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...ignore it!" I would ask you the following: Do you think race should matter? If your answer is "no," I would encourage you to start living by that conviction. Your life is too important and too precious to sacrifice it to the god of race and ethnicity. --Andrew P. Schwartz '99, Harvard Objectivist Club

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Multiculturalism Serves Racists | 2/20/1997 | See Source »

Mediated by GSE lecturer Bob Schwartz, the panel included Meier; Ellen Guiney, director of the Boston Plan for Excellence; Sol Hurwitz, president of the New York Committee on Economic Development; Ron Wolk, publisher and editor of Education Week, and Ronn Robinson, corporate director of education policy for Boeing Corp...

Author: By Tobie E. Whitman, | Title: Panel Discusses Report on Schools | 2/12/1997 | See Source »

...Objectivist Club welcomes all those who are serious about philosophical ideas. We could not agree more that unthinking acceptance of a viewpoint is wrong, and we invite you to critically examine ours--and your own. --Barry D. Wood G4 Jeffrey P. Lindon '97 Joseph C. Anderson '99 Andrew P. Schwartz...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Attack Against Objectivist Club Unfounded | 2/10/1997 | See Source »

...begin with, buying time isn't cheap. It's the ultimate seller's market. For his three-drug combination therapy, Schwartz pays $11,280 annually, plus about $4,000 in test fees and doctor's office visits. Schwartz has insurance to cover most of the expense. But only 20% of the 1 million Americans who carry the virus are so lucky. Taking the new drugs properly--three times a day, with no food for one hour before or two hours afterward--also requires discipline. Patients who neglect the regimen risk developing drug-resistant strains of the virus. The side effects...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIDS: HOPE WITH AN ASTERISK | 12/30/1996 | See Source »

...people, the future is elastic; it stretches before them to whatever length their peace of mind requires. In 1996 a lot of people with AIDS began to find some flexibility in their own dealings with time. "I don't think about the future past a manageable point," insists Caleb Schwartz. "I stopped doing that the day I got the news I was positive." But ask him bluntly whether he expects to be alive a few years from now. The answer he gives may be the same one he would have offered before the new drugs came into the picture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIDS: HOPE WITH AN ASTERISK | 12/30/1996 | See Source »

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