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  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 2, Your rights at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 2, Your rights at work / Immunity Publications Ltd.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 2, Your rights at work / Immunity.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • We work with it... : ...so can you / aNational AIDS Trust, employers initiative.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Your rights in the AIDS era. 3, Discrimination at work / Immunity.
  • Seven members of the French committee on vaccination rail at Tapp, a health officer who resists the new discovery. Coloured etching, 1801.
  • A procession of publicans and a beggar following the coffin of Madam Geneva; attacking the Act preventing distillers from retailing or selling gin to unlicensed premises. Engraving, 1751.
  • Seven members of the French committee on vaccination rail at Tapp, a health officer who resists the new discovery. Coloured etching, c. 1800.
  • Night calls by doctors: sixteen vignettes. Wood engraving by M. Marais, 1897.
  • Seven members of the French committee on vaccination rail against Tapp, who resists the new discovery. Line engraving, c. 1800.
  • Policemen apprehend a pickpocket taking a license from a publican; representing the value to the government of publicans' licenses. Chromolithograph by T. Merry, 1890, after himself.
  • A triumphant American slave woman representing quassia (ingredient in acoholic drinks) is carried aloft by two brewers; representing the outcry against a tax on private brewing (?). Etching by J. Gillray, 1806.
  • The Abortion Law Reform Association Title page
  • George Rose, in profile, in a roundel. Stipple engraving by T. Blood after A. Wivell, 1818.
  • Members of a friendly society compensating one of its members for ill-health. Pen and ink and watercolour, c. 1807.
  • John Coakley Lettsom, physician, with his family, in the garden of Grove Hill, Camberwell.