SF News AIDS Memorial Grove Director Talks Museum Aspirations The National AIDS Memorial Grove, nurtured by more than 175,000 volunteer hours and visited by countless people, is preparing for new growth, perhaps adding a museum to present the history of the
SF News An AIDS Museum? National AIDS Memorial Grove Staff Explores Possibility Word is out regarding a "nascent" effort being "discreetly" explored by the staff of the National AIDS Memorial Grove in Golden Gate Park. The New York Times reveals the early stages and aspirations
Arts & Entertainment Ahead Of 'When We Rise' Part Two, ABC 7 Airs Pioneering AIDS Video Diary By Late Reporter Onetime ABC 7 entertainment reporter Paul Wynne decided in 1990, after being diagnosed with HIV and beginning to show the deterioration signs of AIDS, to document the final period of his life in
SF News It's World AIDS Day, And The National AIDS Memorial Grove Has Just Run Out Of Room To Carve Names Today, Facebook users are temporarily changing their profile pictures and celebrities are getting tested to encourage others to do the same. The occasion is World AIDS Day, the 35th anniversary of the first
SF News Study Shows Strains Of HIV In US Predated 'Patient Zero', Debunking Folklore Theory The New York Post once described GaƩtan Dugas, a French Canadian flight attendant, under the incendiary headline "The Man Who Gave Us AIDS." Known colloquially as "Patient Zero," Dugas figured prominently in Chronicle
Arts & Entertainment The Photograph That Changed the Face of AIDS December 1st marks the 25th annual World AIDS Day, and LIFE.com revisits a turning point in the history of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Shot in November 1990 by journalism student Therese Frare,
SF News New Study Blames Spread of HIV/AIDS On Women, Sort Of Although the early stages of the AIDS epidemic saw more men infected with HIV than women, a new study from UC San Francisco suggests that certain factors unique to women could be contributing