A detailed schedule for an AIDS training program hosted at Shades Valley Lutheran Church in January of 1996. It also shares a new phone number for AIDS volunteers to use, and lists the sponsoring organizations of the program.
A full page ad in the 1991 Birmingham Post Herald for the charity A Baby's Place in Alabama, explaining their purpose and how AIDS can affect babies and small children.
A full-page advertisement in the 1995 Birmingham Post-Herald from A Baby's Place of Alabama. It explains the affects of AIDS on babies and small children, and explains what A Baby's Place does as a charity to help with it.
A pink triangle against a black backdrop with the words 'Silence=Death' representing an advertisement for The Silence = Death Project used by permission by ACT-UP, The AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power
The front and back of an informational brochure for the AIDS Care Teams from the 1917 AIDS Clinic at UAB and the AIDS Education and Ministry Project at UAB. It gives an overview of how the program works and where to get training to volunteer with the program.
A clipping from a scan of the December 2, 1994 Montgomery Advertiser about a vigil at World AIDs Day. Attendees, holding candles, stand in front of the Capitol steps to commemorate those lost to AIDS.
The Reverend Malcolm Marler speaks to church leaders and teaches an AIDS education session at the Church of the Ascension in Montgomery, Alabama. This is a black and white digitization of a photograph from a 1995 edition of the Montgomery Advertiser newspaper.
Clippings of a scanned newspaper from the October 11, 1992 Anniston Star. It summarizes where different religious denominations stand on the topic of AIDS.
A clipping of a digital scan of the Montgomery Advertiser about an ACT UP protest in Nutley, New Jersey in February 1993. Activists blocked a street in front of the pharmaceutical company Hoffman-La Roche.
Rev. Malcolm Marler and AIDS patient Billy Cox speaking to attendees at a session of the Friday Morning Grace program at the 1917 AIDS Clinic. This is a photograph from a digitized edition of the Birmingham Post-Herald.
Founder Glenda Hollis reads to an 8 month old baby that is a resident of the specialized foster home A Baby's Place. This is a digitization of a photo in an issue of the Birmingham Post-Herald.
A picture of Olivia Hill, the director of the Office for Black Ministry of the Catholic Diocese of Birmingham, from a digitization of a 1992 issue of the Birmingham Post-Herald.
A form from Vestavia Hills UMC in Birmingham Alabama requesting an AIDS speaker come to talk to 40 ministers about various AIDS topics, including positivity, basic AIDS education, the current state of AIDS, and how to care for newly diagnosed patients.
A clipping of a scan of the Birmingham Post Herald that lists World AIDS Day events in Birmingham, Alabama. This includes information about services, the ringing of the church bells, and the Day Without Art exhibit.