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Articles from July 2007
Opinion | Friday, July 27, 2007
I’ve got your benchmarks
By Stephanie Ramage
On July 18, at the height of the Senate
debate over beginning a troop withdrawal from Iraq within 120 days,
National Public Radio interviewed former Secretary of State Colin
Powell.
Read full article | Comments: 1
News | Friday, July 27, 2007
More money per minute
Minimum wage hike takes effect
By Colby Dunn
Time is money—it’s an adage that’s been
thrown around by ambitious business people for years. But now, time is
going to mean considerably more money for low-wage workers around the
country.
Read full article | Comments: 2
News | Friday, July 27, 2007
Riding the storm out
Congressional committee investigates mutiny at the National Hurricane Center
By Mark Woolsey
With the pending reassignment of the
director of the National Hurricane Center after an unprecedented
mutiny, some may have thought the resulting personnel hurricane had
blown itself out. But testimony on Capitol Hill paints the opposite
picture. Now the tempest may accelerate to a Category 5, swirling
around officials of the National Weather Service and parent agency the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Read full article | Comments: 0
News | Friday, July 27, 2007
Bully!
Georgia schools try new ways to fight an old problem
By Diane Loupe
With most metro area schools starting classes again within
the next month, a lot of parents and kids are worried about a problem as
old as school itself: bullying. It’s especially common in middle school and may be
far more dangerous than many would think.
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Friday, July 27, 2007
D’oh! The Humanity!
‘Simpsons’ movie can’t live up to its own hype
BY KEVIN FOREST MOREAU
Unless you’ve been living under a
rock—and, really, even then—it’s been impossible to escape the
incessant buildup to “The Simpsons Movie.” No bomb squads were called
out to investigate strange-looking advertisements, as was the case
earlier this year when a marketing plan for the “Aqua Teen Hunger
Force” movie went horribly awry. Still, between a ubiquitous TV
commercial, various 7-Eleven convenience stores transforming into
Kwik-E-Marts and Homer Simpson delivering the opening monologue on “The
Tonight Show” last week, the 20th Century Fox PR machine has been
working overtime to place the movie front and center in the public
consciousness.
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Festivals and Happenings
Back to School with the Braves
Celebrate the upcoming end of summer—for the kids, anyway—with an
evening of baseball. The Braves will host Back to School Night on
Thurs., Aug. 2, as they take on the Houston Astros at Turner Field.
Tickets for outfield seats and upper box seats only $3 for kids 14 and
under. Kids can participate in a pre-game parade around the ballfield
and visit the Braves museum for free. Children that attend will get a
Braves tomahawk. The game starts at 7:35 p.m. 404-522-7630. www.Braves.com/Summer.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Heat Wave
Temperatures are rising in the kitchen and cooling off with fresh and fabulous cocktails
By Kirsten Ott
Pull up a stool, blokes and birds
(that’s British for beer lovers of all sexes). TAP, Midtown’s new
gastropub, from the gents who brought you Trois, Piebar, One Midtown
Kitchen and Two Urban Licks, has concocted a beer club and they’re
recruiting new members. Not since we sported Members Only jackets have
we felt this cool. Sign up at TAP to gain coveted access to more than
40 globe-trotting beers, become a member of the TAP Taster’s Society
and be notified of secret handshakes, news and the like. For more
information, call 404-347-2220 or visit www.tapat1180.com.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Fly the Coop
All roads lead to Anderson
By Caren West
I cannot remember the last time I went on a real vacation. You know,
when you go some place solely for enjoyment with no other purpose than
