Word: husbandly
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Cathy and her husband Terry believe ardently in the restorative powers of the rain forest's pure air and water. They have both battled cancer in the past few years, and now they want to expand the lodge's range of therapies?such as naturopathy, yoga and meditation?and services to include healing retreats and corporate escapes. But their boutique-size spa has none of the hauteur you might expect at the Ritz. With room for only 30 guests, Daintree is so private that visitors are more likely to encounter a white-lipped tree frog than a fellow guest when...
...value of the human lives contained within the space.“Harvard has so many properties, why do they have to take something that’s for us?” asks Melida Deleon, 37, who has lived in the apartments for nine years with her husband and two children. “They’re not thinking about how it’s affecting our kids, our lives. I understand it’s their property and they can do whatever they want, but it would be nice if they let us stay...
...diversity, and the role of groups in the democratic process. A graduate of Princeton University and the University of Michigan Law School, Gerken, who is currently on a visiting professorship at Yale, said that her decision to leave Harvard was based on personal reasons. “My husband and I had offers at Harvard, NYU, and Yale, and the Yale package made the most sense for us as a family,” Gerken said.Her husband, David Simon, is a scholar specializing in African politics.Gerken also said that while she was looking forward to Yale, she was sorry...
While attending college in Houston, she met her future husband Jim Cuthrell at a local parish. He often participated in Opus Dei events, and it was through him that Heather became familiar with the organization. Its central tenet that people should find sanctity in their everyday lives resonated with her. "I grew up my whole life where you do whatever you want during the week, and then on Sunday you're a Christian," she explains. "A lot of people don't live their faith every day. But with Opus Dei, you don't compartmentalize. You try to live your virtues...
...knows something is wrong with her son Daniel. He won't let go of his Thomas the Tank Engine train. He walks on his toes and collects objects, especially anything disk shaped. And he isn't talking. When the diagnosis comes--Daniel is autistic--Melanie's very proper English husband Stephen walks out, leaving her to feel her way forward with only a mysterious child and an army of (mostly) unhelpful doctors to guide her. This is a tearful, joyful novel, and Leimbach (Dying Young) comes by tears and joy honestly: she has an autistic...