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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

1435.0. "From All Walks Of Life 1991" by FSOA::DARCH (You can make a difference!) Thu Apr 11 1991 21:45

    This note will contain messages and announcements pertaining to
    FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE '91, the pledge walk for AIDS care and
    research to be held on Sunday, June 2 in Boston.

    Deb Arch
    FAWOL '91 Digital Steering Committee
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1435.1Sunday, June 2ndFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Thu Apr 11 1991 21:4638
                   From All Walks of Life '91 (FAWOL'91)
               A pledge walk to benefit AIDS care and research

               Mark your calendars now for Sunday, June 2nd!



    This is the sixth anniversary of "FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE," and Digital 
    is again proud to be a corporate sponsor, as it has been for the past 
    four years.  Corporate Personnel actually funds the sponsorship under 
    the leadership of Liz Aberdale, Manager, Corporate Employee Relations/
    Valuing Differences and Paul Ross, Manager, AIDS Program Office.

    Last year, more than 500 Digital walkers brought in more than $40,000, 
    which was matched by the Company's Matching Gift Program, the largest 
    single amount raised and matched by a company, on behalf of the AIDS 
    ACTION Committee (AAC) to that date.

    Please watch for future notes here on FAWOL'91!

    You'll also be seeing more information on FAWOL'91 in your local area 
    newsletters, at your site, in other notesfiles, and in LIVEWIRE.  This 
    is PUBLIC information, so PLEASE feel free to extract it and distribute 
    it to your group, organization, site, friends, family, etc..

    We need YOUR help to make FAWOL'91 even more successful than the previous 
    walks.  You can volunteer to help the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee 
    (Contact Steve Derby at 223-5253 or Pat Dufour at 223-9461); or you can 
    be a Site Coordinator for your facility (Contact Edna Marston at 225-6221 
    or Jeremy Mathews at 291-7569), or you can collect pledges and join the 
    thousands of people walking on June 2nd who belive that AIDS is an issue 
    which touches us all.

    Thank you!

    Steve Derby, Pat Dufour
    Co-Chairs, Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee

1435.2Digital Steering CommitteeFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Thu Apr 11 1991 21:4748
                    Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee


    Below are the key employees on the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee.  
    Feel free to contact any of them with ANY questions regarding FAWOL'91, 
    and ESPECIALLY if you would be willing to help!

Name			     E-mail Address	      DTN	     Site

Ginger Abrams		     HAVOC::ABRAMS	      223-7863	     MLO3

Deb Arch		     FSOA::DARCH	      297-7041	     MRO3
			     SONATA::ARCH	      276-9147	     OGO

Phyllis Bailey		     @MSO		      223-8093	     MSO2

Liz Bartlett		     WECARE::BARTLETT	      381-2883	     ZKO2   

Agnes Buchanan		     ICS::BUCHANAN	      223-9178	     MSO2

Kathy Connors		     FSTVAX::CONNORS	      249-4741	     BUO

Steve Derby *		     FDCV07::DERBY	      223-5253	     PKO3

Pat Dufour *		     ICS::DUFOUR	      223-9461	     MSO2

Jackie Edwards		     USEM::JEDWARDS	      223-2903	     PKO3

Ann Marie Lupacchino	     SALEM::LUPACCHINO	      285-2239	     NIO

Pat Marshall		     POWDML::MARSHALL	      223-8110	     MSO2

Edna Marston		     OBSESS::MARSTON	      225-6221	     HLO1

Jeremy Mathews		     HUGE1::MATHEWS	      291-7569	     MET

Brenda Nias		     HAVOC::NIAS	      223-1698	     MLO5

Pamela Quinlan		     ICS::QUINLAN	      223-4598	     PKO3

Paul Ross **		     ICS::ROSS		      223-9580	     MSO2

Donna Wells		     ICS::WELLS		      223-9574	     MSO2

* Co-Chair
** Technical Advisor


1435.3Site Coordinators neededFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Thu Apr 11 1991 21:4842
               "From All Walks of Life needs Site Coordinators"

    This is a list of Digital sites in New England.  This year we are striv-
    ing to have either a "Site Coordinator" "Health Services person" or both, 
    in as many sites as possible.

    Wouldn't YOU like to be a Site Coordinator, for your site?  For details, 
    or to volunteer your services, Email either Edna Marston (obsess::marston) 
    or Jeremy Mathews (cimnet::mathews).  We are the co-chairperson's for the 
    site coordinators this year, for the 6th annual "From All Walks of Life" 
    1991.

    Or...check with your Health Services person.  S/He should be a valuable
    resource for the Walk too.  We encourage working with the Health organi-
    zation in your site.  Together, we ALL can make this the best year yet!

    We look forward to hearing from you!

    Jeremy/Edna


         CT:  BMF    ENO    FMT    GTO    RCH    SCO   
                      
         MA:  ACO    ACT    AKO    APO    BLK    BNO    BOO    BPO    BUO   
	      BXB    BXC    BXO    BYO*   CBM    CFO    CRL    CTC    CTS    
	      DAS    DLB    DSG    FXO    HLO    HNO    HRO    IND    LCT    
	      LJO*   LKG    LKO    LMO    LTN    MET    MLO    MOO    MRO    
              MSO    NKS    NRO    OFO    OGO    PDM    PKO    RMS    SHR    
              SPO    TAY    TWO    UPO    WAO    WFO    WFR    WJO    WMO    
              WOO*   YWO   
                      
         ME:  ASO    BGR    PLO   
                      
         NH:  DDD    DOO    GSF    HZO    MHO    MKO    NIO    NQO    NSO   
	      NUO    TTB    ZKO   
                      
         RI:  PVO   
                      
         VT:  BTO    KMO    WRJ    WVT   
            
*we currently have at least 1 coordinator, at this site.
1435.4Corporate Kickoff Rally May 6FSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Fri Apr 19 1991 20:5099
                      FAWOL'91 Corporate Kickoff Rally


	WHEN: Monday, May 6, 8:30 - 10:30 AM
	WHERE: MSO2 Cafeteria (3rd Floor)
	WHO'S INVITED: Any Digital Employee!

    Digital Equipment Corporation is once again a major corporate sponsor of 
the sixth (6th) annual "From All Walks of Life" to be held on June 2 to 
benefit the AIDS ACTION Committee of Massachusetts and 28 other agencies, 
which represent a diverse response to the AIDS epidemic. The goal of FAWOL'91 
is $2 million.
    
    Through the leadership of Liz Aberdale, Manager, Corporate Employee 
Relations/Valuing Differences and Paul Ross, Manager, AIDS Program Office, 
Corporate Personnel is funding Digital's sponsorship of FAWOL'91.  By 
helping to underwrite the cost of the Walk, all monies raised can go 
directly to the AAC and the other 28 local agencies.  Joining Digital in 
this effort are many other companies/organizations including: John Hancock 
Financial Services, IBM, Lotus Development Corporation, Polaroid 
Corporation, Boston Globe Foundation, Bank of Boston, Shawmut Bank, Sun 
Microsystems, New England Medical Center Hospitals, Northeastern University, 
Ziff-Davis Publishing, Bull HN Information Systems, University Bank, New 
England Mortgage Company, Stratus Computer, Clinical Partners and WBZ-TV.
    
    To get Digital started on a successful pledge drive, a "Kickoff Rally" 
will be held on Monday, May 6 in the MSO2 Cafeteria, from 8:30 - 10:30 AM.  
The purpose of the Rally is to:
    
o   Learn about Digital's involvement with FAWOL'91.

o   Learn more about FAWOL'91 from AAC representatives.

o   Learn about the other 28 agencies and the people who will benefit from 
    your participation.

o   Meet other Digital employees who will be walking or volunteering on June 
    2 and who believe that AIDS is an issue which touches us all.

    Speakers will include:

o   Rob Ayres, Senior Group Personnel Manager, Corporate Functional Groups
o   Marge Davis Hallyburton, former Digital Employee
o   Bradley Seeman, FAWOL'91 Manager, AAC
o   Lewis Karabatsos, Matching Gifts Program Manager

    We'll also show the FAWOL'91 video; describe the proper matching gift 
procedure; answer questions, and hand out posters, buttons, pledge sheets 
and information packages.  And a very special finale has been planned for 
this year's Rally.

    Just send an R.S.V.P. to Kathy Connors (FSTVAX::CONNORS or 249-4741) by 
April 29th to let us know if you are coming!

    We hope to see you there!

Sincerely,

Steve Derby, Pat Dufour
Co-Chairs, Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee

***************************************************************************

                           FAWOL'91 Kickoff Rally
				  Agenda


Host:  Paul Ross, Corporate Manager, AIDS Program

8:30 AM - Coffee and Munchies - Courtesy of the Tobin Corporation

9:00 AM - Digital Perspective:  "From All Walks of Life '91"

          o  Rob Ayres, Senior Group Personnel Manager, Corporate Functional
             Groups

          o  Marge Davis Hallyburton, former Digital employee

9:20 AM - AIDS ACTION Committee Perspective: "From All Walks of Life '91"

          o  Bradley Seeman, FAWOL'91 Manager, AAC

          o  Elizabeth Chadis, Corporate Liaison Manager, AAC

          o  FAWOL'91 Video

9:45 AM - Digital and AIDS ACTION: "From All Walks of Life '91"
        
          o  Review: Matching Gifts Program Guidelines
             Lewis Karabatsos, Matching Gifts Program Manager

          o  Moving Forward: Next steps, Questions and Answers
             Pat Dufour and Steve Derby, Co-Chairs, Digital FAWOL'91
             Steering Committee

10:15 AM - A Very Special Finale

10:30 AM - Adjourn...until June 2.

1435.51991 FAWOL Grant RecipientsFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Fri Apr 19 1991 20:57199
           From All Walks of Life '91 Grant Recipients Announced
    (reprinted with permission from the "AIDS ACTION Committee Update")
									    

    Setting the date for "From All Walks of Life '91", the largest AIDS 
fundraiser in New England, was the easy part.  The 10-kilometer pledge walk 
started by AAC to raise needed funds for the fight against AIDS will be held 
on Sunday, June 2.

    The difficult task was in determining which organizations would share 
$510,000 in anticipated FAWOL'91 proceeds to be distributed to other AIDS 
service providers to help provide a continuum of care for people with HIV 
disease.

    That challenge fell to the Walk Allocations Committee, a group of 13 
individuals representative of the communities hardest hit by AIDS and 
possessing the expertise and experience needed to make some very hard 
choices.  Over 100 worthy proposals from AIDS service providers throughout 
Massachusetts were submitted this year.

    After evaluating each proposal, Committee members were asked to choose 
their top two to three based on needs assessment and community concerns.  The 
full Committee then met for three nights, discussing, arguing, cajoling, and 
compromising as they came to a consensus on which proposals should receive 
Walk funds.

    But while the allocations process was proceeding, something very special 
was also taking place - something noticed by all who were present.  "The 
cultural diversity of the group was striking and it served to create a high 
degree of camaraderie amongst the participants," said allocations committee 
member Richard Jones.  "The discussions were guided by one shared goal - how 
best to serve people with AIDS and those at risk for HIV infection with the 
limited resources available."

