eS tata 9 aan amon garner HEART WWENISE ANN DARVALL «+. Fatal Hurt avr gui AR eset en CAPE TOWN (CP) -- A South African man continued in satis- factory condition today with the heart of a 25-year-old woman pumping his blood after the medical breaktitrough' Sunday of a human heart transplant. Louis Washkansky, 55, a Lith- uanian-born businessman, was in the critical post-operative pe- riod of what Groote Shuur Hos- pital called the first successful human heart transplant. Heart specialists around the world were waiting to see if Washkansky's body would ac- cept or reject the heart of De- nise Ann Darvall, an accounting machine operator killed in a car crash. "The longer Washkansky goes on, the better,"' said Dr. Jaco- bus G. Burger, medical supervi- sor of the hospital, 'although that does not mean the heart will not be rejected later. The body could decide in five or 10 years' time that it doesn't want this heart." Washkansky inserted in his throat--and could not speak although he was re- ported fully conscious Sunday afternoon after the five-hour operation. He was being fed anti-coagu- lants to prevent blood clooting. Dr. Berger said that without the transplant Washkansky would have been dead within a few days because his heart's muscle was worn down. The landmark operation was supervised by Dr. Jan H. Louw, the hospital's chief »surgeon, with Professor Chris Barnard performing the main surgery. Surgeons removed the heart from Miss Darvall's body first and kept it going by a mechani- cal pump while they took out Washkansky's damaged heart. They then transplanted the girl's heart into the man's chest and start it beating with jolts from electrodes. "It was like turning the igni- tion switch of a car,"' said Dr. Louw. Denise gave not only her SS UU moved and taken to another hospital to be transplanted into Jonathan Van Wyk, a 10-year- old colored boy--mixed race under South Africa's race laws, "It sounds to me like a damn good job--scientifically valid," said Dr. Norman E. Shimway, head of the cardiovascular surgery division at the Stanford University Medical Centre in California. He said his staff is ready to perform the same heart opera- tion when the right combination of dying patient and donor whose heart must be taken no later than half an hour after death--occurs at Stanford. Dr. Shumway predicted that within 10 years doctors will be transplanting hearts with the same frequency they now trans- plant kidneys, About 600 persons throughout the world were liv- ing with transplanted kidneys as of last February. Dr. Michael DeBakey, who led the development of the heart pump, said in Houston the aoa sv Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL, 26--NO. 281 has a tracheotomy--a breathing tube She Oshawa Times 10¢ Single Copy 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered heart. Her kidneys also were re- set I transplant "'certainly would be niet a great achievement if they're able to overcome the rejection." Dr. Kenneth Sell of the U.S. Naval Medical Research Insti- tute said there was "'quite a def- inite chance' Washkansky might survive two years or more since several dogs which have received heart transplants still are alive two years after- ward, One abortive heart transplant effort was made in 1964 at the University of Mississippi. Sur- geons there kept a patient alive despite a failing heart in a long but futile wait for a suitable human donor. In desperation they finally transplanted the heart of a chimpanzee, which failed after one hour, The greatest obstacle to suc- cess in heart transplants is the human body's 'own defence mechanism against foreign ob- jects. To suppress this mecha- nism so it won't attack the transplanted heart, doctors were giving Washkansky a num- ber of drugs. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1967 NMA vc Nc But such drugs so depress the defence mechanism that such harmful! foreign objects as germs thrive more easily, creating another hazard. Dr. Louw said: 'The critical period is the next 10 to 14 days. After that the chances of sur- vival increase considerably." "We are just hoping for the best,' said Dr. Burger. "The body throws out foreign tissues and he might be able to keep it or not. The operation was an ir- reversible step. If the heart is rejected he dies. It's not like a kidney transplant where the pa- tient can be put onto a machine until another suitable donor is found." DESCRIBED TENSION "We were all almost tangibly aware that this was medical history in the making," said a young doctor who witnessed the surgery. 