Marijuana Muffins Take a Toll

2012-05-18 2:39:53 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_7d.txt
2012-05-18 2:39:53 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_7d.txt
2012-05-18 2:39:53 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_7d.txt

The News Review:

- Marijuana Muffins Take a Toll
- ‘We need drug-drive testing’
- Facing death with ecstacy
- Naseem Hamed test positive for Drugs; Could Face Longer Stint in…
- Teen becomes youngest person to graduate from mental health court
- Don’t Give Up the Diabetes Fight

Marijuana Muffins Take a Toll
Washington Post – May 21, 2006
Fulton said her mother has had quadruple-bypass surgery and takes several heart medications. Her heart rate dropped dangerously low, leading doctors to keep her overnight. “She was laughing, but we were all very concerned,” Fulton said. A physician told Fulton “that it was at least in part marijuana” in the muffins, she said. WrightChecking on School’s Prom ChecksMost prospective prom escorts have to worry about passing muster with their dates’ parents. In Cape Cod, school officials are doing criminal background checks on some escorts who are not students.

‘We need drug-drive testing’
NEWS.com.au – May 21, 2006
“The Territory should definitely have it,” Mr Wood said. “Anyone who is driving in an unfit state due to drugs shouldn’t be on the road. “Marijuana use is a major concern in the NT and those people using it shouldn’t be behind a wheel. ”

A spokesman for NT Police Minister Paul Henderson said the Government was not considering implementing random drug tests on drivers. But Mr Wood said if the Government was not introducing it because of financial reasons, those reasons should be set aside for the safety of all road users. Nearly 20 per cent of people interviewed revealed that at some time they had driven while under the influence of illicit drugs. And another survey, carried out by the Drug and Alcohol Council of the NT, found ecstasy was becoming more popular with drug users because it was easier to get… Chief Minister Clare Martin set up a road safety taskforce in January to investigate incidents on NT roads. The Federal Government survey revealed that in the NT users combine drugs with alcohol, that pharmaceutical drugs are becoming more popular and LSD and cocaine less popular. It also found cannabis and ecstasy were the most common drugs taken. The survey attracted recent criticism because it paid drug users $30 to take part in it. Share this article. au’, ‘ ROADSIDE drug-drive testing should be introduced in the Territory, it was claimed yesterday.

Facing death with ecstacy
Taipei Times – May 21, 2006
PHOTO: NY TIMES NEWS SERVICEN Diane never smoked marijuana, and she disapproved of her mother’s past drug experiments. But cancer made the 33-year-old teacher ready to try anything that might help: she hoped she would find a cure in herbs from a Tibetan doctor or in the hands of a faith healer deep in the Brazilian rain forest. Then, as the pain and fatigue of advanced colon cancer left Diane increasingly bedridden, she just wanted the strength to get out of bed. That’s when she found ecstasy, the illegal drug people often take at all-night dance parties. Though ecstasy can damage hearts and brain cells, some researchers say the hallucinogen can also inspire deep feelings of well-being and intimacy with others.

Naseem Hamed test positive for Drugs; Could Face Longer Stint in…
Doghouse Boxing – May 21, 2006
uk: SHAMED boxer Naseem Hamed has tested positive for cannabis (Marijuana) behind bars. Carlin reports that Traces of drugs were found in his system during a routine drugs test as Naseem Hamed began a 15-month jail term last week. It is not known if drugs was in Nas’s system before he entered jail.

Teen becomes youngest person to graduate from mental health court
Charlotte Sun-Herald – May 21, 2006
He says he tried to deal with his depression by playing video games and experimenting with marijuana. A month after his high school graduation, Oxenham was facing charges for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. “I used my father’s death as an excuse to use marijuana,” Oxenham said. “When I got arrested, I was really disappointed in myself. ”
In order to get a clean slate, Oxenham entered the Charlotte County Mental Health Court, a program of the.

Don’t Give Up the Diabetes Fight
nytimes.com – May 21, 2006
toolsRight –>Published: May 21, 2006 To the Editor: Your article about the rising costs of diabetes serves to highlight our insane policy against the medical use of marijuana. Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem just reported an experiment with marijuana cannabinoids that significantly reduced the prevalence of Type 1 diabetes in mice from an incidence of 86 percent in non-treated controls to an incidence of only 30 percent. Meanwhile, even powerful figures like Senators John Kerry and Edward M. Kennedy, working with the University of Massachusetts at Amherst on behalf of would-be researchers, cannot break through the barriers to research thrown up by the federal government. The witch hunt on marijuana has endured for years; we got past the Salem witch trials a lot faster. Jerry Epstein Houston, May 17, 2006 The writer is a board member, Drug Policy Forum of Texas.

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