1995

December

Soldiers of Misfortune Wage an Uphill Battle - Health: On the trail of carriers of sexually transmitted diseases, public workers fight not only mistrust and the clock but also shrinking funds.
Los Angeles Times - December 28, 1995
John M. Glionna; Times Staff Writer
Cruising slowly in their ramshackle van, the disease detectives prowl the back streets of Los Angeles in search of a contagious hit-and-run artist.

Declining Sales Cause Condom Shop to Fold Protection: Long Beach health officials say the store, which fostered education on safer sex, will be sorely missed.
Los Angeles Times - December 24, 1995 28 A 761
Jeff Leeds; Times Staff Writer
LONG BEACH - Erin Hamm is shutting her Long Beach shop for good today for the usual reason--business has slipped.

Supervisor Urges Sweeping Hospital Overhaul - Health: Responding to new revelations of problems at King/Drew, Burke says she will seek a major shake-up to try to restore confidence.
Los Angeles Times Saturday, December 23, 1995
Josh Meyer and Jeffrey L. Rabin; Times Staff Writers
Saying that the public's confidence has been shaken by a series of highly publicized problems and irregularities, Los Angeles County Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke called Friday for an immediate and sweeping reorganization of the county's Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center.

A Deadly Mistake in a Troubled Hospital: HIV-contaminated transfusion underscores the need for reforms at King / Drew
Los Angeles Times Thursday, December 21, 1995
There is no excuse for an HIV-tainted blood transfusion to take place at a major hospital. Yet, tragically, that's exactly what happened last year at the county's troubled Martin Luther King Jr. / Drew Medical Center. Aleta Clemons, who went in for a hysterectomy, came out with the AIDS virus. Such a deadly mistake is unforgivable.

King / Drew Blood Bank Criticized - County: Supervisors harshly assail hospital personnel for overlooking problems that contributed to HIV-tainted transfusion.
Los Angeles Times; Wednesday, December 20, 1995
Josh Meyer; Times Staff Writer
Los Angeles County supervisors expressed outrage Tuesday that officials at the county's Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center overlooked problems at the hospital's blood bank that contributed to a woman receiving a transfusion of deadly HIV-tainted blood last year.

Blood Bank Setup Faulted in HIV-Tainted Transfusion - Health: County, federal reports cited serious problems at King/Drew. Patient was infected last year.
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday, December 19, 1995
Josh Meyer; Times Staff Writer
Aleta J. Clemons entered the county's Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center for a routine hysterectomy last year, without any way of knowing of the systemic problems in the hospital's blood bank. She walked out with the virus that causes AIDS.

Baboon Marrow Recipient in Isolation - AIDS: Patient recovering from experimental surgery won't know for weeks whether it was successful.
Los Angeles Times; Saturday, December 16, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
Jeff Getty was in an isolation ward at San Francisco General Hospital on Friday reading newspaper reports about his landmark baboon bone marrow transplant as he began a nerve-racking three- to four-week wait to learn if he will live or die.

AIDS Patient Given Baboon Bone Marrow - Health: Man's infected tissue is killed before controversial transplant.
Los Angeles Times; Friday, December 15, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
An Oakland man dying of AIDS underwent a historic baboon bone marrow transplant Thursday evening in a last-ditch attempt to save his life.

Potent New Weapon: Scientists say a new class of drugs called protease inhibitors could 'fundamentally change the landscape' of treating AIDS.; SCIENCE FILE: An exploration of issues and trends affecting science, medicine and the environment.
Los Angeles Times Thursday, December 14, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Protease inhibitors--the powerful new generation of antiviral AIDS drugs about to enter the marketplace--have been studied in the laboratory for at least seven years. But nobody knew how potent they were in humans until a little more than a year ago.

Why Author Considers 'AIDS Industry' Inept - Books: Elinor Burkett says too much emphasis is placed on money and not enough on a cure. And, in a nod to critics, she admits the work is venomous.
Los Angeles Times Sunday, December 10, 1995
Bettijane Levine; Times Staff Writer
Somewhere in Michigan is a middle-class, middle-aged woman whose married daughter was pregnant last year. It was a high-risk pregnancy, and the obstetrician asked the mother to be ready to donate blood, since both mother and daughter had the same rare type.

FDA OKs First of New Batch of AIDS Drugs
Los Angeles Times Friday, December 8, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday formally approved the first of a new generation of powerful AIDS drugs, a family of compounds that appear at least 10 times more potent than the existing most widely prescribed antiviral therapies.

O.C. Poll Finds Liberal Streak on AIDS Issues
Los Angeles Times Thursday, December 7, 1995
Martin Miller; Times Staff Writer
IRVINE -- Despite having a conservative reputation, Orange County residents overwhelmingly favor liberal approaches toward AIDS education and awareness, according to a poll released Wednesday.

Experts Isolate Chemicals That May Slow HIV: Medicine: The four naturally occurring chemokines could be useful in prevention and therapy. But two researchers criticize each other's claims.
Los Angeles Times; Thursday, December 7, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
A prominent AIDS researcher said Wednesday that he has isolated three chemicals that may be the long-sought naturally occurring inhibitors of the AIDS virus.

