2004

Mayor proposes opening legal brothels in Lima
Miami Herald - December 28, 2004
Tyler Bridges
LIMA, Peru - The men walked up and down the cement floor, the shy ones looking furtively, the bold ones casting an appraising eye at the women standing in the open doorways wearing nothing but bras, panties, high heel shoes and a beckoning smile. Traffic on a recent Saturday night here at one of the two legal borde


U.S.-funded Colombian anti-drug program to change
Miami Herald - December 28, 2004
Pablo Bachelet
WASHINGTON - Plan Colombia , the United States signature international drug-fighting effort, is to get a major overhaul once its five-year term ends at the end of 2005, with policymakers looking to give it more of a social and less of a military character. Officials say the $3.5 billion program has succeeded in put


Gay teen activist gains accolades for inspiring peers
Miami Herald - December 28, 2004
Steve Rothaus, srothaus@herald.com
Steven Alicea, 17, once a troubled gay youth who has lived in 17 Miami-area foster homes, was honored with two awards for his courage and activism. Two years ago, at age 15 and living in his 15th Miami-area foster home, Steven Alicea came out of the closet. His foster parents at the time, both pastors, said he would go


Uncommon tales preserve the past
Miami Herald - December 26, 2004
Connie Ogle, cogle@herald.com
Author of Life of Pi deftly explores death and redemption in four stories originally published in 1993. THE FACTS BEHIND THE HELSINKI ROCCAMATIOS. Yann Martel. Harcourt. 208 pages. $22. Yann Martel s bestselling, breakout novel Life of Pi explored the dilemma of surviving a shipwreck in a lifeboat with a hungry Bengal


Former outreach chief raised AIDS awareness
Miami Herald - December 23, 2004
Monica Hatcher, mhatcher@herald.com
Samaki Variety, admired for her work within South Florida s HIV/AIDS community, died Sunday in Atlanta of pneumonia. She was 47. Variety, the former community outreach director for Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, spearheaded several city-sponsored AIDS events, including the Tree Lighting Ceremony commemorating World AIDS Day a


Proposal would move hookers into 'sex hotels'
Miami Herald - December 23, 2004
Tyler Bridges
After receiving complaints from residents about streetwalkers in their neighborhoods, one Lima- area mayor had an idea: Put them in discreet hotels. LIMA - The men walked up and down the cement floor, the shy ones looking furtively, the bold ones casting an appraising eye at the women standing in the open doorways wear


Samaki Variety: Former outreach chief raised AIDS awareness
Miami Herald - December 23, 2004
Monica Hatcher, mhatcher@herald.com
Samaki Variety, admired for her work within South Florida s HIV/AIDS community, died Sunday in Atlanta of pneumonia. She was 47. Variety, the former community outreach director for Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, spearheaded several city-sponsored AIDS events, including the Tree Lighting Ceremony commemorating World AIDS Day a


Neighborhood planning holiday yard sale
Miami Herald - December 16, 2004
Carli Teproff, cteproff@herald.com
Just in time for the holidays, the Buena Vista East Historic Neighborhood Association is planning a Neighborhood Holiday Craft and Yard sale, with some of the proceeds benefiting various charities. The sale will run from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, and will cover six blocks from Northeast 42nd Street to Northeast 48th S


Girls pay back benefactors
Miami Herald - December 16, 2004
Laura Morales, llmorales@herald.com
The Coconut Grove Girls Group held a holiday party for Lennar Financial Services, which has been helping them with career tips and computer classes. Brimming with confidence, 13-year-old Darniqua Bogan sashayed toward her audience on the lawn of the West Grove s Gibson House, smiling and swinging her hips while the win


Student election leads to public service
Miami Herald - December 12, 2004
Brighton Watambwa, bwatambwa@herald.com
Students at a Miami Gardens school got a realistic voting experience when they held student council elections in the midst of the U.S. presidential campaign. Not satisfied with their school s A+ rating, teachers and administrators at Crestview Elementary are teaching their students the benefits of political involvement


Miami events open to 'survivor' athletes
Miami Herald - December 10, 2004
Jim Varsallone, jvarsallone@herald.com
Survivor athletes will now compete in Miami Runners Club events, beginning with Saturday s marathon. Under a joint agreement between the Miami Runners Club and Baltimore-based Active Survivors Network, athletes recovering or recovered from catastrophic illnesses or serious diseases will compete in their own divisions.


Gay theme's edgy -- but falters
Miami Herald - December 10, 2004
Eileen Spiegler, espiegler@herald.com
Imagine Jesus existed today. What if he s a soft-spoken kid, sensitive and artistic, born to a single mom in a Texas motel? He hears the voice of the Almighty. And he s gay. Nascent theater company The Baby Factor takes on Terrence McNally s personal interpretation of the Gospel of Matthew, Corpus Christi, in its Browa


'Every war is a war on women'
Miami Herald - December 10, 2004
Myrna Cunningham, gfw@globalfundforwomen.org
Today -- International Human Rights Day -- presents an opportunity to stand up for women s human rights. Just prior to the U.N. designation of this day in 1990, we Nicaraguans were engaged in a violent civil war in which rape was used as a weapon against women. Despite the courage and determination of so many women, th


Bono vs. poverty
Miami Herald - December 6, 2004
Bono has pledged to spend the rest of his life trying to help the impoverished around the world. The U2 frontman said in an interview with the BBC that he wanted the current generation to be remembered for something other than the Internet. It should be the first generation to eradicate extreme poverty, he said. I


A toast to art in a very public place
Miami Herald - December 4, 2004
Jane Wooldridge and Anne Tschida, jwooldridge@herald.com
A street party in downtown Miami drew hundreds of partygoers who were treated to free drinks, larger-than-life art and street performers. Can Miami throw a street party? It certainly can. From super-sized installation art to street performers, an area of downtown Miami was transformed into a festival Friday night.


Despite violence, Powell meets Haitian teens
Miami Herald - December 3, 2004
Jacqueline Charles, jcharles@herald.com
PORT-AU-PRINCE - Gunfire from a political clash still echoed through the streets of Haiti s capital Wednesday as U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell came face-to-face with another of this nation s problems. I want to hear about your life, he asked a circle of 11 teenagers, peer counselors with the Foundation for Repro


Magic Johnson hosts benefit fashion show for his foundation
Miami Herald - December 3, 2004
Elinor J. Brecher, ebrecher@herald.com
Right after he had to retire from professional basketball, Earvin Magic Johnson established a foundation to fight HIV, the virus that ended his NBA career. That was 1991. Since then, the former Los Angeles Laker has expanded his philanthropic mission and built a sprawling business empire. On Thursday night, he flashed


Test results still out on 4 victims of injections
Miami Herald - December 3, 2004
Ashley Fantz, Jacob Goldstein and Gabrielle Banks afantz@herald.com
Four South Floridians were still hospitalized after receiving mysterious injections that may have caused their illness. Four South Floridians remained critically ill Thursday, more than a week after receiving what they thought were Botox injections at an Oakland Park clinic. Pray for her. That s all I can say, said Flo


Health firm for jail can't dispense medicine
Miami Herald - December 3, 2004
Carol Marbin Miller and Wanda J. Demarzo, wdemarzo@herald.com
The Broward County Jail, which houses some 5,000 inmates -- many of them either physically or mentally ill -- has been turned over to a private healthcare management company that has yet to obtain a license to dispense prescription drugs. The jail s new healthcare provider, Correctional Health Services (CHS), apparentl


