University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1983 Page 5 Rowell From page 1 ★★★ Before Rowell was admitted, nurses and doctors at the Med Center had devised some new plans for cardiac patients. They thought that patients had become alienated from the staff, and they wanted to make the relationship more personal and less traumatic. So a staff of surgeons, nurses and doctors from various areas of the Med Center established the cardiac rehabilitation program. It was designed to educate patients and organize the different parts of rehabilitation so the patient could receive personal, step-by-step treatment. HOWELL WAS TO BE the first patient in the program. He and his wife were to undergo extensive training about what the operation involved and what kinds of things to expect afterwards. Nurses and doctors were to show him the intensive care unit, where he would be staying for about four days after the operation. They were to instruct him on the importance of breathing properly, outline the pace of rehabiliation and explain the medicines to be taken. The day before the operation, Powell was talking with members of the staff in his room at the Med Center. An extensive heart attack set in, the woman was rushed off for an emergency operation. "Well, I'm not sure that I was all that worried," Mrs. Rowell said. "I try not to think of things that might happen. I just wait until they do. "I WASN'T SHOCKED at first. There was nothing I could do about it. I was fairly confident that he'd pull through. The doctors and the staff were firstrate. "Besides, it seemed like everyone I'd talked to had known someone that had had the operation." Rowell said, "I suppose I was a bit apprehensive at first, but I knew this thing had been done. Several of my colleagues had had the operation." Thomas Bixler, the surgeon who operated on Rowell, said, "We do this sort of thing all the time." Gill said that about 100,000 people had bypass operations last year. "It's a lot more common than people think," she said. ★★★ Rehabilitation for surgery patients in years past was a lengthy bedrest, but that has changed. "THE BEST THING is to get patients active as soon as possible." Gill said. She said that bedrest used to be prescribed for those who had just had an operation, but that doctors learned the inactivity had resulted in pneumonia and sometimes death for the patients. After Rowell's operation, nurses turned him every two hours. Within 24 hours after the operation, Rowell was sitting up in bed. Within 48 hours, he was standing and walking. In less than two weeks, Rowell's stay at the Med Center ended, but not the rehabilitation. Treatment continues at home for each patient. The Med Center staff instructs the patient about the use of medications and the exercise he can do to help him hand when a patient needs assistance, she said. And with continued contact, she said, the patient will change certain aspects in his lifestyle and prevent further complications. "WE TRY TO GGET people to slow down somewhat," she said. "They'll have to for a Mrs. Rowley said, "I think this has given us a more real perspective. It's kind of like being given a second chance. I'm hoping that he'll slow down a little." But Rosell said, "I'm not sure that I'll change all that much. I have stopped smoking. "I have a tendency to get caught up in things and eventually I'll be running around like usual. "I'd like to get back to Antarctica." Owens broadcast rights would mean that Hedrick would no longer be the head of the KU Sports Radio Network. From page 1 JOHNSON SAID YESTERDAY that all six radio stations he had asked to bid on the broadcast rights had submitted bids by the March 11 deadline. Johnson said he would analyze the bids next week and would then decide whether to choose a The stations and media groups that submitted bids were Stauffer Communications Inc., which owns the Kansas City Royals network, the Kansas State and Drake University networks and radio station WIBW in Topeka, Wichita station KFIH and Teoka station WREN, both owned by the All Landon Network; KLWN in Oklahoma City and Teoka in Topeka, both owned by the Kansas Information Network owned by Misco Communications and based in Wichita. Earlier this year, Johnson estimated that by selling the radio network, the athletic department could make more than $100,000 a year. JOHNSON ALSO SAID yesterday that he expected to hear from the NCAA in the next two weeks about the results of a preliminary basketball department that was completed in January. Last year, the KU Radio Network had a net income of last under $40,000. The department was notified of the investigation more than a year ago. Johnson said that if the NCAA were to make any allegations, Chancellor Gene A. Budd would be notified first. The athletic department would then have a designated period of time to build a defense of the charges and to contact the NCAA headquarters in Mission. He said that he still did not know which KU sports were being investigated and that any allegations made would be secret until the department could respond. The investigation was delayed several times, Johnson said — once because of the load of cases that were being investigated by the NCAA and again because the NCAA wanted to interview them during final week last semester. The interviews were instead conducted in January. From page 1 AT THE UNITED NATIONS in New York, Nicaraguan diplomats called for an urgent meeting of the Security Council to discuss the invasion. The Council could meet today or tomorrow. Anti-Marxist rebels claimed earlier they fought to within 50 miles of the capital of Managua, killing 200 Sandinista soldiers in two weeks of fighting. Invade The streets of the capital were calm, with no unusual troop movements. The airport and border stations were quiet. Nicaragua government sources said there were 1,500 rebels in a two-pronged assault inside Nicaragua territory, with most of them in the north and east, including the Mara and Matagalpa, close to the Honduran border. Sandistina junta sources said that 300 rebels and 57 of its soldiers were killed. Sandinista officials said that evidence of U.S. support for the rebels was contained in Newsweek magazine and other periodicals that reported President Reagan approved a $19 million CIA plan operated out of the U.S. Embassy in Honduras to finance the war. THE REBELS SAY THEY are opposed to the Marxist domination of the government and want to hold elections to determine the country's future. Nassau City in Honolulu to Hawaii. U.S. officials claim that the Sandinistas have In Washington, staff members of a House subcommittee on Inter-American Affairs said they doubted that any Americans were involved in the training of the Nicaraguan rebels or the moved publicly toward a pre-cuban position and also aid Cuban attempt to subvert the rest of But they said there was ample evidence to support charges that money from the United States had been supplied to the rebels. comment, pending the result of the investigation. Rowe said the charges indicated problems with the AUIRH election process. Election "THE ALLEGATIONS REFLECT poorly on the organization," he said. "There needs to be a better organized way to deal with these types of situations." From page 1 Rowe would not comment on the validity of the charges. Dowdy said the election committee would rule on the validity of the allegations and determine what action to take. He said there was no specific rule for HRR rules for dealing with election violations. Jeffrey was not the only losing candidate to file a complaint with the election committee. Jeffrey said he had lost the presidential election by 23 votes, and thus would not benefit from another election. However, he said he might run again if another election was held. SCOTT SAID THAT two hall residents had not been allowed to vote because their names were not on the roster of qualified voters. Milton Scott, East St. Louis, Ill., junior and another presidential candidate, said he filed a complaint because of "inconsistencies in the voting procedures." Scott, who had the presidential election by only four votes, said he would like to have another "We're trying to find out why they were not on the register," he said. "I just want to get this over with so we can get to work. This has set us back a lot." Joan Keleher, Prairie Village junior and the other presidential candidate, said she had not filed a complaint. two students who were not candidates also filed complaints. Scott West, Sedalia, Mo., sophomore, said he filed a complaint against Rowe's vice-presidential running mate. David Walker, who led electioneering 10 feet from the boiling table. "WE WERE EATING DINNER that night at a table close to the box, and Walker walked right up and asked if we would vote for him," West said. "There should be a re-vote since the first one wasn't done by the book." Walker, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was unavailable for comment. Greg O'Neil, Wichita sophomore, also was seated at the table and filed a complaint. seated at the table and tied a compass. "Walker's electioneering ruins the entire election process, and he didn't do it out of ignorance," he said. 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