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              <text>Gay Students Start&#13;
LGBT Scholarships&#13;
NORMAN, Ok - The Oklahoma Lambda Intercollegiate&#13;
Coalition (OLIC) has announced the creation of&#13;
the Oklahoma Lambda Youth Scholarship which they&#13;
claim is the first such program in Oklahoma. The&#13;
Coalition is an umbrella network of Lesbian, Gay,&#13;
Bisexual, and Transgender student groups from Oklahoma&#13;
colleges and universities.&#13;
According to OLIC spokespersons, Kent Doss of the&#13;
University ofOklahoma andMandy Whitten, the President&#13;
of University of Central Oklahoma Gay Alliance&#13;
for Tolerance and Equality (GATE), the purpose of the&#13;
scholarship is to promote pride in youth activism and&#13;
foster leadership at Oklahoma college campuses.&#13;
Oklahoma high-school graduates who intend to remainin&#13;
the state throughout their college careers will be&#13;
eligible for the $1,000 award. Applicants will be selected&#13;
according see OLIC, p. 3&#13;
Tulsa ChamberAdds&#13;
"Sexual Orientation"&#13;
TULSA - The Tulsa Metro Chamber, which recently&#13;
changed i ts namefrom the MetropolitanTnlsaChamber&#13;
of Commerce, also has revised its non-discrimination&#13;
policies to add the term "sexual orientation" to more&#13;
traditional statues like race, religion, age, national origin,&#13;
sex (gender), etc.&#13;
According to Michael Hightower, media spokesperson&#13;
for the organization, the .addition of "sexual orientation"&#13;
waspart ofacomprehensivereview ofChamber’s&#13;
internal policies. The Bank of Oklahoma’s Human&#13;
Resources Dept. conducted this effort for the Chamber.&#13;
This revision is part of a trend on the part of businesses&#13;
to attract employees by committing to fair hiring&#13;
practices. According to the Human Rights Campaign, a&#13;
Washington based civil right group, 494 of the Fortune&#13;
500 companies have added "sexual orientation" to their&#13;
policies. Anumberof majorTulsaemployers,including&#13;
American Airlines, Kimberly-Clark, AEP/PSO, Dollar/&#13;
Thrifty Auto Group, and others have done the same.&#13;
Kerry Lewis, president-elect of Tulsa/Oklahomans&#13;
for Human Rights (TOHR) expressed surprise and&#13;
applauded this Chamber move. TFN publisher Tom&#13;
Neal noted "as one of the few openly Gay members of&#13;
the Chamber, I am really proud to.see the organization&#13;
welcome us. We need to support them in return."&#13;
DIRECTORY P. 2&#13;
EDITORIAL P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P, 4&#13;
HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
¯ Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
TMM’s Exclusion of&#13;
i oGfayDs iDscelriibmerinataetiAocnt ¯ Pastor Says "Sexual Orientation" Was ¯&#13;
Added But TMM Board Never Told&#13;
¯ TULSA - While the incident, a KKK visit, to which a local ¯&#13;
"diversity" statement sought io i’~spond is well past, the state-&#13;
" merit continues to brew controversy. Tulsa Metropolitan Minis-&#13;
" try, an "interfaith" religious organization issued a statement&#13;
-.¯ which defined Tulsa’s "diversity" as being composed of race,&#13;
religion andethnicity, without mentioning sexual orientation.&#13;
¯ Earlier, it appeared that the failure to mention "sexual orienta-&#13;
¯ tion"mighthavebeenanoversightbasedontheKKK’ s historical ¯&#13;
¯ attacks primarily on Jews and Blacks. However, in a return call&#13;
to the Tulsa Family News, the Rev. Russell Bennett of Fellowship&#13;
Congregational Church, UnitedChurch of Christ, stated that&#13;
¯ he participated in themeeting to draft the statement, and specifically&#13;
he called for the inclusion of "sexual orientation" in the&#13;
: statement. Bennett noted that he heard no objections to his&#13;
¯ request, and he said that he expected that "sexual orientation"&#13;
¯ would be included.&#13;
: Perry Simons, executive director of the Jewish Federation&#13;
¯ attended the meeting at Fellowship Congregational Church with&#13;
: Nancy Day of the National Conference for Community and&#13;
Justice, Dr. Sandra Rana, representing Tulsa’s Muslim commu-&#13;
: nity, the Rev. Clark Shackleford of Sand Springs, as well as&#13;
¯ Bennett. Andwhile Simmons says he does notrememberBennett&#13;
." calling for adding "sexual orientation," Simons says he feels he&#13;
¯ shouldhave raised theissue. Simons noted that Dr. Rana took the&#13;
¯ notes of what he described as a "stream of consciousness"&#13;
¯ discussion.&#13;
; However, the Rev. Radford Rader of College Hill Presbyterian&#13;
¯ and a-member of the T!VIM executive boardstated that the&#13;
¯ executive board never saw a version see TMM, p. 11&#13;
Michigan Elects First Gay Rep.&#13;
¯ LANSING, Mich. (AP)- Newly dected state House Rep: Chris ¯&#13;
Kolb heads to Lansing in January as the state’s first openly Gay&#13;
." lawmaker, but he said he has a lot more he wants to tackle than&#13;
¯ simply civil rights for Gay-people. Kolb, 42, admits his role is&#13;
; important, but it’s not his only focus. "I don’t wear it on my&#13;
: sleeve. I am who I am, but I don’t bring itinto every discussion,"&#13;
¯ he said of his sexual orientation. "It’s not my one and only ¯&#13;
crusade in life."&#13;
: The election of Kolb, a Democrat from Ann Arbor, puts&#13;
¯ Michigan among 22 states that have an openly Gay man or ¯&#13;
Lesbianin their legislatures. TheAnnArborcity councilman first&#13;
¯ got interested in politics after receiving his bachelor’s degree in&#13;
.. natural resources from the University of Michigan in 1982. He&#13;
¯ started with local government, distributing campaign literature&#13;
¯ and knocking on doors for candidates. After serving as aprecinct&#13;
¯ captain and secretary of the local Democratic Party, he won an&#13;
¯ open seat on theAnnArbor City Councilin 1993. Eventually, he ¯&#13;
became mayor pro-tern.&#13;
2 " Working on the Democratic-controlled council with former&#13;
." Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon, a Republican, has already&#13;
¯ helped Kolb learn to forge bipartisan alliances, a key skill in the&#13;
¯" state Legislature. Sheldon admits she and Kolb were competitors,&#13;
but said he never made his sexual orientation an issue. "You&#13;
¯ do not think ofhimas being the stereotypical Gay person inAnn&#13;
Arbor," Sheldon said. "He’S a regular person the way you or I&#13;
." would want to be relating to a person."&#13;
Kolb said he will work at improving the state of civil and&#13;
human rights in Michigan,but he’s also interested in tackling&#13;
¯ education and environmental issues. He wants to work on legislation&#13;
that would make it illegal in Michigan to fire employees&#13;
¯ based on their sexual orientation, something already prohibited&#13;
¯ in 11 states. "I’mnotkiddingmyself as to howfar theLegislature&#13;
will be able to be moved," he said. "But civil and human rights&#13;
: are along struggle."&#13;
¯ Kolb will be one of 14 new Democrats and seven Republicans&#13;
¯ to begin their first two-year state House terms inJanuary. He will&#13;
be seated across the aisle see Michigan, p. 3&#13;
I TOHR Celebrates&#13;
20 Years of Se.rvice&#13;
Only MCC Is Older ,n State&#13;
¯ TULSA- Itwas a different world then. Therewas no ¯&#13;
Will and Grace, few Gay or Lesbian images in print&#13;
¯ or on the airwaves, HIV was not yet discovered, and&#13;
¯ what was later called AIDS was just beginning to be&#13;
seen in New York City and San Francisco. The&#13;
¯ Stonewall Riots had only ocurred 10 years before,&#13;
¯ Gay people were still subject to arrests and harass-&#13;
" ment in most of the US, and world.&#13;
¯ In Oklahoma City, community activists began a&#13;
group calledOklahomans forHumanRights (TOHR).&#13;
¯ Tnlsans joined that group and then formed a Tulsa&#13;
; branch. This group lead by three Tulsa attorneys,&#13;
¯ Dennis Neill, Bob Inglish andMikeGreen and others ¯&#13;
later created Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights,&#13;
¯ Oklahoma’s 2nd oldest organization after Tulsa’s&#13;
¯ Metropolitan Community Church United.&#13;
¯ Twenty years later, the world has changed. Tulsa&#13;
¯&#13;
has support groups in the public schools for Lesbian&#13;
¯ and Gay young adults, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and&#13;
Transgenderedpeople are verymuchvisibleinAmeri-&#13;
¯" can media and society butTOHRis still here provid-&#13;
¯ ing community services as at the beginning with all&#13;
volunteer, staffing and not that many dollars.&#13;
¯ Longtime TOHRmember and former boardmere- ¯&#13;
ber Jonathan Stanley remembers being a member as&#13;
¯ early as 1980 or 1981, adding that he recalls Bob&#13;
¯ Inglish as president and meeting in a small upstairs&#13;
¯ room in Stonehorse, a building now known as the ¯&#13;
Consortium. A particularly vivid memory of those&#13;
¯ early days was the controversy whenTOHR rented a&#13;
¯ city pool for an event and cityofficials had the pool&#13;
¯ drained because Gay p_eopl_e_had, used. it..This was in&#13;
the very early days of AIDS when the disease was&#13;
associated exclusively with Gay men and little was&#13;
known about HIV transmission.&#13;
¯ During these years,TOHRhas provided a commu-&#13;
¯ uity information telephone line, civil rights advo-&#13;
¯ cacy, anonymous HIV anti-body testing (eventually&#13;
¯ with paid staff and HIV education outreach workers&#13;
¯ - a program which has spun off as the H.O.P.E.&#13;
¯ Testing Clinic), and for the last several years, a&#13;
¯ community center. The Center was in the Brookside&#13;
¯ neighborhood was first known as the Pride Center&#13;
¯ and featured a 5x8’ flag which flew over the building ¯&#13;
until it was repeatedly stolen. Now the Center is&#13;
¯ known as theTulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
: and has relocated to 21st &amp; Memorial (2114 So.&#13;
¯ Memorial), ironically sharing a wall with one of ¯&#13;
Tulsa’s oldest Lesbian bars, TNT’s.&#13;
," However, TOHR president Greg Gatewood and&#13;
; the proposed new officers, Kerry Lewis, president,&#13;
¯ 1st v.p. Vance Reed, 2nd v.p. Don Glass, secretary ¯&#13;
Curtis Evans, and treasurer Beth Persac, are hoping&#13;
¯ the current location will be a short-term one. TOHR&#13;
¯ has announced a capital raising campaign, the Pyramid&#13;
Project, to purchase a permanent commtmity&#13;
." center.&#13;
." According to Gatewood, the Project has in hand ox&#13;
: in pledges and grants, $65,000 of their goal ot&#13;
¯ $250,000. And the organization has set up legal&#13;
restrictions such that all gifts to the Pyramid Projec!&#13;
¯ arerestricted to that useonly. Also, thoserules (whicl:&#13;
¯ were reviewed by outside legal counsel and CPA’s" ¯&#13;
restrict overhead expenditures to a maximum of&#13;
¯ and all labor for the project is volunteer.&#13;
: Gatewood notes that the organization is setting uI&#13;
web sites for TOHR and the Pyramid Projec&#13;
¯ (www.tohr.org and www.pyramidproject.org) whicl&#13;
¯ they expect to be available in mid-December.&#13;
." To celebrate the 20th anniversary of TOHR, th~&#13;
¯ group will hold a Holiday reception and silent auctiol&#13;
: on Dec. 10th from 4-7pm, see TOHR, p.&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’s, 1737 S Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb, 1926 E. Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Sqtmre&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*Rene~ades/Rainbow. Rooni, 1649.S. Main&#13;
*TNT’s, 211,4 S. Memorial !&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338E! 3rd "&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119&#13;
835-2376&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
834-4234&#13;
58523405&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584-1308&#13;
*The ’Yellow Brick Road Piab; 2630 E. 15th 749-1563 ’&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Book~ ’&amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders B0oks’ 8~ Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside JeWelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehri~,:3807C S. Peoria&#13;
*Cheap Th~ills,~::2(~iOE. 1 lth&#13;
743-1000&#13;
250-5034&#13;
665-4580&#13;
712-1122&#13;
712-9955&#13;
494~2665&#13;
743-5272..&#13;
746-0313&#13;
295"-5868&#13;
Cherry St. Ps,yEtirthdt~py, 1515 S. Lewis 58’1-0902, 743=4117&#13;
Community’CI~ihiiig~’Kerby Baker . " 622-0700&#13;
Tim Daniel, At~tonie~ 352-9504, 800-742-9468’&#13;
*Deco to Discoi" 3212 E. 15th 749=362Q.&#13;
Doghouse 6n-.Brr0kside, 3311 S. Peoria 744-5556&#13;
*Elite Boules-&amp; Vi~t~0S, 821 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
Encompass,Travel," I3161H N. Memorial 369=8555&#13;
Ross Edwar~l:Sal6ii i 584~0337, 712~9379&#13;
Events Uniimited;; 507S. Main&#13;
¯&#13;
5920460&#13;
Floral Design-S~dioi~3404 S,. Peoria " " 744~9595&#13;
Four Star ImpOrt.AutOmotive, 9906 E. 55th P1. ’ 610-0880&#13;
Cathy Furlong;PhiD.~ 1980 Utica Sq..Med. Cir.- 628-3709&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare 808~8026&#13;
*Gloria Jear;’~ .Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st" 742-1460&#13;
Learme MTG’rO~s~’En~i~ance &amp;financial pl,.~a~.ng. 459~9349&#13;
Mark T. Ha~by~A’ttOrney&#13;
*Sandra J. I~ll,M~S;Tsychotherapy, 2865 ~i ~kelly745:74427414101T&#13;
*Internafiol~al T~urs...... 341:6866&#13;
Jacox Aniraal Cliifie, 2732 E. 15th .... 712-2.750&#13;
*Jared’s Antlques;"1602 E. 15th - - 582-3018&#13;
David KauSk~y~:~otmtry Club Barbering 747-0236&#13;
The Keepers; HoUsekeeping &amp; Gardening 582-8460&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers; ’1635 E. 15 599-8070&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #21C -’ 747-5466.&#13;
*Living A~tSpaee; 308 South Kenosha 585-1234&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd 584-3112~&#13;
Mingo Valley’Flowers, 9720c E. 31 663-59341&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place 664-2951&#13;
Puppy Pause: IF,1060 S. Mingo 838-7626&#13;
*The Pride StOre............... 743-4297&#13;
Rainbowz’0~ the River B+B, POB 696, 74101 747-5932&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning ....... 834:0617-&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834~7921, 747-4746&#13;
Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square ...... 749-~6301&#13;
Paul Tay, Car’Salesman 260-7829&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis 481-0558.&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247-S: Harvard 835-5563&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Cotmsding 743-1733&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan 665-2222&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
www.gaytulsa.org - website for Tulsa Gays &amp;Lesbians&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6 583-7815&#13;
B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S~ Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th P1. &amp; Florence&#13;
Church of the Restoration UU, 1314 N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*Community of Hope Church, 2545 S. Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159. e-mail: TulsaNews@earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor: Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors: James Christjohn, Karin Gregory, Barry&#13;
Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche, Lamont Lindstrom, Esther&#13;
Rothblum. Mary Schepers, Hughston Walkinshaw&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1st of each month, the entire contents&#13;
of this publication are protected by US copyright 1998 by&#13;
~oL~/:~,~Nt~v~ and may not be reproduced either in whole&#13;
or in part wi~out written permission from the publisher.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’s&#13;
sexual orientation. Correspondence is assumed to be for&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property of, T.oLu~./:~.’.. N~. Each reader is&#13;
entitled to 4 copies of each. edition at distribution&#13;
-points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
¯ *Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457 ¯&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics’&amp;&#13;
¯ Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74t70-1475 " ~ 355-3140&#13;
~Fellowshipcongreg.Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
¯¯ -*FreeSpiritWomen’sCenter, callforloeation&amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 " " 747-6827&#13;
¯ Friends in UnitySocial Org., POB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
: HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
¯ *Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194 ¯&#13;
HOPE,-HIV Oiitreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
¯ *HouseoftheHoly SpiritMinstries;1517 S. Memorial 224-4754&#13;
¯ *MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715 ¯&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral PI. - , 748-3111&#13;
¯ NOW;Nat’l Org. for Women, POB 14068, 74159 365-5658&#13;
¯ " ,OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tuls~&#13;
seefrom anumber oflawmal~ers who signed&#13;
a letter earlier this year asking the state&#13;
Department of Education to invesugate&#13;
Grand Haven High School for allowing Gay&#13;
speakers to talk to students about being Gay&#13;
during "Diversity Days."&#13;
House Speaker-elect Rick Johnson, RLeRoy,&#13;
and~GOP Rep. Valde Garcia ;o_.[&#13;
DeWitt were two. of the nine. staie House&#13;
members who signed the iletter. Both,say,&#13;
they wi!l not have_any problems worki,r~g&#13;
with Kolb. The House will retain its 58-52&#13;
Republican majority when the new session&#13;
starts. "I don’t agree with the philosophies&#13;
of the Democratic Party, but that doesn’t&#13;
mean I don’t work with Democrats," Garcia&#13;
said. "Just because I don’t approve of his&#13;
lifestyle doesn’t mean I can’t work with&#13;
him."&#13;
¯&#13;
Kolb’s experience in government and&#13;
: ability to handle himself well even when&#13;
! others disagree with him will help him in&#13;
¯ Lansing, said Jeffrey Montgomery, executive&#13;
director of the Detroit-based Gay rights&#13;
¯ group Triangle Foundation. "He’s been&#13;
¯ aroundmany,many,,ch~lenging situations,"&#13;
.: Montgomery said. He s going to be able to&#13;
: handle ahar;dful ofignorantlegislators very&#13;
¯ easily."&#13;
¯ While Kolb believes the media makes a&#13;
¯ bigger deal about his election than anyone&#13;
: else, he knows his role~is important. He says&#13;
¯ the ultimate benefit of his election is as an&#13;
¯ example to members of the Gay community.&#13;
"Any young person, regardless of their&#13;
; sexual orientation, whohears about this will&#13;
¯"- .t~-.G, POB 52800, 74152&#13;
." ~*Planned Parenthood,1007 S. Peori~a&#13;
....tMme-’Timers, P.O: B.ox52t 18, 74152 --&#13;
R;A:L N:; Regional AIDS Interfaith Network -&#13;
¯Red.Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8&#13;
St. Aidan’S Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinriati&#13;
" StTDu~stan’sEpiscopal, 5635 E. 71st&#13;
.*St: Jerome’s Parish Church; 205 W. King&#13;
¯ *TulsaArea United Way,- 1430 S..Boulder&#13;
~-*TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian.Health Care. 582-7225&#13;
¯ Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 ....... 595-4105&#13;
.......~.,2Confideufial HIV Testing -by appt. on Thursdays ionly "&#13;
:.~.Tulsi!O!d.a.T0rH,.t!m.an Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
"..- ~.U.L.S.A.iTulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
- .2 T~s~a City Hall, G~0und Floor Vestibule&#13;
;.... Tiii~ii CommUnityCoil~ge Campuse~&#13;
~ *TulsaGay Community Center, 21st &amp; Memorial 743-4297&#13;
; Unity Church of Clirigtianity,3355 s. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
"BARTLESVILLE&#13;
"-B~fl~svill~Piibllc Library, 600S=. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
TAHLEQUAH ..........&#13;
¯ Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
49-490t ¯ "’ realiz.e..that ~ere’s a world of opportunity,"&#13;
587 76?4.... he said..,~oo often, that s not the message&#13;
our community and others hear." . - , _.&#13;
749-4195&#13;
584-2325&#13;
425-7882&#13;
492-7140&#13;
582-3088&#13;
583-7171&#13;
¯ Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church&#13;
¯ ~Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570&#13;
¯ EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS ¯&#13;
Autumn Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
¯&#13;
Jim &amp; Breut’s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
¯ DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
¯ Emerald Raiiabow,45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
¯ MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
¯ Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
¯ Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
¯ Positive Idea Marketing Plans- ¯&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
¯ White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
¯&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
¯ Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U1.34&#13;
918-456-7900&#13;
918-453-9360&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
501-253-7457&#13;
501-253-6807&#13;
501-253-5445&#13;
501-253-9337&#13;
501-253-2776&#13;
501-253-5332&#13;
501-624-6646&#13;
501-253-6001&#13;
501-253-4074&#13;
417-623-4696&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Notall are Gay-owned butall are Gay-friendly.&#13;
Memorabilia from the years will be on display&#13;
as well as auction items from artists and&#13;
¯ merchants such as Antiquaries inTulsa, P.S.&#13;
, Gordon, DavidHoot, T.A. Lorton, Kathleen&#13;
¯ Pendergrass, Rand’s Art &amp; Antiques, Mary&#13;
¯&#13;
Schepers and others. Curt &amp; Marj’s Cater-&#13;
" ing will offer refreshments as may other&#13;
¯ Tulsa restaurants.&#13;
¯" On Dec. 1 lth, TOHR and PFLAG, Par-&#13;
¯&#13;
cuts, Families and Friends of Lesbians and&#13;
¯ Gays will hold their annual joint Holiday&#13;
potluck dinner at the Center at 7pm. The&#13;
: entree will be provided as will soft drinks&#13;
." and tableware. Attendees should bring veg-&#13;
¯ etables, salads and desserts and may call ¯&#13;
743-4297. to know which of those to bring..&#13;
¯ Gatewood also notes that planning for&#13;
¯ next year’s Diversity Celebration 2001,&#13;
¯ which includes the Parade, a post-parade ¯&#13;
¯ Festival and ablack-tie dinnerwill continue&#13;
a mid-January meeting. The precise date&#13;
¯ will be announced later, t 7pro. The entree-&#13;
¯. will be provided as will soft drinks and&#13;
tableware. Attendees should bring veg-&#13;
¯ etables, salads and desserts and may call the&#13;
¯ Center at 743-4297 for which of those to&#13;
¯ bring.&#13;
Gatewood ~so notes that planning for&#13;
¯ next year’s Diversity Celebration 2001,&#13;
." which includes the Parade, a post-parade&#13;
¯ Festival and ablack-tie dinner will continue&#13;
~ a mid-January meeting¯ The precise date&#13;
¯ will be announced later.&#13;
World AIDS Day&#13;
by Chris Labonte, semorpolicy advocate&#13;
Human Rights Campaign&#13;
As we commemorate the first World AIDS Day of the&#13;
21st Century,itis important to bothcelebrate our achievements&#13;
over HIV and AIDS and work vigorously to ensure&#13;
there will be continued success in thcfuture. With success&#13;
in treatments, we risk the danger of resting on our laurels.&#13;
Instead,:we :mus~ rededicate ourselves to building upon&#13;
these victories anff creating a future without HIV and&#13;
AIDS. ~People with the diseas~e live longer and healthier&#13;
lives yet the number of those’whbar¢ newly infected in&#13;
our country each year remains steady at 40,000.&#13;
The.new barrier to treatment andprevention is complacency.&#13;
It comes from a variety of places and appears in&#13;
many forms. New highly active antiretroviral therapies&#13;
have contributed to the welcome steep decline in AIDS&#13;
deaths in our nation. Media and advertising campaigns&#13;
for these therapies signal that one can live and should live&#13;
a robust and long life - you can go rock climbing, ski&#13;
down the highest mountain, and continue to do fulfilling&#13;
work. While all of this is true, they fail to mention that&#13;
these therapies require years of medication, multiple&#13;
dtses of pills each day - sometimes with possible side&#13;
effects- and all at a great expense.&#13;
This somewhat slanted view of our treatment success&#13;
may contribute to our prevention failure. Although gay&#13;
¯ and bisexual men hage made strides in reducing the&#13;
percentage of HIV infections attributed to male-to-male&#13;
sexual contact, men who have sex with men still account&#13;
for approximately 40percent ofnew infections each year.&#13;
By not recognizing the tree costs ofHIV infection, young&#13;
gay and bisexual men are engaging in risky behavior;&#13;
such as intentional unprotected anal andoral sex.Arecent&#13;
study suggests that the more optimistic memwere about&#13;
the new treatments, the less likely they were to use safe&#13;
sex precautions or limit their number of sexual parmers.&#13;
Moreover, existing health ~disparities among commm&#13;
nitieS of color tuake treatments particularly out.of reach&#13;
for them. For the first time, the numbek Of gay men fromcommunities&#13;
of color - African Americans, Latinos,&#13;
Asian Pacific-Islanders, Native American. and others -&#13;
outnumber the number of white gay and bisexual men in&#13;
new AIDS cases, according to the Centers for Disease&#13;
Control, the federal agency :primarily responsible for&#13;
prevention of HIV/AIDS. Prevention is also particularly&#13;
concerning with communities of color, where young gay&#13;
and bisexual men of color are often confronted with both&#13;
homophobia and racism. We must address this situation&#13;
immediately and offer prevention strategies targeted to&#13;
the unique needs of gay and bisexual men of color so they&#13;
¯ can also benefit from treatments available to others. We&#13;
also cannot ignore strategies that we know have been&#13;
successful in reducing HIV transmission in the past. Far&#13;
too often, policy makers ignore proven science to score&#13;
political points at the expense of peoples’ lives. Needle&#13;
exchange programs and abstinence are two of the most&#13;
vivid examples: Successful risk reduction programs also&#13;
save money on future treatment costs.&#13;
The CDC has set forth an ambitious goal to reduce new&#13;
HIV infections inour nation. In addition, the independent&#13;
and science-based Institute ofMedicine recently released&#13;
areport, "No Time to Lose," that supported the use of cost&#13;
effective methods of reducing HIV transmission, including&#13;
needle, exchange programs. A recent study from .the&#13;
Heury.J. Kaiser Family Eotmda_tign~f.o_und that p.arents&#13;
think schools should have more comprehensive sexual&#13;
education curriculum and cover topics that are not generally&#13;
covered, such as sexual orientation. Effective prevention&#13;
methods deserve support - both financial and&#13;
political support-from Congress, the administration, the&#13;
public health community, and other impacted communities.&#13;
We must strive to continue to find even better&#13;
treatments, furthe~ reduce the number HIV infections,&#13;
provide additional assistance to nations around the globe&#13;
and develop a vaccine within a reasonable time frame.&#13;
These goals are attainable. In a nation as wealthy and&#13;
creative as ours, we should expect nothing less.&#13;
¯ Tulsa Metropolitan Ministry: Gay People Need Not Exist&#13;
¯ by Tom Neal, editor &amp;publisher ¯ committee process and edited out that inclusion. Because&#13;
It might come as quite a surprise to you to learn that there " of their and their organization’s past involvement in acts&#13;
are no Gay people in Tulsa. There are no Gay bars, no Gay " of anti-Gay discrimination, it looks like Dr. Sandra Rana&#13;
churches, no Gay households, no Gay parents, no Gay kids ¯ and Nancy Day of the National Conference for Commu-&#13;
- you get the idea. : nity and Justice wereresponsible.TMM’s executive board&#13;
At least that’s the message that Tulsa Metropolitan " never saw an inclusive version.&#13;
Ministry (TMM) is putting out. While"cel- This does not excuse the executive&#13;
ebrating" Tulsa’s "diversity" specifically,&#13;
claiming to "... support each other’s right&#13;
to live and prosper in this great community.&#13;
¯ ." TMM. somehow managed t3 "disappear"&#13;
Gay Tulsans.&#13;
Wehave long known that some groups in&#13;
TMM are deeply prejudiced against Lesbian&#13;
and Gay persons. Usually these people&#13;
are identified as Tulsa’S Muslim community,&#13;
some of Tulsa’s Black churches and&#13;
Tulsa’s Orthodox Christian commumty.&#13;
No matter how repugnant their views are&#13;
to us, morally and theologically, wehave to&#13;
¯ support their constitutional right to hold&#13;
: those views. But usually their objections&#13;
are to.-us having those basic civil rights&#13;
protections which they enjoy themsdves.&#13;
They want for it-to continue to be legal for&#13;
us to be firedfrom ourjobs, or thrown out of&#13;
our homes or have our children taken from&#13;
us. They have objected to characterizing&#13;
assaults on us as hate crimes, even if the&#13;
"... apologlsts for&#13;
TMM ma~e the&#13;
excuse that Gay&#13;
Tulsans have&#13;
to be sold out in order&#13;
to appease the Muslims,&#13;
or the Blaeh&#13;
churches&#13;
or the Orthodox.&#13;
Gay people are ashed,&#13;
again and again, year&#13;
after year, to go along&#13;
because some good&#13;
comes out of it..."&#13;
board. In this city, and in this time, it is&#13;
very hard not to know that Gay and Lesbian&#13;
people exist. But their oversight lacks&#13;
the malice of deliberate exclusion.&#13;
Many apologists for TMM make the&#13;
excuse that Gay Tulsans have to be sold&#13;
out in order to appease the Muslims, or the&#13;
Black churches or the Orthodox. Gay&#13;
people are asked, again and again, year&#13;
after year, to go along because some good&#13;
comes out of it.&#13;
But this statement goes too far. It demands&#13;
that we collaborate in the denial of&#13;
our own existence. And those.who sign it&#13;
knowing better, knowing thatTMM’s "diversity"&#13;
statement is profoundly a lie, are&#13;
no less collaborators with evil than those&#13;
who kept silent in the face of Nazi horrors.&#13;
TMMhas long tolerated a double standard.&#13;
Gay people are asked to recognize&#13;
that Tulsa Muslims and others are "funda-&#13;
¯ mentalists" and we are asked to tolerate&#13;
same act is a hate crime when they are the target.&#13;
: Butthey hadn’t before soughtto deny our very existence.&#13;
This is largely a symbolic act but in some ways, it is more&#13;
~ powerful than the others. Even when our fundamental civil&#13;
¯ rights are denied, we are atleast acknowledged as existing.&#13;
¯ Ironically, part Of the impetus for this "diversity" statement&#13;
was a visit by a particularly virulent part.of the Klu-&#13;
Klux Klan. Traditionally, theKKK’s principle targets have&#13;
b~nJews andBlacks.But as Gay and Lesbian people have&#13;
become more visible, we have been included very explicitly&#13;
in Klan hatred. This Klan visit was-no.exception. And&#13;
while the Klan did not forget us, Tulsds "do-gooder"&#13;
hypocrites pretend that we don’t exist.&#13;
Now not all of TMM’s members take this position.&#13;
Russell Bennett of Fellowship Congregational Church&#13;
sought to add sexual¯ orientation to TMM’s "diversity"&#13;
statement. But ina deeply disturbing and shameful action,&#13;
one or two commi ttee members appear to have violated the&#13;
to three equally weighted categories; community leadership,&#13;
scholastic merit, and financial need.&#13;
This year,the scholarship selection committee is .comprised&#13;
of a student representative from five of OLIC&#13;
campus organizations, and five OklahomaGLBT community&#13;
leaders..The chair-person of this year, selectiOn committee&#13;
is Whitten. The organizers add that applications will&#13;
be available Dec. 1st from our OLIC organizations, at the&#13;
Oklahoma City and Tulsa Gay Commlmity Centers and&#13;
online at www.geocides.’com/okolic/. Applications will be&#13;
due on Feb. 15,2001 and the winners will be announced in&#13;
late March.&#13;
Also, the Oklahoma ]mmbda IntercJall:egiate C0aii~0~&#13;
hold a fundraising reception in Tulsa Oli December 2’ls(&#13;
from7 - 10pm at thehome ofRick and Susan Doss in Tulsa.&#13;
Funds raised by this event will be used for the Oklahoma&#13;
Lambda Youth Scholarship. RSVP to 405-325-4452. A&#13;
donation of $25 is suggested.&#13;
The goals of the Oklahoma Lambda Intercollegiate&#13;
Coalition are:&#13;
I. Raising awareness of GLBT youth ~ssues within our&#13;
community, schools, and society;&#13;
II. Sharing information and resources in an effort to&#13;
provide the best possible programming for sponsoring&#13;
organizations;&#13;
their bias agaanst us even as Muslims, Jews, Christians,&#13;
and. Unitarians somehow manage to respect each other.&#13;
White supremacist groups, like the Christian Identity&#13;
movement and .others who use theology much like the&#13;
Muslims do to justify their prejudice, are not welcomed&#13;
into.TMM. Buta special place is carved outfor anti,Gay&#13;
prejudice,&#13;
It is finally too much. And it is time that good people&#13;
who know better stand up for their neighbors and friends&#13;
and families, ff this means that Tulsa cannot support its&#13;
real diversity, then at least we’ll be telling .the truth.&#13;
Muslim Tulsans might have to acknowledge that they&#13;
cannot object to anti-Muslim bias while oppressing Gay&#13;
Tulsans. Black Tulsans ought to know better..And Jewish&#13;
Tulsans mightneed to do for Gay people what was done&#13;
for them by non-Jews in the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s,which is&#13;
to be vocally and visibly advocates for civil rights.&#13;
It’s time now for this change.&#13;
¯ III. Supporting a Queer youth movement to impact the&#13;
: politics of our state and nation;&#13;
¯ IV. Providing resources to the Oklahoma GLBT youth&#13;
¯ community including political and health education, a ¯&#13;
safe social environment, and an opportunity to cultivate&#13;
: leadership skills, and;&#13;
¯ V. Fostering the conception and growth of new GLBT&#13;
: student groupsacross Oklahoma.&#13;
¯ For more information, contact, Oklahoma Lambda In-&#13;
¯- tercollegiateCoalition 900Asp,OMU, P,m. 363,Box 169,&#13;
Norman OK 37019-4058 or telephone to.405-325-4452.&#13;
¯ www.geocities.com]okolic&#13;
i Stout Wins Okla.Mr.Leather&#13;
: T.U.L.S. A~ (Tulsa Uniform Leather Seekers Associa-&#13;
¯ .ti.’9fa):held the annual Oklahoma Mr. Leather contest&#13;
"! ~ O.cto~b_dr 20-22 at the Silver S’t~tr in Tulsa. Four Contestants&#13;
from the state competed in c~ate~ories that included inter,&#13;
view, streetwear, physique and full leather image. Seven&#13;
judges from the US and Canada judged the contestants.&#13;
International Mr. Leather 2000 Mike Taylor was among&#13;
the distinguished panel. Contestants were Jason Pelkey of&#13;
Tulsa, Jim Stout of Ramona, Stephen Scott of OKC-Mr.&#13;
Sooner State Leather 2000, and Mark Goins of Tulsa-Mr.&#13;
Tulsa Leather 2000.&#13;
The weekend event began with a tour of the local clubs&#13;
and Tulsa’s Gay Community Services Center. The interviews&#13;
were Saturday morning and the rest of the contest&#13;
was held that night. Stephen Scott was first runner-up.&#13;
Scout Troop Defies&#13;
National Anti-Gay Ban&#13;
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A second Rhode Island&#13;
Scout troop is defying the national organization’s ban&#13;
on homosexuals, Members, leaders, and parents from&#13;
Boy ScoutTroop 28 have sentaletterto the Narragansett&#13;
Council of Boy-Scouts saying they will ignore the&#13;
policy. The troopjoins Cub Scout Pack 88, which sent&#13;
a similar letter, The Providence Journal reported.&#13;
~&#13;
.The national policy is root~,in a 1910 oath that Says&#13;
Scofi~- ~’.st ke~p~el~s-~ ,.ni0ralty straigl~t:~’iThe&#13;
’ !. b~via’g tlplldld~y!th~ Siipr~aid CourtthisS~er,but&#13;
’"about ~:d~ozen~ trbb~ ~at~oflwlde have stud thaiwill&#13;
The leaders of Pack 28 said the words "morally&#13;
straight" have nothing to do with sexual orientation.&#13;
....’The oath didnotmean to banhomosextmls but to keep&#13;
.....on the straight and narrow and do what is right," said&#13;
Y"Allen M. Dennison, an assistant scoutmaster with&#13;
Troop 28, who has four sons in Scouting. Our assessment&#13;
of whatis right is that everyone be included, and&#13;
" that includes Gay leaders and Gay Scouts."&#13;
..... The Narragansett Council will forward the letter&#13;
fromTroop28to theBoy Scouts ofAmericaheadquar-&#13;
’ ters in Irving~ Texas, as it did with the letter from Pack&#13;
88, said state ¢o,.u~,ci! Spokesman David Preston.&#13;
Pack 88hash theard from the national Boy Scouts&#13;
regarding its status and calls to the Boy Scouts of&#13;
America were not returned. Officially, troops that&#13;
" ignore Scouting rule~ Will have their charter revoked.&#13;
To date, however, the Boy.Scouts of America has not&#13;
revoked thecharter of a troop or council for ignoring&#13;
.the banon Gays.&#13;
The ban made news inRhode Island last year, when&#13;
a 16-year-old Eagle Scout filed a complaint with the&#13;
Rhode Island Human Rights Commission saying he&#13;
was denied a job at a Scout camp because he is Gay.&#13;
Maryland Can Ban "&#13;
Anti-Gay Discrimination&#13;
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Gov. Parris Glendening~s&#13;
:plan to add Gays to Maryland’s anti-discrimination&#13;
law likely would not violate the First Amendment&#13;
guarantee of free exercise of religion, according to the&#13;
state attorney general’s office.&#13;
Assistant Attomey General Kathryn M. Rowe issued&#13;
the four-page legal opinion this week at the&#13;
request of-Delegate Sandy,I. Rosenberg, who is expected&#13;
to use it to counter religious-based arguments&#13;
-.. against the proposed legislation. "I did this so we&#13;
would have a:.iegal opinion on the matter instead of&#13;
rhetoric that is not precise," Rosenberg said. "In an&#13;
- issue as emotional as .this, everybody should do their&#13;
best not to misstate the law."&#13;
Rosenberg asked for the opinion after a representative&#13;
of the Diocese ofWilmington testified against the&#13;
governor’s plan at a public heating in Salisbury.The&#13;
diocese includes Maryland’s Eastern Shore.&#13;
The hearing was conducted by a commission ereated&#13;
by the governor to solicit testimony about discrimination&#13;
against Gays, Lesbians, bisexuals and&#13;
transsexuals "The teaching o.f the Catholic Church and&#13;
societal tradition does not accept homosexuality as a&#13;
legitimate lifestyle," the diocese said in a position&#13;
paper presented at the hearing.&#13;
Thepositionpaper alSO said the proposed legislation&#13;
"significantly and Wrongfully encroaches (on) the&#13;
First Amendment, free-exercise rights of religious&#13;
institutionsand ofpersons whose actions are dri-ven by&#13;
their religious beliefs."&#13;
In her opinion, Rowe said there wasprecedent for&#13;
laws with "the incidental effect of burdening certain&#13;
religious practices" - as long as the laws do not single&#13;
out one religion. There is also precedent suggesting&#13;
that the hiring of ministers would be exempt from the&#13;
proposed bill, Rowe said.&#13;
: Navy Ends Harrassment&#13;
: of Former Seaman ¯&#13;
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP)-A former midshipman who&#13;
: resigned from the U.S. Naval Academy amid accusa-&#13;
¯ tious ofhomosexuality won’thave to repay the govem-&#13;
~ ment for his education, the Navy has ruled/The deci-&#13;
¯ sion means that Tommie Watkins, 25, will not have to&#13;
." reimburse the Navy the $86,000 that covered his train-&#13;
. ing and tuition, plus interest.&#13;
i&#13;
Watkins, president of his classand an aspiring Navy&#13;
~ ~pil0t; ~s~id bewas pres’sured to. resign ~and did so&#13;
~ ~ beeau~e he feared ht~mophobia ’would preve~t him&#13;
~- fromreceiviffga fair trial:’After leaving, he acknowl-&#13;
-" edged being Gay. Officer trainees who drop out or are&#13;
¯ expelled during theirjtmior or senior years are required&#13;
¯ by Pentagon policy to repay the government for their&#13;
¯ education, either ~in cash or through enlisted service.&#13;
¯ The Navy’s Board of Correction of Naval Records&#13;
." said last year that he was a victim 6f,"error and&#13;
¯ injustice," and recommended the academy waive the&#13;
." payment. That decision was overruled in March by&#13;
." Carolyn Becraft, the assistant secretary ofthe Navy for&#13;
¯ manpower. Watkins sued, and on the day of the dead-&#13;
: line for the Navy to respond, his lawyer got word of the&#13;
: reversal.&#13;
." Watkins, who works in Miami as the project director&#13;
¯¯ for an AIDS and HIV ministry, called the decision&#13;
¯ "long overdue and totally justified." "It’s kind of&#13;
ironic, because the Navy says its core values are honor,&#13;
¯ courage and commitment," he said. "It seems like I had&#13;
_. to exhibit those qualities to win this case.’"&#13;
¯ Officials from the Naval Academy declined to com-&#13;
." ment on the decision.&#13;
¯ Iowa Order Banning Anti-&#13;
Gay Bias to Be Reviewed&#13;
¯ DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - It’s up to a Polk County&#13;
¯ district ,judge to rule on the legality-, of Gov. Tom ¯&#13;
Vilsack s’ci~il-rights order. District Judge Glenn Pille&#13;
heard lawyers’ arguments about the order during a&#13;
¯ recent hearing.&#13;
¯ Vilsack issued an executive order in September&#13;
1999, forbidding discrimination against Gays, Lesbi-&#13;
¯ ans and Transexuals in state government employment.&#13;
: The move sparked a legislative debate. Conservative&#13;
¯ legislators were particularly angry that the order ap- ¯&#13;
plies to Transsexuals. A majority of lawmakers voted&#13;
¯ to repeal the order, but Vilsack vetoed the legislation.&#13;
¯ Twenty-three legislators led by Republican Senate&#13;
¯ Majority Leader Stewart Iverson, challenged the order&#13;
¯&#13;
in a lawsuit filed in July. They said that Vilsack&#13;
¯ overstepped his authority and thathe, in effect, rewrote&#13;
¯ the law. ¯&#13;
Vilsack has said he is carrying out a state law&#13;
¯ providing equal opportunity in state employment to all&#13;
: persons. Iowa Deputy Attorney General Julie Pottorff&#13;
¯ represented Vilsack at the hearing. She said the dispute&#13;
¯ is a legal question, and that Vilsack acted within his&#13;
¯ auth6rity ensuring that legal protections apply to all&#13;
¯ executive branch employees. ’°-l’his is no more than a ¯&#13;
¯ political disagreement," Portorff told Pille.&#13;
Des Moines lawyer Mark McCormick is represent-&#13;
" ing the legislators and a former state employee. He&#13;
¯ argued at the hearing that the order infringes on the ¯&#13;
constitutional separation of powers and said "The&#13;
¯ governor has no power by- ~xecutive order to create&#13;
~ ¯ law." -&#13;
: Vatican in Tizzy About&#13;
¯ "Fake Marriages"&#13;
¯ VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican has blasted&#13;
¯ lawmakers for givinglegal recognition to so-called"de&#13;
~ facto" unions - including those between Gays - and&#13;
¯ said attempts to allow adoption by Gays were "a great&#13;
danger." A 77-page document made public in Novem-~&#13;
Community&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at 1 lam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm, Sunday Eve. Service, 6pm&#13;
¯ 1517 S. Memorial, 628-0802, Info: 224-4754&#13;
The Open Arms Project&#13;
Young Adult Support Group&#13;
Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment&#13;
Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers&#13;
9413 E. 31st St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
918-663-5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-~.4-5934&#13;
Family Owned &amp; Operated&#13;
Trinna .L.W. Burrows, LSW, ACSW&#13;
Child, Family, Individual &amp; Couple Psychotherapy&#13;
(918) 743-9559&#13;
2121 South Columbia, Suite 420&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74114,3518&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
21st Street &amp; Memorial&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
.743-.GAYS (743=4297)&#13;
6-9 pm! Sudda~ ".-.!F~’{day, ~ ~ . ~ ~ ° !&#13;
12,9~,prn~ ~Saturday, all sales benefit the C~nte?&#13;
Important&#13;
Information&#13;
Call 212-461:2976&#13;
Interested?&#13;
Call 918=447-8602&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa. .&#13;
Free Confidentia!.HIV Testing&#13;
Walk:in Clinics&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs., 5 -8 pm&#13;
at the Center,. 1307 East 38th&#13;
Daytime appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
KIM WILKS Independent Consultant for&#13;
357-1757&#13;
~n just a matter of hours&#13;
.Kelly Kirby, CPA, PC&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
a professional corporation&#13;
747-5466&#13;
4021 South Harvard Avenue, Suite 210, Tulsa 74135&#13;
ber by The Pontifical Council for the Family was built&#13;
heavily around similar denunciations over the last few&#13;
years by Pope JohnPattl II.&#13;
Italian Gay groups, stung over the summer by the&#13;
Vatican’s moves to try to block Gay pride events in&#13;
Rome, denounced the latest pronouncement on homosexual&#13;
unions.&#13;
The Vatican’s council on family matters also presented&#13;
a proposal to make sex crimes against children,&#13;
including "sex tourism" exploitation, crimes against&#13;
humanity. But .the bulk of the positions ,pr.esented.&#13;
hammered away at unions betwb.en Gays as well as&#13;
legal recognition for.~tmm.arried hetgcosexual~couple~.&#13;
While not citing any particular, .country, thd .,Vatica.n,.&#13;
spoke of ’~great concern" aboutlawiiaakers’ efforts "in&#13;
many countries with an ancient Christian tradition" to&#13;
give legal status to unmarried couples.&#13;
Earlier this month, Germany.granted legal recognition&#13;
to Gay couples, following similar moves.ove~ the&#13;
1~ decade by other Western European countries.&#13;
" De facto unions ~e the result.of private behavior&#13;
andshoul’d remain 0ni~e pri~at~ 1,ev_el ," . the Vatican&#13;
said. It described as a ~erious sign, of.the-contempo,~&#13;
rary br0~tkd0wn in the s0dal an~ ~oral.conscilence,&#13;
political eftbrts tO give institutionalstatus to delfacto&#13;
couples. It Said attempts to legalize thead0ption of&#13;
children by Gay. ~Q~ple,s .added ’!an elemen_t.of ~reat&#13;
danger." - ..&#13;
NY Town offers: Benefits&#13;
GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) -The Gr.eenburgh Town&#13;
Board voted un’aJaim6u~ly" tO ’offer health-be]aefits to&#13;
same-sex domestic partners 0f municipal workers.&#13;
"We want to treat all our employees as if they’re&#13;
valuable to us," said Supervisor Paul.Feiner.&#13;
New Yoj~k ~stiite,. Ne~: Yori~ City;._a~nd/~Ve’stchester&#13;
CounU,.plus several ~orporation~,~.rpv.id¢~sach:benefits&#13;
to homosexual couples. Of Westchester s-municipalities,&#13;
only. Eastchester has..acted before&#13;
Greenburgh.&#13;
Under the measure;, which goesinto effect JnJanu-&#13;
..ary, an uumarried,.town, employee who.says-in an&#13;
affidhvit that he or she has hadan exclusive relationship&#13;
for a year can extend medical.and dental coverage&#13;
to\the partner. - " . )_&#13;
Phelps at Phillips Exeter&#13;
EXET.ER, N.H. (AP) - An anti-Gay ch~ch group&#13;
opposed to Phillips ExeterAcadem~~ s p0!~gy .alirwing&#13;
homosexuals to be dorm parents protested outside the&#13;
school recently, v~aving.signs with messages .that included:&#13;
’q’hank GodforA!DS." About adoZenfol!owers&#13;
of the Rev. Fred Phelps of the Westboro B.aptist&#13;
Church of Topeka~ Kan., ~rrivedat ~eS~hob’i~r’rund&#13;
noon after making similar demonstrations in’Ve~ont&#13;
and Maine earlier.&#13;
The, ,church members, oppose a measure Phillips&#13;
Exeter truste~.,S approved in May that al!0ws.Gay and&#13;
,,I~,.sbian faculty and staff to serve as dormitory parents.&#13;
’ it’s destroying the fabric0fthis nation~ the~r~ls/.hat&#13;
this nation ,does have," s,aid Sam Pheligs~Roper’~ the&#13;
Rev.Phelps grandson.".It saslippeDi~lopestraightto&#13;
hell and that’s where this.country is’headed. This is a&#13;
ing match toward the end, when a group of University&#13;
of New Hampshire students arrived to denounce the&#13;
church group.&#13;
"Relax! It’sjust sex," one student shouted. "I preach&#13;
God’s word." "You preach hate." But that’s an accusation&#13;
Phelps’ followers don’t deny. They maintain&#13;
that God hates homosexuals and will destroy any&#13;
society that condones homosexual behavior. ’q’he&#13;
Christian belief is rooted not only in the love of God,&#13;
but also the hate of God. You can’t have one without&#13;
,the. 9~er.,’~’. . .Pt!_dps-Roper said. "That is definitive.&#13;
Th,e~ is~no.question, that Gq~t!ha,t~s, p~9..p!e.]’, ,,&#13;
-~~W.~[bggQ Baptist ,O~,ur..ch ~s. ~gu,t 2Pq i~im~ers.&#13;
. They have picketed~a~ ~e fun~91s of. homosexuals,&#13;
including that of Matthew Shepard,.a Gay man.who&#13;
was brutally beaten and tortured in Wyoming in Octo~&#13;
ber 1998. "He’s in hall. And everyone else who.lives&#13;
daat lifestyle will likely be in he!! with him unle{s.they&#13;
repent," Phelps-Roper said. "Of ~.course, he could.have&#13;
repented, but there’ s a snowball’, s, chance of tha~;happening."&#13;
_.&#13;
¯ The Rev. Phelps did not attend, the demonstr.a_.tion.&#13;
~ His grandson said Phelps,:was .geeded back at his&#13;
¯¯ c,,h.t~h tominister But Phe!ps~Roper.saidthe growing&#13;
acceptance of homosexualit~ made,:their message to&#13;
¯ iEx~ter all the more importan.t. ’;7~..’s.isimportant ~tuff.&#13;
¯ This is a ,matter of life and ~death,’:etemRy h~-re,"&#13;
phelps-Roper said. "When G.0~as said something is&#13;
: ~.abomination, you don’t mes~.~ith it."&#13;
¯ Representatives of 14 churches from the region&#13;
¯ j6i]aekl the university students.i0PPosing Phdps? fol-&#13;
19wers. They said that thoug~flaey:don’t all agree on&#13;
¯ the moral status of homosexu~fity, they univers~ally&#13;
oppose Phelps’ message.&#13;
."While we recognize their, right, to express their&#13;
p,ersonal views freely concermngAcademy policy and&#13;
: ~e subjectin general, we take,~.trong exception to/heir&#13;
¯ rhe.t.ori9and signs denigrati.ng0~r~eighbors,,, the,Rev’&#13;
¯&#13;
¯ DanielWeaver of theExeterUnitedMethodistChurch&#13;
said: ~’We wholcheartedly agree:thathatr’ed, expressed&#13;
¯ or implied, as well as the adVo~icy br promotion of&#13;
¯ haff~lis anathema. It is certaird:y notitt the spirit of the&#13;
¯ v0~b~dsOf Jesus, ’Love your°neiIgl~bor~ as yourself."’&#13;
¯ Accused Murderers of&#13;
" Gay Man to Stand Trial&#13;
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) =T.w,o,teen-agers will stand&#13;
: trial ear)y next year for the murder of a Gay black man&#13;
from.Marion County, a judg.e., ruled~ in November.&#13;
: David Allen Parker, whose lawyers may argue a di-&#13;
: minished .capacity defense;,is ser~ to stand trial in&#13;
¯ Becldey on Jan. 16. His co-defendarit, Jared Wilson.&#13;
¯ will l!0t be tried until February...... ¯&#13;
Par~er, 18, ofGrantTownan~tWilson, 18, ofFairview&#13;
: ar~’charged with first-degree.murder in the July 4&#13;
° beating death of Arthur "J.R." Warren. Police say the&#13;
teens pummeled the 26-year,old acquaintance with&#13;
: their fists and feet, then ran over him four times with&#13;
] Parker’s car to disguise his injuries as a hit-and-run.&#13;
¯ The assault allegedly began after ~Warren told others&#13;
¯" about a sexual relationshiphe claimed to have had with&#13;
: Parker.&#13;
~ Circuit Judge Rodney Merrifield said he will likely&#13;
message that they need." ¯ rule within 10 days whetherjurors at thetrials will hear&#13;
~ ~..m,,d~nts, at .tl],e neari~y,22Q=ye~o!d pri~vate ,high : the teens’ confessions. Defenselawyers argue sheriff’s&#13;
Schorl: apparently ~v~r~fi t irit~Stc;d~j~"h~g it~ ¯ deputies inappropriately obtained the statements the&#13;
Many students and faculty members_wore x~row- :, gtay, 9.t" Lhe_.murd,er,;an accusatton, the deputies have&#13;
colored pins, a symbol of support for homosexuals ¯ denied on the Witness ;/arid&#13;
Judy Quirm, spokeswoman for Phillips Exeter, said " Prosecutors say Warren’s DNA showed up in evithe&#13;
school’s roughly ’1,000 students decided not to&#13;
attend the~demonstration; and instead .-organized a&#13;
diversity celebration in another part of the campus.&#13;
"The values of inclusion and diversity have been&#13;
hallmarks of Phillips Exeter Academy since its formding,"&#13;
she said in a written statement. "The fact an&#13;
objection to these principles is what brings this group&#13;
to Exeter is indeed regrettable "&#13;
The otherwise peacefifl protest erupted into a shout-&#13;
: dence samples taken from the interior, exterior and&#13;
: undercarriage of Parker’s car, as well as on wood&#13;
: paneling and molding from the house where the bea~-&#13;
¯ ing began.&#13;
: Parker’s attorneys, Rebecca Tate and Stephen Fitz.&#13;
¯ also asked the judge for a delay so they could hire ~.,&#13;
~ expert to study their client for a possible diminished&#13;
o capacity defense strategy.&#13;
Bayer Seeks New&#13;
AIDS Treatments&#13;
BERLIN (AP) - Bayer AG, Germany’s&#13;
biggest drugmaker, said Tuesday it will&#13;
join the search fornew AIDS treatments as&#13;
part of a shakeup of its drug research&#13;
activities: The Leverkusen-based company,&#13;
best-known for developing aspirin,&#13;
will look for substances effective against&#13;
resistant viruses, said Wol,fgang Hartwig,&#13;
head of research in’Bayer s pharmaceuti- :&#13;
cal busine.ss group. The company declined&#13;
to specify:how muchit will invest in AIDS&#13;
research. In 2000, it budgeted a total of 1&#13;
billion euros ($845 million) for research&#13;
and development.&#13;
Bayer said it expects to identify the first&#13;
substances suitable for precliuical HIV&#13;
testing within two years. Pharmaceutical&#13;
research will in the future be focused on 13&#13;
fields, including seeking new treatments&#13;
in urology, Alzheimer’s dementia and&#13;
Parkinson’ s disease. Bayer saidit will stop&#13;
its research activities for osteoporosis, fibrosis&#13;
of the liver and stroke.&#13;
Key Protein in&#13;
AIDS. Virus Found&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP) - A protein that&#13;
does housekeeping chores inside cells plays&#13;
a key role in spreading the AIDS virus to&#13;
other cells of the body, researchers report.&#13;
In studies appearing in the Proceedings of&#13;
the National AcademyofSciences (PNAS),&#13;
researchers say that _HIV, the AIDS’virus,&#13;
uses a group of proteins, called&#13;
proteasomes, to assemble new viral partitles&#13;
and to spread those new particles.to&#13;
uninfected cells.&#13;
Ulrich Schubert of the National Institute&#13;
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases&#13;
(NIAID) said test tube studies show that&#13;
blocking the action of the proteasome proteins&#13;
can reduce the spread of HIV infection&#13;
by about 98%. Schubert, the first&#13;
author of one study in PNAS, cautioned&#13;
that the research was conducted only in&#13;
test tubes and it is not known if the&#13;
proteasome inkibitors would work against&#13;
HIV in humans. "We would never inject&#13;
this drug into an HIV-infected person because&#13;
we do not know what would happen,"&#13;
said Schubert.&#13;
Theproteasome inhibitors will be tested&#13;
in monkeys before any human tests are&#13;
considered, and those animal studies could&#13;
take months, he said.&#13;
Dr. Jonathan W. Yewdell, a NIAID researcher&#13;
and a co-author of the study, said&#13;
that althoughinhibitingproteasome shows&#13;
promise as a strategy for treating HIV, "it&#13;
is possible that it may not have any effect&#13;
at all." He said the proteasome function is&#13;
essential for healthy cells and that a drug&#13;
thatblocks thatfunction could affect every&#13;
cell in the body. "It is possible that the&#13;
HIV-infectedcells will be more sensitive&#13;
or that there are effects against the virus&#13;
before" the healthy cells are affected, said&#13;
Yewdell.&#13;
Yewdell and Schubert said cancer researchers&#13;
are experimenting with&#13;
proteasome inhibitors for the treatment of&#13;
prostate cancer and early studies have&#13;
shown no side effects in cancer patients.&#13;
The drug, however, has not been used in&#13;
HIV-infected patients, they said.&#13;
Proteasome’s job inside the cell is to&#13;
identify and destroy old or unneeded proteins.&#13;
Another PNAS study, by researchers&#13;
at Pennsylvania State University, suggests&#13;
that amolecule calledubiquitinplays&#13;
akeyroleinhow viruses use theproteasome&#13;
function in a cell to make new viral partitles.&#13;
Still another PNAS study, by researchers&#13;
from the Dana-Farber Caneer Institute,&#13;
Harvard Medical School and the University&#13;
of Padua in Italy, also demonstrates&#13;
that ubiquitin plays a role in HIV particle&#13;
formation.&#13;
HIV spreads its infection inside thebody&#13;
by forcing white blood cells, called CD4s,&#13;
to make new viral particles. These partitles&#13;
are released from the cells and can&#13;
then infect other cells, spreading the infection&#13;
throughout the body.&#13;
The final part of this virus-making proeess&#13;
is called budding. During budding, a&#13;
new viral particle wraps itself in a membrane&#13;
from the surface of the infected cell&#13;
and completes its development. When the&#13;
budding process is completed, the virus&#13;
particle is released and can then attach to&#13;
an uninfected CD4 cell and continue to&#13;
spread the infection.&#13;
The researchers found that HIV uses the&#13;
proteasome molecules, particularly&#13;
ubiquitin, to complete the assembly of a&#13;
new viral particle at the cell membrane.&#13;
When the pro.teasome action is blocked,&#13;
HIV particle formation is crippled, they&#13;