Study finds HIV cases on rise among gay men
Miami Herald - December 2, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
New HIV diagnoses are holding steady overall in the U.S., but may be increasing among men, a World AIDS Day study suggested. New HIV diagnoses remained stable in the United States at about 40,000 a year between 2002 and 2003, but new data released Wednesday from 32 states hinted at a resurgence among men -- especially


Experts: Epidemic still rages
Miami Herald - December 1, 2004
Darran Simon, dsimon@herald.com
Today, World AIDS Day will honor those who have died as well as those living with the disease and those trying to find a cure. Community leaders, advocates and others will gather in Broward today to commemorate World Aids Day and to remind everyone that the number of new infections in on the rise. South Florida will jo


About The Study
Miami Herald - December 26, 2004
A study published in the American Journal of Public Health estimates that failure to deliver standard care to black Americans cost nearly 900,000 lives from 1991 to 2000. An important limitation of the study was that it looked only at mortality and did not examine the role increased illness or other factors (such as in


Activists stress that HIV/AIDS should be a concern for women
Miami Herald - November 30, 2004
Andrea Robinson, arobinson@herald.com
When Sandra Mikell learned she had HIV 13 years ago, she did not know another black woman grappling with what many considered an automatic death sentence. Her case surely was unusual, she reasoned, because in her mind the virus and its resultant ailment -- acquired immune deficiency syndrome -- only afflicted gay, whit


Cinematheque to show 'Blue'
Miami Herald - November 28, 2004
The Miami Beach Cinematheque, located at 512 Española Way, will present Derek Jarmen s 1993 film Blue at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday as part of AIDS Awareness Day. Blue was Jarmen s last work, and was made while he was dying of AIDS and had been stricken with blindness. With an unchanging blue backdrop on screen, a series of v


Village to launch community center
Miami Herald - November 28, 2004
Sara Blumenthal, sblumenthal@herald.com
Village officials hope to open a community center offering services for students and seniors -- as well as various medical and mental health services -- within three months. El Portal Village Council voted unanimously Tuesday to enter into an agreement with North Dade Medical Foundation for a community outreach center


Volunteers needed for holiday party
Miami Herald - November 28, 2004
Volunteer elves and angels are needed for the Center for Positive Connection s seventh annual holiday party for people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS, taking place from noon to 4 p.m. Dec. 18 at the Knights of Columbus/North Miami Jaycees Hall, 12100 W. Dixie Hwy. The party will treat 100 children to gifts, lunch


White Party lives it up for charity
Miami Herald - November 28, 2004
Karl Ross, kross@herald.com
Organizers of South Florida s premier fundraiser for HIV/AIDS services, the White Party, celebrate 20 years of charity, while worrying about complacency. Your 20th high school reunion was nothing like this: Roman gladiators, revelers in sailor suits and silk pajamas, the pageantry of a carnaval in Rio. All at Miami s m


Alicia calls for: African AIDS action
Miami Herald - November 27, 2004
With World AIDS Day approaching Wednesday, singer/songwriter Alicia Keys is calling upon her peers in the music industry to raise their voices to help millions suffering from AIDS in Africa, reports Billboard Online. Just for a moment, imagine the media hysteria and global outrage if 25 million Americans, many of them


Latin America's HIV rise among highest
Miami Herald - November 24, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
The number of new cases of HIV remained flat in North America, but other regions of the world, including Latin America, saw big increases, and the impact on women continued to grow. Nearly five million people worldwide were infected with HIV during 2004, bringing the number living with the virus that causes AIDS to nea


White Party marking 20 years in AIDS fight
Miami Herald - November 24, 2004
Steve Rothaus, srothaus@herald.com
As AIDS decimated their circle of friends in 1984, Frank Wager and Jorge Suarez began planning an event they hoped would raise awareness -- and a few dollars -- to help fight the virus in South Florida. They dropped leaflets outside gay bars all over Miami-Dade and Broward counties, got businesses to donate food and li


She finds easing victims' trauma helps the community
Miami Herald - November 21, 2004
Marika Lynch, mlynch@herald.com
A licensed social worker has created the Victims Services Center. Rape and incest survivors. The victims of Colombian kidnappings, and torture in Haiti . All have walked into a nondescript, second floor office on downtown Miami s Southwest Third Street, seeking relief from the trauma that haunts them. There Teresa


Anti-gay mind-set is hindering fight against AIDS in Jamaica
Miami Herald - November 17, 2004
Michael A.W. Ottey, mottey@herald.com
Discrimination and violence against gays in Jamaica is undermining government measures to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic, a report said. HIV/AIDS is spreading quickly in Jamaica, yet government measures to fight the epidemic are hampered by discrimination and violence against gays and people living with the disease, acco


With flu shots scarce, doctors struggle to pick the neediest
Miami Herald - November 16, 2004
Jacob Goldstein, jgoldstein@herald.com
At the University of Miami Hospital and Clinics, bone marrow transplant recipients were first in line for flu shots. A few doors down, at Jackson Memorial Hospital, the old, those with compromised immune systems and toddlers under 2 had equal claim. At North Broward Medical Center, hospital employees who work with high


Job fair opens doors to refugees to jobs, health
Miami Herald - November 14, 2004
Jennifer Mooney Piedra, jmooney@herald.com
Visitors at the Refugee Outreach Fair in Hialeah got information on jobs, education and health services. Nadine Bruno emigrated from Haiti more than a year ago, knowing it would be a trying experience. Aside from settling in a new country, she would have to find work and learn a new language. So far, Bruno is close


Returning the smiles to children's faces
Miami Herald - November 12, 2004
Cindy Krischer Goodman, cgoodman@herald.com
A mom s experience with her paralyzed son led her to start Island Dolphin Care, a therapy paradise for disabled and sick children. Swimming with the dolphins helped Deena Hoagland s toddler son beat paralysis caused by a stroke. If it could help him, she thought, what about others? Thus began Hoagland s journey to laun


Brad gets serious about AIDS
Miami Herald - November 10, 2004
Brad Pitt spent four days in Ethiopia to learn more about AIDS in Africa as part of a fund-raising campaign to combat the disease on the world s poorest continent, reports The Associated Press. The trip was organized by DATA, a Washington-based lobby group co-founded by U2 frontman Bono that campaigns on Third World tr


Blood bank works toward buyout
Miami Herald - November 9, 2004
John Dorschner, jdorschner@herald.com
The loser in the region s blood wars, South Florida Blood Banks is about to get taken over by an Orlando company. Florida s Blood Centers of Orlando has offered to purchase the assets of financially troubled South Florida Blood Banks, the loser in the region s blood wars, as its business has steadily eroded because it


Party volunteers needed
Miami Herald - November 7, 2004
Volunteer elves and angels are needed for the Center for Positive Connection s seventh annual holiday party for people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS, taking place noon to 4 p.m. Dec. 18 at the Knights of Columbus/North Miami Jaycees Hall, 12100 W. Dixie Hwy. The party will treat 100 children to gifts, lunch, gam


Helpers use hands-on style to make good things happen
Miami Herald - November 4, 2004
Ben Torter, btorter@herald.com
On Saturday, Hands On Miami is expecting its largest turnout ever for its annual community service event. Claudia Lopez knew that by the end of the afternoon, her clothes would be filthy with dirt and hair and slobber. She loves it when that happens. Once a month Lopez gives three hours of her time brushing, exercising


