so frantic this time of students, but it could work out well." year with all the moving around, but THE WOMEN'S studies department we've always avoided a major problem plans to move out of Lorch by mid- in the past," said Dergis. August and reopen in its new space on The move of the economics depar- the second floor of West Engineering by tment has been needed ever since the September. The University has also fire destroyed the old Economics made new space for the comparative Building. Setting up shop in the old St. literature and American culture depar- Joseph's Hospital has posed many dif- tment offices on the ground floor of ficulties for the department. Mason Hall. "After the move to North Ingalls Each summer, the University's plant we've found that we see far fewer extension goes through this kind of students in our offices," said shuffle trying to accommodate all the Economics Prof. John Cross. a 0 Voter's Choice faces challenge LANSING (UPI) - Foes of the Voter's Choice proposal Mike Hodge of the law firm Miller, Canfield, Paddock and have engaged a prominent law firm to check petitions filed Stone said yesterday a challenge seems likely because the on behalf of the tax cut scheme, and a challenge is viewed as Voter's Choice campaign filed only about 11 percent more likely. signatures than the minimum required. a HAPPENINGS Friday Orchestra - Haydn Fesitval, noon, Liberty Plaza. Performance Network - The Opera, 8:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Dance - Teaching Macedonian dancing, 8:30 p.m., call 971-8638. PTP - Clair Bloom, These Are Women, 8 p.m., call 763-0950. HRD - Course, "Travel Office Policies and Procedures," 8:30 a.m., LSA; "Word Processors, HandsOn," 8:30 a.m., Ad Serv. CEW - Course, "Refreshing Student Skills," 1610 Washtenaw. Medicine - "Management Decisions in Acute Illness and Injury of CNS," Hilton Shanty Creek, Bellaire. Music - Robin Hood, 8p.m., Michigan. AstroFest 137 - Spaceday Special, 7:30 p.m., MLB. Medicine - Workshop in scientific illustration, 8:30 a.m., Kresge I. Labor - Collective Bargaining and Workplace Participation, 3 p.m. Chinese - Meeting, 8p.m., Trotter House. Korean - Bible study meeting, 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Cinema Guild - You Can't Take It With You, 7:30 p.m.; The Bitter Tea of General Yen, 9:50 p.m., Lorch. Cinema Two - All the President's Men, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Natural Sciences. AAFC - Videodrome, 7:30 p.m.; The Tenant, 9:15 p.m., MLB 4. Saturday Art - "Images of the Performing Arts," 2 p.m. Medicine - "Management Decisions in Acute Illness and Injury of CNS," Hilton Shanty Creek. Music - The Secret Marriage, 2 and 8 p.m., Power Center. Labor - Collective Bargaining and Workplace Participation, 3 p.m. Go Club - Meeting, 2 p.m., 1433 Mason. AAFC - The Godfather, 8p.m., MLB 3. Cinema Guild - Das Boot, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Lor- ch. Cinema Two - The Man Who Would Be King, 7:30 and 9:45 p.m., MLB 4. 0 Send announcements to Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.