Clinton Vows to Fight for AIDS Funding: Budget: He tells group of experts, activists he will seek to prevent any cuts in research spending. He assails GOP's efforts to dismantle Medicaid.
Times Mirror Company, Los Angeles Times; Thursday, December 7, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- President Clinton, appearing before 250 leading AIDS scientists, clinicians and activists, vowed Wednesday to fight any attempts to balance the federal budget by reducing AIDS research spending or by dismantling Medicaid, which he called "a lifeline" for people with the disease.

Congress' Lesson on Values: There's No Middle Ground
Los Angeles Times' Thursday, December 7, 1995
Gebe Martinez; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- An Oregon mother, her voice filled with emotion, told a congressional panel Wednesday how her son was so anguished over society's intolerance toward gays like himself that he killed himself by leaping off a freeway overpass and into the path of an 18-wheel truck.

GOP Backing Off Anti-Gay Legislation
Los Angeles Times; Wednesday, December 6, 1995
Gebe Martinez; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- For months, some religious conservatives have been urging the Republican Congress to help end what they argue is promotion of a "homosexual agenda" in public schools.

COMMENTARY ON HEALTH CARE: Without More Treatment, Women May Be an AIDS Time Bomb; They will constitute most new HIV cases by 2000. But through shame, many ignore their symptoms and deny their pain.
Los Angeles Times Sunday, December 3, 1995
Pearl Jemison-Smith; chairwoman of the Orange County HIV Planning Advisory Council and a board member of the AIDS Services Foundation.
AIDS is putting on a new face, a more feminine face. By 2000, more than half of newly infected adults will be women.

USC to House New Archive About AIDS: Health: L.A. donates money, documents for facility. Southland observes world day focused on the disease.
Los Angeles Times - Saturday, December 2, 1995
Bettina Boxall; Times Staff Writer
In one of a number of events throughout the region observing World AIDS Day, Los Angeles officials announced Friday that they are donating thousands of papers to USC for the creation of an AIDS archive.

November

A Howl of Anger: Author Elinor Burkett Says the 'AIDS Industry'--Especially the Feds--Has Botched It
Los Angeles Times - Monday, November 27, 1995
Bettijane Levine; Times Staff Writer
Somewhere in Michigan is a middle-class, middle-age woman whose married daughter was pregnant last year. It was a high-risk pregnancy, and the obstetrician asked the mother to be ready to donate blood, since both mother and daughter had the same rare type.

Voices of 2 Africans in the Times of AIDS
Los Angeles Times - Saturday, November 18, 1995
John Balzar, Times Staff Writer
KAMPALA, Uganda -- Her son is 8 months old. She is 19. Shakira Nakibuka is a prostitute in a city where experts believe 30% of the sexually active population is infected with the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV.

In Uganda, a Scourge on Families; AIDS has ravaged the nation, creating a generation of children raising other children. They struggle to hold stricken homes together, relying on their wits and makeshift support groups.
Times Mirror Company, Los Angeles Times - Saturday, November 18, 1995
John Balzar; Times Staff Writer
KAMPALA, Uganda -- In a not-so-terrible banana-grove slum known as Tank Hill, an adobe shanty weathers and slowly crumbles in the sun. The shanty has three rooms, no electricity or water, empty window frames and a tin roof where spears of light descend through rust holes. Here, at the fringe of Uganda's capital, we are promised we will see a marvel.

Study Ties Death Rate to Type of Insurance
Los Angeles Times - Friday, November 17, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
AIDS patients hospitalized with a special form of pneumonia are nearly twice as likely to die if they are covered by Medicaid than if they have private health insurance, according to a new study by RAND Corp. in Santa Monica and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Drug Can Prevent AIDS in Monkeys, Researchers Find Health: Study of antiviral PMPA stirs excitement because primate experiments are thought to be good indicators of success in humans.
Los Angeles Times Friday, November 17, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
A Belgian antiviral drug can prevent infection of monkeys with the primate version of the AIDS virus, suggesting that the drug could someday protect some individuals exposed to HIV, University of Washington researchers report today in the journal Science.

New Anti-AIDS Drugs Win FDA Panel's Backing
Los Angeles Times Wednesday, November 8, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Ushering in an era of more powerful drugs to fight AIDS, a Food and Drug Administration advisory committee Tuesday recommended approval of the first in a new generation of anti-AIDS compounds.

October

One Woman's Chronicle on AIDS Awareness
Los Angeles Times; Thursday, October 19, 1995
Christina Lima, Times Staff Writer
Six years ago, the most Patricia L. Hoffman knew about AIDS was that members of her church congregation were afraid to talk about their grief for a lost son, daughter or other relative who had died of the disease.