'There was terrific tension. Most of the time was taken up with anastomosis--the painstaking work of suturing main arteries and veins of the imran patient to those of the donor heart. "Then, when the last anasto- mosis was in place they clamped the tubes leading from the heart to the pump. This was the moment of truth. Everybody leaned forward. There was hush in the theatre, "Prof. Barnard muttered: 'It's going to work.' The four surgeons stood back with their hands clasped, waiting. Time seemed to stop. Then the pa- tient's heart took over. Mr, Washkansky was on his own." _Washkansky was taken to hos- pital three months ago and the heart transplant was proposed about three weeks ago. _"He accepted without hesita- tion," said his wife. "He was only impatient-that it could not be done sooner. "Prof. Bernard was abso- lutely confident. When I asked him if my husband could come through, he said there was an 80 per cent chance of the success LOUIS WASHKANSKY +» Critical Period -- NTA OF WOMAN, 25, TRANSPLANTED TO AFRICA MAN. 55 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash of the actual transplant." Weather Report Few cloudy periods tonight Tuesday. Continuing mild. Low tonight 30, high tomor- row 45, TWENTY PASES STROKE FATAL Thousands View Body Of Prelate IWEW YORK (AP) -- Dressed in the white, red and gold splen- dor of a prince.of the Roman Catholic Church, the body of Francis Cardinal Spellman lay in state in St. Patrick's Cathe- dral today. ' Thousands of mourners filed by the catafalque, placed in the centre aisle, after a solemn high mass of requiem sung Sunday night by Archbishop John F. Maguire and nine concele- brants. Archbishop Maguire has been named administrator of archdioceses by Pope Paul to serve until a successor is named. The great bronze doors of the cathedral remained open throughout the night and early morning hours for mourners wishing to view the body. Four New York City firemen and policemen stood guard over the coffin of African mahogony lined with bronze which will re- main in place until funeral serv- ices Thursday for the cardinal, who died Saturday of a stroke at ithe age of 78. All seven surviving American CARDINAL SPELLMAN ++.Lays In State successor is finally made by the cardinals have been invited to|Pope, this will be the first the Thursday services, major American church ap- \ pointment under a new nominat- § X WILL ATTEND the United States have indicated'c they will attend, but whether| jing system set UR to give Amer- The six cardinals currently injican bishops - mor hoosing. : First, the bishops of each of Francis Cardinal Brennan, head|the country's 28 provinces will of the Vatican's Sacred Rota, would return from Rome was)bi not known. n As mourners filled the cathe- dral and messages of condo-jc lence poured into the chancery|from different meet with their governing arch- ishop and agree on a list o ames. bal | These will be given to a new ommittee of seven areas of the e say in the} bishops | Canadian MD Drowns HAMILTON, Bermuda (CP) -- The Canadian-owned schoon- er Ramona, destined for the Caribbean cruise trade, ran into reefs seven miles off Bermuda Saturday night, and half the 10 persons aboard lost their lives including a Canadian doctor. Among the five survivors were three Canadians including a young Halifax widow who shipped aboard the 70-foot three-masted steel-hulled vessel as a member of the crew. The Englisii-built ship had un- dergone extensive refitting at for the tiny island of St. Lucia to work in the West cruise trade. Vagabond Cruises Ltd. ney, N.S., is president of the company, but he was not aground at North Rock. LBJ Supported By AFL-CIO | MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- |AFL-CIO President George --including thse from the Pope|country, named last spring, to| Meany said today "the labor and President Johnson--specu-|draw up a consensus of local;movement must back Lyndon) lation began on who would suc-|nominations. This was frmerly| Johnson' in the 1968 U.S. presi-| ceed Spellman. Although the selection of alii n Washington. Bert Lahr Dies At 72 In 'Wizard' Beloved Lion NEW YORK (AP) -- Bert Lahr, 72, the beloved Cowardly Lion of The Wizard of Oz and veteran of countless stage and movie roles, died today. Lahr's death at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Centre was attributed to a massive: in- ternal hemorrhage. He had been under treatment since Nov. 21 for a back ailment and pneumo- nia. One of the great comic actors, Lahr's career spanned some 50 years and ranged from the clas- sic Cowardly Lion in The Wiz- ard of Oz to Estragon in the"dif- ficult Waiting for Godot. Which did he like best? "Strangely enough," he said once, 'it was-Waiting for Godot. It was controversial. Those that hated it, spit at it. Yet it had its cult, and it created a different type of audience for me. "It was like--it was like play- ing Carnegie Hall. It changed my whole career. Before that I was a buffoon. This gave me a chance to play Shaw and Mo- liere."' But it is as a clown that Lahr will be remembered by millions who saw him--and who will see him--as the Cowardly Lion. Lahr was born in New York City the €xpensive apartment that-came with