Get creative with your kids this Turkey Day by making these cute Thanksgiving crafts! Find ideas for paper turkeys, wreaths, ...
Health experts are warning that taking pink cocaine, a modern drug cocktail linked to the death of popstar Liam Payne, is like “playing Russian roulette”. The drug, which is fairly new to the ...
The Royal Hobart Show has received about 700 entries across its cookery and craft section this year, a more than 30 per cent increase. It's also added more than 100 new creative craft classes.
“Pink cocaine,” name-dropped in the Diddy lawsuit and reportedly tied to the death of “One Direction” alum Liam Payne, is becoming a high-profile designer drug. But the contents of the ...
Pink cocaine is the terrifying new drug cocktail suddenly in the spotlight. The illegal substance has been on the radar of international drugs monitoring agencies for years, but now it’s ...
Toxicology results show he had a mix of drugs including one called "pink cocaine." "The first piece that we almost always see in pink, or pink cocaine, is ketamine - a dissociative drug ...
Pink cocaine is typically a powdery mix of ketamine and illegal substances such as methamphetamine, MDMA (also called molly or ecstasy), or opioids, according to WebMD. Researchers have also found ...
ABC news cited unnamed sources in reporting a partial autopsy found pink cocaine, cocaine, benzodiazepine (depressants) and crack in Payne's system the night he fell to his death from a third ...
Has “pink cocaine”, as it is known, now claimed its first high-profile victim? A post-mortem examination has reportedly found that Liam Payne, the former One Direction star, had it in his ...
The former One Direction star had reportedly taken the mixture of drugs known as ‘pink cocaine’ before his death. A partial autopsy turned up all the drugs that comprise the cocktail ...
In the wake of the tragic death of Liam Payne, new reports indicate that one of the drugs found in the One Direction alum’s system was a substance called “pink cocaine.” Payne, 31 ...
A small international team has found that anurans such as frogs and toads will be facing increased risks to their survival in the coming years due to water habitats drying up as a result of global ...