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MillerComm Lecture Series

AIDS: Science and Society

Monday, September 19th, 1988
June Reinisch
8:00pm

Foellinger Auditorium
South End of the Quadrangle

Event Description

AIDS and Sex: What do we know? What do we need to know?

One in a four-part series

AIDS is the medical and social catastrophe of this generation. Its toll in human suffering, lost productivity, and social dislocation is staggering. AIDS has become a fundamental parameter of experience. Touching virtually every area of American society, the AIDS crisis raises broad and pressing scientific and social questions that go far beyond the understanding and clinical treatment of HIV infection and disease.

 

In conjunction with: Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs; Vice Chancellor for Research; Associate Chancellor for Public Affairs; College of Communications; College of Law; College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Graduate College; School of Human Resources and Family Studies; School of Life Sciences; School of Nursing; Department of Anthropology; Department of English; Department of Health and Safety Studies; Department of History; Department of Speech Communication; Counseling Center; Division of Broadcasting; Division of Campus Recreation; Institute of Communications Research; Institute of Government and Public Affairs; McKinley Health Center; Medical Humanities and Social Sciences Program, College of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign; Office for Women's Resources and Services; Program in Science, Technology and Society; Women's Studies Program; Central Black Student Union; Interfraternity Council; Panhellenic Council; Frances Nelson Health Center; George A. Miller Committee

June Reinisch

Director

Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction