Word: loyolas
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...3/30 Boston College 14-5 W 4-0-0 4/3 New Hampshire 9-6 W 5-0-0 4/5 at Rutgers 16-5 W 6-0-0 4/8 at Yale 7-2 W 7-0-0 4/11 Maryland 7-8 W 8-0-0 4/15 at Loyola (Md.) 10 (OT) L 8-1-0 4/18 at Vermont 7-6 W 9-1-0 4/20 Scotland National Team 5-0 L Exhib. 4/22 Brown 13-4 W 10-1-0 4/25 Cornell 5-2 W 11-1-0 4/26 Old Dominion 16-5 W 12-1-0 4/29 at Dartmouth...
...foundations of evolution, biology and chemistry. What seems on the surface to be irrational, intoxicated behavior is in fact part of nature's master strategy -- a vital force that has helped humans survive, thrive and multiply through thousands of years. Says Michael Mills, a psychology professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles: "Love is our ancestors whispering in our ears...
...least to scientists) the feelings of passion and compassion, but why do people tend to fall in love with one partner rather than a myriad of others? Once again, it's partly a function of evolution and biology. "Men are looking for maximal fertility in a mate," says Loyola Marymount's Mills. "That is in large part why females in the prime childbearing ages of 17 to 28 are so desirable." Men can size up youth and vitality in a glance, and studies indeed show that men fall in love quite rapidly. Women tumble more slowly, to a large degree...
...alacrity to their cardiac symptoms as to those of male patients. Dr. Peter Jones of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, agrees. "If a young woman under 60 came into an emergency room with chest pains," he says, "she would not be taken seriously as a heart attack patient." Loyola's Malloy suggests that women must be more assertive about their heart concerns. "If you have unexplained chest pains," she says, "start with a good internist or cardiologist and pursue it until you're satisfied...
Aggravating the problem is the fact that most major studies of cardiovascular disease have largely excluded female subjects. As a result, Loyola's Malloy complains, there are "loads of data on men and none on women. That only increased the impression that this was a man's disease." It also resulted in therapies and procedures appropriate for men but not necessarily beneficial to women. A landmark study showed, for instance, that a small daily dose of aspirin helps prevent heart attacks in men, but no one knows if the same is true for women...