Word: accessibly
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...paper, they are the lucky ones, the 10,000 or so children and and adolescents living with HIV in the United States. They have access to the latest anti-HIV drugs, powerful medications that can keep the virus at bay and, for all intents and purposes, keep them alive long enough for them to date, attend college, marry, and start families of their own. They are indeed fortunate - although living with HIV, even in the U.S., remains a challenge. But these young pioneers - many of them among the first to test antiretroviral (ARV) medications against HIV - are teaching doctors valuable...
...underrepresented” in elite college admissions is because they are in fact overrepresented. Although they only comprise 4.5 percent of the US population, they comprise nearly 20-30 percent of top colleges’ students. To correct for this over-representation, and maybe their societal advantage in gaining access to higher level secondary education, colleges are now admitting a lower percentage of Asians. MICHAEL T. COSCETTA ’03 Paramus, NJ November...
...current UC has been able to do only one thing well: advocacy. During just the last two years the UC has helped bring us 24-hour access to Lamont Library, increased meal options, universal key card access, and a brand new café in Lamont Library. These were all things we wanted, and the UC secured them by advocating for us. At the same time, however, the UC has proved that it is unable to support student groups, create a functional and useful website, organize a cohesive student events calendar, or even reimburse promised funds within a reasonable time frame...
...Caracas neighborhood of Petare, who asked to remain anonymous, said Chavez's programs were just a way of buying votes. "Chavez has bought all the people in the barrios," she said. She also told her son to vote for the President, wary that opposing Chavez could bar him from access to government jobs and programs. Her fears are not unfounded - countless people who signed in favor of holding a referendum to oust Chavez in 2004 say they're blacklisted and can't get a government...
Harvard returned to a pre-e-mail age yesterday when the Faculty of Arts and Sciences servers malfunctioned. Users of IMAP e-mail programs such as Eudora, Outlook, and Thunderbird notified FAS Computing Services of access problems as early as 9:30 a.m., and all FAS servers crashed around 10:45 a.m. for nearly seven hours, according to Supervisor of Residential Computing Erin Nettifee. Students could not visit any FAS Web sites and were able to access their FAS e-mail only intermittently throughout the day until the system was fully restored by 6:30 p.m. The Computer Services staff...