Word: fever
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Detection of any kind of highly infectious Salmonella* anywhere in the U.S.-particularly in a hospital-is enough to set disease detectives working overtime. Salmonellosis is a particularly severe diarrhea, often accompanied by vomiting, acute cramps and fever; and it can be fatal to feeble youngsters and oldsters. In the Boston case, it fell to Pediatrician David J. Lang to find out whatdunit. From case records, Dr. Lang concluded that while some of the children had been infected with S. cubana when they entered the hospital, others had picked up the infection there. That made the job tougher. Dr. Lang...
Apparent Signs. At the beginning of the year, there was a chance to cool the economy's growing inflationary fever through a combination of moderately higher taxes and slightly tighter money. With an election in the offing, the President chose not to raise taxes then. With that, the Federal Reserve Board felt compelled to carry the entire burden of dampening inflation. Using tight money as its weapon, the board drove interest awfully high awfully fast. Result: while the economy is still laboring under inflationary pressures, largely because of war-spending, it has simultaneously begun to slow down...
...clergyman father who "squashed any enthusiasm," and in private schools where the punishment for a misdemeanor was a whipping. So in later life-after careers as a sheep-shearer, gold prospector and land speculator in New Zealand and a mapmaker in England-Chichester was struck with sea fever. Though he thought "the whole prospect of the Atlantic so appalling that I can't face it," he nonetheless thrilled to "the moan of the wind in the rigging," loved drawing "deep, mad breaths" in midocean...
Goal! Association Football is the proper name of an anything-but-proper game. America calls it soccer, and plays it rather poorly. The rest of the world calls it football, and plays it with a passion that rises to fever heat in midsummer, when 16 of the world's top teams assemble to run off the world series of soccer. Last summer the series was held in England, and it produced some of the most brutal and brilliant football of the decade...
...Marching Fever. Between now and the end of 1967, such sentiments will be all too evident in contract negotiations involving 2,250,000 workers in key industries like electrical equipment, trucking, autos and rubber. Such is the marching fever that some unions can barely wait their turn. In Detroit last week, A.F.L.-C.I.O. Vice President Walter Reuther's United Auto Workers demanded that the contract, which still has a year to run, be renegotiated for some 200,000 pipe fitters, millrights and other craftsmen. The U.A.W. in sisted that such workers get a $1-an-hour wage hike...