found.&#13;
"Inhibiting proteasome causes fewer&#13;
viruses to detach from the cell and what&#13;
viru~ is madeis notas good," saidYewdell.&#13;
Proteasome is most active in the budding&#13;
phase of making a new HIV viral&#13;
particle. It is different from protease, an&#13;
enzyme that helps the HIV virus assemble&#13;
precursor proteins into active proteins.&#13;
Some HIV drugs, called protease inhibitors,&#13;
work by blocking the action of the&#13;
protease enzyme.&#13;
Power&#13;
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Customer Service.is Nb~Available 24&#13;
Hours A Day, Seven Days A Week.&#13;
These days, traditional 8-5 business hours&#13;
aren’t always convenient. So PSO has made it&#13;
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Our Customer Service Center operates 24/7&#13;
offering around-the-clock answers to your&#13;
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Or report a power outage. Or&#13;
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standing by to serve you.&#13;
All, day, every day.&#13;
To provide faster response&#13;
to your needs, we have listed&#13;
our toll-free numbers below.&#13;
¯ Leftover Medicines&#13;
Help in Haiti + More&#13;
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - The jar of&#13;
AIDS medications that Moses Alicea&#13;
plucked from among pill bottles and vials&#13;
spilled across the table were bound for the&#13;
dump - worthless in the United States. But&#13;
in Haiti, where the lifesaving drugs will be&#13;
sent, they are priceless. The medications -&#13;
about $20,000 worth of protease inhibitors&#13;
that can suppress HIV and prevent&#13;
progression of AIDS - will be sent to the&#13;
Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation to&#13;
help people who would otherwise never&#13;
receive the treatment.&#13;
At the root of the salvage effort is the&#13;
vast gulfbetween availability of the medications&#13;
in affluentcountries tike the United&#13;
States and developing countries like Haiti.&#13;
"This is importantbecause there’s peqple&#13;
living with HIV who can’t get the meds&#13;
like we do," said Alicea, 36, who gave his&#13;
ownleftoverAIDS medications. "ffI can’t&#13;
use them, somebody else can. There’s alot&#13;
of stuffoutthere that’ sjustbeing dumped."&#13;
Some 95% of the more than 33 million&#13;
people with HIV and AIDS in the world&#13;
are in poor countries, according to the&#13;
World Health Orgamzation. In those regions,&#13;
the so-called drug "cocktails" -&#13;
Clip And Save "&#13;
p I I I I I I--I I I I III&#13;
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TOLL-FREE SERVICE&#13;
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Preguntas Sobre su Cuenta: 1-888-216-3491&#13;
Fa]ta De Suministr0:1-888-218-3924&#13;
Public Service Company of Oklahoma&#13;
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Medical&#13;
Excellenc.e And&#13;
Compass.lonate&#13;
Care S nce&#13;
1926.&#13;
a ¯ ST. JOHN MEDICAL CENTER&#13;
q P Medical Excellence-Compassi’onate Care&#13;
whichcan costupwardof $20,000 per year&#13;
in the United States -are about 30 times&#13;
the average monthly income and far out of&#13;
reach for most people, according to the&#13;
group Doctors Without Borders.&#13;
The issue of global drug acess has becomeheated.&#13;
Protesters doggedVice President&#13;
A1 Gore last year about drug prices in&#13;
Africa, and the issue is apriority for institutions&#13;
like the World Health Organization&#13;
that are trying to combat the disease.&#13;
Clients of the group Cambridge -Cares&#13;
About AIDS are collecting the drugs from&#13;
friends and family members - even from&#13;
their own medicine cabinets. Most of the&#13;
donated drugs are left over when a person&#13;
with AIDS switches drug regimens because&#13;
of debilitating sitle effects. Since&#13;
last December, the group has delivered&#13;
some $200,000 worth of medications to&#13;
Parmers in Health, a Boston-based organization&#13;
with a clinic in Haiti which distributes&#13;
them to people with AIDS and HIV.&#13;
Partners in Health executive director&#13;
Dr. Jim Yong Kim said between 50 and&#13;
100 people in Haiti are regularly receiving&#13;
the medications gathered by the Cambridge&#13;
group. But there’s an enormous&#13;
unmet need that this effort cannot even&#13;
begin to solve without global attention -&#13;
and a global solution- to the drug crisis, he&#13;
said. "This is now an absolute disaster and&#13;
an absolute crisis," Kim said. "It’s a moral&#13;
problem, but it’s also an economic and&#13;
political problem.’"&#13;
TheWorld Health Organizationhas protocols&#13;
for donated drugs. But the organization&#13;
does not have separate guidelines for&#13;
AIDS medications, which generally involve&#13;
complex daily regimens of 15 to 20&#13;
different pills that require close medical&#13;
supervision. And the medication supply&#13;
must be consistent, because interrupting&#13;
the regimen can result in the HIV virus&#13;
becoming resistant to treatment.&#13;
Only a handful of groups send unused&#13;
AIDS drugs overseas. Kim said agencies&#13;
like his are "writing the book" on salvaging&#13;
AIDS drugs. There is no agency overseeing&#13;
the practice, no way of knowing&#13;
how common it is or whether groups are&#13;
adhering to WHO guidelines for drug donations,&#13;
according to Michael R. Reich,&#13;
acting chair of the Department of Populationand&#13;
International Health at the Harvard&#13;
School of Public Health.&#13;
But he said that while donations will&#13;
never fill the need for drugs in poor countries,&#13;
this effort highlights the problem.&#13;
"Troubling questions arise from gaps in&#13;
access," he said. "Haiti is a country with&#13;
extraordinary needs for good drugs, and&#13;
donations provide a mechanism for trying&#13;
to address the gap."&#13;
James Russo, spokesman for the Partnership&#13;
for Quality Medical Donations, an&#13;
organization composed of drug companies&#13;
and non-govemmen.tal organizations&#13;
thatTdistribute free drugs o~¢erseas, said it&#13;
is a"perfecfly reasonable and understandable&#13;
and decent thing to do."&#13;
Such donations may not technically be&#13;
legal, because the recipient is not the person&#13;
for whom the drugs were prescribed,&#13;
he said. But if the drugs are properly used&#13;
and distributed, thenpublichealthbenefits&#13;
override such legal issues. "The fact that it&#13;
needs doing is, to me, a tragic observation&#13;
about the state of public health policy," he&#13;
said. "Nothing but good can come from&#13;
¯ something like this."&#13;
¯ Sitting beside Alicea, Katherine Gaynes,&#13;
: 54, takes a thick marker and strikes from a&#13;
¯ bottle the name of the original patient, the&#13;
¯¯ doctor who made the prescription and the&#13;
pharmacy that filled it so the pills cannot&#13;
¯&#13;
be traced back to the original recipient.&#13;
¯ She said the huge overseas need for medications&#13;
frustrates her, but she’s glad she’s&#13;
¯&#13;
been able to do some good. "If the rest of&#13;
¯ the world doesn’t get better, then it doesn’t&#13;
; get better for us," she said. .&#13;
¯ Rise in HIV in Gays&#13;
And Natives Feared&#13;
¯ TORONTO (AP) - New numbers on HIV&#13;
infections in Canada point to a worrying&#13;
: trend away from safe sex in some segments&#13;
of the Gay community and a steep&#13;
¯ increase of infections among FirstNations&#13;
¯ people. The number of new infections&#13;
¯ amongmenwho have sex withmenjumped&#13;
¯ by 30% from 1996 to 1999, according to&#13;
¯ the latest report on HIV and AIDS preva-&#13;
¯ lence issued by Health Canada. The hum-&#13;
: ber of new infections among Aboriginal&#13;
¯ Peoples rose 91% over the same period.&#13;
: Some headway hadbeen made over that&#13;
: time in cutting the number ofnew cases of&#13;
_" HIV infection among injected drug users,&#13;
¯ the report said, noting the number of new&#13;
: cases declined 27% last year over 1996.&#13;
¯ "But no sooner did we do that than Gay&#13;
: men are starting to rebound again," Chris&#13;
¯ Archibald, Health Canada’s chief of HIV/&#13;
¯&#13;
AIDS epidemiology and surveillance, said&#13;
: from Ottawa on Thursday.&#13;
¯ Before 1996, Health Canada reported a&#13;
¯ steady drop in the number of new cases of&#13;
¯ HIV among Gay men, the population most&#13;
ravaged by HIV and AIDS. Gay men accounted&#13;
formore than 80% ofnew cases in&#13;
: 1981-83; by 1996, they made up less than&#13;
¯ a third (30%) of new cases of HIV infection.&#13;
Archibald said the upward trend has&#13;
¯ VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) -&#13;
." A group of health-care advocates and in-&#13;
. jection drug users is aiming to make&#13;
Vancouver the first city in North America&#13;
to offer addicts a safe site to inject drugs.&#13;
¯ Whether the facility is a"hole in the wall"&#13;
¯ or a comprehensive health center will be&#13;
." determined by funding, says the Harm&#13;
." ReductionActionSociety, whichreleased&#13;
¯ its pilot project proposal last month.&#13;
." The society would like to have support&#13;
¯ from all levels, "but let’s get this straight,&#13;
we are going to do it," said board member&#13;
Dean Wilson. "One way or another, there&#13;
¯&#13;
will be such a facility or facilities," said&#13;
Ross Harvey, the executive director of the&#13;
¯ B.C. Peoples with AIDS Society.&#13;
The society would like to have a facility&#13;
¯&#13;
open before Valentine’s Day. The group,&#13;
¯ formed earlier this year, recently sent con-&#13;
¯. sultants to Frankfurt,Germany,where they&#13;
visited five sites set up in 1994. The city&#13;
¯&#13;
released proposal recently that included a&#13;
¯ safe-sites proposal,butMayorPhilipOwen&#13;
¯ rejected the idea, saying it would be a&#13;
magnet for drug addicts.&#13;
¯ also been reportedin the United States and&#13;
." the Netherlands.&#13;
Vancouver Looks&#13;
At Injection Site&#13;
sung. And the lyrics aren’t too bad, either.&#13;
He’s been performing since he was 6,&#13;
and appeared in the film "Latin Boys Go&#13;
To Hall" singing a song&#13;
"... Siegfried and Roy&#13;
have never been involved&#13;
..m ~r~ming&#13;
an.i.~.ii.a.lk. i"n the’ ir h,2ves.&#13;
They mold things around&#13;
the personality&#13;
of their animals."&#13;
And maybe, if the rest of.&#13;
us learned’ thattriek -&#13;
love ~hOUt&#13;
the ne~ for~.e~ntrol -&#13;
we’d h~ve better&#13;
ofhis owncomposition.&#13;
He’ s played some ofthe&#13;
most resi~ected venues&#13;
in NYC to critical acdaini.&#13;
’ ~&#13;
He ~is also named&#13;
by HXmagazine as one&#13;
of the ten hottest menin&#13;
NY. Judging from the&#13;
press photos, I’ll second&#13;
that. He’s currently&#13;
working with song-&#13;
.writer DesmondChilde,&#13;
knowi~ for being a&#13;
’ hitwriter forRickyMar-&#13;
.... ~ tin,Ch~,.and Ma~10nna.&#13;
He’il surprise you.&#13;
YOu’.dnever .guess he&#13;
was anice.Jewish bpy&#13;
relationships as well . frOmNew York - he~s ---got: that ~0ul sound&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, entertainment editor&#13;
Merry Yule and Winter Solstice, everyone!&#13;
This year has moved fast - hard to&#13;
believe we’ll be starting&#13;
a new millennium&#13;
soon. Hope everyone&#13;
h~ a ha~pp.y hoR.day.&#13;
~. ~- ~l~a ’frijOl, ~-Jim~&#13;
’ Brf~l~iffa~ ~rbtflrh~:t~o&#13;
Tut~d D~em6~r~5~il fdt&#13;
a a romantic ,evening bf&#13;
musicandfun. Ifyou’ve&#13;
?iaot seen his show be-&#13;
7~ore, .or&#13;
~ ing, it s well worfla it.&#13;
i?And he’s:iher~ ~ith&#13;
¯" ~onny oshioiia,’W~Ch&#13;
~’should&#13;
7~I’11 miss John Trbnes, a&#13;
i, family m.-..~~m~l~ ,~ho&#13;
~’ was here~th&#13;
year, but"J~bgt Doimy&#13;
does a grea~jdb ~i~the&#13;
songs. Ji~ can~take a&#13;
huge thOt~.~d make&#13;
. it seem&#13;
" room, and :he’s gOkgcous to boot - very&#13;
handsom~],~,Sf;.~tl~6~:~;i~uals are as good as&#13;
’the musi.~;.ye~, ~I,know...you really&#13;
" didn’t exp~t ~e t&#13;
without .mgn,ti.0~ngl something like that,&#13;
did you?.~tf!~y!~mmended; especially&#13;
as an earl~’. Yule gift for that sigfiffieant&#13;
other. 596~7111:fo fix.&#13;
If yo~J;~:i’6bidiag for nifty gffties of an&#13;
entertaiifi~ s0~t,’I have a few recomme,n,-&#13;
dations: Fir~ oifth~’list is "Chicken Run’,&#13;
just outOgDVD~dVHS. TheDVDis the&#13;
preferencehe~e, due to the fun extras they&#13;
threw ina~d the".claance to see the film as&#13;
it was preSgntetion screen, instead of only&#13;
half the.p.ivRtr¢fformatted to fit your TV)&#13;
on the VHS version. There’s two documentaries&#13;
9n ..tal.ent and how they made.&#13;
those chickens ttm; and it’s fun to see thecast&#13;
men~!~erswfiose ,v,oices you hear. And&#13;
it is so eff.~ecti~e.you I1 never eat chicken&#13;
pot pies again:-’ Favorite line: Ging,er&#13;
Chickefi,.:~.’.fig’ to explain why they re&#13;
having ~toi~i~aS escaping the chicken&#13;
farm/pfi~on"~to g doubting member of the&#13;
flock, says’ Do’you know what the problem&#13;
is? ~[]ie:fe~i~S.. aren’t just ’round the&#13;
farm, they’reuphe~e-in yourheads !" The&#13;
other chick~ep!ies,"Aw, give it up, ducks.&#13;
There’s.amillion toone chance we’ll ever&#13;
get out of her,e:, Ginger, mustering up thelast&#13;
bit of hope she has (All done with the&#13;
eyes), rep!iles, "Well . . there’s still a&#13;
chance then." And then there’s Nick and&#13;
Fletcher, a pair of rats who have a rather&#13;
mteresturg relataonship... And that s al&#13;
I’ll say about that, except I am surprised at.&#13;
a: c"ertai.n::’a:c"t.lw.?s~t2m. :t~o:,w~n; w;~ho~ di¯ dN, O""T"~fi.1re&#13;
~ff a s~i-ies:.6fl6tters aboi~t Gay i~dople"&#13;
being represented as rats... Even though&#13;
they’re really cute rats, in that rat-like&#13;
way, and help the chickens to escape.&#13;
A new artiste on the Gay scene, Ari&#13;
Gold, has a new CD out, and unlike many&#13;
artists capitalizing on the "I’m Gay and&#13;
out, so even if I suck, you should still buy&#13;
my stuff", it’s actually a really good CD,&#13;
filled with dance grooves and soulful ballads&#13;
that are slickly produced and well&#13;
down. He deserves our&#13;
Support, because he dell,v~rs.the goo~s:&#13;
Mostpr6moCDsfrom Gayarfists ’end&#13;
UPas coastdts 6tmini-frisb.ees. This one’s&#13;
akeeper. Great for dancing and romanc¯&#13;
ing, I give-it fivesnaps. He’ sgot awebsite:&#13;
WWW.ARIGOLD.COM&#13;
¯ For those~vith.cabl~;~the’Americanized&#13;
¯ ,)ersion of the British series "Queer as&#13;
~ ’ .F01k" begins airing On Sh0w~me Decem-&#13;
~ her 3rd. For.those Without c,],,ble, fihd a&#13;
¯ ’ friend that has ~it,; The~iow delivers a&#13;
:" Slice of.gffy life~th~t’ ~ ~corn~ellitag, ~pto-&#13;
,)ocative, and unlike any showyou’ll see.&#13;
For 22 riveting episodes, these unforgettable&#13;
men.andw0in~nr~veal tfiemselves -&#13;
i:eally reveal themselves - as no TV characters&#13;
ever have." Well,Iknow some folk,-&#13;
who are queer, who~ve seenthe original&#13;
British series, and if it’ s kept intact and not&#13;
Americanized todeath, it sh.ould be good.&#13;
: Happyw~ffChing!&#13;
.... " Open now is a duo offeline proportions&#13;
¯ ."in "Siegfried and Roy: The Magic Box."&#13;
i Now, I wonder if .we get to find out just&#13;
.*. :Who has that’magi box? "Siegfried and&#13;
: ’Roy: The Mhgic B6~" i~an’iMAX biopic&#13;
¯ ~Which includes’their Las V~gas a~t~ well&#13;
¯ as abiographical storyin-azstory ofhow&#13;
.’- the two men met .-as-boys in war-tom&#13;
¯ Germany, combining a love of magic,&#13;
’ ~animals, and each other to become the&#13;
." "world’S greatestillu~R~nistS."&#13;
¯ Anthony Hopkins Narrates the story of&#13;
¯ the two boys who meet on a cruise ship ¯&#13;
(oh, the fodder for puns that provides) and&#13;
~ form "a differen,,t kind of i~agic act using&#13;
¯ exotic .snimals, .: an~" als0 ~"forni ~an~ .ex-&#13;
¯ -ty.~me|y lohg ~erm ~-ela~o~s~i~. oli, the&#13;
~° :jokbs that come tomind. So much material&#13;
¯ to work with, so little space.&#13;
¯ Actually, they have my admiration and&#13;
¯ all due respect. To work and live together ¯&#13;
as long as they have and not to have killed&#13;
" each other in the process, and to have&#13;
¯ remained together, is no easy task. I have&#13;
¯ heardthem speakofthat, andhow attimes,&#13;
. you just wanna kill your parmer, but un-&#13;
" derneath it all is the love that keeps you&#13;
¯ working together - see Amuse, p. 10&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
OF T!tI&#13;
S ASON!:&#13;
COUNCIL OAK&#13;
WISHING YOU A&#13;
JOYOUS HOLIDAY SEASON &amp;&#13;
A PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR&#13;
PLEASE JOIN&#13;
TULSA OKLAHOMANS FOR&#13;
HUMAN RIGHTS&#13;
AS WE&#13;
CELEBRATE THE HOLIDAYS.{&#13;
HOLIDAY RECEPTION&#13;
HONORING TOHR’s 20TH ANNIVERSAF~Y&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SILENT AUCTION&#13;
AN ~,.RT, AHTIQUES &amp; FINE DINING.SHOWCASE&#13;
SUNDAY, DECEMBER | 0&#13;
4:00 PM - 7:00 PM&#13;
TULSA GAY COMMUNI’~Y&#13;
SERVICES CENTER&#13;
2114 S MEMORIAL&#13;
PARADE OF LIGHTS&#13;
Come celebrate the spirit of the holiday season&#13;
at the AEP-Public Service Company of Oklahoma&#13;
Christmas Parade of Lights, Satu rday, Decem ber&#13;
9, downtown Tulsa at 6 p.m. View parade floats&#13;
up close, Friday, DecemberS, at the HolidayFest&#13;
(Brady Arts District) from 7 - 9 p.m.&#13;
PUBLIC&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
COMPANY OF&#13;
OKLAHOMA®&#13;
by Karin Gregory&#13;
GEls, have you ever had that Gay male&#13;
friend who does everything with you? A&#13;
Will to your Grace?AJack to your Karen?&#13;
The oneman-for some of you, theONLY&#13;
man - to whom you’d tell your secrets?&#13;
Who is warm, caring, loving,&#13;
a great listener, and in&#13;
many cases,has betterfashion.&#13;
sense than you? The&#13;
one man you can talk to all&#13;
night long? That guy who&#13;
will, even across the miles,&#13;
allow you to cry on his&#13;
shoulder about your girlfriend?&#13;
And you still remember&#13;
your own tearstained&#13;
shoulders from&#13;
when he knocked on your&#13;
door at 3 a.m. Most ofus, if&#13;
we’re lucky, have a guy&#13;
who would be the perfect&#13;
partnerforapolitically correct"&#13;
family value" couple&#13;
if he became a woman and&#13;
we became a man.&#13;
ButI’m nottalking about&#13;
him here. This is another Gay man who&#13;
possesses none ofthe abovequalities. Sure,&#13;
he can be a nice guy- whenhe wants to be.&#13;
And he DOES have better fashion sense&#13;
than I, although that’s no stretch. Butwhile&#13;
I embracedmy.Gayness before embracing&#13;
another woman, he did his embracing, and&#13;
whatever rise (eeeewww!) earl~, on, and&#13;
never really learned to enjoy being Gay.&#13;
"How sad," you might say. Don’t feel&#13;
sorry for him. Especially when you find&#13;
out where I’m spending my days lately.&#13;
Great house, DirecTV, MUCH cleaner&#13;
thanmy place, and the perfect party home.&#13;
I had become - how shall I say? - financially&#13;
non-existent and couldn’t pay my&#13;
rent (sounds like a musical, doesn’t it?).&#13;
My friend - let’s call him Vincent - offered&#13;
to put me up in his house for a few&#13;
months. OK, let’s talk realism. He was&#13;
looking for someone to help him with the&#13;
house payments. I would get oneroom and&#13;
a bathroom, as opposed to my car. Most&#13;
people in my situation wouldjump at this&#13;
arrangement. Although it .would save me&#13;
$400, the cost in psycffiatric visits overmy&#13;
lifetime would soon absorb the savings.&#13;
Let’s just say that we were the other"Odd&#13;
Couple." Picture a much more obsessive/&#13;
compulsive, anal retentive Felix Unger,&#13;
who is also emotionally constipated, and&#13;
you have Vincent. You’re not where I am&#13;
now, and I hope you never are. Let me tell&#13;
you how I got here through a progression&#13;
of nightly entries.&#13;
¯DAY ONE - Got to Vincent’s house&#13;
about 10:45 tonight after work. I can already&#13;
tell our work schedules are going to&#13;
conflict as he made a great show of"having"&#13;
to be up this late. This was HIS idea,&#13;
remember. He showed me the alarm system.&#13;
God, it feels like Fort Knox in here,&#13;
motion detectors and all. He also gave me&#13;
an extra key and garage door opener. It all&#13;
feels so official. This IS just a trial run,&#13;
after all. I’m relegated immediatdy to my&#13;
room, as small as a nun’s cell. He said I&#13;
could have one piece of furniture, but&#13;
there’s no room for anything else. i’ve&#13;
¯ been calling and calling my girlffien.: all&#13;
: night, getting nothing but a busy sig:m!&#13;
: That makes me anxious and frightenex~, se&#13;
: I tall Vincent what’s going on, hoping to&#13;
¯¯ get some sympathy. While I try to hug ¯ : : ~, : :, "ra.m,.~.com.p~,.a~ps.....Oh&#13;
"...G~gr~|s,. ,halve you no," in’d very pugquttbhe&#13;
of voi~qe; his~us~tml t0ne. He e erMd Gay pU s n&lt; "ar0 a.me&#13;
male friend whodoes VERY gingerlg: try’ing to&#13;
everythln~ with you?&#13;
A Will to&#13;
your Grace?&#13;
A Jack to&#13;
your Karen?&#13;
The one man - for&#13;
some of you, the&#13;
ONLY man - to&#13;
whom you’d tell&#13;
your secrets?.. ?’&#13;
much me as little as possible,&#13;
as if I’m a Lesbian&#13;
leper. After he leaves, I get&#13;
into the closet (I thought&#13;
I’d left that for good!) so as&#13;
not to wake him, and call&#13;
my friend Jim. He gives&#13;
me a bigger hug over the&#13;
phone from Tulsa than I&#13;
got from Vincent. I pull&#13;
out my CD player and listen&#13;
to Melissa Etheridge&#13;
(who else?). Somehow it&#13;
makes me feel dominant.&#13;
DAY TWO - After dedaring&#13;
thatmy alarm woke&#13;
him from the other side of the house, he&#13;
leaves. Now I can walk aroundlike I want.&#13;
Ooops! I forget that he leaves the kitchen&#13;
blinds open. Well, his neighbors will just&#13;
be confused. They thooght they were living&#13;
near a Gay man!.Oa my way to work,&#13;
I find my girlfriend has called to let me&#13;
know she’s all right, which should put me&#13;
at ease, but the thought of having to live&#13;
with Vincent depresses me. It already feels&#13;
like I’m giving upmy life to live according&#13;
to his schedule. WhenI arrive at his house,&#13;
I’m in less than a pleasant mood. Anger&#13;
sets in when I realize that I forgot to tape&#13;
"Will and Grace." It doesn’t help that&#13;
Vincent goes on andon abouthow this was&#13;
the funniest episode he’s ever seen. "Did&#13;
youtapeit?" I askhopefully, already knowing&#13;
the answer. "No, I was home to watch&#13;
it," he says, cleaning up the kitchen in a&#13;
"don’t youdaremake amess" way. Selfish&#13;
bastard! This further proves my point that&#13;
when a man asks you into his life, for&#13;
whatever reason, he really means, "I want&#13;
to live my life as I always have, with no&#13;
compromises. You’ll just be around when&#13;
andif I need you." NowonderI’m Gay! He&#13;
woulddrive Pat Buchanan’s wife to Lesbianism.&#13;
I pop my popcorn (the only thing&#13;
I’ve had since noon today), and the only&#13;
thing allowed to me. I once again listen to&#13;
Melissa, who has a strangeway ofempowering&#13;
me. I fall asleep, dreaming of using&#13;
a stun gun on Vincent repeatedly.&#13;
DAY THREE-Today’s finally Friday,&#13;
and I might be allowed to watch some TV&#13;
tonight. I’m fine all day until I enter&#13;
Vincent’s abode. We’re eating pizza, and&#13;
he’s buying, an obvious splurge. But we&#13;
disagree on TV programming, so he&#13;
watches something in his room while I&#13;
have the living room all to myself to watch&#13;
a Beatles special. I’ve figured out one&#13;
thing - never trust anyone who hates the&#13;
Beatles. It’s positively UnAmerican! Another&#13;
night of silence until he comes into&#13;
the living room to switch channels so he&#13;
can watch the news. seeLesbian,p.11&#13;
by Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
"Gifts make slaves just as whips make&#13;
dogs," or so says one bit of Native American&#13;
wisdom. Keep this in mind during the&#13;
upcoming holiday orgy of giving and receiving.&#13;
Grits aremorethan&#13;
just tokens of affection.&#13;
They are’als0 ~gminde~s of&#13;
obligati’On ahdl du~. Giging&#13;
is politiCak ~Pd]~h~ps~ I&#13;
give you a present because&#13;
°I like you. Butifyou accept&#13;
mypresent,you also accept&#13;
that you are indebted to me&#13;
- at least until you can pay&#13;
me back.&#13;
Ihad, once, a studentfrom&#13;
Saudi Arabia whose father&#13;
was in the rug trade. "I’m&#13;
contacting my father," he&#13;
told me near the end of the&#13;
term. "I’d like to give you a&#13;
carpet." Oh no, I thought,&#13;
visions of Baluchis and&#13;
Kilims dancing inmy head.&#13;
How amI going to g~vehim&#13;
the "D" that he deserves?&#13;
Luckily, he presented me&#13;
with a cheap synthetic&#13;
prayer rug decorated,with&#13;
garish neon cameIs, worth&#13;
only a few dollars down at&#13;
yourlocal bazaar. I wasn’t that muchii~’his&#13;
debt after all, and I graded him down with&#13;
a lighter heart.&#13;
l~erhaps we all have had an experience&#13;
of over-receiving. Somebody g~ves us&#13;
something that is waytoo much. What can&#13;
he have in mind? What does he want in&#13;
return?A pesky acquaintance surprises us&#13;
with afine leatherjacket. But what does he&#13;
expect?A closer friendship?A date? Need&#13;
we give it up?&#13;
The fancy anthropological word for gift&#13;
giving is "reciprodty." I give something&#13;
to you, and you give something back to&#13;
me. Such exchange can be balanced or&#13;
imbalanced. Either way,. this says something&#13;
about power. If we engage in prolonged,&#13;
imbalanced gift giving, we find&#13;
ourselves in an enduring relationship of&#13;
inequality. Those fine presents have made&#13;
us into dogs and slaves.&#13;
Parents, for instance, give a lot more to&#13;
children thanchildren giveto parents. This&#13;
exchangeimbalancefuels parental authority.&#13;
Few morns and dads hand their children,&#13;
on their 18th birthdays, a bill for&#13;
$186,000. Ratherthan reciprocating the&#13;
exact dollar cost of raising us, we repay&#13;
parents in obedience. "As long as you live&#13;
inMYhouse, you’ll do what I say!" Those&#13;
gifts come with strings. .&#13;
To avoid, obligfiroh~ we must balance&#13;
gift giving. Only balanced exchange cre:&#13;
ates equality. If some one gives us a holiday&#13;
present, we feel pressured togive a&#13;
present in return. Failure to reciprocate&#13;
means either that we don’tmind shouldering&#13;
this debt and its obligations, or that we&#13;
want to break things off altogether. Does&#13;
morn send out the family’ s holiday cards?&#13;
What does she do when someone fails to&#13;
reciprocate? Cross him off the list!&#13;
Sometimes exchangeimbalancepersists&#13;
¯ for years, however. My dentist sends me a&#13;
¯ Christmas card annually. Butdo I sendone&#13;
¯ back? Nope. In this case, I amrude enough&#13;
¯ to take without giving. But I understand&#13;
¯" the deal implied by this imbalanced exchange~&#13;
I take my mouth&#13;
around to his office every&#13;
six months.&#13;
My friends in the South&#13;
Pacific go to huge efforts&#13;
to raise and give away pigs&#13;
just to get their neighbors’&#13;
pigs in return. If would be&#13;
far easier for all villagers&#13;
to eat their own pigs. But&#13;
what of us? .We are madcap&#13;
enough to enrich the&#13;
Post Office every December&#13;
by mailing, around a&#13;
blizzard of Christmas&#13;
cards. I send out about 60&#13;
each year, and in return I&#13;
receive 60 back. But if I&#13;
really am so desperate for&#13;
cards to clutterupmymantelpiece,&#13;
why don’t I just&#13;
keep those that I buy? I’d&#13;
save a 10t on postage that&#13;
way.&#13;
My island friends are&#13;
fanatic giftbalancers. They&#13;
keep exact records of how&#13;
] many pigs, baskets, and mats they receive&#13;
¯¯ so that they can give the same in return.&#13;
Butthey sometimes over-give- just alittle.&#13;
¯ This iitfleextra gift, which al~O must be&#13;
"... Perhaps we all&#13;
~have had an experhne¢&#13;
of over-reeelvlng.&#13;
Somebody gives us&#13;
something that is way&#13;
too much. What can&#13;
he have in mind?&#13;
What does he want in&#13;
return? A peshy&#13;
aeq~intanee surp~ses&#13;
us ~th a fine l~ther&#13;
~aeket. But w~t&#13;
does he expect?&#13;
A closer friendship?&#13;
A ~te? Need we&#13;
give it up... ?"&#13;
repaid at some point, keeps the :relationship&#13;
moving along.&#13;
Balanced exchanges celebrate the fact that&#13;
we are still investing in the relationship.&#13;
Youremain important to me. Butif I amto&#13;
stay your equal, I need to give you about&#13;
what you give me. I am embarrassed if I&#13;
return too little OR ff I return too much.&#13;
Imbalance in either direction implies either&#13;
that I don’t care about us as much as&#13;
you do, or that I am trying to obligate you.&#13;
Given the importance of exchange balance,&#13;
it is perverse that we remove price&#13;
tags and wrap presents. It’s a bit of a game.&#13;
We see through these pretenses that "it’s&#13;
the thought that counts." As experienced&#13;
givers, we are pretty good at striking a&#13;
balance despite the absence ofprice tags or&#13;
the concealment of gift-wrap. When a&#13;
friend drops off a gaily-wrapped present&#13;
for you, shake that box! Make a mistake in&#13;
what you give back and it could be the&#13;
doghouse for you!&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom teaches anthropology&#13;
at the University of Tulsa.&#13;
and frommurdering each other. They have&#13;
also managed to survive a business that&#13;
chews you up and spits you out.&#13;
It’s easy to makejokes at their expense,&#13;
but you know, there is a magic there, that&#13;
they’ve been able to survive that business&#13;
- andremain together, whenI’m sure there&#13;
were many times it wouldhavebeenmuch&#13;
easier to split under the pressure.&#13;
see Amuse, p. 11&#13;
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In response to God’s Love,&#13;
College Hill Presbyterian Church&#13;
is a community of God’s people&#13;
called to tell others the&#13;
Gospd of-J~sus Christ&#13;
through worship,&#13;
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To nurture our faith, we gather for&#13;
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Trusting in a living~ loving God,&#13;
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Membership is open:.to all people&#13;
regardless of race, ethnic origin,&#13;
worldly condition, marital status, or&#13;
sexual orientation.&#13;
Sunday Worship 1 lam-&#13;
712 S. Columbia Ave., 592-5800&#13;
(Ohe block west of Delaware and the&#13;
University of Tulsa Campus)&#13;
This without saying a word to me. After -&#13;
seeing how the candidates STILL can’t "&#13;
decide this election, I put on my pajamas. "&#13;
That’s all, I swear. When I come out at ¯&#13;
9:20, the TV is turned off, along with the ¯&#13;
lights. My dorm mother has declared my&#13;
curfew. One thought goes through my "&#13;
head - I’m going to kill him; I’m going to ¯&#13;
kill him; I’m going to kill him. Big kitchen&#13;
knives flash through my mind. I go to bed "&#13;
at 9:20, again listening to Melissa. She’s "&#13;
giving me the wrong kind of strength, :&#13;
think.&#13;
DAY FOUR- This is the last day, but I "&#13;
have to spend it with HIM. I see my stu- ¯&#13;
dents at my Saturday class, knowing this :&#13;
will probably be the last time I teachi I’ve ¯&#13;
made up my mind as I arrive at Vincent’s. "&#13;
He ignores me, as usual, while he watches ¯&#13;
gymnastics on TV, laughing for some tea- ¯&#13;
son. Hewon’t laugh forlong. Even though ~&#13;
I hate the color and look bffd in it, orange :&#13;
jumpsuits will be my style for the next 20&#13;
years. Hey, they let you write,letters~in ¯&#13;
prison. Ev~nLestian~olumns, I veheard. :&#13;
"Goodbye Vincent!" 5" by Karin Gregor&#13;
#2238769480, Cell BlockH ¯&#13;
ofthe"diversity" statement whichincluded :&#13;
"sexual orientation," saying he wouldhave :&#13;
noticed its inclusion. ¯&#13;
In response,’sev~al ~gregation have&#13;
commi~ted to re=examining their endorse:&#13;
ment of the document? College Hill Pres- ¯&#13;
byterian Church and’ Fellowship Congre- "&#13;
gational Church will’bring the.issue back&#13;
to theirgov.ernmg boards. ,Andsomemere- "&#13;
bers of MCC~United, Tulsa s Metropoli: ¯&#13;
tan Community Church, members of&#13;
predominatelyLesbianand Gay denomi- "&#13;
nation, are concerned about their church’s ¯&#13;
endorsement of a statement which does&#13;
not acknowledge the existence of Lesbian -"&#13;
and Gay persons. :&#13;
The welcoming committee of Community&#13;
Unitarian-Universalist Congregation ¯&#13;
has drafted a letter to TMM saying, "we&#13;
erred in our endorsement of this state- "&#13;
ment"because thefailure toinclude sexual ¯&#13;
orientation is in conflictwith the values of ¯&#13;
the congregation and the letter further says ,"&#13;
that they wilt not endorse any future state- "&#13;
ments which are not inclusive. ¯&#13;
Other groups such as Holland Hall ¯&#13;
School, the Episcopal Diocese of Okla: "&#13;
homa, and the Eastern Oklahoma :&#13;
Presbytery -: Presbyterian Church USA, ¯&#13;
have been asked to explain their support :&#13;
for a statement which is not compatible .&#13;
with their policies. In the case of the Episcopal&#13;
Diocese and. Holland Hall School, :&#13;
staff and religious leaders were not sure if ¯&#13;
the organization’s names had been used "&#13;
with permission. ¯&#13;
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights :&#13;
(TOHR), the state’s oldest civil rights or- ¯&#13;
ganization has discussed the issue at a "&#13;
recentboardandmembershipmeeting and&#13;
president, Greg Gatewood stated that he ¯&#13;
would seek a meeting with Rana and Day :&#13;
to request an explanation of the exclusion&#13;
of "sexual orientation" from the state- ¯&#13;
ment. Further action on the part of the&#13;
organization will vary depending on their&#13;
responses.&#13;
Other congregations which signed the&#13;
"diversity" statement, like the city’s Episcopal&#13;
parishes and its Unitarian-Universalists&#13;
congregations, all of whom have&#13;
histories of being fair to Lesbian and Gay&#13;
Tulsans are also being asked to consider&#13;
withdrawing their support for the statement&#13;
because of the failure to include&#13;
"sexual orientation."&#13;
And they’ve remained incredibly successful&#13;
throughout the years andups anddowns&#13;
that showbiz life provides. Living with&#13;
someone 5 years is a major feat, much less&#13;
working with them as well. And even in&#13;
relative anonymity, it’s hard enough. To&#13;
have survived and remain together as long&#13;
as they have - 43 years - is a major feat.&#13;
FYI, Royis 5 years younger thanSiegfried.&#13;
About the biographical aspects of the&#13;
film, Roy says "It’s ~way~ a difficult step&#13;
to open yourself up beeauge ~ou make&#13;
yourself very vulnerabl~. That fneans you&#13;
have to let your guard down andeveryone&#13;
has access to you." Scary iild~gd. The&#13;
cameras were allowed full access to the&#13;
home and grounds of theirestate’. He goes&#13;
on to say "I have to say;~it’s~ been pretty&#13;
good to do it. It goes way badk" to when I&#13;
was a boy. I had a catching smile, but in&#13;
reality I was a loner. I wa~ n0t too good&#13;
with people. As a mattel: offact, I didn’t&#13;
trustinpeople. I trustedmy animals more."&#13;
I can relate to that.&#13;
The interesting thing is that,-aozording&#13;
to producer Bernie Yuman,’"Roy has a&#13;
bond with these animals whereby there’s&#13;
no force. Force createsforce. There’s alot&#13;
of love. There’s a lot of.voice intonation&#13;
and camaraderie - and a lot of meat - but&#13;
affection and conditioning, Roy’s never&#13;
trained an animal, and Siegfried and Roy&#13;
have never been involved.in, training ammalsin&#13;
their lives. Theymoldthings around&#13;
the personality of their animals." And&#13;
maybe, if the rest of us learned that tricklove&#13;
without the need for control - we’d&#13;
have longer lasting relationships .as well.&#13;
Food for thought. And so, for all the nasty&#13;
S&amp;Rjokes I could make, I find I reallyjust&#13;
have too much respect for what they’ve&#13;
accomplished to make them.&#13;
In the film, you get behind the scenes&#13;
visits to their home - which is like designer&#13;
overkill, given their taste_~or opulence.&#13;
And you get to see their private&#13;
wildlife sanctuary, where they live with&#13;
and raise the white tigers used in the act.&#13;
Their love of the animals is evident.&#13;
It’s filmed in 3-D, so you’ll be able to&#13;
see Siegfried and Roy up close and personal.&#13;
Numerous digital techniques were&#13;
used to recreate the Europe of their childhoods.&#13;
As for the magic shots, they were&#13;
specifically filmed uncut as master shots,&#13;
so that the audience would no that no&#13;
camera tricks were used. Andrew Dunlap,&#13;
who plays young Roy, was also in the all&#13;
male version of "Importance of Being&#13;
Earnest," which was interesting to note.&#13;
Also playing is Fantasia 2000 and 3D&#13;
Mania: Encounter in the 3rd Dimension;&#13;
71st and Highway 169.&#13;
Healing&#13;
E&#13;
E ECT IIII&#13;
AIDS Memorial Quilt&#13;
re.n.esS&#13;
World AIDS Day Candlelight Memorial March&#13;
Friday, December 1st, 6:30pm&#13;
Tulsa Civic Center Plaza, 5th &amp; Denver&#13;
The NAMES Project Quilt Opening, 8pm&#13;
This advertisement is donated by Tulsa Family News. TFN appreciates the opportunity to support this showing of the Quilt, and The NAMES Project.</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, December 2000; Volume 7, Issue 12</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>James Christjohn&#13;
Karin Gregory&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers&#13;
Hughston Walkinshaw</text>
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              <text>Bishop.Spong Retires&#13;
TEANECK, N.J. (AP) - Bishop John Spong, an&#13;
outspoken supporter of the ordination of Gays and&#13;
women, and blessings of same-sex unions in the&#13;
Episcopal church, retired in January as head of the&#13;
Diocese of Newark. Spong, 68, celebrated one of his&#13;
final services as bishop at the Glenpointe Marriott&#13;
ballroom before hundreds of guests. His successor will&#13;
be John Croneberger.&#13;
Since his elevation to bishop in 1976, Spong has&#13;
raised eyebrows and blood pressures for his beliefs_&#13;
ranging from women becoming priests to supporting&#13;
same-sex marriages to the ordination of openly Gay&#13;
ministers. ButSpong, a native of Charlotte, N.C. who&#13;
speaks with the slightest ac~ut, left the diocese with&#13;
few words of controversy. "It’sjust the next stage ofmy&#13;
life," said Spong. .’,.&#13;
"Basically, I’ve been a bishop, but also an author and&#13;
lecturer," he said. "But in all ofmy ordained life, it was&#13;
participating in movements of people who’ve been&#13;
diminished in society, like people of color and Gays,&#13;
that the church has diminished where I’ve worked."&#13;
Among those present at Friday’s 126th annual&#13;
convention of the Diocese of Newark were the Rev.&#13;
Richard HollowayofEdinburgh; ~.-~- - See Spong~.p.lO&#13;
Southwest Air Adds, Non-&#13;
Discrimination Policies&#13;
DALLAS - Southwest Airlines has amended its nondiscrimination&#13;
and anti-harassment policies to include&#13;
sexual orientation, according to Chief Executive Herb&#13;
Kelleher.&#13;
The move, announced Jan. 24, came after a spate of&#13;
alleged anti-Gay harassment at the airline, which led&#13;
some Southwest employees to raise safety concerns.&#13;
The tensions boiled over when Southwest Airlines’&#13;
Pilots’ Associationpublished ahomophobicletterfrom&#13;
one of its members in its December newsletter.&#13;
The letter, by Capt. Gary S. Ward, urged Kelleher to&#13;
reject calls for the airline to provide domestic partner&#13;
benefits saying, ’Will therebeaneedto hireadepartment&#13;
to check on who is shackin..e, t~p with whom?" The&#13;
newsletterinstructedpilots to write theirownlettersand&#13;
deliverthemto their SWAPArepresentativefordeftvcry&#13;
to Kelleher.&#13;
Dean Hervochon, vice president of the Transport&#13;
Workers Union Local 556 representing Southwest’s&#13;
flight attendants, said the publication "institutionalized&#13;
homophobia" and created a hostile work environment&#13;
that "could jeopardize the safety of all persons on the&#13;
aircraft." "If the front doesn’t talk to the back of the&#13;
airplane, you’ve got a problem," Hervochon told&#13;
WorkAlert.&#13;
Kelleher and leaders of sWAPA and TWU met Jan.&#13;
17 to discuss how to respond.TWUrepresentatives also&#13;
pressed Kelleher to add sexual orientation to the antiharassment&#13;
andnon-discriminationpolicies. Meanwhile,&#13;
the vice presidents for flight operations and in-flight&#13;
services along with SWAPA and TWU officials sent a&#13;
letter Jan. 20 to flight attendants and pilots attempting to&#13;
defusethe situation. Howcver, Gayemployees criticized&#13;
the letter as inadequate and for using objectionable&#13;
language, such as "lifestyle choices."&#13;
Then Kelleher announced the change in company&#13;
policy in a letter to all Southwest Airlines employees.&#13;
"Forsomeyears, I have explidfly declined toamendour&#13;
anti-harassment and see SWAir, p. 10&#13;
" Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families .+ Friends&#13;
Tulsa’s Largest Circulation CommunityP~perA~vailable In More Than 75. City Locations&#13;
!Teachers Credit Union: No&#13;
:-Loan for Lesbians as Couple&#13;
: Credit Union AskedAuto Dealer If They Were Gay&#13;
¯ TULSA- WhenTheresaandJoanWrightwenttoTulsaTeachers&#13;
" Credit Union, they just wanted a car loan. The women are&#13;
: expecting their second child and had found a van.at a local auto&#13;
: collection. And since they have shared checking and savings&#13;
accounts at Tulsa Teachers Credit Union, and good credit, they&#13;
: naturally went there, expecting that getting a loan would be&#13;
: relafivd~ painless. "&#13;
.i.~ ~Wlmt they experienced they say, however, was hurtful and&#13;
~; dUenmioenan(riInTgC. U,A)c, cnoortdoinnlgytroeftuhseedWtoriegvhatlsu,aTteutlhsaemTeaascahceoruspCler,eid.ei.t&#13;
: basing alOan!on their combined income but someone from the&#13;
: creditunion evencalled theauto dealershipaskingifthedealership&#13;
: staff"knew they were Gay?"&#13;
¯ And the Wrights characterized the behavior of their loan&#13;
officer, Sandy Roth as very rude, particularly about the issue of&#13;
: evaluating their joint income for loan purpose. Roth refused to&#13;
¯ look at their joint income saying it was because they are not&#13;
". married.&#13;
In contrast to Tulsa Teachers Credit Union, a loan officer at&#13;
i Tulsa Municipal Employees Credit Union stated that they accept&#13;
¯ unmarried couples withcombinedhouseholds as loan applicants,&#13;
: noting that she’d assisted at least two Lesbian and two Gay&#13;
: couples with loans.&#13;
¯ Bank of Oklahoma stated that they had not always accepted&#13;
: couples whose relationships were not legally recognized but that&#13;
: they now do so. And a senior officer at Spirit Bank encouraged&#13;
¯ Lesbian.and Gay couples to apply with her bank, noting that&#13;
: Spirit Bank would not tolerate anti-Lesbian or Gay bias.&#13;
." Theresa Wright noted that Ms. Roth refused even to look her&#13;
: in the eye when she went in to sign the loan papers. The Wrights&#13;
: noted that the dealership, in contrast to the credit union, was very&#13;
¯ nice, and that irwas the manager assisting them in purchasing&#13;
¯ their new vehicle, who said, "I’m just going to say something.&#13;
: Your bank called and wanted to know the nature of .your&#13;
: re!ationship-are they Gay?" Heassuredthemthathis organization&#13;
¯¯ welcomed everyone and also had Gay people working for it. Ms. Rpth’s su_l~’visor-at TI’CU, David Snyder refused to&#13;
comm~h~ and ref~ed’~ to Chuck Reed, ~ see Credit,p. 10&#13;
¯ TulsaPFLAG &amp; TOHRmembersmarchedfor thefirst time in the ¯&#13;
Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemorative Parade in January.&#13;
TOHR Receives a. $10k Grant&#13;
i TULSA-Inmid-December, TulsaOklahomasforHumanRights&#13;
¯ (TOHR) received a $10,000 grant from the Colin Higgius&#13;
: Foundation. Thegrantis for the Tnlsa Gay Community Services&#13;
: Center programming, marketing and development expansion&#13;
¯ project. Specific goals of the project include the production and&#13;
: distribution of a ommttnity referral guide, the enhancement of&#13;
_" Lesbian Connection- a program that encourages increased&#13;
: involvementfromthewomenofourcommunity, and anexpanded&#13;
¯¯ Pride 2000 Festival.&#13;
The marketing and development aspects of the project will&#13;
focus on enhanced communication and media inaterial as well as&#13;
¯ increased membership and volunteer involvement.&#13;
: The Colin Higgins Foundation is based in San Francisco,&#13;
: California. Colin Higgins,screenwriter, director and producer,&#13;
: established the Foundation in 1986. Mr. Higgins is remembered&#13;
¯ for his remarkable human comedies, including Harold and&#13;
: Maude, Silverstreak, Foul Play and Nine To Five.&#13;
: He created the Foundation in order to further his humanitarian&#13;
: goals. OneoftheFoundation’smainprioritiesistoempowerGay&#13;
menand Lesbiansby supporting community-based organizations&#13;
: that combat homophobia and foster leadership.&#13;
: TOHRdirectors indicated thatitis honored to receive thegrant&#13;
: and that they have ambitious goals for 2000 and beyond.&#13;
New Pastor Leads at&#13;
Tulsa’s MCC-United&#13;
¯ TULSA - After a number of months with an&#13;
¯ interim pastor, Oklahoma’s oldest extant Lesbian&#13;
¯ andGayorganization, theMetropolitanCommunity&#13;
¯ Church United (MCCU), has a new pastor, the&#13;
¯ ReverendCathy l~liott, whojoinedthecongregation&#13;
¯ at theend of 1’999.&#13;
¯ Elliott,grewupin themidwest, butcame toTulsa&#13;
¯ from Florida where she was invoIved with two&#13;
: Metropolitan Community Churches in the MCC&#13;
Fellowship. However, prior to working in Florida,&#13;
¯ she served a Congregation in-Rochester, New York&#13;
¯ and some years ago, was associated with the MCC&#13;
¯ in Little Rock.&#13;
Like many MCC pastors, Elliott came to the&#13;
¯ MCC Fellowship through a winding path, having&#13;
¯ become more serious about her faith while at&#13;
university. There, she joined a church that was&#13;
¯ theologically evangelical, but after a fe~v years, as&#13;
¯ sheacknowledgedbring Lesbian, she foundherself&#13;
¯ becoming involved in an MCC that was about 40&#13;
miles away. Anditwas fromthis initial association,&#13;
: that her calling to the ministry came.&#13;
¯ In a recent interview with TFN, Elliott praised&#13;
¯ theworkhernew congregationhaddoneinmerging&#13;
¯ the formerly two separate churches, MCC-Greater&#13;
¯ Tulsa and Family of Faith MCC. As she and they&#13;
¯ havebeguntobecomeacquainled, thecongregation&#13;
¯ is looking at how they will grow, spiritually and&#13;
otherwise.&#13;
¯ Some members of the congregation .have also&#13;
¯ become involved in a serious social action&#13;
¯ organization, called Soul Force. The group was&#13;
¯ founded by MCC pastor and writer, the Reverend&#13;
¯ Mel White. White, who once wrote for anti-Gay&#13;
¯ evangelical such as Jerry. Falwell, modeled Soul&#13;
¯ Force on the theories of non-violent confrontation&#13;
" for social .change of Martin Luther King, Jr. and&#13;
¯ MahatmaoGhandi.&#13;
see Elliott, p. 11.&#13;
¯ Marriage Is Civil-Rights&#13;
"Issue Says Vermonter&#13;
: MONTPELIER,Vt. (AP)-One ofthemostpainful&#13;
: things about figuring out he was Gay as a teen-ager&#13;
¯ was coming to the realization that he would never&#13;
: get married and have a family. Ed Flanagan came&#13;
¯ from an Irish-Catholic family, one of five kids,&#13;
: "four straight and one Gay," he says. His fatherhad&#13;
: an alcohol problem and"the end resnlt was that we&#13;
¯ childrenwerevery, very closein terms ofsupporting&#13;
: each other to get through that environment." His&#13;
: relationships with his brother and three sisters&#13;
: "have been very crucial in terms of all of the five of&#13;
: us surviving and flourishing," Flanagan said. "It’s&#13;
¯ a very strong presence that we all feel with one&#13;
: another and a source of important emotional&#13;
¯ support."&#13;
Trying to find a place within the Gay comrmmity&#13;
: ofthe 1960s and ’70s wasn’t easy for someone with&#13;
: such strong family ties. "That culture back then did&#13;
¯ not accommodate the id_ea,,o,f family," he said in an&#13;
interview this past week. In the midst of the Gay&#13;
: culture I felt Very alien, for that reason and others."&#13;
: Now that culture is changing, it’s "becoming more&#13;
¯ family-oriented, and longer-term relationships are&#13;
¯" becoming more prevalent," Flanagan said. And&#13;
¯ state law appears to be changing, too.&#13;
¯ Today, Flanagan sees a future in which getting&#13;
married, perhaps even being aparent, may become&#13;
: options forhimandotherGaysandLesbians. There&#13;
." may be an oasis on the horizon for people who have&#13;
¯ wandered much of their lives in an emotional&#13;
: desert. And as the first and still only openly Gay&#13;
¯ man in the country to hold a statewide elective&#13;
: office, Flanagan believes he might be in the right&#13;
¯ time- the dawn of a new millennium - and place -&#13;
". Vermont - to help bring that future about. ’~l’his is&#13;
: the course ofhistory inVermont. Here it is andhere&#13;
: I am," he said.&#13;
Fromthe windows oftheoffice 6fstate auditorof&#13;
: accounts, see Ed, p. 11&#13;
Tulaa Cluba &amp; Reataumnta&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CTg’s, 1737S. Memorial&#13;
*Full Moon Cafe, 1525 E. 15th&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
-*The Mix, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
712-2324 :&#13;
610-5323 :&#13;
583-6666.&#13;
749-4511 :.&#13;
749-1563 ~&#13;
*Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square 744-4280 ¯&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st- 745-9998&#13;
*Silver Star. Saloon, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
834-4234&#13;
~The Storm, 21,82S, Sheridan&#13;
835-2376&#13;
*Renegades/iRainbowRoom, 1649 S: Main-&#13;
585-3405&#13;
.~Tdrl-’ BOX, 1338~13.&gt;3ra ~° : :: : :: :’"~84~ l~3"0g "&#13;
~ ~ ’:r ,TUl~a BUsinesses, Services, &amp; Professionals ~:&#13;
Advanced WireleSs &amp; PCS, Digital Cellular- .. 74%1508&#13;
*Assoc. in Med. &amp;Mental Health, 2325 S.Harvard 743-1000&#13;
Kent Balch &amp; Associates, Health&amp; Life Insurance 747-9506&#13;
*Barnes &amp;Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
250~5034&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 523 1 E. 41&#13;
665-4580&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
. 712=1122.&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
712-9955&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale -&#13;
494-2665&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria .&#13;
Cherry St Psy_cho~eralff, 1,51~5 S,. Lew*s .581-trot&#13;
Community Cleamng, heruy tsager ;,~....., onK-~-~&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 33z-~tr*, ~....-~&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th&#13;
*Devena’s Gallery, 13 Brady&#13;
749-3620&#13;
587-2611&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838:8503&#13;
584-0337, 7i2-9379&#13;
592-O460&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos; 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th PI.&#13;
Cathy Fmlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
I_eanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy~ 2865 E. Skelly&#13;
*International Toms ¯&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 151h&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kdly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 19 E. Brady&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2rid floor&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B,POB 696,74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
744-9595 ¯&#13;
610-0880 -&#13;
628-3709 :&#13;
8O8-8O26&#13;
742-1460&#13;
459-9349&#13;
744-7440&#13;
745-1111&#13;
341-6866&#13;
712-2750&#13;
582-3018&#13;
747-0236&#13;
582-8460&#13;
599-8070&#13;
747-5466&#13;
585-1234&#13;
584-3112&#13;
663-5934&#13;
664-2951&#13;
838-7626&#13;
743-4297&#13;
747-5932&#13;
834-0617&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors&#13;
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard ~&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counsding&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
834-7921,747-4746&#13;
749-6301&#13;
260-7829&#13;
481-0558&#13;
835-5563&#13;
743-1733&#13;
665-2222&#13;
592-0767&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 74101&#13;
579-9593&#13;
All Sods Unitarian Chmch~ 2952 S. Peoria&#13;
743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 "&#13;
587-7314’&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6&#13;
583-7815&#13;
*B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa United Min. Ctr.&#13;
583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston&#13;
585-1201&#13;
~Chapman Student:Ctr.; University of Tulsa, 5th P1. &amp; Florence&#13;
*Church of the Resto~ationUU, 1314N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
,C.-ommunity ofHopeUnitedMethodist, 2545 S" Yale 747-6300&#13;
,CommunityUnitafian-Universalist Congregation&#13;
749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale&#13;
748-3888&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware&#13;
712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31&#13;
742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa- Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475&#13;
355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congre,g. _Church, info" 58%4669&#13;
*Free SpiritWomen s Center, cm " 747-6827&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa, OK74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor: " "&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry H~nsley, J.-P. Legrandbouche,&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom, .Esther Rothblum, Mary Schepers ~..&#13;
Member of The Associated Press :&#13;
Issued on or before’the 1st~af,cach~m0nth,-the enUre~contents.;&#13;
of this publication: ar6 ptrt~t&amp;l?l~tda:~yrightl~~&#13;
T~( F~,~ N~~ ~fid may ~6t~ ~q~oducetl’,~ ~:&#13;
wholeorin partwithoutwritten~Ssionfromth~publisli&amp;:.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’s&#13;
sexual orientation. Correspondence is, assumed to be. for&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed&amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property of T~J.~~Nc~u÷ ~acli reader&#13;
is entitled to 4 copies of each edidon at ,distribution&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
" Gay Pro Lifers March On&#13;
¯ Onjanuary24,2000,about20members&#13;
:of the Pro-Life Alliance of Gays .and&#13;
: Leshi.ans. (PLAGAL). did an am.P_y~ng&#13;
:,~ at the annual Marcia ior Lit-e protesung&#13;
:. the Roe vs. Wade decision on its&#13;
i nnniversary despite being .tl~¯cate_n.e.d&#13;
.: March told PLAGAL that they~.~uta no_&#13;
¯ march, s~n,,c~_, they. ,,w,ere Gay.-Now, if&#13;
:. PLAGAL closet’ed themsd~ andjust&#13;
....~9A%~e’Righ.t to t~te MarCH, an&#13;
oth groups,_w, eaUow t0.ma@be,. hind&#13;
~: b:~nners- refl~tingtheir various eiamcnes,&#13;
: organizations or states but if.PLAGA~&#13;
¯ m~mbers carried its banner, they woma&#13;
". be arrested and thrown in jail.&#13;
¯¯ This being known at the annual&#13;
PLAGALmeefngontheeveofthemarch,&#13;
" members decided to risk being arrested.&#13;
"_ After all, they reasoned it would be&#13;
hypocritical ffPLAGALhid at the March&#13;
,FHufiieVndEsRinCUennitteyr,S4o1c3ia8lCOhrags.,.PPaOgBeB85lv4~2a, 174101 - -558832--60641318 .:~ .fhoarrdLtiofebewinhcelnudfoerdoypeearnslytihnepyrifdoeuegvhetnstos&#13;
:Tulsa C.A.R:E.S., 3507 E. Admi&#13;
834Z4194 : ~-indparadeswithinitsowncommunity.in&#13;
Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st " 481-1111 ." addition, if PLAGAL bowed to the&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention,.E~_u__ca~on _ 83~8378 : 0ressmesimposedbytheorganizers, they&#13;
*House of the Holy Spirit Miustries, 3?~l,0e,,S,~%Nff~rw~oo~ 2437 .. : ~do the Gay ~)mmunity no, g.oqd..&#13;
lnt,~fslth IDSMinistries ’ ~..~6-/~-I,DI, OUU-~.~’I-z¢’~, ... By.not marching, they would be&#13;
~’l~"~mA’ted,i623 N, Maplewood - .: g ~8-~~ ~&#13;
ac~nowiedging that is was fight t~o hate&#13;
I~AMES Project,3507 E. Ad_mi,ml_ ~PI,: ..... ~, ~,~a~_~.~ ¯ and this would be a backward step.&#13;
NOW, Nat’lOrg. forWomen~POB lqotas, t,H3y :)to-o,, :. PLAGAL members do not want to be&#13;
OK Spokes Club ~cyding), FOB 9i65, 74157 . excluded from the Gay community just&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa . "&#13;
PFLAG, FOB 52800, 74152&#13;
749-4901 -&#13;
*Harmed parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 58%7674 :&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
*R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network&#13;
~ 749-4195&#13;
*Red Rock Mental.Center, 1724 E. 8&#13;
584-2325 ."&#13;
.O’RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults :&#13;
O’RYAN, ~r. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth "&#13;
St. Aid,art’s Episcopal Chinch, 4045N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
S,, r~,,-~tan’s EniScoval, 5635 E. 71st&#13;
492-7140 "&#13;
~t.Jer~--~me’s P~arish ~hurch, 205 W. King 582-3088 "&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
*TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
?ulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thmsdays only&#13;
Tulsa Olda. for HumanRights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc.&#13;
298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
*~ulsa Gay Comn;unity Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105 743-4297&#13;
Unity Churchof Christianity,3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
*Borders Books &amp;Music, 3209NWExpressway 405-848-2667&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
