Word: feverently
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...viral pneumonias, the prescriptions and prognoses are clear: analgesics (probably aspirin) to control fever and relieve headache, aching muscles and chest pain; bed rest; and lots of fluids. The President's fever of 101°-102° was neither unusual nor threatening. Still, the disease is considered serious enough for a man of his age to require the seven to ten days in hospital that Nixon was told to expect...
Ziegler said Nixon had been running a fever of between 102 and 103 degrees, but was in "excellent spirits even though somewhat weak...
Ronald Ziegler, the president's press secretary, said last night that Nixon had insisted on following his schedule for the day, including meetings with his staff, despite feeling ill and running a high fever...
Throughout the U.S. economy's ups and downs of the past four years, President Nixon has never managed to rid it of the debilitating fever of inflation. Prices kept rising rapidly through the 1970 recession, in defiance of all economic nostrums. The increases subsided in part because of the wage-price freeze and Phase II controls, but in the five months of voluntaristic Phase III the economy's inflationary temperature has climbed to its highest point in two decades. The situation has helped create near chaos in stock and dollar-exchange markets...
...translator, then as a coordinator of international foundation programs. (She discovers that running a foundation is very like running a family.) Yes, Kate also has an affair, bravely trying not to be maternal about the poor, charming young man who drags her off to unsanitary Spain. There she gets fever, makes it back to a London hotel, descends into darkness for some weeks. When she awakes-hair no longer dyed, all her shape gone-she looks like a 140-year-old woman just escaped from Shangri...