County Steps Up Efforts to Bolster AIDS Awareness: Health: An education campaign for about 500 managers and an early intervention program are among upcoming projects.
Los Angeles Times - Sunday, October 15, 1995
Fred Alvarez; Times Staff Writer
Amid the rising death toll inflicted by AIDS and the inexorable spread of the disease, officials say there is reason for hope in Ventura County.

A Tide of Layoffs and Painful Questions: County: Health workers who remain wonder what will become of patients.
Los Angeles Times - Saturday, October 14, 1995
Jeff Brazil, Henry Chu, and Tina Daunt; Times Staff Writers
When the toddler hit by a car in "C Booth" wails in pain.

The Economic Cost of AIDS
Los Angeles Times - Friday, October 13, 1995
Jennifer Oldham; Times Staff Writer
By 2000, the total cost to the global economy of the AIDS pandemic could reach $514 billion and, in the worst-case scenario, rob the world of 1.4% of its gross domestic product--the equivalent of wiping out the economy of Australia.

Finding a Place of Peace: The Carl Bean AIDS Care Center Specializes in Comfort--for the Dying and for the Volunteers of Project Nightlight Who Sustain Their Spirits
Los Angeles Times - Wednesday, October 11, 1995
Duane Noriyuki; Times Staff Writer
Between breaths, the stillness in his chest seems to linger with finality. Eugene Lever's only sounds are occasional moans from pain the morphine cannot still. Like an aged, deciduous tree, Lever's body has lost its fullness. His arms and legs have become bare sticks, and details of his life have been swept from memory like fallen leaves.

Soldiers of Misfortune: On the Trail of Carriers of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Public Health Workers Battle Not Only Mistrust and the Clock but Shrinking Funds
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday, October 10, 1995
John M. Glionna; Times Staff Writer
Cruising slowly in their ramshackle van, the disease detectives prowl the back streets of Los Angeles in search of a contagious hit-and-run artist.

September

Fighting to the Finish: Boxing: Former WBC champion Paul Banke, who has AIDS, hopes to provide an example that others can follow to battle the disease.
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday, September 26, 1995
Tim Kawakami; Times Staff Writer
Paul Banke, who used to grin when opponents landed their best punches, who still roars in approval when he watches a tape of one his savage struggles with Daniel Zaragoza, now worries when the wind blows.

California Law Doesn't Require AIDS Test
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday, September 26, 1995
Tim Kawakami; Times Staff Writer
Under California law, even if the state athletic commission suspected a boxer had AIDS, there is nothing it could do to prevent him from fighting in the state, according to Richard DeCuir, the commission's executive director.

Now Nonprofit Clinics Are Waiting to Be Bailed Out Health: A federal plan will rescue many public centers from closure, but officials at sites that are caring for growing number of former county patients say they don't expect influx to end soon.
Los Angeles Times, Monday, September 25, 1995
Lucille Renwick; Times Staff Writer
The patient's phone call shocked Corrie Alvarez, but not because of the ailment needing attention.

Warrant Is Issued for Prostitute With HIV Crime: Prosecutors say court commissioner erred in releasing woman after she pleaded guilty. She has failed to appear for sentencing.
Los Angeles Times Friday, September 22, 1995
Nancy Hill-Holtzman; Times Staff Writer
A warrant has been issued for an HIV-positive prostitute released by a San Fernando judge over the objections of prosecutors, who warned that she was a health and flight risk.

Clinic's Experience Backs Needle Exchange Study Health: Officials at Pacoima center say spread of AIDS is decreased and there is no increase in drug use. A panel has urged lifting the ban on funding such programs.
Times Mirror Company, Los Angeles Times Friday, September 22, 1995
Jocelyn Y. Stewart; Times Staff Writer
The news is not new--at least not for public health workers.

Panel Favors Needle Swaps for Drug Addicts
Los Angeles Times; Wednesday, September 20, 1995
From a Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Programs that provide clean needles to drug addicts reduce the spread of AIDS without increasing illegal drug use, and federal funds should be made available for such efforts, a major new report concluded Tuesday.

Untimely End to a Turbulent Life: Death of Channon Phipps, who as an HIV-positive hemophiliac fought to attend public school, is mourned.
Los Angeles Times - September 14, 1995
Geoff Boucher; Times Staff Writer
LAGUNA HILLS - The family and friends of Channon Lee Phipps gathered here Wednesday to mourn the 20-year-old's death and reflect on his tragic, well-publicized odyssey as a hemophiliac who had to battle AIDS, a school system that did not want him and the guardian who betrayed him.

Untimely End to a Turbulent Life: A Times reporter who knew Channon Phipps as a fifth-grader and as a rebellious teen recalls the humor, courage and matter-of-fact attitude with which he faced life--and death.
Los Angeles Times - September 14, 1995
Nancy Wride; Times Staff Writer
Some kids draw stick people. Channon Phipps drew a stick house, with attached garage and trees with bare branches blowing in the wind. There was even a television antenna on the roof.

