Word: breath
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...produced a crippling kind of lung disease, "T-Y asthma." Hitherto healthy G.I.s are seized late at night with uncontrollable coughing and wheezing, leaving them exhausted and panicked by fears of suffocation. Treatments for ordinary asthma do no good; between nightly bouts, the victims suffer continuously from shortness of breath. Japanese doctors do not recognize this as a unique form of asthma, but this does not mean the Japanese are immune: five native Japanese have come down with it, and the only victim who died was a Nisei from Hawaii. Army medics once thought that evacuation from the Kanto smog...
Though smoke and smog the world over inevitably damage the airways leading to the lungs and the oxygen-exchange cells in the walls of the lungs themselves, the effects usually appear slowly. There is an imperceptibly progressive shortness of breath. After years of decreased breathing volume and oxygen exchange, the heart has to work harder to pump more blood, and may fail in the process. The damage shows up dramatically when the lungs are subjected to added stress-from infection or vigorous exertion. This sort of weakness, said Colonel Phelps, is an increasing cause of medical retirement among officers aged...
...other than a kind of inform compassionate rationality. They should judge on the basis of what , taking into account the difficult encountered by the groups and leaders. Then, although he too problem of how to make the statements of one who is honestly , the student critic should detachment and breath which and performer a valuable on their response to the the performance...
...seal the peace; 16th century Frenchman Jean Nicot (whose name is immortalized in the word nicotine) promoted pipe smoking as a sure cure for ulcers; and 19th century authors rhapsodized like Bulwer-Lytton: "A pipe, it is a great soother, a pleasant comforter. Blue devils fly before its honest breath. It ripens the brain, it opens the heart, and the man who smokes thinks like a Samaritan...
Some Britons who tend to demand new station houses and an end to deficits in the same breath sniff at "Dr. Beeching's bitter pills." Totally unruffled by criticism, Beeching says his goal is to convert the railways from "a political shuttlecock" into a lean, efficient business. Should he do it, Beeching would achieve distinction as a bureaucrat who disobeyed Parkinson's Law and actually managed to diminish a bureaucracy...