Word: labs
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...Yard, the Ad Board is actually charged with deliberating on almost all of the cases of student misconduct. However, it seems extraordinarily inconsistent that the same Board should deliberate on a case of a tactless but well-meaning beer-guzzling freshman and on a dishonest student charged with fabricating lab results. Simple discipline for relatively minor infractions must be separated from larger moral issues on campus. Creating an Honor Council (separate from the Ad Board) to uphold an official honor code is the only way for Harvard to acknowledge that it is capable of distinguishing the treatment from the diagnosis...
Cases like Karla and John Baker's are the most controversial. Police raided their home in February 2005, suspecting that the couple was running a meth lab. The Bakers, who turned out to be users rather than dealers, were charged with endangering the welfare of their son Justin, 12. After the Bakers were able to plea-bargain their way out of jail time, Cindy Finch, an Olmsted County social worker, offered an ultimatum: come up with a life plan or lose Justin permanently...
...rock walls. Labyrinthine cables coil along the floor, and the tunnel reverberates with a sometimes deafening din, punctuated by shouts and horn blasts. In an eerily normal scene near ground zero, a surveyor chats on a Touch-Tone wall phone. The atmosphere is that of an underground lab rather than a staging ground for Armageddon...
From Aurora, IL, ELLIOT R. LAUZEN ’09 keeps in shape as a wide-receiver on the football team. This biology concentrator works in a Medical School lab, and likes to hang out with the boys at Hoffa’s. This Pennypacker resident will be making plays in Winthrop next year. His buddies call him “Chise”, and his personal quote is short and concise: “Compete...
...current system of fragmented payment - for hospital stays, office visits, lab tests, drugs, and therapists - destroys the patterns of care that patients need, and leaves them confused and, too often, simply abandoned. Funding care for people over time, instead of for specific medical events, reduces the burden of illness by focusing on high quality preventive care. We need "managed care" as it was originally intended to be - the good kind, not the evil, mutant twin that just tried to cut costs, restrict choice, and limit available care. Correctly conceived, "managed care" addresses the real needs of patients over time...