And a Child Leads Them: Leo Beckerman, 11, of Studio City is one of the top fund-raisers for AIDS Walk L.A. through his group 'Kids Who Care.' HEARTS OF THE CITY: Exploring attitudes and issues behind the news.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY September 13, 1995
Ian James; Times Staff Writer
At 11 years old, Leo Beckerman is pretty much your standard-issue seventh-grader. He loves skateboarding, wears braces, has a fish tank in his room and plays computer games like a fiend. But make no mistake, this San Fernando Valley youngster has more smarts and heart than a whole lot of grown-ups.

Forum Panelists Compromise on Youths and Sex
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY September 12, 1995
Maggie Farley; Times Staff Writer
BEIJING - Toppling one of the last remaining hurdles at the U.N. Fourth World Conference on Women, delegates Monday struck a careful balance between the right of young people to have access to sex education and contraception and the right of their parents to know about it.

School Embezzler Dies in Prison: Stephen A. Wagner, 43, succumbs to AIDS complications. He stole $3.7 million from Newport-Mesa as its finance officer.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY September 12, 1995
David Reyes; Mark Platte; Times Staff Writers
Stephen A. Wagner, the former finance officer who was convicted of embezzling $3.7 million from the Newport-Mesa Unified School District nearly three years ago, died over the weekend from an AIDS-related illness in a medical facility at Vacaville prison, authorities said Monday.

White House AIDS Activist Falls Into Political Exile Health: Once a symbol of change, Bob Hattoy has been pushed aside. He remains outspoken, yet loyal to Clinton.
Los Angeles Times - MONDAY September 11, 1995
Faye Fiore; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - The photograph is propped up on a window ledge, dwarfed by a broad, government-issued desk and a metal filing cabinet, but it is his reason for going on, nevertheless. It shows two people with AIDS standing together at the podium of the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York--Elizabeth Glaser in a smart black suit and pearls, and Bob Hattoy, requiring none of the three baseball caps he packed in case the chemotherapy made his hair fall out.

Women's Panel OKs Measures on Sex, Abortion
Los Angeles Times - MONDAY September 11, 1995
Rone Tempest; Times Staff Writer
BEIJING - Delegates to the U.N. Fourth World Conference on Women drafted a controversial provision Sunday calling on governments to review laws that penalize women for having illegal abortions.

DEADLY TREND: A Los Angeles County survey of gay men finds about half of the 15- to 22-year-olds had engaged in high-risk, unprotected sex in the last six months.
Los Angeles Times - September 3, 1995
BETTINA BOXALL, Times Staff Writer
He could be any 20-year-old taking a college exam, straining with concentration, pausing over difficult questions. His smile is engaging, his manner is one of awkward innocence.

August

Is Italian AIDS Law Spreading Crime?; A 1993 act gives sufferers a virtual 'get out of jail free' card. But some repeatedly--even violently--strike out at society, triggering calls for repeal.
Los Angeles Times - Monday, August 28, 1995
Mary Williams Walsh; Times Staff Writer
TURIN, Italy -- As manager of a small bank on a busy street, Roberto Limerutti has been through his share of stickups. "Just the hazards of the trade," the three-time robbery victim says with a shrug.

Clinic's Grim Prospect: Turning Away the Desperate
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday, August 22, 1995
Susan Moffat; Times Staff Writer
On South Grand Avenue, 10 minutes from the skyscrapers of the financial district, an ugly concrete building with slits for windows squats like a bunker among factories and warehouses.

Cuts Pose Threat to AIDS Programs, County Workers Say
Los Angeles Times - Saturday, August 19, 1995
Douglas P. Shuit; Times Staff Writer
AIDS programs, particularly those for infected women and infants, will be seriously undermined by budget cuts despite the County Board of Supervisors' vote to fully fund local AIDS services, county health workers warned Friday.

Ex-Red Cross Fund-Raiser Pleads Guilty Courts: Albert Wynder embezzled $144,000 and gave it to friends who have HIV or were just needy. Insurance covered most of the loss.
Los Angeles Times - Thursday, August 10, 1995
Anna Cekola; Times Staff Writer
SANTA ANA -- A former employee of the American Red Cross pleaded guilty Wednesday to embezzling more than $144,000, saying he gave most of it to friends who are HIV-positive like himself or are just needy.

Protecting Vision Medicine: Team treatments are helping patients with a viral disease of the eyes maintain their sight.
Los Angeles Times - Sunday, August 6, 1995
Emelyn Cruz Lat; Times Staff Writer
Scott Whiteside had been HIV-positive for more than 10 years before his vision slowly began to fade. At first, he started having trouble seeing small objects. Straight lines appeared slanted. And he began noticing a small blind spot in the center of his left eye.

Russia Delays Enforcing AIDS Tests for Visitors
Los Angeles Times - Wednesday, August 2, 1995
Sonni Efron; Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW -- Russia on Tuesday delayed indefinitely the enforcement of a controversial law requiring that anyone who wishes to visit the country for more than three months be tested for AIDS.

