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September 2007

Trouble in Paradise
by Lucile Scott
Here’s the Jamaica you’ll never see in those rum-and-reggae resort ads: A nation of rampant homophobia, where incendiary song lyrics and violence against gay people stigmatize HIV prevention and care—and increase infection
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The Shore Thing
by Sally Chew
Miami sound-bite machine Jesse Sanchez, 19, always camera-ready, recasts his recent HIV diagnosis into a fierce new ambition: positive market share
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Heads of the Class
by Nicole Joseph
Two students—one HIV negative and in high school, the other HIV positive and in college—dish about school, friends and life as teen AIDS activists
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Solo Shot
by Tim Murphy
After years of HIV combo therapy, some are trying a boosted protease inhibitor—all by itself
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The Elite Meet
by Laura Whitehorn
Some positive people don’t need meds. Are their genetic mysteries about to crack HIV’s code?
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Doctors Ordered
by Nicole Joseph
Treatment “access” takes more than just the drugs
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Get a Nightlife
by Wesley Badillo
This HIV prevention expert fights for your right to party
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Cheat Sheet
by Kellee Terrell
How—and why—the “down low” became an enduring, race-specific cultural myth of HIV and infidelity
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Our Space
by Kellee Terrell
How to teach the MySpace and YouTube set about HIV? Get them where they live—online
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GOAAAAALLLLLLL!
by Nicole Joseph
A South African soccer program takes HIV to the field
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Crowning Achievement
by James Wortman
It seemed touch-and-go there at the 2007 Miss Universe finals, on May
28—as if any of the five finalists could walk off with the tiara.
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Star Billing
by James Wortman
How Bienestar, a preeminent Latino AIDS service organization, has prevailed against decades of stigma and stereotyping
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