taking a break from your daily existence in order to have fun and
perhaps get a little R&R. Any sort of work, even checking in with
the office, is not permitted. Sadly, the concept of vacationing has
become completely foreign to me. All of my trips center around business
or family, so even if I am gallivanting around Vegas or watching my
little sis tie the knot in Mexico, I am somehow required to be there—so
it’s not really the same.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life, Travel | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Everything’s Bigger in Texas
The Sunday Paper pays a visit to Western wine country
By Suzanne Wright
Around these parts, wine aficionados
sport faded jeans, dusty boots and big belt buckles. I’ve traveled 988
miles to attend the 27th annual San Antonio Express-News Wine Festival,
a monumental three-day affair featuring an abundance of regional
vintners and 450 wines from Australia, Italy, Bulgaria, Chile and
California. However worldly the offerings are, I’ve set my sights on
uncorking the local flavors and roping in some of the region’s best
sights.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Party like a rock star
Atlanta’s 10 sexiest nightspots
By Kirsten Ott
Atlanta’s nightlife is growing up. After
the demise of Buckhead’s status as the dance capital of the South, our
club scene has swelled to new levels of posh sophistication, though we
still know how to get down and dirty on the dance floor. The days of
drinking to oblivion haven’t left us just yet—and probably never will,
as pretty young college-age things continue to flock to the remaining
Buckhead bars—but money-maker shakers have matured from dancing on the
bar to simply dancing near the bar.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Beaming With Pride
Every time Micah burps, Jimmy and I just
about fall all over ourselves blubbering with pride. I haven’t felt
this level of euphoria since the time I accepted a joint from at a Pink
Floyd concert in the 1990s. Yes, this instinctual release of tiny air
bubbles makes our collective hearts swell as big as the bangs of a 1980
Texas beauty pageant finalist. And that’s just when he burps once; with
two burps, we behave as if we have been entrusted with a child prodigy.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Cry Me a River
“When did guys start acting so girly,
and why are we dating them?” my West Coast friend S. wailed during one
of our recent catch-up gab-fests.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life, Health + Fitness | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Calming Concerns: Hair Loss in Women
Q I’m a woman in my mid-40s, and
I’m concerned about rapid hair loss. I see hair in the shower drain
almost every morning. I went through some periods of this after each of
my children was born, but this time it’s not stopping. I’ve heard of
female pattern baldness. Could this be what’s happening to me?
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Delivering an action-packed story
Director Paul Greengrass talks about ‘Bourne Ultimatum’
BY BERT OSBORNE
Jason Bourne, the amnesiac CIA operative
played by Matt Damon in “The Bourne Identity” (2002) and “The Bourne
Supremacy” (2004), finally sees in the light in “The Bourne Ultimatum,”
the third (and presumably final) installment in a series of movies
based on the Robert Ludlum novels. Shot on location in New York,
London, Paris, Berlin, Madrid and Tangier–and featuring all the
thrilling action sequences we’ve come to expect from the franchise–the
film reunites Damon with previous “Bourne” co-stars Julia Stiles and
Joan Allen, in addition to introducing a few new shady characters
(played by David Strathairn, Scott Glenn, Albert Finney and others).
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Wicked ways
Life’s a blast for ‘Oz’ witch
BY RACHAEL MASON
To the people of Oz, the Wicked Witch of
the West is a menace. But Jane Blass believes she’s just misunderstood.
“She’s lonely and she thinks people don’t like her,” she says.
