Demonstration of airflow throughout Concorde power plant in different stages of flight. As the Concorde's engine could only use air flowing at about 300 miles per hour at the fastest, the power plant includes adjustable ramps to slow down airflow from Concorde's top speed of ~1300 mph to a usable range. Also include reverse thrust demonstrations.
A digitization of a 1996 edition of the Huntsville Times. Psychotherapist Terry Williams wrote an article for the Community Focus part of the newspaper for World AIDS Day to talk about the reality of AIDS.
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 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 chart of the AIDS statistics in Alabama from a 1994 edition of the Decatur Daily. The numbers were sourced from HIV-AIDS Division, Alabama Department of Public Health.
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.
An article about AIDS Caregiving Workshops in the Montgomery Advertiser. It focuses on Malcolm Marler and the programs he ran through the 1917 AIDS Clinic at UAB.
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.
This official agreement states that Laura M. Powell will pay 6.5 percent interest instead of 8 on her note of June 14, 1920, to be due on December 14, 1929. Written on The First National Bank in Huntsville, Alabama letterhead.
Agreement for the installation of galvanized roofing on a cotton shed occupied and rented by Gilbert Bros. from I. Schiffman and Co. at the request of Bettie Schiffman. Bettie's name appears on documents after July 1910 due to the death of her husband, Isaac.