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...avoid the disease and for those who have trouble dealing with their fear, or "AIDS anxiety," as it is now called. Washington's AIDS Education Fund, for instance, offers seminars for the "worried well," who are sometimes so terrified that they can no longer function normally in everyday life. The worry has even led some gays to change their appearance. Because rapid weight loss is one of the symptoms of AIDS, some homosexuals think it is not fashionable any more to be thin. "In Los Angeles it is almost a sign of health among gays to be too fat," says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In the Middle of a War: AIDS | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

...mention a friend's bad breath to him, do you tell another player you have seen his answer card?) and imaginary situations (you are a politician . . .). But even the picayune posers are intended to provoke. Says Makow: "The small decisions are very important. People love to talk about these everyday moral dilemmas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: For a Change, Ethical Pursuit | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

Junior Lance Salsgiver, Harvard’s everyday right fielder and its closer at the outset of last season, may also be (re-)incorporated into the relief picture...

Author: By Pablo S. Torre, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Slugging Wilson Takes On Closer Role For Baseball | 4/11/2005 | See Source »

Even outside of the hospital, Saturday is a book intimately concerned with the mundane processes of the everyday. The squash game is reported almost point for point, as is Perowne’s cookery. Some of these passages contain stunning descriptions, but they are too self-involved, halting the flow of the book and dragging attention away from the at times intriguing melodrama of Perowne’s family and of the deranged Baxter...

Author: By David G. Evans, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: McEwan Stalls on 'Saturday' | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

These are serious questions, and they are becoming more serious everyday. On January 20 of this year (the day, incidentally, of President Bush’s second inauguration) Microsoft announced that it had sold a record-breaking 6.4 million copies of its new game Halo 2. The same game pulled in $125 million on its first day of sales, three times the amount made on the most successful opening day in movie history (Spider-Man, $40.4 million). Of course, the movie industry is still much larger than the video game industry, but it may not be so for very much...

Author: By Jorian P. Schutz, | Title: You Are What You Play | 4/8/2005 | See Source »

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