<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9102120052
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
911110
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, November 10, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press;Knight-Ridder Newspaper
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NOW LET'S CRY AND CHEER FOR AIDS' OTHER VICTIMS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
And now it's time to treat everyone like Earvin (Magic) Johnson. That's
the real lesson of these terrible last few days. The eruption of love, support
and sympathy for the stricken NBA star was  a wonderful thing to see. But when
you think about it, of all the patients in the world with the AIDS virus,
Magic may need this the least. He is extremely wealthy, can get the finest
doctors, and will  be honored and loved no matter how sick, heaven forbid, he
gets.

  What about the rest?

  Who loves them today?
  If I were an AIDS patient watching the world since 6 p.m. Thursday, when
news  that Johnson was retiring because he had the virus literally burned
across the nation, lighting the sky, erasing all other stories -- the Detroit
TV stations actually reported no other news  that night  -- I might cry a
bittersweet tear.
  Where was everybody, I might wonder, when I got sick?
  The truth is AIDS did not begin with Magic and it won't end with him
either. If we lived in parts of  Africa, I doubt we would have time to notice
Thursday's news; we'd be too busy tending to the dying members of our
families. If we lived in India, word that a basketball player had been
stricken might raise only a sigh, because how much can sadness is left for one
when hundreds of thousands are falling all around you?
  As Americans, we were squeamishly innocent about AIDS before Thursday. We
turned  from its glare, swept it into a corner, dismissed it as a curse for
other people, weirdos, gays, drug addicts, promiscuous bar-hoppers. Even when
some big Hollywood celebrity began losing weight and  was photographed looking
gaunt and pale, we told ourselves "Well, it's a shame, but Hollywood people,
you know how they are . . . "
  This is not Hollywood. This is not India. 
  This is right  outside your door.
  Can you hear it?
"Nightline" vs. Arsenio
  Two images burn in my mind this morning. Both, not surprisingly, come from
the TV screen.
  The first was Friday night, when  Magic Johnson bopped on stage with
Arsenio Hall, who whooped and waved in his normal idiotic fashion, as the
cheering audience rose to its feet. 
  "I'm still gonna be the same old Earvin, happy-go-lucky, living life to
its fullest and having a good time," Magic said, smiling. It was a feel-good
program, and you walked away believing the man is special enough to beat this
thing.
  Then, the other image,  on ABC's "Nightline" in the wee hours Friday
morning.  Among Ted Koppel's five guests -- four of whom were healthy and had
only praise and support for Johnson -- was one man from an AIDS organization
who is also afflicted with the virus, a disturbing fellow named Kramer. He was
not as young or as handsome as Magic. He had short white hair,  glasses, and a
frightening expression, like the butler in  a haunted house. This is what
Kramer said -- not even said, but yelled -- at the camera: 
  "Magic Johnson is going to die! I am going to die! We are all going to
die! There are 40 million potential  victims out there. This is not an
epidemic, Mr. Koppel, this is a plague!"
  There was no band playing, and nobody clapped.
Time for us to get involved
  Somewhere between those two images, I hope,  lies the clue to our next
step. We cannot stop with the smiles on the Arsenio show, making us feel good,
because this is beyond feeling good, and it is beyond sending letters to LA,
telling Magic you still love him. That is a fine thing to do, sure, but let's
be honest: It's easy to love Magic. He is famous, heroic; he has a smile that
would melt chocolate off a Milky Way.
  It may not be as  easy to love the AIDS patient down the street, the gay
man with the thin, bony face, the pale woman dressed in now-baggy clothes, the
victims who gather outside city halls with signs asking for support.  But they
deserve your emotions, too.
  One of the most famous books about the AIDS crisis was entitled "And The
Band Played On," suggesting that, for all the horror, the healthy part of the
world basically  ignored this disease. From now on, that is unforgivable, and
I am not just talking about education here. Yes, education is essential --
you cannot believe how many teenagers still think a condom is  something
somebody else wears -- but we have been trying for years to teach teens about
birth control, and even that has been slow.
  Meantime, people are dying. We need money, right now, to fight  this
disease, to research it, to try experimental cures, as they are doing in
European countries that  are far ahead of us. We need money, and not just your
contributions; we need money from our government,  which has been all too
content to have voters think of AIDS as a gay disease, since it meant less
pressure to spend funding on a cure.
  What we don't need is a cut in the budget for the Centers for  Disease
Control,  which thanks to our administration is what will happen next year.
What we don't need is George Bush conveniently admitting he "hasn't done
enough" on the AIDS issue, after the Magic  story breaks and Bush sees it
could hurt his re-election chances if he says anything less.
  What we don't need are people like Sen. Jesse Helms, who, in his disgusting
fashion, actually supported  legislation that forbade federal funding for AIDS
education if anything in the material was "offensive." Like what, Jesse? The
word "gay"? Or "sex"? How about the word "dead"? That's the one we should find
most offensive.
  Magic Johnson was unlucky, and now he is being brave; we need to be the
latter to avoid being the former. If you truly believe in what Magic says, and
you want to prove it, you  find time for other victims, the ones without any
championship rings. You don't treat them like lepers. You give them your time;
you give them a kind word.
  And then you get on the phone and behind  the typewriter and you get out
in the streets and you don't stop badgering your lawmakers until they
appropriate fewer dollars to their own special interests and a lot more toward
saving the world from  this horror that takes no names, only corpses, and is
getting closer to your doorstep every minute.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
EARVIN JOHNSON; AIDS; VICTIM; HEALTH
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
