Word: marijuana
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...doing it for me, so I can be happy" that resonated in the courtroom. In the past eight years, the child had spent just seven months with his mother. While a weeping Rachel Kingsley listened, he recalled how she often came home drunk and kept a stash of marijuana "in a brown box on a table in the living room." At the end, the courtroom broke into applause as . Judge Kirk announced, "Gregory, you're the son of Mr. and Mrs. Russ at this moment." Then the boy's lawyer presented him with a blue jersey bearing his new name...
...naive and more than a little excessive in the bargain. True, both major presidential candidates have well-established and largely self- administered credibility problems. "Read my lips" -- Bush's infamous 1988 pledge not to raise taxes -- and "I didn't inhale" -- Clinton's account of his youthful experiment with marijuana -- have become jokes, good for a chuckle or a bored wave of the hand wherever the politically world-weary gather...
...Marijuana. He always handled the drug-use question by insisting, "I never broke the laws of my country." Only in a debate before the New York primary was Clinton pressed on whether he had ever used drugs abroad. The answer: a confession that he had taken a puff at Oxford, coupled with that now famous -- and widely doubted -- exculpatory phrase "I didn't inhale...
Students who took part, anonymously, in the largest study ever to examine undergraduate alcohol and drug use, described their use of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and other drugs. They also answered questions about personal health and academic performance...
...unreasonable to believe that if drugs were legalized, people who stole and murdered for crack money in the past would now buy it with pay from a regular job. Teens would no longer need to cheat their employers and do favors for dealers in order to smoke marijuana like other people drink Jack Daniels...