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Word: bronxful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Living in the South Bronx is not easy for Hispanic immigrants. Nor is it easy trying to raise four children in a neighborhood where drug dealers operated within steps of your front door. Nor is it easy trying to make a living with only a limited education and without a firm command of the English language. Nor is it easy supporting your family after being forced to give up your job in a garment factory because of severe chronic asthma...

Author: By Manlio A. Goetzl, | Title: From the South Bronx To the Gates of Harvard | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

...Pforzheimer House senior arrived in the United States from Puerto Rico at the age of two, and his family immediately settled in the South Bronx, a section of New York City notorious for its high crime and poverty rates...

Author: By Manlio A. Goetzl, | Title: From the South Bronx To the Gates of Harvard | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

...took this success in algebra and his affinity for mathematics and the sciences to James Monroe High School, a public school in the South Bronx...

Author: By Manlio A. Goetzl, | Title: From the South Bronx To the Gates of Harvard | 6/5/1997 | See Source »

Buffalo will be grazing on the high grass of the Wichita Mountains when Vetter's vans roll in. The herds had been exterminated from this homeland, but were re-established in October 1907, when the Federal Government shipped some buffalo in on railroad cars from the Bronx Zoo. For centuries, Native Americans went to the Wichita Mountains on vision quests. The campers who join Vetter will understand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOME OF THE BRAVES | 6/2/1997 | See Source »

Genes and social forces may conspire to turn people into addicts but do not doom them to remain so. Consider the case of Rafael Rios, who grew up in a housing project in New York City's drug-infested South Bronx. For 18 years, until he turned 31, Rios, whose father died of alcoholism, led a double life. He graduated from Harvard Law School and joined a prestigious Chicago law firm. Yet all the while he was secretly visiting a shooting gallery once a day. His favored concoction: heroin spiked with a jolt of cocaine. Ten years ago, Rios succeeded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ADDICTED: WHY DO PEOPLE GET HOOKED? | 5/5/1997 | See Source »

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