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...location will effectively decrease the program’s budget by over 14 percent. Now, according to Pepion, the provost’s office has pressured HUNAP to cease its continuing efforts at outreach to tribal communities and recruitment for Harvard’s various schools. While many would suggest that the Undergraduate Minority Recruitment Program could fill the void, that program affects only the College and does not have the contacts and years of experience that HUNAP has with Native American communities. In addition, the admissions offices of the various schools currently lack the personnel who could fill HUNAP?...

Author: By C. DUANE Meat, | Title: The New Indian Removal | 10/15/2002 | See Source »

Simply put, we don't want our houses to suggest English cottages anymore. Interior walls are disappearing. Volume has replaced coziness, from double-height entryways to oversize garages. It's a concept embraced by urbanites who have abandoned their shoebox-size apartments for the wide-open spaces of lofts reclaimed from 100-year-old factory buildings. With the living room fading, the kitchen has become the family gathering place, and it's being packed with multiple sinks and Department of Defense--priced ovens. The kitchen can't be contained anymore, so it blends into that large live-eat-play space...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The New American Home | 10/14/2002 | See Source »

Like Greenland, the increasingly popular superslow workout isn't quite as idyllic as its name would suggest. A session takes just 20 minutes, and only two workouts a week are expected, but this adds up to a very grueling 40 minutes. Clients cycle through six different weight machines, doing a set of four to six repetitions per exercise. but each rep takes up to 20 seconds, with no rest, so muscles quickly start to quake, and stomachs get queasy. trainers encourage short, sharp breaths in place of squirming and grimacing. "It sounds like a lamaze class with cursing," says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Slower but Just as Painful | 10/14/2002 | See Source »

...deadliest diseases--striking some 500 million people a year and killing as many as 3 million of them. So the genetic secrets hidden in those codes could help drug companies design more effective treatments, better repellents and maybe even a vaccine. The information could also be used, some scientists suggest, to breed genetically modified mosquitoes that are resistant to the malaria parasite. Release these mutant bugs in the wild, the thinking goes, and they will occupy the same ecological niche as wild mosquitoes, competing for food and, with any luck, eventually displacing them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Do We Dare Breed A Skeeter? | 10/14/2002 | See Source »

...settlement out of 38 nearby that has potable water?in effect, a single half-meter-wide well must provide for 60,000 people. The headman claims that anyone is welcome to use his well, but the guards fingering AK-47s and a mounted heavy machine gun around the borehole suggest otherwise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wasted: the Drought That Drugs Made | 10/14/2002 | See Source »

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