Word: virusã
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...past competitions and I’m looking forward to seeing them do well again,” he said. These rookies might not be rookies for long, though. As Sorina Casian, a Harvard Business School student dancing with the team, said, “dancing is a virus??once you start you can’t stop...
...from male sex dropped to 42 percent, and those arising from heterosexual sex rose to 31 percent. Even more importantly, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now perform two tests on all blood donated in order to detect the presence of HIV (by testing for antibodies and the virus??s genetic material), and the probability of HIV-positive blood going unnoticed after passing through these tests is about one in two million. In light of such dramatic changes in HIV transmission—and with reliable technology to test blood for HIV—preventing...
Intact samples of both smallpox and several varieties of viral hemorrhagic fever—including the Ebola virus??require a BSL-4 laboratory for study...
Currently, most anti-HIV drugs target individual proteins, and are given in combination as a cocktail. However, according to D’Souza, HIV is mutating and building up resistance to the cocktail. By studying the RNA-protein complex, which is crucial to the virus?? survival, D’Souza aims to sophisticate the current approach to AIDS treatment...
...around the dynamic title character portrayed by Julia C. Chan ’05. Though most productions feature a male Dr. Knock, second-time director Burkle wasn’t concerned with gender when casting the part. According to Burkle, gender is hardly relevant for a “virus?? like Knock.“We basically cast the best person for the part,” Burkle explains. “I loved the character of Dr. Knock, this mysterious doctor who comes in with evil, giant plans to take over the world. I needed someone...