TAHLEQUAH&#13;
*Stonewall League, call for information:&#13;
918-456-7900&#13;
*Tahlequah Unitarian-UniversalistChinch&#13;
918-456-7900&#13;
*Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS,~ARKANSAS " -&#13;
Autumn Breeze Restamant, Hwy. 23&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
DeVito’s Restamant, 5 Center St.&#13;
Emerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek to Go!,~ PC Specialist, FOB 429&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134&#13;
501-253-7734 "&#13;
501-253-7457 "&#13;
501-253-6807 ¯&#13;
501-253-5445&#13;
501-253-9337&#13;
¯&#13;
501-253-2776 "&#13;
501-253~5332&#13;
501-624-6646 ¯&#13;
501-253-6001 "&#13;
501-253-4074 "&#13;
417-623-4696&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Notall are Gay-owned butallare Gay-frlendly.&#13;
becameoftheirpro-lifebeliefs andvalues, ~okmewise, they do want to be excluded&#13;
the pro-life communityjustbecause&#13;
they are Lesbian and Gay. Therefore,&#13;
despite the threats, PLAGALappegr,ex]_at&#13;
themarch,andwhenthepolicebamcaneu&#13;
. them. PLAGAL .members maneuvered.&#13;
around the police and entered the parade&#13;
further up the street marching under their&#13;
banner with the word "censored" taped&#13;
across so everyone would know what the&#13;
vords were underneath. Their decision to&#13;
ignorethearrestthreatsfromtheorganizers&#13;
was noted in The Washington Post, The&#13;
Washington Times, and several others&#13;
news publications throughoutthe counlry.&#13;
Themajority ofGays and Lesbians may&#13;
not share the briefs ofPLAGAL,but the~&#13;
shouldbeproud ofthis small group within&#13;
its community. PLAGAL’s presence was&#13;
a step toward bridging the gap between&#13;
those individuals and the Gay community&#13;
as a whole.&#13;
At the end of the march, members of&#13;
FemtmstforLife , Colleg~ates for Life ,&#13;
Catholic priests and bishops, and others&#13;
from all walks of life and religions&#13;
congratulated and thanked PLAGAL.&#13;
see Letters, p.8&#13;
An nouncements Policy&#13;
Tulsa Family News will provide space&#13;
for holy union ceremony, marriage&#13;
ceremony, birth, adoption~ .and death&#13;
announcements ona space availablebasis.&#13;
Photos are welcome, though we cannot&#13;
promise placement o~r ,re~ttEn ~e~, so&#13;
please send copies to I utsa ~ amtty ~vews,&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa 74159. ~&#13;
¯ ~. Letters Policy :~’&#13;
i" Tulk~’Fam@ News welcomes letters&#13;
0~ issfi~:,which we’ve covered or~on&#13;
issues you think need to be considered.&#13;
You may request that your name be withheld&#13;
but letters must be signed &amp; have&#13;
phonenumbers, or be hand ddivered. 200&#13;
word letters are preferred. Letters to other&#13;
publications will be re-printed as is&#13;
appropriate.&#13;
byChristoptterGraff " ~ Solawmakers arefaced withadivision thatis widening&#13;
¯ !dONTPF.l.lP.R, Vt,(AP)-DonnaLescoeofStarksb°r° ¯ atatime they are looking for .~...useus~s_;ReP.- T~o~. Little,&#13;
: had a simple message for legislators when she testified the chairman of the.HouseJudidary COmm;ttee, ls aman&#13;
,,onGaymmriage."Beheroes~" ~ who has a keen ability to fmd commonground and to&#13;
lawmakers tohavethe courage toextendi¯ stitch together=. divisions, He Js -a Repubfican who : the nmrriage laws tOincludeGays¯ and Lesbians. , commandS’.re.speCt.from-b.oth par.fies~:~But he seetmhaend&#13;
,r :, -~ ,,,~h, SO simule It is hard to be a hero , frustrated this past. week by the w~demng rather&#13;
bv Tom Neal, puoltflg,r &amp; eaztor .... . u ~t ~,~,. ,~ v _:.. ..... ¯ ¯ . ohab y most non-Gry O @Oma : i .".es,the o ti=.rew.lawmakers&#13;
they had no Lesbian orGcoa:ynstfl.uents.. wmlesomeoi *_..m°nmemlle’mmma-,em. vm,.~°~-nsare.s°ucmP.".........&#13;
_,. mp ..-...~&#13;
. " w~’lling to casts: vote that&#13;
them aresimply bigots, many of them know that they- . looked _li~..e .anything bu.~....... . ouldbothdrlast.Nomatter&#13;
oughtto:~be mpportive of basic.civil fights for Gay "- heroe~ folio.wt~.g a re~,,.m " ’~f’k,, ~-~..!. f~ogn6 lavcmaker~ ~. - l~nw stron~ the evidence that&#13;
........ " " " ¯ Ilk UUIIC aaa,o ..~.~ .~--~- .~&#13;
~aUzens.’But they are scared that,treating Gay people Tuesday__ mg P, . _ _&#13;
¯ ,. " . ¯ " ’, , . " " ¯ " .. " * "&#13;
~..,faidy. ..w..a.l.l so, mc,e,nse. othvegr te:rs~.. that they., are=oft.m__:..., _h-.~,g~!tgo~-a.~a-~.t ....... not ea@-. It ~s nothln~ less dmiedthdr dviln~ghts;~t~s&#13;
~.~lhdistta~ttishfibt~ fr0in Oldalaoma R~publicans. ,,-~ ~ ~ ....shell’sn,°q~cm-a~Y-~ ~ : ~ ./ !* ..../ ....L .... - t...a f~ra leoislator to cast a&#13;
¯will be~ deaded 0n TU~da.y;Match 14th. Some 0f,the " them9bPere:!lapfs noeverr e. o[ Freedomand Unlt-~. firestormot races are dfeetivdy settled (Brady Pringledoes~have a i have .1..~0,l~.!e att_~dyd&#13;
Democratic oppon~eatbut in thai~ heavily Republican . a pum~c nearing at me " How to ~ve Gays and Lesbians :polls in November.&#13;
district, it likely doesn’t matter), but others ~ar~.. still : Statehouse.Andthenumber&#13;
unsettled. " - ~ ¯ ~ " : ¯ would have been thousands&#13;
Of particular interestto TulSa’s Lesbian and Gay - moreifasnowstormhadnot&#13;
commlmities is Cound! District 4 .for which former ~ kept many away.&#13;
.~ Yes, eye.one who spoke&#13;
And even if lawmakers&#13;
tl~elr ~xlom an~l yet preserve tl~e craft a package extending to&#13;
unity at the state~&#13;
Gays and Lesbians benefits&#13;
such as having a say in the&#13;
It is the stm~ heroes are madeo[." medical decisions of, their&#13;
incumbent Gary W~tts ischallengingcurrentincumbent parmers;theyknow therewill&#13;
Anna Falling. While _.Gay and ~tiian households a~ - wascivil.Butthecivilitydid&#13;
foundthroughont thedty~-thisdistri¢t,mosflyMidtown, ; not mask the passion: Or the division. The tremors in " be a vote on the.floor on same-sex marriage - and that&#13;
is. easily the most. heavily Gaylone.of the..dt~ For_ ~ people’s voices, a mixture of nerves .and emotion, spoke - tally, no matter what the outcome, will beused in .the fall&#13;
examp!e,jnstonornextttlny_v~;shortbloek~thereare " volumes about-the depths of feeling.~ What became " elections. " Following .the hearing it seemed m the&#13;
at least six Gay families2 . i-.~~ ~. - ,.. -. :. apparent’at theheming is thatthe two sides are moving : Statehouse timt lawmakers would like to f’md a way to&#13;
. One could argue, of course, that- Ms~ Fallingrs very -- fresher aparL - avoidany voteonthis issue this year.Theideaofcreating&#13;
nubile lan.qe., in oood iudoment onnon-Gav issues (win ~-" WhentheSupr_em~eC.o.urtissuedi~.~be.r.idec.i.’s.ion :.a special com~!ssio.n .to .craft. a solu~o~n ,~an~d .rgel~O~ht;o~ r..::-:~.,r.:-- ,, &lt; .,r-~-.,. ..... : ~. nsband~s~ -_ sa g Gays and Lesbians are eg.~fled tP the rights,. ". law.n~Kersnex[yearmt~mgatscus.ssa.tmt _P~r.napsua~ her recycling program pu.bfic or private, her h ...... ym ¯ ¯ ¯ - - ...... . o t the&#13;
¯ n,mmdfi~oroaniTatlon arml~n~f0~nUbficfundson.which ¯ bendits and protecuons gtvenroamedcouples, e_veryone ¯ ~sjustamo.m~entar~. ,.a.nd, ex.p.ected hesitancy foil w ng&#13;
~.~’~l"~.---e7------rr:~--~, r , i . - . ,~ " .t,d--.A ~,~,~teww P,,-a~e and I ~=~h~rt~ ~.q e coul"t -" na~sion80t tile DUDIIC lleallnl~.&#13;
¯&#13;
.&#13;
.snewastovote),areenoughtopersuaaeLesmananatJay - ’-~..’2p~. ""~"*,?." ""~ .’~"..~"~’.’.’-:...l.~a~s.ed the.. .&#13;
~_~__,= _r.t.~_.,~,,t,.nm,~tttiiiX~endnnhowthedebateis&#13;
_ " ~.F2.-............¯,.;~.l,~.t~.i .r~v.r,~--..,~.t.~.n.f.~..e.-~_e.x. mam__aaoge al80 rimmed ¯ frmned m the comm~_ weeks. Opponents ll,ge me. m. p ,L. arg.en.t a.n.dl.na.ol.e .sul.tra.-e.xtr.em.e.re.ng.to.-po.n.u.co.s,.a.no..-..~,¯ .t.~, b~" ause the court di¯d not stri¯ke down the state,s .¯ are seeki"ng to" portray the Supreme Court deeimon as&#13;
her rtosuu[y Io OUr t’I1oe evenls, it s Cl~ar Inat amlost . ,a,.~..j . . . .&#13;
. . .&#13;
,,~....,,1,1 h~ ~,~tt,~ ¯ mamage laws~ Bishop Kenneth Angell calle~_, the court . some_ra.di.’.ca.l, andug,com.ttm.~fio.na).mo.ye ,F~Ve.nnon.t.ers,&#13;
~:................ -&#13;
ruling aadecisivevictoryfor.tradifionalmamage."&#13;
¯ thoughdtlshardtotmagrnet~meIJusuceJenreyAmestoY, Thatbringsus toGaryWatts. Gary,likesomeOklahoma -&#13;
Democrats is not particularly prejudiced. Like those : R seemed at that moment that legislation creating&#13;
same Democrats, he’s not shown much leadership, He : dthormouegshti.cBpuatritnnetrhsehmiposnftohrsGinacyestahneddeLceissbioianntshewtowuolds.l~ose~s&#13;
and they don’t haleus - theyjust don’.t want to deal with -&#13;
our issues. have’ staked out positions worlds aparL&#13;
,But sOi~eone"s got to.start, kno@ing that.we’ll lose the&#13;
first or five engagements but that.each time our issues,&#13;
like a city non-discrimination ordinance, or equal&#13;
compensation (full benefits for our familiesas well as&#13;
equal wages)for Gay cityemployees, or a city domestic&#13;
partners registry, are debated,the public learns. I believe&#13;
that-Oklahomans are basically fair and eventually will&#13;
respond to a reasoned argument.&#13;
And in the meantime, a fair-minded city councilor&#13;
could push for administrative changes, like getting the&#13;
"diversity" training forourpolice departmentto deal with&#13;
more than just race. After all, it’s our city too.&#13;
: Bishop An,g,ell recently-condemned domestic&#13;
: partnerships as steponetowardfullacceptanceofsame- "&#13;
¯ sex marriage" and has evenchallenged ~evalidity ofthe&#13;
¯ Supreme C,o.~_~ ruling itseLf, saying ~.his~t.o ,arms,to .&#13;
Catholics, q~ere are many sound legm minus WhO .&#13;
¯ question the Supreme Court’s authority to even issue "&#13;
¯ such mandates to the legislature.’"&#13;
: At the same time, Gays and Lesbians are saying a ¯&#13;
system of domestic partnerships is insufficient to meet "&#13;
the spiritofthe Supreme Courtrtding. Adomesticpartner "&#13;
sounds like someone who cleans the house, Jonathan&#13;
Radigan told lawmakers.&#13;
: amuchbeloved andeminentlyrespectedpersonwhois as&#13;
: moderate and generally as cautious as they come, doing&#13;
¯ something radical or unconstitutional. It was Amestoy&#13;
: who wrote the court rnling.&#13;
: Andthe hearingdidmuchtoeducatenotju~tlawmnkers,&#13;
but also the public at large. ~Vermont Public Radio did a&#13;
great service by broadcasting the hearing statewide.&#13;
Vermonters of all political and social back_groun.ds .got a&#13;
chance to hear the scripture readings, the pasmon, the&#13;
division. They also got to hearfrom the real.people whose&#13;
lives will be most affected by the legislative action.&#13;
The task facing lawmakers is noteasy. It is nothing less&#13;
than living up to the state’s motto of "’Freedom and&#13;
Unity." How to giveGays andLesbians theirfreedomand&#13;
yet preserve the unity of the state?&#13;
It is the stuff heroes are made of.&#13;
by Dave Fleischer, Senior Fellow Policy Institute&#13;
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force&#13;
We love coming out - except when we hate it.&#13;
Welovereminiscing onand celebrating ourpast acts of&#13;
daring. Comingoutishow wediscoveredbothcommunity&#13;
and freedom. It’s how we found both love and a life.&#13;
But it’s hard to snmmon the energy and courage to&#13;
come out 24/7 - to ask, tell, and pursue on a daily basis.&#13;
That’s why campaigns sidestep the "G" word. When&#13;
we say~ person-to-person, "What do you think ,a,b~,ut tl~."s&#13;
anti-Gay ballot measure?", we are also asking, "What do&#13;
you think about me? Do you see me as a human being,&#13;
although I’m Gay and you probably aren’tT’&#13;
’. Most campaigns avoid coming out, way out_ They&#13;
rarely engage voters .perso.n-to-person, and of,te~, av~oid&#13;
mentioning sexual on~mtataon. Recent research oy ls.en&#13;
~eager (himself an openly-~ay candidate for office)&#13;
~uggests that57% of candidate’~ who think of themselves&#13;
as "openly Gay" don’t actually disclose their sexual&#13;
orientation to voters before the election.&#13;
Likewise, many campaigns to defeat anti-Gay ballot&#13;
measures twist themselves into p~etzels to avoid the&#13;
words "Gay", "Lesbian", or that new scare word&#13;
(rarely so clearly):&#13;
ifax&#13;
Thd challengeofbeing outhas turned us inward before.&#13;
: Look around our community. Most of our organizations&#13;
: are refuges -"safe space"- safe from meaningful&#13;
¯ encounters with straight people. We draw 200,000 to a&#13;
: pride parade to celebrate, yet only a relative handful to&#13;
¯ political campaigns to safeguard our fights.&#13;
¯ But relying onrefuges is a risky strategy. It suggests to&#13;
: our opponents that the rest of the world is theirs, and it&#13;
¯ leaves us vulnerable topolitical attack. Soplease consider&#13;
¯ afew specificcoming-outactionsthatbuildourcollective ¯&#13;
power and don’t unduly disrupt your everyday life.&#13;
¯ 1. Join acampaign where you get to ask voters one-on-&#13;
: one, preferably face-to-face, if we can count-on their&#13;
¯ votes.&#13;
¯&#13;
In 2000, California, Miami-Dade County, Florida,&#13;
¯ Maine, and possibly Oregon face ballot measures that&#13;
¯ affect your rights. If you live in one of these places, join ¯&#13;
your local campaign.&#13;
¯&#13;
If you used to live in one, make a list of everyone you&#13;
; know in your old hometown. Dig out your old address&#13;
book or high school yearbook. Ask your siblings or&#13;
¯&#13;
parents to jog your memory. I’ll bet you know at least 50&#13;
¯ people you can call. Whea you reach them, explain the&#13;
and ask if we can count on&#13;
: "Hometown Project", because it builds on the power of&#13;
¯ our relationships with family and friends, even when&#13;
; we’ve been out of touch.&#13;
: If you have never lived in the hot-spots du jour, don’t&#13;
¯ feel neglected. Make a list of everyone you know who&#13;
¯&#13;
does live in one. You must know 20 people. Send them&#13;
¯ this colnmn. Follow uponthephone.Weneedevery vote,&#13;
¯ and you will help create a new habit of doing the one-on-&#13;
" one ask.&#13;
~ 2. Host a house party to raise money for one of the&#13;
communities under attack. Invite 120 friends and&#13;
." acquaintances to your home to hear about this new wave&#13;
¯ of ballot measures. Call all 120 personally and ask each&#13;
¯ to come. You will bring together 40 people, raise a ¯&#13;
minimum of $1000, and f’md at, least six new volunteers.&#13;
¯ 3. Get training. If face-to-face voter contact sounds&#13;
: intimidating, seek out training, At the¯National Gay &amp;&#13;
¯ Lesbian Task Force Creating Change conference ¯&#13;
November 10-14, we taught the nuts and bolts, went&#13;
¯ door-to-door talking with Oakland voters about the anti-&#13;
-¯ Gay-marriage Knight Initiative. In one evening, we will&#13;
identified hundreds of our supporters, and educated&#13;
undecided, voters.&#13;
,. rput up the periscooI~..~::~t~sgreat that our community&#13;
- but reality&#13;
In some cases, the registry document can provide&#13;
further legal proof of a relationship, Roche said. It&#13;
could come into play, for exhmple, when a Gay couple&#13;
with jointly owned assets separates.&#13;
The registry stirred relatively little opposition in&#13;
Ashland, where it was approvea by a 4-1 vote of the&#13;
City Council, Roche said. Nationally, registries have&#13;
spurred voter initiatives and lawsuits. Courts validated&#13;
Atlanta’s registry but overturned a registry in&#13;
Minneapolis, according to the Lmnbda Legal Defense&#13;
and Education Fund. The registries can be designed !o&#13;
~PP!~ ~ both Gays and t~f~rosextml~i~,as Seattle s&#13;
i~,i[~i~ ~bepurely ;~.~ml~6iic o{’~iV~ sp~i~...d&#13;
tl~e-~ ’~ :: ~ :": " ~. -" ’ .~&#13;
i .Reform&#13;
:Same-Gender Rituals&#13;
NEW YORK (AP).=-Two years after they postponed&#13;
a contentious showdown over same-sex blessing&#13;
rituals, the rabbis ofJudaism"S liberal Reform branch&#13;
will face a decision on the issue at this year’s&#13;
convention. Leaders of the 200-member Women’s&#13;
Rabbinic Network have agreed to force the issue by&#13;
submitting a resolution sanctioning such ceremonies&#13;
to the Central Conference OfAmerican Rabbis, which&#13;
holds-*its national convention, March 26-29 in&#13;
Greensboro, North Carolina.&#13;
The coqeaders of the women’s network, Rabbis&#13;
Shira Stem and Susan-Stone, said the resolution&#13;
agreed" to’recently will differ only slightly from a&#13;
proposed text the same group published in January.&#13;
" That text said: "The relationship of a Jewish, samegender&#13;
couple is worthy ofaffirmation through&#13;
appropriate Jewish ritual and. :-: .each rabbi should&#13;
decide ab0ut-0l’ficiafio-n- a~,Ysfdin-g-t6 hig/her"own&#13;
rabbinic conscience." The conference’s top two&#13;
officials had signed a January declaration urging all&#13;
American tdig~ons to normalize same-sex couples.&#13;
And a conference Sexuality study committee in 1998&#13;
.. endorSed recognition rituals for such couples.&#13;
The women’s net~brk cffes the sexuality&#13;
i C~mtifittee’s view that Judaism’s historic opposition&#13;
¯ to homosexual behavior no longer applies.&#13;
But there is division within Reform rabbinic ranks.&#13;
: The conference’s "responsa comnuttee,’,whose&#13;
¯¯ rulings guide the practices of Reformrabbis, opposed&#13;
thechangeinaT-2decision.Amemberoftheresponsa&#13;
committee majority, .Rabbi .:Jeffrey Salkin of Port&#13;
Washington,NewYork, saidReformrabbis arealready&#13;
free to conduct same-sex rituals if they want. But&#13;
Salkin fears that officially approving the practice&#13;
would"tearrdati,onships apart" amongReformrabbis,&#13;
and hurt Reform s relations ~ith otl~[r branches and&#13;
its hopes-.~fot full a-cce~tance.in {g~el?-Whatevet&#13;
happens, Salkin said; ~’We:are looking at something&#13;
that will ha¢e massive historical iml~pr~ce." ~ "-&#13;
¯ Me,mawhile, the Episcopal’Churchig~s to release&#13;
a proposal on same-same rituals within a weekortwo&#13;
Conventions ofthe Presb~[6ri~m Ch~Ch (U,S.~.) an~&#13;
United Methodist Church will also deb~!le the issue&#13;
this year. .:. ~- " ~&#13;
Gay Club Embraced at&#13;
Catholic College&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
MCC-United&#13;
Reverend Cathg.E~liot&#13;
Pastor ~)&#13;
Sunday Worship&#13;
11:00 am&#13;
1623 N. Maplewood 918/838~715&#13;
~.~,~ ~ "7.-&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at llam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
.................. Wgd_._Bible- Study, ~7 pm&#13;
3210b S. Norwood, Info: 224-4754, Chris or Sharon&#13;
Sandra Hill M.s.&#13;
Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
Counselor, Certified Hypnotherapist&#13;
Psychotherapy &amp; Clinical Consultation&#13;
After Hours Appointments Available&#13;
2865 E. Skelly DriSe, Suite 215,745-1111&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa- O’RYAN&#13;
Oklahoma Rainbow Y0hng Adult Network i~’&#13;
Outreach Prografn Thurs: Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment ~. .:&#13;
Call for.mee.ting tinies ~ind place: ~&#13;
918-584:2325&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers&#13;
II&#13;
Court UpholdsPortl and&#13;
Civil Rights Ordinance&#13;
SALEM, Ore. (AP) - Gay rights advocates have won&#13;
a round as the Oregon Court of Appeals upheld a&#13;
Portland ordinance against discrimination based on&#13;
sexual orientation. The court, in a 9-1 ruling reversing&#13;
a lower court, said the city had the power to give&#13;
citizens the right to go to state courts to enforce the&#13;
anti-discrimination ordinance.&#13;
Even some,of,the appealsjudges in the.majority,&#13;
tho~.igtr, ~orried-@ati tl~e~c0~ ~.i,,hav~ V~iatut~d&#13;
roofs, toward giving private partigs new..avenues&#13;
sUeiffSeateeo.ur~s overlocaHa~sx.The rightto sue-was&#13;
tthet~yi~su~-,N~bod~:oIai,m~4ltmt!hecity1aek~ ~he&#13;
~weri lx~:iid0pt~:~e-ordinanee.in~t991., that bars&#13;
disNNmati~n, i~ eniployment, housing, and public&#13;
accommodations.. ,S~te.taws against employment&#13;
discrimination don’t include sexual orientation. The&#13;
city ordinance also outlaws discrimination based on&#13;
sources of income, which is aimed at protecting&#13;
welfare recipients.&#13;
"This is a great day for civil rights in Oregon,P said&#13;
PortlandMayor Vera¯ Katz..Port.land ~.s once.agatn a&#13;
leaderin efforts to protecttherights ofall our citizens."&#13;
The case decided involved employment. A&#13;
MultuomahCounty temporaryjudge, MonteBricker,&#13;
~n .1.997 ruled against David Sims, who claimed he&#13;
was fired as a cook at Besaw’s Cafe in .Portland&#13;
because he is Gay. Owners of the business denied the&#13;
accusations and have not made a decision-on whether&#13;
to appeal to the oregon Supreme Court.&#13;
Bricker said the city couldn’t givepeopleapathway&#13;
to state courts to seek enforcement of rights under a&#13;
local law. But the appeals court said the city didn’t&#13;
exceedits authority, giving Sims the chance to continue&#13;
............with hislav~sttitin_which he.~6"nght either damages or&#13;
Basic Rights Oregon, a leading Gay civil rights&#13;
advocacy organization, also praised the decision.&#13;
"We’re very pleased to hear that the court has upheld&#13;
employees’ access to fight discrimination at the state&#13;
courtle el, : stud spokeswoman Maura Roche.&#13;
More than one appealsjudge hadmixed feelingson&#13;
thecase, which had been before the~cottrt since fall of&#13;
1998. Only Judge Walter Edmonds Jr. dissented&#13;
entirely. But four others, including Chief Judge Mary&#13;
Deits, said while they agreed with the outcome, the&#13;
court went further than necessary. The decision&#13;
"sweeps too broadly" in deciding that cities can&#13;
broaden the "duties and liabilities of private parties,"&#13;
Judge Virginia Linder wrote in a separate concurring&#13;
opinion. Edmonds said the decision violated the&#13;
concept of state sovereignty over local governments.&#13;
Oregon City/Count,y May&#13;
Try-Partners R gistry&#13;
RTL N , Or . eit: of t’ortland and&#13;
Multnomah County are ~nsiderir~ theadopdon of a&#13;
domesdcpartuefship registry as away~’prGay couples&#13;
t6 Officially iog thdr ~;~i~onships, A jOint ~registry&#13;
wotfld be ihe second ,~.::~gon ,ag_.d~ong three&#13;
dozen nationwide. In Oc~be~AsKihhd approved a&#13;
registry for s/tree-sex couples 18:or older. So did&#13;
California. Seattle has had one since 1994. And New&#13;
Orleans, Boston, New York and Iowa City, Iowa also&#13;
have them.&#13;
The registries stop far short of conferring marriage&#13;
s-tatus- on- Gay -couples= "~Bul~, it’s~ ,still-. an&#13;
acknowledgment of. a relationship that two people&#13;
who are committed to one another have," said Maura&#13;
Roche, spokeswoman for Basic Rights Oregon. "And&#13;
it’~ s away~to aeknoWiedge i-t in:a pt~bli~.forum~ which&#13;
hopefally Wi~,leadito. ~g~puh!ie: understanding&#13;
¯~at~drmi~icaneedi:BotmJ~T~] cxec~ti:ve director Of&#13;
She.-said the~Ialks are;.~.~st~p)i’~-thffright direction&#13;
becaus,e a registry represent§ a chatNejn family.&#13;
That s oae o~ the mNn..eoiicerns of Lou Bores&#13;
exec~utive ~r...e.rgtor ~:;ffae:C~eg0ii chapter of the&#13;
:.~)::: :~ais in Po~ilanO;and the na~9~’~, heL~aid:Beres added&#13;
that he would try to organize h:pmtegt~a~ainst Katz&#13;
and Naito if registries were e~(tended io homosexual&#13;
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - When Dan Neuville&#13;
started classes as a freshman at Saint Joseph’s College&#13;
in Standish last year~ the Gay man felt very lonely.&#13;
Considering the church’s stance on homosexuality,&#13;
Neuville wasn’t suq:rrised that there was no Lesbian-&#13;
¯ Gay studentorganizationlike.~ose at-secular colleges.&#13;
"Tl~ere was-novd~ere form~to go.on,campus," Neuville&#13;
said...........&#13;
Now Newzille has creati~d ~dmewhere to go.,~qaough&#13;
Catholic ze~cNag bars ~homosex~mt¢ from tam’Gage&#13;
and sexual activity, &amp;e State’[ only Roman Cail~olic&#13;
college has:f0~-med a stude~tdub where heterosexual&#13;
and homosesua! smdcms&#13;
The Gay/St~ight&#13;
stat~ff "as&#13;
s~uden~&#13;
dozen&#13;
Jennifer B@iiton;pres~d~nt~of: the student.senate;&#13;
9413 K 31st St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
918-663-5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-444-5934&#13;
Family Owned&amp; Operated&#13;
- - - - -- ~" ~- --7--- - - -&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
Tulsa Gay Commtmity Sen,ices Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743-4297)&#13;
6=~pm, Sunday - Friday..&#13;
"12-9~m, Saturday; all sales.benefit’the Center/~-.i.&#13;
Local&#13;
- --KEVIN BURLESON&#13;
Keller ~Willgams Rea!ty&#13;
712-2252&#13;
Burleson@kw.com&#13;
2651 East 21st Street, Ste. 100, Tulsa 74114&#13;
An Independent Member Broker&#13;
OPENARMS,OPENMINDS-,OPENHEAKq’S&#13;
Saint Aidan ,&lt;. .Saint Dunstan&#13;
4045 N. Cincinnali,i~7882 .ii~~East 71st 492~7140&#13;
Saint John :......Td~ty - "&#13;
4200 S. Atlanta Pla~.~/42-7381 .,501: $.: Cincinnati, 582-4128&#13;
Welcomes You.&#13;
said the ~cp.llege’s administrators, staff and students&#13;
have received the new group well. "On our campus,&#13;
iwe’re open to all issues, and as students we’re&#13;
encouraged to discuss issues in society. Gay issues&#13;
are one of those," she said.&#13;
Thealliancehasmoreheterosexual than homosexual&#13;
members and is not intended to compel anyone to&#13;
endorse homosexuality, Neuville said. "We’re not a&#13;
.. ~ mili~antgroup. We’renotprotesting,pickefn,g, saying,&#13;
"Damn it, we want you to accept us,"" he said.&#13;
club&#13;
Gay on&#13;
.to talk andleam tissues&#13;
andbias against l&#13;
to make Of troths&#13;
.Saint&#13;
Straight&#13;
For the&#13;
problematic&#13;
sexual&#13;
¯ whether homosexuality is a choice or biological is&#13;
." irrelevant. "Gay and Lesbian people are not treated&#13;
." equally in many respects,’" sa~d Jane Marquardt, an&#13;
¯ attorney who donated to the Shepard scholarship&#13;
." fund. The scholarship is meant "to help a particular&#13;
." Gay student develop leadership skills, than people&#13;
¯ can realize Gay people are no different than anyone&#13;
." else," Marquardt said.&#13;
:: Gay Student Sues School&#13;
RENO. Nev._ (AP) - A former Washoe County high&#13;
i School studentclaimsWashoeCounty school officials&#13;
: failed t0 stopverbal andphysica!harassmentinflicted&#13;
i-liy classmates becaus~ h~,is.Gay... In afederal lawsuit&#13;
:. fded recendy, Derek Henkle ailcges school officials&#13;
1 : denied him~i:~te~:~.~.elofhls sexual&#13;
.. ofientation:~d ,d~died,’:.~ fr~:, ~li:rigllts by;&#13;
’: allegedly urging him tohide being ~ay. Tl~_e suit als0~&#13;
.. maizes claimsofnegfigenceandinfliclionofemolional.&#13;
¯" distress. " ’" ...... :’=. .....&#13;
: I-Ienkle:~suit is .being h~ndled.~by me:Lamb~a&#13;
: Legal Defense and Eduction Fund, a New York-&#13;
¯ : : based Gay rights.o~ganiza~on, it seeks unspecified&#13;
t .::damages, Namedas defendan.ts are prindpals;a vice&#13;
: prin~pal, a.teache~, and ~pus poSce officers.&#13;
: School district offi~:ials had no iimnediate comment.&#13;
¯ "we haven’t been served with anythin$ yet and unSl&#13;
" wedo,obvionsly we~m’tcommenton thespedfi~,"&#13;
district Spokesman~Steve Mulvenon said.&#13;
Jon&#13;
,a~Gay&#13;
.~"It’s not a conditiOn&#13;
who is&#13;
But the Catholics,&#13;
: shouidbe~&#13;
Catholic&#13;
,Derek thandled I&#13;
and&#13;
at:the-hands .of&#13;
said. call: :.Henkle&#13;
clearly what :the stated&#13;
-.Gay Scho|ershi&#13;
including students ~and faculty at&#13;
University have raised more than $50&#13;
~e. Matthew Shepard Scholarship&#13;
enaowment wil!.pro~ide $2,000 a year&#13;
Bisexual ortransg~&#13;
grade point average,.=&#13;
"I think it makes":us a,&#13;
Hinds,. a Weber: State staff member who&#13;
: a highway~&#13;
" administrators ~&#13;
At Washoe&#13;
! relatedlY&#13;
: students to&#13;
said his complaints to&#13;
lot while two campus&#13;
Davidson said the p_ri’ncipal&#13;
pcople hewas Gay.&#13;
students who&#13;
tell Lesbians and Gay&#13;
closet," Davidson said.&#13;
¯Gay Pride to.&#13;
Happen pite vatican&#13;
--~, Wyo., ROME (AP) - A Gay Pride week that comes smack&#13;
.: college studentwho was Severely pistol ’ i iirnktehdetmheidVdalteicoafnt,hbeuRt Roommane,CsmatahyoolircinHsoislytedYtehaarththaes.&#13;
left to die. The -&#13;
¯ " laws across the nation. :&#13;
."_.-i .Scho!arshiplapplieants must be a sophQ~ or :: aelvoenngtwwiiltlhbethalelo.Gw,,ae~ydptoritdaekeepvleancte,."bYutoiutmwioguhltdnobtegoa&#13;
: higher level, t~king 12 credit hours per s~es~er. A : mistake to ban it, Mayor Francesco Rutelli said.&#13;
500 to 750 word essay, the World Pride Roma 2000 is expected to bring&#13;
needs, academicperformance .: hundredsofthonsandsofGaysandLeshianstoRome&#13;
with or service to the pay, Lesbian,&#13;
Organizers are working to finalize&#13;
scholarship endowment with the&#13;
there are no applications.&#13;
"There are sexnal m~inorifies.Andthis is&#13;
"there’s a scliolarship here,"’ said&#13;
President&#13;
But&#13;
said Weber State student Niki&#13;
with culture&#13;
¯ at the same fire,the eityis overflowing with religions&#13;
: pilgrims eomingto th~Jubileemillenniumcelebrations&#13;
: calledby PopeJ0hnPaul II."Romehas amillenninm-&#13;
: old code of welcome~.and respect that won’t change in&#13;
¯ 2000." RutelEtold a city council meeting on Holy&#13;
: Year issues:,~:The. ~Vatican, which condemns&#13;
: homosexual acts but.not homosexuality itself, had no&#13;
official comment ~the July 1-9 event. Vatican&#13;
Officials denied~.~.~ that the Holy See had tried to&#13;
÷:: cgoent diitticoanncoelfe~a.-,.n~iio;~[n~,~~ti_.,thae lsooffaiccikanlso,wwlehdogeSdptohkaet tohne&#13;
Vafica was irritate, by the fact that the gathering&#13;
t~mes ~:J~ee yeax.&#13;
seeNews,p. 10&#13;
rZ&#13;
Better.Drugs i Oral Sex Not As&#13;
Equal Fewer Pills i Safe As Thought&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Powerful new ¯&#13;
AIDS drugs in development should help&#13;
relieve one of the biggest problems of&#13;
treatment - the pill burden. Over the past&#13;
four years, new treatment combinations&#13;
have revolutionized AIDS care, changing&#13;
HIV infection from a death sentence to a&#13;
disease that is treatable, if not curable.&#13;
However,patientsmustadhereto atedious&#13;
and exacting sehedule of downing pills,&#13;
.often more than 20 a day.&#13;
Now, drugmakers are working on new&#13;
drugs that require m~ch smaller doses as&#13;
wall as better versions of the old standbys&#13;
that can be taken less frequently.&#13;
Experts say that if all goes well, overthe&#13;
next two or so years it may be possible to&#13;
reduce the .pill burden to just four tablets&#13;
taken once a day. "Most drugs are dosed&#13;
twice or three times a day for a reason.&#13;
Once a day is not enough. The Holy Grail&#13;
would be to take all your medicines once&#13;
aday with as few capsules as possible. We&#13;
are not so far from that, maybe in the next&#13;
couple of years," said Dr. Eugene Sun,&#13;
head of antiviral drug research at Abbott&#13;
Laboratories.&#13;
About half of all patients who initially&#13;
respond to treatment eventually find their&#13;
virus levels rebounding, and the most&#13;
common reason for this is failure to stick&#13;
to apill schedule. Thepill-taking schedule&#13;
is more than just a nuisance. 71~ose who&#13;
miss even a few doses risk losing control&#13;
overtheir virus. Withoutenoughmedicine&#13;
in the bloodstream, HIV comes roaring&#13;
back, often generating mutant versions&#13;
that are resistant to the drugs.&#13;
Akeyingredient of mostdrug regimens&#13;
is a class of medicines called protease&#13;
inhibitors. They are often combined with&#13;
two or three older kinds of drugs, such as&#13;
ddI and AZT.&#13;
At last month’s 7th Conference on&#13;
Retroviruses andOpportunistic Infections&#13;
in SanFrancisco, doctors describedresults&#13;
of testing with new varieties of prot.ease&#13;
inhihibors. Some of these medicines are&#13;
10 times more powerful than the ones that&#13;
transformed AIDS treatment. Protease&#13;
inhibitors are by far the biggest lump in&#13;
the pill burden. Typically patients must&#13;
take three of them three times a day - a&#13;
total of nine pills -often on an empty&#13;
stomach.&#13;
In the works areproteaseinhibitors that&#13;
doctors hope will need to be taken twice&#13;
or even just once a day. One of these is&#13;
Bristol-Myers Squibb’s drugcode-named&#13;
BMS-232632. In preliminary testing&#13;
directed by Sanne, it appears that one or&#13;
two ofthese pills once aday is as effective&#13;
at suppressing HIV as the standard dose&#13;
of nelfinavir, an older protease inhibitor.&#13;
Abbottpresentedpromising results with&#13;
its experimental protease inhibitor ABT-&#13;
378, showing it Seems to work against&#13;
strains of virus that are already resistant to&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Many Gay&#13;
men consider oral sex a safer alternative&#13;
to intercourse, but a new study finds it&#13;
carries a real risk of spreading AIDS.&#13;
Even without condoms, oral sex is&#13;
widelyregardedtobe safe sex, eventhough&#13;
: health agencies have never officially&#13;
: conceded that. A new study conducted in&#13;
i&#13;
San Francisco shows that frequent&#13;
unprotected oral sex can also be risky,&#13;
." though certainly not as much as anal sex.&#13;
: "The message is not that everyone will&#13;
¯ get infected through oral sex," said Dr.&#13;
-" FrederickHechtofSanFrancisco General&#13;
." Hospital, a coauthor of the study. In fact,&#13;
¯ analintercoursecouldbe 100timesriskier.&#13;
¯ Because of declines in unprotected anal&#13;
: intercourse, therehas beenabigreduction&#13;
." in high-risk exposure, I-Iecht said. But&#13;
~ -~._~ere is still plenty of low-risk exposure&#13;
¯ tl~ough oral sex without condoms, "and&#13;
." that low risk adds up." His study found&#13;
: that oral sex was probably the cause of8%&#13;
¯¯ of recent HIV infections among a group&#13;
of homosexual men examined in S~m&#13;
~ Francisco.&#13;
¯ In the past, there have been occasional&#13;
¯ reports ofpeopleapparently catching HIV&#13;
orally. But health investigators have had&#13;
¯ difficulty being certain, since Gay men&#13;
¯ who have do oral sex also may engage in ¯&#13;
¯ other, riskier sex practices, such as anal&#13;
intercourse.&#13;
¯ Now diagnostic tests allow doctors to&#13;
¯ narrow downthe timing ofHIV infections.&#13;
¯ They were used in the latest study,&#13;
." described as the most definitive on the&#13;
subject to date. The work, conducted with&#13;
¯ the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and&#13;
¯ Prevention, was presented in San&#13;
¯ Francisco at the 7th Conference on&#13;
¯ Retrovirases and Opporttmistic Infectious.&#13;
¯ "’Wlfile oral sex may still be safer than&#13;
." anal intercourse or vaginal intercourse, it&#13;
¯ is not without risk and perhaps has higher&#13;
¯ risk than we would have expected&#13;
¯ otherwise," said Dr. Helene Gayle, the&#13;
CDC’s AIDS chief.&#13;
" The researchers sought to learn the&#13;
¯ meaus ofinfectionin 102 GayandBisexual&#13;
¯ men who had recently caught HIV. When&#13;
¯ all other possible means of infection were&#13;
¯ ruled out, oral sex turnedout to be the only&#13;
¯ risk behavior in eight of these men. Most&#13;
0 said they thought- oral sex had little or no&#13;
° risk.&#13;
° Because o~ the strict criteria used, the&#13;
: real number of cases resulting from oral °&#13;
sex may actually have been higher. For&#13;
° instance, two men said they had oral sex&#13;
-" but not anal sex. But they also said they&#13;
o had blacked out once and could not be °&#13;
sure what had happened, so they were&#13;
¯ excluded from the total.&#13;
. All of the men apparently caught the&#13;
¯ virus by giving oral sex, rather than&#13;
receiving it, and none used condoms.&#13;
¯ "We know that the only safe sex is total&#13;
other drugs. The drug will be combined 0 abstinence or sex with a mutually&#13;
smaller doses~ wel!..... ~ ~&#13;
.~’ Ufie~p~.cteff~ide et~l~b.cts can quickly&#13;
derail deq~loptuent of these drugs -MerCk&#13;
Research Laboratories was scheduled to&#13;
presentresultS ofits new protease inhibitor&#13;
at the meeting. But two weeks ago, it&#13;
suspended human testing of the drug after&#13;
rat experiments turnedup possible kidney&#13;
damage. Themedicine, called MK-944A,&#13;
is acombination ofanew protease inhibitor&#13;
and an older one, called indinavir, into a&#13;
single pill that would be taken once or&#13;
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withritonavir, another protease inhibitor, o monogamous,non-HIV-infectedparmer,"&#13;
into pills that willbo-taken three at a time, : ’~ Gayle said. "Everything else has some&#13;
twic~:~a day. The comp.,.a~y?~.s working on ° degree of risk. The sense that oral sex is&#13;
safe sex may have been an unfortunate&#13;
message."&#13;
Gayle said she a~sumes that the risk of&#13;
oral sex when properly using a condom is&#13;
close to zero. She also .said that if oral sex&#13;
alone has played a large role in the spread&#13;
ofAIDS, that wouldalready havebecome&#13;
obvious during the 20 years.&#13;
Dr. Anthony Fauci, head ofthe National&#13;
Institute of Allergy and Infectious&#13;
Diseases, noted that some Gaymenturned&#13;
to frequent unprotected oral sex after&#13;
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Are You-Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
Tulsa s Two-Spirited Indian Mona _ / ~\~"~&#13;
Support Group is here for. you! .~i=-J.~Y LX~&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HIV testing&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
at 582-7225 Ext. 208 or 218,&#13;
giving up anal intercourse.&#13;
"A lot of us in the public health field&#13;
havebeen saying all along to be careful of&#13;
~akrottehceteridskfieslllaotwio,,"buhtewshaaitd.s l"oPwe?o"ple&#13;
AIDS Virus First&#13;
Emerged in 1930&#13;
SANFRANCISCO (AP)-Theworldwide&#13;
AIDS pandemic has beentraced to asingle&#13;
viral ancestor who emerged perhaps&#13;
around 1930. Earlier research had ¯&#13;
suggested that the ol~tbreak began in the ¯&#13;
first half of the 20th century, but the latest :&#13;
analysis, doneat the Los Alamos National ."&#13;
Lab in New Mexico, appears to be the ¯&#13;
most definitive so far. -"&#13;
Bette Korber, who keeps a’database of&#13;
HIV genetic, information at the lab,&#13;
calculatedHIV’s family treebylooking at&#13;
the rate the virus mutates over time. She&#13;
assumed these genetic changes happen at&#13;
a constant rate and used a supercomputer&#13;
to clock the mutations back through time&#13;
tO a common ancestor.&#13;
Korber estimates that the current&#13;
pandemic goes back to one or a small&#13;
group of infected humans around 1930,&#13;
though this ancestor virus could have&#13;
emerged as early-as 1910 or as late as&#13;
1950. From this single source, she&#13;
suggests, came the virus that now infects&#13;
roughly 40 million people all over the&#13;
.world. ’This offers a small piece in a&#13;
larger puzzle concermng the origins of&#13;
HIV," she said.&#13;
Experts believe that HIV’s ancestor is a&#13;
virus that ordinarily infects chimpanzees.&#13;
Somehow it spread to people - .perhaps&#13;
thirough abite or hunting mishap -~n west&#13;
equatorial Africa. Justwhenthis happened,&#13;
though, is .still a mystery, Korber Said.&#13;
The leap from chimp to man could have&#13;
beenaround 1930. Oritmayhaveoccurred&#13;
much earlier and the virus stayed within a&#13;
small group of humans.&#13;
Theworkchallenges atheory thatAIDs&#13;
actually began in the 1950s, when HIV&#13;
was accidentally mixed with the polio&#13;
vaccine. In last year’s book ’¢Fhe River,"&#13;
Edward Hopper theorizes that HIV&#13;
contaminated batches of the vaccine that&#13;
were grown in chimp dssue. This then&#13;
spread when the vaccine was tested in the&#13;
Belgian Congo. Korber said this is highly&#13;
unlikely, since it would require the&#13;
introduction of at least 10 genetically&#13;
separate strains ofthe virus into the vaccine&#13;
from different chimps.&#13;
Dr. Steven Wolinsky of Northwestern&#13;
University called Korber’s project "a&#13;
computational tour de force." Korber&#13;
based her work on the genetic codes of&#13;
160 different copies of the AIDS virus.&#13;
She analyzed them on a Los Alamos&#13;
supercomputer, called Nirvana, that can&#13;
perform l trillion computations per&#13;
second. The earliest existing sample of&#13;
HIV was found in a blood specimen&#13;
obtained in Leopoldville - now Kinshasa&#13;
- in 1959.&#13;
Virus Testing Helps&#13;
AIDS Treatments&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Doctors say&#13;
they can improve the chance of&#13;
successfully treating AIDS by measuring&#13;
how each patient’s virus stands up to the&#13;
drugs intended to kill HIV.&#13;
Through evolution, HIV can grow&#13;
resistant to any of the standard AIDS&#13;
drugs, andoftenitis invulnerable to several&#13;
at once. The specific combination of viral&#13;
resistance varies from patient to patient.&#13;
In theory, doctors can brew up the most&#13;
potent AIDS drug cocktails for their&#13;
patients if they know the strengths and&#13;
vulnerabilities of the viruses they carry.&#13;
In the past, doctors have attempted to&#13;
dothisbychecking the virus forthegenefc&#13;
mutations that make it impervious to&#13;
various drugs. However, complex mixes&#13;
of mutations are sometimes hard to&#13;
translate into drug treatment plans.’&#13;
In a new approach called phenotypic&#13;
resistance tesdng, doctors can check the&#13;
virus against all of the standard drugs to&#13;
see which ones can kill it, then .use~the&#13;
results to tailor their strategy. "With this&#13;
information, you can make better&#13;
decisions," said Dr. Calvin Cohen.&#13;
Understanding virus resistance is&#13;
especiallyimportantwhenputting together&#13;
new drug combinations after the initial&#13;
drug cocktail fails to wipe out all visible&#13;
signs of the virus. Doctors have 15 AIDS&#13;
drugs to pick from, and the choice often&#13;
amounts to an educated guess.&#13;
Cohen and colleagues studied&#13;
phenotypic testing at the Community&#13;
Research Initiative of New England, an&#13;
independent AIDS research organization&#13;
in Brookline, Mass. He described the&#13;
results Monday, in San Francisco at the&#13;
7th Conference on Retroviruses and&#13;
Opportunistic Infections.&#13;
. The test was developed by Virco N.M.,&#13;
a European biotechnology company that&#13;
financed the study with Glaxo Wellcome&#13;
Inc., the pharmaceutical company.&#13;
Doctors say anadvantage ofp,henotypic&#13;
testing is the simplicity of ~lle results.&#13;
"The person’s virus is grown in a culture&#13;
and then ,put into a test tube with each&#13;
antiviral drug," Cohen said. "We monitor&#13;
to seehow wellitgrows. Ifitstops growing,&#13;
.that drug works. It’s that simple."&#13;
The new test costs $800 per patient.&#13;
Screening the geneticmutations inHIV to&#13;
figure outdrug resistance has beenaround&#13;
longer and cOsts about $400 to $500 per&#13;
patient.&#13;
Doctors say that trying to understand&#13;
how well drugs will work by analyzing&#13;
viral genes can be daunting when the&#13;
virus is resistant to several drugs.&#13;
Sometimes resistance to one pill can help&#13;
the virus withstand another, even though&#13;
it does not specifically have resistance to&#13;
that medicine. "Phenotypic resistance&#13;
testing will be attractive because it is so&#13;
mucheasier to interpret," said Dr. Douglas&#13;
D. Richmanofthe University ofCalifornia&#13;
at San Diego.&#13;
To check the test’s value, Cohen’s team&#13;
studied 274 patients who had failed to&#13;
respond to an initial round ofAIDS drugs.&#13;
Half were randomly assigned to receive&#13;
phenotypic testing, while the rest got&#13;
standard care without testing.&#13;
After 16 weeks, 58% of the patients&#13;
getting phenotypic-testing had responded&#13;
so well to their new combination of drugs&#13;
that the virus hadfallentoolow tomeasure.&#13;
By comparison, 37% of those without&#13;
testing did this wall. "Until this study, all&#13;
of this was reasonable but unproven,"&#13;
Cohen said. "Now we can prove it."&#13;
~:~":Wa~ to get involved?&#13;
Need to.get tested for HI~ or a&#13;
Coming Out Support Group?&#13;
Call 743-GAYS (4297)&#13;
Tulsa Gay&#13;
Community&#13;
Services Center&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
~ J. Christjohn&#13;
Happy Imbolc,&#13;
Groundhog’s&#13;
Time for&#13;
initsfirstt&#13;
for some~&#13;
the&#13;
,~cultural&#13;
list of events&#13;
and. relevance.&#13;
~ At thispoint, I&#13;
or film and,&#13;
: On with the&#13;
." good month for staying in and riding out&#13;
¯ winter storms. Orgiving into spring fever&#13;
y ." when possible.&#13;
when ¯ Now for those thirty-somethings that&#13;
: recall growing up to the sounds of the&#13;
Partridge Family. with&#13;
"As you may fondness, David ~sidy&#13;
hasaCDoutentitled:"Old&#13;
notice, I’ve’-~: Dog, .Ne~ T~ck."&#13;
S~inging&#13;
~no&#13;
is&#13;
so. it’s ok,&#13;
is&#13;
else, an&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Of -interest&#13;
,dosed&#13;
music&#13;
v URL:&#13;
it&#13;
13th.&#13;
18th&#13;
pretty&#13;
of the~ show that&#13;
fisten&#13;
on tS~ Partrid&#13;
childhood favorites in col~.&#13;
Back to.the present..&#13;
VALENTINE’S DAYis 9oming!~Gift&#13;
idea?i,.The ever handso.m~,&lt;~piani~t’.:Jim&#13;
Bric~provide~ lovely~usic p~ect&#13;
for,~elight dinners, an~ohn T,rones&#13;
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Ok,themomentyou :reall-~n atting&#13;
for. TheStevie Nicks mentioa.She’s back&#13;
¯" in the Studio working onthe~W CDafter&#13;
". the performing break i~’Vegas and&#13;
i&#13;
Cafifomia. SherylCrow isagamproducing&#13;
- no mention of what happened to Mr.&#13;
." Hip-Hop producer. Thank G~oddess!&#13;
, m,~chers&#13;
¯ wereGay or straight, what mattered was&#13;
i the sl~ed.belief of those ~ching that&#13;
day. ~dnow those Right to’Life March&#13;
org~fi have Somethingto. think h!~out&#13;
¯ for n~t ye,ar,&#13;
: o~~. . .::~. .Ch~,..’.rman-oMfPicLhAaGelAFLeP~A¢.nCs&#13;
:&#13;
: -~lie ~4~li~al Action Committ~for ~.- i~: " .~.=~Lffe Lesbians and~ays&#13;
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Long b~fom multi:million-dollar book deals&#13;
were the fashion~Alexandre Dumas’ son&#13;
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converted his tonidLtomedqerminal love affair&#13;
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Guisep.,pe Ve~: ~dpted. ~8r story for o~ra&#13;
(hello, ka Travi~), Toda~ choreoorapher&#13;
Val Canipamli flni~edthe job of turning.&#13;
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Call:-596-7111&#13;
Order on line: www~,tulsapac.com&#13;
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~ SUNDAYS&#13;
~Ble~qs the Lord At All Times Christian Center,&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 11 am, 2207 E. 6th, 5837815&#13;
Community of Hope (Welcoming), Service - 6pm, 2545 S. Yale, 585-1800&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist Congregation&#13;
S~rvice - i 1am, 2~5~.~5 &amp;Yale, 749-05~ (WeicQ~ing) - : " "&#13;
Church of theRestoration Unitarian Universaiist&#13;
ropo ommumty C&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc.&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 10:45am, 3210b So. Norwood&#13;
Parish Church of St. Jerome (Evangelical Anglican Church in America)&#13;
Mass - 1 lain, 205 W. King (east of N. Denver), Info: 582-3088&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity&#13;
ServiceS: 9:15 &amp; 11:00 am, 3355 S. Jamestown, 749-8833&#13;
University of Tulsa Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay/Transgendered Alliance&#13;
~6:30 pm, Meets at the United Minis,try Cir., 5th &amp; Evanston, 583-9780&#13;
I~" MONDAYS&#13;
lilY Testing Clinic, Fr~ &amp; anonTmous testing. No appoinl~¢n[ r~zluired.&#13;
Walk in testing: 7-8:30pm, 834-TEST (8378) 3501 E. Admiral (~st o~ Hazard)&#13;
HIV Rap Sessions at Bless the Lord At All Times Christian Ceater&#13;
7:30pro, 220"7 E. 6th, 583-78t5&#13;
PFLAG, Parents., Families &amp; Friends of Lesbians &amp; Gays&#13;
2nd Mo~/~ach too. 6:30pro,Fellowship Congregational Church, 2900 S. Harvard&#13;
Women/Children &amp; AB)S Committee, call ~or meeting date, aoon, 585-5551&#13;
Council Oak Meu’s Chorale, rehearsals - ca]! for times, imfo: 748-3888.&#13;
~ TUESDAYS&#13;
AIDS Coalition of Tulsa, call, ~or ne×t.m~ting date. 1430 S. BouJder, 585-5551&#13;
~!~e=~d Let Liye, CommlmitT o~ ~0pe ~nitedMethodist, 7:~, 2,~5 S. ~ale&#13;
IYlultieultural ~I])S Coalitiou, call for ne×t m~ting date.&#13;
~rban L~ague, 240 E~st Apache, 584;0001&#13;
PrimeTimers, meus group, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th&#13;
Coming Out Support Group (TOHR/IIOPE)&#13;
Tuesdays, 6 pro, Pride Genter, 1307 E: 38th, irffo: 743-4297&#13;
I~" WEDNESDAYS&#13;
Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:30 pm 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc. Service - 7pm, 3210b~o. Norwood&#13;
Tulsa-Native American Mens Support Group, more informatidJL. ~call 582-7225&#13;
TCC Gay &amp; Lesbian Association of Students (GLAS), Call fo_r..info: 595-7632.&#13;
Lambda A-A, 7 pro, 1307 E. 38th, 2nd ft. - -. ......&#13;
I~’THURSDAYS ,&#13;
H~PE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Edu~(ion "~:;~)~": _&#13;
Anonymous HIV Testing, Testing:,~ ~ 8:313pm 834-83.-7~ 3507’E. Ad~niral " ~&#13;
O~lahoma Rainbow Young Adult Network (O’.RYAN) " -&#13;
Support/social group for 18-24’s, call Red Rock Mental Health a~ 584-2325 ....&#13;
Substance Abuse Support Group for persons with HIV/AIDS, [nfo: 834-4194&#13;
I~" FRIDAYS&#13;
Safe Haven,~iotm~AduJts Sc;ci~d Group, l st Eft/each ~no. 8pro, Pride Ctr., 1307 E. 38th&#13;
~" SATURDAYS&#13;
out-of their h0mes~ ! can’t i~..gin~e&#13;
throwing my Child out of;the hbu~e: ;&#13;
TheS~~mby Holloway, ~as&#13;
¯S~tan,wh0:cam¢.~s’s am~’Who&#13;
’ had been r6b~andiron on the road.&#13;
In the story, the priest, afraid of being&#13;
deemed unclean, passes by. But the&#13;
Samaritan stoppedtocarefortheunknown&#13;
mall.&#13;
"The point of the parable is that good&#13;
refiglon, following, traditions in these&#13;
Scotland, dozeus of prints, and Spong’s -" anti-discrimination policies, to. include&#13;
second:wife; ChriSti~i~. ’When In~arried ," specifically :sexual- orienta’tion::~ Why?:&#13;
Jack, I knew. what was ahead," said&#13;
Christ.i.ne.,.w.,h..o..m..a..m..e.A. Spong. m..19.9.0......nc.e.xl.ed. Kelleher wrote ’Perha " was&#13;
’When ~ou:-~up. (forGays)~,you~r¢~ =/Wrong&#13;
going to ge~:hit. ?You cannot know Gay ." _ think so, at least with restart to theVast&#13;
imd Lesbian people without wanting to .. maioriW of oar nconle." kelleher addrd&#13;
hugthcm.Someofthcmhavebeenthr~wn ." he was modifying the pohcy to include&#13;
¯.. o~rsmagnex;iewthyatmcivgehrtuhncaevretaeixnits~t,e-dam-boingutihtiys&#13;
." score."&#13;
_" ’WVhat happened at. Southwdst is an&#13;
¯ example&#13;
-" well-mcnningexecutives simplyto donor&#13;
_" give sexual orientation issues in the&#13;
workplace the consideration they&#13;
deserve, stud Kim I. Mills, HRC s&#13;
." education director. "We applaud&#13;
." Southwest Airlines for taking this_stcp&#13;
developed systems, can now get in the toward creating an inclusive work&#13;
.,w.a.y. ofus g~tting t,o~:~ saidI~oll0way..~ environmont~ for ih~ OayandLesbian&#13;
e~. of us arc, w_all~g on the road to i amployees., While Southwest has added&#13;
Jericho,andwem~tIookf~Himbecause&#13;
along the s~d¢ of the road...... .’. offer dom=sticParm~r~:healthbenefits.&#13;
priestandmothcr,stoodnexttoSpongas policies and e~pects&#13;
a sign language interpreter. "He will be :: announc=ment nO later the,, June. "&#13;
sord~ missed,." saidDeats, whowas first ,." _ _ " .............&#13;
ago.~Imayn0tagreewithevcrythingh¢ ! [~]l=-Ie.ll -....- I&#13;
says; but I truly minfi..~’re and respect him . .&#13;
for stan,.d~n.gup,f0r~hat he believ~ in." ._. vice president orlon"di.ng, andI_~s Rector,&#13;
Deats said she believed in more ." president, neither of.whom had returned&#13;
traditional routines of-prayer. "It can be ¯ calls by press time. Dr. Jerry. Carr611,&#13;
boring, I know. And I’m not saying the -" chairperson of the TTCU board of&#13;
bisho~ does.n’t pray, bu~ I believe ~-nore ." directors,andpr0vostatOSU-Oldahoma&#13;
.stronglyin themystical practices ofprayer&#13;
in the ~hurch," said De~ts.&#13;
Croneberger was rector of the Church&#13;
of the Atonement in Tenafiy for i8 years,&#13;
and a priest for more thsn 34 years.&#13;
Croneberger~60,was oneofsix candidates&#13;
- all ofwhomfavor ordaining noncelibate&#13;
Gays and blessing same-sex unions - in a&#13;
field that included the Rev. Canon Gene&#13;
RobinsonofNewHampshire,whomissed&#13;
becoming the first openly Gay Episcopal&#13;
bishop in the nation by several votes.&#13;
Asfor Spong, he willlecture at Harvard&#13;
University starting next month, buthas no&#13;
plans to move from Morris County. His&#13;
latest book, "Here I Stand," was published&#13;
this year.&#13;
Spong, father of three daughters, said&#13;
he found talking to students a great&#13;
pleasure, Last week, Spong lectured at&#13;
Lewis &amp; Clark University in Portland,&#13;
Ore.- "I love the minds of 18- to 23-yearolds,"&#13;
Spong said. "Nothing is sacred and&#13;
they asked all kinds of questions."&#13;
There were no,,questions asked here&#13;
duringthe service, buttherewas amomen!&#13;
of fear when the Rev. Dana Rose slipped&#13;
off the back of the riser as Spong and&#13;
others wereblessing breadandwine. Rose&#13;
was helped to his feeti and Spong quickly&#13;
gave him the sign of the cross.&#13;
Rose, a Gay priest who’s also black,&#13;
was ordainedfirstas adeaconby Spongin&#13;
May 1998. "People say, ’You’re a priest&#13;
and you’re GayT" said l~ose, who works&#13;
for the Gay and Lesbian ministry in the&#13;
diocesez "Now, there are ;many, priests&#13;
who are Gay, but black? I believe in&#13;
inclusion of all people, like me, into .the&#13;
church, just like the bishop."&#13;
City, did callback andsaid he thought&#13;
theremustbe"amajormisunderstanding"&#13;
and that the "professional loan officers&#13;
would not do that [make inquiri~,into.&#13;
loan applica=s sex~.orientation]~. .-&#13;
as saying that the Vatican "expects from&#13;
the premier a gesture ofcommon sense,"&#13;
anapparentcallforthe Italiangovernment&#13;
to intervene to cancel the Gay event.&#13;
Sodano also was quoted as saying the&#13;
controversy "puts into question" the&#13;
concordat, adocumentregulalingrelafions&#13;
. between Rome and the Vatican that was&#13;
first signed in 1929 and was revised in the&#13;
1980s. A pro-Vatican member of&#13;
parliament, Mario Baccini, called the&#13;
mayor’s decision’a "moral and material&#13;
slap" in the face of the Holy See. Vatican&#13;
officials said theHoly See was displeased&#13;
by the city’s cooperation with the&#13;
organizers, including allocation of&#13;
$180,000 to cover municipal costs like&#13;
security.&#13;
Rutdli has been a big Jubilee booster,&#13;
shepherding the city through major&#13;
constructionprojects-includingaVatican&#13;
garage-to spruce itupforan estimated30&#13;
million pilgrims.&#13;
Gays have criticized the pope’s&#13;
teachings on homosexuality, but Italian&#13;
Gay leaders denied any disrespect is&#13;
intended by holding World Pride during&#13;
theJubilee. "It’s not an anti-Jubilee event&#13;
nor an event against the pope," said&#13;
Francesco Falsetta, an official oftheMario&#13;
Mieli Homosexual Cultural Association,&#13;
one of the organizing groups. World&#13;
Pride’s main event will be a July 8 march&#13;
through the city. Organizers say it will&#13;
also feature conferences, sporting events&#13;
and parties..&#13;
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" be," he added. "’It’s been this norm that&#13;
.: they grew up with: Andin so many. ways,&#13;
: pamcularlym~nt, we vebeen, ery&#13;
Do something that brings yoUlhto serio~s°. sensitized to~~ity,humannghts,&#13;
conversation with people who-aren’t just : but.there’.s~i~sg~.,a~i,’ng,.darke,,xception&#13;
likeyou. : tot~tw~thGaY~i:~Lesbiaus._ ..&#13;
For some of you, this will feel like a : ~ Whenlegis~,’~kFl.a~gan wl~.t.he&#13;
leap of faith-l~rhaps in God, orat least ; thinks.ofa~ys~d!domest=cparm..ershi.ps&#13;
in other people. ",- ..... . as an alternafi~t0same-sex mamage, ne ¯&#13;
Maybe this runs counter’ to all the : tells them "it~a~t tap into all of the&#13;
cultural conditioning you’ve received ¯ wonde_r,,ful, ~fic and em~o.tion.al&#13;
about self-sufficiencyi abouthow wrong ! impacts that~conveys. ~nenlze&#13;
itistoaskforhelp.MaybethiSchaHeages . asksaqu~..fio.n~."~~:t~te, isabl~.°ffi~ally&#13;
prized coph~g m~l~nisms ~t Ser~_e you : t.o rec0~ila..~i’~,s,e,.p~nng re,a,&#13;
well whenexcepti-o~d individualeffortis , domesf!_c-p~.e~!:aw;.-wny men wgmu&#13;
enough..... " ;-y0ufeelgt~fig~ed:t.0makeit’diff~emtrom&#13;
¯Bu~aoindividualwinsanelection;alone i ~ theCivil m~a~e’ 6flexed to ~ght&#13;
If!we don’t engage oth~r humanb~ings, ; VermonterS?" ~ " ¯ ~.&#13;
we remain tempting targets to-the :bullies : Hanagan said :he believes there’s an&#13;
ontheright:IfwewanttoendGay-baiting " analogy to be drawn from the experience&#13;
in public life, we have ~o use what we&#13;
know: the power of one h,man being&#13;
talkln£ to another human berg about&#13;
what matters.&#13;
We need to be outward bound, despite&#13;
the discomfort. Because, in elections, the&#13;
greatest thing wehave to fearis fearitself.&#13;
Hanagan can see diagonally across-State&#13;
Street to the Statehouse, where the&#13;
Vermont Legislature this year is crafting&#13;
a response to ahistofic decision from the&#13;
.stat~-~ i :~Supreme " ~ i ,:.~.Court.&#13;
That decision said i~"~iola~d the&#13;
VermontConstitution todeny~tted&#13;
Gay-and Lesbian couples the~i~health&#13;
of other benefits heterosexuaV~ed&#13;
couples take for granted. .=.!i!:."ii(&#13;
Hanagan, 49, is in his fourthi~year&#13;
term as ~mditor and long has beea.,kn~_w,.n_&#13;
to harbor loftier potitical ambiO~,He s&#13;
