1992
- Making the Shadow of AIDS Visible
- The New York Times - Wednesday, December 2, 1992
- Glenn Collins
- Paintings and sculptures in museums and galleries were draped in black yesterday, bells tolled in churches and art institutions, red AIDS-awareness ribbons were given out in hundreds of buildings and the lights went dark outside cultural landmarks in a symbolic blackout of city skylines from New York to San Francisco.
- Federal Agency Announces Start Of Human Tests of AIDS Vaccines
- The New York Times - Wednesday, December 2, 1992
- Philip J. Hilts, Special to the New York Times
- WASHINGTON - The National Institutes of Health announced today that it was ready to begin tests of AIDS vaccines in people at high risk to get the disease. This is a small step forward, giving a vaccine for the first time to people who are at high risk for the disease, the kind of people who will ultimately be getting
- Ashe Asks for Help
- The New York Times - Wednesday, December 2, 1992
- ARTHUR ASHE, upset earlier this year that he was forced by the news media to disclose he had AIDS, asked a group of sports editors for help in teaching people about the disease. We have to be more creative in how we pass along the information, how we get people to listen, Ashe said Monday night at The Associated Press
- BASKETBALL; Johnson's Return to League Isn't Welcomed by Some
- The New York Times - November 1, 1992
- Harvey Araton
- Karl Malone, known around the National Basketball Association as the Mailman, delivered a strong message last week, challenging the accepted belief that Magic Johnson has been universally welcomed back to the league even though he has the virus that causes AIDS. Look at this, scabs and cuts all over me, Malone, the Uta
- David Wojnarowicz, 37, Artist in Many Media
- The New York Times - July 24, 1992
- Michael Kimmelman
- David Wojnarowicz, one of the most individual artists of the 1980 s, whose impassioned and outspoken work about AIDS thrust him into the center of the recent debates involving the National Endowment for the Arts, died on Wednesday night at his home in Manhattan. He was 37 years old. He died of AIDS, said his companion,
This information is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor.
©1980, 1992. AEGiS.