Explore newspaper articles and clippings for help with genealogy, history and other research. (It's safer to use fresh ones, however. "There were many attempts to target women through poster campaigns, like this one, pinpointing the need for condom use not only to guard against unwanted pregnancy.Some organisations seemed to encourage women to be abstinent: "A great love is worth the wait. 1990s.Advertisement for safe sex and the AIDS Information Line in the Netherlands by the Stuurgroep AIDSpreventie Homo's and Buro GVO Amsterdam. He took it badly. View the latest US news, top stories, photos and videos from around the nation. Looks like your browser doesn't support JavaScript.In the 1980s, as the young died and doctors scrambled for answers, charities, activists, and governments tried to inform the public about a new killer: AIDS.Some simply tried to tell people that AIDS is deadly.The "put a rubber on it" message began in 1980s posters and continued throughout the 1990s. As the continued miniaturization continues new technology allows for new consumer products that could never have existed to appear including Domestic Camcorders and Fax Machines , One other notable is the release of the Pac-Man arcade game. Infoplease is a reference and learning site, combining the contents of an encyclopedia, a dictionary, an atlas and several almanacs loaded with facts. It wasn't very popular.Other posters took note of the dangers of sharing needles.And some even promoted the benefit of bleaching needles. Headline News. "Who will take care of him? Find marriage, birth, obituaries, local news, sports and more for people. on the popular soap Dallas.

The human race." Academy Award Winners of the 80's. ET 1990s.Warning about the risk of AIDS by the Alaska Native Health Board. "I can't get AIDS. And a banana design by the New Zealand Aids Foundation, 1990s.Advertisement for the new female condom by the Black HIV/AIDS Network, 1990s.Advertisement for the AIDS Project by the California Department of Health Services, 1990s.Instruction leaflet on how to clean syringes issued by the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, 1988.Advertisement issued by Ortho Diagnostic Systems, 1998.A warning by the New York State Health Department that AIDS, 1990s.Advertisement about the HIV virus by De Anza College Health Services. 1991.Advertisement by the State of California AIDS Education Campaign. Serious Headlines. I only sleep with nice women. Advertisement for AIDS information lines by the California Medical Association.Poster from the America Responds to AIDS advertising campaign, 1980s.An AIDS prevention advertisement by the Central Health Education Bureau in New Delhi.A warning that AIDS is a prolonged death by the American Indian Health Care Association. Movies. "HIV/AIDS charities were in desperate need of funds, so many used adverts and posters to gain donations. 1990s.Ad by ACT-UP for an AIDS demonstration on Friday 6 October 1989.Advertisement for the AIDS hotline by the AIDS Project Los Angeles. "AIDS attacks one race and one race only. Memorable Moments in Sports. Find historical newspapers from across the United States and beyond. The 1980s greatly tested New York City’s strength: residents fled the city in record numbers, government mismanagement caused near bankruptcy of the city, and the introduction of crack-cocaine unleashed an unprecedented wave of drug addiction and violence. This campaign highlighted gender-based violence: "She told her husband she was HIV+. Not So Serious Headlines. News stories from Wednesday June 11, 1980 Summaries of the stories the major media outlets considered to be of particular importance on this date: The Prime Minister of Japan died after a heart attack at the age of 70. 1997.Patrick Strudwick is a LGBT editor for BuzzFeed News and is based in London. Trends. "Don't have sex without a rubber for anything. It wouldn't be until 1996, after millions had already died, that effective anti-retrovirals arrived.A crucial message in many of the posters was to encourage everyone to support, not judge, people with HIV/AIDSSome countries, such as Kenya, incorporated the need to take care of HIV-positive people – and oneself – by emphasising the importance of family.And on World Aids Day — 1 December 2015 — with 35 million dead, and 34 million still living with the virus, this poster, once aimed at individuals, could now be aimed at governments who fail to respond to the crisis.