July

HEALTH: S. Africa Takes First Steps to Fight Rising AIDS Rate
Los Angeles Times; Saturday, July 22, 1995
Bob Drogin; Times Staff Writer
SOWETO, South Africa -- Dr. Glenda Gray, a pediatrician at the sprawling Baragwanath Hospital complex, remembers how she and other researchers once had to search for patients infected with the AIDS virus.

The Bottom Line Is People Are Dying: AIDS funding is at risk as some in Congress turn penny-wise and pound-foolish
Los Angeles Times; Friday, July 21, 1995
Despite an impressive roster of more than 60 Senate co-sponsors, important AIDS funding faces an uphill battle on Capitol Hill. That's because the money provided by the Ryan White CARE Act is threatened by congressional budget slashers intent on reducing outlays no matter how penny-wise and pound-foolish that might be.

AIDS Clinic Seeks to Serve Unique Needs of Youths: New center is intended for those in their teens and 20s who often fail to get tested or do not pick up results.
Los Angeles Times; Friday, July 21, 1995
Bettina Boxall; Times Staff Writer
The first time Jaime Silva went to a clinic to be tested for AIDS, he never returned for the results. The second time, he fled in tears, unwilling to even venture past the waiting room.

A Healthy Dose of Compassion: Doctor who triumphed over polio is working on an experiment aimed at halting growth of the AIDS virus. Patients say he has a unique understanding of their plight.
Los Angeles Times; Monday, July 17, 1995
Michael Arkush; Times Staff Writer
Dr. Jeff Galpin is an expert on epidemics. He almost died in one.

Panel OKs Baboon Marrow Transplant for AIDS Patient
Los Angeles Times; Saturday, July 15, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
A Food and Drug Administration advisory panel Friday gave permission for a controversial experiment to infuse a San Francisco AIDS activist with bone marrow obtained from a baboon in a last-gasp effort to save his life.

Activists Gain Partial Victory in AIDS Fight: Bob Dole announces July 24 as date for Senate vote on bill funding $690-million program for victims.
Los Angeles Times; Friday, July 14, 1995
Vivien Lou Chen; Times Staff Writer
BURBANK -- What began as a day of protest by activists in Burbank turned into a partial victory Thursday in Washington as Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) scheduled a vote on a bill funding the nation's largest health care program for AIDS victims.

Are We Teaching Too Little, Too Late?: Americans are fiercely divided over sex education. Some call for abstinence. Others preach contraceptives. But so far, little seems to be working. / 1 in 8: Who's to Blame for Teen Pregnancy. Last of four parts.
Los Angeles Times Wednesday, July 12, 1995
Shari Roan; Times Mirror Company
The names of many teen pregnancy prevention programs inspire confidence: Success Express, Project Taking Charge and I Have a Future.

New Clinic Provides Lifeline for Women
Los Angeles Times; Sunday, July 9, 1995
Leslie Berestein; Times Staff Writer
When Vitalina Samayar discovered she was HIV-positive, she was confused, helpless and five months pregnant.

German Court Bans Shocking Benetton Ads: Panel labels as 'immoral' the clothier's campaigns on HIV, oil slicks and child laborers.
Los Angeles Times; Friday, July 7, 1995
Mary Williams Walsh; Times Staff Writer
BERLIN -- Opponents of Benetton's controversial "shock advertising" campaign won a round Thursday, when a German appeals court ruled that three of the Italian clothing company's commercial images could not be published in this country.

Agencies Decry Stalling on AIDS Funds: Sen. Jesse Helms blocks renewal of act, saying 'revolting conduct' is cause of the disease. One local director says lives are being sacrificed for political gain.
Los Angeles Times; Friday, July 7, 1995
Faye Fiore; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Asserting that their "deliberate, disgusting and revolting conduct" is the cause of their disease, Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) has stalled renewal of the nation's largest health care program for people with AIDS, a delay that threatens to shut down a host of services in Los Angeles if not resolved by summer's end.

(LAT) Nixon's Nephew Explains Visit to Vesco in Cuba; Donald Nixon Jr. says that before his house arrest he was working through the fugitive financier on a 'miracle drug' to treat AIDS.
Los Angeles Times; Thursday, July 6, 1995
Sarah Klein; Times Staff Writer
IRVINE -- The late President Richard Nixon's nephew Donald Nixon Jr., who was held under house arrest in Havana while Cuban officials investigated his ties to fugitive financier Robert Vesco, said Wednesday he believes that authorities might have been after a "miracle drug" that he and Vesco were testing.

Lowly Algae in the Desert Have Farmers Seeing Green
Los Angeles Times; Monday, July 3, 1995
Tony Perry; Times Staff Writer
CALIPATRIA, Calif. -- The Japanese engineer, the Ethiopian chemist and the Mexican American production manager looked over their simmering crop of spirulina and they were pleased.

FBI Illegally Fired Physician With AIDS, Court Finds
Los Angeles Times; Saturday, July 1, 1995
Bettina Boxall; Times Staff Writer
In a ruling that runs counter to the trend of legal opinions involving health care workers with AIDS, a federal appeals court has found that the FBI illegally fired a San Francisco physician who had AIDS.