suc- cess, As a teen-ager, he joined a|« BERT LAHR eee A Great Comic ug. 18, 1895, not far from|children's vaudeville act called|s ponsible for classes from Fifth Avenue|Nine Crazy Kids. "It was horrible," he said, but I got the bug, you know." done 'by the apostolic delegate! dential election, despite the "un-| | popular" war in Vietnam. Meany said _ the 14,000,000- | | member labor federation sup-| |ports Johnson's war policies as| 'well as the administration's} domestic programs on _ educa-| tion, anti-poverty and slum re-| building. | "Nobody likes this war,"| Meany said in a talk to union jnewspaper editors. "I'm sure) Lyndon Johnson likes it a little! less than anybody I know."' | But, Meany said of the U.S.) in there to protect the interests and security of the American people." RC Upper High Board Elected PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- |The first senior Roman Catholic high school board to be elected |in Ontario was chosen Sunday |by voters using ballot boxes) | placed in churches. | The boxes were placed in churches in the 10 area parishes |supporting St. Peter's senior high school. The board elec- \tions saw heavy balloting by voters in city parishes. | Voters had to choose among |11 candidates for the six posi- jtions open to city parishes. Ear- lier, two rural board members iwere acclaimed in nominations | Jan. 1 for a two-year term. | Roman Catholic separate | school boards in Ontario are re- Grade. 1 to Grade 10. These grades are eligible for provin- |cial tax support, Off Bermuda Lunenburg, N.S., and was bound] ; Indies| | The Ramona is owned by the : of St.) . Lucia. Walter Boudreau of Syd-| © aboard the vessel when it ran] " ee ali Reco Sc Louis Washkansky, who received a heart transplant Sunday, is checked. by nurse. This is the first pho- oo ne ee 3 é s to of Washkansky after the operation. It was taken by a surgeon at Groote Schuur &. Hospital in PATIENT AFTER HEART TRANSPLANT Cape Town, 27 Hurt In San Francisco As Cable Car Runs Wild SAN FRANCISCO (AP) down one of San Francisco's ming a car which exploded into flames and crashed into nine! others. most of them from the cable| car, to hospitals with burns and) bruises. Critically burned was James Van Baalen, 30. | The six-ton Hydr Street Cable, car, nearing the end of its two-| pour, rolled onto the steep control on rain-slick tracks. Passengers said the cable car careered for 1% blocks down Hyde. Some passengers jumped} off. At Bay Street the car} rammed an auto which bounce Kosek, just returned from serv-/singer could be in hospital "any- ing in Vietnam, said the cable|nere from a week or two to a couple of months." car seemed to have '"'lost its brakes." Several persons were injured) in the autos that were hit after|Scious and beaten along a free- way early Friday. He suffered a |skull fracture. He had apparent- \ly been attacked by a blunt in- " the initial impact. FOREWARNS PASSENGERS war effort in Vietnam, "We're| teenest hills Sunday night, ram- ding the touri --|steep hill toward Bay Street, the,!laughed. Then |With passengers screaming injdriver said, 'Oh, oh, it looks like| going. Some people jumped off, |terror, a cable car ran wild! we're gonna lose our cable.' ) GLENDALE, Calif. mile run from Powell and Mar-| roiksinger Jimmie Rodgers was ket streets in a heavy down-/renorted well enough to make telephone calls from his hospital « grade and went forward out of od acdey, although his sac F \ger said he is still 'in very seri- |ous condition." "He insists 9n making tele- phone calls to friends and they = q|are letting him do it rather than | |get all worked up over it,'"' said |Seymour Heller, Rodgers' man- Rodgers off others as its gas tank \ruptured. "A big sheet of flame hit the 25°: : cable car," said Jim Kosek, 22.) Heller said was Trhumers wo: 2 senor FOLKSINGer Jim Rodgers Said Robbed, Beaten (AP) -- the 33-year-old found uncon- Another cable car passenger, |strument during a robbery at- Lorena Matson, 29, said: "As|tempt, said his physician, Dr. the cable car started down the! William L, Donham, South Africa, where the sur- gery was performed. (AP. Wirephoto) kept screaming. There was a white "We. thought he was just kid-| car at Bay Street. Then things sts and we!were calling. There was fire." JIMMY RODGERS o++Very Serious" \ Toronto Doctor Doubtful | TORONTO (CP) -- Heart sur jgeon Dr. William Mustard finds 'in South two or three months. interview. years. Anybody can transplant a heart. It's not too great a problem. But success will be jeatch up and overcome the body's rejection phenomenon on foreign organs. | "I think Dr. (Chris) Bar- nard's operation in South Africa is very exciting. He is a first class surgeon but he couldn't} have conquered the rejection- proglam. This heart transplant! jwill last | months." Toronto heart surgeons have been doing heart transplants | with dogs for several years. | WATER