Elton: Here come the grooms?
Miami Herald - November 4, 2004
Elton John is planning to become a married man. The flamboyant performer is saying that he wants to wed his longtime companion, David Furnish, reports MSNBC.com. We haven t set a date and it surely won t be a big public ceremony but I would like to place my life in his hands with a wedding vow, the Rocket Man told the


Gay activists on mission to get vote out for Kerry
Miami Herald - October 22, 2004
Amy Sherman
Energized by President George W. Bush s support for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, gay activists in Broward have organized their biggest get-out-the-vote drive ever. That has gotten so many people riled up, that was part of the catalyst that brought to a head that we need some place to all get togethe


How Haiti Can Survive: This time, make a commitment to stay until the job is finished
Miami Herald - October 21, 2004
--Our Opinion: U.S. Must Lead Effort To Rebuild Haiti Or Face Recurring Crises Twenty-one years ago, a first-time visitor to Haiti was horrified by what he observed in the Western Hemisphere s poorest country: Division, injustice, excessive inequality, degradation of the quality of life, misery, hunger and the fear of


District 111 candidates prepare for election
Miami Herald - October 17, 2004
Nathalie Gouillou, ngouillou@herald.com
Laura Leyva, a political novice, will challenge Marco Rubio, the man voters sent to Tallahassee four years ago, for a seat in District 111. When Laura Leyva headed back home from a mall in Hialeah on Monday afternoon, she had wore down another pair of black heels and had swollen feet -- again. Leyva wasn t on a shoppin


AIDS awareness campaign launched
Miami Herald - October 16, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Marking National Latino AIDS Awareness Day Friday, U.S. Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona announced a new national campaign of public service announcements promoting testing and HIV prevention. From 1999-2002 in the 29 U.S. states with long-standing reporting, HIV diagnoses among Hispanics increased 26 percent, Carmon


Boys learn 'sex is a serious thing'
Miami Herald - October 14, 2004
Jennifer Mooney Piedra, jmooney@herald.com
A group of middle school boys got a lesson on the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases as part of the activities of a role-model program aimed at mentoring them through their difficult years. The dangers of sexual intercourse were never taught to ninth-grader Kevin Vixama. That is, until now. Kevin, 15, along with


BSO to tote stun guns
Miami Herald - October 13, 2004
Wanda J. Demarzo, wdemarzo@herald.com
It passed. And now BSO plans to arm its deputies with the controversial stun gun. After a three-month trial late last year, Broward sheriff s deputies are getting Tasers -- the controversial stun gun that incapacitates by shooting electrically charged darts into an unruly subject. The two darts remain connected to the


A medical-ethical clash over an incurable killer
Miami Herald - October 12, 2004
Glenn Garvin, ggarvinherald.com
* The Most Dangerous Woman in America. 8-9 tonight. WPBT-PBS 2. It s easy enough to sneer at Fidel Castro s quarantine camps for AIDS victims, and most of us do. But tweak your imagination a little bit: Make the disease more highly contagious, more easily spread, completely untreatable, and then move it to the


Cheney assailed for AIDS and black women remarks
Miami Herald - October 8, 2004
Lesley Clark and Andrea Robinson, lclark@herald.com
Cheney assailed for AIDS and black women remarks Democrats accused the Bush administration of being out of touch after Dick Cheney s comments regarding the AIDS epidemic in the United States . Vice President Dick Cheney s admission that he was not aware of an AIDS epidemic among black women in the United States drew a


Five lose jobs over suicide watch
Miami Herald - October 7, 2004
Luisa Yanez, lyanez@herald.com
Top-ranking officials at a Pasco County prison resigned or were fired for allowing a female inmate to be naked in her cell while on suicide watch, a violation of procedures. Five senior officials of a Central Florida prison have quit or been fired because an HIV-positive suicidal woman inmate was kept naked in her cell


Spiritual coming out: Increasing numbers of gay Christians are becoming more active in both liberal and conservative churches
Miami Herald - October 2, 2004
Alexandra Alter, aalter@herald.com
Xavier Cortada s complex feelings about the Catholic Church are difficult to put into words, but they flow easily onto canvas. The Miami artist s work, filled with religious icons, pulses with love and disappointment, hope and frustration. I draw on my faith in my art, because that s who I am, said Cortada, 42. A lot o


4 charged with defrauding Medicaid
Miami Herald - October 2, 2004
Lisa Arthur, larthur@herald.com
State Medicaid fraud investigators arrested four people they said ran a scam out of a Miami treatment center for AIDS and Hepatitis C patients. Medicaid fraud investigators arrested four people connected to a Miami infectious disease treatment center, charging they were running a scam that beat the government out of $4


Child pornographer faces sentencing today
Miami Herald - September 24, 2004
Jay Weaver, jweaver@herald.com
A Miami Beach child pornographer faces a potential 100-year prison sentence today after being convicted on charges of producing, importing and selling videos of underage girls. Armed with a search warrant, a U.S. postal inspector stumbled upon a clue to a Miami Beach child pornographer two years ago when he discovered


Democratic newcomer squares off against veteran
Miami Herald - September 19, 2004
Nathalie Gouillou, ngouillou@herald.com
Voters must choose between the man they sent to Tallahassee four years ago and a newcomer who says she brings fresh ideas. For the past two elections, State Rep. Marco Rubio has been unopposed for the District 111 seat. But this year, a Democratic businesswoman says she wants to put her knowledge of healthcare issues t


'Survivor' ready to help others
Miami Herald - September 16, 2004
Ben Torter, btorter@herald.com
This year s Miami-Dade County Heart Walk Honorary Survivor has been taking care of himself because I want to be able to see my grandkids grow up. Clarence Brownlee, who has been tapped as the Honorary Survivor of the 2004 Miami-Dade County Heart Walk taking place Saturday is grateful to be alive and able to help others


What Makes Public Hospitals Different
Miami Herald - September 16, 2004
* Public hospitals treat all patients regardless of their ability to pay. At Jackson Memorial, the mission is said to deliver a single standard of care to all patients. * They treat large numbers of at-risk populations, including the elderly, low-income children and families on Medicaid, minorities, people with limited


The minority health crisis
Miami Herald - September 13, 2004
John Dorschner, jdorschner@herald.com
On a quiet summer Saturday, 10 minority members of the U.S. Congress gathered in Miami to discuss the crisis in minority healthcare. For more than two years, stacks of reports have been piling up about what has become a raw, festering wound on America s social conscience. Dozens of studies make the point: Even if minor


'Survivor' ready to help others
Miami Herald - September 12, 2004
Ben Torter, btorter@herald.com
This year s Miami-Dade County Heart Walk Honorary Survivor has been taking care of himself because I want to be able to see my grandkids grow up. Clarence Brownlee, who has been tapped as the Honorary Survivor of the 2004 Miami-Dade County Heart Walk taking place next weekend, is grateful to be alive and able to help o


Aleman keeps seat despite poor reviews
Miami Herald - September 1, 2004
Sara Olkon, solkon@herald.com
Controversial Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Aleman holds onto her seat in a high-profile election race against a vocal critic. Incumbent Circuit Judge Cheryl Aleman held off challenger Robert Malove, a Pembroke Pines lawyer, in the most closely watched judicial race in Broward this season. Aleman, appointed by Gov. Jeb Bu


Alleged cop killer says he is broke, has AIDS
Miami Herald - August 20, 2004
Roberto Santiago, rsantiago@herald.com and Jay Weaver
Allegedly cop killer Ken Wilk, who allegedly shot and killed a Broward Sheriff s Office deputy yesterday told a federal judge that he is broke, has dementia , and has AIDS. I have full-blown AIDS and AIDS dementia, Wilk, 42, told U.S. District John J. O Sullivan during a Friday afternoon hearing on child pornography ch


Beauty fights against AIDS
Miami Herald - August 15, 2004
Ginelle G. Torres, ggtorres@herald.com
Thea Duncan of Palmetto Bay was crowned the first Miss CARICOM in July and wants to use her title to tackle the HIV/AIDS crisis in the Caribbean. When Thea Duncan was a child, her mother, a nurse, began to talk to her about the ravages of AIDS. The disease had hit close to home -- it took a relative at the age of 22.


