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Blacks Suffer Most AIDS Cases Are Not Getting Services, Group Charges
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We've Had Enough flyer for 1987 protest. Includes clippings for Philadelphia Daily News article on Theodore Johnson.
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Fredrick Douglass One-Man Show featuring James Charles Roberts benefit for Blacks Educating Blacks About Sexual Health Issues
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Impact Committee Quarterly Report for the Quarter Ending September 1986
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Memorandum covers issues of housing, client services, ATS program, and minority outreach programing
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Letter: Donald T. Stafford to David Fair
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Letter Letter from Theodore B. Johnson to James Charles Roberts
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Flyer for meeting on African Americans and AIDS awareness
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Flyer for BEBASHI's 1986 annual report AIDS & Minorities in Philadelphia A Crisis Ignored
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Meeting flyer regarding African Americans and the Philadelphia AIDS Task Force
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Interview with James Credle with the Queer Newark Oral History Project. Interviewer: Candace Bradsher
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iAna DiAna's presentation of "DiAna's Hair Ego" by Ellen Spiro at Concordia University, followed by lecture and questions.DiAna DiAna is an African-American South Carolina-based grassroots prevention activist and hairstylist who became the subject of the American documentary film DiAna's Hair Ego in 1991. She was one of the early pioneers of AIDS education, having begun prevention work in her hair salon in 1986 by handing out condoms to her clients, soon after which she founded the nonprofit South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN). Run by volunteers and funded by donations from salon clients and visitors looking for a way to help, SCAEN has provided one-to-one AIDS information to more than nine thousand people living in South Carolina, fostering projects such as AIDS Busters, which served to bring safer sex information directly to Columbia's youth, and an AIDS education and support hot line run from DiAna's own home. In 1989, DiAna joined forces with ACT UP to stage a State House rally for the rights of people with HIV/AIDS in South Carolina. A filmmaker borrowed footage from the rally and from DiAna's salon to make the short film DiAna's Hair Ego, which was honored by the American Film Institute and the International Public Television Conference (INPUT) in Dublin. Opening with a screening of this terrific documentary, DiAna's Concordia talk will reflect on her experiences as an AIDS prevention activist and safe sex educator, examine the impact of grassroots organizations, and take a look at what she is doing now within her community.
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Poster and flyer to Gospel Concert Against HIV/AIDS Ticket at Greater Mount Calvary Holy Church sponsored by DC CARE Consortium and Mary Fisher's Family AIDS Network
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Photographs of Valerie Papaya Mann at the National Black AIDS Awareness Day on February 23, 2001
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Images from an early 1990s International AIDS Candlelight Memorial event
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Poster by AIDS Education Fund of Whitman Walker that reads "Blacks and other third-world gays are highly susceptible to AIDS, also. "
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Flyer by the AIDS Education Fund of Whitman Walker reading "Washington is a capital city. Let's keep it that way. Blacks Are Highly Susceptible to AIDS. There has to be a solution, Work with us to find it."
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Handout from Whitman-Walker AIDS Education Fund
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Collection of three article pertaining to Valerie Papaya Mann's development trips to West Africa as executive director of the D.C. CARE Consortium. Articles from the Washington Blade and Ghana's Daily Graphic
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Twelve (12) posters from the D.C. CARE Consortium campaign designed by Valerie Papaya Mann
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D.C. Care Chronicle Winter 2000 newsletter
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Concert ticket to Gospel Concert Against HIV/AIDS Ticket at Greater Mount Calvary Holy Church sponsored by DC CARE Consortium and Mary Fisher's Family AIDS Network