~md~,ttaking 0ae long-expected:~i~tfo_r&#13;
higher office this year, and has.raised&#13;
morethan$400,000" alotforachallenger&#13;
inVermont- so farinhis campaignfor the&#13;
Democratic U.S.. Senate nomination.&#13;
He’s been able to raise money around&#13;
the country from supporters of Gay men&#13;
and Lesbians, but even more so from&#13;
former Harvard Law School classmates&#13;
who have found themselves in lucrative&#13;
careers and can afford to be generous.&#13;
Flanagan took a risk five years ago&#13;
when he acknowledged for the first time&#13;
publicly that he was Gay, and he’s taking&#13;
arisk now in being such a strong advocate&#13;
for same-sex marriage. "I assume any&#13;
professional political consultant would&#13;
advise against it," he said. "But some&#13;
issues are so compelling and so pure that&#13;
political considerations becometrivialand&#13;
inappropriate. This is at the core of my&#13;
beliefs. I’mnot going to equivocate in the&#13;
slightest and I hope Vermonters will&#13;
respectmycommitmentto prmcipl,,e, even&#13;
if they may not thoroughly agree.&#13;
More often than the campaign trail,&#13;
Flanagan is drawn these days to the&#13;
Statehouse, because he senses history in&#13;
the making, because he relishes and is&#13;
fascinated by legislative deliberation and&#13;
because he knows that, for many&#13;
lawmakers, he can put ahumanface on an&#13;
abstract set of issues. As he’s walked the&#13;
Statehousehalls lately, Flanagan sm.’dhe’ s&#13;
noticed "people tend to move ~n my&#13;
direction more often than normal. I’m a&#13;
person they know and most often like&#13;
quite a bi~ and relate to. I’m real. I have a&#13;
real personality that they’re familiar with,&#13;
so there isn’t that fear component of&#13;
something foreign.&#13;
"I don’t think often people are as&#13;
homophobic as they think they should&#13;
"For me,&#13;
some time tc&#13;
mamage&#13;
stress&#13;
come when&#13;
many Gays and’ Lesbians had coming to&#13;
grips with themselves 20 or 30 years ago,&#13;
to the straggle many straight people are&#13;
having now When thinking about&#13;
somethinglike same-’sexmarriage. "When&#13;
you foste~ real bigotry againast iso.mdeonoef&#13;
he said.&#13;
"That’s-the of bigotry.. It&#13;
weighs&#13;
years, but&#13;
and "one’s private life will be put back&#13;
into its private place."&#13;
Flanagan, who said he has "a great&#13;
capacity tolove," also offered a glimpse&#13;
into whatapersonal heavenonearthmight&#13;
look like. "I would love to be a dad. I’ve&#13;
always cherished the idea of being a dad&#13;
and I think I would be a good dad?’&#13;
Locally, members ofMCCUnited have&#13;
created a chapter of Soul Force and at&#13;
least one member joined White and 200&#13;
other Gay and Lesbian (or friendly)&#13;
Christians in a meeting with FalWell.&#13;
Elliott has as a personal goal, the&#13;
development of the Community of the&#13;
church, not the building or the number of&#13;
members as much as the network of&#13;
support for the members - much like the&#13;
model of the earliest Christian&#13;
communities.&#13;
However, Elliott and other&#13;
congregational leaders do discuss the&#13;
possibilities of physical change for the&#13;
group. Acknowledging the s~ ,newhat&#13;
isolated location of the church build~ z&#13;
(off major streets in a ver) q~&#13;
neighborhOod)~, they consider that t&#13;
tufty-sell this building and find a more&#13;
visible .and central location. But Elliott&#13;
emphasizesthat these things are ouly just&#13;
possibilities and are not anything which&#13;
will happen soon. The spiritual life comes&#13;
first and the rest will follow as the Spirit&#13;
calls MCC-United to be.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
Metropolitan Community Church United&#13;
or about the Soul Force efforts, call 838-&#13;
!715.&#13;
The Eight Annual&#13;
2000&#13;
Saturday, March 4&#13;
Cocktails, 7pm, Dinner, 8:15&#13;
Myriad Convention Center, Grand Ballroom&#13;
Auction &amp; Dancing, Blacl( or Red Tie&#13;
to benefit the&#13;
Oklahoma AIDS Care Fund&#13;
1999 Beneficiaries:&#13;
AIDS Support Program, Inc.&#13;
American Red Cross,&#13;
Oklahoma County Chapter&#13;
CarePoint, Inc.&#13;
Cimarron Alliance Foundation&#13;
LegalAi6ofWestem Oklahoma, Inc.&#13;
Northern Lights Altematives&#13;
Oklahoma AIDS Care Fund,&#13;
Individual Assistance Fund&#13;
Oklahoma Hemophilia Foundation&#13;
Oklahoma Medical&#13;
Research Foundation&#13;
Oklahoma Mental Health Council -&#13;
RedRockBehavioral Health Service&#13;
Other Options, Inc.&#13;
Planned Parenthood of&#13;
Central Oklahoma&#13;
Regional AIDS Interfaith&#13;
Network (RAIN)&#13;
Tulsa CommunityAIDS Partnership</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, February 2000; Volume 7, Issue 2</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>James Christjohn&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers</text>
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              <text>Friends RallyAround&#13;
Accused Musician&#13;
District Attorney Suspected of Bias&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor &amp;publisher&#13;
Around Tulsa’ s Gay community, the reaction is one&#13;
of dismay and disbelief at the allegations of indecent&#13;
exposure made against musician and chorale leader,&#13;
Rick Fortner.&#13;
According to a Dec. 3rd Tulsa Worm story, a 16 year&#13;
old man has accused Former of masturbating in front of&#13;
him in a sauna of All-American Fitness Center in&#13;
Broken Arrow. A spokesperson for the Broken Arrow&#13;
p01icenoted that themanand Former were the only ones&#13;
in the sauna.&#13;
Friends and acquaintances notethat F,grmermaintains&#13;
his innocence, and have stated their suplJort for Former.&#13;
Mitchell Savage, spokesperson for the Council Oak&#13;
Mens Chorale (COMC) for which Former is music&#13;
director, said that the board of directors of the&#13;
organization has voted to express its support for Former&#13;
and their belief that his innocence will be established.&#13;
- TheCOMCboardposition was endorsedby the group’ s&#13;
general membership also. Savage added that he has&#13;
been acquainted for 15 years see Fortner, p. 10&#13;
Anti-Gay Harassment&#13;
Alleged in Public Schools&#13;
Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
Tulsa’s Largest Circulation Community PaperAvailable In More Than 75 City Locations&#13;
V rmont Marriage Victory&#13;
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) - By the time Nina Beck and " previously said he would support Gay mamage,&#13;
¯ Stacy Jolles got the news, it seemed like everyone already knew:&#13;
¯¯ The Vermont Supreme Court had issued its long-awaited ruling&#13;
on Gay marriage. They had won.&#13;
¯&#13;
The court ruled unanimously that Gay and Lesbian couples in&#13;
¯ Vermont should enjoy all benefits and privileges afforded to&#13;
¯ heterosexual couples who can legally marry. It is the first court&#13;
: in the nation to make such a sweeping ruling on the question.&#13;
’ But the justices split on whether it should amount to marriage.&#13;
¯ Onejustice splitfrom themajority’ s view that the state Legislature&#13;
¯ should decide whether Gays and’Lesbians should actually be ¯&#13;
allbwed to marry or shouldbe given domesticpartnership benefits&#13;
¯ equivalent to heterosexual marriage.&#13;
The split was of no immediate concern to Beck and Jolles and&#13;
¯ the other two couples who sued in 1997 when their town clerks&#13;
denied them marriage licenses. "It’s just fantastic this decision&#13;
¯" could come following his birth," Beck said as Jolles stood&#13;
¯ alongside her holding their month-old son Seth.&#13;
The issue now will be the subject of debate before the&#13;
: Legislature, which convenes on Janl 4. "I think the court has&#13;
¯ broken all barriers by dearly riding that we have a class of&#13;
¯ individuals in Vermont who are being denied their rights and I&#13;
thinkit is the Legislature’ s responsibility to correct that injustice ,"&#13;
¯&#13;
said Peter Shumlin, Senate president pro tern.&#13;
¯ But the question will be how. Should Vermont statutes be&#13;
¯ amended to permit two men or two women to marry? Should a&#13;
¯ domestic partners registry be established for Gay couples to&#13;
¯ record their relationships and therefore qualify for the benefits&#13;
¯ now accorded heterosexual mamed couples?&#13;
¯ "I think it’ s going to take a couple ofweeks, anyway, forpeople ¯&#13;
tounderstand what this means," said Rep. Thomas Little, chairman&#13;
¯ of the House Judiciary Committee. "Everyone wants to have a&#13;
: virtually immediate informed reaction to it, but I think it takes&#13;
¯ longer than.that."&#13;
: Gov. Howard Dean said same-sex marriage "makes me&#13;
¯ uncomfortable, the same as anybody else." He predicted the&#13;
¯ Legislature would comply with the court decision by enacting a&#13;
¯ domestic partners law rather than making marriage legal for&#13;
: same-sex couples. House Speaker~Michael Obuchowski, who&#13;
¯ Evergreen Awards Recognize&#13;
i Beal, Campbell, and Others&#13;
TULSA -Allegations of anti-Gay harassment have&#13;
risen at two Tulsa high schools. On two campuses,&#13;
teachers contend that they and some students have been&#13;
singled out for inappropriate attention.&#13;
While Tulsa Public Schools (TPS) does have a nondiscrimination&#13;
policywhich TPS’s attorney interprets&#13;
as protecting Gay teachers, staff and students from&#13;
discrimination, that policy does not explicitly ban&#13;
discrimination based on sexual orientation. It&#13;
"The Board is committed-to-the concept of&#13;
nondiscrimination in relation to race, religion, sex, age&#13;
national origin, handicap and other human differences.&#13;
This policy will prevail in al matter concermng staff,&#13;
students and the public." However, in the interests of&#13;
protecting these teachers from possible further&#13;
harassment, their names are being withheld.&#13;
One teacher, who is active in a local Gay mens’&#13;
singing group, was called into his principal’ s oftrme and&#13;
was shown a copy of the group’ s concert program. His&#13;
participation in the group was highlighted with a&#13;
- comment, -*’is -this~ legal .w’ Another teacherwhohelps,&#13;
With a support group for Gay kids. had a self-identified&#13;
"Christian" fundamentalist teack-zr attending support&#13;
group meetings andthe teacher whodoes notidentify as&#13;
Gay but as Gay-friendly felt there was an intent to&#13;
identify her as Gay and therefore to threaten her job.&#13;
Andatonecampus;twoyoungwomenwere suspended&#13;
for a public display of affectkm. A Gay teacher and&#13;
other students whb were familiar with the incident&#13;
claim that the two women were not behaving with any&#13;
less discretion than heterosexual students use in the&#13;
same circumstances, They do claim that the&#13;
administration response w~:much more harsh than for&#13;
heterosexuals. However,~ TPS spokesperson, Tiffany.&#13;
Bruton responded to TFN inquiries, saying that the&#13;
students’ conduct was well beyond socially acceptable&#13;
behavior even for heterosexuals. The students involved&#13;
did not respond to TFN requests for an interview.&#13;
TULSA - The 1999 Evergreen Awards recognized the work of&#13;
a number of Tulsans involved in HIV/AIDS issues. Prominent&#13;
among these were Dr. Jeffrey Beal and his parmer Ted Campbell&#13;
for their years of service as Tulsa’s principal physician treating&#13;
HIV and AIDS related illness and for Campbell’s mental health&#13;
practice around those issues.&#13;
The lunch ceremony was held at the offices of the Community&#13;
Service Council (CSC) on Dec. 7th, and opened with a remarks&#13;
Ted Campbell &amp; Dr. Jeffrey Beal&#13;
by ~chael Conley of Tulsa CARF~, Melanie Speetor of Tulsa&#13;
’County Health Dept. and John Hawk Cocke of Indian Health&#13;
Services.&#13;
Presenters and the recipients of the awards included many of&#13;
Tulsa’ s most prominent activist/workers around HIV/AIDS care&#13;
and prevention. Sharon Thoele, exeentive director of Tulsa&#13;
CARES, Erie Ramirez of Planned Parenthood, Kathy Bird of&#13;
RegionalAIDS Interfaith Network, Tulsa officewere afew of the&#13;
presenters andrecipients included videographerAllisonCosslett,&#13;
Wendy Weisberg, Audra Sommers for her fundraising work,&#13;
Kay Rollins for NAMES PROJEC~ leadership, and Jeremy&#13;
Simmons for prevention education.&#13;
The Evergreen Awards are presented by the Tulsa AIDS&#13;
Coalition which was introduced at this event by Tim Gillean and&#13;
represented by CSC staffer, Janice Nicklas.&#13;
: said politics might prevent that. "What I’m hearing&#13;
¯ from my colleagues is that they’re saying that ¯ domestic partnership is amorepolitically attainable&#13;
situation and I think I’d have to agree with that&#13;
¯ analysis,"saidObuchowski,aDemocratlikeDean.&#13;
¯ Thoughthey were ecstatic, the three couples who&#13;
sued will hold off on their celebrations until they&#13;
¯ get an opportunity actually to say their vows in a ¯ wedding ceremony. "I think the acttml celebration&#13;
¯ will be when we get married," said Stan Baker,&#13;
standing withhis armaround partner Peter Harrigan.&#13;
Winnie Stachelberg, Political Director with the&#13;
¯ Human Rights Campaign, one national Gay&#13;
¯ organization noted,"we are thrilled that the Vermont&#13;
¯ Supreme Court had the wisdom and courage to&#13;
hand down this historic, landmark decision. There&#13;
¯ has never been a logical or justifiable reason to&#13;
exclude same-sex couples from marrying, and&#13;
¯ decision validates the unfairness of exclusion. This ¯&#13;
is a tremendous victory forGay and Lesbian couples&#13;
¯ in Vermont who are now one-step closer to being&#13;
¯ considered equal in the eyes of the law."&#13;
¯ Paula Ettelbrick, attorney and Family Policy Director at the National Gay and Lesbian Task&#13;
¯: Force Policy Institute said, "the court’s decision is&#13;
unique in that it commands that the state give samesex&#13;
couples every benefit and protection that&#13;
: currently provides to married couples."&#13;
¯ "However, bystopping short offully recognizing&#13;
: the freedom to marry, the court has opened the door&#13;
¯ to complete equality but has not constitutionally&#13;
¯ guaranteed it. Now the batde progresses to the&#13;
: Vermont Legislature," Ettelbrick continued. "We&#13;
¯ have the opportunity as a community to convince&#13;
lawmakers to provide the full badge of citizenship&#13;
¯ by recognizing the freedom to marry."&#13;
¯ Ettelbrick noted that Vermont is a logical state to&#13;
¯ become the first see Vermont, p. 12&#13;
New Leather Contest&#13;
TULSA- Ric Poston, Oklahoma Mr Leather 1999&#13;
and his partner James Murray _Mr Tulsa Leather&#13;
1997 have announced they are producing a new&#13;
leather contest, Mr. Sooner State Leather. The&#13;
contest will be a preliminary event to the StateTitle&#13;
of "Oklahoma Mr Leather" and is open to any&#13;
Oklahoma resident.&#13;
This first event will be held in Oklahoma City on&#13;
the weekend of April 21 - 23, 2000 and any profits&#13;
from the contest will benefit the Leather Archives&#13;
and Museum in Chicago.. The event will provide&#13;
education and information about the community,&#13;
"demonstrations," opportunities for brotherhood, a&#13;
brunchonSunday,andthe contestitselfon Saturday&#13;
night April 22, 2000.&#13;
Judges for the contest .will be Dave Rhodes,&#13;
owner and editor of The Leather Journal, Terrell&#13;
Brown, Oklahoma Mr Leather 2000, Oklahoma&#13;
Drummer2000 (to be announcedin February 2000),&#13;
and Michael Vrooman, the current International&#13;
Miss Gay Rodeo and a former International Mr ~sayRodeo,MarkMalonInternational Mr. Leather,&#13;
tRunnerUp-t997;and alternatejudge, Ed Smith&#13;
who is an avid supportor of local and nadonal&#13;
Leather and Drummer events.&#13;
The contest will be held at the Habana Inn,&#13;
Oklahoma’s all Gay hotel and bar complex. For&#13;
reservations (be sure to mention the contest for&#13;
special rates), contact the Habana Inn, 2200&#13;
Northwest39thExpressway, OklahomaCity,73112&#13;
1-800-988-2221, www.habanainn.com. For any&#13;
furtherinformation about the contest, applications,&#13;
and weekend packages contact:&#13;
ms.oonerstatelthr@aol.com.&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Full Moon Cafe, 1525 E. 15th&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
*The Mix, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
*Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s .Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*The Storm, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-6666&#13;
749-4511&#13;
749-1563&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
834-4234&#13;
835-2376&#13;
585-3405&#13;
*TNT’s, 2114S..Memorial 660-0856&#13;
*Tool Box,. 1338. E, .3rd o 584-1308&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp;:Pr~fe~si6nais&#13;
Advanced Wireless &amp; PCS, Digital Cellular 747-1508&#13;
*Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Kent Balch &amp; Associates, Health &amp; Life Insurance&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
*Barnes &amp;Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41.&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria&#13;
743-1000 :&#13;
747:9506 :&#13;
250-5034-,"&#13;
665-4580 ¯&#13;
712-1122 "&#13;
712-9955" 2&#13;
494-2665 ~&#13;
743-5272 ¯&#13;
746,0313 :&#13;
Cherry St: Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby..Baker 622-0700&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th 749-3620&#13;
*Devena’s Gallery, 13 Brady&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon ,~,: 584-0337,&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th P1.&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Learme M: Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning&#13;
Mark T: Hamby,.At.tomey ¯ ..&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E Skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th_&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kanskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living Al"tSpace, 19 E. Brady&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2nd floor&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, POB 696, 74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
587-2611&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838-8503 -&#13;
712-9379&#13;
592-0460&#13;
744-9595&#13;
610-0880&#13;
628-3709&#13;
808-8026&#13;
742-1460&#13;
459-9349&#13;
744-7440&#13;
745-1111&#13;
341-6866&#13;
712-2750&#13;
582-3018&#13;
747-0236&#13;
582-8460&#13;
599-8070&#13;
747-5466&#13;
585-1234&#13;
584-3112&#13;
663-5934&#13;
664-2951&#13;
838-7626&#13;
743-4297&#13;
747-5932&#13;
834-0617&#13;
834-7921,747-4746&#13;
749-6301&#13;
260-7829&#13;
481-0558&#13;
835-5563&#13;
743- 1733&#13;
665-2222&#13;
592-0767&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors&#13;
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
Tulsa Agencies~ Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 741-0L .... 579-9593&#13;
All Sods Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6 583-7815&#13;
*B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616-S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman. Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th PI. &amp; Florence&#13;
*ChurchoftheRestorationUU, 1314N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*Community ofHope United Methodist, 2545 S. Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters,3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa- Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74!70-1475 355-3 t40&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
*Free SpiritWomen’ s Center, call for location &amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
"&#13;
.&#13;
"&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal " "&#13;
Writers + contributors: ¯&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche, Lament "&#13;
Lindstrom, Bob Rounsavell, Esther Rothblum. Mary Schepers&#13;
~dember o! The AssociatedPress ...........&#13;
Issued on or before the 1st of each month, the entire contents -"&#13;
:of this publication are protected by :US copyright 1998 by&#13;
Nta, and may not be repr-oduced either.in :&#13;
whole orinpar~withoutwrittenpermission from thepublisher.&#13;
Publicationof a name or photo does not indicate a pers0n’s .&#13;
.sexual orientation. Correspondence is assumed to be for :&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed’&amp; be: "&#13;
comes:the ~ole property ofT,J Eachreaaer "&#13;
~s entitled :to 4 copies of each editton at distribution ",&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., POB 8542,74101 582-0438 ¯&#13;
¯HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
¯Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194 "&#13;
¯Holland Hall School,5666 E. 81st 481-1111 :&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378 ¯&#13;
¯House of the Holy Spirit Minstries, 3210e So. Norwood :&#13;
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438=2437, 800-284-2437 "&#13;
¯MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715 ."&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral PI. 748-3111 ¯&#13;
NOW, Nat’lOrg. for Women; POB 14068,74159 365-5658 "&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 74157&#13;
¯OSU-TUlsa °&#13;
PFLAG, POB 52800, 74152 749-4901 ¯&#13;
¯Planned Parenthood~ 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674 ’&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
.*R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
¯Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 " 584,2325&#13;
O’RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults :&#13;
O’RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth&#13;
St. Aidan’ s Episcopal Church, 4045 N.Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140 "&#13;
¯St. Jerome’s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088 "&#13;
¯Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583=7171&#13;
¯TNAAPP (Native AmeriCan men), Indian Health Care 582-7225 "&#13;
Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105 :&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only :&#13;
TulsaOkla.forHumanRights,c/oThePrideCenter 743-4297 :&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827 ¯&#13;
¯Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
¯Tulsa Community College Campuses ,"&#13;
¯TulsaGay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105 743-4297&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity, 3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
BARTLESVILLE ¯&#13;
¯Bardesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337=5353 ¯&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN ."&#13;
¯Borders Books &amp;Music, 3209 NWExpressway 405-848-2667 -"&#13;
¯Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907 ¯&#13;
TAHLEQUAH "&#13;
¯Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456=7900 "&#13;
¯Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900 :&#13;
¯Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360 :&#13;
¯ NS.U School of Optometry, 1001.N, Grand.........:&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates "&#13;
¯¯ EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
Autumn Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
¯&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
¯ DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St. ¯&#13;
¯ Emerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
: Geekto Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
¯ Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery ¯&#13;
¯ Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
: White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
." JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
¯ *Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Not all are Gay-owned butall are Gay-friendly.&#13;
501-253-7734 ,"&#13;
501-253-7457 ¯&#13;
501-253-6807 ¯&#13;
501-253-5445 "&#13;
501-253-9337 "&#13;
501-253-2776 "&#13;
501-253-5332 ¯&#13;
501-624-6646 "&#13;
501-253-6001 -’.&#13;
501-253-4074 "&#13;
417-623-4696 "&#13;
It’s Elementary + more...&#13;
December 22, 1999&#13;
On the heels of a tremendously&#13;
successful campaign togetIt "sElementary&#13;
aired on public television, we are thrilled~&#13;
to announce our new media series for&#13;
kids. We are writing to you today to tell&#13;
you a little about the project and to ask for&#13;
yo~help: .W.e.hopeyo.u’!l eonside.rm.~king&#13;
a year-end contribution toward its&#13;
completion and distribution.&#13;
We’ve been asked repeatedly by It’s&#13;
Elementaryfans, "When are you going to&#13;
make sombthing we can show to kids?""&#13;
.Finally wehave an answer -- THAT’S A.&#13;
FAMILY! -- a video for elementary&#13;
school children about family diversity.&#13;
To learn more about THAT’S A&#13;
FAMILY! and to make a donation to&#13;
ensure its successful completion, please&#13;
read the rest of this email, or go to:&#13;
http:.//www.womedia.org/support.html&#13;
on the internet.&#13;
THAT’S A FAMILY! is the first video&#13;
in our. long-awaited media series for&#13;
children, "Respect for All." THAT’S A&#13;
FAMILY! introduces children to different&#13;
kinds of families, while the second and&#13;
third videos~in the series center on&#13;
dispelling Gay and Lesbian stereotypes&#13;
and confronting anti-Gay name-calling.&#13;
In THAT’S.A FAMILY! you’ll meet&#13;
children’ who were adopted; are&#13;
multiracial; haveparents whoare divorced;&#13;
are being raised by step-parents, single&#13;
morns or dads, or by grandparents and&#13;
guardians. There also are children with&#13;
Gay dads or Lesbian morns, and their&#13;
stories are intertwined with those of the&#13;
other families.&#13;
THAT’S A FAMILY! is scheduled for&#13;
release in the spring of 2000. It has the&#13;
potential to reach hundreds of thousands&#13;
of children, giving elementary schools a&#13;
truly inclusive, respectful teaching tool&#13;
that children will love to watch. Wehave&#13;
no doubt that the long-term impact of this&#13;
project will be tremendous. Giving&#13;
elementary school students the opportunity&#13;
to hear the words "Gay" and "Lesbian"&#13;
described in a matter-of-fact way by their&#13;
peers, and experience Gay and Lesbian&#13;
families inthe contextofsuchanincredibly&#13;
diverse group of other families, could&#13;
have a profound effect on their values and&#13;
behavior for the rest of their lives.&#13;
To kick off this ambitious media series&#13;
for children, we need your help. We need&#13;
to raise additional funds to finishTHAT’S&#13;
A FAMILY! this winter and to launch its&#13;
distribution. Our work is not commissioned-&#13;
instead we independently&#13;
produceand distribute ourmediaprojects.&#13;
see It’s... p. 14&#13;
Announcements Policy&#13;
Tulsa Family Newswitl provide-space&#13;
for holy union ceremony, marriage&#13;
ceremony, birth, adoption and death&#13;
announcements onaspace availablebasis.&#13;
Photos are welcome, though we cannot&#13;
promise placement or return them, so&#13;
please send copies to Tulsa Family News,&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa 74159.&#13;
Letters Policy&#13;
Tulsa Family News welcomes letters&#13;
on issues which we’ve covered or on&#13;
issues you think need to be considered.&#13;
You may request that your name be withheld&#13;
but letters must be signed &amp; have&#13;
phonenumbers, or behand delivered. 200&#13;
word letters are preferred. Letters to other&#13;
publications will be re-printed as is&#13;
appropriate.&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor &amp; publisher&#13;
January is National Volunteer BloodDonor Month and&#13;
most newspapers in the city have received press releases&#13;
exhorting Tulsans to donate blood.&#13;
According to Tulsa’s chapter of the American Red&#13;
Cross’ communications manager, Maggie Jewell, "the&#13;
winter time is a crucial time for blood donations and that&#13;
many new donors are needed to help meet patient needs&#13;
in local hospitals...many donors who regularly give find&#13;
that they cannot during the winter months because of a&#13;
cold or the flu.., the nation’ sblood supply... [is] just a&#13;
few hours aheadofdemand. Asit stands today, ifeveryone&#13;
stopped donating blood, our nation’s supply would&#13;
disappear within only two days..."&#13;
So you’d think that the Red Cross would welcome all&#13;
donors. In the Red Cross" press releases, they state, "to&#13;
donate, one must be 17 years or older, weigh at least 110&#13;
pounds, and be feeling wall the day of the donation..."&#13;
What they don’t say is that ffyou are Gay, you don’ t lie&#13;
about it, and you give blood, they throw your blood away&#13;
- even though ALL blood is tested for HIV antibodies&#13;
anyway! Anyone who’s had sex with someone of the&#13;
samegender since,ifmemory serves me, 1984, is banned.&#13;
To reframe a 19th century prejudice: "Irish need not&#13;
apply" becomes "Faggots need not apply."&#13;
The local Red Cross shrugs off responsibility, saying&#13;
it’s a national policy. The national Red Cross places the&#13;
blame on the Federal Drug Administration (FDA). They&#13;
all know that thisis bad science. "&#13;
Once one might have presumed-a tight correlation&#13;
between sexual orientation/behavior and HIV status.&#13;
Today, those exposed to the HIV virus can just as easily&#13;
be heterosexual. Infact, one of the parts ofour population&#13;
whichhas disproportionately highinfectionrates is young&#13;
Mrican-Americans. Does anyone think we’d see the Red&#13;
Cross or FDA saying, "Young Blacks need not apply"?&#13;
The reality is that this discrimination is socially wrong&#13;
as well as bad public health policy. TulsaArea Red Cross&#13;
can’ t:change it by itsdf but its Board of Directors can go&#13;
on record to call for a change in the policy (it wouldn’t&#13;
hurt if they added a non-discrimination pohcy too). And&#13;
it can stop trying to sweep this prejudice under the rug.&#13;
Until it and the FDA change their policies, its press&#13;
releases should read, "to donate, one must be 17 years or&#13;
older, weigh at least 110 pounds, and be feeling well the&#13;
day of the donation.., andnot be aGay or Bisexual man."&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor/publisher&#13;
Early on the morning of Dec. 3rd, like many others, I&#13;
was shocked to see the face of a friend, someone whom.&#13;
I respectandlike, inTheWorld accused ofa vcry unlikely&#13;
act.&#13;
Reading the article and knowing the man, my first&#13;
reaction was to wonder that the charges had been brought&#13;
at all. It is a classic, "he said, she said" recast as "the&#13;
straight ’boy’ said, the Gay man said."&#13;
According to comments made to the Tulsa World by&#13;
Broken Arrow police, the&#13;
only persons present at the&#13;
allegedactwere RickFortner&#13;
and themanwhohas accused&#13;
him of lewd behavior (I say&#13;
man who accused because at&#13;
16 if he were a murderer,&#13;
he’d be considered an adult&#13;
and 16maynotbevery wise,&#13;
but it’s hardly a child in this&#13;
day and age).&#13;
I then wondered at&#13;
possible motivations for his&#13;
accuser. Was this the sick&#13;
behavior of a young man struggling with his own&#13;
homosexuality andprojecting his self-hatred onto another&#13;
target?&#13;
Or is he yet another young American man warped into&#13;
mindless hatred Of men who love other men by a society&#13;
whose need for some hated "other’ dates back to before&#13;
the Republic was founded (let me see: we Americans&#13;
havehated Indians in the East, we’ ve hated Blacks, we’ve&#13;
hated Jews, we’ve hated Germans, we especially hated&#13;
the Irish, we’ve hated Catholics, and Poles, and again&#13;
Indians in the West, and Asians: Chinese, Japanese, Fast&#13;
Indians, we’ve hated Commumsts, Socialists, Unionists,&#13;
women who dared to vote -or merely not be endless&#13;
baby-factories, hell, we’ ve even hated some Republicans&#13;
- I personally have thought that Ronnie Reagan was one&#13;
of the most profoundly and blandly evil men of our time&#13;
but I digress).&#13;
Former says he is innocent and I believe him as do his&#13;
friends and colleagues at his work, All Souls Unitarian&#13;
ChurchandinCouncil Oaks Mens Chorale whichFortner&#13;
founded and leads, and I hear his family, thank God.&#13;
But even when his innocence is proven, and these&#13;
charges likely are shown to be shameless political&#13;
opportunism by Tulsa County District Attorney Tim&#13;
Harris, Fortuer remains victimized by the accusation. His&#13;
reputation has been called into question and defending&#13;
" Fortner says he is innocent and I&#13;
believe him... But even when his&#13;
innocence is proven, and these&#13;
charges likely are shown to be&#13;
shameless politlea! opportunism by&#13;
Tulsa County District Attorney&#13;
Tim Harris, Fortner remains&#13;
victimized by the accusation...."&#13;
himself can 0nly be costly even if the charges are without&#13;
merit.&#13;
So why is this haptmning? Political and other observers&#13;
have known for some dme that Tulsa District Attorney&#13;
Tim Harris is closely associated with right wing political&#13;
extremists who call themselves "Christian."&#13;
Tulsa’s DA’s earlier demonstrated their willingness to&#13;
abuse the powers of the office to promote a ultra rightwing&#13;
agenda when they failed to prosecute seriously the&#13;
brutal hate assault against Tony Orr and Tim Beauchamp&#13;
until after prim media had&#13;
written about the DA’s bias,&#13;
failing even to get them&#13;
victim’s compensation for&#13;
their medical injuries as the&#13;
DA’s office does for other&#13;
crime victims.&#13;
Local attorney and&#13;
TOHRboard member Kerry&#13;
Lewis suggests that Harris is&#13;
shamelessly using this&#13;
accusation to appeal to the&#13;
part ofhis electoratewho are&#13;
rabidly prejudiced, to appear&#13;
as though Hams is "fighting crime" andjust incidentally&#13;
destroying Rick Fortner’s lifein the process.&#13;
We can likely anticipate that much of our District&#13;
Attorney’ s strategy, if they have the nerve to push such a&#13;
seemingly meritless case so far, is going to be to engage&#13;
in blatant legal "Gay-bashing." It will be suggested that,&#13;
ipso facto, Rick’s a"homo" and therefore capable of any&#13;
evil, and that any accusation by a red-blooded, all-&#13;
American boy is, of course, God’s own Truth!&#13;
But what’s really on trial here, is American justice&#13;
itself. As has played out generation after generation, with&#13;
minority after minority, the reality has been that our&#13;
justice, at its best- is uneven, and more often than not is&#13;
wildly unfair, favoring wealth, whiteness and heteromaleness.&#13;
And all the problem is not in the DA’s office. Some&#13;
Tulsa police, year after year, engage in varieties of anti-&#13;
Gay bias, including breaking the very law, with no&#13;
restriction nor anti-bias training from Chief Palmer nor&#13;
the elected official to whom he answers, Mayor Savage.&#13;
But right now, what matter is that Rick Former is&#13;
treated fairly. I don’ tknow if he’ s got alegal defense fund&#13;
set up but he may need it.&#13;
I’d suggest that any help readers might give, be sent to&#13;
the Rev. Suzanne Meyers at All Souls Unitarian Church.&#13;
They’re in the book.&#13;
by Dave Fleischer&#13;
National Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force&#13;
Ask voters a question - then listen to their answers -&#13;
and you get what Lily Tomlin calls a "goosebump&#13;
experience." Why the adrenaline rush? Because you&#13;
challenge not only your cherished ideas about the voters,&#13;
but also what you believe about yourself.&#13;
I was reminded of this while campaigning in Carol&#13;
City, an African-American, working-class Miami&#13;
neighborhood. I was with a team of volunteers from&#13;
SAVE Dade, the group preparing to defend their county&#13;
Human Rights Ordinance.&#13;
Scene: short, bald, Jewish me at.the door, talking to a&#13;
voter: "The Ordinance protects all of us from&#13;
discrimination, whether we’~re aman or woman, black or&#13;
white, Gay or non-Gay. The newest part of the law is the&#13;
part that includes Gay people. Some people want to take&#13;
the law .apart and remove Gay people from it. But we&#13;
think that s wrong-wethink everyone ought to be treated&#13;
with dignity and respect. What do you think?"&#13;
,,W,_ith barely a pause, the voter began "My church says.&#13;
¯. Oy ray. I figured I knew where we were headed, and&#13;
it wasn’t the promised land. "My church says--Jesus&#13;
loves everybody. Diseriminadon is always wrong." She&#13;
and I had a brief, affirming discussion.&#13;
I went to door #2, said my piece, and the voter&#13;
immediately began,"My church says..." I listened. "My&#13;
church says homosexuality is a sin. It’s wrong. Read&#13;
your Bible, and you’ll see the Lord has a plan for a better&#13;
life for you." As he amplified his point of view, I was&#13;
: trying to decide how quickly to exit. When he stopped&#13;
: talking, we paused and looked at each other. Then I said,&#13;
"Well, I’m Gay. I likemylife, and if IYm doing a goodjob&#13;
¯&#13;
at myjob, do you think my boss should be able to fire me&#13;
¯ just because I’m Gay?"&#13;
¯¯ The voter looked astonished: "Wall of course, no one&#13;
should fire you for that." That started a back-and-forth&#13;
¯ that surprised both of us. Wedisagreed about why people&#13;
are Gay. We agreed that discrimination against G.ays is&#13;
¯ unacceptable. After a fewminutes, as hewas prepanng to ¯&#13;
read tomefrom the Bible, I called ahalt, thanked him, and&#13;
¯ moved to the next door.&#13;
: What I learned about myself was how hard itis to ask&#13;
: a question and hear the answer. Both times, it only took&#13;
: three words before I thought I knew what was coming.&#13;
¯ Both times, I was Wrong but I realized why asking&#13;
~¯ questions is uncomfortable.Whenwe ask a question, and&#13;
really wait to hear the answer, we are not Controlling the&#13;
¯ situation. We are sharing control with the other person.&#13;
American culture teaches us all to like control. To&#13;
¯ celebrate our individuality - to believe that one pe.rson&#13;
¯ can make a difference - to have it our way--is as&#13;
¯ American as a.microwaved Mcwhopper.&#13;
But growing up Gay raises the stakes. Many of us&#13;
realize early on that we’ re different, subject to ridicule or&#13;
¯&#13;
hurt. So we crave control as a way to protect ourselves,&#13;
¯ and to survive. We pump up our talent for isolated&#13;
¯ individual achievement, sometimes neglecting team-&#13;
" building and our curiosity about others.&#13;
: Our life becomes a search for refuge. To protect&#13;
¯&#13;
ourselves, we build communities and organizations&#13;
¯ designed to shelter us. Butwe thenmiss genuine, reciprocal&#13;
¯ connectionwithotherpeople, especially thosewho aren’ t&#13;
just like us. Werarely ask them what they think ofus. We&#13;
¯&#13;
assume we know.&#13;
¯ When we don’ t ask real questions - like "What do you&#13;
think?"- we rely on Our past experience. No wonder that&#13;
¯&#13;
we hold onto ahigh level of paranoia. We can’ t forget the&#13;
¯ feelings we knew when we were young. We can’t miss&#13;
¯ the hostility expressed by right-wing extremists now. that&#13;
¯ we are older. ¯&#13;
But, guess what? Neither has much to do with where&#13;
¯ most Americans stand today. When we lack confidence&#13;
¯ in other people, it is no wonderwe struggle in campaigns. ¯&#13;
Ourlifeis a niche, but in elections we need50% + 1 of the&#13;
¯ participating voters on our side.&#13;
¯ It is understandably scary to put aside our past hurts to&#13;
test the possibilities in the present. It’s easier to avoid&#13;
person-to-person campaigning; it’s tempting instead to&#13;
¯ rely on every other possible form of communication, all&#13;
of which have at least some value. But what price do we&#13;
[ pay for our lack of curiosity, our unwillingness to risk&#13;
: authentic exchange? Are we, without meaning to, buying&#13;
¯ intothelargerculture’stoleranceofstereotypicalthinking?&#13;
~ Who is most imperiled when it’ s a deviant act to ask a&#13;
¯ question - or to question a stereotype? Let’s rescue ¯ ourselves. Goosebumps are ours, for the asking.&#13;
Dave Fleischer is a seniorfellow at the Policy Institute&#13;
ofthe National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.&#13;
Nationwide Insurance : Allen said. Allen said much of the group’s time is&#13;
Adds Partners’ Benefits:¯ teachers can ha,,v.e a tough time discussing even with&#13;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Nationwide Insurance those~who don t have a disability.&#13;
Company has just begun to offer employees a new : The Arc, formerly known as th.e .Associatio~&#13;
benefits package that will recognize same-sex : Retarded Citizens, adopt,e~,.. a posmon paper mr&#13;
d0mestic partners. The plan also .will cover relatives " " year~ ago affirmin_g that. indiv]~du,~.s with m~enn~&#13;
_ including extended family members~uch as : retardationarepe°plew~tlasexualIeel.mgs’~nhee~n~}&#13;
’grandparents - roommates and unmarriedpartners&#13;
~vho live w,ith the .employees, Donna. James; [ the 7:2 million people with,,mental retardation in the&#13;
Nationwide s senior vice president :of ihuman ¯ United States, s~ys people have fundamental ri,g,h,ts&#13;
resources, told The Outlook, an iaiiependent [ as individuals to have privacy, love and be loved.&#13;
¯ eater Columbus Ga,c community. ~ Sfill,. Gay people with mental disabilities are often&#13;
newsPaper°f,thegr.: - . . .,’.= ~,-~-’--,=-1= ¯ o,;~,~: "zed somefimesb arents,orcaretakers-the&#13;
Those co,v:_cream.u..~si tt~. a:.e.,p-enaoe.n..t.o. nm. e~’~auP~..’u~ . o~,~att_ ,,&#13;
em lo eeforsupp0rtorsnarelmanclalrespOn~t°mq¢ v~"v *~ a r&#13;
"&#13;
P Y. ........... .... .&#13;
.... ’ r-All of Nationwide s 28,000 .&#13;
¯ . ¯ _ . .’. .--. ¯ wem~pthlotyheeewsaorere.klig.eib..!.e..f0rth-,ep~ lan.Byear: ly~’mber"’ ¯ ’. " W : ~lrglfllfl CoHrt to lalevle&#13;
A recentForbesMagazine sur~ey, mo!area:&#13;
unmarried parmers .are ovyr~..byh~e’~l~9.ben,efitS ~ :: ’ ROANOKE, Va. (AP)-A Virginia.appe~s court,has&#13;
10% of .the businesses with :at least zoo em~toy~.. : agreed"to review the constitutionality oI a state taw&#13;
Companies that.pr0vide.same-sex P.-aFtner~e3Its .: tl~t ~nalizes oral sex between consenting adults.&#13;
indtide:Lotus!.De~vd0pment Corp.,MicrosoRtsorp:, .. The.Virginia Court of Appeals agreed to ~ear. the&#13;
-IBM, Walt Disney Co.,Honeywell and Xerox. ¯ ~i~s ~)f nine men convicted of soliciting sodomy&#13;
¯ " " e : from undercover police posing as Gay me~... .&#13;
McCam, Forbes:Endors : The case will test alaw that some autho~taes say ~&#13;
a legitimate way to deter public sex acts. opponen ’Don’t Ask, DOn’t-Tell’- ": 0fthelawarguethatit’sanarchaicinvasionofprivacy&#13;
.... .........si .that targets homosexu~,,s. The law, referred to as&#13;
WASHINGTON(AP)-TheClintona~stxatto.n&#13;
polieybarfing0penh0mosex.ual~sfro,m,..military~e_ ; ,crimes against nature, applies to all consenting&#13;
~vorksandshouldbepreserYed,Kepumtcancanoauate~ ’" adults, homosexual and heterosexual, who engagem&#13;
" oral sex in public or private. Violating the law is a&#13;
Sen. JohnMcCainanffSteveForbes s~din Decem~ber;&#13;
¯ McCain~ a former naval officer and prisoner oI war felony, plmishable ,by up to five years in prison.&#13;
inVietnam, Saiahewo,~dhave sen.1.°r o,f.fieer,s,re,v]ew&#13;
Those who say it s time for Virginia to join the list&#13;
the p0ffcy, but ad,d,ed, I support me poncy, i oeueve&#13;
of states that have abolished their alifi-sodgmy laws&#13;
that it;s working. ’ ,, , "&#13;
i are. encouraged that the appeals court has agr.e.e,d to&#13;
On"Fox Ne~s Sunday, Forbes said: ’The military&#13;
¯ hear the case. The sodomy law also was invokedmthe&#13;
is not an institution for socialengineering. It has. a&#13;
¯ case of Sharon Bottoms, a Richmond-area woman&#13;
~:ery real,role of protectingus. It... operates in very&#13;
" who lost custody of her son in 1993 when ajudge said&#13;
speJzial circumstance§, and theref0reapresident must&#13;
" she was an linfit mother because she and her female&#13;
take heed of leaders such as Gen. Powell and G.en.&#13;
¯ lo~er engaged in oral sex.&#13;
Scfiwarzkopf Who s,a,y that you cannot have open&#13;
inhispetitiontothe.appealscourt, Garrison said,,,the&#13;
Gays in the military.. The Repu.bh,ca~,~ fro,nt-ru~n~ar~&#13;
’ : case is not just a Gay issue, but one that affects me&#13;
ri ht to 4 5 million adult Virginians to be&#13;
Texas Gov George W.-Bush, also nas. enaorseu&#13;
Clinton policy. "&#13;
,&#13;
The position of Vice President A1 Gore, a,Viemam&#13;
they have a reasonable expectataon to privacy, t ne&#13;
veterat~, and.his Democratic Opponent Bill Bradle~ is&#13;
appeal attacks the law from several angles: that it&#13;
that people who.can be firefighters, police officers&#13;
¯ violates privacy rights guaranteed by both state and&#13;
andmembe~s,ofColigress shouldhaVeopenaccess to&#13;
federal Constitutions; that it is based on religious&#13;
.military service as wall. Gay civilrights activists who ¯&#13;
met with Clinton ¯last week said the president¯ told "&#13;
them the ~’don’.t ask, dOn~t.tell’’ policy was a failure..&#13;
R.., ,rded-Gays and ¯&#13;
Lesb"ia"ns" "Find Support.&#13;
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)- For decades, the ¯&#13;
sexuality of people with mental, dis~abi!i_ti_e_s,^W_~e]~ ¯&#13;
taboo a subject that parents ann prolesslonm~ ,o~ ~&#13;
acknowledged its ..ex~stence. The disabl.ed were o~ften ¯&#13;
treatedas if they Were eternal children; immune irom&#13;
desire. Bu,t as people with mental disabilities come of :&#13;
age in a more accepting’atmosphere, they are’:&#13;
grounds and thus violates the separation ofchurch and&#13;
state; and that its potential five-year prison sentence&#13;
subjects defendants to cruel find unusual punishment.&#13;
Eighteen men were charged under the law-in the&#13;
Roanoke Police Depfirtment;s sting. The biggest&#13;
challenge for those appealing .their convictions may&#13;
be convincing the appealS.court that they have legal&#13;
standing to overturn a’law that affects not just them,&#13;
but all adult Virgimans. In 1979 - the-last’ time a&#13;
higtier state court heard a challenge of the sodomy_.&#13;
law, the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that a man&#13;
arrested in Richmond had no such standing2 ’&#13;
Since then, several states have recoglfized that&#13;
defendants arrested for alleg.ed public ~.ex acts are&#13;
entitled to fight the law not just as it was applied to&#13;
them, but as it potentially co~d be applied to bthers.i&#13;
formerly Family of Faith &amp; Greater Tulsa MCC&#13;
Joined as one body of believers.&#13;
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Sunday Services, 11 am&#13;
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Certified Public Accountant&#13;
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For the past.year, a small group’o P P : statesthat’stillhassu~halaw- ’&#13;
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On a monthly basis, ~ey meet a~ a group with a : CHICAGO (AP) ~ Shelived withher Lesbian parme,r- . .&#13;
advocates for:the disabled say:more’ " n . ,-., . ~nva"cy¯ .-.~.-~.-.~..,~..ri.~.r.ti.i .".~.a.t.e.l.us; .t.no.t.c.o.ve.r.e.d.u.nd.e.r.a. state law-governing Visitaaon rights. ~ne oec,slon&#13;
NewHaven group:~d the meetings are niSt a dating ":&#13;
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¯segment of the populati°n that is d°ubl:y ils°)ated.t°, : th~illin0islaw.~pecifi~i~]iame~i~i~?eS.’~.~e~ : l,li-,~ , 12~21’.S~uttlCo~umbialSuRe420 ,~&#13;
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Amanda met her partner, "Helen," in 1984 when&#13;
they were living in Georgia. Helen was artificially&#13;
inseminated in 1993 and gave birth to a daughter that&#13;
December. Amanda was involved in the preparations&#13;
for the birth and helped take care of the little girl for&#13;
a year and a half. The relationship ended in 1995. The&#13;
next year, Helenmoved to Chicago with her daughter&#13;
and has refused to allow Amanda any contact with the&#13;
child since 1997, the court said. Amanda’s suitargued&#13;
that even though she was not married to Helen, She&#13;
Should have the same rights parents have under&#13;
common law. Sawyer, an attorney for the Eainbda&#13;
Legal Foundation, said a decision would be made&#13;
later on. whether to appeal to the Illinois Supreme&#13;
Court.&#13;
Helen’s attorney, Leon Finkel, noted that Illinois&#13;
does not recognize common law in such cases’~ He&#13;
said boyfriends, aunts and uncles and in some cases&#13;
even stepparents are among those whoare not entitled&#13;
to visitation rights under Illinois law.&#13;
Finkel also said limiting the list was a good idea.&#13;
because parents should only m special instances be&#13;
forced to give up the power to determine who is&#13;
allowed to visit their children.&#13;
He added that while Illinois doesn’t recognize&#13;
same-sex marriages, it does recognize same-sex&#13;
adoptions. Had Amanda legally adopted the girl, she&#13;
would have had visitation rights and the dispute&#13;
would never have taken place, he said.&#13;
Study Says Marriage Ban&#13;
Would Hurt Children&#13;
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - At least 40,000&#13;
children living with Gay couples and 100,000 more&#13;
with Gay single parents would be affected by a&#13;
proposed state ban on same-sex marriages, according&#13;
to a new study. Those children could feel ostracized&#13;
by. society if their parents’ Unions were considered&#13;
invalid, concludes the review by Michael Wald, a&#13;
Stanford University law professor who specializes in&#13;
public policy’s effect on children. Proposition 22&#13;
would let California recognize only marriages&#13;
performed between a man and a woman. It will be&#13;
voted on in March.&#13;
’q’his alleged study, which promotes homosexual&#13;
marriages, is nothing more than a bogus political&#13;
campaign hit piece against Proposition 22 and the&#13;
institution of marriage," said Robert Glazier, a&#13;
spokesman for the Yes on Proposition 22 campaign.&#13;
Wald’s review used findings by the American&#13;
Psychological Association and several research studies&#13;
on same-sex parents. "By all reports, these families&#13;
are doing very wall," Wald said. "It is different,&#13;
obviously, growingup in afamily with two parents of&#13;
the same sex, but children adjust to it." Studies have&#13;
shown that the children of Gay parents are welladjusted&#13;
and do wall in school, but often face&#13;
intolerance, he said.&#13;
The report drew criticism from David Orgon&#13;
Coolidge, director of the Marriage Law Project atThe&#13;
Catholic University ofAmerica inWashington, D.C.,&#13;
who called it "an attempt to mislead voters." "prop 22&#13;
is not about same-sex couples," Coolidge said in a&#13;
written statement. "Prop 22 is about whether&#13;
Californians will be allowed to decide for themselves&#13;
how marriage will be defined in this state."&#13;
Colorado Anti-Marriage&#13;
Amendment Progresses&#13;
DENVER (AP) - A proposed constitutional&#13;
amendmentto restrict same-sexmarriages in Colorado&#13;
has been approved by the .secretary of state’s office&#13;
and now advances to a 30-day challenge period, ifapproved&#13;
by voters, the measure would recognize&#13;
only marriages between, a man and a woman and&#13;
would make same-sex marriages performed in other&#13;
states invalid in Colorado.&#13;
Themeasure, which cleared the secretary of state’s&#13;
ritle-setting board in December, will face opposition.&#13;
"As a statewide agency,we are eommitted to fighting&#13;
this every step of the way," said LoriAnn Girvan,&#13;
executive director of Equality Colorado. "We feel&#13;
that the taxpayers of Colorado don’t need another&#13;
anti-Gay ballotinitiative that will re-ignite our state’s&#13;
reputation as a place of intolerance."&#13;
Candace McCune, an Englewood lawyer&#13;
representing proponents of the measure who formed&#13;
the group Coloradans for Traditional Marriage, said&#13;
the measure would close a loophole in the state&#13;
Constitution. The Legislaturelast year rejected an&#13;
attempt by Sen. Marilyn Musgrave, R-Fort Morgan,&#13;
to pass a statute similar to the proposed amendment.&#13;
Opponents oftheinitiativehave 30 days to challenge&#13;
it. Ifit survives, signatures ofnearly 64,000 registered&#13;
voters. W~ould have to be collected tO.l~m the ~easure&#13;
off ~1i~ ~6all0t. Coloradatis- for Tradiu6nal" Marriage&#13;
also withdrew a proposal to ban same-sex marriages.&#13;
Hank Aaron Slams&#13;
Pitcher’s Comments&#13;
ATLANTA (AP)- Hall of Famer Hank Aaronjoined&#13;
thebarrage ofcriticism against AtlantaBraves pitcher&#13;
Johp_ Rocker, despite his apology for making&#13;
derogatory comments about Gays and minorities.&#13;
Aaron said he was "very sick and disgusted about&#13;
the whole situation" and questioned how Rocker&#13;
could continue in baseball. "I have no place in my&#13;
heart for peoplewhofeel that way," the all-time home&#13;
run king, who is the Braves’ senior vice president,&#13;
told syndicated radio host Jay Mariotti.&#13;
About 15 activists protested outside Turner Field,&#13;
urging the Braves to fire Rocker for the comments,&#13;
which were published i~n a recent Sports Illustrated.&#13;
"There may be some room for redemption, but not&#13;
as anAtlantaBrave," said Michael Langford, president&#13;
of the United Youth-Adult Conference. "We&#13;
encourage him to enter his resignation right now and&#13;
go into an early retirement."&#13;
Rocker told Sports Illustrated he would never play&#13;
for a New York team because he didn’t want to ride&#13;
a subway train "next to some queer with AIDS." He&#13;
also bashed immigrants, saying, "I’m not a very big&#13;
fan of foreigners... How the hell did they get in this&#13;
country?" While driving in Atlanta during the&#13;
interview, Rocker criticized Asian women: Look.&#13;
Look at this idiot," he said of another driver. "I&#13;
guarantee you she’s a Japanese woman. How bad are&#13;
Asianwomenatdriving?" Healso calledan overweighl&#13;
black teammate "a fat monkey."&#13;
Rocker apologized in a ffritten statement, saying he&#13;
was carried away by his "competitive zeal" against&#13;
New York Mets fans. He said heis not a racist mad the&#13;
comments do not reflect his true feelings.&#13;
Civic groups and a member of the Atlanta city&#13;
Council delivered aletter to Braves owner TedTurner&#13;
and general manager John Schuerholz demanding&#13;
Rocker’s immediate firing. "We would have hoped&#13;
there would havebeen amore scathing condemnation&#13;
of these comments," said Councilman Derrick&#13;
Boazman. "This was more thanjust rhetoric. This was&#13;
hate." There was no answer at Turner’ s office, and his&#13;
publicist did pot return a telephone call.&#13;
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig called Rocker’s&#13;
remarks "inappropriate and offensive." He said&#13;
baseball is reviewing the matter and would take&#13;
"appropriate action." There is precedent: Former&#13;
Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott was suspended&#13;
from baseball for the 1993 season for her use of racial&#13;
and ethnic slurs.&#13;
¯ Pentagon .Seeks Tougher&#13;
: Stand Aga,nst Harassers&#13;
¯ WASH!NGTON(AP)-The U.S. Defense Department&#13;
¯ is piessing armed services leaders to re-emphasize to&#13;
¯¯ commanders that harassment of troops based on their&#13;
sexual orientation will notbe tolerated. The Pentagon&#13;
: has drawn fire recently for its "don’t ask, don’t tell"&#13;
: policy. Critics say an increasing number ofGay and&#13;
Lesbian servicemembers arebeingharassed, contrary&#13;
: to the stated policy ofpermitting them to serve so long&#13;
: as they do not declare their sexual orientation.&#13;
: The criticism sharpened after a court-martial in&#13;
¯ which anArmyprivate was convicted of murdering a&#13;
¯&#13;
Gay ,soldier harassed with the knowledge of his&#13;
¯ superiors. PresidentBill Clinton said earlier lastmonth&#13;
¯ that the Pentagon’s policy on Gays was "out of ¯&#13;
whack."&#13;
". see Briefs, p. 14&#13;
Older Americans&#13;
With HIV Increasing&#13;
HOUSTON (AP) - An aging population,&#13;
life-extending treatments, and a&#13;
misperception that AIDS is a disease of&#13;
the young have fostered an increase in&#13;
AIDS infections among older Americans,&#13;
the Houston Chronicle reported recently.&#13;
Nationally, about 11% of reported AIDS :&#13;
cases are in people 50 or older, the&#13;
newspaper reported.&#13;
Seniors are the age group with the&#13;
fastest-growing AIDS rates - up 22%&#13;
between 1991 and 1996, compared with a&#13;
9% increase among people age 13-49,&#13;
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease&#13;
Control and Prevention in Atlanta.&#13;
However, health officials warned that&#13;
the increases seem dramatic because the&#13;
numbers are small. A 106% increase in&#13;
the number of older women infected&#13;
through sex, for example, is based on an&#13;
increase from 340 eases to 700 eases.&#13;
"’At this point, the numbers are so small&#13;
that they really have notbeen perceived as&#13;
a problem," said Dr. Rose Brownridge,&#13;
acting bureau chief of the Texas&#13;
Department:of Health division that deals&#13;
with AIDS and other sexually transmitted&#13;
diseases. She added, however, that the&#13;
issue needs further study.&#13;
About 72,000 .americans age 50 and&#13;
over and about 4,50(3 Texans have been.&#13;
diagnosedwithAIDS. N~gneknows how&#13;
many seniors are infected with HIV, the&#13;
virus that causes AIDS, because not all&#13;
states require HIV reporting and because&#13;
older people arethought to be tested far&#13;
less often than their younger counterparts.&#13;
According to the CDC, slightly more than&#13;
