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Bruce Raymond Voeller (May 12, 1934 – February 13, 1994) was a biologist and researcher, primarily in the field of AIDS, and gay rights activist. In 1973 he co-founded the National Gay Task Force.
Get ready for all of today's NYT 'Connections’ hints and answers for #618 on Tuesday, February 18, 2025. Today's NYT Connections puzzle for Tuesday, February 18, 2025The New York Times.
Baker was born on September 30, 1961, in Sodus, New York. [1] He spent part of his early childhood in Apopka, Florida, raised by his maternal grandmother, Fannie Baker, before moving to Syracuse, New York, to live with his mother, Shirley Baker, who worked as a social worker and family services coordinator for New York State Correctional Services.
Patrick Spencer Cox (March 10, 1968 – December 18, 2012) was an American HIV/AIDS activist. He was involved in ACT UP New York and the Treatment Action Group during the height of the AIDS Crisis in New York. He helped facilitate the production of protease inhibitors, which revolutionized AIDS care in the 1990s.
About 630,000 people died from AIDS-related illnesses worldwide in 2023. Stegling said that if PEPFAR is not formally reauthorized for USAID funding for 2025 to 2029, there would likely be a 400% ...
On December 20, 1992, Schmalz wrote a first-person story for The New York Times titled, "Covering AIDS and Living with It: A Reporter's Testimony." [10] This first-person journalism was new for Schmalz, who had been a consummate Timesman focused on objectivity and non-biased reporting. In his first-person piece, Schmalz wrote about waking up ...
When it came to Hudson's HIV-positive status, Taylor found out the news with the rest of the world, just months before he would die of AIDS-related complications in 1985. "He didn’t tell anyone.
The early history of the AIDS epidemic in New York City began with early rumors in 1981 of a "gay plague". Because AIDS first emerged among populations considered marginal by many mainstream residents of New York City, including prostitutes, drug users, and men who had sex with men, early responses to the disease were uneven and underfunded.