    "The Allocations Committee members were distinguished by their integrity, 
their insight, and their compassion," said Larry Kessler, AAC's Executive 
Director.  "Theirs was a particularly difficult task, given the substance 
and quality of all the proposals.  It was clear from the onset that hard 
choices would have to be made and we are indebted to these extraordinary 
individuals for the breadth of knowledge and experience they brought to the 
process."

    The 28 AIDS service providers selected by the Walk Allocation Committee 
will receive grants ranging from $5,000 to $28,000 from this year's Walk 
proceeds.  Those receiving award notification letters include:

1.  AIDS Law Clinic, Jamaica Plain - To provide legal services to clients 
    with HIV disease.

2.  AIDS Project Worcester - To provide for the continuation of 
    comprehensive programs of client services, education and outreach in the 
    Greater Worcester Area.

3.  Amigas Latinas en Accion pro-Salud (ALAS), Somerville - To educate 
    Latino youth about HIV prevention and promote sensitivity within the 
    Latino community concerning the needs and rights of people with AIDS.

4.  Boston Alliance of Gay and Lesbian Youth, Inc. (BAGLY) - To continue 
    AIDS/HIV education services for lesbian and gay adolescents and expand 
    support services.

5.  Boston Living Center - To help plan a series of seminars offering help 
    to those who are HIV positive, their partners, families and friends.

6.  Cambridge Cares About AIDS, Inc. - To provide comprehensive outreach, 
    case management, and support services for Cambridge residents living 
    with AIDS/HIV infection.

7.  Center for Living & Working, Worcester - To expand the HIV/AIDS service 
    system by hiring a part-time skills trainer responsible for case 
    management, outreach and advocacy.

8.  Codman Square Health Center, Dorchester - To develop an outreach program 
    targeted to women at risk of HIV infection, largely African American, 
    Caribbean, and Latin immigrants.

9.  Community Servings at American Jewish Congress, Boston - To provide hot, 
    delivered meals to people with AIDS, their families and caregivers.

10. Dimock Community Health Center, Roxbury - To provide case management 
    services for families with HIV disease who live in two supported housing 
    sites in the community.

11. Dorchester Counseling Center - To reach youth in minority communities 
    aged 9-13 through production of HIV prevention video developed by 
    multi-cultural group of teens.

12. Fenway Community Health Center - To support a full-time nursing case 
    manager for assessment, management, education and maintenance.

13. Gay & Lesbian Advocates and Defenders (GLAD) - To support GLAD's ongoing 
    work combating HlV-related discrimination.

14. Greater Lawrence Family Health Center - To provide a program of 
    prevention education called "Hablemos" (Let's Talk) concentrated in the 
    Latino community of Lawrence.

15. Haitian Community AIDS Outreach Project (HAP), Dorchester - To help 
    maintain the present salary of the Case Management Coordinator position 
    and support funding for client emergency relief assistance.

16. Hispanic Office of Planning & Evaluation (HOPE), Boston - To support the 
    increase in capacity of HOPE's "Poder Latino de Jovenes = Latino Youth 
    Power," a youth peer educators and leadership development program.

17. Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion (IBA) - Continuation of AIDS Education and 
    Prevention Programs for Boston's South End Latino Youth.

18. Latino Health Network, Inc. - To increase access to a wide range of 
    services for Latinos who are living with HIV.

19. People With AIDS Coalition of Boston, Inc. - To provide HIV prevention 
    education for adolescent and adult populations from diverse cultural 
    backgrounds.

20. Planned Parenthood of Massachusetts - To expand Heart-To-Heart, a 
    comprehensive HIV prevention and sexuality education program for 
    adolescents in Boston and Worcester public schools.

21. Positive Directions, Inc., Boston - To be used for current educational 
    and psycho-social support programs as well as continuing to provide a 
    forum for increased activism in AIDS-related political issues.

22. Provincetown AIDS Support Group - To provide comprehensive case 
    management services for clients and client residents in new residential 
    housing.

23. RUAH (Hebrew for "Breath of Life"), Boston - To provide case management 
    services for a residence under development for homeless women with AIDS.

24. Social Justice for Women, Boston - To provide AIDS education and case 
    management at MCI-Framingham.

25. St. John's/St. Hugh's Parish, Boston - To help the parish provide meals, 
    transportation and other services for people with AIDS in the Grove 
    Hall/Franklin area of Boston.

26. Strongest Link, Inc., Topsfield - To fund the addition of a Case Manager 
    to meet the needs of an expanding caseload in the suburban Essex County 
    area.

27. Victory House, Boston - To provide prevention education for active 
    addicts and those in recovery.

28. Women, Inc., Dorchester - To help expand AIDS education, outreach, case 
    management and counseling programs.

The members of the "From All Walks of Life" Allocations Committee are:

o   John Auerbach, Chief of Staff, Mass. Dept. of Public Health

o   Anne Barton, AAC Housing Search Worker

o   Caroline Chang, Regional Director, Office of Civil Rights, U.S. Dept. of 
    Health and Human Services

o   William Elliott, Vice President for Strategic Alliances of Stratus 
    Computer

o   Richard Jones, Executive Director of Boston Children's Services 
    Association and a member of the AAC Board of Directors

o   Linette Liebling, Facilitator of Allocations Committee, Training 
    Specialist at the John Snow Institute and a member of the AAC Board of 
    Directors

o   Ronald Macon, Community Planning Director, United Way of Central 
    Massachusetts.

o   Victoria Mederos, Director of Affirmative Action, Mass. Executive Office 
    of Human Services

o   Ricardo Millett, Sr. Vice President, Planning & Resource Mgt., United 
    Way of Massachusetts Bay.

o   Guitele Nicoleau, Director of Haitian Teens Confront AIDS Program of 
    Partners in Health

o   Robert Rimer, AAC Board of Directors Member and a client of the AAC

o   Ann Sanders, Liaison to the Gay Community, Mayor's Office of 
    Neighborhood Services

o   Cheryl Schaffer, AAC Director of Administration and Human Resources

"From All Walks of Life" is the largest AIDS fundraiser in New England and 
the third largest in the nation.  Last year, more than 25,000 walkers raised 
over $2 million to support the work of the AIDS ACTION Committee and other 
AIDS service providers throughout the state.

From the onset, AAC has worked with a wide range of community-based 
organizations to help ensure the existence and accessibility of high quality 
HIV-related prevention/education and direct service programs.  In addition 
to being AAC's own largest source of funding, "From All Walks of Life" has 
helped create a solid network of services throughout Massachusetts for 
people at different stages of HIV infection.  Over the past five years, AIDS 
ACTION has distributed over $2.25 million in Walk proceeds to 59 other 
organizations involved in the fight against AIDS and HIV infection.

1435.6FAWOL '90 Final ReportFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Wed Apr 24 1991 22:2032
                           FAWOL'90 Final Report


Gross Income		     $2,214,477

Production Costs	        244,264

Personnel and Overhead	        147,524

Net Income		     $1,822,689

Total production costs equal 11% of gross income and are comprised of the 
following:

Printing		     $61,457
Incentive production	      40,564
Event production	      28,871
Postage and courier	      26,143
Equipment Rental	      21,186
Video production	      11,664
Contracted services	      10,276
Volunteer activities	       9,065
Graphic Design		       8,444
Police security		       7,270
Entertainment		       5,208
Ground transportation	       5,191
Office supplies		       3,347
Advertising		       3,073
Photography		       2,258
Dues and fees		         247

1435.7Walk presentationsFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Wed Apr 24 1991 22:2110

Members of the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee are available to give 
presentations on the Walk and to show the Walk video at group or 
organization staff meetings.

If you would like to arrange for someone to come to your next staff meeting 
to talk about the Walk, please call Steve Derby  (DTN 223-5253) or send him 
E-mail (FDCV07::DERBY).

1435.8Corporate SponsorsFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Wed Apr 24 1991 22:21101
            Corporate & Foundation Participation Proves Vital to
                     "From All Walks of Life " Success



It is dramatically clear that a vital factor in FAWOL's success is the role 
of dozens of corporations and foundations in becoming Walk sponsors and in 
aggressively promoting participation by their employees.  Scores of 
companies, large and small, field contingents of pledge walkers.  Bradley 
Seeman, Walk Manager, says, "We owe the corporate and foundation community 
an enormous debt of gratitude for responding to our request for help with 
such compassion and generosity."

Digital Equipment Corporation leads the way, bringing in over $100,000 in 
employee contributions, matching gifts, and corporate sponsorship of the 
event.  Paul Ross, Corporate Manager, AIDS Program Office at Digital, says, 
"We must not lose sight of the fact that social problems, including AIDS, 
affect every sector in society.  Digital Equipment Corporation and its 
employees are proud to play an important role in the success of the Walk.  
We know AIDS ACTION has made a commitment to meet the changing needs of our 
community as it responds to AIDS.  As business leaders, we at Digital have 
made a commitment to do all we possibly can to bring our skills to bear on 
this important issue.  We want people to join with each other - inside and 
outside the business community - to emphasize everyone's stake in dealing 
with this deadly disease.  "From All Walks of Life" is such a strong 
statement of our various communities working together toward common goals."

Another leader is Lotus Development Corporation.  Lotus, the first corporate 
sponsor of the Walk in 1986, brought in a combined total of close to $60,000 
this past year in sponsorship, employee contributions, and matching gifts.  
Laura Gold, Organizational Development and Training Consultant at Lotus 
says, ""From All Walks of Life" is a perfect example of community leadership 
and partnership.  Working together, we really can make a difference in the 
lives of those in our community.  "From All Walks of Life" is the best loved 
volunteer activity of Lotus - and has been since the beginning.  For over 
five years, the Lotus family has said "Yes, we're here to help." and we will 
be there for as long as the need exists."

International Data Group (IDG) generated over $60,000 in employee 
contributions and matching gifts last year.  IDG makes creative use of team 
captains, special incentives, and inter-divisional competitions to build 
employee enthusiasm for joining the pledge walk.

"The commitment of so many corporate and foundation leaders to the Walk is 
an extraordinary hopeful sign," says Steven A. Holt, Corporate and 
Foundation Campaign Manager.  "Organizations such as Digital, Lotus, and 
IDG, the Boston Foundation, The Boston Globe Foundation, Bank of Boston, 
Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, Shawmut Bank, John Hancock Financial 
Services, Bull HN Information Systems, Inc., Northeastern Mortgage Company, 
University Bank, New England Medical Center Hospitals, Northeastern 
University, Stratus Computers, Inc., Polaroid Corporation, New England 
Deaconess Hospital, and Clinical Partners have demonstrated true leadership.  
They and their employees are helping to build a powerful partnership that 
can make a real difference in the fight against AIDS.

The following is the list of Corporate Sponsors for FAWOL'91.

