Word: safe
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...other hand, phenylephrine sprays are usually safe for folks with high blood pressure, since the medication stays pretty much in the nose and doesn't affect the rest of the body. Pseudoephedrine, by contrast, should not be used, except under a doctor's order, if you have hypertension. Also, in extremely rare cases, the drug may trigger a heart attack...
...inactivity due to faulty infrastructure, the Quincy Grille will be up and runing again, starting this Saturday night. The culprit—a grease-clogged vent—was repaired over the summer, and after passing a sanitation inspection yesterday, the Grille has now officially been deemed both safe and sanitary. While the Grille will still be recognisable to those who remember it, this year’s managers, Ben J. Conlee ’07 and Adam P. Schneider ’07, have a few changes up their sleeves. Prices will be lowered on some items, such...
...Perez wasn't bashful about her faith either. Every Sunday morning, she'd wake up by playing gospel CDs as she read the Bible. Her roommate Ramirez-Raphael, always trying to catch up on sleep, says Sunday mornings weren't safe until Perez - and the tambourine she always took to play in the Gospel Choir - were at church...
...Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Brown University. Richard R. Anderson, a professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School and the Director of the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at MGH, was instrumental in the development and testing of a newly invented tattoo ink that is fully removable and completely safe. “The tattoo consists of these little submicron particles that are designed so that they carry the pigment permanently, but can be cracked open and then the pigment is released,” Anderson explained. Unlike the ink currently used to make tattoos, Anderson said...
...coli cases have been reported in Massachusetts. But when dealing with the possibility of a gastrointestinal illness marked by such symptoms as bloody diarrhea, cramping, and, um, death, Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS) took what HUDS Assistant Director for Marketing Crista Martin called a “better safe than sorry” approach. Following a Sept. 15 warning from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, HUDS pulled pre-bagged greens from the menu. Still, odds are nobody’s going to end up puking in Stillman at least for anything but the usual punch + vodka + TLR misadventures.Why...