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Word: feverently (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...pamphlet also warns that people sometimes mistake any illness involving fever, aches and pains for influenza, even though it could be a completely different virus...

Author: By Margaretta E. Homsey, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Flu Season, Flu Shots Arrive on Campus | 11/3/2000 | See Source »

Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever. One of the most terrifying infectious diseases known to man has once again mysteriously surfaced, this time in the Gulu district of northern Uganda. To date, this outbreak has seen 191 confirmed infections and 68 deaths from this terrible pathogen...

Author: By B.j. Greenleaf, | Title: A Real Halloween Monster | 10/31/2000 | See Source »

...have contracted the dread virus? Well, the rest of this column goes out to all the hypochondriacs out there. Quite perniciously, the first symptoms of the infection in the early stages are similar to those of the common flu. The CDC warns that most stricken with Ebola display high fever, headache, muscle aches, stomach pain, fatigue and diarrhea, and some patients also complain of sore throat, hiccups, rash and red itchy eyes within a few days post-infection. Of course, these symptoms could easily be confused with numerous every-day maladies (from the common flu to pre-midterm stresses), which...

Author: By B.j. Greenleaf, | Title: A Real Halloween Monster | 10/31/2000 | See Source »

...fatal. It is traditional at funerals in the rugged and remote north for mourners to show their solidarity by washing their hands in the same bowl of water, and that's what they did at the funeral in September of Ester Awete, who died of an unexplained fever. Health workers now believe it was that ritual cleansing that launched the current outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus. The hemorrhagic fever, which kills its victims within days of its onset, is transmitted via contact with any of the body fluids of an infected person. It's killed some 39 people over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ebola: The Return of a Killer | 10/19/2000 | See Source »

...been so good for young people. The younger generation has always thought they were smarter than their parents, but the phenomenal success of dot-coms headed by 27-year-olds who eschewed college has actually proved us right. Books like Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and Luxury Fever tell us that younger, educated classes are getting richer quicker than any before. Two years of I-banking and you're making serious six figures including bonuses. And if you don't want to "beat the Street," you don't have to! For the first time in recent memory...

Author: By Christina S. Lewis, | Title: Keeping Up With the Joneses | 10/18/2000 | See Source »

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