Democrats aim at tough incumbent Ros-Lehtinen
Miami Herald - August 15, 2004
Nicole White, nwhite@herald.com
The Democrats who will square off in an Aug. 31 primary in U.S. House District 18 are taking shots at incumbent Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and her support for President Bush. The effort to unseat Republican congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen essentially comes down to this: a battle cry to defeat the woman who opponents sa


Jet-setters mix charity and fun at Dominican resort fete
Miami Herald - August 15, 2004
Daisy Olivera, dolivera@herald.com
Casa de Campo, the luxury resort in La Romana in the Dominican Republic has become the St. Tropez of the Caribbean for European and Miami society. A playground for the jet-set who want a quick getaway during the summer -- much like Varadero Beach once was in Cuba .


Pines lawyer seeks to unseat embattled judge
Miami Herald - August 12, 2004
Sara Olkon, solkon@herald.com
Lawyer Robert Malove is challenging incumbent Circuit Judge Cheryl Alemán in a race that has become personal. In a rare challenge, a Pembroke Pines lawyer is trying to unseat Broward Circuit Judge Cheryl Alemán, who was appointed by Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001. The thrust of Robert Malove s campaign is to paint himself as co


Inside the ER: Some can pay. Some can't.
Miami Herald - August 9, 2004
John Dorschner, jdorschner@herald.com
Some patients can pay for emergency-room care. Others can t. That s the problem. Monday mornings are the busiest times for emergency rooms, and shortly after 11 a.m., the radio at the central nurse s station at Homestead Hospital squawked: A traffic accident victim was two minutes away. Twenty-five-year-old male. Abras


HIV group celebrates anniversary
Miami Herald - August 8, 2004
The Center for Positive Connections will host a ninth anniversary celebration from 9 p.m. to midnight Thursday at the Porterhouse Bar and Grill, 17004 Collins Ave. The event and is open to anyone infected or affected by HIV. The night will include music by DJ Buddy Bear, karaoke, a buffet with hot and cold finger foods


Man with HIV charged in teen rape
Miami Herald - August 7, 2004
Wanda J. Demarzo and Sara Olkon, wdemarzo@herald.com
A man infected with HIV was charged with 22 counts, including sexual battery, after police say they saw him in the back of a van with a teenage girl. A young teen who police said has been sexually assaulted a number of times must wait for the outcome of tests to see if she is infected with HIV. The Miramar man who is c


County team trying to save AIDS group near fiscal ruin: A county emergency board is trying to salvage MOVERS, a Miami HIV/AIDS organization that focuses on the black community, from being overwhelmed by expenses.
Miami Herald - Sunday, August 1, 2004
Andrea Robinson, arobinson@herald.com
MOVERS, the venerable HIV/AIDS agency that began as a church-based ministry to serve Miami s black community, is struggling with financial problems that have nearly put the organization out of business, county records show. A county-ordered management oversight team is trying to overhaul the agency s operations so it c


Unsung Heroes: On African trip, MD pair will fight HIV and myths
Miami Herald - Saturday, July 31, 2004
Donna Gehrke-White, dgehrke@herald.com
As a surgeon, Dr. Jose H. Valladares works 14-hour days. But he s closing his Little Havana office and taking off Friday for a nine-day trip to Africa. He s not going on safari to see giraffes and elephants, though. Valladares, 66, and his wife, Dr. Jacqueline Junco-Valladares, 38, a University of Miami physician and i


Marijuana-like drug eludes scientists
Miami Herald - Friday, July 30, 2004
Jacob Goldstein
As Ricky Williams fights social anxiety disorder with marijuana, scientists are working to take advantage of the plant s anti-anxiety properties while avoiding the drug s side effects. Ricky Williams claim that marijuana helps stave off social anxiety may have scientific merit, but developing a drug that could produce


Developing drugs calls for strategic thinking
Miami Herald - Tuesday, July 27, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
BANGKOK, Thailand - It s like a deadly game of chess, AIDS-drug researchers say. They make a move against HIV, the virus counters. At every AIDS conference, Big Pharma, as the international drug companies are called, announces a promising new drug or two. And other researchers hold sessions on how HIV has mutated, deve


A new wave of AIDS drugs on the horizon for women: A new class of drugs being tested offers women protection against AIDS.
Miami Herald - Tuesday, July 20, 2004
Fred Tasker, Miami Herald
Microbicides - vaginal gels, creams or foams -- can protect women during sex. BANGKOK, Thailand - With an effective AIDS vaccine a decade away, and no major new drugs making their debut, the most exciting scientific development is a new class of drugs that can protect women during sex. Called microbicides, they re


AIDS CONFERENCE ACTIVISTS: Angry trio's cynical, lusting for change
Miami Herald - Monday, July 19, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
BANGKOK, Thailand - They had come seeking science, new medicines, ways of sharing what they knew with people from other countries. But what the three South Florida women who journeyed here to attend the XV International AIDS Conference came away with was far more emotional. They left impassioned, angry with their count


Trade, tourism focus of big parley: Broward leaders and representatives from Central and South America and the Caribbean started a conversation about improving trade and tourism relations.
Miami Herald - Friday, July 16, 2004
Ashley Fantz, afantz@herald.com
It was a small luncheon with a big goal: drum up practical solutions to complex international issues. Officials from about 25 Latin American and Caribbean nations gathered with Broward leaders in Tamarac to take small steps toward enhancing economic exchange between Broward s diverse communities and residents home coun


America's global AIDS policy criticized
Miami Herald - July 15, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Critics at an international conference complained that the United States gives too little to the fight against AIDS and that the money has strings attached. BANGKOK, Thailand - In a fractious session at an international AIDS conference here, U.S. AIDS czar Randall Tobias on Wednesday defended President Bush s global pr


U.S. defends AIDS program funding at conference
Miami Herald - July 15, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
BANGKOK, Thailand - In the most fractious session at the XV International AIDS Conference here, U.S. AIDS czar Randall Tobias on Wednesday defended President Bush s global program for fighting AIDS, while about 50 protesters sat on the floor holding up signs that said, He s lying. This year America is spending ne


Women catching up with HIV rate in men
Miami Herald - July 14, 2004
Fred Tasker
The HIV/AIDS rate among women is growing. The principal cause, researchers said, is women being infected by unfaithful male partners. BANGKOK, Thailand - A generation ago, one in 10 of new AIDS patients in the United States was a woman. It s now one in four. Worldwide, women made up nearly half of the adults living


Quest for vaccine lacks investment, observers say
Miami Herald - July 13, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
A great deal more money than is now being invested needs to be put into the search for an HIV vaccine if the quest is to succeed, experts say. BANGKOK, Thailand - Worldwide efforts to create an AIDS vaccine have grown dramatically in the past two years but still fall far short of what is needed to succeed, leaders of t