MUSIC UNPOPULAR NOW Heart Transplant Patient Speaks | CINCINNATI | Maybe the Cincihnati Youth | Symphony Orchestra should | have Handel's Water Music | off the program of their re- | hearsal. The young musi- cians were playing at a high | school Sunday when a water | main broke, flooding the | school basement and ending | the rehearsal abruptly. (AP) | Earth Tremors | In Yugoslavia SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- A strong earthquake sent resi ~ dents fleeing in panic and jeracked the walls of many houses today in Krusevo, 37 miles southeast of Debar, the} |town which was wrecked by a! violent quake last Thursday. No. casualties were reported in this latest of the scores of jtremors which have hit south- | west Yugoslavia and eastern Al- bania in the last five days. More than 100 earth tremors were recorded Saturday in . \Debar, near the Albanian bor |der. One of them flattened two of the town's few remaining | buildings and injured 10 per- | Sir John 'ebson Dies In Britain LONDON (AP) -- Sir John | Hobson, 55, a former. attorney-| = general and a member of the|= | "We're a little bit away from it yet," Dr. Mustard said in an 'Td say, avout five ~| PC Leader Asks Quebec | | dians are trying to convince you\ince, and several hundred dele- |the heart transplant performed that Canada belongs to you too,| gates Africa exciting but 7 jdoubts it will last more than narrow until the immunologists} yy, cta Mr. Stanfield delivered mainly| personal anti-Diefenbaker cam- ahouk: ho on: Hives nag ce first address tojpaign during the party leader- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | House of Commons, died today) . after a brain operation. | His death will cause a hyelec- tion in the safe Conservative} » = |district of Warwick and Leam-! ington, which Hobson had repre- | sented since Sir Anthony Eden| resigned to become Lord Avon | - li lin 1957, a For Patient Attitude MONTREAL (CP) -- Conser- coming party leader three vative Leader Robert Stanfield! months ago. Says most Canadians now are| Both Mr. Stanfield and Dalton ready to accept changes giving)Camp, national PC president, > French - speaking people wider| urged Quebec members to work rights across the country. {together and to beef up the "We English - speaking Cana-| party organization in the prov- responded by choosing jand that your sons have equal|themselves a new "united j chances to play leading roles at|front' president at the closing all levels," he told the annual/ Session, Sunday night. convention of the Quebec/ NEED \CD-OPERATION Progressive Conservative Asso- Campaigning successfully on ciation. | the party unity slogan was lum- Quebecers should be patient,;/herman Leopold Carriere, for- however, in pressing .for in-|mer mayor of Lachute, who told creased rights across Canada.'delegates "it's high time we nfield conceded that ap-|acted in a spirit of co-opera- peals for patience were nothing|tion." new to French - speaking Cana-| Mr. Carriere succeeds the dians, but said "now I think you!outspoken mayor of Granby, have better reasons for being| Paul O. Trepanier, who stirred patient." |controversy among delegates Enthusiastic applause greeted| with his public pronouncements the Saturday night speech which|on sensitive issues and with his onservatives since be-| ship convention last September. eee tee a Leen at CAPE TOWN (CP) -- A middle-aged South African man with the transplanted heart of a 25-year-old woman pumping his blood spoke today for the first time since Sunday's medical breakthrough of a human heart trans- plant. "I am feeling much better," Louis Washkansky, 55, a Lithuanian - born 'businessman, told doctors at his bedside at Groote Shuur Hospital where the first success ful human heart transplant was performed. 26 Killed On Saigon Plane SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S. military command announc- ed today an air force C-8 Caribou transport crashed about 260 miles northeast of Saigon Nov. 49 and all 26 aboard were killed. The plane was en route from Pleiku, in the céntral highlands, to coasial Qui Nhon and went down sul three miles from Qui Nhon. Cyprus Accepts Peace Proposals UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- President. Makarios of Cy- prus accepted "in general" today United Nations Secre- tary - General-U Thant's peace proposals for the east- ern Mediterranean island, diplomatic sources reported, The proposals omitted provisions of a Greek - Turkish agreement to which Makarios had objected. ..In THE TIMES Today .. PUC Candidates--P. $ Bill Creber Wins--P. 6 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--? Classified--14, Comics----19 Editorial---4 Financial --18 Obituaries-----16 Pickering News--S 15, 16 sin Sports---6, 7, 8 Television--19 3 wens Theatres----17 2 i eather--2 "There must he some mistake, Wearer™* Women's--10, 11 We're wealthy!" Fassia