Deadly Drugs Hit Schools

Written by Jeff Morelock


The 18-year-old high school student died on Mother's Day. Her mother spentrepparttar night before helplessly watching. Her daughter's body temperature reached 108 degrees. Her blood cells boiled. She bled from her mouth. Was it a rare tropical fever that had caused such a horrible death? No. It was a little tan tablet called PMA.

Overview

PMA is an illegal hallucinogen with effects similar to Ecstasy. PMA is made in clandestine laboratories and has become popular with teenagers. The drug is usually sold in a tablet form withrepparttar 111513 Mitsubishi diamond emblem stamped into it. Most PMA tablets are tan, and are a little bigger than an aspirin.

Hidden Danger

Every year more high school students go to rave clubs. Once inside, drugs such as Ecstasy are easily purchased. Stricter control of chemicals used to make Ecstasy have made it expensive and difficult to buy. Illicit drug chemists sought alternatives. PMA wasrepparttar 111514 answer.

Most dance drugs raise body temperature, but PMA can send it soaring to 108 degrees. Chemicals to make PMA are easy to find. It's cheaper to make. PMA is sold as Ecstasy for a healthy profit.

Drug dealers don't care if they hurt or kill, as long as they are making money. Byrepparttar 111515 time a teenager realizes he or she has made a serious mistake, it is too late. Depending on purity and dosage,repparttar 111516 teenager could spendrepparttar 111517 rest of his or her life boiling to death internally on a rave club floor.

PMA causes users to feel euphoric and energized. Users hug and kiss each other. This often leads to sexual activity -sometimes right onrepparttar 111518 dance floor. People who use PMA say that their sense of touch, smell, and sight are more acute. Others report mild hallucinations.

Purity and dosage varies from tablet to tablet. Even tablets fromrepparttar 111519 same batch of PMA vary. One tablet provides a user withrepparttar 111520 expected experience, whilerepparttar 111521 next one out ofrepparttar 111522 bag killsrepparttar 111523 unlucky teenager who chooses it.

Organize for Creativity

Written by Kathleen Wilson


OK, well, I know organization isn't really decorating, now is it? But, let's face it, what good is allrepparttar effort to create a nice home when it's hidden behindrepparttar 111512 mess andrepparttar 111513 clutter? So in order to help us all prevail over repparttar 111514 chaos, here are some great hints for putting everything in its place! (On a budget, of course!) The number one way to reduce clutter and mess? Deal with things as they occur, don't save it for later! Filerepparttar 111515 mail (or throw it away) as soon as it comes out ofrepparttar 111516 mailbox! Don't step over a small mess thinking you'll do repparttar 111517 whole room later. Getrepparttar 111518 idea? File your paperwork. Make a file/correspondence box with file folders. I just covered a sturdy cardboard box with some contact paper, turned it on its side, and glued a piece of miniature picket fence (cut out of leftover foam core) ontorepparttar 111519 front to hold inrepparttar 111520 bills! You could save lightweight cardboard for dividers, make a "to pay" file and a "to keep" file, and perhaps a school file forrepparttar 111521 kids, and whatever else fits your household! Hide stuff! Yes, there are times when we don't want our living room to look like Disneyland! Floor length cloths onrepparttar 111522 end tables are a great place to shove a toy box or unusually shaped toys when not needed. If you have open shelving or a pantry area, consider sewing a gathered curtain panel to cover clutter. Install it with a

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