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E, Music, Reviews | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Soundcheck
Delta Moon
“Clear Blue Flame”
(Jumping Jack)
4 stars
Churning through two female vocalists
in the past two albums sure doesn’t help the consistency of a band
fronted by a woman singer. So guitarist/songwriters Mark Johnson and
Tom Gray ditch the attractive front person for the first time on their
new release. Read full article | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Cold as Ice
Modern Gentlemen take on Pinky and Reyka Vodka and Sterling Caviar
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod
“Vodka … caviar … more rock ’n’ roll!” So shouts the Soviet trade
representatives from the fictional “Soft Drink Secretariat” in the
classic 1961 Billy Wilder Cold War farce, “One, Two, Three” during a
meeting with Coca-Cola rep C.R. MacNamara (James Cagney) at an East
Berlin nightclub. Soon, in a famous scene, MacNamara’s sexy blonde
secretary (Liselotte Pulver) seductively dances on the tabletop in a
slinky polka-dot dress, while one of the reps bangs his shoe against
the table (á la Khrushchev) to the beat of the music. Can quality vodka
and caviar really be so jubilant? Absolutely.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Fresh Catch
A major seafood supplier gives SP the lowdown on shrimp
By Suzanne Wright
Bill Demmond, chief operating officer
and seafood enthusiast, just celebrated his 25th anniversary with
Inland Seafood. Inland is the Southeast’s largest fresh seafood
processor and among the top five in the United States. Shrimp is their
No. 1 selling product.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Learning a new trade
Former soccer star settles in as Silverbacks women’s coach
BY JASON CHATRAW
On an unseasonably cool July evening, Keith Jones stalks the sidelines
of an Atlanta Silverbacks women’s game, studying the field, ready to
give direction when needed. It’s a sight that takes some getting used
to: Most of the fans in the stands may not be aware of it, but it
wasn’t that long ago that Jones was a star in what is arguably soccer’s
best professional association, the English Premier League.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Five more years
Franco returns to the ATL, with an eye on the long term
BY JASON CHATRAW
Julio Franco sits at the kitchen bar,
polishing off the last few bites of a Saturday morning breakfast. It's
hard not to notice the sculpted biceps protruding from his skin-tight
shirt. It's also hard not to notice the green tea he sips from an
espresso shot cup. “This stuff has the best antioxidants,” he explains.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, July 26, 2007
Shooting Blanks
Vick not the only one making wrong decisions
BY ADAM KROHN
Arthur Blank really thought the NFL was
like Home Depot. He thought he could just walk in and build an
organization from scratch. There’s one problem with that theory: The
Falcons weren’t at square one. In fact, under the leadership of Dan
Reeves, they were at the cusp of a championship. But Reeves wasn’t the
owner; he was just a “football guy.” Had he succeeded at his goal of
bringing a championship to Atlanta, it wouldn’t have been under Blank’s
leadership. So he had to go.
Read full article | Comments: 2
Friday, July 20, 2007
Don’t abandon Iraq
By Stephanie Ramage
I recently met a Korean War veteran who
explained to me that the Korean War was never won because no peace
agreement was secured. What we achieved was an armistice, which is why
we still have troops on the North Korean border.
Read full article | Comments: 3
Opinion | Friday, July 20, 2007
Beyond crepes and victims
By Bob Zaslavsky
In its latest draft of course criteria,
which will go into effect July 1, 2008, the Georgia Department of
Education’s foreign language recommendation is not, strictly speaking,
a requirement and it is both inadequate and demeaning. Continuing our
discussion from last week, anything less than three years (a two-year
basic course followed by one year of literature study) is less than
what a student needs to achieve genuine mastery of another language.
The goal of studying another language—just as with English—is the
understanding of another culture, and no understanding of a culture can
develop without a feel for that culture’s literature.
Read full article | Comments: 2
News | Friday, July 20, 2007
Execution delayed
Board agrees to consider new evidence
By Stephanie Ramage
On July 16, the Georgia Board of Pardons
and Paroles granted a 90-day stay of execution to Troy Anthony Davis
who was scheduled to die by lethal injection on July 17.
Read full article | Comments: 0
News | Friday, July 20, 2007
Landing NBAF
Georgia makes final cut for center aimed at animal-to-human diseases
By Colby D. Dunn
Mississippi, Kansas, Texas, North Carolina, Georgia. These are the
five contenders left fighting for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility,
or NBAF, and as the field continues to
narrow, the competition is getting tight.
Read full article | Comments: 1
News | Friday, July 20, 2007
Out of bounds
Reeling from a federal indictment, Atlanta reconsiders its love affair with NFL superstar Michael Vick
By Kevin Moreau and Stephanie Ramage
Following the July 17 news of Michael
Vick’s indictment on a federal conspiracy charge for his alleged role
in a multi-state dogfighting ring run from his Virginia home, the
Atlanta Falcons quarterback’s name is on everyone’s lips. It’s nearly
impossible to turn on the TV or the radio without hearing it, or to sit
down in a bar or restaurant without the guy behind you outlining Vick’s
litany of lapses of judgment. You can’t go anywhere in Atlanta without
being bombarded by the constant chatter about jail time and possible
trade scenarios or the gruesome details of the dogfighting charges.
