
Prospective groomsman taken by surprise
Dear Amy: My wife’s sister “Georgia” and her fiance “Jon” are getting married in March. As the wedding is getting closer, their Save the Date cards were sent out with a wedding website listed on the card.
Dear Amy: My wife’s sister “Georgia” and her fiance “Jon” are getting married in March. As the wedding is getting closer, their Save the Date cards were sent out with a wedding website listed on the card.
We are familiar with the scene on television and movies: a person clutches their chest and drops to the ground, unconscious. Another character starts chest compressions and help is summoned. Although cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, is often not accurately portrayed in such productions, it serves as a good reminder to all that CPR can save a life.
DEAR DR. ROACH: I recently caught a quick news headline on breast cancer stating that there are now findings of cancer in women who have had breast implants. What can you tell us about these new findings and studies?
In America, every four years the word “football” is surprisingly unclear. Americans know the word “football” to mean a sport played with an oblong ball and very little foot. In the rest of the world, the word “football” refers to a sport that is played almost exclusively with a foot. Hence the name of the sport. Why do Americans refer to this sport as soccer? Because the word football was already taken by a sport largely independent of the foot. Go figure.
Dear Readers, Weather permitting, for the next ten days I’ll be crisscrossing Kansas repeatedly for both business and pleasure. Occasionally I’ve eyed all the scrawled notes on my December calendar and muttered, “ I am nuts.” But more often I’m filled with giddy excitement. Sure, we’re all stressed professionally and personally as we attempt to complete way too many projects and celebrate the holidays with family and friends. The flip side is that despite the building pressure and increasingly frenetic pace our lives take on this time of year, good humor and benevolence abound. Laughter and music surround us. And of course, there are special treats to sample. Last but never least, there’s the way our homes and streets light up our nights—twinkling, blinking and winking at us as we bustle on our merry ways.
This year nearly 250,000 patients will be diagnosed with lung cancer and 130,000 will die from it. In SD, 660 people will be diagnosed and over 400 will die from the disease.
Less than three hours before the polls opened on Election Day last week there was a total eclipse of the moon. Called a Blood Moon because the orb turns a dusky red as the shadow of the earth passes over it, totality was reached at 4:17 a.m. — and it was the only eclipse ever to coincide with a U.S. general election.
The distinction of earning a spot in any hall of fame — whether for baseball, teaching or advertising — is longevity. Rather than awarding a single season, a one-time project or brilliant moment, induction to a hall of fame spotlights decades of excellence.
Dear Amy: I’m a 55-year-old man. I legally changed my (first) name when I was 25 years old, mainly because I was the fourth “John” in my family, with many of us sharing the same name.
DEAR DR. ROACH: I need your opinion. I was diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer almost two years ago. I have had chemo treatments (Keytruda, carboplatin and Alimta) for over one year. My most recent PET and CT scans of my lungs were all stable, with no change. My oncologist says that I do not have to come back for three months, and to get another CT scan in six months.