Banners advertising more than two decades of AIDS Walks hang on the walls of Craig Miller's Los Angeles office - testaments to the years spent confronting the illness that still sparks scandal and fear.

They are also evidence of Miller's dedication to pursuing a cure for the disease - one that led him to give up his career in politics as his personal interest evolved into a professional passion.

"We all have choices to make in life, so as long as the AIDS epidemic exists, there's nothing I'd rather be doing than devoting my time to confronting it. Frankly, I think it's how I can be most useful."

Toward that end, Miller has dedicated his adult life to raising money, garnering attention and support and speaking on behalf of the estimated 1.2 million Americans living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

"It's not so much that I was alone. We were alone - gay men were alone. There was very little being done to address this public-health emergency.

The disease moved to the forefront of America's consciousness in 1985, with the death of actor Rock Hudson, who had hid his homosexuality. America lost the flamboyant pianist Liberace to AIDS in 1987 and gasped in 1991 when NBA idol Magic Johnson announced that he had contracted the human immunodeficiency virus.

But with a nation still largely uncomfortable talking about sex and presidential administrations speaking only to abstinence, the 47-year-old Miller finds the same fear and silence from the 1980s is still pervasive in some communities today.

"It causes people, particularly young people, to be deprived of the information they need to be healthy. It's really outrageous," said Miller, president of MZA Events Inc., which produces AIDS Walk Los Angeles and other walks across the country.

For the past 22 years, he has rallied hard for national and local attention to the disease that mushroomed during the 1980s during a social climate that wasn't particularly interested in gay men and a political atmosphere determined to cut the fat out of government spending.

Miller said it was the intersection of those issues that caused the country to miss the best chance it had to contain the health care emergency in its early days.

campaigns for former U.S. Rep. Anthony C. Beilenson, who represented the San Fernando Valley from 1977 to 1996, Miller mobilized 4,500 people and organized the first AIDS Walk in 1984.

"He put all his political skills to work on this cause, and that's what it needed," said U.S. Rep. Howard Berman, D-Van Nuys, who met Miller through his political work.

Miller's most recent challenge is Broward County, Fla., where he said the AIDS epidemic rages and remains invisible to most of the region's 1.6million residents.

Broward County ranks fourth in the country for new HIV infections and has the highest rate of the disease progressing into AIDS, said Miller, whose group teamed up with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation this year to establish a fundraising walk there.

But they ran into obstacles after creating advertisements, which would run on top of taxis, for AIDS Walk Fort Lauderdale. The cab company feared the ads would tarnish the area's reputation as a tourist destination.

"It was a throwback to 1985," he said. "It was a great reminder of what we're up against - a society trying to come to grips with the AIDS epidemic."

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