June

New AIDS Panelists Share Commitment to Fighting Disease; Health: Presidential appointees come from varied backgrounds, but all offer moving stories of friends lost to illness.
Los Angeles Times; June 17, 1995
Jeff Leeds; Times Staff Writer
At first glance, they appear to tread little common ground. One is a doctor who drives a Mercedes through Beverly Hills. One runs a church in South-Central. Another works for the city of Los Angeles. A closer look, however, reveals that they share at least one trait: the pain that comes with personal, passionate involvement in the nation's war against AIDS.

The Changing Face of AIDS; To Avoid Risk, You Need Facts
Los Angeles Times; June 16, 1995
Bettijane Levine; Times Staff Writer
People have inadvertently been misled into thinking that AIDS won't happen to them unless they are gay or drug users. That may have been true of the first wave of AIDS, experts say, but we are now experiencing a second wave of HIV infections, transmitted through heterosexual contact.

May

HIV Pioneer Gallo to Open New Institute; AIDS: The famed researcher is leaving the National Institutes of Health after 30 years. Center will be created at University of Maryland.
Los Angeles Times - May 25, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Dr. Robert C. Gallo, the peripatetic and controversial co-discoverer of the AIDS virus, announced Wednesday that he will leave his job at the National Institutes of Health to create a major human virology research institute at the University of Maryland.

Two Dornan Proposals in Defense Bill; Military: House National Security Committee OKs AIDS and anti-abortion measures.
Los Angeles Times - May 25, 1995
Gebe Martinez; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The socially conservative Republican agenda became part of the House defense authorization bill Wednesday when the National Security Committee approved proposals by Orange County Rep. Robert K. Dornan to discharge military personnel who test positive for the AIDS virus and to prohibit abortions at overseas U.S. military bases.

Latinos, Women Lead Percentage Rise in New County AIDS Cases; Health: In both groups, the figure more than doubled during the past 12 months. Drugs and a lack of education are blamed in part.
Los Angeles Times - May 16, 1995
Carlos V. Lozano; Times Staff Writer
The number of new AIDS cases in Ventura County increased by 57% during the past year, with women and Latinos representing a growing proportion of these new cases, health officials said Monday.

Ebola Appears Even Stronger Than in 1976
Los Angeles Times - May 15, 1995
Bob Drogin; Times Staff Writer
KIKWIT, Zaire -- Sister Dinarosa Belleri, an Italian nursing nun who devoted nearly three decades to serving the poor and sick here, had an unusual funeral Sunday in the sad and dusty graveyard behind the city's cathedral.

WESTSIDE / COVER STORY; Positively Risky; Sex-Enhancing Drug May Expose New Generation of Gay Men to AIDS
Times Mirror Company, Los Angeles Times - May 11, 1995
Lorenza Munoz; Special to the Times
Tony, who is HIV-positive, will never forget the night he went home with a bearded, glassy-eyed man he met in a Hollywood sex club. He ended up in the man's "dungeon," engaged in an ugly sex fantasy.

U.S. Team Goes to Zaire to Probe Lethal Illness; Africa: Doctors will stay 'as long as it takes' to find cause. Researcher links deaths to Ebola virus.
Los Angeles Times - May 11, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- A team of federal disease detectives was dispatched to Zaire on Wednesday to investigate a deadly outbreak of what health officials strongly suspect is viral hemorrhagic fever--a devastating illness that can cause death within days by dissolving the body's organs.

Dornan Criticizes Federal AIDS Employee Education; Politics: The congressman charges that the program 'promotes homosexuality.' Backers deny the assertion.
Los Angeles Times - May 04, 1995
Gebe Martinez; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The Clinton Administration's AIDS education program for federal employees has come under fire from Rep. Robert K. Dornan (R-Garden Grove), who charged Wednesday that it "promotes homosexuality or bisexuality as just another healthy lifestyle choice."

April

A Boy, AIDS and a Lesson in Life; Education: A play for children pulls no punches as it tells the tragic yet inspiring story of an 8-year-old's struggle.
Los Angeles Times - April 19, 1995
Beverly Beyette; Times Staff Writer
LOS ANGELES -- The "Dear Parent" letters minced no words in explaining that children from the third grade up were going to see a play about AIDS and that classes would be discussing AIDS--how you get it, how you don't.

2 United Pilots File 1st AIDS-Related Suit Against an Airline; Workplace: Case extends the already-sensitive subject to another group of professionals.
Los Angeles Times - April 12, 1995
James F. Peltz and Stuart Silverstein; Times Staff Writers
Two United Airlines pilots said Tuesday that they have filed an employment discrimination lawsuit against the airline, alleging that United forbade them from flying because they have HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Thousands Flock to Funeral for Eazy-E; Music: Overflow crowd is drawn to 'gangsta' rap star's service. Eulogy notes his contributions but warns of danger of AIDS, which killed the rapper.
Los Angeles Times - April 08, 1995
Frank B. Williams; Times Staff Writer
The steady stream of cars, some of them blasting the booming bass guitar and screeching adolescent voice that made him famous, kept rolling slowly down Harvard Boulevard near the First African Methodist Episcopal Church during a funeral Friday for rapper and AIDS casualtyEazy-E.