Young gays drive HIV rise in U.S.
Miami Herald - July 13, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
A younger, less risk-aware population of gay men is responsible for an acceleration in the rate of HIV infection in the United States , medical experts and researchers said in Thailand . BANGKOK, Thailand - A new generation of U.S. gay and bisexual men is engendering a sharp increase in the number of newly diagnosed HI


Not enough being done on AIDS, Annan says
Miami Herald - July 12, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
At the world AIDS conference in Thailand , U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan pointed to key failures by world communities in the fight to stop the spread of HIV. BANGKOK, Thailand - Too few doctors treating AIDS. Continuing victimization of women by men who infect them. A lack of leadership from top government official


Resuscitating the fight against global pandemic: Our Opinion: With U.S. Leadership, Battle Against Aids Can Be Won
Miami Herald - July 12, 2004
As the International Conference on AIDS begins in Bangkok, Americans have reason to feel both shame and optimism. Shame because of our pitiful response to a global plague that is killing millions and ravaging entire nations; optimism because we have the intellectual and financial wherewithal to defeat this pandemic if


Idea to market doll hits a snag
Miami Herald - July 11, 2004
Lily Leung, Herald writer
A man wanting to cheer up his girlfriend s granddaughter after her parents died made a doll in her likeness. He wants to distribute other dolls to kids in need but a disagreement with the manufacturer has delayed the process. Some parents buy toys to comfort a sad child. From the latest superhero action figure to the n


Global Health Crisis: AIDS specialists confronting spread: 'We're losing the battle'
Miami Herald - July 11, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Thousands of AIDS specialists are gathering in Bangkok, Thailand , where a global spread of AIDS will come under scrutiny. AIDS, which was born in Africa and arrived in the United States as a gay men s scourge, is exploding across the globe with equal-opportunity fervor. It s infecting a new generation of women, te


Three women have common cause
Miami Herald - July 11, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
The Herald will report from Bangkok on the activities of these three women this week. Sheri Kaplan of North Miami went to her doctor for birth control pills in 1994 and came away with an HIV-positive diagnosis: From regular old heterosexual sex, she says. Probably even the missionary position. I was in shock. She has d


Unsung Heroes: At 23, this 'dad' runs full house
Miami Herald - July 10, 2004
Erika Pesantes, epesantes@herald.com
When Antonio Seay returned to his Brownsville home last spring, a college degree in hand, he was proud. But somber. AIDS had ravaged the body of his 40-year-old mother. She barely remembered Seay and his siblings hospital visits, even though they commuted daily by Metrorail to spend final moments by her bedside. The


Gaming needs to grow up
Miami Herald - July 10, 2004
Ana Veciana-Suarez, aveciana@herald.com
It is perhaps the last frontier in virtual reality. In the land of chips and circuitry, where technology enables us to create families, build cities and crash cars without leaving our chair, now we can make love, too. The Sims 2, scheduled to be released at the end of this summer, will feature characters capable of hav


Gere pushes
Miami Herald - July 9, 2004
for safe sex Richard Gere launched his new HIV/AIDS prevention campaign in India s financial and entertainment capital, using Indian film and sports stars to convey a safe-sex message. The Heroes Project is the latest initiative by Gere, who over the past year has become a vocal campaigner against HIV/AIDS in the regio


The naked truth
Miami Herald - July 8, 2004
She did it! Macy Gray has fulfilled her pledge to perform nude -- by stripping during her London concert Monday night, reports IMDB.com. The eccentric singer, 33, appeared naked behind a chair onstage at the Coronet venue during a sterling rendition of Nina Simone s Feeling Good -- where she was photographed for a book


Meek to speak about health
Miami Herald - July 8, 2004
U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek, D-Miami, and three other members of Congress will attend a summit at Miami Dade College that will discuss racial and ethnic disparities in health issues relating to tobacco, obesity, HIV/AIDS and immigrants. Summit panels will meet in Building 3 of the Champan Center of MDC s Wolfson Campus, 24


At Caribbean summit, focus on Haiti: The 25th annual summit of Caribbean governmental heads began Sunday with discussions about Haiti's suspension from the group and regional development.
Miami Herald - July 5, 2004
Michael A.W. Ottey, mottey@herald.com
ST. GEORGE S, Grenada - The heads of government of Caribbean nations opened a summit here on Sunday, noting growing challenges such as helping Haiti and improving economic development and healthcare throughout the region. Leaders at the 25th conference of heads of government of the Caribbea


A haircut that might help save some lives
Miami Herald - June 27, 2004
Andrea Robinson, arobinson@herald.com
An AIDS organization has teamed up with a trendy Morningside barbershop to deliver condoms and HIV education to its customers. Twice a month, Alphene Rhone treks from his North Miami office to a barbershop on Biscayne Boulevard. He doesn t go for the regular haircut, trim or style. Instead, he delivers condoms -- and i


Camp a 'nurturing environment' for children living with HIV
Miami Herald - June 24, 2004
Cristina Silva, csilva@herald.com
The 9-year-old girl with HIV squirmed in her chair as she discussed her daily medical routine. I got all these pills and some new liquid medicine, so I don t know what they are called, said Alexis, describing the five pills she takes every day. I got these other pills, they are so skinny, you don t have to drink any wa


For at-risk teens, therapy with a beat
Miami Herald - June 21, 2004
David Ovalle, dovalle@herald.com
At Youth Expressions in Little Haiti , at-risk teenagers use hip-hop to channel their frustrations and structure their lives. The teens gather every afternoon in the Little Haiti office of a nonprofit program that pulses with hip-hop -- and with purpose. Sabrina Abraham fiddles with a weathered stereo. A thick beat rum


Parade accents pride, politics
Miami Herald - June 21, 2004
Ashley Fantz, afantz@herald.com
Everywhere there were Jim Stork stickers, hats, posters, and pins. Wilton Manors gay mayor s bid for Congress had the annual Stonewall Festival focusing on politics as much as partying. The annual Stonewall Festival, a gay pride parade and street party, brought out the usual crowds -- men and women wearing pounds of Ma


Bond reduced for Coral Gables urologist charged in drug case
Miami Herald - June 15, 2004
Sara Olkon, solkon@herald.com
The Coral Gables urologist accused of selling diluted cancer and AIDS medications won a bid for a lower bond Monday. Broward Circuit Judge Eileen O Conner cut Paul Perito s bond from $2 million to $1,175,000 after hearing arguments from defense attorney Jane Moscowitz Friday. The lower bond comes with several condition


Health-care disparities plague Hispanics
Miami Herald - June 15, 2004
Christine Armario
Hispanics are more likely to suffer from certain chronic diseases and have less access to health care than non-Hispanic whites, panelists said at the kick-off for a series of nationwide conferences Thursday in Miami Beach. We re dying of some of these diseases because we re not getting the treatment, said Elena Alvarad


DRUG CASE: Another side of accused doctor
Miami Herald - June 12, 2004
Sara Olkon, solkon@herald.com
A urologist charged with dealing diluted cancer and AIDS drugs made a bid to reduce his $2 million bond by half. More than 50 of his friends and co-workers attended the hearing in Fort Lauderdale to lend their support. Inside a crowded Broward County courtroom Friday afternoon, two very different portraits emerged of C


