Breakthroughs in Health
and Fitness
Dr. Mirkin is one busy guy, what with his daily radio health tips, newsletter,
video course, and fitness clinic. At his site, you can read his tips, search
a file of articles on practical health matters ("Health Benefits in
Food, Not Supplements"). There's a helpful link to lots of fat-free
recipes for entrees, soups, and desserts. But wait, there's more: You can
also order his videos, books, and his very own collection of spice blends
for cooking. If he doctors as well as he markets, we're in good shape (or
will be).-KW
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Internet Athlete
I'm afraid the Internet Athlete, "your worldwide source for athletic
information," is down for the count. It's supposed to be a place where
runners, swimmers, bikers, and triathletes find out about upcoming races
and results, teams, features articles, and the inevitable products - but
nothing is open past the top level. Worse yet, the latest date on the page
is July 1995. Folks: We would gladly trade a nice clean home page for some
gritty, useful information. You did it backwards, and we have no reason
to visit.-KW
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The
Good Health Web
The good folks at Good Health offer you a no-frills site, with a good amount
of well-organized information. You can link to newsgroups on illnesses and
preventive health care and health FAQs (AIDS, migraines, typing injury).
There's a searchable database of a thousand health organizations, and a
helpful clutch of health care mailing lists you can subscribe to. Best link
of all is "Interesting Sites," which takes you to several government
agencies (HHS, FDA, CDC) and other meta-pages. Good job, Good Health.-KW
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The
Weight lifting Page
Power lifting, Olympic weight training, hardgaining: this is an excellent
place to get inspired - or at least be impressed by the passion of the Seriously
Muscled. This well-organized site contains lots of links to e-mail lists
and FAQs on exercising, training, the ever-challenging abdominal muscles,
and more. You can find lots of nutrition and diet info geared to the serious
lifter, as are many links for diet supplements, vitamins, and the powdered
food forms they favor. A few gyms have pages, and the personal pages feature
lots of GIFs of major muscular magnitude.-KW
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To Your Health
Dr. Art Ulene, who gained fame as the ever-calm and sensible doctor on "The
Today Show," hosts a handsome page with good intentions, but there's
very little there. For one thing, it hasn't been updated in months. The
weight loss tips are, well, lame ("Go to the salad bar at a fast food
restaurant... stretch a glass of wine by mixing in 50 percent seltzer to
make a spritzer." Doesn't everyone already know this stuff?!). There
are nutrition "strategies" that may be useful, but they're loaded
with typos. Come on, Dr. Art - we thought we could trust you.-KW
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