Abt Associates Inc.		     John Hancock Financial Services
Bain & Company			     Keystone Group
Bank of Boston			     LEF Foundation
Bank of New England Foundation	     Liberty Mutual Insurance Group
Banker and Tradesman		     Lotus Development Corporation
Bay Windows			     Massachusetts AFL-CIO
Boston Against Drugs		     Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston Business Journal		     Neighborhood Health Plan
Boston Garden			     New Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc.
Boston Globe Foundation		     New England Critical Care
The Boston Foundation		     New England Deaconess Hospital
Boston Energy Associates	     New England Health Resources
Boston Herald			     New England Medical Center Hospitals
Boston Organ & Piano		     Northeastern Mortgage Company
Bull HN Information Systems	     Northeastern University
Cape Cod Snacks			     The Perrier Group
Cahner's Publishing Company	     The Pioneer Group, Inc.
Chartwell Home Therapies	     Phoenix Media Communications Group
Clinical Partners		     Polaroid Corporation
Community Medical Alliance	     The Putnam Companies
Color Film Corporation		     Sametz Blackstone Associates
Cooper Productions		     Shawmut Bank
Creative Celebrations		     The Stop and Shop Companies, Inc.
Creative Gourmets		     Stratus Computer
Data General Corporation	     Sun Financial Group
Delta Dental Plan		     Sun Microsystems
Digital Equipment Corporation	     Stanhope Framers
E. G. Smith Socks		     Thermo Electron Corporation
Faxon Company			     TJX Companies
Filenes				     Trans National travel
Fleet Bank			     University Bank
Giltspur/Boston			     Videosmith
Graphic Access			     Vidoetroupe
Graphics Express		     The Westin Hotel, Copley Place
Great Woods Center for the	     WBZ-TV
  Performing Arts		     Wyatt Company
Ingalls, Quinn & Johnson	     Yamaha Corporation of America
International Data Group	     Ziff-Davis Publishing Company
IBM

25% of last year's walkers picked up their pledge sheet at work, showing how 
significant the business sector is to the Walk's success.

1435.9AAC Kickoff RallyFSOA::DARCHYou can make a difference!Wed Apr 24 1991 22:2331
               You are cordially invited to the "first ever"

       AIDS ACTION Committee's "from All Walks of Life" Kickoff Rally

 For everyone who has ever Walked, and anyone who wants to Walk this year.

                            Tuesday, May 7, 1991
                                at the ROXY
                279 Tremont St. in Boston's Theater District

                6 PM - Cocktail Hour with live entertainment
                      7 PM - Program and Dancing later

                        The Kickoff Rally features:

                  o  The walk video on giant screen
                  o  Special Preview of the 91 Walk
                  o  First chance to buy a Walk 91 T-shirt
                  o  Live entertainment
                  o  Dancing
                  o  And some surprises!

  Free Admission - Admission to the Rally is limited to those 21 and over

                      Let hope triumph over heartbreak

The 6th annual "From All Walks of Life", a pledge walk to benefit AIDS 
prevention and care, will be held on Sunday, June 2nd, 1991.  For more 
information, or to get a pledge sheet, contact your local Health Services or 
Personnel office.
1435.10AAC letterFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Sun May 05 1991 12:3621
Dear Friend,
 
Eleven months ago, on a bright, slightly humid June morning, 25,000 people 
gathered on Boston Common to begin a ten-kilometer walk that would make 
history.  The AIDS ACTION Committee's 5th annual "From All Walks of Life" 
was the largest AIDS fundraiser ever held in New England, and only the 
second AIDS walk in the nation to break the $2 million mark.  Eleven months 
later, the money and the spirit of hope from that day are making a 
difference in people's lives.

On a personal note, it has been a pleasure during my year as Walk Manager to 
get to know so many of you who have been involved with this event.  I'd like 
to thank everyone who's been a part of the '90 Walk and invite you to join 
us in '91.

Sincerely,
 
Bradley Seeman
AAC Walk Manager

1435.11Walk Q&AFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Sun May 05 1991 12:3664
                         Walk Questions and Answers


Q:  Who walks?
A:  As anyone who has been to the Walk can testify, there is no "typical"    
    pledge walker.  But here are a few things we know about the people who 
    brought pledge sheets to the 1990 Walk:

    o  75% live within Route 128
    o  60% are women
    o  Most commonly, they get their pledge sheets in the mail (40%), at 
       work (25%), or from a display in a store or restaurant (10%)
    o  2/3 had never walked before!

Q:  Some of my friends who finished the Walk before me said they got a great 
    lunch.  But when I got to the end there was hardly anything left.  What 
    happened?
A:  We had far more people than we expected.  The volunteer picnic team, 
    which had been working for months to get enough food donated to feed 
    20,000 people, did a terrific job - but when 20,000 - 30,000 people 
    showed up at the Walk, the food ran out.  The picnic team for Walk '91 
    is led by Alison Healy of Creative Celebrations.  Alison and her crew 
    are already at work rounding up picnic donations so that every 
    registered walker can get something to eat.

Q:  How much does the average pledge walker bring in?
A:  Including matching money, the average pledge walker brings in $195.
    
Q:  How much money has the Walk raised since its beginning?
A:  In its first five years, "From All Walks of Life" has grossed a total of 
    $6.5 million.  Total costs have been $1.1 million, leaving $5.4 million 
    to be spent on care, education, and research.  The cost of producing a 
    dollar of Walk revenue has been declining each year.  This year the 
    production cost of the Walk was less than eleven cents on the dollar.

Q:  How do you decide who gets money from the Walk?
A:  Each year, four months before the Walk, an Allocations Committee reviews 
    proposals from a wide variety of organizations involved in the fight 
    against AIDS and HIV infection, and recommends which should receive Walk 
    grants.  The Allocations Committee, two thirds of whose members are from 
    outside AIDS ACTION, is composed of service providers, business people, 
    government officials, people with AIDS, and other representatives of the 
    diverse communities involved in the AIDS issue.

Q:  How many AAC staff persons does it take to coordinate the Walk?
A:  The Walk Manager and the Walk Associate work full-time on the event.  
    All of the other people who help coordinate the Walk are volunteers.

Q:  What's the best volunteer job on the Walk?
A:  Some volunteers would never consider any job but counting the money.  
    Others swear by decorations.  And some of the route monitors have been 
    keeping walkers safe since the first Walk in 1986.  The more than 1500 
    volunteers perform an extraordinary variety of jobs, not only on the day 
    of the event but for weeks and months before.  Volunteers drive trucks, 
    handle publicity, blow up balloons, guide poop-out vans, organize teams 
    of walkers from their workplace, solicit donations of everything from 
    popsicles to police whistles, and perform scores of other vital jobs.  
    Without them, there would be no Walk.

Q:  Is it too early to volunteer for the '91 Walk?
A:  No!  To volunteer, contact a member of the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering 
    Committee.


1435.12Globe articleFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Sun May 05 1991 12:36126
          After the book, Jeanne Blake plans a documentary on AIDS
         (Reprinted from the Boston Globe, Sunday, April 21, 1991)



Jeanne Blake, medical reporter for WBZ-TV (Channel 4), leaned forward with a 
sense of directness and, in the same straightforward manner that 
characterizes her book for teenagers, "Risky Times: How to be AIDS-Smart and 
Stay Healthy," assessed the AIDS epidemic and AIDS education for young 
people.

"People still don't realize the potential devastation the AIDS epidemic can 
cause," she said.

At a time when America is preoccupied with an economic recession and the 
repercussions of a recent war, interest in Acquired Immune Deficiency 
Syndrome has taken a back seat.  According to Blake, people feel the 
epidemic is over, but she is certain it's not.  It continues unabated in our 
younger population, teenagers and those in their 20s.

"Young people are this country's most important resource.  If we don't do 
something to alter the epidemic among children, we will pay a huge price 
down the road, emotionally and financially.  It costs $10,000 to care for an 
AIDS patient from the onset of the disease."

In her latest attempt to get young people thinking and talking and doing 
something about AIDS, Blake this month received what she said is a "major" 
grant from the Harvard Community Health Foundation to produce a 60- to 90- 
minute television documentary to explore the changing sexual behavior 
patterns of young people,issues of denial and the general topic of AIDS and 
its impact on teenagers.

"As a medical reporter and as author of "Risky Times," when I speak to 
groups about AIDS, I realize that during the past few years the whole 
country has developed a mind-set that AIDS is only a problem of the poor or 
other disenfranchised groups," she said. "But it's everyone's problem.

"It is this denial that prompted me to try to do something that can affect 
the behavior of people," she said.  "Believe me, I realize how difficult a 
challenge that will be, but you can't know the number of people I know at 
risk and not try to do something about it."

Blake hopes the documentary and the book will help parents who are hesitant 
to discuss AIDS prevention with children because it deals with things that 
are difficult to talk about: sex, drugs, homosexuality, and death.  Parents 
often think talking about sex will encourage their children to get involved.

Blake, however, feels that will not happen.

"The best way to make sure your kids make healthy decisions about sex is to 
give them the knowledge about it and explain that sexuality is part of 
life," she said.  "It is those kids who are not informed who turn to 
experimentation.  Parents may not want their kids to be exposed to certain 
issues, but they talk to friends, watch TV, and have VCRs.  Teens get 
bombarded with messages about sex and often the wrong ones."

Parents may be reticent to talk to their children about the HIV virus that 
causes AIDS, but, according to Blake, 90 percent of parents polled in 
national surveys want their children to know about AIDS. They prefer that 
schools provide the information.

Health educators interviewed recently said schools are offering much more 
instruction about AIDS than five years ago, but they agreed parents should 
realize that teaching the facts about the disease must tie into a 
comprehensive sex and health-education program.

It is this comprehensive approach that Blake takes in "Risky Times."

"I knew this book couldn't be just a facts book about AIDS," she said.  "It 
had to be an umbrella for a lot of issues: peer pressure, sexuality, 
decision-making, discrimination and denial. Children experiment with sex and 
drugs for a lot of reasons, but it really ties in to how they value 
themselves, their self-esteem.  Schools must address these issues, too." 

Blake believes good health education begins in kindergarten, where children 
can learn about germs and why, for example, it is important to wash their 
hands.

At older grade levels," she said, "physiology, sexuality, and AIDS 
prevention can be introduced, so that, by high school, the information is 
integrated into the child's life.  Emphasis throughout a health-education 
program should be placed on discussing attitudes, behavior and learning to 
make healthy decisions.

"Kids can learn that AIDS is a disease you can choose not to get."

Massachusetts schools are making progress in AIDS education, but because 
such programs are not mandated by the state, they vary greatly from school 
to school.

Nancy Olin, health and AIDS consultant for the state Department of 
Education, feels the growing number of teen-agers who now have the HIV virus 
is the driving force behind the increasing attention given to general 
education.

According to Blake, 21 percent of the AIDS cases in Massachusetts are among 
people ages 20-29.  "Given the 10-year incubation period for HIV," she said, 
"most people were infected during their teen-age years."

Olin agrees with Blake that an ideal sex-education program would start at 
the primary-school level, give age appropriate instruction and encourage 
children to see sexuality as part of the life process.  Such a program would 
put AIDS in the content of greater health issues.

