Word: bypass
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...item remains ominously outstanding on the Teach-in ledger. Cox had hinted that action might be taken against an "unnamed Faculty member" and said that if he felt it was necessary he would bypass the new Faculty discipline procedures being hammered out by the Faculty and take the case directly to the Corporation. He took no action during the Spring...
Eight months ago, Gardner's concern for the failings of our governmental system led him to the creation of Common Cause, which is designed to bypass partisan politics in order to deal directly with what he describes as a "system which is incapable of changing itself from within...
...press conference was assured success because of the one vital ingredient-the all-American hero. Joe Cavanagh started the mystique by announcing that he would bypass pro hockey next year for the long-range advantages of a B.C. Law School degree. Then came the you-wouldn't-believe-it story of a ninth-grader waiting for a basketball game, picking up a tennis racquet for the first time, catching the coach's eye, and playing for the state champion varsity the next spring. By the end of the interview, the reporter was asking coach Jack Barnaby if Joe couldn...
...Pass. Effler and Favaloro believe that bypass grafts, particularly when combined with mammary implants, are the ideal solution to most coronary conditions. Dr. W. Dudley Johnson of Milwaukee, a hard-driving perfectionist who claims credit for the first double and triple bypass grafts, tends to agree, though he differs slightly in his approach to arterial problems. He questions whether angiography tells a surgeon all that he needs to know and feels that some conditions must be observed more thoroughly to be properly evaluated. As a result, Johnson operates on many patients whom the Cleveland crew would reject as unfit...
...zero." The doctor is right, and for those who survive heart surgery, the prognosis is promising. Of Johnson's revascularization patients, 77% have survived at least two years after their operations; some of Effler's earliest patients have lived three years with their new plumbing. Most bypass patients are not only alive, but well. A Massachusetts lawyer who underwent an emergency bypass graft a year ago has resumed his law practice, and Jack Chronin of New York, who had his cardiac plumbing redone last October, has recovered even more remarkably. Determined to keep himself and his heart healthy...