UNSUNG HEROES: His obsession to help others enhances immigrants' lives
Miami Herald - June 12, 2004
Donna Gehrke-White, dgehrke@herald.com
Years ago, you might have seen Francois Leconte handing out AIDS-prevention pamphlets on street corners in Fort Lauderdale. What you didn t see: Leconte working for free to set up a nonprofit agency for struggling immigrants. He didn t take a paycheck from his Minority Development & Empowerment Inc. for three years


Streisand's personal FX go on the block
Miami Herald - June 7, 2004
Collectors took advantage of a rare opportunity Saturday when Barbra Streisand put hundreds of items from her films and personal life on auction to benefit several charities. The collection included everything from gowns Streisand designed and wore in movies and concert appearances to her prescription eyeglasses and cu


Stars align for African aid
Miami Herald - June 4, 2004
Jude Law, U2 frontman Bono and Coldplay singer Chris Martin are among a host of celebrities who have signed an open letter to Prime Minister Tony Blair requesting more aid money for the world s poorest countries, reports The Associated Press. The letter, also signed by Helen Mirren, Colin Firth, Joseph Fiennes and Minn


Website opens up Internet to black students
Miami Herald - June 1, 2004
Andrea Robinson, arobinson@herald.com
Karnita Dumas and Christopher Emile laughed in delight at the animation that appeared on the website: black and brown children reading books, dancing and painting -- the same things they like to do. This is great, said Karnita, 11, glancing up from the computer screen. Like Christopher, 10, she is a fifth-grader at Lin


VIDEO VOYEUR: Colombian artist Miguel Angel Rojas explores personal themes in an exhibit at Miami gallery
Miami Herald - May 30, 2004
Elisa Turner, elisaturn@aol.com
The video projected on the floor in Miguel Angel Rojas solo show at Casas Riegner Gallery is brazenly, boringly simple. Over time, it s also hypnotically fascinating. This video by Colombian artist Rojas, On the Border of Panic, shows seven minutes of a white plastic-gloved hand drawing white chalk marks across the gri


Doctor charged with diluting cancer drug
Miami Herald - May 28, 2004
John Dorschner, jdorschner@herald.com
A South Florida doctor was arrested, accused of selling diluted cancer and AIDS medications. Some of the sales took place at the strip club he owns. Coral Gables urologist Paul Perito was arrested Thursday, accused of selling diluted cancer and AIDS medications -- sometimes from the Homestead strip club he owns -- in a


'Sexual Perversity' fails to satisfy
Miami Herald - May 24, 2004
Christine Dolen, cdolen@herald.com
David Mamet s plays are not for the faint of heart (or taste), and neither is the Sol Theatre Project s new production of his Sexual Perversity in Chicago. Director Robert Hooker s production of the young Mamet s 1974 play is, in fact, a winkingly campy exercise in excess, a show that combines period style and 21st-cen


Intensity, complexity drive 'Normal'
Miami Herald - May 23, 2004
Christine Dolen, cdolen@herald.com
Panic pulses -- first quietly, then insistently -- through the devastating revival of Larry Kramer s urgently galvanizing play, The Normal Heart. The Worth Street Theater Company production at the Public Theater, where the play was born in 1985, is both a window into history and a demonstration of what theater at its m


About the Play, the People
Miami Herald - May 23, 2004
* Larry Kramer grew up outside Washington, D.C., and graduated from Yale University. He produced and wrote the Oscar-nominated screenplay for the Ken Russell-directed 1969 movie version of D.H. Lawrence s Women in Love. His successful, controversial 1978 novel Faggots detailed gay life in the 70s. The Gay Men s Health


Second chance for playwright, AIDS play
Miami Herald - May 23, 2004
Christine Dolen, cdolen@herald.com
NEW YORK - Larry Kramer walks up the steps into the Public Theater s cavernous lobby, trailing just behind a bundle of honey-colored canine friendliness named Tiger. The balding gray-haired man on the other end of the Wheaton terrier s leash certainly looks like a New York character: He s dressed in deep blue bib overa


AIDS fight gets boost from Cannes
Miami Herald - May 22, 2004
Sharon Stone and Liza Minnelli dazzled the crowd at the Cannes Film Festival by hosting a charity dinner to raise money for AIDS that left the French Riviera town feeling star-struck, reports Hello! magazine. Have a cocktail kids -- it s gonna be a long night, said Stone to kick off the fun. The Basic Instinct star, de


Immediate action necessary to curb AIDS crisis
Miami Herald - May 22, 2004
Cesar Chelala, cchelala@aol.com
The recent warning by the Chinese Government that HIV/AIDS is spreading rapidly in the country and that new and urgent measures to combat the infection are necessary is an important step in the fight against this killer. This is particularly remarkable because at the beginning of the epidemic the Chinese authorities we


Receiver: Viatical firm has some funds in bank accounts
Miami Herald - May 18, 2004
Patrick Danner, pdanner@herald.com
In his initial report, the receiver overseeing the shut-down Mutual Benefits Corp. said he had found more than $218 million in various company bank accounts. Federal securities regulators were duped by state investigators into placing the Mutual Benefits Corp. in receivership and seizing its assets, according to a lawy


Homestead woman honored for efforts on behalf of migrant workers
Miami Herald - May 18, 2004
Tere Figueras, tfigueras@herald.com
A Homestead woman who has labored for years to aid South Dade s migrant workers has won the prestigious Robert Wood Johnson Community Health Leadership Program award -- one of 10 people in the country so honored this year. Susan Reyna, a third-generation migrant worker, founded M.U.J.E.R Inc. in 1996 -- helping provide


Healing prayer
Miami Herald - May 15, 2004
Donna Gehrke-White, dgehrke@herald.com
Sheri Kaplan went to the doctor for birth control pills. Instead, she tested positive for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS -- the shock of my life. A virtual death sentence, she felt. Ten years later, Kaplan, 39, is robust and confident she can manage her life-threatening illness. Prayer and a spiritual awakening -- she


Voter registration effort kicks off
Miami Herald - May 13, 2004
Several community-based groups and agencies are coming together to launch a campaign aimed at increasing the number of black registered voters and encouraging those who are registered to vote. The effort will kick off at Ingram Park, 2100 Burlington St. -- 142nd Street east of 22nd Avenue -- in Opa-locka, from 3 to 7 p


'Condom Lady' sues over arrest
Miami Herald - May 11, 2004
Wanda J. Demarzo, wdemarzo@herald.com
An HIV educator known as the Condom Lady has filed a wrongful-arrest suit against the Broward Sheriff s Office after she was placed in custody while distributing condoms at a Broward nightclub. To scores of young people around South Florida, Angie Lee is known as the Condom Lady, for her aggressive efforts to promote s


Online quiz helps teens understand sexual issues
Miami Herald - May 6, 2004
Debbie Glasser
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy and its founding partners, Teen People Magazine and TeenPeople.com, have developed an online quiz to encourage teens to think about how they might respond in various sexual situations and to raise awareness about consequences of their behaviors. This quiz, which will be p


Death benefit firm closed in scam
Miami Herald - May 6, 2004
Patrick Danner, pdanner@herald.com
Mutual Benefits Corp., the giant viaticals company in Fort Lauderdale, was shut down by regulators. The industry sells sick people s life-insurance policies to investors. State and federal regulators on Wednesday shut down Fort Lauderdale-based Mutual Benefits Corp., saying the nation s largest viatical-settlement comp


Group giving students phone cards
Miami Herald - May 2, 2004
Eunice Sigler, esigler@herald.com
A local nonprofit group, is distributing free calling cards to middle and high school kids in Miami-Dade County for use in emergencies. Victory for Youth, a local child advocacy group, has teamed up with Miami-Dade County Public Schools to distribute 200,000 emergency power cards to kids in sixth through 12th grades.