Read full article | Comments: 6
Sports | Thursday, July 19, 2007
The honeymoon’s over
Indicted and underperforming, Vick’s lost his appeal
BY JASON CHATRAW
I don’t know if I ever really fell in
love with Michael Vick as the Falcons’ quarterback, but I certainly was
in like with him. He razzled and dazzled us all: leaping over
defenders, vanishing in the grasp of a linebacker, racing for the end
zone. He turned my weekly Maalox moment with the Falcons into an ice
cream Sunday treat. But when the feds indicted Vick on three counts
related to dogfighting, I was reaching for the Maalox bottle again.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Getting Back To Normal—Whatever That Is
By Lisa Baron
I probably sent the wrong message when I
registered for Brooke Shield’s postpartum opus “Down Came the Rain,”
but I never had a baby before, so I wanted to be prepared for all
postpartum possibilities. We are not only the proud parents of baby
Micah; we also are the proud owners of loads and loads of books full of
facts, figures and calculations on how to raise a normal baby. Most of
the information I learned about pregnancy and caring for a baby come
from these books, as well as the experiences of other mothers. The only
problem is that the baby isn’t reading the books. He doesn’t know that
at seven weeks he is supposed to be noticeably enthralled with hands
and intrigued by his feet. As far as he’s concerned, it’s hard enough
work lifting his floppy head off his tummy-time mat while two giant
heads are drooling all over his every move. And I know just how he
feels: I’ve been trying to keep up with the supposed “normal” schedule
since I got pregnant—even when my body and/or my mind just weren’t
ready.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Marching To the Beat of My Own Theme
By Caren West
I often work with my headphones on to
drown out all the distractions around me. With as many as five dogs
running around the office and phones ringing off the hook all the time,
far too often 8 a.m. turns into 8 p.m. Instead of sitting on my couch
watching HBO’s “John from Cincinnati” (my new obsession) courtesy of my
TiVo, I find myself still at the office looking at number four on my
to-do list of 400.
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Strong hold
‘Hairspray’ remake charms viewers with song and dance
By Rachael Mason
It’s impossible not to compare
“Hairspray” with the original 1988 movie, directed by John Waters. That
film inspired the stage version of “Hairspray” and the popularity of it
led to the new movie.Read full article | Comments: 0
Life, Travel | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Coasting By
A Nantucket escape evokes quiet repose in any season
By Suzanne Wright
Euphemistically, you could call the
plane “petite.” Counting the one next to the pilot, Cape Air’s flight
from Boston to Nantucket has nine seats. At check-in, I am asked to
weigh my purse (7 lbs) and provide my own weight. (I hope the agents
know everyone fudges and add 20 percent to the aggregate total.) It’s
an absolutely gorgeous fall day when we take off, heading straight for
the skyline and then rising over the red brick buildings that shape the
skyline. The plane is mostly windows, so the view of the coastline is
superb. When we land, 35 minutes later, the small airport reminds me of
the one on the TV show “Wings.”
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Water Works
Lessons in water-skiing produce more than just balance
By Hope S. Philbrick
The first time I attempted to water ski
I was 13 years old. I plunged into Grand Traverse Bay after watching my
father’s friend’s 17-year-old son—upon whom I had a huge crush—skip
gracefully across the waves. “It’s easy,” Dad said,, tossing me the
towrope while he sat dry in the speedboat. “Just stand up as the boat
gets going.” It looked fun, and, as a strong swimmer, I wasn’t afraid
of the water. I most hoped to impress Scott, whose job it would be to
watch me while our fathers drove and alert them if I fell; I imagined
that if I was able to hold his gaze long enough, I could make him fall
in love with me.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, July 19, 2007
The quiet man
Braves veteran Edgar Renteria leads by example
By Michael Mahan
Atlanta Braves shortstop Edgar Renteria
knows what it’s like to be adored and idolized. After driving in the
winning run in the bottom of the 11th inning in the seventh game of the
1997 World Series, he was knighted and named Man of the Year in his
native Colombia. He also knows what it's like to be vilified, dubbed
“Edgar Rent-an-Error” by members of the Boston tabloid media after
leading the Major Leagues in errors during his only season with the Red
Sox in 2005.Read full article | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Get real!
