                     AIDS Daily Summary 
                        May 27, 1994


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National AIDS
Clearinghouse makes available the following information as a public
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Copyright 1994, Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD


"Gay Games Bring Protest and Support at City Hall"
New York Times (05/27/94) P. B2;  Lueck, Thomas J.
     Conservative politicians and advocates of traditional values 
yesterday protested the Gay Games, an Olympic-like competition 
for homosexuals that is expected to draw large crowds to New York
City next month.  The group of about 10 denounced the event as a 
threat to the morals of children, and an AIDS scourge on the 
city.  Some of the harshest criticism targeted federal officials,
especially Attorney General Janet Reno, who in March granted a 
waiver that will allow travelers with HIV or AIDS entry into the 
United States for no more than 10 days.  Rev. Reuben Diaz, a 
member of the Police Civilian Complaint Review Board who recently
came under fire for homophobic comments, said the waiver 
presented a severe risk of HIV transmission.  According to Diaz, 
the waiver would attract 10,000 infected people to New York.  
Federal officials have placed the number of foreign participants 
and spectators at 10,000 to 15,000, but they have not offered an 
estimate of how many of them will have HIV/AIDS.
      
"Chicago Museum to Offer AIDS Exhibit"
Baltimore Sun (05/27/94) P. 2E;  Storch, Charles
     Next March, Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry will open 
what promises to a pioneering, if controversial, exhibit on AIDS.
Museum officials, who believe the $1 million installation will be
the first permanent exhibition of its kind, say it will tackle 
such topics as sexual behavior, AIDS prevention--including 
abstinence--and condom use.  The exhibit will be presented in a 
style and vocabulary aimed primarily at children aged 9 to 12.  
Officials say that although the AIDS exhibit will not attempt to 
sugarcoat the fatal nature of the disease, it will try not to 
convey hopelessness about a cure or frighten the children.  Final
plans have not been completed, but the exhibit will emphasize 
prevention, discuss the latest scientific advances, and 
demonstrate that infected individuals can lead productive lives, 
said Barry Aprison, project director for the exhibit.
      
"New Condom Helps LIG Gain Foothold in Japan"
Financial Times (05/27/94) P. 25;  Blackwell, David
     London International Group, the world leader in branded condoms, 
yesterday announced a joint venture with Okamoto Industries that 
will take it for the first time into the Japanese condom market. 
LIG will introduce to Japan its new polyurethane condom, called 
Avanti, which it claims to be a technical breakthrough.  The 
polyurethane product, known as Duron, is twice as strong as 
latex, which allows the manufacture of very thin condoms.  Japan,
which sells 3.8 million condoms a year, is second only to the 
United States in the world market.  The American market, however,
has a lower value than the Japanese market, partly because the 
Japanese are more willing to pay for quality.
      
"AIDS Funds Concerns Go to Allen"
Richmond Times-Dispatch (05/26/94) P. B8;  Billingsley, Anna 
Barron
     Michael J. Snoddy, a disease intervention specialist at the 
Alexandria Health Department, has asked Virginia Gov. George 
Allen to investigate the department for alleged misappropriation 
of AIDS funds.  Snoddy contends that an estimated $60,713 out of 
$94,575 earmarked for anonymous AIDS testing has been used for 
other purposes.  Because that money has been diverted, he says, 
"fewer people are being tested and more people probably are being
infected."  Bill Harrison, a spokesman for the Virginia 
Department of Health, said that the anonymous testing program in 
Alexandria serves as a model for the rest of the state, and that 
there was no reason to believe that any money in that program has
been misappropriated.  Still, Harrison said Snoddy's accusations 
will be investigated.
      
"Ottawa to Extend Tainted-Blood Inquiry"
Toronto Globe and Mail (05/26/94) P. A6
     The Krever inquiry, which was to finish its probe into the safety
of Canadian blood supplies by September, will be granted more 
time and money to complete its investigation, confirmed Jocelyne 
Bourgon, Clerk of the Privy Council.  Justice Horace Krever, who 
is heading the inquiry, has asked for a $10-million budget--four 
times the $2.5 million originally set aside for the commission's 
use--and has requested that the deadline be pushed back to the 
end of 1995.  Bourgon said that although the deadline has been 
extended, the final amount of money is still under discussion.  
The inquiry was established to explore how more than 1,000 
Canadians contracted HIV through blood products in the 1980s, and
to recommend measures to improve the safety of the blood system.
      
"Ukraine Appeals for Money to Screen Blood for AIDS"
Reuters (05/26/94)
     A Ukrainian government health agency on Thursday appealed for 
hard currency to conduct HIV screening of blood, saying that, 
otherwise, it could not assume responsibility for its safety.  
Untested blood in Ukrainian hospitals had increased the risk of 
HIV infection through transfusion, and money was needed to filter
out tainted blood, said the state committee.  The statement also 
reported that blood donor services had virtually ground to a halt
in various regions because of the lack of funds and fear of AIDS.
The disease, which infects mostly foreign students and workers 
from third world nations, is not yet a serious problem in Ukraine
or other parts of the former Soviet Union, but the country's 
medical service has declined from the poor standards maintained 
during the Soviet era.
      
"Dutchman Gets 10 Years Jail for HIV Syringe Attack"
Reuters (05/25/94)
     A 39-year-old man who infected a former lover with HIV by 
stabbing her with a syringe filled with contaminated blood was on
Wednesday sentenced to a 10-year prison term, reported the Dutch 
news agency ANP.  He will also have to spend time in an 
institution for the criminally insane.  The man deliberately 
jabbed his former girlfriend with the syringe, full of the 
infected blood of a HIV-positive friend, in retaliation for her 
break-up with him, said prosecutors.  The woman, a mother of two,
has tested positive for the virus.
      
"New TB Cases Drop in 1993"
Houston Chronicle (05/26/94) P. 12A
     Last year, for the first time since the mid-1980s, the number of 
new tuberculosis cases fell significantly, federal officials 
announced on Wednesday.  The 1993 tally dropped by 1,360 cases, a
5 percent reduction from the previous year, when the number of 
cases rose by 2 percent.  The number of new cases had climbed 
steadily since 1985, due to the emergence of AIDS--which makes 
people more vulnerable to infection--increasing numbers of 
TB-infected immigrants, and homelessness.  Experts from the 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which compiled the 
statistics, cautioned that the one-year decline does not 
necessarily mean the problem is under control.  "It probably 
reflects the effectiveness of prevention and control methods," 
said Dr. Kenneth Castro, the CDC's director of tuberculosis 
elimination.  He added that under-reporting of TB cases, too, may
have contributed to the statistical decline.

      
The AIDS Daily Summary will not publish on Monday, May 30, 1994.  
Publication will resume on Tuesday, May 31.
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