Posted by LouSchuler at flat stomach local news

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Posted by LouSchuler at 02:19 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack     April 29, 2005 Right On Time On September 19, 2000, the New York Times ran a book review/interview with Ruth Engs, Ph.D., an Indiana University professor of applied health local news science. Clean Living Movements, Engs' book, had just come out. It tracks three local news distinct eras in the U.S., in which interest in health and fitness rose in combination with surges in religious awareness and attempts to local news stomp out unhealthy habits. The U.S. saw its first clean-living movement from 1830 to 1860. This era saw the rise of the Mormons and Seventh-Day Adventists, who combined spirituality with health consciousness. Benjamin Graham, of Graham cracker fame, was the era's pre-eminent health guru. That movement was trumped by the Civil War, which is a recurring theme: Clean-living movements encourage fanaticism, and fanaticism leads to cataclysm. The second clean-living movement started in 1880 and ended with World War I and the worldwide flu pandemic in 1920.
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