Hollywood welcomes Beckham to America, but soccer's status won't change
BY ADAM KROHN
European football in America? ROFL,
like, whatever! The sport is so irrelevant in this country that we
invented our own football, as if to correct such a ridiculous game! In
America, football means war (on the field, of course, but I’ll get to
that later). It means fighting in the trenches and knocking your
opponent out cold to gain that precious inch for a first down—not a
bunch of Vlade Divac-like crybabies laying on the ground faking
injuries while everyone else runs around in circles trying to kick a
ball through a net. In fact, on the priority list of American sports
fans, “soccer,” as it’s called here, ranks comfortably below
professional bowling.
Read full article | Comments: 5
Quick | Thursday, July 19, 2007
RADAR
Putting the “art” in “party”
It’s not every day you see crowds packing an art gallery to
overflowing, with folks spilling into the street. But that was exactly
the sight at the Bill Lowe Gallery’s 18th anniversary bash on July 13.
Patrons were treated to complimentary cocktails, special dance
performances and the debut of two eye-catching exhibits: “Painters,”
featuring works by Brett Osborn, Richard Currier, Rose Freyuth-Fraizer
and Aleksander Balos; and “Shadowdance,” an “exploration of form in
photography” by regional photographer Keiko Guest. That’s dancers Rikki
McKinney and Liz LeGrande, above, bending over backwards to entertain
the crowd. Get it? Oh, we slay ourselves …
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Wall of Voodoo
“Call of the West”
(I.R.S. Records)
Recently, I dusted off and played my
25-year-old vinyl copy of “Call of the West” in advance of Wall of
Voodoo founder Stan Ridgway’s July 27 show celebrating its silver
anniversary. The L.A. band’s sophomore release is best known for the
iconic “Mexican Radio,” a not entirely representative fluke hit that
has become Ridgway’s arty albatross, aided enormously by MTV’s constant
play of its bizarre yet eye-catching video. Even though it was the
band’s breakthrough, the project became the singer-songwriter’s swan
song with the band he started. Ridgway then moved on to an
intermittently successful solo career.Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Strange bedfellows
‘Chuck & Larry’ depicts fake couple, but offers real laughs
By Steve Warren
Deception swings both ways in movies
about gays and straights pretending to be the opposite of what they
are. Consider films like “The Gay Deceivers” (1969), “Victor/Victoria”
(1982), “La Cage aux Folles” (1978) and its American remake “The
Birdcage” (1996). The aim seems to be to figure out what a mass,
mainstream audience is ready for, and give it to them, with comedy
being the spoonful of sugar that helps a message of tolerance go down.
After the success of “Brokeback Mountain” you’d think Hollywood would
throw caution to the winds, but so far, that isn’t the case.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Life, Health + Fitness | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Smart Legs: Microprocessors aid in mobility and stability
Q: I have a prosthetic leg, but have heard that Mayo Clinic is testing a computerized “smart” leg. Please tell me more about it.
A: The term “smart” leg
refers to a group of prosthetic-knee devices with imbedded
microprocessors that sense the appropriate way to respond to the
demands placed on the prosthesis. When walking, your knee bends and
needs mobility as the foot swings forward. Then, stability is required
as the foot is placed on the ground and the other foot swings through.
