Word: valium
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...cope with anxiety and tension, millions of people reach for a Valium, a tranquilizer that has become the U.S.'s most widely prescribed drug. Now comes a report guaranteed to make users of the drug anything but tranquil. According to a Canadian physiologist, Valium may promote the growth and spread of cancer...
...York City, a typical Simon comedy that catalogues the neurotic lives of Mel (Michael Achtman) and Edna (Sarah McPhee) Edison: boy lives with girl, boy loses job, girl gets job, boy has breakdown, boy gets girl. Assaulted by noisy cars, barking dogs, loud neighbors, and Valium that doesn't work, Mel and Edna step into the ring with The City and survive, bruised and battered but still whole--and still suffering. As Mel asks, "Why do we pay somebody hundreds of dollars a month to live in an egg box that leaks...
...such shows back to the appearance of NBC's persistently popular Real People, an hour of sometimes amusing interviews in the heartland. A recent show followed A. J. Weberman, a "celebrity garbageologist" who among other feats has retrieved memos from Richard Nixon's trash can and empty Valium bottles from Gloria Vanderbilt's. ("The best thing I ever found," he says, "was Jackie Kennedy's pantyhose.") While Real People, which gets more than a third of the audience in its Wednesday prime-time slot, spawned a series of other "entertainment news" shows like...
Dean M. Gallant, executive officer for the Standing Committee on the Use of Human Subjects at Harvard University, said yesterday he was not surprised Harvard students comprise the largest group selected for the study. He explained that the drugs are probably on a par with Valium and Librium, and that Harvard students are a "very rich, upwardly mobile, and sophisticated" group--the type usually associated with the use of those drugs...
...More likely, though, there are very few shallow people, at least shallow and interesting people. More than likely, it is the writer's attempts that are too superficial, not his subject's lives and thoughts. There is nothing rotten in McPhee, nothing that is decaying or growing or taking Valium. There is no shortage of gift, only, perhaps, of will, for to look honestly and deeply at himself and at others will prove more painful than the labor to which McPhee is accustomed. But contented mediocrity hides not only hurt, but bliss as well. No horse likes blinders...