Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
The New York City AIDS Memorial is a public memorial in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City built "to honor New York City's 100,000+ men, women and children who have died from AIDS, and to commemorate and celebrate the efforts of the caregivers and activists."
Loyola School is an American Jesuit high school on the Upper East Side of the Manhattan borough of New York City New York, founded in 1900 by the Society of Jesus. It is located two city blocks east of Central Park and Museum Mile on 83rd Street and Park Avenue.
In December 1980, a Brooklyn schoolteacher died of AIDS in New York City. During the fall of 1979, he sought medical advice about the hardened lymph nodes and odd purple skin rash he’d developed.
New York City was affected by the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s more than any other U.S. city. [1]: 16–17 The AIDS epidemic has been and continues to be highly localized due to a number of complex socio-cultural factors that affect the interaction of the populous communities that inhabit New York.
17 Απρ 2018 · A memorial to a small fraction of the thousands of New Yorkers who died of H.I.V./AIDS-related causes.
As a Catholic, independent, coeducational, college preparatory, urban, secondary day school, rooted in the Jesuit tradition, Loyola School challenges its young men and women to become intellectually fulfilled, open to growth, religious, loving, and committed to doing justice.
29 Μαΐ 2014 · We reached out to dozens of them — living both with and without HIV — to ask what moments they remember most vividly from those years, which were terrifying and grief-filled but also sometimes ...