U.S., judicial races open
Miami Herald - May 2, 2004
Beth Reinhard, breinhard@herald.com
The fall election season gets underway as federal and judicial candidates begin qualifying for the ballot. Today marks the official start of the race to join the most exclusive political club in the country: the U.S. Senate. Candidates to replace the retiring Sen. Bob Graham must qualify for the fall ballot between noo


Drug-resistant STD on rise in S. Florida
Miami Herald - April 30, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Drug-resistant gonorrhea is spreading among gay and bisexual men, adding to fears that unprotected sex could also lead to an increase in HIV. The rate of drug-resistant gonorrhea among gay and bisexual men nearly tripled in the United States between 2002 and 2003 -- and it has made its way for the first time into Miami


SILVER KNIGHT AWARDS: A night of glory for 15 Broward students
Miami Herald - April 20, 2004
Mary Ellen Flannery, mflannery@herald.com
Fifteen Broward County students have shown their teachers, parents and peers how to make a difference in other people s lives. On Monday, they were honored with Silver Knight awards for their hard work. When super soccer player Tessa Krantz was invited by one of her coaches to practice with Latin American and Caribbean


'Oz' a wizard at fundraising
Miami Herald - April 20, 2004
Hugh Jackman and The Boy from Oz aren t just packing them in at the New Amsterdam Theater on Broadway. They are also doing a lot of good. The rousing, heartbreaking hit musical starring Jackman has raised $1,073,522 for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS since opening last fall -- the most money a Broadway show has rais


Word is spread on AIDS
Miami Herald - April 18, 2004
Mamie Ward, mward@herald.com
In Miami and across the country, blacks are sharpening their focus on the scourge of HIV/AIDS, which disproportionately affects their community. Students at a recent workshop on HIV/AIDS were asked to raise their hands if someone close to them had contracted the disease or had died from it. Nearly half of them raised t


State pulls website over privacy flap
Miami Herald - April 15, 2004
John Dorschner, jdorschner@herald.com
After The Herald alerts them to the problem, officials shut down a state website that had made it possible for private nursing-home information to be accessed by any visitor. A glitch in the state s website, MyFlorida.com, allowed anyone to access confidential complaints and health information about people in nursing h


Bringing hope to Haiti
Miami Herald - April 5, 2004
Richard T. Halvorson, Miami Herald
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Angel Aloma crosses the threshold at the exit at Mais Gate Airport and wastes no time getting to work. Within minutes, he is on the dusty ground of a walled compound housing a school and AIDS clinic in Cite Soleil, the 25-square-mile slum that houses Haiti s poorest of the poor. Aloma warms the


Art learns to deal with HIV/AIDS
Miami Herald - April 4, 2004
Octavio Roca, oroca@herald.com
Some dances at once capture an era and suggest what is to come. There is a moment in Agnes de Mille s The Other where dancer and dance become one with the tale, and the effect is devastating. The gesture is as dense as it is brief, one of those rare epiphanies of truth onstage that audiences can treasure for a lifetime


Critics: Interest in treating patients wanes as the faces of AIDS change
Miami Herald - March 31, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Critics charge that now that the AIDS caseload falls more heavily on minorities, government and social ser- vice agencies are losing interest. As the face of AIDS has changed from that of gay white males to blacks, Hispanics and other minorities over the past 20 years, critics charge that governments and community lead


AIDS rate rising among Americans older than 50 New drugs allowing older men to have sex again may be partly to blame for new figures showing that HIV/AIDS is spreading faster among Americans 50 and older.
Miami Herald - March 30, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
AIDS is sneaking up on gray-haired America. It s fueled in part by men who suddenly can have sex again because of Viagra and other drugs and by post-menopausal women who don t demand condoms. It s complicated by researchers who don t include those over 50 in their studies because they don t think they have sex anymore,


AIDS fighters hear good news from Haiti: Innovative treatment and prevention programs have cut Haiti's HIV rate by 50 percent since 1993
Miami Herald - Monday, March 29, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Despite the stealing of ambulances by thugs during the recent violence, despite experts saying AIDS cannot be fought effectively in poor, rural settings, prominent AIDS fighters said Sunday there s good news from Haiti . While AIDS still claims 30,000 lives a year in Haiti and has left 200,000 children orphaned, innov


Feeding poor in Haiti 'depressing' -- but rewarding
Miami Herald - Saturday, March 28, 2004
Richard T. Halvorson, rhalvorson@herald.com
A Deerfield Beach charity tries to find Haiti s poor and make sure that they are fed. PORT-AU-PRINCE -- For more than 20 years, Raymonde Pun has combed the trash-lined alleys of Port-au-Prince searching for the poorest of the poor. Pun, the executive director of Food for the Poor, Haiti, has spent her life providing ho


A call to arms on AIDS at world conference: Experts at the National HIV/AIDS Update Conference roll out alarming numbers in urging world leaders to do more to combat the pandemic
Miami Herald - Saturday, March 28, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Every day the world loses another 8,000 lives, And when we talk about the global AIDS epidemic, this includes the U.S. -- KATHLEEN CRAVERO, deputy executive director of UNAIDS Using words of war at an international AIDS conference in Miami on Saturday, some of the world s top AIDS fighters sought to shock world leade


Medical care scarred, experts say: Haiti's violence has disrupted immunization campaigns and programs to prevent and treat such illnesses as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis
Miami Herald - Saturday, March 27, 2004
Michael A.W. Ottey, mottey@herald.com
PORT-AU-PRINCE -- While Haiti s political violence is on the wane, its people still face a health crisis that could reverse years of work to control or eradicate deadly diseases, international health experts say. Immunization campaigns and programs to prevent and treat such illnesses as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis remain


AIDS focus is shifting to S. Florida
Miami Herald - March 26, 2004
Fred Tasker, Miami Herald
AIDS experts convene in Miami to discuss the changing face of the oft-deadly foe HIV/AIDS, the quest for vaccines and the pandemic s global impact. After 14 years of meeting in San Francisco, the National HIV/AIDS Update Conference comes to Miami for the second consecutive year this weekend, as experts assert that the


Methamphetamine taking a toll on gays
Miami Herald - March 22, 2004
Andrea Robinson, Miami Herald
Perched in front of a laptop in his South Beach apartment, Marc Cohen logs in to a popular South Florida gay Internet chatroom where men banter in hopes of finding sex partners, drugs or both. One guy zips into the room with a quick request: Hey, anybody know where I can score some Tina? Tina is street slang for metham


'Funkadelic' fundraiser to assist Center
Miami Herald - March 18, 2004
The Center for Positive Connections will hold its Funkadelic Playhouse fundraiser March 27 at the Where?House, 20204 NE 15th Ct. in North Miami Beach. VIP tickets are $50 for festivities starting at 6 p.m. and including hors d oeuvres, an open bar, a silent auction, live band and acoustic music, psychic/tarot readings,


Blacks should be supportive of gays' struggle
Miami Herald - March 12, 2004
Leonard Pitts Jr.
Call it an object lesson in the quality of equality. I refer to last week s Senate subcommittee hearing on the proposed constitutional amendment outlawing same-sex marriage. And specifically, to an exchange between two leaders of the African-American community. The first, Hilary Shelton, director of the Washington bure


