Word: harrisons
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...everyone takes it right, and even a single dose may not be safe for everyone. The FDA has received at least 1,500 reports of health problems associated with ephedra supplements, including almost 90 that resulted in death. The problem, says Dr. Harrison Pope, a Harvard psychiatrist who has studied supplements, is that it is hard to know exactly how many people use ephedra, which would tell doctors whether 1,500 is a significant portion. The ephedra industry says it is being unfairly targeted. "More than 16,000 deaths each year occur from the use of aspirin and similar drugs...
...facing problems with the bus slowing to a near-halt on the way down to New York earlier the same day—causing the group to almost miss the rally—tired and worn-out HIPJ members had only the strength to be wearily amused by the Harrison Ford action flick. “A heroic president fighting an evil world single-handedly,” said HIPJ member Abigail S. Miller ’05, “is definitely not the choice [of film] I would have made...
DIED. LOU HARRISON, 85, influential innovator of classical music, characterized by what composer Ned Rorem called "infectiously beautiful" melody; of an apparent heart attack, while traveling to a festival of his music; in Lafayette, Ind. Celebrated for promoting the gamelan--an Indonesian percussion orchestra--in the U.S., Harrison relied on everything from Korean court music to medieval dance melodies in composing symphonies, operas, choral pieces and instrumental suites...
...Harrison Bergeron” rule. All the Harvard players must wear lead weights on their skates to slow themselves down and put rubber on their sticks to give themselves less control. A remote controlled device must create a loud beeping noise in their heads whenever they see a teammate open for a pass to distract them and impair their vision...
...interact as equals. A 1998 poll showed that women’s rights were second only to AIDS as the issue about which young women were most concerned; forty-six percent of young women called women’s rights their “very biggest concern” (Harrison Hickman, Jan. 1998; Feminist Majority Foundation). Clearly, The women of Harvard University care about women’s rights, and The Crimson’s lack of coverage indicates a sad lack of attention to their concerns...