Word: tiller
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They are: David J. Baker '66, Johnathan P. Goldman '66, Alan E. Lazar, Craig Donaldson, Frederick P. Schaffer '68, John T. Sackton '68, George M. Tiller '68, Henry W. Corbett '66, Lucy Moore '66, Virginia Wiesell David A. Link '66, Charlene S. Chang '66, Kate G. Wenner '69, Patrick J. McGinity '66, Alan H. Venable '66, and James S. Wylie...
...says. Her father, Anatole, was the rakish owner of a Montmartre restaurant called La Cloche d'Or, popular in the '20s with the show-business crowd. Her mother, an English dancer named Kathleen Buckley, had come to Paris at the age of 17 to dance with the Tiller Girls at the Folies-Bergére. She met Anatole at the restaurant, and they were married when she was 20. The Moreau family, descended from a long line of farmers, never quite welcomed her into the fold. Jeanne was born in Paris in 1928, and a few years later...
...Tiller studied 83 mentally alert and physically active office patients, all 60 or older. When he divided them up by how much sleep they said they got, it turned out that those with the fewest complaints were those who slept eight hours or more, and most often those who also took an afternoon nap. Those who slept seven hours and less had the most complaints - vague tension, nervousness, lethargy and exhaustion...
...Annals of Internal Medicine, Dr. Tiller reports that he prescribed the simplest possible remedy: more sleep...
...first week or two, a few of the short sleepers felt worse on enforced rest, but within a month virtually all were getting eight hours of sleep or more, just as Dr. Tiller prescribed. They were more relaxed, had fewer complaints, and were less prone to become apprehensive, dizzy or confused. Some of the tensions of the aged, Dr. Tiller concludes, may be due to something as simple and obvious as "a long-standing deficit of rest, sleep or both...