Word: alcohol
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...processed food. No alcohol. Nothing unnatural for the body...
...After all, the effects of caffeine and alcohol consumption are similarly chemically-induced (albeit state-sanctioned). Parents who would be horrified at the thought of legalizing speed happily give Adderall, an amphetamine, to children. The only difference is that prescribed drugs “fix” a problem, supposedly making you more normal (happier if you are depressed, calmer if you are agitated, etc.), whereas illegal drugs—which can have the same physiological effects—make you “high,” or abnormal...
...local newspaper, the Kingston Daily Freeman, quoted State Police Captain Patrick Regan as saying there was “absolutely no indication of drugs or alcohol...
...Perhaps if the pill were potentially lethal, like say, alcohol, one could argue that the government has a legitimate role in imposing this cost on women. But the pill has not been shown to have any severe long or short-term risks; none of its possible side-effects—nausea, headaches, slight weight gain and, with lifetime use, delayed menopause—are serious enough to warrant a prescription. Nor is there any real chance of abuse or drug extraction: An overdose of ethinyl estradiol and levonorgestrel (two common pill ingredients) is more likely to result in vomiting than...
...Undergraduate Council (UC) for fun. Faced with accommodating both the party-hopping social butterflies and the early-to-bed bookworms on campus, the College must attempt to install a universally sound social agenda. Changes in the structure of social programming boards, new student spaces, and a new alcohol policy have all changed the way students experience social life at Harvard.This year was the first full year of operation for the College Events Board (CEB)—an autonomous body with undergraduate-elected members and a $200,000 budget from the College—which has proven...