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October 2006

Here Comes the Son
by Regan Hofmann
Jake Glaser, son of the late HIV positive AIDS activist Elizabeth Glaser, shoulders his mother’s legacy of helping children infected with HIV/AIDS.
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Meet The Grandparents
by Tim Murphy
AIDS stole their parents. Now, the enduring children—some of them HIV positive themselves—are coming of age. The heartbreaking and backbreaking job of raising them has made fierce warriors out of unusual suspects: their grandmothers—and other older relatives
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Feet First
by Tim Murphy
The pins and needles of neuropathy have a toehold on positive people. But new therapies may finally start to untangle the tingles
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Attention, Class!
by Tim Horn
The non-nuke category may soon get some support from a new classmate
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Flu's Clues
by Tana Moz, RN
’Tis the season: What’s your flu IQ?
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Gene Genies
by Kellee Terrell
Embryonic stem cells fuel a futuristic HIV therapy
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Control Issues
Some curb HIV without meds. Knowing why may help the rest of us
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The Big Chill
by David Thorpe
Whether on the job, on a date or hanging with Mom: How to survive rejection’s cold shoulder
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Cash Prizes!
by Rebecca Minnich
Will the Gates and Buffett bucks deliver a cure?
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Inside Job
by John-Manuel Andriote
Forty-eight years ago, on October 6, my mother was taken to the hospital to bring me into the world.
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False Positives
by Lucile Scott
A baffling new strain of HIV is infecting popular culture: People are lying about their status to guarantee fame and fortune. What’s so new about that, you ask? They’re pretending to be...positive
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Believe the Hypo
by Lucile Scott
Massachusetts and Delaware stop sticking it to needle exchanges for IV drug users
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So Sue Me
by Lucile Scott
Will Californians cash in on a case that allows them to sue their suspected infector?
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Gender Bender
by Erin Baer
The United Nations looks to the ladies
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Hurricane Liz
by Geoffrey Weiss
Elizabeth Taylor storms into New Orleans with an HIV caravan
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I’m Gonna Tell
by Spencer Cox
In the fight against stigma, has Spencer Cox divulged too much information?
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Change Is Good
by Michael James
Michael James spares a dime for the needy—then contracts a need of his own
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