Word: affected
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...Margaret L. Dale, the HMS dean for faculty and research integrity. They are permitted to do so if their financial interests do not exceed those limits, provided they disclose the relationship in publications and presentations. The study authors said they surveyed department chairs because they believed their behavior would affect that of their students and colleagues. The study authors would not divulge the results of the surveys completed by chairs at Harvard-affiliated institutions. “The surveys we’ve done have all been anonymous,” Weissman said, “but Harvard...
...available to women with certain characteristics of the disease are heartening. However, there is a paucity of funding. We need to better understand priorities and must demand that our representatives do too. Members of Congress can work to more effectively define funding priorities while realizing that their efforts affect more than just government agencies, corporations and re-election opportunities. We are not dealing with numbers; we are dealing with people's lives. Stefan N. Miller, Baltimore...
...about its diagnosis, treatment and funding. Advancements in diagnosis and the array of treatments that are available to women with certain characteristics of the disease are heartening. However, there is a paucity of funding. Members of Congress can work to better define funding priorities while realizing that their efforts affect more than just government agencies, corporations and re-election opportunities. We are not dealing with numbers here; we are dealing with people's lives...
...Honestly, who really believes we shouldn’t have input in College legislative decisions that affect us? Do administrators really know us better than we know ourselves? We’re selected because Harvard believes we are the best and the brightest. In fact, we’re trusted, and almost expected, by this College to become leaders in the future. Preventing us from attending “closed door” sessions only stifles learning and breeds discontent, hurting both the students and the administration in the process...
...However, declaring that Petersen’s speech was poorly timed is an excuse for ignoring the much bigger issue it brings up: student citizenship. At the very least, do we have a right, as men and women of Harvard, to real representation in issues that affect us? Be courageous like Petersen...