Index of all Articles in the Weight Loss Camp Category
- How To Cut Weight For Wrestling!
Let’s take a look at the typical year for a wrestler. During the off-season, the wrestler is in the gym lifting weights. The workouts are intense. The wrestler eats normally, sustaining muscle, and adding strength to their body. The wrestler might comp Read More...
- Celebrating Little Clothes After Gastric Bypass Weight Loss
Have you found yourself asking “whose clothes are these?” when you are taking care of your very own “little clothes” since losing weight with gastric bypass? Men and women alike, after experiencing massive weight loss, enjoy a wonderment, a shock and a Read More...
- Step to, Soldier: Weight Loss Camp
These days we’ll try anything to lose weight, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Doctors have shown that obesity is leading to so many problems that the problems could not all be listed and then detailed in a single book, much less a modest article a Read More...
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- CNN - WWII Soldier Learns Of Brother's Death Camp Hell (WSMV Nashville)
Bernard Vogel Was A U.S. Soldier Who Died In A Nazi Slave Camp During World War II. For 63 Years, His Brother, Martin, Longed For Answers. With The Help Of CNN, He Finally Has The Truth. "You Don't Know How Much This Means," He Said Between Sobs. Martin Would Learn Another Stunning Detail: The Government Commuted The Death Sentences Of Those Responsible. Â
- Maine man who shed 140 pounds to join the Marines to begin boot camp (Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune)
LEWISTON, Maine - Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "'You've got to lose weight,'" Milana remembers them saying. But Marine recruiters were willing to work with him as he began his weight-loss journey in December 2007.
- Fattest UK teen loses 6 stone in just 10 weeks in US camp (New Kerala)
London, Nov 17 : Weighing 33 stone, a schoolgirl, who was declared the fattest teenager in Britain, has lost six stone in just 10 weeks after enrolling into the world's leading weight loss camp in the US.
- After 63 years, vet learns of brother's death in Nazi slave camp (CNN)
For 63 years, Martin Vogel longed for information about how his only brother -- his best friend and a fellow U.S. soldier -- died in World War II.
- Maine man sheds 140 pounds to join the Marines (Lexington Herald-Leader)
Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "'You've got to lose weight,'" Milana remembers them saying. But Marine recruiters were willing to work with him as he began his weight-loss journey in December 2007. Now, 11 months later, Milana is 140 pounds lighter as he leaves Monday for Parris Island, S.C., to begin boot camp. It ...
- Maine man sheds 140 pounds to join the Marines (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)
Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "'You've got to lose weight,'" Milana remembers them saying. But Marine recruiters were willing to work with him as he began his weight-loss journey in December 2007. Now, 11 months later, Milana is 140 pounds lighter as he leaves Monday for Parris Island, S.C., to begin boot camp. It wasn't ...
- Boxing legend De la Hoya confident despite weight loss to face Pacquiao (AFP via Yahoo! News)
US boxing legend Oscar de la Hoya said Monday he has dropped pounds but no punching power ahead of his December 6 welterweight showdown here with Philippines star Manny Pacquiao.
- Marines help 330-pound recruit lose weight to enlist (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
LEWISTON, Maine — Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "You've got to lose weight," Milana remembers them saying.
- TV Show Makes Weight Loss Look too Easy, Fitness Experts Say (The Lakeland Ledger)
The hours-long, athlete-level routines take place from the get-go. And mainstream physical health experts are appalled by such extreme workouts. "This is another example of taking a serious health condition and almost mocking it."
- Ulysses Milana loses 140 pounds in 11 months so he can join the U.S. Marines; What's more difficult - losing weight or ... (The Flint Journal)
Flint Journal extra: See below for a photo of Ulysses Milana. LEWISTON, Maine -- Army and Navy recruiters took one look at 330-pound Ulysses Milana and told him to forget about joining. "'You've got to lose weight,'" Milana remembers them...
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