|
|
|

|
| |
healthy News Archive
09-Jan-2006
'Healthy New Year's resolutions (Selma Times-Journal)
3. Stop smoking. 2. Exercise.
'Holistic counselor offers free consultations for healthy living (Torrington Register Citizen)
TORRINGTON -- It?s time for healthy living and balanced lives. Free 30-minute health consultations were available Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. by Holistic Health Counselor and Registered Nurse Maryann Holden at the Good Life Natural Food and Holistic Center, 43 Daycoeton Place.
'For healthy trees, clean up diseased leaves, old fruit (San Jose Mercury News)
Q I am curious whether I'm increasing my risk of fungal disease in the orchard by leaving leaves on the ground. A Cleaning up leaves under the rose bushes, picking up fallen camellia blossoms, raking up diseased leaves and removing mummified fruit in the orchard are exceptions to my exhortations to leave tree debris where it falls. Generally, leaves falling to the ground should be left to
'HEALTHY & FIT CHALLENGE 2006: Getting started (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
Most people have goals or resolutions for the new year. For many of us, that's to lose weight or get in shape. But according to many experts, you should break down your goals into something more specific.
'Learning to ?Bee Healthy? (The Daily News Tribune)
WALTHAM - Professional actors helped Whittemore Elementary School promote its school motto "Bee Healthy, Bee Fit" Friday.
'Healthy Scratch Has Sykora Thinking (Los Angeles Times)
ST. PAUL, Minn. ? Even when his name swirled in trade rumors earlier in the season, Petr Sykora held out hope that it would work out in Anaheim.
'Bush Cites 2 Million New Jobs in 2005 and Healthy Economy (Sarasota Herald-Tribune)
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS and RICHARD W. STEVENSON New York Times WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 - The United States generated about 200,000 new jobs a month in the last part of 2005, a healthy pace that President Bush immediately used on Friday as part of a broader campaign to promote his economic record and agenda of tax cuts, tighter limits on government spending and more trade.
'Ready, set...get healthy (Waterloo Cedar-Falls Courier)
WATERLOO --- Debbi Shoopman is desperate to lose those last five to 10 pounds. So she plans on signing up for Lighten Up Iowa, a program designed to help Iowans develop a healthy lifestyle.
Back
to Your source for information about healthy eating, weight loss, diet, nutrition and fitness.
Back to healthy News Archive
|
|
|
|
|
|