Word: healthfully
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...depth will still be our problem in the big meets," McCurdy warned, "even though we were temporarily straightened out against Cornell." One reason for the "straightening out" was the improved performance of several runners whose health status had been in doubt. Ed Martin, who has been nursing a troublesome Achilles tendon, managed to finish fourth for the Crimson, while Jim Schlaeppi, whose conditioning has been hampered by a cold, finished sixth...
...long, and to learn Spanish. Dr. Jordan wants more free time with her second husband, retired Investment Banker Penfield Mower, and to get to Boston Symphony concerts. And she will have a tough stint as a six-day-a-week columnist for King Features Syndicate. Appropriately, her first "Health and Happiness" column for next week begins: "Let's face it: old age must be lived and lived with...
Agony Hour. Alaska is virtually doctorless. In the great land's entire western half (250,000 sq. mi.), only Nome boasts a private practitioner. The job is mainly up to seven public-health physicians, including Dr. Brownlee, at five tiny U.S. hospitals run by the Alaska Native Health Service. They serve only 30,000 people, but visiting patients is usually out of the question. For hours at a time, every night, the "agony hour" radio dialogue goes...
Tube Much, Tube Soon. In Blackpool England, Health Inspector Frank Sugden, after a survey of 200 homes in the industrial town of Morley, reported that only three had bathtubs, six had hot water four had their own toilets, but 125 had television sets...
What Lederer-Burdick say they want in the U.S. Foreign Service is "a small force of well-trained professionals" who are willing "to risk their comforts and-in some lands-their health." What the authors really want (and no one can deny that it would be fine, if it were possible) is a bunch of saints with engineering degrees...