one-third of older people with AIDS are&#13;
Gay or Bisexual men. About one of five&#13;
was infected by using a dirty needle to&#13;
inject drugs.&#13;
While popular attention has been&#13;
focusedon declining infection rotes among&#13;
children, AIDS among seniors has been&#13;
virtually ignored. That must change, said&#13;
Marcia try, chief of social science&#13;
research on aging at the National Institute&#13;
onAging. "The pointis that society cannot&#13;
ignore AIDS in that pediatric population,&#13;
in the young adult population or the older&#13;
population," Ms. try said. "For people&#13;
living longer or getting infected at_ an&#13;
older age, these people are incredibly&#13;
isolated, and they may not getthe treatment&#13;
they need."&#13;
That is likely to change with the&#13;
onslaught of baby boomers nearing&#13;
retirement age, said Kathy Nokes, a New&#13;
Yorknursewho works withinfected older&#13;
patients and editor of a book on seniors&#13;
with AIDS. "Baby boomers talk about&#13;
everything, try everything, demand&#13;
everything," she said. "To a 60- or 70-&#13;
year-old, that’s not polite."&#13;
Ironically, the drug Viagra that has&#13;
allowedmanyoldermento revive dormant&#13;
sex lives also has heightened concern&#13;
aboutthe spread ofAIDS. "They are pretty&#13;
AIDS-unaware as they venture out into&#13;
the world of sexual activity," said Sara&#13;
Selber, executive director of AIDS&#13;
Foundation Houston. "AIDS wasn’ treally&#13;
on their screen at the time they were&#13;
(previously) sextmlly active."&#13;
Fish Gene Key to&#13;
Immune System&#13;
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A gene discovered&#13;
in puffer fish - which have immune&#13;
systems similar to humans - may hold&#13;
secrets to learning more about diseases&#13;
that affect the human immune system,&#13;
such as AIDS, medical researchers say.&#13;
~esearchers doing work at St.&#13;
Petersburg’s All Children’s Hospital&#13;
published their findings in this week’s&#13;
Proceedings of the National Academy of&#13;
Sciences, an academic journal.&#13;
Despite the finding, researchers do not&#13;
know what the newly found gene does,&#13;
said Gary Litman, the University of South&#13;
qoridaimmunologistwholedthe research&#13;
effort.&#13;
However, they do know the gene plays&#13;
amajor role in theimmune systembecause&#13;
of its complex structure.&#13;
In addition to the puffer fish, the&#13;
~mportant gene is found in other bony&#13;
fish, including zebra fish and sharks.&#13;
"The hunt is on for this gene in man,"&#13;
said Litman, who is working with eight&#13;
other researchers in Florida and in&#13;
California and Massachusetts. "Now we&#13;
know where to look."&#13;
Researchers are using computers .to&#13;
search human DNA for the identical or&#13;
similar sequence of 114,000 amino acids&#13;
found in the fish DNA. There are about 3&#13;
million amino acids in the human body.&#13;
Discoveries about the immune system&#13;
can affectnew developments in treatments&#13;
for diseases ranging from common&#13;
allergies to cancer and Alzheimer’s&#13;
disease.&#13;
Litman said thenew gene mightprovide&#13;
clues to an additional type of immunity&#13;
that doctors might not have realized.&#13;
AIDS Most&#13;
Important Story&#13;
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP)- The&#13;
discovery of and ongoing efforts to treat&#13;
and find a cure for AIDS was the top story&#13;
of the century, according to a survey of a&#13;
group ofhigh school history students. The&#13;
students surveyed by The Hutchinson&#13;
News otherwise generally agreed with&#13;
adult readers surveyed by the newspaper,&#13;
but, adults gave AIDS barely a mention.&#13;
’ It had such a high impact on what they&#13;
thought about their own mortality," said&#13;
Susan Smith, a teacher atHutchinsonHigh&#13;
School. "They didn’t think they could die,&#13;
and they certainly didn’t think having sex&#13;
could make them die."&#13;
Lindsey Derr, 16, saidnews aboutAIDS&#13;
is evenmoreimportantnow that the disease&#13;
is generally understood by experts and&#13;
millions of people have been identified as&#13;
AIDS,positive. Jacqui Faber, 16, said a&#13;
lot of people still don’t know enough&#13;
about where and how to get tested.&#13;
Some issues identified by students as&#13;
mostimportant occurred long before their&#13;
lifetimes, such as womengaining theright&#13;
to vote in America. Other issues that are&#13;
again xn the news, such as the Scopes&#13;
"Monkey" trial pitting evolutionary theory&#13;
against creationism, weren’t seen as&#13;
important.&#13;
Other stories that were big during their&#13;
lifetimes, such as the explosion of the&#13;
space shuttle Challengerandthemeltdown&#13;
¯of the Russian nuclear power plant at&#13;
Cheruobyl, were neat the bottom of the&#13;
high-school list.&#13;
Thebombing ofPearl Harbor that led to&#13;
U.S. entry into World War II, top of the&#13;
general readership’ s list,was infifthplace&#13;
among the students.&#13;
A high-ranking story on the students’&#13;
list that ranked low among the gener~&#13;
readership was the "I Have a Dream&#13;
speech given by the Rev. Martin Luther&#13;
King Jr. Talesha Brassield, a 16-year-old&#13;
junior, said King’s speech was still a&#13;
reminder that Americans have a lot to&#13;
learn about respecting each other. "There&#13;
The Second Annual&#13;
Progressive Alliance Summit&#13;
The State Capitol&#13;
Oklahoma City&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Januar 15th, 2000&#13;
Join activists from many different&#13;
progressive movements from across the&#13;
state for skills and coalition building.&#13;
Keynote Speaker: Frosty Troy&#13;
The Oklahoma Observer&#13;
For more information or for reservations contact Planned&#13;
Parenthood in Tulsa at 918-587-7674&#13;
or Keith Smith at The Smith Group: 405-840-2219&#13;
Are You Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
Tulsa’s Two-Spirited Indian Men’s&#13;
Support Group is here for you!&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HIV testing&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
at 582-7225 Ext. 208 or 218&#13;
Dial-Up Accounts&#13;
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Equality Rocks&#13;
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Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, Washington, DC&#13;
Hear Our Voices&#13;
Our Vision For the New Millennium IsAWorld Where&#13;
Peopl.e Can Live With Hope, Equality and Safety.&#13;
Join Melissa Etheridge, Ellen Degeneres, Anne Heche and&#13;
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Bisexual and Transgender People Everywhere. Tickets on&#13;
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are still people that believe people have to&#13;
think the same, look the same and believe&#13;
the same things," Talesha said.&#13;
Thais Protest US&#13;
Drug Monopoly&#13;
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Some 120&#13;
Thai activists and HIV-AIDS patients&#13;
camped Wednesday outside the Health&#13;
Ministry demanding an end to a U.S.&#13;
pharmaceutical monopoly thatmakes antiviral&#13;
drugs too expensive for most in&#13;
Thailand. They want theThai government&#13;
to enforce a patent act to legalize local&#13;
manufacture of Didanosine or DDI, a&#13;
medicine that suppresses the deadly HIV&#13;
virus in a patient’s blood, delaying the&#13;
onset of AIDS.&#13;
Few. of the more than 1 million HIV&#13;
postive individuals in Thailand, a country&#13;
of 62 million people, can afford drugs&#13;
such as DDI and AZT, imported to&#13;
Thailandfromoverseas,mainlyfromU.S.&#13;
manufacturers.&#13;
DDI,manufacturedby U.S. ftrmBristol-&#13;
Myers Squibb, is sold at50 baht ($1.25) a&#13;
tablet in Thai hospitals. Patients need at&#13;
least fourtablets aday, costingin all about&#13;
6,000 baht-10,000 baht ($160-250) a&#13;
month. A Thai office worker earns about&#13;
4,400 baht($110) amonth. Thedrugprice&#13;
would be halved if Thailand produce it&#13;
locally.&#13;
Last month, Medecins Sans Frontieres,&#13;
the Nobel Peace Prize-winnlngemergency&#13;
healthcare group, said U.S. trade pressure&#13;
has made proper health care for H!V/&#13;
AIDS patients nnaffordable in Thailand&#13;
and other less developed countries.&#13;
Activists said access to DDI, used by&#13;
around 5% of people living with HIV in&#13;
1997, declined over the past two years due&#13;
to Thailand’s economic recession. Since&#13;
theHIV epidemicbeganin the early 1990s,&#13;
more than 260,000 Thais have contracted&#13;
full-blown AIDS.&#13;
’q’he government has full legislation to&#13;
enforce the act butit fears the U.S. will be&#13;
angry andit mightlead to trade sanctions,"&#13;
said Paisal Tan-ud, spokesmanoftheThai&#13;
Network For People Living With HIVAIDS.&#13;
The activists plan to camp outside&#13;
the ministly in Bangkok until they get an&#13;
answer from the government.&#13;
Earlier this year, campaigners succeeded&#13;
in demanding local manufacture of&#13;
Diflu.can, a drug used to treat cryptococcat&#13;
memngitis, a fungal infection of the brain&#13;
which occurs in HIV-AIDS patients.&#13;
The government has allowed two local&#13;
pharmaceutical compames to produce the&#13;
drug, originally manufactured by the U.S.&#13;
drug company Pfizer.&#13;
Girl + Grandmother&#13;
Tell Their Story&#13;
WOODBRIDGE, Va. - When Annisha&#13;
Wilbum was 4 years old, she went to live&#13;
with her grandmother, Valerie Reeder-&#13;
Bey, who is HIV-positive. Reeder-Bey&#13;
knew she had to talk about her condition&#13;
with her granddaughter. The hard part&#13;
was finding a way to do it without&#13;
frightening her or delving into&#13;
uncomfortable details. "I was living in&#13;
fear that anything could happen," said&#13;
Reeder-Bey,46,wholives inWoodbridge.&#13;
"I wanted to tell her. I just really had to&#13;
find the way without being graphic."&#13;
She started by jotting down things that&#13;
Annisha shouldn’tworry about: "It’ s okay&#13;
to hug," she wrote. "It’s okay to hold&#13;
hands." As the girl got older, she started&#13;
making her own contributions to the list.&#13;
¯ Talking on the telephone with her&#13;
: grandmother was OK, Annisha pointed&#13;
¯ out, or going rollerblading together.&#13;
¯ Thus was born "My Grandma Has&#13;
: AIDS: Annisha’s Story," a 14-page&#13;
¯ illustrated children’s book that was&#13;
¯ published this year by a pharmaceutical "&#13;
¯ company and distributed at the U.S.&#13;
Conference on AIDS in Denver and a&#13;
World AIDS Day commemoration in&#13;
¯ Boston.&#13;
"- Annisha and her grandmotherare both&#13;
¯ listed as authors, but thebookis writtenin&#13;
¯¯ Annisha’s voice. "Hi. My name is&#13;
Annisha. This is a story about my&#13;
grandma," the book begins. "She is real&#13;
: special to me. Mygrandmaisjustlikeany&#13;
¯ other grandma. My grandma has AIDS."&#13;
The book goes on to describe the various&#13;
things they do together. "I know that ifmy&#13;
friendhas AIDS, I cannotcatch itbybeing&#13;
~ their friend," Annisha says in the book.&#13;
~ Reeder-Bey, who also lives with her&#13;
¯ husband, Tommy, is excited about the&#13;
: book’s distributionandhopes parents will&#13;
¯" use it to introduce the subject of AIDS to&#13;
i¯ tHheeairvcehniilndrVenie.wS,haeniosnaplrsoofitthtehafotpurnodveirdeosf&#13;
: health counseling and support groups for&#13;
¯ people living with AIDS. "I would love&#13;
¯ forit to be in ev,,e~y household. That’s ~e&#13;
ultimate dream,’ she said. "Even if it s&#13;
¯ not in every household, I want everyone&#13;
~ to know about it."&#13;
: The road to "My Grandma Has-AIDS:&#13;
¯ Annisha’s Story"was along one. It began ¯&#13;
¯ whenReeder-Beywent toherownmother,&#13;
looking for solace after she learned she&#13;
¯" was HIV-positive. Reeder-Bey said she&#13;
¯ spent 22 years as an alcoholic and drug&#13;
¯ addict. Her mother could not accept the&#13;
: diagnosis and sent her daughter away, she&#13;
: said: "I forgive my mother now, but then,&#13;
¯ I couldn’t take it," she recalled.&#13;
¯ Six years later, Reeder-Beywas alcohol-&#13;
. and drug-free andembarking onanew life&#13;
¯ as an AIDS activist and drug counselor.&#13;
¯ Then her daughter, who has had her own&#13;
: struggles with addiction, asked her to take&#13;
in Annisha. "Wehad already spent a lot of&#13;
." time together," Reeder-Bey said of&#13;
¯ Annisha. "She just became a part of my&#13;
: life."&#13;
When Annisha was 6, Reeder-Bey&#13;
¯ thought the two of them had a book worth&#13;
¯ sharing. She went to several well-known&#13;
: children’s book publishers, who told her&#13;
¯ that the subject matter was inappropriate&#13;
¯ or didn’t fit their needs.&#13;
¯ Butthebookdidcatch the eye ofofficials&#13;
." at Agouron Pharmaceuticals, a La Jolla,&#13;
." Calif.-based company that makes the&#13;
." AIDS drug Viracept, and Agouron&#13;
¯ published it. Agouron has an active&#13;
: outreachprogramthatfocuses particularly&#13;
¯" on minority communities, and the book&#13;
¯ worked well with that program, said Joy&#13;
¯ Schmitt, a company spokeswoman.&#13;
: Reeder-Bey also made sure that Prince&#13;
¯ WilliamCounty school administrators got&#13;
: a copy of"Annisha’s Story." Annishais a&#13;
¯ third-grader at Featherstone Elementary.&#13;
¯ Agouron said it plans to distribute the&#13;
~ book at otherAIDS conferences, with the&#13;
¯ authors’ permission. In the meantime, ¯&#13;
Reeder-Bey is a one-woman distribution&#13;
¯ machine, bringing books to her doctor’s&#13;
¯ office, to work, to wherever she thinks&#13;
¯ someone would pick one up. "I want&#13;
: people to open up and start talking to kids&#13;
: about it. Kids want you to be open with&#13;
: them," Reeder-Bey said.&#13;
¯ And Annisha said she plans to keep&#13;
¯&#13;
writing. She has advice for other would-&#13;
~ be authors: "I think they should write&#13;
¯ what’s in their imagination, and write&#13;
: what’sin their heart."&#13;
Happy New Year and Century to " hit Broadway, running for 2 years. This&#13;
everyone! "If you’re with me, next year : ground breaking drama about 9 Gay men&#13;
willbe... The perfect year!" Sorry, Petula ¯ gathering for a birthday party with catty,&#13;
left a little Norma Desmond behind. (The ¯ emotionally trying results spawned a film&#13;
line is from a song that features ~ -by William Friedldn (who went on to&#13;
prominentlyinthemusical, direct "the Exorcist", and&#13;
"Sunset Boulevard".)&#13;
Actually, there were afew&#13;
days I couldn’ t tell the two&#13;
apart. What, me catty? I&#13;
don’t know what you&#13;
mean. . . (Eyes bat&#13;
iunocenfly. Well, as close&#13;
as I can get... Shaddup!&#13;
Stop snickering amongst&#13;
yoursdves!)&#13;
January at the PAC: Ben&#13;
E. King performs with the&#13;
Tulsa philharmonic the 7&#13;
&amp;8. The armchair traveler&#13;
goes to France on the 10;&#13;
and the All State Music&#13;
Festival happens onthe 15.&#13;
"Gaelic Storm," the Irish&#13;
band that played in the 3rd&#13;
class steerage section of&#13;
the Titanic appears at the&#13;
PACJanuary 19 &amp;20. Leo&#13;
danced a jig to their tunes&#13;
in the film. Latin music is played by&#13;
Scarles, Allen and River on the 22, and a&#13;
concurrent concert hapl~L’ns with Janina&#13;
Fialkowska at the piano. On the 23, Das&#13;
Puppenspeil (I love that name!) puppet&#13;
theatre performs with the Philharmonic,&#13;
and the month closes with "Buddy," the&#13;
Buddy Holly musical from the 25 through&#13;
the 30. "Crossing Delancy" opens on the&#13;
28. More info on these artists to come. If&#13;
~ou lust can’t wait, you can always call&#13;
e f~iendly folks at the PAC ticket office&#13;
at 596-7111.&#13;
Forthose abitmoreventuresome, Dallas&#13;
seems to be the place of interest in&#13;
upcoming months. GeorgeWinstonplays&#13;
Majestic Theatre Jan 7; and for those who&#13;
recall a rather large member of the Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show cast, Meat Loaf&#13;
performs at McFarlin Auditorium Jan 16.&#13;
My, they’re really bringing in the class&#13;
acts now, aren’t they?&#13;
For the more modem crown, Counting&#13;
Crows plays the Bronco bowl Jan 25, and&#13;
Beck plays there Jail 26. Kids in the Hall,&#13;
the all male cross dressing comedy troupe&#13;
of some fame in the mid-90’s plays the&#13;
Bronco bowl Feb 3. The Pretenders, with&#13;
opening act "Gay Dad", perform at the&#13;
Bronco Bowl Feb 6. The Chieftains, for&#13;
those who like their Irish music Irish, are&#13;
at the Fort Worth Bass Performance Hall&#13;
Feb 6. Back in Dallas, Diana Krall plays&#13;
the Majestic Theatre Feb 18. And for&#13;
those into boy bands, Backstreet Boys&#13;
(almost has-beenS) are at Reunion Arena&#13;
March3-4. For themorefolksy set, Crosby,&#13;
Stills, Nash and Young are playing&#13;
Reunion Arena March 7th.&#13;
For thosepining for somedecent theatre&#13;
- and I know many of you are, even if you&#13;
don’t attend it- Mort Crowley’ s seminal&#13;
work, "The Boys in the Band", runs&#13;
through January 29 at the Fort Worth&#13;
Theatre (817-921-5300). It rated a full&#13;
page storyin theFortWorthStarTelegram.&#13;
Apparently, Fort Worth has become a&#13;
progressive town, in that one of its oldest&#13;
and mostprestigious theatres has started a&#13;
series of Gay plays called the "Labor of&#13;
Love" series. They have sold out.&#13;
Hello, Theatre Tulsa!&#13;
"Boys" opened in April 1968, and was&#13;
one of’the first, if not the first, Gay play to&#13;
"Sorcerer") and nnhinged&#13;
the closet door that held&#13;
Gay theater locked inside&#13;
and blew it down the&#13;
hallway.&#13;
. FortWorthTheatrehas&#13;
already produced two&#13;
shows this season thathad&#13;
to do with some aspect of&#13;
homosexuality:&#13;
"Seducing Sally" and&#13;
"The SantalandDiaries".&#13;
Folks, this is a city&#13;
nicknamed "Cowtown".&#13;
Hello? It’ s about the size&#13;
of Tulsa. They have 3&#13;
theatres there that are&#13;
unafraid to try something&#13;
new -CircleTheatre, Stage&#13;
West, and now, the most&#13;
staid of the Fort Worth&#13;
Theatres.&#13;
We have Heller, and&#13;
: sometimes TU, and the quality of theatre&#13;
¯ in this town is very hit and miss. I know&#13;
: that’ll tick some folks off, but it’s true.&#13;
¯ And more often than not, it’s missing.&#13;
: Let’s work on that, shall we? I mean,&#13;
¯ Cowtown, really!&#13;
Tickets are $10 - $12 dollars, and a&#13;
¯ percentage of ticket sales goes to AIDS&#13;
~ Resources of Rural Texas. And from the&#13;
: pics of the cast, it looks like it would be a&#13;
¯ handsome evening, indeed. Thanks to&#13;
: Mark Lowry of the Fort Worth Star&#13;
Telegram for some of the info used in this&#13;
: tern.&#13;
Usually, when I write of an album&#13;
wherein the songs, music and lyrics, tend&#13;
to eerily reflect events in my own time&#13;
space, it’ s a safe bet that I’m writing about&#13;
Stevie Nicks. Shejust does thht sort thing.&#13;
I got walloped this last week by an album&#13;
my best friend Karin (who’ s straight, by&#13;
the way) mademelisten to. She started off&#13;
by saying some of the songs reminded her&#13;
of me and one of my last major romantic&#13;
entanglements. Then she started playing&#13;
it, and I was just about knocked out of the&#13;
car. The album is by an artist I never gave&#13;
much ~hought to, except to wish that I’ d&#13;
never hear the phrase "I Wanna Come&#13;
Over" again. Yes, I was ~,valloped by a&#13;
Lesbian MdissaEtheridge slat~stalbum,&#13;
"Breakdown" (an ironic rifle, given the&#13;
album’ s previously stated significance) is&#13;
a treasure trove of powerful lyrics and&#13;
dynamite music.&#13;
The song "Stronger Than Me" is one of&#13;
the ones my best friend Karin related to&#13;
: my experience from her viewpoint. The&#13;
~ lyrics are dark and intense, and the music&#13;
; echoes their intent. "I don’t know how&#13;
: you can take it / invest your heart and then&#13;
¯ youbreakit / I don’ tknow how youcan set&#13;
: it free / you must be stronger than me"&#13;
: certainly sums up my somewhat&#13;
¯ overoptimistic romantic enthusiasms&#13;
according to Karin.&#13;
"Breakdown" is a power ballad about a&#13;
~ love gone so wrong one has left, but the&#13;
¯ other p~rson keeps pulling you back like&#13;
~ a pit of quicksand. "I’m coming to your&#13;
~ breakdowntonight.""Enough ofMe" was&#13;
¯ another sock to the stomach in its eerie&#13;
: capturing of what the last year of my last&#13;
; majorrelationship was like. see Jirn,p. 14&#13;
The Tulsa Phiharmonicpresents&#13;
pianist&#13;
Janina Fialkowska&#13;
the third concert in the,&#13;
Masterworks Series&#13;
Saturday, January 22, 8pm&#13;
Tulsa Performing-Arts Center&#13;
Debussy, Prelude a l’apres midi d’une faune&#13;
Grieg, Piano Concerto in A minor, op. 16&#13;
Wagner, selections from&#13;
Der Ring des Nibelungen&#13;
Tickets: 747-PHIL or 596-7111&#13;
earles, Allen &amp; Rive.ra&#13;
URBANTULSA&#13;
THE KERR FOUNDATION, INC.&#13;
FOUNDERS AND ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
"cO IJ/IELLIAS cao~oea~v:VAL CANIPAROLIw~:FREOEIIIC CHOPIN&#13;
Long before multi-million dollar book deals -&#13;
were the fashion, Alexandre Dumas’ son&#13;
(yes, the "The Three Musketeers" author)&#13;
converted his torrid:turned-terminal love affair&#13;
into a best seller. From there, composer&#13;
Guiseppe Verdi adapted the story for opera&#13;
(hello, "La Traviata"). Today, choreographer&#13;
Val Canipamli finished the iob of turning&#13;
"La Traviata" into dance. Using drama,&#13;
not melodrama. For understatement&#13;
underscored. A full-length love story.&#13;
"You don’t have&#13;
to knew ballet&#13;
to love ballet.&#13;
You just have&#13;
to try it."&#13;
-- MARCE£LO ARGELJNI&#13;
ARTISTIC DIRECTOI~&#13;
" FRIDAY 8 PI~EBRUARY 11&#13;
SATURDAY B PMFEBRUARY 12&#13;
SUNDAY 3 PMFEBRUARY 13&#13;
SEASON SPONSORS:&#13;
ABC Music&#13;
Order tickets by calling The Tulsa BaJlet Ticket Offica: 749-600|&#13;
4512 S. Peoria Ava. , Tulsa, OK 74105-4563 ¯ VisH&#13;
GILCREASE MUSE&#13;
I~" SUNDAYS&#13;
Bless the Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 11 am, 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
Community of Hope (Welcoming), Service - 6pm, 2545 S. Yale, 585-1800&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist Congregation&#13;
Service - 11am, 2545 S. Yale, 749-0595 (Welcoming)&#13;
Church of the Restoration Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Service - 1 lain, 1314 No. Greenwood, 587-1314&#13;
Metropolitan Community Church United&#13;
Service, llam, 1623 North Maplew00d, Info! 838-1715&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc.&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 10:45am, 3210b So. Norwood&#13;
Parish Church of St. Jerome (Evangelical Anglican Church in America)&#13;
Mass - 1lain, 205 W. King (east of N. Denver), Info: 582-3088&#13;
Unity. Church of Christianity&#13;
Services: 9:15 &amp; 11:00 am, 3355 S. Jamestown,749-8833&#13;
University of Tulsa Bisexual/Lesbian/Gayfrransgendercd Alliance&#13;
6:30 pm, Meets at the United Ministry Ctr., 5th &amp; Evanston, 583-9780&#13;
~’ MONDAYS&#13;
HIV Testing Clinic, Free &amp; anonymous testing. No appointment required.&#13;
Walk in testing: 7-8:30pm, 834-TEST (8378)3501 E. Admiral (east of Harvard)&#13;
HIV Rap Sessions at Bless the Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
7:30pro, 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
PFLAG, Parents, Families &amp; Friends of Lesbians &amp; Gays&#13;
2rid Mon/each mo. 6:30pm, Fellowship Congregational Church, 2900 S. Harvard&#13;
Women/Children &amp; AIDS Committee, call for meeting date, noon, 585-5551&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale, rehearsals - call for times, info: 748-3888.&#13;
I~" TUESDAYSAIDS&#13;
Coalition of Tulsa, call for next meeting date. 1430 S. Boulder, 585-5551&#13;
Live And Let Live, Community of Hope United Methodist, 7:30pro, 2545 S. Yale&#13;
Multienltural AIDS Coalition, call for next meeting date.&#13;
Urban League, 240 East Apache, 584-0001&#13;
PrimeTimers, mens group, Pride Center. 1307 E. 38th&#13;
Coming Out Support Group (TOHR/HOPE)&#13;
Tuesdays, 6 pm, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th, info: 743-4297&#13;
~ WEDNESDAYS&#13;
Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:30 pm 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc. Service - 7pm, 3210b So. Norwood&#13;
Tulsa Native American Mens Support Group, more information, call 582-7225&#13;
TCC Gay &amp; Lesbian Association of Students (GLAS), Call for info: 595-7632.&#13;
Lambda A-A, 7 pm, 1307 E. 38th, 2nd ft.&#13;
~" THURSDAYS&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education&#13;
Anonymous HIV Testing, Testing: 7 - 8:30pm 834-8378, 3507 E. Admiral&#13;
Oklahoma Rainbow Young Adult Network (O’RYAN)&#13;
Support/social group for 18-24’ s, call Red Rock Mental Health at 584-2325&#13;
Substance Abuse Support Group for persons with HIV/AIDS, Info: 834-4194&#13;
~ FRIDAYS&#13;
SafeHaven, Young Adults Social Group, 1 st Fri/each mo. 8pm, Pride Ctr., 1307 E. 38th&#13;
I~" SATURDAYS&#13;
Narcotics Anonymous, 11 pm, Community of Hope,1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800&#13;
Lambda A-A, 6 pm, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th, 2nd ft.&#13;
t~= OTHER GROUPS&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform &amp; Leather Seekers Association, info: 298-0827&#13;
Gal-A-Vanting, Womens Social &amp; Cultural Group&#13;
Call for info: Kathy at 322-6322, or Barb at 459-6825.&#13;
OK Spoke Club, Gay &amp; Lesbian Bike Organization. Long rides &amp; short rides from&#13;
Zeigler Park. Long &amp; short tides from Tulsa Gay Community Center. Write for info:&#13;
POB 9165, Tulsa, OK 74157&#13;
Mixed Volleyball, non-active in winter, call Shawn at 243-5190 for spring activities.&#13;
Ifyour organization is not listed, please let us know. Call 583-1248 orfax 583-4615.&#13;
reviewed by Barry Hensley&#13;
Tulsa City-County Library&#13;
Here are a couple of new books at the&#13;
library that you shouldn’t miss! A few&#13;
years ago, author Rik Isensee wrote an&#13;
eulighteningbookforGay&#13;
men, rifled "Reclaiming&#13;
Your Life: The Gay&#13;
Man’s Guide to Love,&#13;
Self-Acceptance and&#13;
Trust." He’s back with a&#13;
new winner for those of&#13;
us in our, ahem, late&#13;
thirties (and on up), "Are&#13;
You Ready?"&#13;
The time has come for&#13;
the community to&#13;
understand that Gay life&#13;
doesn’t end simply&#13;
because you remember&#13;
Watergilte. This book&#13;
helps you learn to&#13;
celebraie i the positive&#13;
things about aging&#13;
(flexibility, " greater&#13;
"One d Isensee’s&#13;
primary tasks is to&#13;
help Gay males&#13;
reach closure with a&#13;
youtlt~l identity¯&#13;
The key to this is&#13;
learning to stop&#13;
living for the&#13;
moment¯ For a&#13;
¯ reclaim youthful ambitions. This tendency&#13;
: can be compared to the stage of&#13;
¯¯ ’bargaining’ in grief reactions. If only I’d just work harder, exercise more, go to&#13;
¯ bars, get a facelift, get a tattoo- I’ll be all ¯&#13;
right."&#13;
One of the suggested&#13;
steps toward stabilizing&#13;
your life is to get in a long&#13;
term relationship. Just&#13;
because it didn’t work&#13;
whenyouwereyoungand&#13;
foolish doesn’t mean it&#13;
won’t work now! There&#13;
is a good section that&#13;
provides some basic&#13;
guidance toward finding&#13;
a rdationship, including&#13;
"what are you looking&#13;
for?," "distinguish&#13;
_between desirables.and&#13;
necessary qualities," and&#13;
variety of reasons, "be open to men who&#13;
" don’tfityouinsual type." we are living longer. _There are alsosomegood&#13;
tolerances, self ann " 1- ....&#13;
¯....&#13;
" ~ d nav" ate neell to remmn&#13;
acceptance) an lgate~_____-~_~.&#13;
the negatives (dis-eti~ vital and involved.&#13;
over physical aging,&#13;
d i s i 11Usi onm e n t,--It Is very Important&#13;
examples of how&#13;
depressio,and lethargy).&#13;
One of Isensee’s to-not waste time&#13;
primary tasks is to help re]ivln6 -&#13;
Gay males reach closure&#13;
with a youthful identity, the past..&#13;
The key to this is learning&#13;
to stoplivingfor themoment. Fora variety&#13;
of re~ons~ we are living long~-and need&#13;
to remain vital and involved. It is very&#13;
important to not waste time reliving the&#13;
past.&#13;
As Isensee explains, "During this&#13;
uncertain time, when we’ ve lost our way,&#13;
there may be a sense of not having&#13;
accomplished anything. Itmay be difficult&#13;
to remember earlier goals or to ascribe&#13;
any significance to them. It’s also hard to&#13;
imagine what else we would like to do.&#13;
Rather than tolerating the anxiety of not&#13;
knowing, some men are tempted to make&#13;
up for lost time - through some radical&#13;
change for its own sake, or a mad dash to&#13;
with Former and does not believe the&#13;
accusation to be credible.&#13;
Attorney Kerry Lewis, who is also a&#13;
board member of Tulsa Oklahomans for&#13;
Human Rights suggested that anti-Gay&#13;
bias and political opportunism on the part&#13;
of Tulsa County District Attorney Tim&#13;
Harris and his staff may be behind this&#13;
accusation.&#13;
Lewis noted that such a case would&#13;
have appeal for Republican Harris whose&#13;
voter bast is tied to religious extremist&#13;
elements in the Republican Party. Lewis&#13;
also said that given the level of anti-Gay&#13;
prejudice in the area’s jury pool; Harris&#13;
maybecalculating thatheneednotactually&#13;
prove Former guilty, that is that merely&#13;
being a Gay man accused by a younger&#13;
man will be taken as proof of guilt in a&#13;
legal system. that is hostile to minority&#13;
citizens.&#13;
DrumwrightattorneyTimDaniel whose&#13;
practice~has’included defending Gaymen&#13;
relationships change over&#13;
the years. No, thesethi~gs&#13;
are not easy, but the hard&#13;
work will pay off in. the&#13;
end!&#13;
Another new book is,&#13;
’q’he Book of Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Quotations."&#13;
This is a fun compilation&#13;
of quotes by Gays and&#13;
¯ Lesbians; and Gay-friendly peopleas well,&#13;
¯ from ancient times to the present. It is a&#13;
." simple reference book broken down into&#13;
¯ broad subjects: solitude, morality, hope,&#13;
¯ etc.&#13;
: Some of the better quotes are: "a waist&#13;
¯ is terrible thing to mind," "anyone who&#13;
¯ says that softball is a boring game to&#13;
. watch isn’t looking at the right things!,"&#13;
: and "the only way of getting dd of&#13;
temptation is to yield to it." This is a super&#13;
: book for one liners.&#13;
: Check for these and other fun books at&#13;
¯ your local branch library, or call the ¯&#13;
Readers ServicesdepartmentattheCentral&#13;
: Library at 596-7966.&#13;
: who say they were entrapped by Tulsa&#13;
¯ Police, believes that the Tulsa County&#13;
¯ DistrictAttorney uses anti-Gay bias in the legal system to plea bargain cases,&#13;
: knowing that accused Gay men, even if&#13;
¯ they are not guilty, or even if the police ¯&#13;
engaged in illegal conduct themselves in&#13;
¯ order to make an arrest, will accept a&#13;
~ "deal" rather than risk having a hostile&#13;
¯ jury and even more serious charges and&#13;
¯ punishment.&#13;
: Anti-Gay hate crime victims, Tony Orr&#13;
¯ &amp;TimBeauchamp, also have pointed out ¯&#13;
that Hams’ office failed to assist them in&#13;
: getting normal compensation for their&#13;
: medical expenses due to the assault on&#13;
¯ them, and that the DA’s office did not&#13;
¯ even prosecute seriously their assailants ¯ until after The Tulsa World wrote a story&#13;
: about the DA’s inaction.&#13;
¯ Fortner did return a call to TulsaFami!y&#13;
: Newsbutonadviceofhis attorney declined&#13;
; to comment onthe allegations. Calls to&#13;
: Former’s attorney were not returned.&#13;
January April July October December&#13;
Even Out Your&#13;
Monthly Electric Bills.&#13;
At PSO, we know that changing&#13;
weather conditions throughout the&#13;
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Which can make it hard to tflan your&#13;
¯household budget. That’s why~&#13;
~ourAverage Monthly Payment plan,&#13;
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Wata~you imy about the&#13;
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And best of all ifs free. AMPis just&#13;
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o~ons PSO offers you. For more&#13;
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To reserve your place, please Call the&#13;
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Holland Hall admits qualified students without regard to race, sex. religion, national or ethnic omgm, or p~.sical disabili~..&#13;
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The new Patti Johnsqq Wilson YWCA wi, be opening February 2000&#13;
Fitness Center&#13;
Aerobics&#13;
Aquatic Programs&#13;
Licensed Child Care&#13;
Our Proffress&#13;
Le s!&#13;
by Mary Schepers . - I will respect electrical energy and will&#13;
TFNdo-it-yourself-dyke extraordinaire ¯ notwireanyfixture, outletorswitch’hot."&#13;
The holidays are over, the mistletoe " - I resolve to keep saw blades sharp and&#13;
delightfullynsed, abusedandrefused.The ¯ clean. I will unplug power saws before&#13;
long nights and short days of winter seem ¯ removing the blade.&#13;
to stretch on forever. It is - I resolve to use trendy&#13;
the time to dreamoffuture&#13;
projects that will not be&#13;
started until spring time&#13;
comes. And it is time for&#13;
making all of those godawful&#13;
New Year’s resolutions&#13;
that endurebutfor&#13;
a mere matter of days.&#13;
Why not combine home&#13;
projects with good&#13;
intentions andmake some&#13;
resolutions you’ll actually&#13;
keep?&#13;
Inall modesty, and with&#13;
absolutely no sense of&#13;
overstepping boundaries,&#13;
your DIYD gently offers&#13;
her own suggestions for&#13;
your approval and&#13;
implementatzon.&#13;
Considerityourblueprint&#13;
for a millennium of&#13;
satisfying home projects.&#13;
Or consider it your DIYD&#13;
telling you what to do -&#13;
again. And always. Why&#13;
should this century be any&#13;
different than the. last?&#13;
You love it, ducklings,&#13;
you know you do! Now,&#13;
repeat after me&#13;
- I resolve to always work&#13;
safely! I will read and follow direction~&#13;
and will not by-pass guards or safety&#13;
devices. I will use personal protection&#13;
(safety glasses, earplugs, etc.), and ask for&#13;
help if I need it.&#13;
-I will measure twice (minimum!) and&#13;
cut once. Woodis expensive and screwing&#13;
up makesmecranky and unbearable. Let’ s&#13;
avoid that this year.&#13;
-I will not swear to the extent and/or&#13;
noise level that the dog or cat needs deep&#13;
therapy.&#13;
-I will always involve my partner (if&#13;
applicable) inhome repair and decoration&#13;
decisions. Even if they say they "don’t&#13;
care" - trust me, cupcake, theydo!&#13;
- I resolve to take good care of my tools.&#13;
I will keep them clean, organized and in&#13;
good repair. I will thereby not waste&#13;
precious project time obsessing about the&#13;
mystery location of the screwdriver or&#13;
paint roller.&#13;
- I resolve not to treat any ofmy partner’ s&#13;
questions as stupid - no matter how&#13;
glaringly obvious the answer or solution.&#13;
- Iwill not loan out tools I care about to&#13;
people who abuse them or do not return&#13;
them, I will acknowledge my emotional/&#13;
psychological bond with my tools,&#13;
especially thoserequiring apower supply,&#13;
- I will buy that leather tool bdtas soon as&#13;
I can. And I will use it (silk boxers&#13;
optional).&#13;
- I resolve to always set my ladder up on&#13;
a stable, even surface and to havesomeone&#13;
watching out for me nearby. That&#13;
especially applies if I am on the roof. The&#13;
dog does not count as my ’safety buddy.’&#13;
-I resolve to overcome my fear and&#13;
loathing of spiders and slugs long enough&#13;
to enter the crawl space and make that&#13;
minorplumbingrepair to thebathtub drain.&#13;
Other-wise, I will overcome my aversion&#13;
to paying a plumber to do the same.&#13;
"In all modesty, and&#13;
with absolutely no&#13;
sense of overstepping&#13;
boundaries, your&#13;
DIYD gently offers&#13;
her suggestions for&#13;
your approval . . .&#13;
Consider it your&#13;
blueprint for a&#13;
millennium of&#13;
satisfying home&#13;
projects.&#13;
Or consider it your&#13;
DIYD telling you&#13;
what to do - again.&#13;
And always.&#13;
Why should this&#13;
century be any&#13;
different&#13;
than the last?"&#13;
colors and designs in my&#13;
home sparingly, remembering&#13;
fullyhow appalled&#13;
I was by the ’50’s Peptopink&#13;
bathroom walls, tile&#13;
and tub. I am leaving a&#13;
legacy! (this does not&#13;
apply if you wish vengeance&#13;
on your heirs)&#13;
- I will always get three&#13;
quotes for any contract&#13;
labor, as well as&#13;
references.&#13;
- I resolve to be more&#13;
respectful for the people&#13;
wor.king atmylocal home&#13;
repatr palace, even thal&#13;
patronizing boob in&#13;
plumbing. Fantasize&#13;
about replumbing his&#13;
fixtures, butdon’tactually&#13;
threaten to do it this time.&#13;
-I resolve to buy very&#13;
good paint brushes and&#13;
keep them clean and&#13;
properly stored for a&#13;
lifetime of painting&#13;
pleasure.&#13;
-I will not tell friends,&#13;
family or relative&#13;
strangers how they&#13;
screwed up their latest&#13;
project and what I wouldhavedonebetter.&#13;
Do give them a stack ofDIYD columns as&#13;
a form of gentle guidance.&#13;
- I resolve to do one project this year, no&#13;
matter how small, to improve the&#13;
aesthetics, efficiency or value ofmyhome.&#13;
- I resolve tomakemy DIYD that cocktail&#13;
- a Manhattan with two cherries - as a&#13;
small token of the gratitude I bear her for&#13;
enlightening my life and improving my&#13;
home!&#13;
And your DIYD resolves to be back&#13;
next month to help you make good on&#13;
some of these intentions.&#13;
PS: Your DIYD doesn’ t waste precious&#13;
energy tying cherry stems into knots with&#13;
her tongue when it is better applied to&#13;
practical projects!&#13;
¯&#13;
By the time ~this song played, I was&#13;
¯ becoming a fan. So much so, I bought the&#13;
CD&#13;
If ’ ,&#13;
: you ve been depressed, and couldn t&#13;
¯ explain how debilitating a state it really&#13;
¯ can be, "Into The Dark" is one of those&#13;
¯¯ songs you play for people to make them&#13;
understand what the dark night of the soul&#13;
¯ is all about. One ofthemore powerful and&#13;
dark songs on thi~ album, it leaves you&#13;
." haunted. It’ s a ditty about going "into the&#13;
¯ soullinto the heart/into the dark", and&#13;
: realizing that one’s been spinning one’s&#13;
wheels keeping a dead relationship alive,&#13;
¯ not that Iwouldknowanythingabout that.&#13;
"There was tire/therewas death/there was&#13;
¯ lyingonyourbreath/Itumedaway/Iwould&#13;
¯ pretend/but the fire never ends/I’ve been&#13;
¯&#13;
here sleeping all these years. "&#13;
_" Lest you think it’s all doom a~ad gloom,&#13;
: JulieCypher, Melissa’s longtimepartner,&#13;
¯ requested a more upbeat song for fear her&#13;
to recognize same-sex civil marriage. It&#13;
was thefirst state to offer domesticpartner&#13;
benefits to state workers, one of the first&#13;
states to recognize second-parent&#13;
adoptions and one ofthe first states to ban.&#13;
discriminationbasedonsexual orientation.&#13;
-The Mormon church, which has&#13;
campaigned.-against Gay marriage in&#13;
Vermont, Hawaii and California, issued a&#13;
brief statement repeating its position and&#13;
¯ saying,"As the legislative process moves&#13;
forward, The ChUrch of Jesus Cqh-’ist of&#13;
Latter-day Saints urges the citizens of&#13;
Vermont and their elected representatives&#13;
to protect the uniqueness and sanctity of&#13;
traditional marriage and to preserve the&#13;
family ~ the basic unit of society."&#13;
Next Door In New Hampshire&#13;
A statelawmakeris trying to make sure&#13;
Gay New Hampshire couples do riot take&#13;
advantage of the Vermont ruling. Rep.&#13;
Gary Torressen, R-Center Harbor, says&#13;
he was disappointed by the decision that&#13;
Gay couples are entitled to the same&#13;
benefits and protections as husbands and&#13;
wives. Torressen said he filed., his bill,&#13;
which would prevent New Hampshire&#13;
from recognizing same-sex marriages&#13;
contracted out of state, in anticipation of&#13;
the Vermont court’s decision.&#13;
The Legislature repealed a ban on Gay&#13;
foster parents and Gay adoptions. The&#13;
state also has a law that protects Gays and&#13;
Lesbiansfrom discrimination in housing,&#13;
employmentand access topublicfacilities.&#13;
State Sen. Rick Trombly, a Boscawen&#13;
Democrat who is Gay, said New&#13;
Hampshire shouldgo further and set upits&#13;
own domestic partnership system. Rep.&#13;
Martha Fuller Clark, D-Portsmouth, has&#13;
filed a bill that would extend medical&#13;
benefits to domestic partners, andrecently,&#13;
trustees for the state university system&#13;
approved domestic partner benefits for&#13;
employees. But Gays and Lesbians still&#13;
lackfull acess to the samehealthinsurance,&#13;
disability benefits, tax breaks and&#13;
inheritance protections that married&#13;
couples enjoy.&#13;
Trombly believes New Hampshire&#13;
lawmakers would support a domestic&#13;
partnership system as a fundamental&#13;
affirmation of equal rights. But he does&#13;
not believe they would support Gay&#13;
marriage, because many believe&#13;
heterosexual marriage has a religious&#13;
significance.&#13;
State Sen. Pat Krueger, a conservative&#13;
Republican from Manchester, said&#13;
Tuesday she had Gay friends whose lives&#13;
were complicated by their lack of legal&#13;
protections, and she would consider&#13;
supporting domestic partnerships. A&#13;
spokeswoman for Gov. Jeanne Shaheen&#13;
said the governorremains opposed to Gay&#13;
marriage. Spokeswoman Pamela Walsh&#13;
declined:comment on Shaheen’ s .view of&#13;
domesticpartnership.legislation, sayingit&#13;
was premature.&#13;
Excerpts from the Supreme&#13;
Court decision on marriages:&#13;
Maythe stateofVermontexclude samesex&#13;
couples from the benefits and&#13;
protections that its laws provide to&#13;
opposite-sex married couples? That is the&#13;
fundamental question we address in this&#13;
appeal, aquestionthatthecourtwellknows&#13;
arouses deeply-felt religious, moral, and&#13;
political beliefs. Our constitutional&#13;
responsibility to consider the legal merits&#13;
of issues properly before us provides no&#13;
exception for the controversial case. The&#13;
issue before the court, moreover, does not&#13;
turnon the religious-or moral debate over&#13;
¯&#13;
inlimate same-sex relationships, butrather&#13;
¯ on the statutory and constitutionai basis&#13;
for the exclusion of same-sex couples&#13;
: from the secular benefits and protections&#13;
: offered married couples.&#13;
¯ We conclude that under the Common&#13;
Benefits Clause of the Vermont&#13;
Constitution, which, in pertinent part,&#13;
e,ads, that government ~s, or ought to be,&#13;
instituted for the common benefit,&#13;
¯¯ protection, and security of the people,.&#13;
¯ nation, or community, and not for the&#13;
particular emolument or advantage ofany&#13;
i single person, family, or set of persons,&#13;
¯ who are a part only of that community,"&#13;
plaintiffs may not be deprived of the&#13;
: statutory benefits andprotections afforded&#13;
¯ persons of the opposite sex who choose to&#13;
~ marry. We hold that the state is&#13;
¯ constitutionally required to extend to ¯ same-sex couples the common benefits&#13;
: and protections that flow from marriage&#13;
under Vermont law.&#13;
". (and)&#13;
¯ While the laws relating to marriage&#13;
¯ have undergone many changes during the&#13;
¯ last century, largely toward the goal of ¯&#13;
equalizing the status of husbands and&#13;
¯ wives, the benefits of marriage have not&#13;
¯ diminished in value. On the contrary, the&#13;
¯ =benefits and protections incident to a&#13;
: marriagelicense under Vermontlaw have&#13;
: never been greater.&#13;
¯ (andfrom Justice Denise Johnson)&#13;
¯ This case is undoubtedly one of the&#13;
¯ most controversial ever to come before&#13;
¯ this court. Newspaper, radio andtelevision&#13;
¯ media have disclosed widespread public&#13;
¯ interest in its outcome, as well as the full&#13;
¯ spectrum of opinion as to what that&#13;
¯ outcome should be and what its&#13;
¯ ramifications may be for our society as a ¯&#13;
whole.&#13;
¯&#13;
.One line of opinion contends that this is&#13;
¯ an issue that ought to be decided only by&#13;
¯ the most broadly democratic of our&#13;
¯ governmental institutions, theLegislature; ¯ and thatthe small group ofmenandwomen&#13;
: comprising this court has no business&#13;
deciding an issue of such enormous&#13;
¯ moment.&#13;
: For better or worse, however, this is&#13;
¯ simply not So. This case came before us&#13;
¯ because citizens of the state invoked their&#13;
¯&#13;
¯ constitutional right to seekredress through the judicial process of a perceived&#13;
¯ deprivation under state law. The Vermont&#13;
¯ Constitution does not permit the courts to decline to adjudicate a matter because its&#13;
¯ subject is controverslal, or because the&#13;
¯ outcome may be deeply offense to the&#13;
Strongly held beliefs of many of our&#13;
¯ citizens.&#13;
¯ We do not have, as does the Supreme&#13;
¯ Court of the United States, certiorari&#13;
-’ jurisdiction, which allows thatcourt, inits&#13;
¯ sole discretion, to decline to hear almost&#13;
¯ any case. To the contrary, if a case has&#13;
¯ been brought before us, and if the&#13;
¯ established procedures have been&#13;
¯ followed, as they were here, we must hear&#13;
¯ and decide it.&#13;
: Moreover, we must decide the case on&#13;
¯ legal grounds. However much history,&#13;
: sociology, religious belief, personal&#13;
¯ experienceor other considerations may ¯&#13;
inform our individual or collective&#13;
: deliberations, we must decide this case,&#13;
¯ and all cases, on the basis of our&#13;
¯ understanding of the law, and the law&#13;
¯ alone.&#13;
¯" Thismustbethe trueandconstant effort&#13;
¯ of every member of the judiciary. That&#13;
¯ effort, needless to say, is not a guarantee&#13;
¯&#13;
of infallibility, nor even an assurance of&#13;
¯ wisdom. It is, however, the fulfillment of&#13;
.. our pledge of office.&#13;
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Walk-in Clinics&#13;
Tuesday Testing, 5 -8 pm&#13;
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Wednesday Testing, 5-8 pm&#13;
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Daytime.appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
Church&#13;
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11 am, Sunday&#13;
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We knowyou’re&#13;
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Need to get&#13;
tested for HIV?&#13;
Need a&#13;
Coming Out Support&#13;
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743-GAYS (4297)&#13;
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1307 E. 38th&#13;
at Peoria, 2nd floor&#13;
Country Club&#13;
Barbering&#13;
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Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pro&#13;
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Call 341, 6866&#13;
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A UTHENTIC FRESH&#13;
1TALIAN RAINBOW&#13;
CUSINE TROUT&#13;
OfEureka Springs&#13;
,Voted Number One in Arkansas!&#13;
(SOD 253-6807 Closed Wednesday&#13;
Center Street, Eureka Springs, AR 72632&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa&#13;
O’RYAN&#13;
Oklahoma Rainbow&#13;
¯ Young Adult Network .&#13;
Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment&#13;
Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
918-584-2325.&#13;
TOM NEAL&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&amp;&#13;
GARDEN&#13;
DESIGN&#13;
58:3- 1248&#13;
by Lamont Lindstrom, Ph.D. ¯ into gender patterns as soon as they are&#13;
One of my students owns 189 pairs of ~ born, wrapping them in blue or pink&#13;
athletic shoes. Not quite Imelda Marcos, ~ blankets. Walk into any toy store and you&#13;
butgettingthere.Anthonyisjust20years ¯ knowwhenyou’veenteredthegirls’aisle.&#13;
old and already he is a sophisticated ¯ Everything suddenly has turned pink.&#13;
collector. Collecting things is oddly ¯ Several of my friends with young sons&#13;
importantformany ofus.&#13;
I have other friends who&#13;
accumulate Native&#13;
American artifacts. And&#13;
books. And jazz vinyl&#13;
recordings. And Cacti.&#13;
And uniforms.&#13;
Most of us collect&#13;
some-thing evenif this is&#13;
only string or a draw full&#13;
Of condoms. Our houses&#13;
are museums. One ofmy&#13;
professors saved sheets&#13;
of toilet paper from bathrooms&#13;
around the world.&#13;
Me, I have.a stupendous&#13;
collection of refrigerator&#13;
magnets.&#13;
We buy stuff; we give&#13;
it away; we receive it;&#13;
andwe curateit: Think of&#13;
all those shoeboxes lined&#13;
UP in Anthony’s bedroom.&#13;
Things, clearly,are&#13;
important for reasons&#13;
beyond the utilitarian.&#13;
Evenwearing themevery&#13;
second until the day he&#13;
dies, Anthony will never&#13;
use up all his Shoes. He&#13;
buys themto ownandnot&#13;
particularly to wear. They&#13;
helpmake sense ofwhom&#13;
he is - or at least who he&#13;
thinks he wants to be.&#13;
Because ofthiS, ormaybe&#13;
it’s their smell(they give&#13;
him a buzz.&#13;
Having just survived&#13;
the holiday season, we&#13;
know the pleasures and&#13;
pains of stuff. Did you&#13;
get what you want for the&#13;
holidays? Did you make&#13;
a list? Did you check it&#13;
twice?&#13;
Everyone grumbles&#13;
about the materialism of&#13;
a onetime religious&#13;
celebration. But complain&#13;
away, I sure had a&#13;
lot of desperate company&#13;
last month when I went&#13;
foraging for things in the&#13;
bleak shopping expanses&#13;
of Walmart.&#13;
"We slot our&#13;
ehildren into gender&#13;
patterns as soon as&#13;
they are born,&#13;
wrapping&#13;
them in blue or&#13;
pink blankets.&#13;
Walk into any toy&#13;
store and you know&#13;
when you’ve entered&#13;
the girls’ aisle...&#13;
Several of my&#13;
friends w~th young&#13;
sons complain that&#13;
it is difficult to find&#13;
gender-neutral toys.&#13;
’One two-year old&#13;
boy loves to play&#13;
with brooms and&#13;
vacuunl cleaners.&#13;
His morn, of course,&#13;
has to go to the&#13;
girlS’ side to find&#13;
toy household&#13;
eleanlng equipment.&#13;
And, worse, the kid&#13;
likes to play with&#13;
dolls. His father&#13;
nervously protests&#13;
his son’s&#13;
babydoll games.&#13;
" Je~z! Can’t you buy&#13;
the boy atru~k?"&#13;
This connection Of stuff and identity is&#13;
characteristically American. We learn&#13;
early on to~ define ourselves in terms of&#13;
things, We_+play a:game with children&#13;
called "favorites." Weinsist that kids tell&#13;
us their favorite"color~ music, television&#13;
show, make of car,.or ice-cream. Evenif&#13;
complain that it is difficult&#13;
to find gender-neutral&#13;
toys: One two-ye~ old&#13;
boy loves to play with.&#13;
brooms and vacuum&#13;
cleaners. His ~m0m+ of&#13;
course, has to go to the&#13;
girls’ side to find toy&#13;
household cleaning&#13;
equipment. And, worse,&#13;
the kid likes to play with&#13;
dolls. His father nervously&#13;
protests his son’s.&#13;
babydoll games. Jeez!&#13;
Can’t you buy the boy a&#13;
truck?&#13;
This paternal nervousness&#13;
signals the symbolic&#13;
strength of the connections&#13;
we draw between&#13;
things and identity, ff doll&#13;
equals girl, thenboy-whoplays&#13;
-with-doll equals&#13;
girlish, perhaps even Gay.&#13;
Our use of particular&#13;
things sends messages,&#13;
accurate or not, aboutwho.&#13;
we might be. We know&#13;
that both men and women&#13;
need to.practice nurturing.&#13;
Butthe doll-loving boy,&#13;
like the toy gun-toting girl,&#13;
violates the cultural code&#13;
of consumption that attributes&#13;
gender to things.&#13;
And, who knows? Maybe&#13;
the Kid really just likes&#13;
dolls. Or maybe he has&#13;
already figured out our&#13;
consumption code and he&#13;
likes dolls on purpose in&#13;
order to Send dad a&#13;
message.&#13;
My daughters, too’old&#13;
for dolls, and also,too old&#13;
for Pokemon, this year&#13;
wrote Gameboy camera&#13;
on their Christmas lists.&#13;
They didn’ t seem worried&#13;
about the name. Why&#13;
Gameboy and not&#13;
Gamegirl? In hierarchical&#13;
systems, it is easier to&#13;
"ups,h,ift" than "dowm&#13;
Shifi. Gifts wear pants.&#13;
Not .too many boys wear&#13;
¯ dresses. Women become d0ctors; not too&#13;
¯ many mendreamaboutbecominganurse.&#13;
" Except, perhaps+ some of those sweet,&#13;
¯ doff-loving boys of course&#13;
~When I was a kid, Barbie dolls didn’t&#13;
:~ last long in my neighborhood. We’ d steal&#13;
¯ themfromour sisters .and use thbm cruelly.&#13;
we aetuallyhave,nofavorites-~ this question ¯ They,w~ould.’be J..gan of Arc atthe stake,&#13;
puslies~s tomeasureandsztuateoursel~es: . andWor~.~ If ~eh~d any ~ense, w~ W~~d&#13;
svi_thin the w0dd of goods.. So goes .,".ha’ve,ca~-~f~illyst6i?&amp;l them away intheig&#13;
American.inff!~iduality:;~and.so..goe~rour..: ." boxes to’become’rich by selling them to&#13;
_economy:as well....... ~ , - ....... " ........ ., today’s fanatic Barbie ¢_ollectors: I can&#13;
Favorites make less senseintta.ditional~ ~ recommend a great website with-pictures&#13;
societies where individuality is ,muted~ ." of.Ken, from 1961 to 2000: Check out&#13;
and where the range of goods is.litfiited. ¯ www.manbehindthedoll.com. This guy&#13;
But even in ¯simpler societies,¯ things: ." ~ really likes,his boy dol|s.J’m suggesting&#13;
differentiate gender.. Women wear : to Anthony thathe build a similar Shrine&#13;
differentarticles of clothing than do men~ : to his boy shoes :’ . z&#13;
They oftent~s~different tO~Is~ The)~ may .~ Lamont Lindstrom, Ph.’D,~ ~teaChes&#13;
noteatihesamefoods~.W,eslotourchi.’l.dren. "- anthropology, at .t:he.~University of Tulsa,&#13;
We dedicate an enormous mount of&#13;
resources to outreach, networking,&#13;
building allies and forging ties with&#13;
advocacy, educational and religious&#13;
organizations. Even when distribution&#13;
goes well, though, it hardly covers our&#13;
costs. To do this kind of media work, we&#13;
rely on outside support from our friends&#13;
who share our goals and understand the&#13;
unique role films like IT’ S&#13;
ELEMENTARY and THAT’S A&#13;
FAMILY!canplayinprevenfingprejudice&#13;
and violence.&#13;
Pleasehelp us keep thehugemomentum&#13;
IT’S ELEMENTARY generated going&#13;
strong. Help us welcome the millennium&#13;
by getting THAT’S A FAMILY! out of&#13;
our editing room and into elementary&#13;
school classrooms all across the country.&#13;
Please send your tax-deductible&#13;
donations toWomen’ s Educational Media,&#13;
2180 Bryant Street, Suite 203, San&#13;
Francisco,CA94110. Orgo to this interuet&#13;
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http://www.womedia.org/support.html&#13;
Donations of any size will be of great&#13;
help. With warm regards and deep&#13;
appreciation for your generous support,&#13;
- Debra Chasnoffand Helen S. Cohen&#13;
Producers&#13;
P.S. We are honored to let you know&#13;
that IT’S ELEMENTARY just won the&#13;
1999 Multicultural Education Media&#13;
Award,givenby th6National Association&#13;
for Multicultural Education (N.A.M.E.).&#13;
Weknow this award -- the first N.A.M.E.&#13;
has ever given to anything Gay-related&#13;
will help us build even better alliances&#13;
with educators who are committed to&#13;
addressing diversity !ssues. Please help&#13;
ustoday to get THAT S A FAMILY! out&#13;
where it can be put to good use.&#13;
Women’s Educational Media&#13;
2180 Bryant Sreet Suite 203&#13;
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(415) 641-4616, (415) 641-4632 fax&#13;
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon&#13;
said thatRudyde Leon, the under secretary&#13;
of defense for personnel, and Douglas&#13;
Dw0rkin, the acting general counsel,raised&#13;
the matter in a Dec. 18 memorandum to&#13;
service leaders. "It is important that the&#13;
leadership of each of the services issue a&#13;
strong statement to the field that&#13;
harassment~of service members for any&#13;
reason, to include alleged or perceived&#13;
homosexuality, will not be tolerated,"&#13;
according to thememo,releasedThursday&#13;
by the Defense Department.&#13;
Bacon said it had not been made&#13;
sufficiently clear to commanders that a&#13;
service member’ s complaint about being&#13;
harassed for alleged homosexuality is not&#13;
grotmds forinvestigating the complainant.&#13;
Instead it should be the basis for&#13;
investigating the harassers, he said.&#13;
image would be one see Jim, p. 14&#13;
of a liorrible drago,n,, given the tone of the&#13;
oth~"rdationship songs. Melissa asked&#13;
her~f,"How much do I love Juiie? I love&#13;
her~uchthat I would want to die in her&#13;
ar~ Quite a wonderful thing to say&#13;
aboi~.’ anyone’s lover, male or female.&#13;
"S!O~p" was the answer to the question, a&#13;
lovely song about getting away from the&#13;
noise ofthe world and snuggling into your&#13;
¯¯ lover’s arms and listening to him/her&#13;
breathing, and feeling trusting and&#13;
¯&#13;
comfortable enough with another person&#13;
: to be able to sleep. It’s a lovely song of&#13;
¯ quiet comfort.&#13;
¯&#13;
And then there’s issues of equality.&#13;
: "Truth of the Heart"is a wonderful ballad&#13;
¯ to the truth that "We all begin this race at&#13;
: the start" and about how "deep down&#13;
: inside we’re all the same / try not tojudge&#13;
¯ someone / and never shame." Partnered&#13;
¯&#13;
for almost 11 years now, the two have two&#13;
¯ children of their own. Melissa wrote this&#13;
¯ song to explain to their children about ¯&#13;
how to deal with life. Words to live by. In&#13;
: "MamaI’m Strange", thejoys of growing&#13;
¯ up Gay - or just different - is artfully&#13;
: explored, with just the fight amountof&#13;
¯ angst to remind us where we came from&#13;
¯&#13;
and how hard the struggle could be at&#13;
¯ times~&#13;