"In a 1989 survey of all Massachusetts public schools, 87 percent have some 
kind of AIDS education in grades 7 through 12," said Olin.  She is 
concerned, however, that the high level of information is not translating 
into behavior.  When teen-aged students were surveyed, only 40 percent said 
they used condoms.  That leaves 60 percent at risk.  Clearly we have to go 
beyond just the facts and address behaviors associated with transmission of 
the HIV."

Addressing behavior, in fact, is one of Blake's goals.  She speaks to 
teen-agers and adults as often as her schedule permits and urges businesses 
to get involved by furnishing educational materials about AIDS to schools or 
parent groups.  Workman Publishing, which published her book, discounts 
copies to groups interested in using it in school curriculum's, for 
community projects or for employees and their families.  The American 
Library Association recently included "Risky Times" on its list of best 
books for young adults.

"One of the best things about writing the book is that, through it, I've met 
wonderful and courageous people who are totally dedicated to fighting this 
epidemic," said Blake.  "I have learned what a privilege it is to be in a 
position to help young people."

1435.13Matching giftsFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Fri May 10 1991 00:3874
                      DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
                          MATCHING GIFT PROGRAM
          PROCEDURE FOR "FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE" MATCHING GIFTS
    

A. ELIGIBILITY
    
   - All regular employees 

B. FORMS

   - Matching Gift forms are available at all Digital personnel offices. 
     Instructions are listed under "Special Events Procedure" on the 
     Matching Gift form.

   - Walk pledge sheets are available at Digital's Health Service offices. 

C. COLLECTING FUNDS FOR CORPORATE MATCH

   - Money collected for pledges from Digital employees may be combined on 
     one Matching Gift form. On a sheet of paper (back-up sheet) list the 
     following:		o names of employees
     			o badge numbers 
     			o total of each employee's donation
 
   - This back-up sheet must be attached to the Matching Gift form and 
     turned in at the registration table on the day of the walk with your 
     check(s), or sent directly to Aids Action Committee. A matching gift 
     form and back-up sheet should not be turned in until all money has been 
     collected.

   - An employee may use the "From All Walks of Life" pledge form as his/her 
     back-up sheet if he/she includes the badge number in the telephone 
     number column. The Matching Gift office will verify badge numbers 
     through the Employee Master File.

   - If a walker collects pledges that exceed the $1,000 limit, the balance 
     can be matched if another Digital employee is willing to complete a 
     matching gift form under his/her name, and badge number and signs the 
     form. A back-up sheet for the remaining dollars and employee 
     contributors must be attached to the second form. This only applies if 
     donations of more than $1,000 are collected from pledges. 

   - If a donation of $15.00, or more, is made by one employee, the employee 
     should be given the option of: 

     o filling out his/her own Matching Gift form and not being included on 
       another employee's back-up sheet 
     o being included on the walkers form with his/her name, badge 
       number, and dollar amount listed on the walker's back-up sheet. 

   - Pledges of $15.00 or less will be matched only if they are part of a 
     number of gifts included on a walker's back-up sheet (with name, badge 
     number and dollar amount) collectively totaling at least $15.00  

All Matching Gift forms and back-up sheets with donations should be sent to:

                           Aids Action Committee
                           From All Walks of Life
                            131 Clarendon Street
                           Boston, MA. 02116-9779

D. TAX DEDUCTION

   - For employees to claim their donation on their tax returns, checks 
     must be made out to Aids Action Committee. 
   
If you have any additional questions, please contact the Matching Gift 
office at DTN 223-7256.
 

CLT
4/91

1435.14DEC manager's speechFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Fri May 10 1991 12:3373
The following is the text of a speech given by Marge Davis Hallyburton, a 
former Digital manager, at the FAWOL'91 Kickoff Rally, which was held on 
Monday, May 6th.

***************************************************************************

Good morning and thank you *very* much for being here.  "From All Walks of 
Life" is near and dear to my heart, as my brother Phil is near and dear to 
my heart.  He is a 41-year-old grocer, in Chicago, and he is living with 
AIDS.

Phil was first diagnosed with HIV disease three years ago.  He has been 
participating in a study program with the NIH - National Institutes of 
Health - since 1982, and he had the option all along of learning his HIV 
status.  He put off learning his status until there were treatments starting 
to emerge and he simply practiced safer sex in the interim.  In fact, when 
he learned his status he inquired and learned that he had been HIV positive 
when he first came into the test group.  So, we're talking about someone who 
was HIV positive in 1982 for certain, and likely before that.

Phil's diagnosis did not come as a great shock to our family, as a great 
many of his friends have died of AIDS-related diseases, but you are never 
really cushioned for the truth even so.  In the first year of his diagnosis, 
Phil was hospitalized three times and was treated for Pneumocystis 
Pneumonia, or PCP.  He was placed on AZT medication and on a monthly 
treatment of aerosolized Pentamidine, or AP.  His medical bills that first 
year were $72,000.

Fortunately, his trips to the hospital have pretty well stopped, except when 
his temperature has spiked.

Phil continues to work, although his level of activity has decreased: he 
sleeps a lot and he suffers dizzy spells several times a day.  He has been 
able to maintain his group medical insurance.  As AZT has run its course for 
Phil, his physician sought alternate treatments, and he is now participating 
in an experimental program, taking a drug called ddI.  Three months into the 
program, his t-helper cell count remains at 37, as it was when he entered 
the program.  He's holding his own, and his spirits have been amazingly good 
throughout.

When ddI was first used, there was a serious problem with pancreatitis, and 
Phil had a triglyceride scare a couple of weeks ago, but it was unfounded.  
If Phil cannot continue to take ddI, and AZT has run its course for him, his 
prospects are not good.  Phil's worst fear comes with speculating how the 
disease might take him.  His upstairs neighbor lost a leg before he died, 
and a good friend suffered dementia.  These are the realities.

One can despair, or one can hope, and it is the caring of people like 
yourselves, and the tremendous work that organizations such as AIDS ACTION 
provides that brings hope.

Two years ago, when I went into Boston Common for the Walk, I went alone and 
in isolation.  By the end of the afternoon, I had found a wonderful network 
of truly caring people here at Digital.  Since that time, they have been a 
great source of strength to me.  We worked together on the NAMES Quilt panel 
which bears Digital's logo.  The Program Office and Health Services have 
sponsored a great many educational programs that are helping to get out the 
word on HIV disease.  The electronic network is a wonderful source of 
information: AIDS Treatment News comes in over the network, and there's a 
restricted notes conference which Liz Augustine maintains.  When I tell my 
brother about all this, he finds it hard to believe and tremendously 
encouraging.

Last year, a former DECie started a Walk in Chicago, and my brother was a 
Walk monitor.  They are where Boston and New England were five years ago now.  
"From All Walks of Life" has served as a model for many cities around the 
country.  Digital is to be congratulated as a corporate sponsor, and each of 
you is to be congratulated for your untiring work.  It is *your* work which 
sustains the hope for all the Phil Davises of this world.  Thank you.

           (Posted with permission from Marge Davis Hallyburton)

1435.15ProfileFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Fri May 10 1991 12:34106
                              DOER'S PROFILE:
                  DONNA BROCKENBROUGH, CHECK-IN VOLUNTEER
                         Written by: Stephen Handy
                (reprinted from the AAC Volunteer Calendar)

 
The Doer's Profile features the story of a different volunteer or group of 
volunteers active in AAC programs every month.

"From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the 
one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked." (Luke 12:48 
NIV)

Most Americans live in a world of "take and give me."  Yes, we struggle to 
get the right education; get right job; marry the right person.  But when 
the struggle is over, a new challenge begins.

Donna Brockenbrough recognizes the challenge.  She got the college degree.  
She got the right job.  She married the right man.  She bought the right 
home and, yes, she's even planning to have the perfect family.  It should 
have been easy for her to go to work every day, go home to hubby and the 
kids (she's expecting her first child soon) on the North Shore and leave the 
cares of the world for someone else to worry about.

But for Donna something was missing.  A very vital part of her was not being 
fulfilled.  She wasn't giving back.  How could she help, what could she do?  
There are so many causes, so many problems; so much to do.

After talking with her husband's cousin, who is a Buddy in the Washington 
D.C. area, Donna decided that the straight white community was not doing 
enough and was prompted to call the AIDS ACTION Committee Hotline.  She saw 
a need and decided it was time to give back.  She was ready, and not just 
for one cause this month and another the next.  Not even for several causes 
at once.

In January, 1989 Donna and her husband attended an AAC volunteer Open House.  
She was persistent about placement and in May, 1989 she interviewed with 
Client Services to become an Advocate Assistant.  Donna trained through the 
summer and in September, 1989 she started to work as a volunteer.

As an Advocate Assistant, she is the vital link between the client and AAC.  
Two years ago, the advocates in Client Services had very large caseloads, 
causing some clients with complex long-term needs to feel lost.  The 
Advocate Assistant position was designed to allow a trained volunteer to 
help clients whose needs were not as complex by calling on a weekly or 
monthly basis as needed, providing support and giving referrals.

I asked Donna- why Client Services?  She replied, "I liked the idea of 
direct contact with clients and saw that as the greatest service this type 
of agency could supply.  I also knew that I couldn't give the time required 
to be a Buddy and wasn't sure that I was ready for that.  Here, as an 
Advocate Assistant, I could give the time and have the type of contact I 
wanted with the clients.

Though I've never met most of my clients personally, we form a strong 
relationship and often I feel as though we have become friends.  When the 
loss comes, and it has come often, I grieve as I would for any of my close 
friends or family."

We talked about rewards, frustrations and change.  Donna says her greatest 
reward is the feeling of connection between her and the client.  Most 
clients look forward to the personal contact; someone calling just to say 
"Hi, how are you?"  When people have to deal with the everyday frustration 
of a chronic illness, a phone call and a friendly conversation can mean so 
much, says Donna.

The worst part for Donna is the suffering that people have to go through; 
feeling humiliated, rejected and out of control because of the stigma that 
goes with having the virus.  It hurts because she can't do more, take away 
the pain, relieve the frustration and of course it's hardest dealing with 
death.  Again she states that though she's never met most of her clients, 
the loss is great.  Change- well she would like to see the world become more 
compassionate, remove the stigma of AIDS and destroy the disease.

Last year the Client Services Department underwent reorganization due to the 
increased client caseload.  With the reorganization, the position of Case 
Manager was created.  Case Managers are assigned to those clients who need 
an initial assessment and service planning, also to clients with long 
standing, complex issues.

Clients not needing the intensive services of a Case Manager are assigned to 
the Access Team and receive immediate information and referrals for services 
and supports.  Donna now works as a Check-in Volunteer with the Access Team.

During the period of transition, as with any change, clients became confused 
and could have been easily lost.  It was during this period that Check-in 
Volunteers like Donna would call the clients to assure them that they were 
still there for them.

She feels that in her position as Check-in Volunteer, she must give 100 
percent - that means keeping up with current readings about new discoveries 
and services to provide the best service available to her clients.