A Boy, AIDS and a Lesson in Life
Los Angeles Times - April 07, 1995
Beverly Beyette; Times Staff Writer
The "Dear Parent" letters minced no words in explaining that children from the third grade up were going to see a play about AIDS and that classes would be discussing AIDS--how you get it, how you don't.

AIDS in Los Angeles County
Los Angeles Times - April 06, 1995
Patient characteristics for L.A. County AIDS cases reported in February:

Yeltsin OKs AIDS Testing for Foreigners
Los Angeles Times - April 04, 1995
Carol J. Williams; Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW -- President Boris N. Yeltsin signed a controversial law Monday requiring AIDS testing of all foreigners living in Russia and ordering the deportation of anyone whose results show they have been infected.

COMMENTARY ON AIDS; A Report From the Battlefront; Despite great strides in O.C., the fight remains difficult. Resources are critical.
Los Angeles Times - April 02, 1995
Pearl Jemison-Smith; chairperson, Orange County HIV Planning Advisory Council. She also serves on the Board of AIDS Services Foundation and is a founding board member of AIDS Walk
As a child growing up in wartime England, I dreamed of blue sky and oranges, of peace and no more "buzz bombs." Fifty years later, some of my dreams are a reality. I am living in Orange County where the skies are blue (often enough) and oranges grow on trees (here and there). Unfortunately, I'm still at war.

March

Baby Clears HIV From Body, Researchers Say
Los Angeles Times - March 30, 1995
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
UCLA researchers say they have documented for the first time a case in which an infant infected with the AIDS virus at birth cleared the virus from his body by his first birthday.

MISSION VIEJO; College Nixes Outdoor Workshop on AIDS
Los Angeles Times - March 22, 1995
Jeff Bean; Times Staff Writer
A Saddleback College student leader who has proposed an outdoor AIDS awareness workshop with mock demonstrations on how to "eroticize" condom use has been ordered by administrators to hold the event in a less public place.

AZT Seen Hastening Some AIDS Deaths
Los Angeles Times - March 15, 1995
From Times Staff Reports
AIDS patients whose viruses develop resistance to the drug AZT are nearly three times more likely to die within a year than those who either haven't taken the drug, or whose viruses remain susceptible to AZT.

Antiviral Cocktail: The Toast of AIDS Researchers; Medicine: Experts at Costa Mesa conference believe attacking HIV with three drugs simultaneously will keep it from replicating and add years to patients' lives.
Los Angeles Times - March 14, 1995
Julie Marquis; Times Staff Writer
COSTA MESA -- Researchers hope to add years to the lives of AIDS patients by combining as many as three antiviral drugs and using new medications that ambush the virus in novel ways, experts said at a regional HIV conference Monday.

Ex-Jail Nurse Blames the County for Her AIDS; Lawsuit: Woman is said to be near death as a result of infection by inmates.
Los Angeles Times - March 11, 1995
Dwayne Bray; Times Staff Writer
A former nurse at Ventura County Jail filed a Superior Court lawsuit Friday, saying she contracted the virus that causes AIDS from inmates because she was not given proper protective equipment.

A Decade Later, 'Heart' Has New Meaning; Theater: 'The Normal Heart' pioneered AIDS-themed works. An original cast member, who will participate in readings for the play's anniversary, says events in the ensuing years alter the audience's response.
Los Angeles Times - March 09, 1995
Don Shirley; Times Staff Writer
During the curtain call after one of the first performances of Larry Kramer's "The Normal Heart" in New York in 1985, cast member D. W. Moffett was stunned by the appearance of one of the audience members who was applauding the landmark play, which is a story of the early New York battles against AIDS.

CALIFORNIA: State Doctors Group Urges HIV Reporting
Los Angeles Times - March 07, 1995
Douglas P. Shuit; Times Staff Writer
ANAHEIM -- In a sharp policy shift, members of the California Medical Assn. voted Monday to ask for state legislation that would require anyone testing positive for the AIDS virus to be reported to county health authorities.

AIDS Research at a Key Juncture
Los Angeles Times - March 05, 1995
Editorial/OPINION
It has been 13 years since the dreaded disease that has come to be called acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS for short, was first diagnosed. Few then would have thought that the strange malady would soon become a worldwide pandemic or have imagined the human suffering it would cause.

February

'The Truth Shall Set You Free'; Since telling the world that he has AIDS and detailing his dark childhood, Greg Louganis has heard all the criticism. How is the Olympic gold medalist enduring the maelstrom?
Los Angeles Times - February 28, 1995
Michael Quintanilla; Times Staff Writer
Greg Louganis says he has "no more secrets" and is prepared to deal with the criticism he expects after his stun ning disclosure last week that he has AIDS.