¯ The single most striking song is called&#13;
: "S~carecrow", and it’s about Matthew&#13;
¯ Sheppard. She said she hadlots of trouble&#13;
," w~riting that because here she was also&#13;
¯ writing ’’Truth of the Heart" as well and&#13;
¯&#13;
felt she couldn’t be writing about people&#13;
: being good in one song and denounce&#13;
¯ them in another. So the end of the song is&#13;
". her way of forgiving (but not forgetting)&#13;
¯&#13;
the second attacker (I think he was going&#13;
¯ to trial or prison at that time). It has to be&#13;
: heard to be experienced. If you aren’t&#13;
¯ crying and angry after hearing it, you’re&#13;
¯&#13;
dead.&#13;
¯ There are two versions of this CD, one&#13;
¯ of which is already hard to find. It has ¯&#13;
three extra songs, "Touch and Go",&#13;
: "Cherry Avenue" (where she mentions&#13;
the name of one-of the Lesbian bars in&#13;
¯ which she sang for about 4 years before&#13;
being discovered -Que Sera), and "My&#13;
¯ Beloved", and is released in a cardboard&#13;
¯" case. The regular version has 11 songs in&#13;
theusual plasticjewel box; Whichincludes&#13;
: the lovely ode tounrequitedlove, ’"’Angels&#13;
¯ Will Fall". That’ s the one most folks are&#13;
¯ going to be familiar with at this point. ¯&#13;
For you men out there: I know that in&#13;
¯ some-minds, there’s a big chasm between&#13;
¯ Gay men and Lesbians, and this extends&#13;
¯ to performer preferences. I’ve heard the&#13;
¯ nasty comments - from both sides. All I&#13;
¯ can say is, get over your prejudices, and&#13;
¯ get this CD. It’s well worth it, and&#13;
¯ incredible in its beauty and reflection of&#13;
¯&#13;
life. And, Melissa, you have a new fan.&#13;
Thank you Karin, for your contributions&#13;
¯ to widening my musical horizons and the&#13;
infolmation contained in the above article&#13;
¯&#13;
about the backgrbund of the songs. Seems&#13;
¯ ironic that I’ mbeing tutoredinGay culture&#13;
¯ and musical icons by a straight woman, ¯&#13;
but suchis life. I feel like I shouldknow all&#13;
¯&#13;
this alrcady!&#13;
." There’s a few things Karin said that I&#13;
¯ think bear repeating, for both Melissa&#13;
¯&#13;
fans, and more importandy, for us all: "I&#13;
¯&#13;
am so happy that I could bring a singer&#13;
¯ into your life who writes and sings from ¯&#13;
¯ the heart. VH1 is rertmmng her "Behind&#13;
the Music" next week, and I’m going to&#13;
tape it for you You’ll like it. It’ s the only&#13;
¯ oneI veseenwheretheartmtlsn thit~hing ¯&#13;
about something. Someofthemjustwhine&#13;
¯&#13;
endlessly. ’I love Shania Twain, but her&#13;
¯ BTM special was one endless bitch and&#13;
¯ whine.&#13;
¯ Stevie Nicks doesn’t bitch, but she’s&#13;
: had such lousy things happen, to her, by&#13;
: her own hand, that it just sounds so&#13;
¯ depressing. You know Melissa has been&#13;
¯ depressed, butthere’s somuchshedoesn’t&#13;
¯&#13;
say. I saw John Mellencamp’s BTM&#13;
¯ (Behind the Music), I’ve sc~en Cherts&#13;
¯ dozens of times, along with Madonna’ s,&#13;
and Melissa’ s just seems so upbeat that&#13;
Timothy Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fightfor&#13;
justice &amp; equality for&#13;
Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury,&#13;
Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointments are available.&#13;
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Sprint PCS" Select Retailer&#13;
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Buy any Sprint PCS Phone and&#13;
get $25 off!’ Everyone is approved!&#13;
All Sprint PCS service plans include.~&#13;
¯ Free Voicemail, Free Caller ID&#13;
¯ Free Call Waiting ¯ Free 3 way calling&#13;
, No activation fee ¯ No contract required&#13;
¯ 100% Sprint PCS Nationwide Neb,vork.&#13;
Tulsa Locations:&#13;
2001 S. Garnett, 437-2dd~.&#13;
3733S. Memorial, 66003zl4&#13;
1216 S. Harvard, 587-1778&#13;
Sapulpa Location:&#13;
,109 N. Mission, 227-2322&#13;
Meet Local&#13;
.Guys for&#13;
Hot Ti&#13;
@Origin. 18+. Additional features from&#13;
personal ads&#13;
see Jim, p. 15&#13;
she seems to have had a great life. Like I&#13;
said before, growing up Gay anywhere, I&#13;
know from you, is awful, but growing up&#13;
Gay in Leavenworth, Kaus~ must be the&#13;
pits. She doesn’t make much of anything&#13;
depressing. I was veryimpressed. Thanks&#13;
for the remark to the Gay men to listen to&#13;
Lesbians. I think they shodd each take&#13;
heed of that.&#13;
And remember, she’s the only one I&#13;
know of getting the word out to the&#13;
.mainstream crowd. P,e~,,ple like her so&#13;
much that they tend to. forget" (or tryto&#13;
...forget) that she’s Gay. She doesn’t let&#13;
them. ("Someone’s spitting blood/face&#13;
downinthe dirt/someone’ s thinking about&#13;
~ a gun/to try and stop the hurt/someone&#13;
drew conclusious/on the wail of destiny/&#13;
someone’s getting louder/and that&#13;
someone would be me.") That should be&#13;
importanttous ail."- Miss KarinGregory.&#13;
And I agree.&#13;
Janis Ianis performing Saturday March&#13;
4 in Dallas, TX at a club called Uncle&#13;
Caivin’s with Buddy Mondlock. And&#13;
ladies, as aiways, if you have something&#13;
to contribute or would like to see in this&#13;
column, please let me know care ofTFN,&#13;
or email me at tfnentritr@aol.com.&#13;
I wouldn’ twantto disappointthe diehard&#13;
readers of this column, so now it’s time&#13;
for... The Stevie Nicks mention. She has&#13;
a featured track on the new Sheryl Crow&#13;
and FriendsCDand video. The song is the&#13;
venerable Gold Dust Woman, and she’s&#13;
never sounded better! The CD’ s out now,&#13;
video to follow. Sarah. McLachlan,&#13;
Chrissie Hynde, the Dixie Chicks and&#13;
others aiso sing with Sheryl. And Stevie&#13;
still has a few shows left to do in Las&#13;
Vegas at the house of Blues this month.&#13;
Hernew album, first duein October oflast&#13;
year, now set for sometime this year,&#13;
maybe, is being produced by one of the&#13;
better known producers of hip hop and&#13;
rap. I’d mention the name, but I caff t&#13;
rememberit. Shery! Crow was producing,&#13;
which wouldhavemadefor an interesting&#13;
aibum - she did the excellent jobs of&#13;
producing the Stevie songs forthe Practical&#13;
Magic soundtrack. Stevie and rap... That&#13;
will be interesting as well, aithough I fear&#13;
for different ~easous. We shall see.., or&#13;
hear.&#13;
The ever handsome pianist Jim&#13;
Brickman performed at the PAC on&#13;
December 10, 1999, along with the very&#13;
talented John Trones and the beautiful&#13;
Anne Cochran. The show was lovely, an&#13;
eveningofromance and seasonal favorites,&#13;
and as Mr. Brickman described the&#13;
evening, much like a gathering of friends&#13;
round the piano. Okay, if the friends had&#13;
areally large living room, and reaily good&#13;
- moodlighting. Andamplifiers. Thegroup&#13;
.i did a swell job ofmaking a cavern into an&#13;
intimate cabaret. Mx. Brickman has a&#13;
charming sense ofhumor and intelligence&#13;
.to complementhis goodlooks. (Evenbetter&#13;
m person and up close. I love my job...)&#13;
He seemed very relaxed, and it was like&#13;
meeting an old friend for the first dine.&#13;
His playing can certainly set amood, from&#13;
exuberant to melancholy and romantic all&#13;
at the same time; and has a warmth to it&#13;
thatis reminiscentof spending the evening&#13;
with a loved one by a fire.&#13;
Or, if you’ re .single, as I am, curledup in&#13;
a comforter with a good book and cup, of&#13;
cocoa. Now that weknow how I spendmy&#13;
evenings... What? Have I said too much?&#13;
Mr. Brickman is a prolific songwriter as&#13;
well, setting words to music that is lovely&#13;
: to hear and unabashedly sentimental in&#13;
feeling.&#13;
: Anne Cochran, who met Mr. Brickman&#13;
¯ inhigh school, where they formed aband,&#13;
: has one of the most incredible voices I’ve&#13;
: heard. And her phrasing with a song is&#13;
: immaculate. Shecaptured thewarmthand&#13;
joy of the compositions she performed&#13;
withexpertease, andhas alovely, energetic&#13;
yet relaxed stage presence that also added&#13;
to the ambiance of the evening. She has a&#13;
new CD out called "Lucky Girl’_’, which I&#13;
would highly recommend for a gift based&#13;
on whatI heard that evening. Iwould have&#13;
one in my hot little hands right now had&#13;
they not been sold out. She isa name you&#13;
might be familiar with, she has had a top&#13;
¯ 5 hit with Jim Bfickman on the song&#13;
: -"After All These Years" which has been&#13;
: reed by skater Rosalyun:Summers, both&#13;
: live and recorded. It was also the song&#13;
¯ used on the final episode of "Home&#13;
: Improvement", andshe will be featured in&#13;
:- the Lifetime television speciai"A Golden&#13;
Moment". Definitely worth checking out.&#13;
You can order her CD at&#13;
www.AnneCochran.com.&#13;
John Trones (pronounced ~tro-ness’),&#13;
who is as nice and gorgeous as he is&#13;
.talented (what a voice! whata smile! what&#13;
a chest! what a pleasant man!), was a&#13;
delight to listen to as well.&#13;
With a million dollar smile that shines&#13;
like a searchlight, and a voice that has&#13;
incrediblerange and expressiOn,hejoined&#13;
Anne on several numbers and had some&#13;
lovely solos. His singing soared through&#13;
the Chapman theatre and could melt the&#13;
most hardened heart. He has an aibum of&#13;
standards and ballads out called&#13;
"Forward", which I was able to snag and&#13;
most definitely would make a great&#13;
Valentine’s girlie for the special man on&#13;
your list. He can melt the ice off the fiorth&#13;
Pole with that voice, and his phrasing and&#13;
reading of the standards is right on target.&#13;
A pity he’s in Minneapolis, I would love&#13;
to see more of him. He does Cabaret there&#13;
at Blanche’s, and has performed in a&#13;
number of Gay plays, listed on his web&#13;
site, www.JohnTrones.com, which is&#13;
worth a look. You can also order his CD&#13;
there.&#13;
After listening to several review CDs of&#13;
dubious quality sent to TFN, put out by&#13;
Gay artists of dubious talent, attempting&#13;
to sing standards and not succeeding very&#13;
well at anything other than murdering the&#13;
music, I am glad to say that his would be&#13;
the one I would, and did, purchase.&#13;
They were joined by Tracy Silverman&#13;
on electric violin, and he did quite an&#13;
interesting variationonthe Beade’ s"Here&#13;
Comes The Sun". His playing added an&#13;
interesting embellishment to Mr.&#13;
Brickman’s piano. I will say he had the&#13;
most lovely and LONG hair I’ ve seen on&#13;
aman in along time. He has an album out&#13;
on Windham Hill records. If you get the&#13;
chance to catch any or all of these artists&#13;
should they make a return appearance,&#13;
DO SO! You won’t regret it. Just make&#13;
sure you have a date, and one that won’t&#13;
stand you up.&#13;
I was looking forward to Peter Buffett’ s&#13;
"Spirit: A Journey in Dance, Drum, and&#13;
Song"aunique blend of Native American&#13;
and contemporary music, dance, and&#13;
storytelling, to have been held January 3&#13;
and 4th, 2000 at the Brady Theatre.&#13;
According to the latest info, ail spring&#13;
dates have been put onhold. According to&#13;
my sources, a late spring tour is in the&#13;
plans.&#13;
James Christjohn serves as TFN&#13;
Entertainment editor with emphasis on&#13;
the performing arts.</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, January 2000; Volume 7, Issue 1</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Bob Rounsavell&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers</text>
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              <text>High Court + Scouts:&#13;
No Gays Need Apply&#13;
by Laurie Asseo, Associated Press&#13;
WASHINGTON - The Boy Scouts can bar Gays from&#13;
serving as troop leaders, the Supreme Court said at the&#13;
end of June in a 5-4 decision on "free-association&#13;
rights." The decision may also let the-6.2-millionmember&#13;
organization reject Gay boys as members.&#13;
Forcing the Scouts to accept Gay troop leaders would&#13;
violate the organization’ s right of"expressive association"&#13;
under the Constitution’s First Amendment, the&#13;
justices nded on the last day of their 1999-2000 term.&#13;
"The Boy Scouts asserts that homosexual conduct is&#13;
inconsistent with the values it seeks to instill," Chief&#13;
Justice William H. Relmquist wrote for the court. Requiring&#13;
the organization to have a Gay scoutmaster&#13;
would force it "to send a message, both~£o the youth&#13;
members and the world, that the Boy Scouts accepts&#13;
homosexual conduct as a legitimate form of behavior,"&#13;
the ,..hief justice said.&#13;
"-.We’ re very pleased," said Scouts spokesman Gregg&#13;
Shields. "It’ s going to allow us to continue our mission&#13;
of providing character-building programs for youth."&#13;
see Scouts._ tg. 9&#13;
uNPredicts: AIDS Will Kill&#13;
One Half.of African Teens&#13;
GENEVA (AP) - AIDS has killed 19 million people&#13;
worldwide, but the worst is yet to come, the United&#13;
Nations has just predicted: the disease is expected to&#13;
wipe out half the teen-agers in some African nations,&#13;
devastating economies and societies.&#13;
’q’here is a whole generation which is being taken&#13;
outYsaid Peter Plot, head of the U.N. Joint Program on&#13;
HIV/AIDS. He said vulnerable countries in Asia, Eastem&#13;
Europe and the Caribbean risk a similar catastrophe&#13;
unless they act now to control infection rates.&#13;
In its 135-page report released at the end of June,&#13;
UNAIDS estimates:&#13;
-The virus has killed 19 million people worldwide,&#13;
up fronr 16.3 million at the end of 1998. ~t has infected&#13;
34 million more, including 5.4 million last year alone.&#13;
-More than 13 million children have been orphaned&#13;
by AIDS.&#13;
-In 16 sub-SaharanAfrican countries, more than onetenth&#13;
of the population ages 15-49 carries the Human&#13;
lmmunodeficiency Virus, or HIV.&#13;
-In seven of those countries, at least one-fifth of the&#13;
population is infected.&#13;
One-of the countries where 20% of the population is&#13;
infected is South Africa, which has 4.2 million people&#13;
who are HIV positive- the largest single national total.&#13;
The southern African nation of Botswana has the worst&#13;
rate, with more than one in three adults infected. That is&#13;
the equivalent of 90 million people out of the U.S.&#13;
population of 270 million, see Africa, p. 9&#13;
DIRECTORY P. 2&#13;
PRIDE PHOTOS P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P. 4&#13;
HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
Serving Lesbian; Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
Pride 2000: Greg,&#13;
Greta + ORU Too&#13;
TULSA - While the Edsel ferrying Greg Louganis broke down and despite a steady but mild rain, Tulsa’s 2nd Pride&#13;
Parade went off without a hitch. Beginning at the Tulsa Gay Community Services Center near 41st &amp; Peoria, several&#13;
hundreds gathered along with grand marshals, Olympic champion Greg Louganis and distinguished US Army veteran&#13;
Greta Cammermeyer.&#13;
The. parade featured&#13;
churches, choirs, drag&#13;
queens and female impersonators,&#13;
leather "boys and&#13;
daddies," bars and businessmen&#13;
who spread out over&#13;
more than a mile and ended&#13;
up at Veteran’ s Park for the&#13;
Pride Festival.&#13;
This yearlikelast, a handful&#13;
of protesters gathered at&#13;
the beginning of the parade,&#13;
and then scurried to the end&#13;
to protest yet again.&#13;
Incontrast with those who&#13;
were protesting, the pastor&#13;
and a couple of members of&#13;
the CarbondaleAssembly of&#13;
God passed out bottles of&#13;
water without any message&#13;
of condemnation as they did&#13;
last year also. When asked&#13;
about their effort, they said&#13;
they just wanted to act with&#13;
compassion and to avoid the&#13;
nastiness - leaving judgement&#13;
to the Almighty.&#13;
see Pride, p. 6&#13;
Humanity Unites for Human Rights Oral Roberts University Alumni&#13;
Gree Louganis at the Millennium Parade Sharon Toele with Greta Cammermever&#13;
i" Vermont Judge Won’t Block-&#13;
Unions, Officials Rebel + More&#13;
¯ MONTPELIER,Vt. (AP)-Opponents ofVermont’ s civil unions. ¯&#13;
made another legal bid to block thelaw from taking effect on July ¯&#13;
¯ 1st. A day after a Superior Court judge refused to issue a ."&#13;
¯ preliminary injunction blocking the first civil unions ceremonies.&#13;
¯ from taking place, opponents filed a new request and added new °&#13;
plaintiffs.&#13;
A Virginia lawyer representing Shdtra and the other plaintiffs °&#13;
said Superior Cpurt Judge Stephen Martin did not have enough ;&#13;
information beftre him when the judge ruled that no irreparable °&#13;
harm would occur if the law went into effect. ¯&#13;
Lawyer Erik Stanley asked to add two new plaintiffs to the ;&#13;
lawsuit: town clerks in Corinth and Fairfield, who say they would °&#13;
be harmed if forced to issue civil union licenses. ¯&#13;
"These town clerks object to doing that on moral and religious °&#13;
grounds and have asked the attorney general’ s office if they could "&#13;
not issue these licenses," Stanley said. ’The attorney general ;&#13;
responded in a letter to them that if they refuse to issue civil ¯&#13;
unions licenses, they could be faced with civil lawsuits from the "&#13;
individuals to whom they refused to issue licenses." There also ¯&#13;
is the remote possibility of criminal fines or prison terms. ¯&#13;
Several town clerks say they object to homosexuality and do ¯&#13;
not want to be forced into providing licenses that will grant same- "&#13;
sex couples nearly all the rights and benefits Of marriage. " "&#13;
The clerks now have been added to 15 people who sued to -"&#13;
overturn the law. Eleven of those plaintiffs are members of the ¯&#13;
Vermont House who opposed civil unions, including prominent"&#13;
representatives such as Sheltra, Oreste Valsangiacomo, D-Barre, °&#13;
Robert Starr, D-Troy, and George Schiavone, R-Shelburne. ¯&#13;
They argue that an informal betting pool among 14 House "&#13;
members who supported the bill should invalidate it. The 14"&#13;
bettors each threw in a dollar to wager on the number of "yes" ¯&#13;
votes the bill would garner when it went before the House for ¯&#13;
preliminary approval in March. It passed by seven votes that day. "&#13;
Opponents argued the pool should have disqualified those who "&#13;
participated because it gave them an interest in the outcome of the ¯&#13;
vote. ¯&#13;
In a recent ruling, Martin said allowing Gay and Lesbian "&#13;
couples to enter into civil unions beginning Saturday would pose :&#13;
no harm to the initial 15 plaintiffs, see Vermont, p. 9.&#13;
Coke Adds Benefits for&#13;
Gay +-Lesbian Partners&#13;
WASHINGTON The Human Rights Campaign,&#13;
anational Gay civil rights organization, commended&#13;
the Coea-Cola Co. today for announcing plans to&#13;
extend health care benefits to same-sex domestic&#13;
partners of its United States-based employees.&#13;
"This is excellent news, and yet another sign that&#13;
domestic partner benefits are becoming a standard&#13;
component of benefits packages at forward-thinking&#13;
companies," said Kim I. Mills, HRC’ s education&#13;
director who oversees WorkNet, HRC’s&#13;
workplac project. "With this announcement, Coke&#13;
becomes the 99th member of the Fortune 500 to&#13;
take this important step."&#13;
The Human Rights Campaign and its Business&#13;
Council have been working with Coea-Cola and&#13;
KOLAGE, its Lesbian and Gay employee resource&#13;
group, for many months on this issue, Mills said.&#13;
HRC WorkNet (www.hrc.org/worknet) provided&#13;
data, strategy and other advice as needed.&#13;
The Coca-Cola Co. released a statement today&#13;
announcing the benefits, which will begin Jan. 1,&#13;
2001. According to the statement, employees will&#13;
be able to sign up during the fall benefits enrollment&#13;
period. The company also said it is researching&#13;
opportunities for implementing its policy on a&#13;
global basis. "Our company is committed to attracting&#13;
and retaining the most diverse workforce&#13;
in the world," Coca-Cola said in the statement.&#13;
"Our goal is to ensure that the Coea-Cola Company&#13;
is the best place for all people to work. This&#13;
extension ofbenefits is another step toward achieving&#13;
that goal."&#13;
"The Coea-Cola Company has provided worldclass&#13;
leadership to the beverage industry, and to the&#13;
business commtmity in Atlanta and all of Georgia&#13;
by taking this historic action," said Harry Knox,&#13;
executive director of the Georgia Equality Project,&#13;
whichrepresents Georgia’ s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,&#13;
and Transgendered citizens, see Coke, p. 2&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’ s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb, 1926 E. Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’ s, 2114 S. Memorial&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119&#13;
835-2376&#13;
749-4511&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
834-4234&#13;
585-3405&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584-1308&#13;
*The Yellow Brick Road Pub, 2630 E. 15th 749-1563&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Advanced Wireless &amp; PCS, Digital Cellular&#13;
*Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria&#13;
*Cheap Thrills, 2640 E. 1 lth&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. ISth&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
Encompass Travel, 13161H N. Memorial&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
747-1508&#13;
743-1000&#13;
250-5034&#13;
665-4580&#13;
712-1122&#13;
712-9955&#13;
494-2665&#13;
743-5272&#13;
746-0313&#13;
295-5868&#13;
581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
622-0700&#13;
749-3620&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838-8503&#13;
369-8555&#13;
584=0337, 712-9379&#13;
592-0460 "&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria 744-9595&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th P1. 610-0880&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr. 628-3709&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare 808-8026&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758.E. 21st 742-1460&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning 459-9349&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney 744-7440&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly 745-1111&#13;
*International Tours 341-6866&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th 712-2750&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th 582-3018&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering 747-0236&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening 582-8460&#13;
*Kerfs Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
599-8070&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210 747-5466&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha 585-1234&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd 584-3112&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31 663-5934&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place 664-2951&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo 838-7626&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2nd floor 743-4297&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, POB 696, 74101&#13;
747-5932&#13;
Richard’ s Carpet Cleaning 834-0617&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-7921, 747-4746&#13;
Scribner’ s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
749-6301&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman 260-7829&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis 481-0558&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
835-5563&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling 743-1733&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan 665-2222&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
592-0767&#13;
www.gaytulsa.org&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 74101&#13;
579-9593&#13;
All Sods Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria&#13;
743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159&#13;
587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6&#13;
583-7815&#13;
"13/UGFr Alliance, Univ. ofTulsa United Min. Ctr.&#13;
583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th P1. &amp; Florence&#13;
*ChurchoftheRestorationUU, 1314N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*Community ofHopeUnited Me~o~li."~st, 2545 S:.Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universanst tgongregauon 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’ s Chorale&#13;
748-3888&#13;
*Ddaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware&#13;
712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31&#13;
742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa- Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard&#13;
747-7777&#13;
*Free SpiritWomen’ s Center, call forlocation &amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
)18.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
o-mail: TulsaNews@ earthlinl~ net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn, Karin Gregory, Barry Hensley, J.-P.&#13;
Legrandbouche, Lamont Lindstrom, Esther Rothblum. Mary&#13;
Schepers, Hughston Walkinshaw&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1st of each month, the entire contents&#13;
of this publication are protected by US copyright 1998 by&#13;
T~, lz:~ h/~w~ and may not be reproduced ei.th.er in&#13;
whole orin part withoutwrittenpermission from thepublisher.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’ s&#13;
sexual orientation. Correspondence zs asslmaed to be for&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property of TJ.~, F¢,~.’. No,w÷ ..Each..rea.der&#13;
is entitled to 4 copies of each ediuon at distnbutton&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., POB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
*Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194&#13;
Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st 481-1111&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
*House of the Holy Spirit Minstries, 3210e So. Norwood .&#13;
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437 ¯&#13;
*MCG United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
gAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral P1. 748-3111&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, POB 14068, 74159 365-5658&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa&#13;
PFLAG, POB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
*Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 584-2325&#13;
O’ RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults&#13;
O’ RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth&#13;
St. Aidan’ s ,Episcopal church, 4045 N. Cincinnati&#13;
425-7882&#13;
St. Dunstan,s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st&#13;
492-7140&#13;
*St. Jerome s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
*TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
Confidential I-IIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
Tulsa Okla. for Human Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
*Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105 743-4297&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity, 3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
B,ARTLESVILLE&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
¯ Borders Books &amp; Music, 3209NWExpressway 405-848::2667&#13;
: Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
: TAHLEQUAH&#13;
: Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
¯ *Tahlequah Unitarian-UniversalistChurch 918-456-7900&#13;
Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
Autunm Bre~.,ze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
DeVito’ s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
Fmerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’ s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
501-253-7457&#13;
501-253-6807&#13;
501-253-5445&#13;
501-253-9337&#13;
501-253-2776&#13;
501-253~5332&#13;
501-624-6646&#13;
501-253-6001&#13;
501-253-4074&#13;
www.gaytulsa.org&#13;
stirs controversy&#13;
TULSA - gaytulsa.org, a non-profit continues&#13;
to stir controversy about and in the&#13;
Tulsa Lesbian, Gay, Bi and ~rans communities.&#13;
Hosted by webmaster David and his&#13;
: partner, Seth, a statement onthe sitenotes,&#13;
¯. " [that it is] an effort to chronicle the dme&#13;
sl~ent out and about in the Tulsa gay scene&#13;
¯ mixed with a bit of news and&#13;
¯ information. We do not claim to be fair,&#13;
objective, or even nice. This is 99%&#13;
¯ opinion. Whileyoumayormaynotagree,&#13;
¯ wecanpromise youwill be either amused,&#13;
¯ baffled, or (more commonly) pissed if ¯&#13;
¯ youkeep visiting. We acceptgossip, slander,&#13;
or anything else you want to submit&#13;
¯ we can post here."&#13;
¯ The awardwinning sitefeatures links to&#13;
¯ other web sites of interest and offers the observations of local writer, Dyke Di-&#13;
¯ vine. Also included are cordial descriptions&#13;
of local and state pnnt media: Tulsa&#13;
Family News, The Gayly Oklahoman and&#13;
¯ newcomer to Tulsa, the recently renamed&#13;
Tulsa Triangle.&#13;
¯ On the net: www.gaytulsa.org&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134 41%623-4696&#13;
* is where youcan findTFN¯NotallareGaY"ownedbutallareGay"fri"endly"&#13;
i The Georgia Equality Project also played&#13;
¯ a key role in working with the company&#13;
: andKOLAGEto helpbring aboutthenew&#13;
¯ policy.&#13;
¯ GEP also unveiled a new initiadvg~to-&#13;
¯ day to persuade nine other Georgia COm-&#13;
" panies to provide domestic partner ben-&#13;
" efits to their Lesbian and Gay employees.&#13;
¯ These companies are: Home Depot, At-&#13;
: lanta Gas Light Co., BellSouth, Georgia&#13;
¯ Pacific, DeltaAirlines, Wachovia, United&#13;
¯ parcel.Service, Shaw Industries and Gulf&#13;
¯ Stream Aerospace.&#13;
¯ "Some companies in Georgia are be-&#13;
: hind the times in their treatment of their&#13;
Lesbian and Gay employees, said Kno .&#13;
"We are launching this initiative because&#13;
our Gay daughters, sons, fathers, moth-&#13;
. ers, aunts, uncles and cousins should re-&#13;
. ceive benefits for their dependent family&#13;
¯ members just like everyone eis .&#13;
¯ Earlier this month, DaimlerChrysler&#13;
: Corp., Ford Motor Co. and General Mo-&#13;
¯ tots Corp., along with the United Auto&#13;
¯ Workers umon, announced they would&#13;
offer health care coverage to same-sex&#13;
¯&#13;
partners of all eligible U.S. employees. It&#13;
¯ was the first time an endre industry, along&#13;
¯ with its leading umon, announeed domes-&#13;
¯ - tic partner benefits simultaneously. More&#13;
: than.3,400 private and public employers&#13;
¯ provide these benefits to their employees.&#13;
¯ So far this year, an average of five&#13;
: employers a week are announcing these&#13;
: benefits, according to HRC’ s WorkNet,&#13;
: which tracks these trends. Many of&#13;
¯ America’ s leading companies offer these ¯&#13;
benefits including: IBM, MicrosoftShell&#13;
~ Oil, Walt Disney, Fannie Mae, Cifgroup,&#13;
¯ Xerox, Time Warner and United and&#13;
: American Airlines. Additionally, more ¯&#13;
thanhalfoftheFortune 500includesexual&#13;
: orientation in their non-discrimination&#13;
¯ polities.&#13;
: Letters Policy&#13;
: TulsaFamilyNewswelcomes letters on ¯&#13;
issues which we’ve covered or on issues&#13;
: you thinkneed to be considered. Youmay&#13;
: request that your name be withheld but&#13;
letters mustbe signed&amp;have phonenum-&#13;
~ bers, or be hand ddivered.&#13;
&#13;
Anti-Gay Ads in Mexico "¯ past. of police was once so pervasive that&#13;
hate crimes andsame-sex domestic violence went&#13;
MEXICO CITY (AP) - The two leading candidates&#13;
in Mexico’ s presidential campaign have raised eyebrows&#13;
by casting doubts on each other’ s masculinity.&#13;
But the real surprise to .many,,,I~__ple in tl~i."s land w~.ith&#13;
a reputation for "machismo has been me negauve&#13;
reaction to the tactic.&#13;
Criticism led opposition candidate Vicente Fox to&#13;
quickly drop a negative TV ad aimed at rival Fran=&#13;
cisco Labastida, the candidate of the long-governing&#13;
Institutional Revohition.ary. Party, or PRI. Using a&#13;
¯ Mexican slang termfbr s0iii~0ne Of madefined seXu2&#13;
ality, the ad showed Labastida hugging and lifting a ~&#13;
PRI colleague by the thighs: It also featured shots of&#13;
male strippers at a’ campaign rally for another PRI&#13;
candidate. "&#13;
After canceling the ad, Fox’ s socially conservative&#13;
National Action Party, known as PAN, ran an advertisement&#13;
in newspapers defending itself tothe Gay&#13;
community. The p~t,,y is "not against.the ,O,,ay community&#13;
in any way,’ the ad said, adding: In a Fox&#13;
admiulstration, there will befrcedOm for people to&#13;
live without masks."&#13;
Carlos Monsivais, an author and social critic, said&#13;
the party’ s retreat was a milestone for Mexico, where&#13;
there are no openly Gay politicians and homosexualtty&#13;
has not been wtdely accepted..The most tm.po,&#13;
t~( thing is that even Fox and the right had to oacK&#13;
down and apologize to the Gay commumty,, h,e’ s.atd.."&#13;
"It’ s incredible to hear the word ’homophobta oemg ~&#13;
used even by the right."&#13;
Labastida’ s supporters have drawn their own criticism&#13;
for taking shots at.Fox’ s masct!!.inity with allusions&#13;
to his separation fromhis wife andhis being the&#13;
father of four adopted children. Such attacks have&#13;
seldombeenso directinMexicanpolitics, althoughin&#13;
the previous presidential election six years ago, the&#13;
PRI allegedly hired transvestites to attend an opposition&#13;
campaign rallyin Veracruz state in an attempt to&#13;
discredit it.&#13;
This time, the attacks were started by Fox. Fo,x,&#13;
called the PRI candidate a sissy and" La Vesttda,&#13;
a pun on his rival’s name implying Labastida is a&#13;
cross-dresser. But the atmosphere changed when a&#13;
minor-party candidate, Gilberto Rincon Gallardo of&#13;
the Social Democratic Party, stuck up for homosexuals,&#13;
the handicapped, rape victims and Indians in a&#13;
televised debate, the first time many of those groups.&#13;
had been mentioned in the race. "In weak democracies&#13;
like Mexico, legal protections are necessary to&#13;
prevent a tyranny of the majority over minorities, so&#13;
that people can decide on their own private lives&#13;
withou,,t a majority imposing its moral or cultural&#13;
views, Rincon Gallardo said.&#13;
On June 17, the Gay community held what was by&#13;
far the largest Gay-pride parade in Mexican history,&#13;
with organizers estimating a turnout of 30,000. Just&#13;
¯ five years ago, SUCh parades drew an average of about&#13;
1,000 people. But Gays haven’ t had much success in&#13;
their effort to make an issue of the banning of some&#13;
Gay cultural events by PAN officials in towns they&#13;
goBveemnj.amin Araujo of the Front for-People with&#13;
AIDS-HIV said that "Gays are more tolerated than&#13;
accacne~udteadte"iisnaMneimxipcoosasnibdiltihtyat. aTnhoepperenvl.yat..Ge,nacye,,p.oo.Il"~iatni.c,.ua.1-.&#13;
Gayattitudes wasillnstratedbY areportoymet_,mzen)&#13;
CommitteeAgainst Homophobic Hate Crimes: It&#13;
estimates that 190 Gays were killed in Mexico bec1a9u9s9e.&#13;
BofuttMheoirnss~evxautasl soereisenptraotgiorenssb.etWweeesnul1!h9a9v4ena"ndt&#13;
reached the point of having an openly Gay candidate,"&#13;
he said. "But we are now at a point where there&#13;
can no longer be an openly anti-Gay candidate."&#13;
Denver Cops &amp; Gays&#13;
Work Together&#13;
DENVER (AP) - Gays and Lesbians have formed an&#13;
alliance with police to deal with late-night cruising,&#13;
loud noise and sex in public around Cheesman Park.&#13;
Police, Gay civil-rights activists and park neighbors&#13;
have been handing out fliers to motorists for the&#13;
past few weeks warning that police will crack do.wn&#13;
on traffic, park curfew violations and inappropriate&#13;
activity on surrounding streets. ¯&#13;
Thejoint effort wouldnot have been possible in the&#13;
¯ unreported, activists said.&#13;
: "I think there was, clearly, some traditional stereo-&#13;
. typing on both sides, but that has changed alot," said&#13;
¯ Lt. Jimmy Martinez, who leads a communi.ty-poli.c;&#13;
~ ing team in the Cheesman Park area: Marttnez sara&#13;
¯ acting Police Chief Gerry Whitman devised the strat-&#13;
~ - egy when he was captain of District 6 surrounding&#13;
~ Cheesman. Once the "Fort Apache" of city police&#13;
~ districts, District 6 is now a model for community-&#13;
~ policing programs.&#13;
Cheesman is ~a .well:known gathering #ace for ~ -~&#13;
Gays and Lesbians,~and friction de~eloped between&#13;
neighbors andparkusers¯ Marfinez~idpolicegot the~ --&#13;
Cheesman Park West Neighborhood Associationand&#13;
Equality Colorado, a statewide Gay civil-rights orga-&#13;
: nization, directly involved.&#13;
¯ Representatives on both sides said the strategy has .&#13;
~ worked. "For one thing, our work with the Denver&#13;
:~&#13;
police has become a model for how an organization&#13;
like ours can work with law enforcement," said Lori&#13;
¯ Girvan, directorofEquality Colomdo.DedeDePerein,&#13;
¯&#13;
who heads Equality’s Anti-Violence Project, sai.’d&#13;
i cooperadun with police has "built bridges" over me&#13;
". Gay community’ s prevalent, persistent fear and misi&#13;
trust of law enforcement.&#13;
JoeBarrows of theChcesman ParkWestNeighborhoodAssociation&#13;
saidheandhis neighbors frequently&#13;
called oolice with complaints before the communitypolicing&#13;
campatgn. Now compl.amt.s a~..e rare: Tl~.e&#13;
result has been a positive changem tlae atsrupttons m&#13;
the neighborhood. It’ s been a positive experience all&#13;
the way around," he said.&#13;
Mormans Attack Gay&#13;
Relationships in Nevada&#13;
CARSON C1TY (AP) - A Mormon church-endorsed&#13;
ban on same-sex marriages cleared one hurdle recendy&#13;
when the secretary of state’ s office said aballot&#13;
~etition contained enough signatures. The ruling by&#13;
Deputy Secretary for Elections Susan Morandi advanced&#13;
the constitutional referendum to its final step&#13;
- a test sampling names on the petition for regist.ered&#13;
voters. County clerks and voter registrars were given&#13;
until July 7 toverify that registered voters signed the&#13;
petition.&#13;
Morandi’ s office said the Coalition for the Protection&#13;
of Mamage got 120,558 people to sign its 15etitlon,&#13;
which is almost three times the number of&#13;
registered voters needed to put a question on the&#13;
Nevada ballot: Under the measure, Nevada would&#13;
recogmze mamages only of a re.an and woman. ,That&#13;
already is part of state law, but advocates want to t~acK&#13;
it up in the state constitution.&#13;
Opponents say the initiative amounts to discriminadota&#13;
and bigotry. The Progressive Leadership Alliance&#13;
of Nevada and about 20 other groups across the&#13;
state formed the Coalition for Unity to campaign&#13;
against the ballot measure.&#13;
The Coalition for the Protection of Marriage is&#13;
heavily supported by the Church of Jesus Christ of&#13;
Latter-day Saints, whose members were central to&#13;
anti-Gay marriage efforts in Hawaii and Alaska, and&#13;
most recently, in California. However, the former&#13;
Catholic bishop of Las Vegas, Daniel Walsh, asked&#13;
priests and paris.ke_s to. support the ’~.aditi0nal f_~amily"&#13;
but not to support Ziser’ s effort because it fosters&#13;
ill-will toward Gays.&#13;
Gay Pride in Tel Aviv&#13;
" TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Celebrating Gay pride,&#13;
thousands of Israelis in tank tops and shorts danced to&#13;
¯ deafening music and waved rainbow-colored flags at&#13;
¯ the end of June. The annual street party has become&#13;
¯ the latest venue in the culture war between secular&#13;
¯ Israelis and devoutJews who consider h°m°sexuality&#13;
¯ an abomination.&#13;
¯ "We promise to support your struggle against the&#13;
~ religious," legislator Tommy Lapid, leader of the&#13;
¯ secular rights party Shinui, told the cheering crowd.&#13;
~ In recent years, Gays and Lesbians in Israel have&#13;
¯ scored a string of successes in the courts, though not&#13;
¯ in parliament, where ultra-Orthodox religi°us Parties&#13;
¯ have considerable deut. Last month, the Supreme&#13;
Court allowed a Lesbian spouse to be registered as the&#13;
United in&#13;
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-The Pride Storev&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
seeondparentofherpartner’sbiologicalson-in1994, ¯&#13;
Norway’ s only female bishop, RosmarieKohn, faced&#13;
same sex unions were recognized for benefit pur- ¯&#13;
a revolt by nearly one-third of her own clergy when&#13;
: she allowed openly Lesbian Siri Sunde to return to the&#13;
poses.&#13;
The court rulings have coincided with growing " pulpit. Sunde had been barred after she married her&#13;
public ,acceptance of Gays. Just a few years ago, ". female companion. Gay marriages are legal in NorpublicdisplaysofGaypridewereunheardofinlsrael.&#13;
¯ way, with all the fights of heterosexual marriages&#13;
By contrast, Gays were hugging and kissing in Tel : except church weddings and the right to adopt.&#13;
Aviv’ s central Rabin Square in 1998 to celebrate the ¯&#13;
transsexual singer Dana international’ s victory in the : Germany Considers&#13;
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in-hand. There were no religious protests. Tel Aviv is&#13;
anoverwhelmingly secular city, and the parade was&#13;
being heldjust before the onset oftheJewish Sabbath,&#13;
during which observant Jews refrain from work and&#13;
travel.&#13;
Taking a break from the blazing heat, Kinneret&#13;
G01an said the scene made her feel that Israel was no&#13;
different from othercountries. "You only see pictures&#13;
of Israel when rocks are being thrown. I’m proud that&#13;
despite everything we can still do this," she said.&#13;
Golan~ said that in the increasingly bitter culture&#13;
war betwTeen Israel’ s secular majority and thedevout&#13;
minority, the distrust is. so great that "each side&#13;
defines itself as the opposite:of what the other is."&#13;
Therefore, she said, many secular Israelis will sup-&#13;
]2~ort causes as long as they are denounced by the&#13;
’~:~’~r~igious community.&#13;
Lapid, standard bearer of the secular fight against&#13;
whathe calls religious coercion, said his party and the&#13;
homosexual movement are natural partners. Next&#13;
week, a bill proposing recognition of same-sex civil&#13;
unions will be up for approval. However, Lapid said&#13;
it will likely fail because of the influence of the&#13;
religious parties. But some of those dancing in the&#13;
parade said they paid little heed to politics. "Who&#13;
cares what they do in the Knesset? Look at this&#13;
celebration," saidAnat Schumaker, one of theparticipants.&#13;
"We’ re here and they can’ t do anything to stop&#13;
Gay Clergyman Shakes&#13;
Up Norweigan Church&#13;
OSLO, Norway (AP) - The selection of an openly&#13;
Gay clergyman in defiance of state Lutheran church&#13;
guidelines raised concerns Friday that the issue of&#13;
homosexuality could split the church. The Church of&#13;
Norway’ s highest body, its 85-member national congress,&#13;
ruled in November 1997 that clergy who enter&#13;
homosexual partnerships could not hold jobs that&#13;
require ordination.&#13;
However, the~Oslo Bishops’ Council of clergy and&#13;
laity voted 4-3 on June 15 to appoint Jens Torstein&#13;
Olsen as chaplain for the Majorstue Church. Olsen&#13;
noted onhis application that he was living with a Gay&#13;
partner.&#13;
The council minority appealed the decision to&#13;
Trend Giske, head of the churches and education&#13;
ministry that formally employs state church clergy.&#13;
He initially said he saw no reason to reverse the&#13;
council majority’s decision, but will make a final~&#13;
decision next month. If hired, the 51-year-old Olsen&#13;
would be Norway’ s first male minister who is openly&#13;
living with a Gay partner.&#13;
Oslo Bishop Gmmar Staalsett saidhe expects the.&#13;
ministry to respect his council’ s majority, in keeping&#13;
with usual practice. "Olsen is dearly the best qualified&#13;
for the post," Staalsett said.&#13;
But the move prompted Norway’s head bishop,&#13;
Odd B0ndevik, to say he was calling an emergency&#13;
meeting of the national bishops council on the matter&#13;
probably in August. "The appointment.., can split&#13;
the Church of Norway," he was quoted as telling the&#13;
Norwegian news agency NTB.-"When we said the&#13;
issue does not have to be a splitting factor, we assumed&#13;
that each individual bishop would be loyal to&#13;
the national church council’s resolutions and the&#13;
church itself," Bondevik was quoted as saying.&#13;
An anguished debate over Gay clergy has already&#13;
led to bitter disputes within the church. Last year,&#13;
reform. Half a million people were expected for the&#13;
annual Christopher Street Day parade in the German&#13;
capital. The bill, to be presented to parliament before&#13;
t breaks for summer next month, would recognize&#13;
registered Gay palTmerships as families, said Greens&#13;
lawmaker Volker Beck. However, homosexual&#13;
couples apparendy would not have the right to adopt&#13;
children - a demand of the Greens rejected by the&#13;
dominant Social Democrats.&#13;
Gay partnerships wonld get legal rights similar to&#13;
heterosexual couples on taxes, social security and&#13;
~mmigration law - an important point for Gay couples&#13;
where one parmer is a foreigner. Beck said the proposals&#13;
still require formal approval bythe parliamentary&#13;
groups of the two governing parties.&#13;
Opposition conservatives blasted the plahs and&#13;
hinted they would try to stall the bill in th~ upper&#13;
house of parliament, where the govemment,lack.s a&#13;
majority. Thomas Goppel, aleader of Bavaria s rightist&#13;
Christian Social Union party, called the proposals&#13;
"absurd." Germany’ s Association ofGays and Lesbians&#13;
welcomed the draft saying it did notmeet all of the&#13;
group’ s demands but still were a great st p forward."&#13;
Minnesota ’Sodomy’&#13;
Law Under Challenge ¯&#13;
¯ MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A state law that makes oral&#13;
and anal sex acrimeis unconstitutional and shouldbe&#13;
¯ thrown out, tim Minnesota Civil Liberties Union&#13;
¯ claimed in a lawsuit filed at the end of June. The&#13;
i MCLU and the Lesbian and Gay Rights Project of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union are challenging&#13;
¯ Minnesota’ s sodomy statute, saying the law violates&#13;
the right of privacy guaranteed by the state constitui&#13;
tion. Thelaw - which applies to all consenting adults,&#13;
even married heterosexuals - makes violations pun-&#13;
: ishable with a year in prison and up to $3,000 in tines.&#13;
¯ Theclass-actionlawsuit,filedinHennepinCountY,&#13;
¯ asks the court to declare the statute void and prevent ¯&#13;
the state from enforcing it. The plaintiffs include two&#13;
: married heterosexuals who say they risk prosecution,&#13;
: a Lesbian who fears eviction because her lease pro-&#13;
" hibits illegal activity, a Gay law student who fears&#13;
¯ being disbarred, a divorced Gay manwhofears losing&#13;
¯ his right to visithis children, and a group of Lesbian,&#13;
¯ Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered lawyers and law&#13;
¯ students.&#13;
¯ According to the MCLU, 18 states still have sod-&#13;
.: omy, statutes, down from all 50 in 1961. In five of&#13;
": ~ose s’tat~s, the law hpplies 0nly to Gays [editor’s&#13;
¯&#13;
note: Oldahoma is one of those with laws only di-&#13;
¯ rected at Gay people]’. Legislatures have repealed&#13;
¯ sodomy laws in 25 states, while courts have over-&#13;
. turned them in others. In one of the most recent cases,&#13;
an appeals court in Texas voided that state’ s sodomy&#13;
¯ law two weeks ago.&#13;
¯ Attorney General Mike Hatch was out of state and ¯&#13;
unavailable for comment on the lawsuit, said his&#13;
¯&#13;
spokeswoman, Leslie Sandberg.&#13;
¯ Tom Prichard, executive director of theMinnesota&#13;
Family Council, which has helped fight off attempts&#13;
¯ to repeal the law at the Legislature, said the law&#13;
should stay on the books, and he criticized theMCLU&#13;
¯ for filing the lawsuit. ’°They’ re trying to do an end run&#13;
by getting the courts to strike it down instead of going&#13;
through the appropriate channel, which is the Legis-&#13;
¯ lature," Prichard said.&#13;
. ated offices to deal specifically with Gay&#13;
alth Officials to health issues. Officials in Seattle have&#13;
Focus Gay Needs :d velo#as iali d mpaigntovac-&#13;
¯ cinate Gay men for hepatitis.&#13;
BOSTON (AP) - Boston public health&#13;
officials have agreed to try to better meet&#13;
the needs of the city’ s Gay community by&#13;
collecting data onillnesses,raising awareness&#13;
of health issues and seeking funding&#13;
for new programs. Their decision follows&#13;
the lead of other big U.S. cities, where&#13;
officials have already taken action to address&#13;
the health needs of Gay, Lesbian,&#13;
Bisexual and Transgender residents.&#13;
’q’hereis clear datathat shows there are&#13;
health differences between the Gay and&#13;
larger communities," said Stephen&#13;
Boswell, executive director oftheFenway&#13;
Community Health Center, which serves&#13;
a high percentage of Boston’ s Gay population.&#13;
"If those problems are addressed,&#13;
we can make a significant impact."&#13;
At a conference held in Boston in May,&#13;
officials from public health agencies&#13;
around the country cited studies showing&#13;
Gays are at risk for a range of health&#13;
problems, including depression, breast&#13;
cancer, and substance abuse.&#13;
After years of focusing solely on HIV&#13;
and AIDS, Boston’s public health officials&#13;
decided soon after the conference to&#13;
develop a more efficient way to deal with&#13;
the community’s other pressing needs,&#13;
said John Auerbach, executive director of&#13;
me Boston Public Health Commission.&#13;
q~nis.is the first time the he~Ith department&#13;
has acknowledged it needs to specifically&#13;
address the health needs of the&#13;
Gay community," he said. "This is a significant&#13;
step forward."&#13;
Health departments in New York, Chicago&#13;
and San Francisco have already c~e-&#13;
While Louganis left immediatdy alter&#13;
the parade to fly out of the city,&#13;
Cammermeyer spoke briefly in the rain,&#13;
noting that she really might have preferred&#13;
not to come to Tulsa, thinking that&#13;
it might not really be safe or wdcoming,&#13;
but that probably she needed to come to&#13;
Tulsa for precisdy that reason.&#13;
Another group which received great&#13;
atteiation was ORU.out.com, a new Lesbian&#13;
and Gay alumni organization for&#13;
Oral Roberts University (ORU). While&#13;
Gay alumni groups exist around the country,&#13;
ORU.out.com is unusual in thatORU&#13;
has a policy of banning Gays as.students,&#13;
faculty or staff. Regardless, ~e ~oup&#13;
numbered about 20 and group orgamzer,&#13;
Jeff McKissic notes that about 60 people&#13;
have gotten involved.&#13;
Orgamzers of the Parade and Festival,&#13;
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights,&#13;
Inc. estimated that some 3,000 participated&#13;
or attended.&#13;
More than !00,000 march in&#13;
Paris Gay Pride parade&#13;
PARIS (AP)- In a festive celebration of&#13;
Gay pride; more than 100,000 people&#13;
marched and danced on the last weekend&#13;
in June through the streets of Paris behind&#13;
a giantbanner with the slogan for this&#13;
year’s parade: ,Homophobia - a social&#13;
pl~gr~h------ Educatton Mimster Jack Lang&#13;
and the Socialist Party’s mayoral candidate&#13;
Bertrand Delanoe were among the&#13;
politicians thatkicked offGay Pride 2000&#13;
behind dozens of motorcyclists from the&#13;
Gay Bikers Club.&#13;
Rainbow-colored flags waved under&#13;
overcast skies as the parade wound from&#13;
:: Feds to Fund AIDS&#13;
¯ Vaccine Search&#13;
¯ WASHINGTON (AP) - Four new part-&#13;
" nerships were announced by a federal&#13;
¯ health agency Tuesday to provide fund-&#13;
: ing to groups attempting to bring anAIDS&#13;
¯ vaccine to market.&#13;
i Theseparme.rships, call,edHIV ~acone&#13;
¯ design and development teams, were&#13;
¯_ prompted by~ a. presidential dirertive to&#13;
¯ increase public-private cooperation in&#13;
: developing vaccines to major diseases,&#13;
: according to the National Institute of Ai-&#13;
: lergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID),&#13;
¯ the section of the National Institutes of&#13;
: Health that set up the deals.&#13;
¯ "Many vaccines in use today resulted&#13;
i&#13;
fr°mb°th g°verument-sp°., snL0r--~andpfi.-&#13;
vate research," said Dr. Anthony S. Faucl,&#13;
: director of NIAID.&#13;
¯ The awards are incentive-based, aimed&#13;
¯ at teams that have a vaccine in develop-&#13;
: ment but have not yet reach_ed human&#13;
~ testing. The teams will receive funds as&#13;
¯ they achieve preset goals.&#13;
¯ Three U.S. companies - Advanced&#13;
~ BioScience Laboratories in Kensington,&#13;
¯ Md.; Chiron Corporataon in Emeryville,&#13;
¯ Calif.; and Wyeth Lederle Vaccines and&#13;
¯ Nutrition in Pearl River, N.Y. - as well as&#13;
~ a consortium of Australian universities&#13;
¯ led by the University ofNew SouthWales&#13;
¯ all have different tactics on how to create&#13;
¯ a serum that will protect humans from&#13;
; HIV infection, which causes AIDS.&#13;
.district. Boolmng techno and 0asco music&#13;
¯ played as drag queens and other elabo-&#13;
¯ rately costumed men and women danced&#13;
on colorful floats and along the sidelines&#13;
of the parade Police estimated the crowd&#13;
size at between 100,000 and 130,000&#13;
people, while organizers said that 250,000&#13;
people turned out for the event.&#13;
Coinciding with the weekend of the&#13;
parade, Social Affairs Minister Martine&#13;
¯ Aubry said the government planned to&#13;
: introduce new laws oudawing discrimi-&#13;
¯ nadon against homosexuals. Aubry said&#13;
: the new legislation would appear as an&#13;
¯ amendment tO a "social modernization"&#13;
: bill currently going through Parliament.&#13;
¯ Denver Pride Draws 100,000&#13;
¯ DENVER (AP) - More.than 100,000 at-&#13;
" tended Denver PrideFest 2000. The festi-&#13;
~ val, organized by the Gay, Lesbian &amp;&#13;
: Bisexual Community Services Center, is&#13;
¯ inits 10th year. No violence was reported&#13;
~ dUring the parade betweenCheesmanPark&#13;
: and Civic Center Park that featured 100&#13;
: floats. The festival also featured 230&#13;
¯ booths and. a family zone with the signs:&#13;
~ "drug-~ alcohol-, hate-flee zone."&#13;
¯ Activists told a crowd at the Civic Cen-&#13;
: ter that good people standing up to big-&#13;
~ otry, not legislation, will protect Gays,&#13;
¯ Lesbians and Bisexuals from violence.&#13;
¯ "In every case, a mass mobilization of&#13;
¯ people changed thepolitteal clunate, sm&#13;
¯ Leslie Feinberg, author of ’q’ransgender&#13;
¯ Warriors" and "Stone Butch Blues."&#13;
Gay Pride Elsewhere&#13;
¯ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A rollicking&#13;
; ,,Gay p,fi,de parade replete with dancing&#13;
nuns, all-maleche.~rleading squads and&#13;
¯ drag queens in stilettos attracted a half&#13;
¯ million revelers as it made its way from&#13;
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" the waterfront to City Hall.&#13;
As David Ellard watched the processouthern&#13;
Paris to its destination at the ¯ sion see Pride, p. 8&#13;
Place de la Bastille, near the city’s Gay&#13;
Power&#13;
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, PublicServiceC0mpany,0fOklah0ma ,&#13;
by Karin Gregory&#13;
COMING OUT.&#13;
Even the words evoke an ominous, almost&#13;
surreal scene, like the Great and&#13;
Powerful Wizard, whose&#13;
deep voice echoes&#13;
throughout closets everywhere.&#13;
In my case, my 44&#13;
yearold closetwas sot’ffled&#13;
that I couldn’t hea~ the&#13;
echo e~}en if I tried, i finaily&#13;
Sprang out, machete&#13;
inland, :r~dy to tell everyone&#13;
that I’ma Lesbian!&#13;
Well, two or three people,&#13;
anyway.&#13;
Because I didn’t know&#13;
what was all involved in&#13;
"coming out." I had no&#13;
good role models to speak&#13;
--of in that area. And don’ t&#13;
tell me Melissa Etheridge&#13;
and Ellen DeGeneres -&#13;
because famous people&#13;
will always be heard and&#13;
don’ t have to repeat themselves.&#13;
I, onthe otherhand,&#13;
have to tell friends individually&#13;
and hear such remarks as: "Oh, I&#13;
always knew that"; "Yeah, I was wondering&#13;
when you were going to tell me"; and&#13;
the ever popular, "YES! We knew it! We&#13;
win the bet!"&#13;
Umm, friends, if you knew it for so&#13;
long, how come I JUST found out? You&#13;
could have let me in on it! (Best friend’ s&#13;
¯ note: I tried! You don’ t just sit someone&#13;
down and tell them "Um, Karin, I think&#13;
you’re Gay. Deal with it!" - Jim) Actually,&#13;
I hav&amp;known, all my life, but I never&#13;
gave a name to it. And there were the&#13;
various signs that threw me totally off&#13;
track. Instead of telling you my. boring&#13;
life, I’ 11 give you a sampling of it, interspersed&#13;
with the steps I went through (and&#13;
probably many of us go through) in realizing&#13;
my true nature. ~&#13;
I know what you’ re saying. If I’mreading&#13;
Tulsa Family News, I know I’m Gay&#13;
and what could you possibly tell meabout&#13;
it?" Nothing, but since I want you to read&#13;
about my boring life anyway, I have to&#13;
jazz itup somehow. Also, there may be a&#13;
few of you who are reading your&#13;
boyfriend’s copy of this newspaper. If&#13;
you’re "curious" and your boyfriend is&#13;
reading Tulsa Family News, then you’ re&#13;
both Gay! Read on.&#13;
I. "I’m What?"&#13;
Sooner or later you have to start questioning.&#13;
What kind of music do you listen&#13;
