|    About PHP    |     Books    |     Author Shows    |     Archived Shows    |     Listen Live    |     Articles    |     Letters    |

Report of Ecstasy Drug's Great Risks Is Retracted

A leading scientific journal yesterday retracted a paper it published last year saying that one night's typical dose of the drug Ecstasy might cause permanent brain damage.

The monkeys and baboons in the study were not injected with Ecstasy but with a powerful amphetamine, said the journal, Science magazine. (Free Registration Req'd)  More...

***
Students get warning on underage drinking
Double-cohort class brings big increase in younger population at universities

TORONTO - Underage students caught drinking in campus pubs will face penalties harsher than a hangover as Ontario universities prepare for the increased number of teenagers arriving this year.

Although universities in the province have always had a few underage students, the elimination of the fifth year of high school means that there are even more teenagers under the legal drinking age of 19 on school campuses.
More...

****

Early bird gets happy - especially in Toronto

Montreal is famous for its joie de vivre, Toronto for its grimly puritan outlook. Or at least that's how the clichés go.

But a new study suggests that Torontonians might be happier than Montrealers - and oddly enough, a lot of it has to do with each city's location in the Eastern Standard time zone.

Torontonians live farther west in that zone, and therefore get up earlier in relation to the sunrise than the more eastern-dwelling Montrealers, notes a Montreal psychiatrist studying the link between depression and late risers. More...

***
 

Check out the selection of books available!! And remember: Every time you purchase a book through the website, you're helping to support People Helping People!

Google
Search WWW
Search www.markelliot.com

LISTEN LIVE
Saturday Night
 Midnight - 3 AM EASTERN (GMT - 5)
News Talk 1010 CFRB Toronto    CJAD 800 AM Montreal

Shortwave CFRX 6070 Khz


Insurance Bureau of Canada


Coleman's Restaurant & Deli

3085 Bathurst St. Toronto
416-789-1141  Toll Free: 1-866-882-3620


Mark Elliot

You've enjoyed listening to him and now he's available for counselling in Toronto or by telephone wherever you are!

Find out more by calling today!

416-928-2225


Bellwood Health Services

Help is just a phone call away.

Toll free 1-800-387-6198 In Toronto 416-495-0926  

E-mail info@bellwood.ca


Questions? e-mail to:
peoplehelpingpeople@cfrb.com

FEEDBACK@markelliot.com TODAY
 
To: mark@markelliot.com
Subject: Hi

Dear Mark,

I just wanted to write a short note to say that I am very pleased that you will be taking over the Nightside. You did an excellent job of keeping us all informed during the blackout and the days shortly thereafter. That entire period of time was made all the more bearable listening to you......and the Spider. I was hoping that CFRB would give you more time, so the best news I heard last week was that you would be getting the Nightside.
 More...

The Futile Pursuit of Happiness
If Daniel Gilbert is right, then you are wrong. That is to say, if Daniel Gilbert is right, then you are wrong to believe that a new car will make you as happy as you imagine. You are wrong to believe that a new kitchen will make you happy for as long as you imagine. You are wrong to think that you will be more unhappy with a big single setback (a broken wrist, a broken heart) than with a lesser chronic one (a trick knee, a tense marriage). You are wrong to assume that job failure will be crushing. More...


Coliena Rentmeester for The New York Times


???????????? ????????????????? ???? ????????. ?????? ????????? ?????????.


Program 'saved my life'
Alcoholic battles demons with help of United Way
Idol finalists at run to kick-start agency's campaign

TORONTO - There's no mistaking the mischievous glint in Cheryl Latus' blue eyes, a flickering light that hints at merriment and misery at the same time.

And that's been pretty much the life of the 51-year-old Toronto alcoholic who, thanks to a United Way-funded agency, is battling to return to a normal existence without a bottle of booze in her purse. More...
Saturday

LIVE Midnight to 3 AM

Listen live Saturday Night

News Talk 1010 CFRB Toronto    CJAD 800 AM Montreal


The buzz across Canada: coffee houses go to pot

MONTREAL -- In many Montreal restaurants, you can bring your own booze. So what might be the next logical step?

"It'll be bring-your-own-buzz," says Hugo St-Onge.

The leader of the Bloc Pot, a provincial pro-marijuana party, he wants to open a café where you can light up your own cannabis.

And he isn't alone. Across Canada, a small but growing number of coffee houses encourage customers to bring their own joints, taking advantage of the current legal ambiguity over simple possession of cannabis. More...

Dr Steven R. Miller Ph.D

      

Today's Thought

Receive Today's Gift a daily e-mail meditation

redflagsweekly.com

RAISING ISSUES, FACING CONTROVERSIES, EXPLORING IDEAS
In Health, Science, Environment, Arts and Politics
 
Canadian Centre for Abuse Awareness

Canadian Centre for Abuse Awareness
Martin Arnold Kruze Memorial Fund

In Canada you can order any of the books you find on the website from

www.chapters.indigo.ca

Marijuana Anonymous Chatrooms

Click Here to go to Yahoo Chat: : Addiction & Recovery/Smoking

 

HARM REDUCTION THERAPY
HOME-BREWED BOOZE AND DOCTORING

By Mark Elliot

John had lived in the back of a downtown Toronto community center for as long as anyone could remember. "He was there for the past 14 years as far as we've been able to tell," says Art Manuel, the director of the harm reduction program at Toronto’s Seaton House homeless shelter. "He was blind when we found him - drinking anything he could find that had alcohol in it."

Manuel’s harm reduction program took John in to care for him in a way that was unheard of until just a few years ago. In 1996, a coroner’s investigation into the freezing deaths of three homeless men led to the start of the Seaton House program. Recommendations in the report ordered authorities in Toronto to provide an alternative to abstinence-based recovery. "No one was allowed in shelters if they were drunk and certainly not if they were still drinking," he says. "That left many of the most vulnerable people in the system on the streets drinking whatever they could find." The neighborhood stores around the Seaton House shelter stock plentiful supplies of mouthwash, Lysol, cheap colognes, and Chinese cooking wines - the drinking stuff of the bottom-end alcoholic. As a long-time drunk once taught me: "Mix it with orange pop and you can drink anything."
More...

e-mail to:
peoplehelpingpeople@cfrb.com

Business Office:
(416) 928-2225

Regular Mail:
People Helping People
CFRB 1010
2 St. Clair Ave. West
Toronto, ON M4V 1L6
Canada

Website created by

Jarrett Rainhard

Problems?
Questions?
E-mail me!


If you download SETI,
please join our group!

Back Issues? Click Here

Executive Producer: Warren Cosford

All Copyrights remain the property of the Corporations listed..
All Summary COMMENTARY Copyright © 2002, 2003 The Elliot Company Inc.

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.