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Table of Contents



Growing Pains

A Stirling Example




You’ve Come a Long Way, Babies

My Generation

Can We Talk

Raw Hide

Parent Trap

Homing Devices

The Insure Thing

Birds, Bees and HIV

Pass the Mike




Sugar Rush

Cambodia Manhunt

Girl Talk

Iowa Rocks

Download This!

Angels in Africa

They Clicked

Raven Reviews

Fifteen Candles




Editor's Letter-January/February 2008

Mailbox-January/February 2008

The NAPWA/TAEP HIV/AIDS Policy Report


Most Talked About

HIV: Behind the Music (49)

An HIV Doc's Dilemma (35)

Virtual Prevention: Fighting HIV Online (26)

Inmate Testing: Optional or Mandatory? (19)

Killer Gay Sex! (15)

Most Popular Lessons

Herpes Simplex Virus

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Shingles

The HIV Life Cycle

Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)


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January 2008


Iowa Rocks

by Kathleen Reeves

Positive residents can steer the ’08 race.

Iowa’s extraordinary influence over the course of the presidential election stems not only from the early, pace-setting date of its caucuses (January 3). The town-hall caucus system, comprising 1,784 meetings in many precincts, gives HIV-positive Iowans a rare showcase for swaying candidates and fellow voters toward HIV-related issues.

“Each [Iowan’s] vote counts more,” says Kaytee Riek of Iowans for AIDS Action, a loose affiliation of positive people and their advocates. The group trains people living with and affected by HIV to question the contenders. “Nobody in the country has the access that Iowans do,” says Riek, citing the caucuses’ intimate gatherings of candidates and citizens. Each county contains dozens of precincts; the counties with the most positive citizens have even greater influence.

HIV-positive Tami Haught, of Iowans for AIDS Action, says, “HIV is the last thing the candidates expect an Iowan to ask about. They’re expecting ethanol, the farm bill, the economy.” But if Iowans can convince the candidates that AIDS is on the map—not just in Africa, but in the heart of America—we may finally see AIDS at the heart of campaigns.      

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