Microprocessor-controlled knees make that adjustment without effort
from the patient. The same adjustments occur when the patient is going
down stairs, walking on a changing slope or other circumstances that
require alternating stability and mobility. Mechanical knees don’t make
that adjustment, requiring the patient to look down and consciously
adjust foot and body position based on ground conditions. Read full article | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Swiss Army Bar
Smash, Stick & Crush with Tools of the Booze Trade
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod
Too often, bright young city-dwellers
live in cool pads replete with an imported coffee maker that can brew
caffeinated nectar, LCD-everything and Wi-Fi availability at every
square inch. While a broadband connection can offer the fruits of
knowledge (liberal arts or carnal), it can’t fix a drink. Alas, given
the call to cocktails, many peer past the hanging phalanx of copper
pans, open the utility cabinet and find barely a serviceable cocktail
shaker. Mon dieu. What happens when a recipe calls for muddled fruit,
sexy garnishes or crushed ice? For those who are still straining mixed
drinks through the spaghetti colander and stirring gin martinis with a
spatula handle, below is a primer on three of the most absent bar tools.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Milking it
Flat Creek Lodge opens Georgia’s second artisan dairy
By Hope S. Philbrick
Small family dairy farms dot the landscape in Europe and New England,
while for many years Georgia could claim only one such enterprise:
Sweet Grass Dairy in Thomasville. But Flat Creek Lodge, a hunting and
fishing resort and spa in Southeast Georgia, celebrated the official
opening of its micro-dairy June 9, making it the state’s second
licensed artisanal cheese producer.
Read full article | Comments: 1
Life | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Age of Love: It Ain’t What It Used 2 B
By Blane Bachelor
“¿Que pasa?” the message would read over my sea-green cell phone, usually around 3 a.m. Translation: “Can I come over?”
Read full article | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, July 19, 2007
Notes from the past
Musical revues spotlight retro tunes
BY BERT OSBORNE
Heaven only knows what ART Station artistic director David Thomas sees in playwright Roger Bean. It’s sad enough that audiences keep eating up Bean’s particular brand of dim-witted musical revue—which typically uses stock period caricatures and flimsy plot gimmicks to bridge the gaps in a concert of golden oldies from this or that bygone era.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, July 13, 2007
Georgia’s school requirements: Some improvement, but more is needed
By Bob Zaslavsky
The Georgia Department of Education has
posted a draft of a plan (Rule 160-4-2-.48) to toughen the
requirements—effective July 1, 2008—for high school graduation. The
purpose of the plan is to prepare all students equally for college or
the workplace in recognition that the workplace—today more than ever
before—needs individuals who are prepared for college-level work, even
if they have no immediate, post-high school intent to attend college.
Read full article | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, July 13, 2007
Praise For Those Who Saved Us!
by Silas Von Haessler
It is bittersweet for me to write this.
On one hand, it is a privilege for me, in the year 2107, to sing the
praises of those who sang for us so long ago. On the other, I am forced
to confront the fact that my own great-great-grandfather Eric Von
Haessler was one of those wretched writers who foolishly denied the
impending holocaust of global warming in article after article for this
very publication a hundred years ago.
Read full article | Comments: 1
Opinion | Friday, July 13, 2007
A different kind of faith
By Stephanie Ramage
We are creating a warrior caste in this
country. And this division can be chalked up in part to a growing
number of American civilians who might be said to lack a belief in
ideals, according to Robert D. Kaplan, who says such “moral hardiness”
is pro forma for a majority of the soldiers charged with protecting
that populace.
Read full article | Comments: 1
Opinion | Friday, July 13, 2007
Hard-Learned Lessons
By Mark Douglas
Common sense says that if you want
someone to learn a lesson, they need to be allowed to face the
consequences of their actions. Unfortunately, this makes some lessons
difficult to learn, especially in democracies. And nowhere is this more
evident than in civilian control of the military, where the
consequences of military actions are often shouldered by persons who
did not initiate those actions—partly because the initiators are out of
office and partly because they didn’t have to shoulder weapons while
they were in office.
Read full article | Comments: 0
News | Friday, July 13, 2007
Antidepressant contamination
Our happiness is killing our fish and frogs
By Colby Dunn
Prozac. Paxil. Zoloft. Lexapro.
Wellbutrin. Cymbalta. We hear about them constantly. And all of us
probably know at least 10 people that are on one of them—and maybe even
more according to a recently released CDC study that names
antidepressants the No. 1, prescribed drug class in the country. More
than 118 million people are throwing back these so-called happy pills,
and often to life-changing effect. But not everyone is jumping for joy
at the antidepressant revolution. In fact, some fish and frogs are
finding it difficult to jump at all, due to antidepressant exposure.
Read full article | Comments: 0
News | Friday, July 13, 2007