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...rest of Harvard's Cambridge tax bill, whichis the fourth largest in the city, comes inpayments made on utilities and non-academicproperties. The University pays approximately$300,000 in user fees for water and sewageservice...

Author: By Mark M. Colodny, | Title: Even Harvard Must Face Taxes | 4/15/1986 | See Source »

...help by setting up nationwide hot lines with toll-free 800 numbers that workers and their families can call to get advice on drug problems. The service offers a guarantee of privacy to employees who are reluctant to approach their bosses or stop by medical departments. Once the drug user is on the phone, the hot-line counselor can encourage him to get help through an EAP or local clinical program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Battling the Enemy Within | 3/17/1986 | See Source »

Despite the high level of intimacy, only one of the 101 people in the study was infected with the AIDS virus. The sole victim was the five-year-old daughter of an infected, female drug user; the child had probably contracted the virus before her birth. The absence of the virus in the other 100 was particularly impressive because most of them belonged to low-income families living in the kind of crowded conditions that are thought to facilitate the spread of infectious diseases. If the disease cannot be transmitted in such family settings, says Dr. Harold Jaffe, chief AIDS...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Medicine: Feb. 17, 1986 | 2/17/1986 | See Source »

...flash onscreen, encouraging viewers to phone in their requests, comments, prayers or pledges. (The show's name derives from an early crisis when, in order to stay on the air, it needed 700 donors to send $10 a month.) CBN just passed American Airlines as the nation's heaviest user of WATS telephone lines. On-camera operators take the messages, sometimes suggesting local help and often relaying news of miracle cures for Robertson and Kinchlow to pass along to the audience. Kinchlow, 49, has known a miracle or two himself. He was drifting and embittered until "Jesus changed me from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Power, Glory - and Politics | 2/17/1986 | See Source »

...University is the city's largest landholder, but it pays no property taxes. Although Harvard does give Cambridge a payment in lieu of taxes, the institution nonetheless has a large social obligation to the community as its biggest property user. The University has also contributed, albeit indirectly, to the homeless problem by destroying 78 homes when it built Leverett and Mather Houses. We should not be content with letting homeless people sleep on our vents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Let's Do Something | 2/10/1986 | See Source »

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