to? Yep, if you answered Tori Amos, Ani&#13;
DiFranco, Sophie B. Hawkins, !Indigo&#13;
Girls, and Sarah McLachlan, then you&#13;
need to examine your lifestyle. I haven’ t&#13;
known a Gay personyet who doesn’ t love&#13;
Sarah McLachlan. However, if you own&#13;
five differentcopies ofMelissa Etheridge’ s&#13;
Breakdown (and I do!), the questioning is&#13;
over. ’ ~ ¯&#13;
II..Environment&#13;
.I came into this world kicking and&#13;
screaming, and when I found out, in my&#13;
neighborhood full of boys,-that I was&#13;
differentfromthem, Ikickedandscreamed&#13;
again. I wanted to be a boy. lplayed just&#13;
like ~the boys; doing everything they did&#13;
exeep,tJ~,e,, standing up. And I was pissed&#13;
I icouldn’t master that! Physically and&#13;
¢motionall);i Was a gifl~butI thought like&#13;
a:boy. So when I would question myself&#13;
- years later, I always wentback to the same&#13;
thing: I HATED girls then. Well, most&#13;
little boys do hate little girls at that age. If&#13;
"It was hound&#13;
to happen...&#13;
Marolyn was&#13;
i~autfful, with&#13;
lees and&#13;
weB, 7ou&#13;
~en yo~ mantra&#13;
[or a smmer&#13;
s~s no~&#13;
~ST yo~ ~d;’&#13;
" they don’ t, they’ re usually Gay boys WhOr’i".&#13;
.. feel more comfortable around girls play-&#13;
" ing house, school, and Easy Bake Oven.&#13;
¯ By the .way, if you played with dolls&#13;
when you werelittle, don’ t&#13;
think that disqualifies you.&#13;
Especially if you. had a&#13;
Barbie doll and spentmany&#13;
a day practicing undressing&#13;
her. It was when I was&#13;
13 that things became, for&#13;
want of a better word,&#13;
sticky.&#13;
III. Crushes&#13;
She walked in beauty,&#13;
like the night...OK, so&#13;
they all did at one time or&#13;
other, didn’t they? This&#13;
particular she walked into&#13;
my eighth grade English&#13;
classroOm, and I immediately&#13;
thought,"Wow, she’ s&#13;
pretty." I never used that&#13;
word to describe any gift&#13;
before. All right, there was&#13;
the time I whistled at Ann&#13;
" Margret in the movie theatre&#13;
when she came on&#13;
" screen in "Viva Las Vegas."&#13;
¯ Some people don’t see signs that say&#13;
" "Caution - Falling Rocks"; I don’t see&#13;
¯ signs that clearly scream, "Karin- you’ re.&#13;
¯ a Lesbian. Get over it. when my eighth&#13;
¯ grade crush continued into ninth grade, I&#13;
¯ went to her house for a sleepover.&#13;
I’ll say this here and now - Jane Eyre&#13;
¯ shouldbeforbidden reading injunior high.&#13;
" The protagonist as a little girl has a crush&#13;
" on her best friend, which author Charlotte&#13;
¯ Bronte says ~s normal Besides the very&#13;
¯ obvious inference that Charlotte had her&#13;
¯ own Lesbian feelings, it did much to help&#13;
¯ me rationalize the rest of my life. If I felt&#13;
¯ something for a girl, then I invoked the&#13;
¯ name ofCharlotte Bronte, and things were&#13;
¯ "normal" again. So when I wanted to&#13;
: watch my friend undress in front of me,&#13;
¯ that wasjust anormal straight girl feeling.&#13;
¯" When I fantasized about crawling in bed&#13;
: naked withher, I still usedCharlotte Bronte&#13;
: as a guide. Charlotte was talking about&#13;
- "little" girls, mind you.&#13;
¯ When I was 30 I met a woman who,&#13;
". without touching me, did things to my&#13;
¯ southerly regions that no one had ever&#13;
done before. When I’ d had enough frus-&#13;
" tration, I had sex with a man, and truly&#13;
¯ believed there was something wrong with&#13;
: me for not feeling what I thought I should&#13;
¯ feel. Whom did I call in as my counselor?&#13;
" Yep, good old Charlotte.&#13;
¯ IV. In Love&#13;
It was bound to happen, and this time a&#13;
¯ Lesbian became not only my crush, but&#13;
¯ probably the only person I’ ve ever fallen&#13;
: in love with. Marolyn was beautiful, with&#13;
¯ great legs and a great pair of - well, you&#13;
¯ get it. When your mantra for a summer is&#13;
¯ "She’s just my friend, she’s just friend,&#13;
¯ she’ sjustmy friend", she’ s notJUST your&#13;
¯¯ friend.&#13;
Have you ever had amoment of clarity?&#13;
¯ Amoment when suddenly the clouds part,&#13;
¯ the sky opens up, and you just KNOW&#13;
-" what you want? Marolyn took me to my&#13;
¯ first Lesbian bar (we were "just friendg’:,,&#13;
¯ mind you), Sue Ellen’ s in Dallas. As we&#13;
danced a slow _..d~,c~ together, my m~ ....&#13;
-" merit of clarity hit. I d shoved down the~.;~ ~&#13;
¯ feelings about Marolynfor so long that a!l,;!’~::&#13;
¯ at once they came rushing at me and l&#13;
¯ conldn’ t deny any longer. I looked arotmd&#13;
¯ and just knew I had finally found some-&#13;
" place to belong, see Lesbian, p. 11&#13;
by Jim Christjotm, entertainment editor&#13;
Some of you might ask, "What’s he&#13;
clucking about this time?" And well you&#13;
might - run, don’t walk, to see Chicken&#13;
Pun. Created by ’%Vallace and Gromit"&#13;
impresario Hick Parks, this rollicking&#13;
comedy about chickens dreaming of a&#13;
better p!a~..~.~, ~far away fromthe ~neentra-&#13;
¯ tion c~ami3 Chlcken farm ttiey re in’fs a&#13;
witty, int~-.ligentfi~~1m........ ¯ .~&#13;
I havehad my suspicions~’abtut Nicks~&#13;
familystatus given&#13;
some subtle references&#13;
in the&#13;
Wallace&amp;Gromit&#13;
shorts (available&#13;
on video, and well&#13;
worth it), such as&#13;
Gromit (a dog)&#13;
knitting a rainbow&#13;
striped sweater.~&#13;
The Wallace and&#13;
Gromit shorts are&#13;
guaranteed to&#13;
cheer up the most&#13;
depressed person&#13;
in the world, and&#13;
watch for the&#13;
subtle touches he&#13;
puts in, like the&#13;
newspaper-headlines&#13;
in thepapers&#13;
the characters&#13;
read.&#13;
While the films are claymation, they&#13;
are not children’s films. With Chicken&#13;
Run, thereality ofwhathappens to chickies&#13;
whodon’ tlay theft share ofeggs is brought&#13;
home in an unflinchingly touching way.&#13;
And yes, you wiII reIate to the characters&#13;
- and never look at chicken pot pies the&#13;
same way again. As for the aforementioned&#13;
clues as to the Gay sensibility of&#13;
the film, Cheek out the ratsi relationship.&#13;
And when the birds are practicing flying,&#13;
one ofthe best gags was when they fall,&#13;
and the rat says "It’ s raining hens", which&#13;
to those of us who re,c~l a certain song&#13;
with a similar rifle, realize it’ s a pretty big&#13;
tipoff as to the sensibility that inspired&#13;
this film.&#13;
The jokes are all extremely well done,&#13;
and the sight gags, well, the film begs a&#13;
second and third viewing to take everything&#13;
in, and look at the backgrounds.&#13;
There are gems hidden everywhere. It is&#13;
ironicthatMel Gibson,homophobicadulterer&#13;
that he is, lends his voice to the film&#13;
in a really well done turn as a Rhode&#13;
KD Lang&#13;
¯ KD Lang’s newCD is a delight. Re-&#13;
: member those lazy weekends whenmom&#13;
: (in some ease, you) Wouldpiit her favorite&#13;
¯ records on the changer in the late 60’ s&#13;
: early70’s?BarbraStreisand’sStoneyEnd,&#13;
¯ and Sergio Mendes’ Brazil ’66 come to&#13;
¯i miipindadt.eWd ieiilil{,aK~Dfhioa~sslt~a.k~enmthait~sofu’n.d~_a~nv~d-,"~ ~&#13;
¯ met fling that grows in to ab~t diore of a.&#13;
"...While the films are&#13;
claymation, they are not&#13;
children’s films.&#13;
With "Chicken Run,"&#13;
the reality of what happens to&#13;
ehiekles who don’t lay their :&#13;
share of eggs is brought home in&#13;
an unflinehlngly touching way.&#13;
And yes, you will relate to&#13;
the characters- and never look&#13;
at chicken pot pies&#13;
the same way again...."&#13;
serious thing.&#13;
And it is the perfect&#13;
album for a&#13;
cloudy Sunday afternoon&#13;
with your&#13;
loved One, your.&#13;
summertimefling.,&#13;
or even an imaginary&#13;
lover. The&#13;
-albuin’ S title is In~..&#13;
vindbte Summer,&#13;
and La Lang has&#13;
ne~er soundedbetter.&#13;
Thealbumprogresses&#13;
with the&#13;
nervous, first on~-&#13;
tact ditty about a&#13;
possibleloveinter--&#13;
est titled "The&#13;
Consequences of&#13;
Falling", and she&#13;
captures the moment&#13;
perfectly.&#13;
Island Red cock named Rocky. One must&#13;
think that someone planned that casting -&#13;
and this is the place for an obvious joke,&#13;
¯ This segues into an up tempo number&#13;
¯&#13;
called"Summertime Fling" thateapsulizes&#13;
¯ that high, giddy feeling when itis discov- ¯&#13;
ered that indeed, the objet d’affection&#13;
: returns the feeling. It is sure to bring a&#13;
: smile to the mostjaded heart. Thememory&#13;
¯ may be buried deep, but it’ s in there some-&#13;
" where! The albums builds to a quieter&#13;
: climax than one might imagine, as the&#13;
THE ART 0f PERFORMANCE&#13;
For ~.ales, contact Rupy Robateau 280.5999&#13;
. or Marcus Winkler 280.6234&#13;
For Service, contact Danny Quigg 280.6828&#13;
JAGUAR&#13;
9607 S. Memorial Dr.&#13;
: seriousness of the relationship deepens. Are You Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
¯ "Love’ s Great Ocw.an" is a winner, and - ~B~,~t Va~ll ~r’~[il/a~ &amp;m~.e’|eltrm9 _&#13;
has a mysterious feel to it that gives the /’~1 ~ /OM II~.ilI~.~ a’~III~.~lI~.ll.&#13;
album some weight. The rest are pretty~--&#13;
standard love songs, pleasantto~ " ............. n’&#13;
eat for a dinner o essin to- /ulsas iwo-~plrlteo inolan Me S ",eta \"~&#13;
: makeout album. The retro feel is great, Support Group ts here for you.&#13;
¯ andblends well into the music, capturing&#13;
¯" the feeling perfecdy ofsome ofmy favor-&#13;
: ite songs remembered-from childhood&#13;
: and beyond. Highly recommended. It’ s a&#13;
¯ great companion, piece to Melissa&#13;
: Etheridge’s darker "Breakdown". With&#13;
: Melissa, you cover the darker cynical&#13;
: moments, with La 1 ang, the bright sun-&#13;
: shiny day moments.&#13;
¯ I caught Arturo Brachetti on a guest&#13;
¯&#13;
appearaneeonDrewCarey, andyes,he’s&#13;
: family, and yes,he’ s fantastic. Well worth&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HIV testing -&#13;
which I will leave to your imaginations. ¯ seeing what he’ s gotup his sleeve! Check&#13;
Think about it. (R~oc~y,.....Rhode, gg~.it? ;.,rpriorcol~f~r~t~.. ¯ :&#13;
Right up there with Ginger Chickeh, ifi~ : .... And fi~t mbliffi, the’R~ilt ifiteiaiiews!’&#13;
heroine of the piece. Rosemary is the :&#13;
Chicken that doesn’ t have babies. You’ll&#13;
get it when :~you see.the, film.) All the&#13;
actors are marvelous, and if you’ re a fan&#13;
of any of the British comedies on PBS&#13;
Sunday nights, you’ll recognize a few&#13;
voices. If there’s one film you see this&#13;
summer, make it this one. It’ 11 be well&#13;
worth your time. I plan to see it several&#13;
more times, and get the DVD when it&#13;
comes out - just to scroll through the&#13;
frames and catch what I missed the first&#13;
ten times. And I think instead of chicken&#13;
pot pies, I’ll stock up on the vegetarian&#13;
ones instead. Andinstead of roast chicken&#13;
sandwiches, the veggie chick burgers as&#13;
well.&#13;
Buh-bye, colonel!&#13;
¯" in the city’s 30th annual Lesbian Gay&#13;
¯ Bisexual Transgender Pride Parade, he&#13;
¯ said such events provide "a little light of&#13;
: hope.., acceptance of Gay people is still&#13;
¯ the toughest issue out there," said Ellard,&#13;
¯ 35. "The religious right still thinks we’re ¯&#13;
a threat to family values. But when you&#13;
¯&#13;
look at the Gay families marching with&#13;
: their children.., you see thatit’ s not true."&#13;
¯ What began in 1970 as a meager pro-&#13;
: cessionfollowedby an unassuming"Gay-&#13;
¯ in" at Golden Gate Park has become one&#13;
: of California’ s biggest events,&#13;
¯ see Pride, p. 9&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
’q’beprobability thatyoudiefromAIDS&#13;
when you arc 15 today is over 50%in&#13;
these countries," Plot told a press conference.&#13;
"We arc going into societies where&#13;
there arc more people in their 60’ s and&#13;
70’ s than there are in their 40’ s and30’ s,"&#13;
hc said. "This is unheard of."&#13;
¯ In Washington, the Peace Corps an-&#13;
: nounced a worldwide campaign to push&#13;
¯ similar measures - training its 2,400 vol-&#13;
: unteers inAffieain preventive tedmiques&#13;
¯ and forming a200-member"crisis corps"&#13;
: tohelp educate commtmities. "There is no&#13;
¯ option for any organization working in&#13;
: development other than to play a role in&#13;
¯ helping these countries confront the HIV-&#13;
¯ AIDS crisis," Peace Corps Director Mark&#13;
With dwindling numbers of economi- i Schneider sai~.&#13;
eally active adults left tosupport the re~ L .,~ .~o~~i~~~.~d~l~st rate&#13;
of the .’.population, the. impact on ~.~tff~ot~:~i~A~i~t~i2~.;%~ is cooving&#13;
¯ . ~!~ .....,~ ~,-~.o:,~. ~7~." ~~ ~7,~&gt;.&gt;-.~ : ~_.: Afficamnattous ts devastating. Agng,~ t.~ ~ai[.an*-~i~su~ssf.u~ ~..emBpatgn 0,f protural&#13;
production in nations like Zim.~: ~ moting’¢Offdoni~us~. And’ Brazil" s policy&#13;
bwe, wh,ere 2,000people die each w..~ee;;~ : of prevention coupled with locally pro-&#13;
AIDS, is falling. Businesses are goi~i~g ¯ ducedaltemativestohigh,costanfi-AIDS&#13;
bankrupt beeause of the deaths of skilled, : drugs has halved the number of deaths&#13;
educated staff members. Hopes of better&#13;
education are also in tatters. The number&#13;
of new teachers trained in 7a~bia is just&#13;
keeping pace with .the number felled by&#13;
AIDS. Children are leaving school because&#13;
they are orphaned or forced to work&#13;
to support their families.&#13;
Hospitals are overwhelmed by AIDS&#13;
patients. Many have inadequate supplies&#13;
of even basic antibiotics to fight the pneumonia,&#13;
tuberculosis or mouth fungus that&#13;
accompany AIDS, let alone the sophistieated&#13;
drugs whichhave eased suffering in&#13;
rich countries, the report said.&#13;
Denial continues to be a problem. The&#13;
report cited a 1999 survey of 72 minors&#13;
orphaned by AIDS in a hard-hit Kenyan":&#13;
commnIfity: Although all knew of the&#13;
disease~one of them believed their parents&#13;
had died of it. Most thought witchcraft&#13;
or a curse was to blame.&#13;
Piot Said one of the reasons for the&#13;
explosion of cases in southern Africa is&#13;
the legacy of apartheid~ which separated.&#13;
men from their families in rural areas and&#13;
forced them to work in towns, with only&#13;
prostitutes for relief. But he said govern:&#13;
ments were also to blame for ignoring the&#13;
problem for too long. "What is happening&#13;
in southern Africa should.be a lesson for&#13;
countries today which don’t have a big&#13;
problem yet," he said. "I’m thinking of&#13;
Asia, I’m thinking of easte,,m, Europe, I’m&#13;
thinking of the Caribbean. About $~ bill&#13;
lionis needed annually forprevention and&#13;
education programs to turn the tide, Plot&#13;
said. He called for debt-relief programs&#13;
for poor comitries..&#13;
Sandra Thurman, director of President&#13;
Clinton’s White House Office on AIDS&#13;
policy, said the report urgently underscores&#13;
the need for goverm~ent l~aders to&#13;
face the crisis head on. "It will take the&#13;
engagement of all sectors of all societies&#13;
ifwewantto winthebattle againstAIDS,"&#13;
Thurman said in a recent statement.&#13;
Although Asiahas relatively low infec:&#13;
tionrates overall, there arefears that could&#13;
change because of the density of its population,&#13;
gome 0.7% of the Indian po,,p~ation&#13;
is ~IV-positive, or 3.7 milliof~ii~e&#13;
overall:Thediseasehas so farbeenl~g~ly&#13;
confined to drug addicts.&#13;
Infections in the former Soviet blocare&#13;
soaring because of drug addiction. Piot&#13;
said the number of new HIV cases in&#13;
Moscow last year far outstripped all previous&#13;
years combined. And the disease is&#13;
proliferating in Caribbean countries like&#13;
Haiti and Barbados because people have&#13;
multiple sexual partners from an early&#13;
age.&#13;
Despite the gloom of the report, Plot&#13;
said there are signs of hope. Uganda,&#13;
whichused to be the worst-affected country,&#13;
has slowed new infections thanks to&#13;
strong prevention campaigns and increased&#13;
condom use. Zambia is following&#13;
suit.&#13;
: and led to huge savings in hospital bills,&#13;
," the report said.&#13;
¯ "In the West and in Europe, the impact&#13;
:. of treatment has been spectaculars" Piot&#13;
said. "Mortality has really collapsed..There&#13;
isa longer and better life for people with&#13;
AIDS."Onthe Net: http://www.uuaids.org&#13;
In renewing his plea for suspending the&#13;
law until the central issues go to trial,&#13;
Stanley argued that there is realharm that&#13;
could happen.’ The clerks’ rights to freed0m&#13;
of religion under the Vermont Constitution&#13;
would be violated, he said:,&#13;
He also argued that taxmoney wouldbe&#13;
spent through providing,rights and benefits&#13;
to same-sex couples. Permitting&#13;
umous to go forward that may in the&#13;
future be ruled unconstitutional would&#13;
cause irreparable harm, he said. In all, the&#13;
~ lawsuit_,claims.:that the.,civil unions_law_&#13;
violates five different articles of the state&#13;
Consttitution, several state statutes and&#13;
House rules.&#13;
Many of those arguments were made&#13;
when the i|~wsuit first was flied and the&#13;
state’ s lawyer handling the ease said he&#13;
did not believe any substantially new&#13;
claims were made that would prompt the&#13;
judge to change his mind. "I don’t think&#13;
there’ s a ntl~ ttdt:~~ys~~u:can only ask&#13;
once, butinpractical term~ someonewould&#13;
put together their best case for a preliminary&#13;
injunction," said Chief Assistant&#13;
Attorney General William Griffin. "My&#13;
view is they’ ve had their day in court and&#13;
-the court made a decision. I.guess I’ d be a&#13;
little surprised if we went around again."&#13;
Varmont Official May.Dof~ LaW&#13;
TOPSHAM, Vt. (AP) - The town clerk is&#13;
considering defying the state by refusing&#13;
to issue civil union licenses to Gay and&#13;
Lesbian couples. Juanita Claflin describes&#13;
the unions as "endorsed perversion." The&#13;
law, whichis to gointo effectJuly 1, states&#13;
that if a town clerk does not want to issue&#13;
the licenses he or she must at least appoint&#13;
someone else to do so.&#13;
In a memo sent on town letterhead to&#13;
every Topsham honsehold earlier this&#13;
month, Claflin tells voters she will not&#13;
issue the licenses and asks if they believe&#13;
she should defy the law, resign or appoint&#13;
a willing assistant to deal with the paperwork.&#13;
Most of the responses so far have&#13;
urged defiance of the law, but Claflin said&#13;
she has not decided whether to risk lawsuits&#13;
and penalties by following the&#13;
townspeople’ s wishes.&#13;
"I still have to make that absolute final&#13;
decision," she said. After the townspeople&#13;
respond, she will meet with the select&#13;
board and possibly hold a public meeting&#13;
to tell residents about the potential consequences&#13;
of defying the law. "I made the&#13;
commitment to the people that I would&#13;
uphold what they said," she added. "If "&#13;
they’ re still of that opinion (after being&#13;
informed of the consequences), I’ll take :&#13;
my licks." ¯&#13;
At least one other town clerk, in "&#13;
Tunbridge, has resigned over the issue. In&#13;
Waterbury, the town clerk and assistant&#13;
town clerk also resigned recently, citing "&#13;
unspecified personal reasons and an ef- ,&#13;
fective date of July 1. ¯&#13;
Claflin’ s opposition to civil unions has "&#13;
~no secret since She was elected in "&#13;
summa.e,dCh. t~hWe hpe~n,,s~h.ee ,w,easxcsewp0trtonins,elslheciivni-l&#13;
on licenses into her oath of office. At&#13;
the time Claflin thought the bill, then&#13;
being debated, would notpass, she says in&#13;
her letter. "Well, I was wrong... The&#13;
unthinkable did become law," she writes.&#13;
"I stand firm and unwavering in my commitment&#13;
to refuse to be a party to this&#13;
endorsed perversion based on my constitutional&#13;
rights and personal belief."&#13;
But theNew Jersey assistant scoutmaster&#13;
ousted when the organization learned&#13;
he is Gay expressed dismay at the ruling.&#13;
"I’mdef’mitely saddenedby thedecision,"&#13;
said James Dale. "People don’t join the&#13;
Boy Scouts beeaus~ they’re anti-Gay.&#13;
People join the Boy Scouts because they&#13;
want acceptance, they want community."&#13;
The ruling did not specifically give the&#13;
Scouts permission to bar Gay youth from&#13;
membership, but its language left room&#13;
for that interpretation. "I think it suggests&#13;
that they can" ban Gay boys from being&#13;
Scouts, said Evan Wolfson, Dale’ s lawyer.&#13;
"They won the.right to declare themselves&#13;
an anti-Gay group." University of&#13;
Southern California law professor Erwin&#13;
Chemerinsky agreed, saying, "I don’ t see&#13;
any basis for drawing a distinction between&#13;
Scout leaders and Scouts."&#13;
The Scouts organization, formed in the&#13;
United States in 1910 and now boasting&#13;
6.2 million members and adult leaders,&#13;
has a policy that "avowed homosexuals&#13;
are not extended membership or leadership&#13;
positions," Shields said. He would&#13;
not say whether the organizationhas withdrawn&#13;
membership from Gay youths.&#13;
But Scott Cozza, an adult Scout leader&#13;
in California and president of Scouting&#13;
For All, which advocates letting homosexuals&#13;
join, said: "They’ve kicked out&#13;
Gay Scouts and now they’ll continue to&#13;
do so because they’ ve been given the goahead&#13;
by the Supreme Court to continue&#13;
to discriminate."&#13;
The justices reversed a New Jersey&#13;
Supreme Court decision that said the&#13;
Scouts wrongly ousted Dale, an Eagle&#13;
Scout. The state court said the Scouts&#13;
violated a New Jersey law banning discrimination&#13;
in public accommodations.&#13;
But Rehnquist wrote, ’q’he forced inclusion&#13;
of an unwanted person in a group&#13;
infringes the group’ s freedom of expressive&#13;
association" if it harms the group’s&#13;
ability to advocate its viewpoint. His opinion&#13;
was joined by Justices Sandra Day&#13;
O’ Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony M.&#13;
Kennedy and Clarence Thomas. Dissenting&#13;
wereJustices John Paul Stevens, David&#13;
H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and&#13;
Stephen G. Breyer.&#13;
Writing for the four, Stevens said the&#13;
New Jersey law does notforce the Scouts&#13;
"to communicate any message that it does&#13;
not wish to endorse. New Jersey’s law,&#13;
therefore, abridges no constitutional right&#13;
of the Boy Scouts." Wolfson, Dale’ s lawyer,&#13;
had cited Supreme Court decisions&#13;
during the 1980s that let states force the&#13;
Jaycees and Rotary International to admit&#13;
women as full members.&#13;
But Rehnquist said requiring such&#13;
groups to accept women members would&#13;
not interfere with the message they seek&#13;
to express. Instead, the chief justice likened&#13;
Dale’ s case to a 1995 Supreme Court&#13;
ruling in which thejustices let the private&#13;
sponsor of the Boston St. Patrick’s Day&#13;
Parade exclude a group ofGays andlesbi7&#13;
a~.s, s,,aying parades are a"form0fexpres~&#13;
slon.&#13;
The American Center for Law and Jus~&#13;
tice, a conservative advocacy group that&#13;
supported the Scouts’ appeal, said the&#13;
ruling "will have a dramatic impact on all&#13;
private organizations - including religious&#13;
groups - to define their own mission and&#13;
set their Own criteria for leadership."&#13;
The. Human Rights Campaign, of the&#13;
largest Lesbian and Gay civil rights organizatious,&#13;
called the Supreme Court decision&#13;
to allow the Boy Scouts of America&#13;
(BSA) to continue its ban on Gay scouts a&#13;
travesty of justice that may allow large,&#13;
open membership groups to be above the&#13;
law and evade .state and local nondiscrimination&#13;
laws.&#13;
"We are gravely disappointed with a&#13;
ruling thatgives theBoy Scouts ofAmerica&#13;
the ability to discriminate withimpunity,"&#13;
said HRC Legal Director Tony Varona.&#13;
"TMs is a hollow victory for the Boy&#13;
Scouts of America - considering the&#13;
wasted time, energy and money it has&#13;
spent on maintaining its ability to .discriminateand&#13;
attack young menwhohave&#13;
served its organization with distinction. Is&#13;
this any way to teach youth aboutfairness,&#13;
honesty and justiceT’&#13;
Dale was 19 and an assistant scoutmaster&#13;
of a Matawan, N.J., troop when in&#13;
1990 he was identified in a newspaper&#13;
article as co-president of a campus Lesbian&#13;
and Gay student group at Rutgers&#13;
University. The Scouts’ MonmouthCouncil&#13;
revoked Dale’ s registration as an adult&#13;
leader, andhe sued, citing the New Jersey&#13;
anti-discrimination law. The New Jersey&#13;
court ruled that the BSA is not a private&#13;
club, but a public accommodation given&#13;
its size, open membership and extensive&#13;
entanglement with government agencies.&#13;
In its appeal to the Supreme Court, the&#13;
Boy Scouts argued that New Jersey’ s antidiscrimination&#13;
law infringed on its First&#13;
Amendment right to association.&#13;
)’In accepting the BSA’s arguments&#13;
concerning expressive association, the&#13;
Court inexplicably ignored the fact that&#13;
theBSA’ s purposeandmessagehas never&#13;
had anything to do with sexual orientation,"&#13;
added HRC’ s Varona. "To the contrary,&#13;
the Boy ScOuts’ oath stresses public&#13;
serviceandhonesty, andits Congressional&#13;
charter and bylaws make clear that membership&#13;
is open to ’any boy’."&#13;
Dale now lives inNew York City and is&#13;
advertising director for a magazine for&#13;
people who are HIV-positive.&#13;
On the Net: Supreme Court decision in&#13;
Boy Scouts of America v. Dale: http://&#13;
supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/99-&#13;
699.ZS.html&#13;
and one of the world’s best known celebrations&#13;
of Gay pride. Numerous celebrities,&#13;
including comedienne Margaret&#13;
Cho, made appearances. Police said the&#13;
parade had proceeded peacefully, and&#13;
knew of no counter-demonstrations.&#13;
Parades took place also in S~atfle. New&#13;
York, Chicago and Atlanta.&#13;
by Lamont Linds~rom. Ph.D. skins for very long. Early medical science&#13;
Is it the unkixxdest cut? That’s what a ¯ of the late 19th century seized on the&#13;
foreskin-challenged writer to Dear Abby " operation as a cure for excessive masturrecently&#13;
claimed. He bitterly reproached ¯ bation and also to treat an odd collection&#13;
his morn for letti~ag himbe&#13;
circumcised - a condition&#13;
he blamed for bis regrettable&#13;
shortcomin~,~ inbed.&#13;
Circtmacision is a body&#13;
modificationritua~ ",hathas&#13;
fascinated antLropologists.&#13;
People everywhere&#13;
redesign-their ~odies.&#13;
Modification may be as&#13;
simple as a haircut and a&#13;
shave, or more invasive&#13;
foot-binding, ear-piercing,&#13;
- head-molding, ~attoomg,&#13;
or scarification. Modifying&#13;
the body carries social&#13;
and personal meaning. Individuals&#13;
may remake&#13;
themselves -andhow they&#13;
think about themselves -&#13;
by altering their bodies.&#13;
These alterations have social&#13;
implications as well.&#13;
We ustmlly know what to&#13;
think when we see someone&#13;
dieting, or sporting a&#13;
new tattoo, or a tongue&#13;
pierce, or a shaven head.&#13;
Humans modify lots of&#13;
body parts - elbows, fingers,&#13;
chins, bellies - but&#13;
it’ s no surprise that many&#13;
societies have fixatedupon&#13;
Cireumelslon is a&#13;
body modlfleatlon&#13;
ritual that has&#13;
faselnated&#13;
anthropologists.&#13;
People everywhere&#13;
redesign&#13;
their bodies.&#13;
Modifieatlon may be&#13;
as simple as a halreut&#13;
and a shave, or&#13;
naore invaslve footblndln~,&#13;
ear-piereln~,&#13;
h d-mo!dln ,&#13;
tattooln~,&#13;
or searlfleatlon.&#13;
l~lbdlfyln~ the body&#13;
earrles sodal and&#13;
personal rneanlnff&#13;
the foreskin. Like earlobes, foreskins are&#13;
easily pierced, sliced, or cut away without&#13;
much endangering human functiomng.&#13;
Unilke earlobes, however, foreskins attach&#13;
to the dhief organ of male pleasure&#13;
and reproduction. Many cultures have&#13;
elaborated the powerful symbolic uses of&#13;
snipping off a piece of men’ s genitals.&#13;
Circumcision is often the key component&#13;
of male initiation rituals, as it is on&#13;
Tanna, anislandin the SouthPacificwhere&#13;
1livedfor some years. TheTarmese gather&#13;
up their sons between the ages of six and&#13;
twelve and lead them away to a secret&#13;
house in the forest to be snipped. Traditionally,&#13;
boys were cutwithbambooknives&#13;
- their foreskins sliced down the top - an&#13;
superincision rather than a circumcision.&#13;
Nowadays, island fathers anduncles might&#13;
take the boys down to a local clinic for a&#13;
full-blown Western circumcision.&#13;
The loss of foreskin marks the boy’s&#13;
journey into manlaood. Tannese kids tease&#13;
boys who are yet to be circumcised. They&#13;
call them a name that means something&#13;
like "pulls back skin." A Presbyterian&#13;
missionary from New Zealand lived on&#13;
Tanna, in th~ 1980S wi,th his triple~ sons.&#13;
My island friends were scandalized that&#13;
these boys remained uncircumcised as&#13;
they approached their teen years. Every&#13;
time the boys wandered by, you knew&#13;
localmenwere ponderingbambooknives.&#13;
New Zealanders, like most people in the&#13;
world, leave their foreskins alone. Circumcigion&#13;
is uncommon in Europe, Asia,&#13;
and Latin America and is disappearing in&#13;
AustraJia and Canada. We Americans&#13;
share the ritual mostly with sundry Pacific&#13;
Islanders and Australian Aborigines,&#13;
peoples of the Middle East (notably Jews&#13;
and Arabs), and various northern and central&#13;
African societies.&#13;
Artistic depictions of circumcision in&#13;
Egypt dated to 4500 years ago suggest&#13;
that the ritual has a long history. But&#13;
Americans haven’t been snipping foreof&#13;
other conditions. Once&#13;
circumcision became part&#13;
of the modern medical&#13;
toolkit, doctors were loath&#13;
to giveitup. They invented&#13;
a series of spurious rationales&#13;
for the operation. The&#13;
newes t defense of circumcision&#13;
argues that uncut&#13;
menare three to eight limes&#13;
morelikely (different studies&#13;
give differentnumbers)&#13;
to.catch HIV. The vires -&#13;
so says this hypothesis -&#13;
attaches itselfmorereadily&#13;
to cells thathave been kept&#13;
tender underneath a foreskin.&#13;
Whether or not this latest&#13;
medical rationale for&#13;
circumcision holds up,&#13;
cutting has powerful social&#13;
meanings that go far&#13;
beyond the merely hygienic.&#13;
Just why do we&#13;
mess withforeskins? Is this&#13;
a male attempt to appropriate&#13;
natural female fertility:&#13;
Menbleed their genitals&#13;
to mimic menstruation?&#13;
Or are men coneemed&#13;
to drain away dangerous&#13;
female blood from&#13;
their sons, as do the Tannese, in order that&#13;
these boys can fully mature? Or do men&#13;
cut their sons - and in so doing potentially&#13;
endanger the reproductive future of their&#13;
family line - as a mark of loyalty to their&#13;
tribe? Or do boys undergo symbolic castration&#13;
as a-price they pay fatherg to join&#13;
the men? Anthropologists have proposed&#13;
all these explanations.&#13;
It’s pretty clear that in 20th century&#13;
America circumcision became a marker&#13;
of class and status. Only people with&#13;
money could afford doctors and genital&#13;
surgery. And only trendy parents who&#13;
supported mainstream beliefs about public&#13;
hygiene would accept new scientific&#13;
rationalizations for the operation. Circumcision&#13;
rates were far higher among the&#13;
urban and the wealthy than they were&#13;
among poorer, rural, immigrant, or minority-&#13;
group families. Middle-class white&#13;
boys carried on their bodies the mark of&#13;
their family’ s status claims.&#13;
By the 1940’ s, the medical industry had&#13;
captured control of childbirth. A majority&#13;
of women went into hospital to give birth.&#13;
And for the first time amajofity of Ameri-&#13;
:canb0ys wer~eircumcised. Circumcision&#13;
rates peaked at around 85% in the 1970’ s.&#13;
Since that decade, these numbers have&#13;
dropped - as an anthropologist would&#13;
predict - down to 60% in the mid 1990’ s.&#13;
When everyoneshares the same practice,&#13;
that practice no longer serves to create&#13;
distinctions of class and status among us.&#13;
Thefact thatmanyHMOs nowadays force&#13;
parents to.pay for the.operation also has&#13;
spared many sons’ foreskins~&#13;
Still, being cut continues to symbolize&#13;
"clear," "healthy," and "modem" across&#13;
much of America. Until these meanings&#13;
erode, it’ s likely that many of us will yet&#13;
be able to hold our heads up high, should&#13;
we happen to mninto any teasing Pacific&#13;
island boys.&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom teaches anthropology&#13;
at the University of TUlsa.&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale&#13;
presents&#13;
Saturday, July 15, 2000 - 8pm&#13;
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Tulsa’s only&#13;
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body-piercing&#13;
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Images:&#13;
Portrayals of&#13;
Native America&#13;
Gilcrease Museum&#13;
1400 Gilcrease Museum Road&#13;
5 9 6 2 7 0 0&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, entertainment editor&#13;
Sam Harris returns to Tulsa as Josephin&#13;
Theatre Arts’ productionofAndrew Lloyd&#13;
Webber’s "Joseph and the Amazing&#13;
Technicolor Dreamcoat"&#13;
heading up a cast of thousands&#13;
of locals - well, ok,&#13;
maybe not quite thousands,&#13;
but it’ s aprettylong&#13;
cast list.&#13;
The cast includes John&#13;
Orsulak and Patrick&#13;
Hobbs, members of the&#13;
Council Oak Men’s&#13;
Chorale’ s (we really need&#13;
agoodacronymhere!) and&#13;
formerly Finales, along&#13;
with David Hubbard,&#13;
Kathy LaFortlme, Bradd&#13;
Gillespie, Larry Gray, and&#13;
Eric Cornell (an actor and singer to watch,&#13;
as he’s got a lotta talent, and he’s dedicated&#13;
to performing enough to go far).&#13;
Directed by New York’s Jon Grodeski,&#13;
the musical is a.,lively rethinking of the&#13;
biblical tale of Joseph and his jealous&#13;
brothers.&#13;
Sam Harris, a Sand Springs native, left&#13;
home at 15 to pursue the dream of performing&#13;
on Broadway. Everyone knows&#13;
about Star Search, and the recording career&#13;
that followed. His latest endeavors&#13;
have included the critically acclaimed "In&#13;
the Life," a Broadway musical; Grease on&#13;
Broadway; and his latest CD, "Revival",&#13;
a return tohis pop and soul roots.. He also&#13;
wrote the TBS sitcom "Down to Earth."&#13;
He’s been a busy boy! And he still manages&#13;
to look fabulous!&#13;
. He recently completed work on the&#13;
feature film "In the Weeds", with Eric&#13;
Bogosian, Molly Ringwald, and Joshua&#13;
Leonard. He recently premiered his new&#13;
oneman show, "Revival", and is planning&#13;
to tour the show after a New York Run.&#13;
He’ 11 bemaking his Tulsa concert debut&#13;
July 28 in "An Intimate&#13;
Evening with SamHarris."&#13;
There’s a joke in that, but&#13;
I’m trying to maintain a&#13;
more staid image. Actually,&#13;
there’s about three&#13;
jokes I could make. It’s&#13;
kindalike resisting chocolate&#13;
- you know it’s the&#13;
right thing to do, but it’s&#13;
just so tempting.., but no,&#13;
I have eschewed that behavior.&#13;
Performances run July&#13;
14th- 23rd, and the&#13;
evening shows start atT:30&#13;
rather than the usual 8pm, so plan accordingly.&#13;
Matinees are at 2pm. The venue is&#13;
Tulsa Community College’s PACE theatre&#13;
at their southeast campus at 81st and&#13;
169, so don’ t go downtown to thePACfor&#13;
this one. For more info., call 595-7777.&#13;
July 15th is "Sand Springs Night" in&#13;
honor of Mr. Harris’ hometown roots.&#13;
July 19th is "Youth Night" - if you don’t&#13;
qualify for that one, you can at least pretend&#13;
to be from Sand Springs.&#13;
And I would like to welcome a couple&#13;
of new writers to Tulsa Family News.&#13;
Hughston Walkinshaw will be covering&#13;
film and local theatre for us here. He’ll&#13;
make his debut in our August issue. And&#13;
while -I’m at it, some of you have read&#13;
about my best friend Karin. Wall, who&#13;
wouldhave thunkitbut she’ s finally’’come&#13;
out" and this month, we will feature her&#13;
thoughts, in a new column entitled"Raging&#13;
Lesbian."&#13;
Sam Harris&#13;
More importantly, the woman with her&#13;
arms around me was the woman I wanted&#13;
to be with. My heart was telling me this&#13;
was right, tree and just. Then the song&#13;
ended, and that insidious thing called my&#13;
brain took over. Years of living in the&#13;
Bible Belt made me once again think too&#13;
much, and I acted straight again. Which is&#13;
fnnny since I obviously don’t know from&#13;
straight. Too many missed opportunities&#13;
later, and my unrequited love affair with&#13;
Marolyn (I didn’t DARE think about this&#13;
at the time!) endedwhen shemovedaway.&#13;
V. Random Musings&#13;
Don’t get me wrong. Three girls does&#13;
not a Lesbian make. There have been&#13;
many more I’ve felt "that way" about,&#13;
including Ms. Black Hair, DeepBlueEyes&#13;
with whom I worked; Ms. Nude Model&#13;
whom I LOVED to draw in art class; the&#13;
two English teachers at school where I&#13;
taught; and the young P.E. teacher at the&#13;
same school. Comeon, there’ sALWAYS&#13;
a P.E. teacher! And when I was 25, there&#13;
was the &lt;ahem!&gt; 16 year old I worked&#13;
with! Hey, I can’t be arrested for my&#13;
thoughts, not even in Tulsa!&#13;
VI. Acceptance.&#13;
I know acceptance doesn’ t come in six&#13;
easy steps, but time and space being what&#13;
they are, I’ ve cut to the chase. What made&#13;
me finally accept myself as a Lesbian?&#13;
Not any one thing. I guess years of chipping&#13;
away at my libido, and the fact that&#13;
everytime I had sex with a man, it coincided&#13;
with some girl I had a crush on.&#13;
Then there’ s the entertainment world. A&#13;
friend got me interested in’qRte X-Files"&#13;
years ago, but for the past few seasons my&#13;
heart has skipped a few beats more and&#13;
I’ ve thought,"Was DavidDuchovny even&#13;
in that episode tonight?" If you listen&#13;
exclusively to Melissa Etheridge for a&#13;
year, it’ s not just her music you identify&#13;
with. And even when you do identify with&#13;
it- need I say more?- you’ re Gay! When&#13;
you tape the ENTIRE Gay Rights Rally&#13;
on CSPAN it’ s a pretty sure bet that, yes,&#13;
you’ re Gay!When you seriously consider&#13;
moving to the state capital (what do you&#13;
call a city FULL of Lesbians? Austin!),&#13;
then, you guessed it - you’ re Gay! When&#13;
your best friend calls you long distance&#13;
from Tulsa to tell you the new issue of&#13;
Curve is out - with Gillian Anderson on&#13;
thecover- and youhaul ass to the nearest&#13;
Gay neighborhood to buy it within the&#13;
hour, well, you’ vejust taken a ride on the&#13;
Dyke Express! When you own copies of&#13;
"Desert Hearts", "Bound", "Everything&#13;
Relative", "Claire of the Moon", etc., and&#13;
display them prominently on your shelf,&#13;
then grrlfriend, you have swung those&#13;
closet doors open for the last time.&#13;
And it feels good, clean, and honest.&#13;
|&#13;
Want to get involved?&#13;
Need to get tested for HIV or&#13;
a Coming Out Support Group?&#13;
Call 743-GAYS (4297)&#13;
Tulsa Gay&#13;
Community&#13;
Services Center&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, July 2000; Volume 7, Issue 7</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>James Christjohn&#13;
Karin Gregory&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers&#13;
Hughston Walkinshaw</text>
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              <text>Methodist "community council" which did adopt the goal.&#13;
Neal suggested to council co-ordinator Marly Newman that "&#13;
TULSA-Inaneffortbothnerve-wrackingandtedious ." McDonald be asked to lead the effort because of the World’ s ¯&#13;
several Tulsans, SueKnanse, KentDoss,I~arenWeldon ." seeming preference to deal with representatives of non-Gay ¯&#13;
(and another who need to remain unnamed), were ¯ groups which advocate on behalf of Gay people rather than Gay&#13;
arrested in Cleveland with the Reverend Mel White and : people themselves. ".&#13;
191 others in acts of peaceful civil disobedience at the " In a widely distributed June 1st e-mail about the change,&#13;
recent United Methodist Church. Conference: ¯ McDonald wrote"how you will also remember that PFLAG had&#13;
The acts of civil disobedience, blocking a car park " to be very creative in the design of our signature ad for the paper "&#13;
exitfolloweddaysofnegotiationswithMethodistchnrch : as part of the PROJECT OPEN MIND Campaign"- areference ¯&#13;
leaders about the anti-Gay policies of the United Meth- " to how PFLAG under the former World policy could not use its ¯&#13;
odistChurch (UMC). The conference held in Cleveland ¯ own legal name because it included the banned words. ~.&#13;
was attended by hundreds of UMC delegates. ¯ McDonald added, "... PFLAG submitted an ad and with&#13;
The Methodist church like some other "mainline" ~ several revisions, it has been approved... The cost of the ad is "&#13;
Christian denominations has adopted policies which " approximately $500 and [it is] to run on Sunday, June 4th, in the ¯&#13;
limit participation of Lesbian and Gay persons in that ¯ Living Section. It has Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians ¯ Will Allen, Emily Sizeraore &amp;&#13;
group. White stated, "the United Methodist Chruch has " and Gays, as well as some other statements, ’Is someone you care " Matthew Holloway are winners&#13;
ahistory of social concern [butthey haye] anti-homo- " for gay orlesbian? Issomeoneyoulovegayorlesbian?Ifso, call ¯ ofCoraraunity Hero awards.&#13;
sexual policies in place that lead to discrimination ¯ Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays’ and then it ¯&#13;
suffering, and even death." _. lists our Helpline number."&#13;
The Tulsans joined other notable civil fights leaders. ¯ McDonald also wrote, "I have no idea what the response will "&#13;
YolandaKing, theRey.Dr.JamesLawson, friendofDr. " be? I suspect some positive and some negative so theHELPLINE ¯&#13;
King, Congressman John Lewis of Georgia and others. " has been notified. If anyone is so moved to help thelocal Chapter ¯&#13;
see Arrest, p. 10 : with the cost of the ad, see World, p. 2 "&#13;
Gays Better Educated,. ForJustices+Couples, Unions. Missouri Backwoods:A&#13;
Lower Paid Than Straights " Require Creative Language ° Hotbed of Hate Groups&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP) - Men who consider themselves&#13;
"unmarried partners" of another man are better educated&#13;
on average, but make less money than heterosexual&#13;
men of the same age, according to a study that°&#13;
claims to take the most comprehensive look ever into&#13;
the lives of homosexuals in America.&#13;
Women who have female "unmarried parmers" also&#13;
tend to be more educated, but earn salaries comparable&#13;
to those ofheterosexual womenin the same age bracket,&#13;
according to the study in this month’s issue of&#13;
"Demography," the journal of the Population Association&#13;
of Americ&amp;&#13;
"An important point that is clearly articulated is that&#13;
it illustrates the impact of anti-Gay discrimination .on&#13;
income levels," said David Smith, spokesman for the&#13;
organization Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy&#13;
group for Gays and Lesbians.&#13;
Advocates applauded what they said was the first&#13;
comprehensive study of homosexuals but cautioned&#13;
against drawing any t-nan conclusions until more research&#13;
is done.&#13;
"Demographically, this is a hard population to target&#13;
and analyze. Data on sexual orientation is not as easily&#13;
avai[dible as information on race~ gender and age," said&#13;
Seth Sanders, a study author and .an economist at the&#13;
University of Maryland.&#13;
The study looked at statistics from the 1990 Census.&#13;
~the first,count to allow people to check offthatthey lived&#13;
with:an .unmarried partner of the same sex.&#13;
see Pay, p. 11&#13;
DIRECTORY P. 2&#13;
EDITORIAL P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P. 4&#13;
HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
by Ross Sneyd, Associated Press Writer&#13;
MONTPELIER, Vt. -"And now, by the powers vested in me by&#13;
the state of Vermont, I pronounce you.. ?’ What? Partners?&#13;
Together as one? Joined as family?&#13;
Unlike marriage, there’ s no common syntax for the new world&#13;
of same-sex civil unions. Because the couples are twomen or two&#13;
women, the old fried-and-true "man and woman" or "husband&#13;
and wife" phrases don’ t quite make it.&#13;
With no rulebook and few traditions-as wall as no other state&#13;
sanctioning what willbe the equivalent of same-sex marriage and&#13;
thereby offering some guideposts - Vermont’s justices of the&#13;
peace and .couples entering civil unions are crafting their own&#13;
conventions and rituals.&#13;
There has been a lot of discussion, both lighthearted and&#13;
serious, about how to conduct a ceremony. ’q’here’ s so much&#13;
creativity in our community among Gay and Lesbian couples in&#13;
how to create outward signs of their commitment," said Mary&#13;
Hurlie, ajustice of the peace in Hinesburg who has been with her&#13;
female partner for 13 years. "But we haven’ t gotten to that level&#13;
of detail, yet."&#13;
As marriages must be "solemnized" by judges, justices of the&#13;
peace or members of the clergy, so, too, will civil unions have to&#13;
be "certified." But there aren’t any rules. The civil unions law&#13;
says only that they must be certified. There’ s no script ~,State&#13;
statute that must be followed for a marriage, either.&#13;
"Just like marriages, there aren’t any magic words," said&#13;
Secretary of State Deb Markowitz. " ’We pronounce you man&#13;
and wife, husband and wife,’ they’ rejustmade up. Youdon’ t find&#13;
them in statute."&#13;
Training sessions have been held for justices by the secretary&#13;
of state’ s office in recentweeks becauseit is almost unquestioned&#13;
that it will be to them that the primary responsibility for performing&#13;
civil umons ceremonies falls. That’ s because there are few&#13;
religious faiths that bless same-sex unions and so there won’ t be&#13;
many clergy members willing or able to certify civil tmions on&#13;
behalf of the state.&#13;
Justices of the peace have a handful of responsibilities under&#13;
state law. Most have to do with taxes and elections. A town’ s&#13;
iusdces - there are as few as fiveinsmall towns see Unions,p.ll&#13;
Humanity Unites For Human Rights&#13;
Diversity Celebration 2000t&#13;
"Diversity Celebration 2000!" is an eight-day&#13;
celebration of the human rights movement with the&#13;
goal ofuniting northeastern Oklahoma’ s Gay, Lesbian,&#13;
Bisexual and Transgendered (GLBT) and&#13;
¯ GLBT-friendly communities. Tulsa Oklahotnans&#13;
for Human Rights, Inc., Oklahoma’s oldestr~rnreligious&#13;
Gay community organization released it&#13;
final schedule&#13;
which follows:&#13;
Friday,June 2nd&#13;
Diversity Celebration&#13;
2000!&#13;
will kick off at 7&#13;
pm with an Interfaith&#13;
Service led&#13;
by Rev. Mel&#13;
White at the Williams&#13;
Theatre in&#13;
the Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
(PAC). Special&#13;
musical guests include&#13;
Council&#13;
Oak Men’s Chorale,&#13;
Ernestine&#13;
Holloway is notpictured. Dillard, Jessie&#13;
Scott, and the&#13;
Fourth Quarter gospel quartet. Participation by&#13;
persons with a variety of faith traditions will be&#13;
included in the program. Admission is free. An&#13;
offering will be taken, see Pride, p. 7&#13;
by Doug Johnson, Associated Press Writer&#13;
¯ GAINESVILLE, Mo. - The remote and rugged&#13;
¯ Ozark hills blanketed with dogwoods and oaks are&#13;
¯ treasured by hunters, hikers and others wanting to&#13;
¯ get away from the bustle of urban life.&#13;
." The pastoral hills are also a haven for hate&#13;
¯ groups, authorities say. Southern Missouri has&#13;
¯ drawn more than its share of religious sects and&#13;
¯&#13;
white supremacists looking for a place to hide.&#13;
¯ Last week, police arrested the Rev. Gordon&#13;
: Winrod- the leader of an anti-Semitic church ~ for&#13;
: allegedly kidnapping six of his grandchildren and&#13;
: concealing them for years at his farmhouse in the&#13;
¯ hills. The only explanation authorities offer for ¯&#13;
why the kids werekidnappedis thatWinrod thought&#13;
: theirtwo fathers wereJewish. Sheriff SteveBartlett&#13;
¯ said the youngsters had been taught by their grand-&#13;
-¯ father to distrust authorities. At one point, the&#13;
sheriff said, the children shouted at deputies, "Get&#13;
: your Jew hands off me."&#13;
: Winrod, 73, and his followers gained a reputa-&#13;
¯ tioninOzark Countyformass mailings ofliterature&#13;
: calling law enforcement officers and prosecutors&#13;
¯ "Jewdicials" - a play on the word judicial - and&#13;
¯ claiming-they cover up murders of whites. ¯&#13;
It’ s not uncommon to find that kind of sentiment&#13;
~ in some areas of the Ozarks, which straddles the&#13;
: state line between Missouri and Arkansas. Experts&#13;
¯ say the region draws hate groups and people con-&#13;
: nected to the white supremacist "Christian Iden- ¯ tity" movement.&#13;
¯. "We are richin these types of groups down in this&#13;
¯ part of the country for some reason," Highway&#13;
: Patrol Sgt. Marty Elmore said. Southwest Missouri&#13;
: is often characterized by a lack of adequate law&#13;
¯ enforcement in rural areas and lacks a tradition of&#13;
: heavy-handed local government and gun control, ¯&#13;
said Robert Flanders, former director of the Center&#13;
¯ for Ozark Studies see Hate, p. 7&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW" s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb, 1926 E. Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’ s, 2114 S. Memorial&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
*The Yellow Brick. Road Pub, 2630- E: 1-5th.....:-&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119&#13;
835-2376&#13;
749-4511&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
834-4234&#13;
585-3405&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584-1308&#13;
--749- 1563&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Advanced Wireless &amp; PCS, Digital Cellular 74% 1508&#13;
*Assoc. in Med, &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. HarYard 743-1000&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71 250-5034&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41 665-4580&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15 712-1122&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21 712-9955&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale 494-2665&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria 743-5272&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria 746-0313&#13;
*Cheap Thrills, 2640 E. 1 lth 295-5868&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker 622-0700&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th 749-3620&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria 744-5556&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
Encompass Travel, 13161H N. Memorial 369-8555&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon 584-0337, 712-9379&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main 592-0460&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. P~eoria 744-9595&#13;
Four Stai: Imi~ort Automotive, 9906 E. 551h PI. 610-0880&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr. 628-3709&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare 808-8026&#13;
*Gloria Jean’ s Gourme( Coffee, 1758 E. 21 st 742-1460&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning 459-9349&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney 744-7440&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly 745-1111&#13;
*International Tours 341-6866&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th 712-2750&#13;
*Jared’ s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th 582-3018&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering 747-0236&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening 582-8460&#13;
*Kerfs Flowers, 1635 E. 15 599-8070&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210 747-5466&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha 585-1234&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd 584-3112&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31 663-5934&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place 664-2951&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo 838-7626&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2nd floor 743-4297&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, PUB 696, 74101 747-5932&#13;
Richard’ s Carpet Cleaning 834-0617&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-7921,747-4746&#13;
Scribner’ s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square 749-6301&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman 260-78-29&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis 481-0558&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard 835-5563&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counsding 743- !733&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan 665-2222&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, PUB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black&amp; g~hite, l,nc,~,POB 1400!,Tulsa,7~4~5.9... 58%7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Tsmes Chnstian C~"nter, 2207 E. 6 J583-78’15&#13;
*B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. ofTulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*C~hapman Student Ctr.,:University of Tulsa, 5th PI. &amp; Florence&#13;
Chureti oVth_~Rest~or~tionUU,1314N.~reeawt~od : 587-:13,14&#13;
*C~~°.U~’~’ari2UniVexsalist Congregafirn 749-0595 748 3888&#13;
,Delilw~e~i~yilotise¢:iSilS "Dela~vare .- 712-15.11&#13;
*DemOcratiC Headquarters, 3930 E: 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, PUB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
*Free Spirit Women’ s Center, call for location &amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, PUB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
PUB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche,&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom, Esther Rothblum, Mary Schepers&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1 st of each month, the entire contents&#13;
of thig publication are protected by US copyright 1998 b)&#13;
T~ /:~,~v.~ and may not be reprodu~.d (~th~r~i~a:&#13;
whole orinpart W~th0utwrittenpermission from thepublish~.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’ s&#13;
sexual orientation. Correspondence is assumed to be for&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property ofT~ ~.’. N~- Eachreader&#13;
is entitled to 4 copies of each editmn at distribution&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248. "&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., PUB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
*Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194&#13;
Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st 481-1111&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
*House of the Holy Spirit Minstries, 3210e So. Norwood&#13;
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437&#13;
*MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral PI. 748-3111&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, PUB 14068;’74159 365-5658&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), PUB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa&#13;
PFLAG, PUB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
*Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 584-2325&#13;
O’ RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults&#13;
O’ RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth&#13;
St. Aidan’ s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140&#13;
*St. Jerome’ s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
*TNAAPP (Native American men). Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
Tulsa County Health Department, 46 16 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
Tulsa Okla. for Human Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniforn~’Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
*Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity, 3355 S. Jamestown&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
Thanks be to you for that wonderful article,&#13;
"Our Governor Foot-in-Mouth&#13;
Keating"... wentto TulsaLibrary, picked&#13;
up first copy of Tulsa Family News and&#13;
began reading... Laughed out loud, and a&#13;
long overdue laugh it was, over the comments&#13;
of Mr. Keating and your"right-on&#13;
analogies." The very ideathat there should&#13;
have to be a public consensus to treat all&#13;
people fairly! What hideous stereotyping&#13;
by our governor...&#13;
[I] regret that there is no place close to&#13;
¯ ,my ho,me, w,he,r,e !,.c,gn.get your. w.onderful&#13;
", i~per. The’littl~ ~egment ,~0 ~epoi’i hate&#13;
,, ~ sigee~h 0i: virleh~e~ Call i.he Gay communit~&#13;
cent~ris so r~assuring... Loved the&#13;
~ Quilt article, unfortunately got my paper&#13;
." too lateiio go. Extended thanks.&#13;
¯ - Gay-friendly in Depew.&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 3209NW Expressway 405-848-2667&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
TAHLEQUAH&#13;
Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
*Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456=7900&#13;
Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001 N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
Autuinn’Bre~ze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent’ s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