New-born babies require 100 percent also and the commitment would not be 
there and her clients would suffer.  She hopes to return in the future, if 
not to Check-in then to another area of the AAC where the commitment would 
not be as great.

How about others Donna, how do we get them involved?  Donna feels that 
volunteers must share with others the joys and the great experiences they 
have had as a volunteer; and how much it satisfies that inner need for self 
fulfillment.  Do something to help others.  The Walk is coming and can be so 
exhilarating.  Even if you don't have much time to give or don't feel ready 
for the type of work Donna has been doing for the last two years, walking 
will change your life.

1435.164 storiesFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Fri May 10 1991 12:36237
              Going the Distance - Four Stories from the Walk


"I had to wait for the right time to tell my daughter.  This little girl was 
very fragile.  She had a bad beginning," explains Connie, a person living 
with the HIV virus, and one of 25,000 participants in the 1990 "From All 
Walks of Life."

Last June's 5th Anniversary Walk was a milestone in the fight against AIDS 
in Massachusetts by being the first to break the $2 million mark.  The Walk 
also signified a personal milestone in the lives of many of its 
participants.  Here are four of their stories.

***************************************************************************

The 1990 Walk was Connie's second.  Just one month before the 1989 Walk, 
Connie, a recovering drug addict, tested positive for the HIV virus.  At the 
time, she was living in a halfway house and decided to be tested after 
learning that many of her former "using" friends carried the virus.

"When I found out that I was positive, I felt dirty. I felt like everybody 
was going to turn me away.  My father wouldn't kiss me.  It was bad enough 
being a drug addict.  Now I had something that made me feel even lonelier."

That year, Connie came to the Walk with Helen, a friend who was also a newly 
recovering addict and whose son had recently been diagnosed with AIDS.  "I 
remember the power.  When we got to the Walk, we felt loved.  I realized 
that there were people there that didn't have AIDS.  I thought, maybe they 
do care.  Maybe I won't be rejected."

Connie feels that the Walk had an enormous impact on her.  By the end of the 
Walk I felt so much hope.  I began to feel like I could live with this."

During the past year, Connie has become very open about her HIV status.  She 
has spoken to a wide variety of groups as a part of her work with the AIDS 
ACTION Committee's Speaker's Bureau, an education and awareness program 
partially supported by proceeds from the Walk.

"I find out so much about myself when I speak," says Connie.  "Sometimes I 
am filled with so much energy.  I don't feel AIDS is as powerful inside my 
body when I talk about it."

Connie says that the biggest challenge she's faced was telling her daughter 
that she tested positive.  Her daughter, who is now nine, was the main 
reason she decided to seek help for her addiction to heroin and other drugs.  
"I didn't want her to be ashamed of a mother who died of AIDS on the street.  
That's what turned my life around.

"When I got sober and found out that I had HIV, that was scary.  What was 
even more scary was telling my little daughter.  She has been through a lot.  
I thought, my God, one more disappointment."

Connie told her daughter about testing positive a few weeks before the 1990 
Walk.  "When I told my daughter, she cried.  And then she said, "Are you 
OK.?"  And I said, "Yeah, I'm OK."  And then she said, "Well, as long as 
you're OK., I just want to remind you that I'm nine years old."  And then we 
both cried."

Connie's daughter accompanied her to the 1990 Walk.  She was amazed by all 
of the people who participated.  She told her mother, "With all these people 
here, they've got to find a cure."  Since then, Connie's relationship with 
her daughter has grown stronger.  They talk openly about AIDS and lean on 
each other for support.

Connie sees the Walk major tool against the fear that surrounds AIDS.  "Some 
people are still frightened of people with AIDS instead of being frightened 
of this disease.  I hope that the Walk continues to make it OK. to talk 
about our fear.

"I just feel that I'm so lucky to be alive and to have my daughter in my 
life," says Connie.  "I'm not sure what's ahead but we live each day with a 
lot of hope.  I feel like I'm making a difference."

***************************************************************************

Rick Boynton, a special education teacher at Needham High School, organized 
more than 100 Needham High students to walk under the school banner at the 
1990 Walk.

Over the past few years, Rick has grown increasingly concerned over what 
students know, or don't know, about AIDS.  "The lack of knowledge that kids 
possess about AIDS is just unbelievable.  I don't feel that any school is 
currently doing enough.  At our school, there were a couple of lessons in 
their health class about AIDS, and that was about it."  He saw the Walk as a 
way to challenge their ignorance.

Rick knew the school system well enough to understand that before he could 
attempt to convince students to come to the Walk, he had to sell the idea to 
school administrators.  He arranged a meeting with the principal to discuss 
the idea.

~Before I finished the proposal my principle said, 'It's a great project.  
My wife and I and her 84-year-old grandmother did the Walk last year.  It's 
a wonderful idea."

Rick then had to reach the students.  Since every student took gym, Rick 
arranged to have the Walk video shown in every gym class.  "The video was 
the best sell," says Rick.  "It interviewed some people who were living with 
AIDS, it talked to corporate people, and it showed some of the fun things 
that happen along the way, like the entertainment.

"The kids thought the aerobic warm-up was just hysterical.  I expected to hear 
some negative comments and snickering - but we did not hear anything negative."

On the day of the Walk, more than one hundred Needham High students gathered 
on Boston Common.  For many walkers, seeing the throngs of enthusiastic high 
school students turned out to be one of the highlights of their day.

"Our students did something that was constructive, and wasn't directly for 
them," says Rick.  He sees the Walk both as an important educational tool 
and an opportunity for students to contribute to their community.

Rick also explains that many students believe that AIDS is a problem that 
can't touch them.  "Our students need to see that it is not just gay men who 
have been affected by this disease."  He feels that the Walk is a way to 
start breaking down these faulty perceptions among teenagers.

The Walk has been endorsed by the Massachusetts Association as an excellent 
project for high school students and Rick is eager to see more schools join 
in the event.  "If my school is an illustration of what is being done in 
suburban schools, then clearly more needs to be done.  Kids need to start 
learning the facts about this disease."

Rick is already making plans for the 1991 Walk.  "I would like the kids who 
were involved in last year's Walk to take responsibility for our school's 
participation in this year's Walk.  I would like to see more kids get 
involved and maybe compete against other high schools.  Needham High School 
versus Wellesley High School.  Let's see who can raise the most money or get 
the most kids walking."

***************************************************************************

Each day, Nan Midgley visits three or four people who are living with AIDS.  
Nan is a visiting nurse with the Boston Visiting Nurse Association and over 
the past three years, she has cared for over 50 people who have died from 
complications associated with HIV infection.

One of the first AIDS patients Nan cared for was a Haitian woman named Ruth.  
Nan says, "I really watched Ruth grow through the experience.  She began to 
accept her illness and knew her time was limited.  Initially, when I saw 
Ruth, she was very quiet and shy.  I actually watched her take charge of her 
life and blossom.  She learned how to get her needs met."

Nan explains that she learned a great deal through their relationship.  
"Ruth taught me how to let go.  Before Ruth, I didn't know how to do this.  
Ruth showed me that when it's someone's time to go, you have to let them go.

"I feel that this is my life's work.  It's ultimately the clients who keep me 
going.  I help them to stay at home and they give me such gratitude and love."

Working with terminally-ill patients can easily lead to burnout for the care 
giver.  Nan says, "I really have to work at taking care of myself.  I talk 
about my feelings.  There is a lot of support for me at the Visiting Nurse 
Association and I need it."

The Boston Visiting Nurse Association has been a recipient of funds raised 
by the Walk and works closely with the AIDS ACTION Committee in coordinating 
client-based services.  The two organizations also coordinate their efforts 
in establishing policy and program development for home health care.

"Dealing with the clients is usually the easy part.  It's dealing with the 
bureaucracies that's tough.  I just went to a conference where they were 
talking about a new wonder drug used to treat Kaposi's Sarcoma.  Well great.  
I just had a patient die last week from K.S.  So let's stop talking about 
this and get this stuff out."

Nan has been involved with the Walk since 1987.  The first two years she 
participated as a walker volunteered at the Red Cross Station.  She explains 
that while she spends most of the year battling AIDS with a small group of 
people, the day of the Walk connects her to the larger community.  While 
helping out at the Red Cross Station, Nan watched as several of her 
patients, over 40 of her coworkers, and thousands of strangers walked by.

"Seeing all of those people walking shows that there are so many people out 
there who really care.  My hope for the Walk is that it gets bigger, that it 
makes more money, and that some day we won't need a Walk anymore."

***************************************************************************

Sidney Borum is the Deputy Executive Director of the Boston Living Center, a 
service organization run by and for people with AIDS and HIV infection, and 
one of the 38 organizations that received grants from the Walk.

Sidney has been to two Walks.  He did the 1989 Walk shortly after being 
diagnosed with AIDS following a battle with pneumocystis pneumonia.

When Sidney came down with pneumocystis, he did not know that he was HIV 
positive.  He was in the hospital for 43 days, and his weight dropped from 
164 pounds to 80 pounds.  "During the second blood transfusion, I actively 
made a choice to fight back," says Sidney.  "I had a respiratory arrest, and 
there was a moment when I knew I could have given up.

"I looked around the ward.  I knew that even though I was petrified, I had 
to stop looking at this just from my point of view.  All of these people 
were suffering.

"I knew that if I fought hard enough and was given a second chance in life 
that there was a reason for me to be here.  I wanted that second chance.  I 
began to set little goals for myself, like I wanted to gain a pound a day.

"When I did the Walk shortly after being diagnosed, I did the entire six and 
a half miles without even stopping.  It was like the Walk carried me."

Since his diagnosis, Sidney has spoken to thousands of people about living 
with AIDS.

He vividly recalls his participation in the AIDS awareness program at a high 
school in Hyde Park.  The school planned to spend a day on the program, and 
ended up spending a week.  "I was so touched by these kids," he says.  "They 
invited me to their prom.  In the course of the evening, they all had 
pictures taken with their dates, and then they had pictures taken with their 
dates and me.  For a black gay man to talk to adolescents about these topics 
and then be invited to be a part of their memories - that was unbelievable."

As Deputy Executive Director of the Boston Living Center, Sidney specializes 
in program development and public relations.  He was attracted to the Boston 
Living Center because the program is peer directed and it deals both with 
asymptomatic and symptomatic HlV-infected people.

"Many AIDS organizations used to function as if they were giving care to 
people who were waiting to die instead of empowering people who are faced 
with a terminal illness.  At the Living Center, we are all in this 
together," says Sidney.

Sidney feels that the Living Center helps give power back to people living 
with HIV.  "It is called the Boston Living Center, not the Boston Dying 
Center.  It's about life and hope."

In the 1990 Walk, Sidney spoke at opening ceremonies: "Looking out over the 
crowd today, I see the faces of so many old and new friends.  It is the 
commitment and strength which I have found here today that gives me the 
drive to continue to fight and live a fulfilled and gratifying life."

At the end of the ceremony, Sidney joined his brother, sister-in-law, 
nieces, and nephews and together, they did the Walk.

