Word: restrictions
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...would correct some marketplace excesses. A provision in one bill would ensure that a woman could have direct access to an obstetrician (a specialist, after all) throughout her pregnancy. Another would allow emergency care anytime a "prudent layperson" would consider it appropriate. Another would remove bonuses for doctors who restrict care...
...people, it should be brought to the attention of the Harvard community. Herzlinger, as a member of the Board of Directors for Cardinal Health, is accountable for its actions, and students are urging her to tell the company to put the strikers back to work. The administration should not restrict the right to freedom of expression, even if they do not agree with the specific content of the material...
...almost universal discretion in determining Harvard's investments. Only in special cases does a committee of the Corporation--the Committee on Shareholder Responsibility--restrict HMC from certain industries for ethical reasons...
...ringgit, and its stock market plummeted, mercurial Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad implied that international financier George Soros and his ilk were responsible. He then trotted out a familiar, repellent accusation, blaming Jewish speculators who he contended were out to squash the economy of a Muslim country. His proposals to restrict currency trading and otherwise punish foreign investors quickly scared away new investment and called into question the future of what has been one of the world's great economic success stories...
Lost in these political battles is a basic question: is ketamine really dangerous? Maybe not. The British government decided not to closely restrict ketamine because it could not prove that K's effects were severe. Most drug-overdose deaths result from circulatory or respiratory failure, and ketamine doesn't usually depress these functions. Dr. Alex Stalcup, medical director of a California drug-treatment center, says the effects of K are "basically like being really, really drunk. It's really not a demon, not compared with the other stuff we're seeing with kids now," including smokable versions of heroin...