COLUMN ONE; Is Smoking Pot Good Medicine?; The Cannabis Buyers' Club says it helps the sick and dying. But the underground movement has met with resistance from those who question the drug's safety and effectiveness.
Los Angeles Times - February 26, 1995
Richard C. Paddock; Times Staff Writer
SAN FRANCISCO -- This is a different kind of drugstore. A haze of marijuana smoke hangs in the air, and in the background Mick Jagger sings, "You can't always get what you want . . ."

AIDS Again 'Has a Face' in Greg Louganis; Health: The public will refocus on the disease and HIV testing will increase because of the Olympic athlete's disclosure, gay-rights activists say.
Los Angeles Times - February 24, 1995
Bettina Boxall and David Reyes; Times Staff Writers
AIDS activists in Orange County on Thursday expressed shock and sorrow, a day after the revelation that diver Greg Louganis has AIDS.

Support Sought for Bill to Aid Hemophiliacs With AIDS; Health: Costa Mesa man will lead L.A. news conference. Legislation faults FDA for not taking action in 1980s.
Los Angeles Times - February 23, 1995
Steve Scheibal; Times Staff Writer
COSTA MESA -- Mike Hylton, 48, a hemophiliac infected with AIDS, will lead a Los Angeles news conference today to focus attention on a bill that would pay $125,000 each to more than 10,000 hemophiliacs and family members infected with HIV and AIDS.

Nation IN BRIEF; WASHINGTON, D.C.; Guidelines Issued for Prenatal HIV Testing
Los Angeles Times - February 23, 1995
From Time Staff Reports
Pregnant women should be encouraged to undergo voluntary AIDS testing in light of studies showing that the drug AZT can dramatically reduce transmission to the fetus, federal health officials said.

Olympic Diver Louganis Reveals That He Has AIDS; Sports: The gold medalist says in a TV interview that he has had the virus since before the Seoul Games in 1988.
Los Angeles Times - February 23, 1995
John Weyler; Times Staff Writer
Greg Louganis, considered the greatest competitive diver ever after becoming the only man to win gold medals in platform and springboard events at consecutive Olympics, revealed that he has AIDS in a television interview that will be broadcast Friday.

New Strategies Fuel Optimism in AIDS Fight
Los Angeles Times - February 20, 1995
Marlene Cimons and Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Staff Writers
WASHINGTON -- After a long, cold winter of disappointment, disillusion and discontent, a warmer, more optimistic wind is wafting through the AIDS research community.

AIDS Has Altered U.S. Sex Habits
Los Angeles Times - February 18, 1995
Robert Lee Hotz; Times Science Writer
ATLANTA -- Almost three in every 10 Americans have dramatically altered their sexual behavior to lower their risk of contracting AIDS, and those at greatest risk--people with multiple sex partners--are most likely to be taking precautions, leading authorities on sexual behavior said Friday.

New Needle Exchange Effort; Health: Agency gives away syringes in Pacoima after asking residents' cooperation. The aim is to slow the spread of AIDS.
Los Angeles Times - February 10, 1995
Jack Cheevers; Times Staff Writer
Chastened by previous controversies over public needle exchange programs for drug addicts, a San Fernando Valley treatment center Thursday cautiously began a new effort to give sterile needles to addicts in an effort to slow the spread of the AIDS virus among intravenous drug users.

Combined AIDS Drug Therapy Shows Promise; Medicine: 3TC, when used with AZT, improves patients' immune systems, studies show. Findings follow encouraging report on protease inhibitors.
Los Angeles Times - February 02, 1995
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- A new experimental antiviral drug called 3TC, taken in combination with the commonly used drug AZT, decreased AIDS infection and appeared to improve the immune systems of patients better than either drug used alone, according to new studies presented Wednesday.

New Drugs Offer Hope in Battle Against AIDS; Health: Preliminary trials of protease inhibitors show that they are 10 to 20 times as powerful as AZT.
Los Angeles Times - February 01, 1995
Marlene Cimons and Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Staff Writers
WASHINGTON -- In the first good news to come out of the battle against AIDS in this decade, researchers reported Tuesday that a new family of drugs called protease inhibitors can sharply reduce replication of the human immunodeficiency virus and restore immune system functioning in patients in the early stages of the disease.

January

County Report Shows Steady Spread of AIDS
Los Angeles Times - January 20, 1995
Carlos V. Lozano; Times Staff Writer
The number of new AIDS cases in Ventura County continued to increase steadily in 1994, health officials said Thursday, even as they released a report that seemed to contradict that trend.

Needle Exchanges Battle AIDS and the Law; Public health: Addicts spread HIV by sharing contaminated syringes.
Los Angeles Times - January 09, 1995
Jack Cheevers; Times Staff Writer
By the time she was 16, Gretchen Adams was a veteran junkie, shooting up daily with amphetamines, getting so wired she often didn't sleep for days, wandering the streets of Hollywood in a hallucinatory fog.


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