1435.17Pledge sheet infoFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Fri May 10 1991 12:4027
Author:	STEPHEN DERBY                 
Date:	02-May-1991
Posted-date: 08-May-1991

                Important FAWOL'91 Pledge Sheet Information

1.  Make sure you put in "DIGITAL" for the "Name of employer" on your pledge 
    sheets.

    Not DEC, Digital Equipment, Digital Equipment Corporation, or variations 
    thereof.

2.  If a sponsor is a Digital employee, then be sure to record their "Badge 
    Number" in the "Zip" column on your pledge sheet.

3.  Refer to the FAWOL'91 Information Package for other instructions and 
    information on Pledge Sheets and Matching Gift Forms.  FAWOL'91 
    Information Packages, Pledge Sheets, and Buttons can be obtained from 
    your site Health Services Office, Personnel office, Employee Activities 
    person; Site Coordinator, or from any member of the FAWOL'91 Steering 
    Committee.

The goal of the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee is to see 1,000 
Digital Employees, with pledge sheets, walking together to stop AIDS!  
Please help us reach that goal.


1435.18Pre-registration at DEC sitesFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Mon May 20 1991 19:4651
                   FAWOL'91 Pre-registration at Digital!

Digital's FAWOL'91 Steering Committee has organized a "From All Walks of 
Life '91" pre-registration at three (3) Digital sites on Thursday, May 30th.  

Bring your pledge sheets and cash or checks to:

	o   The MRO3 or ZKO1 cafeterias between 10 AM and Noon
				or
	o   The MSO2 cafeteria between 1 and 3 PM

By registering early, you will avoid the lines on the morning of the Walk 
and be assured of either a specially-designed Digital-Walk T-shirt or a 
Digital visor--available to the first 400 Digital employees with pledge 
sheets who either pre-register at Digital or come to the Digital table at 
the Corporate Meeting Area Tent on June 2.

If you have raised enough money to qualify for one of the special gifts 
which the AIDS ACTION Committee is awarding, you will also receive a coupon 
at pre-registration which you can redeem at the Walk.

Register early at Digital and avoid registration the morning of the Walk!

FAWOL'91 Information Packages, Pledge Sheets, and Buttons can be picked up 
from your site Health Services Office, Personnel office, Employee Activities 
person; Site Coordinator, or from any member of the FAWOL'91 Steering 
Committee.

The goal of the Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee is to see 1,000 Digital 
Employees, with pledge sheets, walking together to stop AIDS!  Please help 
us reach that goal.

                    Win a Vacation in Paradise for Two!

The island of Aruba awaits the person who turns in the most money on the day 
of the Walk.  The grand prize is a one-week vacation for two, including 
airfare and accommodations at the luxurious Sonesta Hotel, courtesy of Trans 
National Travel.  Other incentives for pledge money collected and turned in 
on June 2nd:

	$250:	 Official Walk T-Shirt
	$500:	 Official Walk Sweatshirt
	$l,000:	 New Balance Shoes
	$2,500:	 Polaroid Spectra System Camera

Also, the first 400 Digital employees with pledge sheets who either 
pre-register at Digital or come to the Digital table at the Corporate 
Meeting Area Tent on June 2 will receive either a specially-designed 
Digital-Walk T-shirt or a visor.

	- Stephen Derby
1435.19LogisticsFSOA::DARCHFROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, SUNDAY 6/2Mon May 27 1991 14:3299
                             FAWOL'91 Logistics
                            Sunday, June 2, 1991
                               (no rain date)

The Walk begins at Boston Common (Parkman Bandstand) and finishes at the 
Hatch Shell, Boston Esplanade.

1.  When you arrive at the Boston Common, proceed first to the Main Registra-
    tion Tent to register, if you have NOT pre-registered beforehand.

    a. The Main Registration Tent opens at 8:30 AM.
    
    b. There will be Digital employees, wearing their Digital badges, in the 
       Main Registration Tent, in case you have any last-minute questions.
    
    c. Be sure to bring to the Main Registration Tent:

       1)  Your Pledge Sheet(s) - If you have more than one pledge sheet, 
           number the sheets and put the "Grand Total" on the last page
       2)  The Money Collected
       3)  Matching Gift Form(s) -- with back-up sheet (or Xerox of your 
           pledge sheet(s)) stapled to it

    d. If your pledges will earn you an AAC incentive (T-shirt, Sweatshirt, 
       Sneakers, etc.), a Registrar will give you a coupon to redeem your 
       incentive.

2.  Proceed to the Corporate Meeting Area Tent, which will be located on the 
    Tremont St. side of the Boston Common, directly across from Burger King.

    THIS TENT WILL BE THE MEETING POINT FOR THE DIGITAL CONTINGENT.

    a. The Corporate Meeting Area Tent will have banners from most of the 
       companies that are Corporate Sponsors.  Look for the Digital banners.

    b. Directly underneath the Digital banners will be a table with some 
       Digital employees, wearing Digital/FAWOL'91 T-shirts and their 
       Digital badges.

       1)  Sign-in at the table.  There will be a notebook at the table for 
           you to sign in with your Name, Badge Number, Location, Amount 
           Collected, and Amount Matched.

       2)  The first 300 Digital employees to sign-in will receive either a 
           commemorative Digital/FAWOL'91 T-shirt, that has been designed 
           exclusively for Digital, or a Digital visor.

       3)  The table will also have some spare supplies (staplers, pens, 
           pledge sheets, highlighters, a calculator, etc.).

3.  Go get some breakfast and warm up.

4.  Come back to the Corporate Meeting Area Tent to start the Walk!

    THE DIGITAL CONTINGENT WILL BEGIN WALKING PRECISELY AT 9:45 AM. 

Digital Greeters - 	There will be several Digital employees, wearing 
                        Digital/FAWOL'91 T-shirts and their Digital badges, 
                        stationed around the Common.  If you are lost, or 
                        are not sure what is located where, just ask one of 
                        these people.  They will be there early, just in 
                        case you are too!

Digital Photographers - Some Digital employees and/or their significant 
                        others have kindly offered to take photos again this 
			year, in addition to all the official media people 
			that will be there.  They will be capturing all the 
                        activities Digital people are involved in: Registra-
			tion, Greeting, Working at the Corporate Meeting Area 
			Tent, Carrying banners, and all the other activities.

Transportation -	If you drive in, park in a metered space (you don't 
                        have to put money in the meters on Sundays), or use 
                        one of the parking garages.  Convenient streets to 
                        park on are:  Arlington, Berkeley, Clarendon, 
                        Tremont, Boylston, Beacon Park, Charles, or Newbury.

			If you take public transportation, the Red Line or 
                        the Green Line will drop you off at the Park Street 
                        Station which is right under the Boston Common.  The 
                        Charles Street/Mass. General Hospital Station (Red 
                        Line) or the Arlington Street Station (Green Line) 
                        are near the Hatch Shell for your return trip.

****************************************************************************
			     RECAP OF LOGISTICS

7:00 - 8:00	   Digital Greeters arrive and are stationed around the 
                   Boston Common
8:00		   Breakfast Tent opens
8:30		   Main Registration Tent opens
		   Corporate Meeting Area Tent opens
9:00		   Aerobic stretch warm-up to music
9:30		   Opening Ceremonies
9:45		   Digital Contingent heads out from the Corporate Meeting 
                   Area Tent
1:00 - 3:00	   Complimentary lunch for all registered walkers
3:06		   Radio-TV Simulcast: "That's What Friends Are For"
3:30		   Aerobic cool-down to music
1435.20Thank you!FSOA::DARCHThat's what friends are for!Wed Jun 05 1991 00:5361
                          FAWOL'91 - June 2, 1991


    "From All Walks of Life '91", which was held on Sunday, June 2nd, was 
an enormous success!  25,000 walkers raised more than $2 million.

    Approximately 500 Digital employees walked, with their friends, loved 
ones, spouses, families, significant others, and/or parents.  Digital 
employees contributed approximately $60,000, $40,000 of which will be matched 
by Digital's Matching Gift Program.  That amount will grow higher over the 
next month as final pledges drift in.

    Digital Equipment Corporation, a major corporate sponsor of the Walk, 
was a prominent player in the day's activities.  Besides walking, Digital 
employees also pitched in to be greeters, registrars, banner carriers, 
corporate-tent workers, and photographers.  The energy and the enthusiasm 
was overwhelming!  The first 400 employees who registered at the corporate 
tent received either a specially-designed Digital/Walk T-shirt or a visor.

    Nobody seemed to mind the blazing sun thanks to frequent water stops and 
lively entertainment along the route.  After the Walk's closing ceremonies, 
they played Dionne Warwick's "That's What Friends Are For."  Everyone stood 
arm-in-arm to sing along, and there were lots of smiles and hugs and tears.

    We, who have worked to help make this year's Walk so successful, wish to 
thank every one of you...on behalf of the AAC, FAWOL'91, and all the 
associated agencies, for your support this year and in past years.

    Whether you walked with us, volunteered, or sponsored a walker, we want 
you to know that you did make a difference, and we thank you all very much!

Digital FAWOL'91 Steering Committee
-----------------------------------

Ginger Abrams			Jackie Edwards
Deb Arch			Ann Marie Lupacchino
Liz Bartlett			Pat Marshall
Agnes Buchanan			Edna Marston
Kathy Connors			Jeremy Mathews
Steve Derby			Pamela Quinlan
Pat Dufour			Donna Wells

FAWOL'91 Site Coordinators
--------------------------

Renee Amado		   Kathy Gallup		Peg O'bin
Deb Arch		   Amy Goldman		Virginia O'Brien
Liz Bartlett		   Bob Gray		Jon Oelfke
Barbara Benoit		   Rene Heffern		Deb Olson
Helen Berrigan		   Donna Joyce		Rosemary O'Neil
Don Bracken		   Ann Kiernan		Pam Quinlan
Buck Buckley		   Bill Licea-Kane	Kelley Sharp
Susan M Burkley		   Annalisa Lafferty	Kathy Silvak
Robin Canty		   Edna Marston		Jim Sloan
Janet Cardillo		   Jeremy Mathews	Todd Staats
Barbara Foglia		   Reggie MacDonald	Bonnie Steadman
Cindi Foley		   Pat Marshall		Rosalie Tamasy
Gale Flynn		   Tom McCurdy		Donna Wells
Donna Doyle		   Susan Moore		Judy Werner
Carla Dumas		   David Mooshian
Jim Fritz		   Brenda Nias
1435.21FAWOL91 - Final ReportFDCV07::DERBYBe PROUD of who you are!Sun Nov 10 1991 23:26387
October 9, 1991

Steve Derby
Digital Equipment Corporation
129 Parker Street
PK03-2/F6
Maynard, MA 01754

Dear Steve,

With the books recently closed on the 1991 FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE, I wanted 
to let you know the good news: we made our goal of raising over $2 million 
for AIDS prevention and care.  Enclosed is a copy of our final report, with 
more detailed information on what we raised and what we spent.

