A nation that had ignored so many AIDS-related deaths could not ignore Ryan White’s funeral. Held on April 11, 1990, in “the gothic expanse of Second Presbyterian Church” in Meridian Hills, an ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Marchers 1983 Gay Pride parade AIDS research banner Manhattan New York City The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first ...
Face of AIDS : the making of an online archive / Martin Kristenson & Fredrik B. Persson -- Witnessing AIDS in the archive / Anna Sofia Rossholm & Beate Schirrmacher -- Voices of AIDS : the HIV virus ...
The start of AIDS Awareness Month puts a spotlight on how treatment for HIV and AIDS has progressed over the past 40 years. Treatment for HIV/AIDS has consistently seen progress each decade, since the ...
The preservation of AIDS history in the Champaign-Urbana area nearly disappeared years ago after its archivist died in 2022. Now, Daniel Rodriguez is committed to finishing what was started. As a ...
My new book examines the life, death, and legacies of Ryan White, the Indiana teenager with hemophilia who contracted HIV through contaminated blood products in the early to mid-1980s. White became ...
I clipped Randy Shilts’s obituary from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and carefully placed it inside my copy of And The Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic – his most famous, most ...
In July 1985, more than 4,000 people gathered in their walking shoes at California’s Paramount Studios, bound by a cause that until then had largely existed in the shadows. Their grassroots motivation ...
Members of ACT-UP/KC in the 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation in Washington, D.C. Kansas City Public Library What's Your KCQ is a collaboration between The ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first used the term “AIDS” on Sept. 24, 1982, more than a year after the first ...
(The Conversation) — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first used the term “AIDS” on Sept. 24, 1982, more than a year after the first cases appeared in medical records. Those early years ...