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Word: aspirins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...poll further indicated that 29 per cent of students drive foreign cars, 47 per cent own stereo speakers, 46 per cent use stomach pain relievers, and 78 per cent use aspirin and other headache pain killers...

Author: By Chris Flowers, | Title: Campus Poll | 1/18/1978 | See Source »

...very wealthy group of citizens. That is fallacious." Adds J. Peter Grace, president of W.R. Grace & Co.: "The consumer is caught in a double squeeze. He pays the taxes that support the bureaucrats in Washington, and he pays higher prices for almost everything he buys, from automobiles to aspirin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Rage over Rising Regulation | 1/2/1978 | See Source »

This year's wave of corporate takeovers already has swept up companies dealing in copper, oil, paper, beer, aspirin and dozens of other products. Last week the tide spread to retailing and starch. Los Angeles-headquartered Carter Hawley Hale, the sixth largest U.S. department store chain, proposed buying Chicago's venerable Marshall Field & Co. for an estimated $325.8 million - over Field's resistance. And Unilever United States Inc., a subsidiary of the giant Anglo-Dutch food and household products maker, bid $482 million for National Starch & Chemical Corp. of New Jersey, a maker of food products, plastics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Takeovers | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

...Scientists Confront Velikovsky will not stop such debate; it will instead encourage it. Only education of the people will reduce their gullibility towards pseudo-science. An educated public would not buy Velikovsky any more than they would protein hair conditioners, timed release aspirin, Geritol, or other such fakes. Until then their ignorance will most likely bring scientists into many more close encounters of the Velikovsky kind...

Author: By Steven A. Wasserman, | Title: Some Should Not Be Heard | 11/28/1977 | See Source »

...Using machines that signal physical changes in the body with beeps or flashing lights, Diamond has been able to train some patients at his headache clinic to raise temperatures in the hand by as much as 10° to 15°. As he explains in his recent book More than Two Aspirin (Follett; $8.95), higher temperatures mean an increased flow of blood there?and presumably a reduction elsewhere, including the head. Almost invariably, he reports, the technique stops headaches. Still another imaginative treatment has been introduced by Dr. Howard Kurland at Northwestern University (Quick Headache Relief Without Drugs; Morrow; $7.95). He applies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Battle Against Migraine | 11/7/1977 | See Source »

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