I also wanted to take this chance to thank you for all you did to make Walk 
'91 such a success.  By helping to recruit walkers at your workplace, you 
played a vital role in keeping the Walk strong despite a dismal economic 
environment.  This year, more walkers than ever got their pledge sheets at 
the workplace.  More walkers than ever participated as part of a corporate 
"team."  And in coming years, effective organization at the workplace -- the 
kind of work you did for this year's Walk -- is likely to play an ever 
larger role in the response of this community to the AIDS epidemic.

Thank you again for your powerful contribution to the fight against AIDS 
here in Massachusetts.  If you have any questions about the '91 Walk, or 
about next year's Walk, feel free to give me a call at (617) 437-6200, ext. 
295.

Sincerely,

Bradley Seeman
Walk Manager

***************************************************************************

                         FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE '91
                         --------------------------

                                FINAL REPORT
                                ------------

                             September 5, 1991
                             -----------------





Submitted by:
Bradley Seeman, Walk Manager
Louis Cappella, Asst. Walk Manager





           FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE '91, the AIDS ACTION 
           Committee's Sixth Annual pledge walk, was held on 
           Sunday, June 2, 1991.  For the information of the 
           twenty-eight recipient organizations, our corporate 
           sponsors, and all rested parties, we are providing 
           the following financial report.
           
***************************************************************************

INCOME REPORT:

Publicized Goal for event			 $2,000,000

Amount pledged day of event			 $1,911,401





Gross Income					 $2,015,740

* Less event expenses:
     Production (13% of income) $255,160
     Personnel and overhead     $137,040	 $  392,200 

  Net Income					 $1,623,540

* See attached summary

***************************************************************************

PRODUCTION EXPENSE SUMMARY:

         Printing				 $ 53,817
         Graphic Design				    6,913
         Postage and Courier			    5,312
         Promotion and Incentives		   56,037
         Contracted Services			   26,133
         Police and Security			    7,303
         Video Production and Photography          17,224
         Equipment Rental			   24,614
         Advertising				      995
         Event Production			   32,345
         Meeting Expenses			   11,006
         Volunteer Activities			    5,463
         Office Supplies			    1,545
         Ground Transportation			    4,016
         Miscellaneous				    2,437
         
                Total Production Expenses	 $255,160
                
***************************************************************************

DISTRIBUTION OF NET INCOME:

AIDS Law Clinic, Jamaica Plain			 $   25,000
AIDS Project Worcester				     25,000
Amigas Latinas en Accion pro-Salud, Somerville       17,000
Boston Alliance of Gay & Lesbian Youth		      5,000
Boston Living Center				     26,000
Cambridge Cares About AIDS			     10,000
Center for Living & Working, Worcester		      5,000
Codman Sq. Health Center, Dorchester 		     15,000
Community Servings, Boston			     20,000
Dimock Community Health Center, Roxbury              25,000
Dorchester Counseling Center			     14,000
Fenway Community Health Center			     25,000
Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders              20,000
Greater Lawrence Family Health Center                15,000
Haitian Community AIDS Outreach Project, Dorchester  28,000
Hispanic Office of Planning & Evaluation, Roxbury    20,000
Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion, Boston		     20,000
Latino Health Network, Boston 			     20,000
People With AIDS Coalition of Boston 		      5,000
Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts	     15,000
Positive Directions, Boston			      5,000
Provincetown AIDS Support Group			     25,000
RUAH, Boston					     25,000
Social Justice for Women, Boston		     20,000
St. John's/St. Hugh's Parish, Dorchester	     20,000
Strongest Link, Topsfield			     25,000
Victory House, Boston				     10,000
Women, Inc., Dorchester				     25,000
AIDS ACTION Committee, Boston			  1,113,540

                   Total Distribution		 $1,623,540
                   
***************************************************************************

AIDS LAW CLINIC, JAMAICA PLAIN

The AIDS Law Clinic provides legal services to over 50% of AIDS ACTION's 
clients who seek legal services.  It is one of the primary legal referral 
sources for AAC's clients, providing a range of free legal services to any 
person diagnosed HIV positive.  This funding is to enable AIDS Law Clinic to 
expand its services to more clients, most of whom are low-income and people 
of color.

AIDS PROJECT WORCESTER

The second largest independent AIDS service organization in Massachusetts, 
APW provides comprehensive programs of client services, education and 
outreach.  The agency serves central Massachusetts and the far western 
suburbs of Boston.  Funding is for general operating expenses.

AMIQAS LATINAS EN ACCION PRO-SALUD. SOMERVILLE

ALAS is a collective of Latina women committed to gathering and 
disseminating health information for low-income Latina women and their 
families.  Funding will support the ALAS AMIGOS Project, a multi-media
program that educates Latino youth about HIV prevention and promotes AIDS 
sensitivity within the Latino community.

BOSTON ALLIANCE OF GAY AND LESBIAN YOUTH

BAGLY is a youth-run social support organization which provides a safe place 
for gay, lesbian and bisexual, or undecided young people, age 22 and under.  
This grant will support BAGLY's continuing efforts to help educate lesbian 
and gay adolescents.

BOSTON LIVING CENTER

A drop-in center by and for people with HIV, the Living Center offers 
support, Recreational and self-help programs to all people living with AIDS, 
their families, domestic partners, and other helpers.  Funding will help BLC 
plan a continuing series of seminars that will offer help to those who are 
HIV positive, their partners, families and friends.

CAMBRIDGE CARES ABOUT AIDS

The agency's mission is to develop a comprehensive city-wide approach to the 
AIDS epidemic, including education and outreach.  This grant represents 
funding for continued outreach, case management and support services for 
Cambridge residents living with AIDS/HIV infection.

CENTER FOR LIVING AND WORKING, WORCESTER

The Center for Living and Working provides a unique HIV/AIDS service system 
of Personal Care Attendants for homebound residents of Central 
Massachusetts.  Walk funding will be used to obtain a part-time skills 
trainer responsible for case management of 15-20 people with severe HIV 
infection.

CODMAN SQUARE HEALTH CENTER, DORCHESTER

The Health Center has been providing primary care services to the Codman 
Square area since 1979.  Women, most of whom are African American or 
Hispanic, make up almost half of the HIV cases receiving care at the Center.  
Walk funding will be used to develop an outreach program targeted to women 
at risk of HIV infection using the Safety Net model.

COMMUNITY SERVINGS, BOSTON

Coordinated under the auspices of the American Jewish Congress, in 
collaboration with a diverse group of community-based organizations, this 
program provides hot, nutritious meals delivered to home-bound people with 
AIDS living in Greater Boston.  The program will provide services to all 
affected communities with particular attention to ensuring participation of 
communities of color.  Walk funding will help expand program services.

DIMOCK COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, ROXBURY

A comprehensive family health center serving all people living in Roxbury, 
Dorchester and Jamaica Plain, Dimock has been a leader in the development of 
AIDS-related programs targeted to communities of color.  Funding is to 
provide case management services for families with HIV disease who live in 
two supported housing sites in the community.

DORCHESTER COUNSELING CENTER

DCC is a comprehensive community mental health center serving residents of 
Dorchester, Mattapan and Roxbury, and is the largest provider of these 
services to people of color in Massachusetts.  Funding will be used for an 
HIV prevention video targeted at youth aged 9-13, and will be developed 
entirely by a multi-lingual and multi-cultural group of 19 teens.

FENWAY COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER

The Fenway is the leading community-based primary care facility in Boston 
serving the Fenway Neighborhood and the Gay and Lesbian community in a 
variety of health programs.  Over the last few years, Fenway has emerged as 
a leader in providing AIDS and HIV-related medical and mental health 
services, anonymous counseling and testing and community-based research.  
Funding is to help support a nursing case manager.

GAY AND LESBIAN ADVOCATES AND DEFENDERS, BOSTON

GLAD is a public interest legal agency, founded to litigate and educate on 
behalf of the legal rights of gay men and lesbians.  Funding will support 
the ongoing work of GLAD's AIDS Law Project, which targets its services to 
persons who are affected by HIV-related discrimination in employment, 
housing, medical and dental care, public accommodations, insurance, 
confidentiality, testing and access to treatment information.

GREATER LAWRENCE FAMILY HEALTH CENTER

The Health Center provides primary health care to Greater Lawrence 
residents, most of whom are Latino.  Walk funding will be used to develop a 
program of prevention education called "Hablemos" (Let's Talk), reaching 
low-income men and women, with particular attention to female clients, many 
of whom are immigrants from the Caribbean and Central America.

HAITIAN COMMUNITY AIDS OUTREACH PROJECT, DORCHESTER

HAP was created by local Haitian physicians and concerned community 
activists for the purpose of preventing the spread of HIV in the Boston 
Haitian community.  Walk funding will help maintain the Case Management 
Coordinator position and support funding for client emergency relief 
assistance.

HISPANIC OFFICE OF PLANNING AND EVALUATION, ROXBURY

A statewide, multi-service organization, HOPE works with a wide range of 
Latino groups.  Walk funding will help support an increase in capacity of 
HOPE's "Poder Latino de Jovenes = Latino Youth Power", a youth educators and 
leadership development program involving out-of-school, high risk youth, 
ages 15-19.

INQUILINOS BORICUAS EN ACCION, BOSTON

For more than twenty years, IBA has been addressing the social, cultural, 
economic and health issues facing Boston's Latino community.  This grant 
will fund the continuation of the AIDS Education and Prevention Programs for 
South End Latino Youth, including health workshops, the expansion of a 
Latina Girl's Group and the creation of an HIV/AIDS bilingual library for 
community use.

LATINO HEALTH NETWORK, BOSTON

This agency's mission is to assess, document and advocate for the Latino 
community's health needs, with particular emphasis on preventing the spread 
of HIV.  Walk funding will support a case management mechanism to increase 
access to a wide range of services for Latinos who are living with HIV.

PEOPLE WITH AIDS COALITION OF BOSTON

The PWA Coalition is a volunteer, peer-led organization.  Their mission is 
to be public and open about AIDS by providing PWA speakers, advocating for 
better AIDS policy and treatment and to empower its membership by providing 
an organization by and for people with AIDS.  Funding will be used for an 
HIV prevention education campaign targeted at adolescents and adults from 
diverse cultural backgrounds.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD LEAGUE OF MASSACHUSETTS

PPLM's mission is to encourage and facilitate responsible, informed choice 
about individual sexual behavior, and to foster a political and social 
climate favorable to informed decisions.  Walk funding will help PPLM to 
expand Heart-To-Heart, a comprehensive HIV prevention and sexuality 
education program for adolescents in Boston and Worcester public schools.

POSITIVE DIRECTIONS, BOSTON

A Boston-based grass roots self-help group of HIV positive individuals, 
Positive Directions' mission includes education, psycho-social support and a 
forum for increased activism in AIDS-related political issues.  This grant 
will be used for general operating expenses.

PROVINCETOWN AIDS SUPPORT GROUP

Serving Barnstable County, PASG provides social services to persons with 
AIDS/HIV to maintain and enhance their quality of life, and educates 
individuals and the community with information about AIDS/HIV.  Funding is 
for comprehensive case management PASG clients and client residents in new 
housing.

