Word: rosenman
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Boone '87 4:15.37 Naomi A. Kaji '88 4:29 Dennis Lewis '87 4:32.46 George Ortiz '87 4:35 Tom McMillan '87 4:38.42 Steven Sneidman '87 4:42 Adam J. Epstein '88 4:43 Leslie Benedict '88 4:46.27 Bobby T. Deon Strickland '88 5:17.38 Marc Rosenman '87 5:27.14 Daniel Sullivan '87 5:28.30 Renee Callahan '88 5:35.18 Stephanie Smith '88 5:35.18 Louis R. Dibernardo '87 6:05 Todd Bida '87 6:09 Stuart Read...
...major research programs have failed to uphold the notion that Type-A behavior leads to increased heart risk. Scherwitz's own projects turned up evidence that some Type A's may be better off than many of the placid Type B's. A pioneer in the field, Ray Rosenman of the University of California, Berkeley, now says that Type-A behavior "may not necessarily be bad for any given individual at all." Other researchers reported that many of the traits associated with Type-A behavior, including fast-paced speech and eating and a sense of urgency about time...
...Marc Rosenman. Jr., Chicago. Pefect team player. Last man on team last year, now a starter. The self-proclaimed Jim McMahon of the Crimson squad...
...recent years doctors have come to recognize another psychological factor that drastically increases an individual's susceptibility to heart attacks and other stress-related illnesses: Type A behavior. First identified by San Francisco Cardiologists Meyer Friedman and Ray Rosenman, Type A has two main components, both of which can be recognized by giving standardized personality tests or conducting careful interviews with the patients. Says Friedman: "First, there is the tendency to try to accomplish too many things in too little time. Second, there is free-floating hostility. These people are irritated by trivial things; they exhibit signs of struggle...
With the New Deal came the New Dealers, a breed unknown in the sleepy Southern town that Washington had been. Rosenman had urged Roosevelt to seek advisers not among the usual politicians and financiers but in the universities. Harvard Law Professor Felix Frankfurter was now sending along a pack of bright and ambitious young lawyers who came to be known as the "happy hot dogs." Washington "is more entertaining and more lively than at any time since the war," the critic Edmund Wilson reported in the New Republic. "Everywhere in the streets and offices you run into old acquaintances...