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November 1998
Organizing Inside
by Esther Kaplan
Against all odds, inmates have emerged as their own best AIDS
educators and advocates. Why don't prison wardens, ASOs and health
departments get it?
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Concealed Weapon
by Cindy Patton
PWA Greg Smith is serving 25 years for attempted murder. His crime? Allegedly biting a corrections officer.
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Long Day's Journey
by Angelo Ragaza
From Far Rockaway to Sing Sing, the children of an inmate with
AIDS hold a family together.
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Lethal Lottery
by Nina Siegal
Treatment and care for inmates with HIV varies dramatically from prison to prison. The luck of the draw can mean life or death.
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Double-Crossed
by Ann Silversides
New investigation and intrigue in '80s tainted-blood
tragedy
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Swim Lessons
by Scott Hess
Surprise! Sharing a snorkel has no HIV risk
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Privacy Parsed
by Doug Ireland
A national medical ID poses severe threats to HIV confidentiality
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Get Our Phil
by Dominic Hamilton-Little
The king of chat loves to do just that
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One for the Books
by Viet Din
Tommy and Valerie Reeder’s romance is better than fiction
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Flying Ace
by Kevin O'Leary
Francine Rodriguez reaches for the sky
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Hatch a Plan
by Terry Bisson
On the run—this time for Congress
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Poetic License
by River Huston
She was a poet who didn’t know it
until she got HIV
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Poetic License
by River Huston
She was a poet who didn’t know it
until she got HIV
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The Vision Thing
by Dave Gilden
At New York City’s PWA Health Group, the bottom line ousts a top activist
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Bleach Works
by Dan Bigg
Tips on reducing harm from drugging and tattooing
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Helper Cells
by Belinda Filippelli
Information and advocacy for prisoners with HIV
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Dark Secrets
by Barton Lidice Benes
Barton Benes makes art combining images with text from the thousands of letters his Aunt Evelyn wrote to him in the ’70s, when he was a young gay artist in New York City and she was a lonely Florida widow who hung on every word of his adventures.
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