HIV/AIDS awareness activities
Miami Herald - March 11, 2004
The Miami Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority is holding several HIV/AIDS awareness activities across the county Saturday. One will be an HIV/AIDS youth awareness workshop from 1 to 4 p.m. entitled: Why Keep It a Secret: A Straight-Up Discussion about HIV/AIDS. It will be held at Booker T. Washington High Sch


Fight against AIDS has victories, hurdles
Miami Herald - March 9, 2004
OUR OPINION: PROVIDERS SHOULD COOPERATE TO SUSTAIN GAINS South Florida s fight against HIV and AIDS has seen tangible victories and troubling setbacks. Through it all, people on the front lines -- researchers, outreach and medical workers -- face challenges that threaten to reverse the declining number of AIDS cases re


Three at UM share prize for research on HIV: Three University of Miami medical school researchers have won an international award for their work on the transmission of AIDS from mothers to newborns.
The Miami Herald - March 8, 2004
Elinor J. Brecher, ebrecher@herald.com
Three University of Miami medical researchers will share a $100,000 prize for work that has helped reduce the transmission rate of HIV from mothers to newborns. The winners of the 2004 Lois Pope LIFE International Research Award are Drs. Margaret Fischl, Gwendolyn Scott and Mary Jo O Sullivan of the UM School of Medici


Sorority to hold workshop
Miami Herald - March 7, 2004
Herald Staff Report
Members of the Miami Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority will conduct an HIV/AIDS youth awareness workshop from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday as part of its International Day of Service. The workshop, entitled: Why Keep It a Secret: A Straight-Up Discussion about HIV/AIDS, will be held at Booker T. Washington High Sch


Black churches soften to HIV-infected: More than 23 years after the onset of the AIDS epidemic, black congregations are softening their attitudes about the virus -- to a point.
Miami Herald - March 7, 2004
Andrea Robinson, arobinson@herald.com
As a young adult, Lisa Sheffield left her Liberty City church and fell into a life of drugs, booze and indiscriminate sex to support her habit. She eventually found her way back -- sober, in a lesbian relationship and carrying HIV. But the comfort and caring she knew in her youth at the Church of the Incarnation, Sheff


El Portal: Village receives funds for community center
Miami Herald - February 29, 2004
Charisse Lopez-Mason, clopez-mason@herald.com
The North Dade Medical Foundation is giving El Portal a $350,000 donation for a new community outreach center, village officials announced at a council meeting Tuesday night. The center will offer programs for senior citizens, children in grades K-6 and the mentally and physically handicapped. It will be housed at the


Gay plays head straight to Broadway and beyond
Miami Herald - February 26, 2004
Octavio Roca, oroca@herald.com
It s shaping up to be a very gay season, as the Great White Way takes on a lovely lavender hue. We re not talking the odd little play here and there. No, we re talking mainstream hits, the hottest tickets on and off Broadway, what American audiences are cheering in a burst of spring fever even as the culture wars gear


Monkey protein may help block HIV: A monkey protein could provide the key to blocking transmission of HIV and other viruses, according to a Harvard study.
Miami Herald - February 26, 2004
Fred Tasker, ftasker@herald.com
Swinging through the trees of prehistoric Europe, Asia and Africa, Old World monkeys encountered the HIV virus eons before humans did, and developed a unique defense against it. A Harvard study published today in the journal Nature identifies for the first time the simian protein that provides that defense, raising hop


5 charged in Rx drug fraud case: Three Broward men, including a doctor, and two from Miami-Dade are accused of peddling millions of dollars worth of medications without proper paperwork.
Miami Herald - February 25, 2004
Noah Bierman, nbierman@herald.com
Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist announced charges Tuesday against five men accused of putting millions of dollars worth of adulterated prescription drugs on the market -- including one batch of phony AIDS treatment drugs sold to undercover officers. Law enforcement officials believe the Broward and Miami-Dade me


ACLU vows to fight ruling that bans gay adoptions Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union will ask a federal appeals court to reconsider its ruling supporting a law barring gays from adopting.
Miami Herald - February 19, 2004
Tere Figueras, tfigueras@herald.com
A month after a federal appeals court upheld Florida s law barring gays and lesbians from adopting, the legal battle to overturn the controversial law still simmers. Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union, which began its challenge five years ago on behalf of four gay South Florida men -- all of them guardians


Information blitz aims to educate
Miami Herald - February 15, 2004
Mamie Ward, mward@herald.com
The mayor of Miami joined volunteers to distribute HIV/AIDS awareness information at a housing project in a section of the city where the disease is taking a heavy toll. Gary Bryant has lived in the Model City area for 49 years, and he remembers a time when AIDS and HIV, the virus that causes the deadly disease, were u


Stars go Glam to fight AIDS
Miami Herald - February 13, 2004
MAC cosmetics has introduced five new celebrity spokespeople for Viva Glam products that will benefit the MAC AIDS Fund, reports The Associated Press. All proceeds from Viva Glam V Lipstick and Lipglass will go to the fund, which provides money to organizations that give care and daily essentials to those afflicted wit


AIDS outreach event set
Miami Herald - February 1, 2004
Miami Mayor Manny Diaz and city of Miami volunteers will join high school students Saturday to distribute information about HIV/AIDS and testing locations in Coconut Grove, Model City, Little Haiti and Overtown in recognition of National Black HIV Awareness Day. The neighborhood outreach teams will begin gathering in C


Duty, not the warm fuzzies, drives him
Miami Herald - January 31, 2004
Steve Rothaus, srothaus@herald.com
South Florida s Herb Sosa says that being a high-profile gay activist provides him plenty of personal satisfaction, but that s not why he does it. It s not a question of satisfaction -- it s what you need to do, said Sosa, one of this year s Top 10 gay Latina/o activists, according to Tentaciones, a monthly national bi


Mt. Tabor celebrates anniversary Feb. 8
Miami Herald - January 22, 2004
Mount Tabor Missionary Baptist Church, one of the oldest houses of worship in Liberty City, will celebrate its 103rd anniversary on Feb. 8. The anniversary theme, Putting God First, is befitting the historic church, located at 1701 NW 66th St. According to church history, Mount Tabor was organized in 1901 by several fa


Bono receives high honor
Miami Herald - January 19, 2004
As a teenager in Ireland , when violence and unrest were escalating because of the conflict over Northern Ireland, U2 front man Bono longed for the voice of reason from somebody such as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Those thoughts and a deep understanding of King s teachings and life led the singer to write a song ab


A White House whitewash on health studies
Miami Herald - January 19, 2004
Leonard Pitts Jr.
Black people get crappy healthcare. If this comes as news to you, it s probably because you haven t been paying attention. Numerous studies have documented the fact that, regardless of income levels, African Americans and other minorities have less access to medical treatment, and the treatment they receive is often su


Morning-after pill dispute apt to stir again
Miami Herald - January 6, 2004
Daniela Lamas, dlamas@herald.com
It s Friday night and you have unprotected sex. Or your condom breaks. Your doctor won t be in the office until Monday. Should you be able to pick up the morning-after pill -- which can help to prevent pregnancy if taken within 72 hours, the sooner the better -- in the aisles of your local drugstore? The Food and Drug


Tammy Faye hosts drag bingo for AIDS benefit
Miami Herald - January 5, 2004
A drag bingo event hosted by Tammy Faye Messner drew about 700 people to raise money for an AIDS organization. The former Tammy Faye Bakker said she was one of the first women to speak out about caring for people with AIDS when she was on the The PTL Club television evangelism show with her ex-husband in the 1980s.



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