Word: vitaminous
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Sean Darling-Hammond ’06 volunteered to read the sex scene aloud for the entertainment of everyone on the ski trip. He did so with great dramatic flare, though he was frequently interrupted by laughter. Everyone lost it when Eve offered Steven some Vitamin V, after a few rounds of rather short-lived lovemaking—the poor guy is in his late sixties after...
...Coping in a World Gone ADD. Among his suggestions: prioritize ruthlessly ("Cultivate the lilies, or the things that fulfill you," he says, "and cut the leeches, those that deplete you"), allot 30 minutes a day for thinking, relaxing or meditating, and get significant doses of what he calls vitamin C--the live connection to other people. "As much as we are connected electronically, we have disconnected interpersonally," he says. Compulsive screen sucking, he suggests, may actually be a symptom of vitamin-C deficiency. To perform your best, maintain your individual creativity and avoid the pitfalls of ADT, he insists...
...Cancer The sun may be bad for your skin, but it could do wonders for the prostate. A new study found that men with high exposure to the sun had half the risk of prostate cancer than men who spent most of their days indoors. Why? The prostate uses vitamin D--which the body makes in response to sunlight--to help prostate cells grow normally and crowd out cancer cells in the organ...
...chart. His latest solo album, “The Massacre,” is this year’s top selling record.According to an estimate in The New York Times, 50 is worth $50 million. His moniker has been used to sell clothing, sneakers, watches, and even Vitamin Water. Later this month, a video game called “50 Cent: Bulletproof” will hit store shelves, just in time for the holidays.Indeed, “Get Rich Or Die Tryin,’” the title of 50’s film, has become his life?...
...drugs' capacity to produce suicidal thoughts and, in what he estimates to be 1 in 500 of all SSRI users, drive people to kill themselves. The serotonin-imbalance theory has been a marketing tool for the drug companies, skeptics say. "It suggests a disorder a bit like a vitamin deficiency that will be put right by vitamins," Healy says, "when in fact the SSRIs produce marked abnormalities in the serotonin system...