Feeling 'fat' may signal stress in life
Dr. D,
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The State News' archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Dr. D,
Living a healthy lifestyle is the key to maintaining youth. Improving one’s health now can lead to a longer life.
Dear Dr. D,
Dr. D,
Our dirty little secrets, the vices and habits that make us shame ourselves, are some of the greatest human equalizers.
As people everywhere vow to shed pounds and begin eating better for the new year, some will inevitably look to the latest crash diet or quick fix. The cabbage soup and grapefruit diets may have run their courses and fallen to the wayside by now, but one particular diet — or cleanse rather — keeps coming around.
Dr. D,
For Domonique Baul, the numbers don’t illustrate the problem.
Dr. D,
Only the people you know really well are complex enough to have emotional problems. Everyone else is either just normal or crazy, and therapy is only for the latter. Although it is gaining acceptance, seeing a therapist is seen as a weakness and discussing the topic is often still considered taboo. The imperfect world breeds imperfect people who think they’re short, fat or stupid.
Dr. D,
I wish I hadn’t started reading The State News Monday morning; I was in a great mood. After all, it is the start of one of my favorite holiday seasons of the year — which I try to prolong for weeks with decorating, baking, cooking and socializing (which includes eating) with friends and family.
Forget pens and bluebooks. LIFE: Rx’s test is all blood, sweat and tears.
For Ashley Bleibtrey, society’s obsession with body image lurks around every corner.
While the urge to hibernate may creep up in the coming months of finals, frigid weather and holiday festivities, there are still plenty of opportunities to keep moving.
Dr. D,
A parking enforcement officer’s foot was run over Thursday by a driver whose car was in the process of being towed from Lot 72, MSU police Sgt. Florene McGlothian-Taylor said. The 20-year-old female parking enforcer was in the process of towing a 21-year-old male student’s car when the vehicle owner returned to his car, got into the driver’s seat and put the vehicle in reverse, McGlothian-Taylor said. The car ran over the parking enforcer’s foot and hit her in the shin. The parking enforcer took herself to Olin Health Center, McGlothian-Taylor said. No medical report was available. When contacted by police, the car owner denied the allegations. A report is likely to be forwarded to the Ingham County Prosecutor’s Office for review.
Every week a group of MSU students fan out across campus to give students a health lesson.
Kinesiology junior Kelly Mattran, left, and zoology junior Jennifer Chen share a laugh during the bi-weekly Coffee Club meeting in Eustace-Cole Hall on Wednesday evening. Nutritionists from Olin Health Center came to talk about the effects of coffee at this week’s meeting. Quizzes were passed out with tricky questions concerning coffee. Students in attendance found out that coffee, in itself, is not an addictive substance.
Dr. D,