RUAH, BOSTON

RUAH, which is Hebrew for Breath of Life, is an organization run by women 
for homeless women living with AIDS.  Collaborating with a variety of 
existing AIDS service agencies, they will provide complete medical, legal 
and psychological services for women.  Funding will help provide case 
management services under development for homeless women with AIDS.

SOCIAL JUSTICE FOR WOMEN, BOSTON

SJW has been a leader in advocating for prison-based AIDS education, and its 
programs serve as models for the nation's prison system.  Working with area 
agencies, SJW helps to develop appropriate plans for women with HIV released 
from MCI-Framingham.  Funding is for the continuation of AIDS education and 
case management at MCI-Framingham.

ST. JOHN'S/ST. HUGH'S PARISH, DORCHESTER

Located in an urban area hard hit by HIV infection and serving primarily 
communities of color, St. John's/St. Hugh's Parish will be the first to 
employ a case management model to enhance parish based services for people 
with HIV in Boston.  The Walk grant will help the parish provide meals, 
transportation and other services for people with AIDS in the Grove 
Hall/Franklin area of Boston.

STRONGEST LINK, TOPSFIELD

Strongest Link currently provides support, advocacy and referral services 
for those living with HIV/AIDS in suburban Essex County.  Walk funding will 
go towards the addition of a Case Manager to strengthen services provided to 
current clients and better enable the organization to meet the needs of an 
expanding caseload.

VICTORY HOUSE, BOSTON

Founded as a non-profit in 1975, the agency is committed to providing 
rehabilitation and treatment for all persons who seek drug abuse recovery, 
particularly those with severe medical problems, such as AIDS, who quite 
often require specialized treatment care.  Walk funding will help continue 
the prevention education programs for active addicts in recovery.

WOMEN, INC., DORCHESTER

This organization has pioneered in providing treatment and support to 
substance abusing women, and particularly low-income and women of color.  
The agency has two over-reaching goals: to help women move from dependence 
on drugs, alcohol and public assistance to independent social health and 
responsibility, and to preserve and strengthen the family units headed by 
these women in the process of their treatment.  This funding will help 
expand current AIDS education, outreach, case management and counseling 
programs.

AIDS ACTION COMMITTEE OF MASSACHUSETTS

AIDS ACTION is a non-profit corporation committed to combating the epidemic 
of AIDS and to addressing the needs of those affected through service, 
education, advocacy, and outreach.  Through cooperative mutually supportive 
effort between professional staff and a strong volunteer component, AIDS 
ACTION seeks to serve with a compassionate and caring presence, people of 
all cultures affected by AIDS and HIV-related disorders, as well as those at 
risk of infection.  AIDS ACTION operates in partnership with a wide range of 
community organizations, as well as with government agencies at the local, 
state, and national levels.  Funding is for general operating expenses.

1435.22a questionWUMBCK::FOXTue Nov 19 1991 17:2016
    I have nothing against this program, but what does this have to do
    with the "DEC style of working"?
    I really wouldn't mind, but I put a note in DIGITAL asking for
    people to help a boy (and many other) with leukemia. It was
    promptly deleted saying it had nothing to do with the purpose
    of this notesfile. I sort of expected it, but I wanted to
    reach a large audience, and thought I'd give it a shot.
    
    However what we have here is someone asking people to help
    others with AIDS, and it's allowed to stay. Why is this ok,
    yet my note was deleted? Will this note too get deleted?
    I have nothing against FAWOL, I repeat. I just want to know
    why the moderators allow this, but do not allow other similar
    notes from getting posted.
    
    John
1435.23SQM::MACDONALDTue Nov 19 1991 17:367
    
    Re: .22
    
    Dunno, perhaps your topic wasn't PC enough.
    
    Steve
    
1435.24SMOOT::ROTHThe 13th Floor ElevatorsTue Nov 19 1991 18:0924
From looking at the first few notes in this topic it appears that Digital
is a corporate sponsor of FAWOL. 

I guess that is the difference, but does this topic have anything
to do with the 'Digital way of Working'? Seems to me the first few notes
would fall under the removal criteria of note 1.10.

Lee

            <<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
                          -< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1.10                    Introduction and Policy                    10 of 10
SCAACT::AINSLEY "Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow"      8 lines  13-NOV-1991 11:23
                  -< This conference is NOT a bulletin board >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The moderators have had to remove multiple postings of an event announcement/
solicitation.  Bulletin board type announcements are not in accordance with
the charter of this conference.  Please DO NOT post bulletin board type
announcements in the DIGITAL conference.

Thanks,

Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
1435.25MU::PORTERbah, humbugTue Nov 19 1991 18:116
Well, one difference could be that F.A.W.O.L. is a program that's
sponsored by DEC, and your note was just a note from an individual.

Therefore, one is related to working at DEC, and the other is not.

(No opinion implied about the relative worth of the causes in question).
1435.26WUMBCK::FOXTue Nov 19 1991 18:2214
    re .24, .25
    I agree, and my entry was probably at least partially responsible
    for the entry of 1.10.
    Reading 1.10, I cannot for the life of me see how 1435.* is allowed
    to stay in the conference. The fact that DEC sponsors it has *nothing*
    to do with how we do our jobs. DEC sponsors many things, and if I
    decided to donate to the organization that is helping this boy, I
    would solicit DEC to donate through their matching donation program,
    making them a partial sponsor of this event. If that's the qualification,
    then my note should not have been deleted. However I don't think it's
    sponsorship that allows 1435.* to remain, despite it's blatent 
    contradiction to the rules of this conference.
    
    John
1435.27FAWL is an offical Digital sponsored eventSCAACT::AINSLEYLess than 150 kts. is TOO slowTue Nov 19 1991 18:2313
    re: .22
    
    John,
    
    FAWL is an official Digital sponsored event, exempt from the P&P
    against solicitation, etc.  The item you posted, while definately
    for a good cause, does not meet the above criteria.
    
    Please note that when updates to .0 were posted on a frequent basis,
    the moderators deleted them and worked out an agreement with the poster
    to allow a follow up reply after the event was held.
    
    Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
1435.28WUMBCK::FOXTue Nov 19 1991 18:3711
    
>    FAWL is an official Digital sponsored event, exempt from the P&P
>    against solicitation, etc.
    Bob,
    I'm not denying that DEC sponsors this, but what does sponsorship
    have to do with work? And if there is some connection that I can't
    see, what level of sponsorship is required to become exempt from
    the P+P against solicitation? What is the significance of a certain
    level of sponsorship over another level of sponsorship? 
    
    John
1435.29CSC32::J_OPPELTNOW what!?!?!Tue Nov 19 1991 21:071
    	Is this a VoD issue?
1435.30ICS::CROUCHJim Crouch 223-1372Wed Nov 20 1991 09:178
    It has always been quite ok for DEC to dun us for money for their
    favorite charity. ;-( Just don't try it yourself for your favorite
    charity or event. This has always been a very touchy subject for me
    and has had much notes play in the past.
    
    Jim C.
    
    
1435.31DEC doesn't follow its own rulesTLE::REINIGThis too shall changeWed Nov 20 1991 12:026
    Yes, DEC is so consistent.  At DEC, you can't solicit others but  DEC
    is perfectly free to solicit us.  There's the United Way, this thing,
    and others.  I've complained to management citing the rule against
    solicitation chapter and verse but to no avail.  
    
                                            August G. Reinig
1435.32WUMBCK::FOXWed Nov 20 1991 12:218
    I've looked through the policies, and can't see anything that states
    a DEC sponsored event is exempt.
    However for my purposes, that's not important. If DEC will match
    my contribution, they are offically a sponsor, making this event
    just as exempt as FAWOL, correct? Unless it can be explictedly
    proven otherwise, the regulations say my event can be posted.
    
    John
1435.33CVG::THOMPSONRadical CentralistWed Nov 20 1991 12:288
> Unless it can be explictedly
>    proven otherwise, the regulations say my event can be posted.

	What regulations? The Orange Book? Yes according to that your
	event can be posted. The Orange Book does not say that the moderators
	must allow it in a spicific conference. 

			Alfred
1435.34seems simple to meWUMBCK::FOXWed Nov 20 1991 13:027
    re .33
    True, the moderators can allow or delete anything they choose, if
    they choose to enforce their regulations arbitrarily. If they don't,
    and apply the regulations fairly, they should not object to my
    posting of this event in this conference. 
    
    John
1435.35CIS1::FULTIWed Nov 20 1991 13:4115
re:                       <<< Note 1435.34 by WUMBCK::FOX >>>

>    True, the moderators can allow or delete anything they choose, if
>    they choose to enforce their regulations arbitrarily. If they don't,
>    and apply the regulations fairly, they should not object to my
>    posting of this event in this conference. 
    
John you are correct in you assertion, however I believe that you will not
be able to have your's posted because the moderators do not want this
conference to become a bulletin board for everybodies pet cause.
I agree with that goal, however, they have violated their own rule by
allowing the FAWL topic and now its going to be interesting to see how
they get around that. 

- George
1435.36FSOA::DARCHmucho ruido y pocas nuecesWed Nov 20 1991 22:0220
    A couple of points...

    1.	I will convey Note 1.10 to Paul Ross and next year's FAWOL 
	committee.  The moderators are welcome to express their concerns 
	directly to ICS::ROSS.

    2.	Digital is a corporate sponsor of FAWOL.  Ken Olsen and the
	Executive Committee have stated their support of endeavors for 
	Digital to be a good "corporate citizen."

    3.  AIDS ACTION Committee is a certified 401C non-profit
	organization, which is the criteria for matching gift funds.

    4.	The Digital FAWOL committee is comprised of volunteers, with
	a corporate consultant/leader (Paul Ross).

    5.	AIDS is a workplace issue...some employees work with people with 
	AIDS and HIV, and some employees *are* PWAs/PWHIVs.

	deb (committee chairperson 1990, member and notes-poster 1991)
1435.37NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Thu Nov 21 1991 11:2020
re .36:

>   2.	Digital is a corporate sponsor of FAWOL.  Ken Olsen and the
>	Executive Committee have stated their support of endeavors for 
>	Digital to be a good "corporate citizen."

Digital is a corporate sponsor of a golf tournament.  Would the moderators
allow notes requesting volunteers for this tournament?

>   3.  AIDS ACTION Committee is a certified 401C non-profit
>	organization, which is the criteria for matching gift funds.

That has no bearing on the appropriateness of using this notesfile to
publicize FAWOL.  There are thousands of such organizations.

>   5.	AIDS is a workplace issue...some employees work with people with 
>	AIDS and HIV, and some employees *are* PWAs/PWHIVs.

Leukemia is a workplace issue...some employees work with people with 
leukemia, and some employees *have* leukemia.
1435.38CVG::THOMPSONRadical CentralistThu Nov 21 1991 12:276
>Digital is a corporate sponsor of a golf tournament.  Would the moderators
>allow notes requesting volunteers for this tournament?
    
    Please take a look at topic 510.
    
    			Alfred