DeVito’ s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
Emerald.R_ainbo~,4~ &amp;l/2_Spfing,St. ~ .....&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, PUB~ 429&#13;
OldJailhouse_ Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’ s~ Hwy. 62 :East&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134&#13;
¯ Announcements Policy&#13;
¯ Tulsa Family News will provide space&#13;
¯ for holy union ceremony, marriage&#13;
-" ceremony, birth, adoption and death&#13;
~ announcements ona space availableb~sis.&#13;
Photos are welcome, though we cannot&#13;
promise placement or return them, so&#13;
¯ please send copies to Tulsa Family NewS,&#13;
; PUB 4140, Tulsa 74159.&#13;
¯ Letters Policy&#13;
¯ Tulsa-~amily News welcomes letters&#13;
¯ on issues which we’ve covered or&#13;
¯ issues you.think need to be consider~ed,&#13;
¯ You may request that your name be with-&#13;
: held but letters must be signed &amp; have&#13;
¯ phone numbers, or be hand ddivered. 200&#13;
¯ word letters are preferred. Letters to o~¢r.&#13;
publicat.ions will be re-printed as ks~&#13;
appropriate. ~.~&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
501-253,7457&#13;
: any donation wouldbe appreciated. Please&#13;
send to PFLAG, PO Box 52800, Tulsa,&#13;
¯ OK 74152. I truly believe this will ope~&#13;
the door for PFLAG as well as o~&#13;
organizations to submit ads to theT~&#13;
World. Our thanks to Joe Worley&#13;
¯ assisting us with this policy change. He&#13;
~ was very, very helpful.’"&#13;
: The World’ s anti-Gay policy is doen-&#13;
¯ mented back to the middle’80’ s when a&#13;
: Lesbian owned card, gift and book store,.&#13;
743-4297 ¯ Two’s Company, located near 31st &amp;&#13;
749-8833 ¯ Harvard was told the World would not&#13;
¯ accept advertising for the store because ¯&#13;
the owners wanted to let readers know the&#13;
¯ target audience, i.e. Lesbians and Gay&#13;
¯ men. The owners conducted a one day&#13;
¯ picket of the World but the policy re-&#13;
. mained unchanged.&#13;
¯"&#13;
In 1993, when Tulsa Family News pub¯&#13;
lisher Tom Neal, opened a gift and card&#13;
¯ shop "tomfoolery !" at the Silver Star, the&#13;
World also refused to accept advertising,&#13;
even though the store did not trade in&#13;
eroti~ Or any other possible objectionable,~&#13;
fials, citing the same policy, .&#13;
A~,~arslaterl PFLAG, TulSa Cliap5~&#13;
ter ran afrul of the same anti-Gay po|i~¢y&#13;
501-253-6807 ¯ when it tried to run a pro-Gay civi! .rights _t&#13;
501-25_3-~5 :.. signature ad. !ntetesgngly, the&#13;
501:253:9337 : la~editsbw~ipoli’cy~’~WW~eks]~e~r,-’~te.~’~a&#13;
501-253-27"/6~. : runninffthe censrr~’FLAGa~.~a...i~)&#13;
501-253-5332, : accept~l’~ an anti-G~i~,iid from a"~Jali~0I¢~U&#13;
501-624~’6~~ ¯ of weS~side Tulsa &amp;i~ches&#13;
501-253-600I": one of:~banned~c~ds. .&#13;
501-253-4074 : Editor’s note: for a related editorial,&#13;
¯ see page 3. The editorial was written the&#13;
417-623-4696 " earlier in the day before the news broke&#13;
¯ about the World’ s newpolicy. Hats offto&#13;
¯ Nancy McDonaldfor her work in negoti*&#13;
is where you can findTFN. Not all areGay-owned but all are Gay-friendly. ating this new policy.&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor &amp;publisher&#13;
For being the proverbial 900 lb. gorilla of our local&#13;
media, those folks over at The Tulsa Worm sure seem to&#13;
be thin-skinned about criticism. One editor, whom I&#13;
respect greatly, took particular umbrage atmy calling our&#13;
daily, "a country-club newspaper."&#13;
I suspect ,that a good part of his irritation is that he&#13;
knows there s still truth in the charge. The Tulsa World&#13;
has made great progress in providing better coverage of&#13;
all of Tulsa, including our minority communities, - even&#13;
Gay people. But like the town it serves, it carries with it.&#13;
its parochial,.elitist and raciSt/anfi-minority phst~. And f6r&#13;
every .step forward, there s~ems tb t~ffve tO be a least one&#13;
step back. " :-&#13;
Consider this charming carto0h"0y Simpson, reproduced&#13;
here, with its somewhat sophisticated bigotry and&#13;
stereotyping. The comment of "real girls only," implying&#13;
that Gay men are somehow like women but yet are less&#13;
than women, is full ofunexaminedmisogynism. It comes&#13;
out of a hierarchy where straight men (and traditionally&#13;
straight, white men) are superior, women are lesser&#13;
creatures, and Gay men are even lower because we’re&#13;
men "who want to be women." Lesbians, of course, exist&#13;
only to populate the sexual fantasies of straight men.&#13;
To put this cartoon in the proper historical context, we&#13;
need only think back to early 20th century racist political&#13;
cartoons in which Black Americans were represented&#13;
ape-ishly and made to speak in "step’ n’ fetch it" dialogue&#13;
- or other cartoons where orthodox Jews or Japanese-&#13;
Americans were misrepresented as evil foreigners.&#13;
Ironically, Simpsonjust gets it wrong. The GirlScouts&#13;
of America are clearly on record as saying, they, unlike&#13;
the Boy Scouts, do not discriminate on tile.,.basis of sexual&#13;
orientation. The organization does use adult men as well&#13;
as women in its programs in leadership and in training&#13;
roles,: Therefore, not only would young women who are&#13;
Lesbian be welcome, adult Lesbians and Gay men could&#13;
also participate and no doubt have.&#13;
And guess what, the Girl Scouts are doing just fine.&#13;
But The Worm is not doing so well. For at least 15&#13;
years, our daily has maintained an anti-Gay .advertising&#13;
policy which bans the words: Lesbian, Gay or Bisexual.&#13;
Theyjustify this saying that they are a"family" newspaper.&#13;
Note that this ban does not apply to content of news&#13;
articles, editorials or, obviously, cartoons!&#13;
In fact, The World literally could notdo the basic work&#13;
of a newspaper, merely reporting the stories of our city,&#13;
country and world, if they censored these words.&#13;
¯ How can anyone with a shred of reasoning think that&#13;
these words ifplaced in an advertisement somehow have&#13;
an adverse impact on any family, if dearly the same&#13;
words placed in a news story right next to an ad are&#13;
acceptable.&#13;
What really is going on here is epitome of institutionalized&#13;
prejudice. The policy doesn’ t make any sense, it is&#13;
bigoted and discriminatory but no. one at The World has&#13;
the courage to say that what they’re doing is just wrong.&#13;
And in being silent, they, the reporters, editors, other&#13;
: staff, both straight and Gay, become collaborators in&#13;
¯ societal oppression. In a society which seems to have to&#13;
¯ have an "other" againstwhich to define itself,Gay people&#13;
currently occupy the place Blacks, Jews, Indians, Irish&#13;
¯ and others have had.&#13;
¯ Contrast this with an advertorial section in a recent&#13;
"Out" magazine in which The New York Times bragged&#13;
¯ about its excellent coverage of Lesbian and Gay issues,&#13;
: and its commitment to its Lesbian and Gay readers and&#13;
¯ staff. Can you seeThe World doing that? I hope to seejust&#13;
that someday. Who knows maybe next year The World&#13;
¯ which is certainly profligate with its sponsorship of ¯&#13;
public events will even join Oklahoma’ s Gay press in&#13;
¯ being a sponsor of June’ s traditional Pride events.&#13;
¯ Don’tlaugh-itjustmighthappen.Andwhynot, thead&#13;
¯ policy’s now changed, why not even more progress?&#13;
by Joe Andrew and Edward G. Rendell&#13;
After theoverwhelming turnout at the MilleniumMarch&#13;
and record participation in the recent presidential primaries,&#13;
Gays and Lesbians across the country are more&#13;
united than ever in their fight for equality and inclusion.&#13;
The Democratic Party is proud to stand with them - to&#13;
fight with them - as we all celebrate Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Pride this month.&#13;
Democrats have forged lasting relationships with the&#13;
Gay and Lesbian community by supporting common&#13;
sense issues related to basic fairness and non-discrimination&#13;
for all Americans. Unlike discriminatory and divisive&#13;
Republican figures like Pat Robertson, Gary Bauer,&#13;
and presidential candidate George W. Bush, Democrats&#13;
believe that our diversity is a source of great strength.&#13;
While getting Bush to meet with Gays and Lesbians in&#13;
his own party is like pulling teeth, A1 Gore has worked&#13;
side-by-side with openly Gay and Lesbian advisors&#13;
throughout his life. On specific policies that improve the&#13;
lives of Gay Americans like hate crimes legislation,&#13;
funding: ~or HIV/_AIDS¯ research, atii5~- :!he Empl9yment&#13;
Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA~;~.tli~re is no comparisonb~&#13;
tween the candidates. Gorehas supportedGays and&#13;
Lesbians~time and time again.&#13;
BUSHII~PPOSES HATE CRIMES BILLS ~ ~ ~ .t~, ,’~ ,. ¯ .. ~" . -&#13;
A.c~,r,~ng to the.Le’~fJ~an/Gay Rights Lobby of Texas&#13;
(L(~."~R~.~)~,~.m.~re than 2,~ hate crimes were reported to&#13;
th~’Fe~Departmen~6fPublic safetybetween 1992 and&#13;
19971 ~i~(eefi percem~ere hate cfim~s motivated by the&#13;
victim’s sexual orien~ation~ making Gays ’and Lesbians&#13;
the second most-targeted group of hate crime victims in&#13;
Texas.&#13;
Given this fact, George W. Bush still opposed provisions&#13;
in the James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Act that would&#13;
have included protections for Gays.and Lesbians from&#13;
hate crimes. The bill would have mandated stiffer penalties&#13;
for cases in which victims of violence are targeted&#13;
because of their race, gender, or sexual orientation. His&#13;
spokesman said that Bush "does not support special&#13;
¯ rights based on sexual orientation."&#13;
¯ Special rights? Where is the leadership? Bush wants ¯&#13;
the world to believe that he is a compassionate, but&#13;
." apparently his compassion does not extend to all the&#13;
citizens of Texas.&#13;
¯ "... We need leaders llke AI Gore&#13;
: who will speak out against&#13;
¯ homophobla and prejudlee in a fight&#13;
: to maintain elvll justice and equality.&#13;
¯ Through his aetlons and&#13;
i&#13;
the aetlons of hls party, it is clear that&#13;
¯ George W. Bush is not that leader...&#13;
As we celebrate Gay and Lesbian Pride,&#13;
: Democrats pledge our support and&#13;
¯ eontlnued work to promote&#13;
¯" requal opp~rtufilty and ndn-dlserimlnatlon&#13;
¯ for a strong and united America.&#13;
As a Party, we embrace these ideals&#13;
because we believe that&#13;
no American should be left behind..."&#13;
Democrats, on the other hand, have begun to wage an&#13;
all-out campaign against hate crimes in America. We&#13;
have also endorsed and fought for civil rights legislation&#13;
that would protect Gay and Lesbian Americans from&#13;
¯ discrimination.&#13;
A1 Gore has been a tireless advocate for passage of the&#13;
: Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA), calling on Con-&#13;
." gress to come together in one voice on this issue. HCPA&#13;
¯ would expand the definition of hate crimes to include&#13;
: those based on sexual orientation, gender or disability&#13;
¯ and allow for the prosecution of those crimes under&#13;
federal law.&#13;
¯ Democratic leaders have walked the walk in the fight&#13;
¯ ; against hate in America. We are the party of inclusion&#13;
¯ because wehavejudgedandwill continue tojudgepeople&#13;
~ based on the content of their character.&#13;
: BUSH: SILENT ON HIV/AIDS&#13;
: Bush’s silence on HIV/AIDS as governor is simply&#13;
¯ deafening. Despite the fact that almost 10,000 Texans&#13;
: have died ofAIDS under his watch, Bush has never taken&#13;
¯ a publicpolicy position on the epidemic. In fact, he never&#13;
¯ even publicly used the word"AIDS" in office.When the ¯&#13;
Children Uniting Nations Chairperson Daphna Ziman&#13;
¯ asked US governors for assistance regarding the AIDS&#13;
¯ epidemic in Africa, forty-nine governors responded to&#13;
¯ her urgent personal letter and only one governor ignored ¯ the plea: George W. Bush. In December 1999, Bush also&#13;
: received a failing grade on Lambda Legal Defense and&#13;
¯ Education Fund’s (LLDEF) World AIDS Day Report&#13;
¯ Card.&#13;
:. ,Since the beginning of the Adminislxaf!on, President&#13;
Clinton and Vice President Gore have proven their com-&#13;
-¯ mitment to fight for AIDS research again and again.&#13;
During the last seven years, the Ryan White CARE Act&#13;
¯ ha~ seen funding ,increases of more than 292 percent in&#13;
° funds fo~ medicationsfserving low-inb.6_’me in~lividuals.&#13;
¯ Overall fundingforAIDS~relatedprograms has increased&#13;
by more than 122 percent during thisAdministration.&#13;
¯ A1 Gore has been on the front lines of fighting the&#13;
¯ epidemic. Recently, he announced an Administration&#13;
¯ initiative to commit more than $100 million to fight the&#13;
worldwide AIDS crisis and increased funding for re-&#13;
" search, care andprevention. Weneed a leader that has put&#13;
: a great deal of thought on this vital issue.&#13;
: BUSH: AGAINST ENDA&#13;
." As governor, Bush opposed employment protection&#13;
¯ for Gays and Lesbians. He refused to adopt an Adminis-&#13;
: tration non-discrimination policy that includes sexual&#13;
¯ orientation. see Demos, p. 7&#13;
Candian Supreme Co,,urt&#13;
Holds for Pro-Gay Ruling&#13;
OTTAWA (AP) -The Supreme Courthas rejected an&#13;
Ontario government request to re’clew a landmark&#13;
decision on Gay civil rights. The Attorney General&#13;
for Ontario had asked for a rehearing of theM and H&#13;
case, referring to a Lesbian couple whose breakeup&#13;
almost a decade ago triggered a dispute over assets.&#13;
The case began when one of the women in the case,&#13;
known only as M, found she couldn’t sue her ex’-&#13;
partnerHwhen their relationship ended. Mthen went&#13;
to court to have the spouse law struck down.&#13;
The high court ruled in an 8-1 decision that the&#13;
definition of spouse in Ontario’s family law was&#13;
unconstitutional because it discriminated on the basis&#13;
of sexual orientation. Theruling last yearwas specific&#13;
to Ontario, but legal experts said other provincial&#13;
governments and Ottawa had few options but to&#13;
amend their lawsor face having them struck down in&#13;
similar battles. The House ofCommons passed legislation&#13;
to bring federal legislationinto lineandOntario&#13;
grudgingly amended its laws but still launched a bid&#13;
for a rehearing before the Supreme Court.&#13;
The two Toronto women, who had bought a home&#13;
and started an ad agency together, settled the money&#13;
dispute out of court long before their case wound its&#13;
way to the country’ s highest court.&#13;
Presbyterian Court&#13;
Rulings Are Gay-friendly&#13;
!AP)-The Presbyterian Church’ s highest court ruled&#13;
~n May that local congregations have the right to&#13;
conduct religious ceremonies celebrating Gay unions&#13;
that stop short of marriage. The d~ision by the 16-&#13;
member court is binding unless the General Assembly&#13;
of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) overrides it.&#13;
The case, one of three on Gay issues argued before&#13;
the tribunal, stemmed from a same-sex ceremony&#13;
performed in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. The Northeast regional&#13;
church court ruled that ceremonies of "holy&#13;
union" for same-sex couples may be conducted ifit is&#13;
made clear they are not marriages. The high conrt&#13;
agreed, though it instructed regional church bodies to&#13;
make a clearer distinction between marriages and&#13;
"blessing services."&#13;
A second case before the high court involved a&#13;
homosexual candidate for the ministry who said he&#13;
did not intend to remain celibate, even though church&#13;
rules require clergy to observe either "fidelity in&#13;
marriage" or"chastity in singleness." In that case~ the&#13;
Northeast regional court decided that he could continue&#13;
as a candidate, and that his "manner of life"&#13;
could be evaluated prior to ordination. Again, the&#13;
high church concurred. It said the denomination’s&#13;
standards of fidelity and chastity are to be applied at&#13;
the point that a person is azonsidered.for ordination,&#13;
not during, candidacy~&#13;
Freda ~ar~dn,~r~ and Clifton Kirkpatrick, the two&#13;
national leaders Of the 2.6 million-member denomination:~&#13;
headquartered in :Louisvil!,e, Ky., said in a&#13;
~ecent i~astoral letter that the 0aurt s decisions real-&#13;
:firm. churchpolicy of disallowing Gay-marriages and&#13;
the.ordinatiOn Of’s(xua~ly active Gays., Theseissues&#13;
will Surface again when.the General Assembly.meets&#13;
in Long Beach,:Calif., fromJune 24 to July 1. Among&#13;
legislation to be considered: a proposal to ban samesex&#13;
marriage.&#13;
Utah High School Club&#13;
For Gay Issues Meets&#13;
SALT LAKECITY (AP) - Five years after the debate&#13;
over Gay school clubs began in Utah, East High&#13;
School students on Wednesday held the state’ s first&#13;
school-sanctioned club meeting to discuss current&#13;
events from a Gay and Lesbian perspective.&#13;
The PRISM Club - People Respecting Important&#13;
Social Movements - meeting featured Laura Gray, a&#13;
Salt Lake City attorney involved in Gay-rights issues.&#13;
.About45 students attended. Students said they talked&#13;
about the historical, legal and religious significance&#13;
of marriage and the current restrictions barring Gays&#13;
and Lesbians from forming such unions.&#13;
The district barred news media from the. meeting,&#13;
claiming it was for students only. However, district&#13;
personnel attended, along with an attorney for the&#13;
Utah chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.&#13;
The ACLU is representing East High juniors Jessi&#13;
Cohen and Margaret Hinckley, who in April filed a&#13;
federal-court suit claiming the district violated their&#13;
First Amendment rights to free speech by rejecting&#13;
PRISM as an academic club. The district banned all&#13;
nonacademic clubs in 1996, a year after East High&#13;
students tried to form a Gay and Lesbian support&#13;
group. U.S. District Judge Tena Campbell issued a&#13;
temporary restraining order against the district last&#13;
month, forcing it to temporarily acknowledgePRISM&#13;
as a legitimate club pending the outcome of the&#13;
students’ lawsuit.&#13;
The meeting was "definitely a win," said East High&#13;
senior Ivy Fox, whounsuccessfully sued the districtin&#13;
1998 over the ban. "It’ s such a good feding to see all&#13;
your hard work pay off." Sophomore Evan Done&#13;
attended the club meeting, but didn’ t think the discussion&#13;
was appropriate. "It is an important step for the&#13;
Gay community that needed to be taken," he said, but&#13;
"I don’ t really think it has a place in school."&#13;
PRISM advertised the meeting with fliers and during&#13;
regular school announcements over the school&#13;
intercom. Some of the fliers were destroyed and some&#13;
students posted "straight pride" fliers, which showed&#13;
two connecting male symbols and two connecting&#13;
female symbols that were crossed out.&#13;
Three Receive First&#13;
Shepard Scholarships&#13;
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Three Gay and Lesbian&#13;
high school students were awardedfull tuition to Iowa&#13;
state universities under a new scholarship named for&#13;
slain Gay student Matthew Shepard.&#13;
The scholarships, worth approximately $25,000&#13;
each over four years, were presented Tuesday to&#13;
Galen W. Newton, Jessica M. Brackett and Paul N&#13;
Wharmel. The scholarships include tuition, books and&#13;
fees at the University of Iowa, Iowa State University&#13;
or University of Northern Iowa.&#13;
The scholarship program was announced in March&#13;
by Gov. Tom Vilsack and the mother of Matthew&#13;
Shepard. theWyoming college student who was beaten&#13;
to death by two men. Police said the attack was&#13;
motivated in part because Shepard was Gay.&#13;
The scholarships are awarded to Gay students based&#13;
on academic achievement, financial need and community&#13;
service, Vilsack said. Brackettcredited Vilsack&#13;
for trying to provide greater civil rights to Gay Iowans.&#13;
"He’ s really pushing for rights for everybody&#13;
andI thinkhewill be ourmain strength during thenext&#13;
four to six years," Brackett said. "I think he’s going to&#13;
push for progress."&#13;
Newton said he.plans to remain.active inGay rights&#13;
.’. issues whilein college. He said the Scholarship is abig&#13;
encouragement. "People are beingawarded for being&#13;
courageou_s,".he s-aid. ¯ -&#13;
Funding for the scholarships.~omes from a chari-&#13;
.tablefoundation establishedbyprominentDes Moines&#13;
businessman Rich F...y~.~haner..An’rpe~l.y Gay RepubS&#13;
lican, Eychanermad~ an unsuccessi~ui bid for the U.S~.&#13;
.House in 1984, but’lost :in the~.&#13;
Vatican Increases&#13;
Attack on World Pride&#13;
ROME (AP) - A top Italian cardinal weighed in&#13;
against a major Gay gathering scheduledin Rome in&#13;
July, stepping up a campaignto move the event&#13;
elsewhere. "What we are asking is not at this time and&#13;
not in Rome," said Cardinal Camillo Ruini, president&#13;
of the Italian Conference ofRoman Catholic Bishops.&#13;
World Gay Pride Roma 2000 is expected to draw&#13;
hundreds of thousands of Gay and Lesbian participants&#13;
for a week starting July I. The Vatican has&#13;
opposed the city’ s plans to host the gathering, saying&#13;
it is out of keeping with the church’ s Holy Year that&#13;
has been drawing millions of pilgrims to Rome.&#13;
Some opponents fear the event will turn into a&#13;
demonstration against Pope John Paul II, who has&#13;
defended the Vatican’ s condemnation of homosexual&#13;
acts. "I don’ t believe it is by chance that they selected&#13;
Rome this year," Ruilfi said.&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
MCC-United&#13;
Sunday Worship Reverend Cathy Elliot&#13;
11:00 am Pastor&#13;
1623 N. Maplewo0d 918/838-1715&#13;
Community&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at 1 lam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm&#13;
3210b S. Norwood, Info: 224-4754, Chris or Sharon&#13;
Sandra Hill&#13;
Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
Counselor, Certified Hypnotherapist&#13;
Psychotherapy &amp; Clinical Consultation&#13;
After Hours Appointments Available&#13;
2865 E. Skelly Drive, Suite 215,745-1111&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa - O’RYAN&#13;
Oklahoma Rainbow Young Adult Network&#13;
Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Envirorndnt&#13;
Call for meeting times and .place:&#13;
Mi.ng0 Valley Flowers.&#13;
9413 E. 31st St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
9.18-663-5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-44~-5934&#13;
Family Owned &amp; Operated&#13;
Trinna L. W. Burrows, LSW, ACSW&#13;
Child, Family, Individual &amp; Couple Psychotherapy&#13;
(918) 743-9559&#13;
2121 South Columbia, Suite 420&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma 7411’4-3518&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743:4297)&#13;
¯6-9 pm, Sunday - Friday&#13;
fl2-9_ p~,~ Sat..u~~dq2, all sales b.eqefit the Center,&#13;
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Tuesdays, 5 -8 pm, Center, 1307 East 38th&#13;
Wednesdays, 5-8 pm, Red Rock, 1724 East 8th&#13;
Daytime appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
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4200 S. Atlanta Place, 742-7381 501 S. Cincinnati 582-4128&#13;
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You&#13;
In another development, the Gay civil-lights group&#13;
ArciGay called for the resignation ofPremier Giuliano&#13;
Amatoforhi s remarks before parlianlent earlier in the&#13;
week.. Amato said that "unfoftnnately" the Gay Pride&#13;
week week must be allowed to be held because of&#13;
constitutional protection for public gatherings.&#13;
Gays Losing Supporter&#13;
ST. PAUL (AP) - State Sen. Allan Spear, who is&#13;
retiring after 28 years, will probably be remembered&#13;
for work that took "probably less than 10% of my&#13;
time" - his advocacy of rights and protections for&#13;
Gays and Lesbians. "Nobody can get elected and&#13;
adequatelyserve a constituency on Gay,~ssues alone,:&#13;
Spear said..",But it’s important to have people for&#13;
whom Gay i~su~s are a~hi.gh priority." . "&#13;
Spear became the first openly Gay legislator in&#13;
Mimlesota- and one of only two in the nation - when&#13;
he acknowledged his homosexuality in 1974. His&#13;
retirement at the end of this year will likely leave just&#13;
one openly Gay legislator: Rep. Karen Clark, DFLMinneapolis.&#13;
Scott Dibble, who is running for a&#13;
House seat in Minneapolis, is also Gay, but there&#13;
would be no openly Gay senators.&#13;
Spear believes ~t is important for Gay people to&#13;
have legislative representation. "It helps a lot to have&#13;
someone come from the Gay community who can&#13;
speak from the inside," said Spear, DFL-Minneapolis.&#13;
"You need someone who can talk about what it’ s&#13;
like growing up Gay, or coming out, or what it’ s like&#13;
to deal with a partner who you feel is your spouse, but&#13;
society won’ t recognize as your spouse. Other people&#13;
can sp,,eak out on those issues, but it isn’ t quite the&#13;
sanle,&#13;
Ann DeGroot, executive director of the Gay political&#13;
action group OutFront Minnesota, said part of&#13;
Spear’s legacy will be other legislators who can.&#13;
advocate for Gay rights, whether they’re Gay or not.&#13;
"Of course we’ re going to miss Allan," she said. "We&#13;
haven’t had a session without him yet. "But we’ve&#13;
worked with other people so much, other leaders who&#13;
are supporters, we know we can count on them.?’&#13;
Gay.&amp; Lesbian Parents&#13;
TroUbled by State Law&#13;
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Chris and Mike Croghan-&#13;
Miller are like other parents, caring and proud. They&#13;
videotaped their son’ s birth, took time off from work&#13;
when he was born, and in the weeks before, had an&#13;
announcement party, a baby shower, painted the&#13;
"baby room" and spent days with a ~erious case of&#13;
"the butterflies." But there is one difference some say&#13;
makes them unfit parents - they’re Gay.&#13;
Advocates argue that the bottom line is a good&#13;
home for the child that meets the requirements set by&#13;
the state. "We don’t care whether they’ re married,&#13;
single or Gay," said Carolyn Amett, contract attorney&#13;
"for Adoptions ofKentucky. "We don’ t discriminate."&#13;
Kentucky Youth Advocates’ director Debra Miller&#13;
said the concern should be "that any child is adopted&#13;
by parents who have the emotional and social support&#13;
necessary to be good parents. We don’t think that&#13;
there’s anything constitutional that makes a Gay or&#13;
Lesbian parent unable to do that. Noris there anything&#13;
that guarantees that heterosexual folk can be good&#13;
parents."&#13;
The Croghan-Mil!er.family is part ofaboom~~t~e&#13;
numbe~ Of Gays ~d Les~iafls ~fi~osin~’to’becSth~e&#13;
parents, according to the San Diego-based Family&#13;
Pride Coalition. Though state officials and private&#13;
adoption agencies in Kentucky don’ t keep any estimates&#13;
on how many Gay men or Lesbian~ have&#13;
adopted here, the San Diego group claims 15,000&#13;
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered families&#13;
as members, including dozens in Louisville. ¯&#13;
And across the nation, cases of adoption and custody&#13;
issues involving Gays and Lesbians have become&#13;
increasingly visible. Mostrecently, Mississippi&#13;
joined Florida and Utah in banning adoptions by&#13;
Gays, despite arguments that it is an unconstitutional&#13;
violation of due process and privacy rights.&#13;
The Cabinet for Families and Children has recently&#13;
proposed changes that would "make our systemmore&#13;
accepting to a broad variety of families," said Mike&#13;
Jennings, a cabinet spokesman. But the change is not&#13;
being made specifically out of consideration for Gay&#13;
and Lesbian couples.&#13;
Gay Teens Face&#13;
Harassment &amp; Isolation&#13;
MILLERSVILLE, Pa. (AP) - During her junior and&#13;
senior years in high school Lilith visited the hospital&#13;
seven times for severe depression, self-mutilation&#13;
and thoughts of suicide. She was trying to destroy&#13;
hersdf, she said. Destroy the thing within her that was&#13;
making her different from her classmates.&#13;
Lilith is Gay and, during her early teen years, the&#13;
thought of being a Lesbian "practically .disguste0,".&#13;
her. ~he denied it, ran from it, ti-ied to erie it’f~om.!,i~ ~&#13;
soul!, but her affeeti0n for bilker ffomenw~ beCrn{i~&#13;
impossible to ignor~ Lilith ~ Who, f0( pi-i~acy #~aI- i&#13;
sons, chose a fictitious name for this story - is now 20,&#13;
a full-time college student and a self-assured Lesbian&#13;
woman. But, she says, her high school years were&#13;
rough.&#13;
Like many Gay youth, Lilith suffered through&#13;
harassment and lack of acceptance, feelings of isolation,&#13;
and self-imposed silence. Gay teens are twice as&#13;
likely as heterosexual youth to seriously consider&#13;
suicide because they feel adrift in an unsupportive&#13;
world.&#13;
Overall, the nonheterosexual population (Gay, Lesbian,&#13;
Bisexual and Transgendered) is 5-10%, said&#13;
Brad Becker, executive director of the Gay &amp;Lesbian&#13;
National Hotline. High school percentages are likely&#13;
the same, but surveys are skewed because most teens&#13;
are not comfortable answering gender-preference&#13;
questions. In addition, many have yet to figure out&#13;
their sexuality, he said. "They may not be identified&#13;
as Gay,, said Becker. "They know something is&#13;
different but have yet to pinpoint their sexuality.".&#13;
"Teens begin feeling their sexuality around the age&#13;
of 13," said Linnea Bailey, a Lancaster psychologist&#13;
who specializes in Gay and Lesbian issues. "So much&#13;
of being a teen is exploring sexuality. If they realize&#13;
they are not part of the norm, it can be frightening.&#13;
They know that those who are different get picked&#13;
on." Gay and Lesbian youth commonly struggle with&#13;
self-esteem issues and may withdraw from family&#13;
and friends. They often skip school and may eventually&#13;
drop out in search of an accepting peer group. If&#13;
they do come out and continue in school, they risk&#13;
being harassed or beaten by those with differing&#13;
bdiefs.&#13;
In an average school day, says the Gay, Lesbian and&#13;
Straight Education Network, the typical Gay teen will&#13;
hear 26 anti-Gay remarks. And, one in six Gay youths&#13;
are beaten so badly they seek medical attention. "The&#13;
last acceptable form of overt prejudice is against&#13;
Gays," Bailey said. "It’s still extremely bad in the&#13;
public school systems."&#13;
Most Gay teens wait to come out until they are in&#13;
college or the work world. There tends to be greater&#13;
diversity and less peer pressure. "Often it’ s the first&#13;
time they are away from home and family," said&#13;
Anthony Lascoskie Jr., coordinator of the Lesbian&#13;
Gay Bisexual Allies at Franklin &amp; Marshall Colleg_e&#13;
and .treasurer of the Pink Triangle Coalition. "They&#13;
can be Gay at school and straight at home." Boys&#13;
typically come out at age 18; gifts, 23.&#13;
Julian, a 19-year-old Millersville student, came out&#13;
the summer before his junior year of high school by&#13;
writing a letter to a trusted faculty member. During&#13;
his junior year he began telling his friends. J~ian.said&#13;
most of his friends were OK with his sexuality, but&#13;
some faded away. And although there were no physical&#13;
attacks, there were plenty of verbal attacks.&#13;
- Bailey said~lack of- peer suPport is.the, one of the&#13;
worst koadblbcks for ~ay teer~sl During a time When&#13;
support is most important, there is typically very&#13;
little. "Imagine dating as a Gay teen-ager," she said.&#13;
"If you break up with a same-sex partner, there’ s no&#13;
support. Who do you go to to talk about it? There is so&#13;
much loneliness and isolation."&#13;
Black Church To&#13;
Fight AIDS Harder&#13;
TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP) - Black ~hurch&#13;
leaders, trying to overcome policy differences&#13;
in their efforts to combat AIDS~&#13;
have gathered in Tuskegee to try to put&#13;
together a plan of action. More than 300&#13;
bishops, pastors, priests and laymen from&#13;
across the nation and as far away as Africa&#13;
tookpart the lastweek inMay in theAIDS&#13;
Conference for Black Churches at&#13;
Tuskegee University.&#13;
Black churches have been Slow to take&#13;
onAIDS because of the stigma associated&#13;
with frank discussion of sex, drugs and&#13;
homosexuality in church, church leaders&#13;
said. There is also disagreement over issues&#13;
such as the distribution of condoms&#13;
and needle-exchange programs. "This&#13;
hesitationis killing our people," U.S. Surgeon&#13;
General David Satcher told the conference&#13;
in a videotaped statement.&#13;
Blacks accounted for 45% of all AIDS&#13;
cases reported in the United States in&#13;
1998, according to federal data. Africa is&#13;
home to 23.3 million of the world’ s 33.6&#13;
million infected people, said Dr. Helene&#13;
Gayle, head of the AIDS center at the U.S.&#13;
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.&#13;
Within a decade, she said, there will&#13;
be 40 million orphans in Africa because&#13;
of the disease.&#13;
Church leaders and AIDS experts said&#13;
their efforts likely will focus ottxeaching&#13;
teens and young adults. The Rev. Calvin&#13;
Butts III, president of the Council of&#13;
Churches of the City of New York, said&#13;
churches must teach sex education. "Un~&#13;
less we learn to talk about it, we’re not&#13;
going to solve the problem of AIDS," he&#13;
said. "You can’t be hypocritical about&#13;
this, because it’ s killing us." Other leaders&#13;
said churches should boost outreach efforts&#13;
in jails and prisons. Nearly one-fifth&#13;
of people who are HIV-positive will be&#13;
incarcerated at some point in their lives,&#13;
according to CDC data.&#13;
Pernessa Seele, founder ofThe Balm in&#13;
Gilead Inc., the organization that sponsored&#13;
the conference, said church leaders&#13;
must provide better counseling and care&#13;
to people with AIDS. "Church folk are&#13;
Gay folk, they are.., straight folk. We’re&#13;
all family," she said. "But some people&#13;
justdon’ tgetit. We’ ve got to tear down all&#13;
these barriers."&#13;
AIDS Vaccine to&#13;
Be Tested in Haiti&#13;
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Vanderbilt&#13;
University Medical Center will work with&#13;
the nation of Haiti to test a vaccine for&#13;
AIDS. The research hospital is seeking&#13;
150 local volunteers for testing in Nashville&#13;
this summer. Tests begin in Haiti in&#13;
the fall.&#13;
.’,~It’~s:important-for,the.science of vaccine&#13;
development to embrace the developing&#13;
world, where most of the AIDS&#13;
burden is now," said Dr. Barney S. GrahamofVanderbilt~&#13;
s AIDS Vaccine Evaluation’Unit.&#13;
"We’re veery excited about&#13;
workilig with Haiti."&#13;
Vanderbiltis 0neof five medical centerg&#13;
in °be:United States testing a vaccine&#13;
based on a virus which ca°mot reproduce&#13;
in mammals - the canary pox virus. Scientist&#13;
splice genes for inactive HIV proteins&#13;
into the canary pox virus, and inject&#13;
it into the volunteers. If it works, the&#13;
vaccine will stimulate the body’ s immune&#13;
defenses into action, including the production&#13;
of a white Mood cell that can&#13;
dispose of HIV-infected cells to prevent it&#13;
from spreading inthe body.&#13;
"It’ s not a perfect vaccine, but it is the&#13;
best candidate we have now," said Dr.&#13;
Peter F. Wright, also of Vanderbilt. Side&#13;
affects of the vaccine can include mild&#13;
fever and mnsde soreness. There is no&#13;
chance of getting infected with HIV, Graham&#13;
said. "We’ re not at all worried about&#13;
safety," Graham said.&#13;
Vanderbilt’ s research is supported by&#13;
an annllal grant of $2 million from the&#13;
.federal govemmentwhichis goodthrough&#13;
2005. If this year’s tests are successful,&#13;
large-scale trials will be done in 2001.&#13;
:Russia Too Poor to&#13;
Fight AIDS CriSis&#13;
MOSCOW (AP)- Registered HIV cases&#13;
in Russia are snowballing and the cashstrapped&#13;
government is too poor to confront&#13;
the health crisis, a senior health&#13;
official said in May. "That means people&#13;
will simply die without treatment," said&#13;
VadimPokrovsky, thehead ofthe Federal&#13;
AIDS Prevention Center.&#13;
Last year, 18,140 new cases of infection&#13;
with HIV - the virus that causes&#13;
¯ MDS - were registered; that’s dose to&#13;
half of all the HIV cases registered in&#13;
Russia since 1987. Pokrovsky told anews&#13;
conference that at least a two-fold increase&#13;
is expected this year, and that the&#13;
registered number of cases are likely only&#13;
one-fifth to one-tenth of the real number.&#13;
’q’hat means that the real number of HIV&#13;
cases may reach 300,000-400,000 by the&#13;
~.nd of this year. By 2005 we may have&#13;
about 1 million cases, under an optimistic&#13;
scenario," he said.&#13;
Intravenous drug users aecountformost&#13;
of the new HIV cases, but the virus is&#13;
rapidly spreading through sexual contacts,&#13;
Pokrovsky said. "In some regions around&#13;
Moscow up to 5% of all young people&#13;
have AIDS," he said. "According to other&#13;
estimates, up to 15% of Moscow prostitutes&#13;
are infected with HIV."&#13;
The relatively small number of officially&#13;
registered HIV cases has prompted&#13;
a negligent attitude in the government,&#13;
which has been slow to earmark funds for&#13;
combatting the disease. Officials have&#13;
sometimes hampered privately funded&#13;
AIDS prevention efforts. TV ads and billboards&#13;
promoting the use of condoms&#13;
have disappeared after authorities complained&#13;
they were harming public morals,&#13;
¯ Pokrovsky said.&#13;
Currently, only therelatively rich Mos-&#13;
¯ cow city governmentcan fully pay the bill&#13;
¯ for treating AIDS patients, while other&#13;
¯ regions provide only a fracdon of funds&#13;
¯ needed to pay for expensive treatment.&#13;
According to Pokrovsky, a modern&#13;
¯ course of treatment for AIDS comes only&#13;
¯ a fraction cheaper than in the West, be-&#13;
¯ causemostdrugs areimported. Suchtreat-&#13;
¯ ment costs about $10,000 per patient, he&#13;
’ ~aid,~ a hefty sum a’or ~the.economicalIy&#13;
¯ struggling nation. "The nmnber of pa-&#13;
¯ dents will be so high, that only few of&#13;
¯ them will get treatment," he said. "No&#13;
¯ more than 10% of the patients may count&#13;
¯ on receiving treatment." ¯&#13;
OK AIDS Network&#13;
ADAP, the AIDS Drug Assistance Pro-&#13;
. gram is working but is severely&#13;
¯ underfunded. OKAIDS Netis asking that&#13;
¯ the following legislators be asked to sup-&#13;
, port more funding in the next session.&#13;
Write: Senators Stratton Tayltr, Ben&#13;
¯ Robinson, Angela Monson, Cal Hobson,&#13;
¯ Enoch Kelly Haney and Representatives&#13;
¯ Loyd Benson, and Bob Weaver at State&#13;
Capitol, 2300 No. Lincoln,OKC730105.&#13;
Timothy W. Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fight for&#13;
justice &amp; equality for&#13;
Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury,&#13;
Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appoinlmenls are available.&#13;
Tulsa City County Library System&#13;
is proud to support&#13;
Humanity Unites for&#13;
Human Ri£!hts&#13;
Diversity Celebration 2000&#13;
and presents&#13;
Not All Fruits are Oranges:&#13;
the Roots, Branches &amp; Produce of&#13;
the Gay &amp; Lesbian Literary Grove&#13;
by&#13;
Dr. T. Alan Culpepper, Ph.D.&#13;
Visiting Assistant Professor.ofEnglish~ Rogers State University&#13;
Tuesday, June 13, 7pm,&#13;
Aaronson Auditorium, Central Library&#13;
Look for the Library Booth at the Millenium Festival&#13;
and check with Central Library for books and videos of&#13;
interest to Gay &amp; Lesbian readers, families and friends.&#13;
when i dare&#13;
to be powerful -&#13;
to use my strength&#13;
in the service&#13;
of my vision,&#13;
then itbe Qm&#13;
tmpo ant&#13;
whether i am&#13;
afraid.&#13;
¯..audre Iorde&#13;
please oin&#13;
)Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights&#13;
in welcoming&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
Dr. Margarethe Cammermeyer&#13;
and&#13;
Mr. Greg Louganis&#13;
as guest speakers&#13;
,--of.the&#13;
"Humanity Unites for Human Rights"&#13;
0 "DIVERSITY CELEBRATION 20001"&#13;
black-tie (optional)&#13;
benefit dinner and silent auction&#13;
Friday, June 9, 2000&#13;
The Summit Club&#13;
6th &amp; Boulder&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma&#13;
(free parking in Bank of America tower)&#13;
VIP Reception; 7:00 PM / $50 per person&#13;
Reception: 7:00 PM&#13;
Silent Auction: 7:00 -- 9:00 PM&#13;
_ Dinner:,8:00 PM/,$75 per person&#13;
$550 / table of eight&#13;
- ~:~ $750 /.table of eight &amp; VIP reception&#13;
for ticket information,&#13;
please see enclosure&#13;
I&#13;
at Southwest Missouri State University in&#13;
Sptingfield.&#13;
"When I think of Ozark County, I always&#13;
think ofhow the sheriff did not have&#13;
a car until 1937," he said. "The rivers&#13;
weren’t bridged and there was no real&#13;
road system developed." Outlaws looking&#13;
for cover in the backwoods - including&#13;
such notorious villains as Bonnie and&#13;
Clyde and Jesse James - were drawn to&#13;
the area for those reasons, Flanders said.&#13;
Religious~based groups, typically those&#13;
who shun the doctrines of mainstream&#13;
churches, appreciate the quietandreserved&#13;
nature of fellow Ozarkers. ’’There is a&#13;
long tradition in the hills that you live and&#13;
let live, no matterhow weird the beliefs of&#13;
your neighbors might be," Flanders said.&#13;
Both Springfield and Bransonhave seen&#13;
national and regional supremacy conventions&#13;
in the last year. In February, some&#13;
225 people gathered in Branson for the&#13;
third annual convention of the Identity&#13;
group Songs for His People.&#13;
"You’ re tight in the middle of the Bible&#13;
Belt, which plays an important role in the&#13;
culture there," said Devin Burghart of the&#13;
Chicag0-based Identity watchdog group,&#13;
Center for New Commlmity.&#13;
’‘These guys come strolling along singing&#13;
songs andholding Bibles, which allows&#13;
them a certain degree of legitimacy&#13;
in the area. But behind it all is still the&#13;
same message of hate and intolerance,"&#13;
he said. Christian Identity espouses white&#13;
Anglo-Saxon virtues and calls Jews, racial&#13;
minorities and Gays enemies of God.&#13;
S6memembers believe in death sentences&#13;
for those who violate "’God’ s law."&#13;
In August, Identity follower Buford&#13;
Furrow Jr. allegedly killed a Filipino-&#13;
American postal worker and wounded&#13;
five others after opemng fire on a Jewish&#13;
day-care center in Los Angeles. A month&#13;
earlier, two brothers-also Identity adherents&#13;
- allegedly killed a Gay couple in&#13;
California and set fire to several synagogues.&#13;
Through the 1980s, the Identity movement&#13;
became associated with other extremist&#13;
groups, including The Order, the&#13;
Ku Klux Klan and The Covenant, the&#13;
Sword, and the Arm of the Lord, or CSA.&#13;
Many residents here say they have felt&#13;
intimidated by supremacist groups like&#13;
CSA and Winrod’ s church. Most define&#13;
to be interviewed or ask not to be identified&#13;
for fear of retaliation.&#13;
"These guys would wear fatigues and&#13;
walkinto thepostoffice withguns swapped&#13;
to their waists," said Tim Morgan, owner&#13;
of a marina in Pontiac, a town of fewer&#13;
than 300 not far from Gainesville. "They&#13;
were intimidating because they were so&#13;
military-looking."&#13;
Winrod’ s church, called Our Savior’ s,&#13;
consisted-mostly~ ofhi~ adult ehilO*en,&#13;
their families and a few other followers.&#13;
The sheriff said he began distributing his&#13;
racist mailings to every county resident.&#13;
"People Wouldcall and Complainabout&#13;
it, but there is nothing we could do- he&#13;
hadFirstAmendmenttights ," Bartlett said.&#13;
"We could only keep an eye on him."&#13;
Now, Winrod is accused along with&#13;
two ofhis childrenofabducting his grandchildren&#13;
from their North Dakota hometowns&#13;
in 1994 and 1995. Their mothers&#13;
are M.ready serving ptison terms for kidnapping.&#13;
At ~ pretrial court, appearance Thursday,&#13;
Wiurod said he did not have an attorney&#13;
The court has givenhim until June 13&#13;
to either retain counsel or waive his tight&#13;
to representation. A preliminary hearing&#13;
on the case was set for June 21.&#13;
Authorities fear the Wiurod case will&#13;
attract attention from other affiliated&#13;
groups. ’‘There are groups like this all&#13;
over the country, peoplewhomaybearen’ t.&#13;
closely affiliated with one another but&#13;
who share similar beliefs, and they decide&#13;
they want to come and get involved in&#13;
these situations," Said Elmore, the highway&#13;
patrol sergeant. "We don’ t want that&#13;
to happen this time."&#13;
On the Net:&#13;
Southern Poverty Law Center:&#13;
http://www.splcenter.org ~&#13;
Center for New Community:&#13;
http://www.newcomm.org&#13;
Yet again, he dismissed these basic protecdons&#13;
as "special tights ." In addition, he&#13;
has sided with the extreme wing of his&#13;
Party and refused to endorse the Fmployment&#13;
Non-Discrimination Act (F_aNDA).&#13;
ENDA wouldput an end to discrimination&#13;
against Gay men and Lesbians in the&#13;
workplace - discrimination that is currenfly&#13;
legal in 39 states. AI Gore and the&#13;
Democratic Party have fought vigorously&#13;
for ENDA because we believe in the tight&#13;
of every American to bejudged on his or&#13;
her merits and abilities, and to be allowed&#13;
to contribute to society without facing&#13;
discrimination on the basis of sexual ori_-_&#13;
entation.&#13;
As President, AI Gore also would continue&#13;
President Clinton’ s Executive Order&#13;
prohibiting discrimination based on.&#13;
sexual orientation in the federal civilian&#13;
workforce. Facing aRepublican challenge&#13;
to the Executive Order, Clinton and Gore&#13;
worked with Representative Barney Frank&#13;
and other fair-minded Members of Congress&#13;
to defeat the Republicans’ and-Gay&#13;
amendment with the support of over 90&#13;
percent of Congressional Democratsl&#13;
We need leaders likeAl Gore who will&#13;
speak out against homophobia and prejudice&#13;
in afight to maintain civil justice and&#13;
equality. Through his actions and the actions&#13;
ofhis party,it is clear thatGeorgeW.&#13;
Bush is not that leader. There is every&#13;
indication that he would make no room&#13;
forGays and Lesbians inhis WhiteHouse.&#13;
As we celebrate Gay and Lesbian Pride,&#13;
Democrats pledge our support and continued&#13;
work to promote equal~opportunity&#13;
and non-discrimination for a strong and&#13;
umted America. As a Party, we embrace&#13;
these ideals because we believe that no&#13;
.aanetican should be left behind.&#13;
An interpreter for the deaf will be provided.&#13;
- The Rev. Mel.White heads, Soulforce,&#13;
Inc., anon-profitorganization thatruns an&#13;
ecumenical network of volunteers committed&#13;
to the teachings and applying the&#13;
principles of nonviolent civil .disobedience&#13;
on behalf of sexual minorities. Rev.&#13;
White has relendessly devoted his life to&#13;
heal the wounds caused by: the anti-Gay&#13;
rhetoric and to enter into dialogue with&#13;
the faith organizations that perpetuate&#13;
hatred and violence toward sexual minotifies.&#13;
In the past year, Rev. White has&#13;
led "direct actions" with Rev. Jerry&#13;
Falwell, the trial of Rev. Jimmy Creech,&#13;
and most recently, the General Assembly&#13;
of the United Methodist Church.&#13;
Shortly after visiting Tulsa, Rev. White&#13;
will lead a delegation see Pride,p. 8~&#13;
Pr&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, mac guru &amp; more&#13;
Brachetti is coming! No, it’ s not apiece&#13;
of toast with herbs and tomatoes on it, it’ s&#13;
Arturo Brachetti, the quick-change artist.&#13;
Think "Greater Tuna" meets Robin Williams&#13;
while doing David Copperfield’s&#13;
act.&#13;
GreaterTuna had two guys doing quick&#13;
changes to create ,the ,22 characters of,a&#13;
small mythi.cal town; Artur9 is one man&#13;
crearii~g 88characters during the course&#13;
of an evening ~-grom cowboys to geishas&#13;
and barmaids to&#13;
Royal Mounties,&#13;
he is a very charmlng&#13;
man - and&#13;
handsome as well.&#13;
He speaks at least&#13;
three languages&#13;
fluently, and has a&#13;
mischievous sense&#13;
of humor rivaling&#13;
yours truly.&#13;
Described as&#13;
Versace on hyper&#13;
speed, Brachetti&#13;
changes costumes&#13;
at lightning fast&#13;
speed, transforming&#13;
into more than&#13;
80 characters and&#13;
giving life to le-&#13;
"... Deserlbed as Versaee on&#13;
hyper speed, Braehettl changes&#13;
costumes at lightning fast speed,&#13;
transforming into more than 80&#13;
characters and giving llfe to&#13;
legions of personalities.&#13;
His show is a multl-medla&#13;
~xtravaganza, eomblnlng&#13;
comedy, tousle, magle, and video&#13;
in a unique collage of aetlng,&#13;
storytelling, stunts&#13;
and earleature . . ."&#13;
gions of personalities. His show is a multimedia&#13;
extravaganza, combining comedy,&#13;
music, magic, and video in a unique collage&#13;
of acting, storytelling, stunts and&#13;
caricature. He is the winner of the 2000&#13;
Moliere Award (the French "Tony"&#13;
award), and a delightfully impish fellow.&#13;
Add a little Cirque De Soleil t~ that&#13;
mixture above, too.&#13;
I had the chance to speak with him&#13;
before one of his sold out shows in Paris,&#13;
France. A U.S. tour is planned for 2001,&#13;
buthis first stop for a very limited engagement,&#13;
is here in Tulsa. Whenasked, "Why&#13;
Tulsa?" he responded, "Well, you have to&#13;
start somewhere!" He spoke of it being&#13;
the "center of the United States" and as&#13;
such, a good place to begin.&#13;
tie spoke of the Italian art of"transformation"&#13;
as not having been seen in thirty&#13;
years. It had its origins in the 17th century&#13;
as an offshoot of the commedia del’ artr.&#13;
According to Brachetti, Giovanni&#13;
Gabrielli was the originator of "transformarion,"&#13;
performing all the characters of&#13;
the commedia del’ arte single-handedly,&#13;
changing masks and characters all byhimself.&#13;
I asked him what prompted him to create&#13;
such a show-, and his response was that&#13;
he was doing some add-on acts for a&#13;
production of "Midsummer Night’s&#13;
Dream" (French pr~oductions often thro,w_&#13;
extra scenes ifffor fun), which led to him&#13;
creating a one man show in which he&#13;
played all the parts, an embryonic version&#13;
of his current two hour plus show, for an&#13;
arts festival.&#13;
A later version of the show, largely&#13;
autobiographical, opened in June ’99 in&#13;
Montreal. Selling outevery night, he eventually&#13;
took the show to Paris. There was&#13;
no advertising budget, and the first week,&#13;
they had to find people just to sit in the&#13;
audience. After that first week, however,&#13;
word of mouth started and the show exploded.&#13;
Brachetti would like audiences to leave&#13;
the show different from when they entered.&#13;
He said that the show speaks to the&#13;
eight year old child witltin all of us. In the&#13;
dip of the show, s beginning, shown at the&#13;
press conference, it begins with a mysterious&#13;
masked man removing his mask to&#13;
reveal yet another mask underneath, continuing&#13;
for some time.&#13;
Just that brief dip spoke to me of the&#13;
fact that we all wear so many masks from&#13;
day to day, ,to the point where the real&#13;
personbecomes buried over ume. It s.eems&#13;
to me, that his show is about removing the&#13;
masks of adulthood so that We can free the&#13;
child trapped within, (but then agaifi, I’ m0&#13;
a psychology major,&#13;
and can read&#13;
deep insight into&#13;
anything).&#13;
I will say that&#13;
sequence is very&#13;
powerful, and can&#13;
only imagine what&#13;
therest ofthe show&#13;
must be like.&#13;
Brachetti hopes to&#13;
restore the wonder&#13;
of the world as&#13;
seen from the eyes&#13;
of kids. He alternated&#13;
as he spoke,&#13;
from well-educated&#13;
adult to impish&#13;
child.&#13;
He’ll eventually&#13;
play S_an Francisco (the costumes will&#13;
go over big there) and New York, as well&#13;
as Chicago. Brachetti arrives in Tulsa at&#13;
thePAC courtesy ofCelebrity Attractions&#13;
August 6-13 and to OKCat the Rose State&#13;
Performing Arts Theater august 15-21.&#13;
Tickets can be had by calling 596-7111.&#13;
I don. t know if he’ s Gay, but I will tell&#13;
you now, the costumes that Brachetti designed&#13;
and created rival any elaborate&#13;
Bette Midler/Cher/Drag Queen extravaganza.&#13;
Did I mention he’ s cute, designs a&#13;
meanfrock, inhis mid thirties (he’ s cagey&#13;
about his age) and single? Me first, guys !&#13;
For’those Goddess worshipers out there,&#13;
I am pleased to announce Goddess: Tulsa&#13;
Artists’ Coalition Women’ s Show 2000,&#13;
sponsored by TAC and The University of&#13;
Tulsa School of Art. It features Goddessthemed&#13;
artwork, and the exhibit goes up&#13;
June 8 and runs through July 7th. The&#13;
opening is from 5-8pm June 8, and the&#13;
regular gallery .hours are 9am-4:30pm&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. and 9am-noon Friday. The&#13;
gallery is in TU’ s Alexander Hogue Gallery&#13;
at 5th Street and College Avenue.&#13;
Andfor those wondering, Stevie Nicks,&#13;
new album "Trouble In Shangri-La" is on&#13;
permanent delay, as usual Apparently,&#13;
there are troublein the Shangri-La recording&#13;
studio in which she’ s been working&#13;
with a revolving doorful of producers&#13;
.since ,!997. Have fun at the Diversity.&#13;
Celebrations, ~_nd be safe! ’ ¯&#13;
We’ ve seen it before. The horror of the&#13;
ship’ s sinking never quitemadeit onstage.&#13;
You’ re more bothered by the horror of&#13;
having paid to see this show. The songs,&#13;
for the most part, are mawkishly written,&#13;
stealing from everyone imaginable - Gilbert&#13;
and Sullivan, Lloyd Webber,&#13;
Sondheim. Few original ideas are in the&#13;
music, which is a pity. This is portrayed as&#13;
homage, but basically, it seems Yeston&#13;
just couldn’t come up with anything on&#13;
his own. Want something better? Wait for&#13;
Rent later this summer.&#13;
Are You Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
Tulsa’s Two-Spirited Indian Men s ~/k~&#13;
Support Group is here for you! ,-~/~.~/&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HIV testing&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
Call JOHN RAGAN, the friendly, caring real estate agent who understands&#13;
your special needs! 918-583-2125 800-559-1558 wrvw.NewNest.com&#13;
of Soulforce members on a direct action&#13;
to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian&#13;
Church U.S.A. as they debate the&#13;
inclusion of Gays and Lesbians in that&#13;
denomination.&#13;
Organizational sponsors include:&#13;
Soulforce in Oklahoma (presenting sponsor)&#13;
TulsaOklahomans forHumanRights&#13;
(presenting sponsor) Community ofHope&#13;
Church,CommimityUnitarian/UniversalistCongregationDignity/&#13;
IntegrityofTulsa&#13;
FellowshipCongregational Church, Green&#13;
Country Society of Friends (Quakers),&#13;
Metropolitan Community Church United&#13;
(MCC), Parents, Families and Friends of&#13;
Lesbians and Gays in Tulsa (PFLAGTulsa),&#13;
Parish Church of St. Jerome, Regional&#13;
AIDS Interfaith Network of Oklahoma&#13;
(RAIN-OK), and Volunteers in&#13;
Action Committee of All Soul’s Unitarian&#13;
Church as wall as others.&#13;
Soulforce Workshop&#13;
Saturday, June 3rd&#13;
A SoulforceWorkshop led by Rev. Md&#13;
White will be held at the Charles Norman&#13;
Studio at the Performing Arts Center at 2&#13;
pro. Rev. White and his partner, Gary&#13;
Nixon, will provide training in the principles&#13;
of M.K. Gandhi and Martin Luther&#13;
King, Jr. as part of the non-violence justice&#13;
movement. The workshop will last&#13;
until 5 p.m. Admissionis free.&#13;
TOHR Follies 2000&#13;
Saturday, June 3rd&#13;
¯he bawdy humor and sentimental&#13;
songs of theTOHRFollies returns at 8 pm&#13;
at the Doenges Theatre, PAC. Join a host&#13;
of performers and singers celebrate your&#13;
favorite show tunes from a "100 years of&#13;
Broadway." Elaborate productions from&#13;
the timeless works of Rodgers &amp;&#13;
Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerome&#13;
Kern, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Charlie&#13;
Smalls will entertain you. A Reception&#13;
will follow in the Charles Norman Studio&#13;
with catering provided by Curt &amp; Marj’ s.&#13;
Admission is $15 each. Tickets will be&#13;
sold through the Performing Arts Center&#13;
Ticket Office beginning around May 3rd.&#13;
Call the PAC for ticket information at&#13;
596.7111 .or 800.364.7111 or buy your&#13;
tickets online at www.tulsapac.com.&#13;
Entertainers: Sedackeiry Taylor&#13;
Alexander, Johnny Cronin, Domoniqne&#13;
Daniels, Veronica De,core, Vivian&#13;
MINI-MOVIE FESTIVAL&#13;
Thursday, June 8th&#13;
AMini-Movie Festival will run throughout&#13;
the day on a 60" screen at the Tulsa&#13;
Gay Community Services Center. The&#13;
Community Center is located on the corner&#13;
of 38th and Peoria (above Boulevards).&#13;
Popcorn and refreshments will be&#13;
available. Admission is free. Schedule:&#13;
1:00 pro, Lilies&#13;
3:00 pm, Beautiful Thing&#13;
5:00 pm, It’ s In The Water&#13;
7:00 pro, Broadway Damage&#13;
9:00 pm, Everything Relative&#13;
Black Tie Benefit&#13;
Friday, June 9th&#13;
TOHR offers the opportunity to meet&#13;
Margarethe Cammermeyer and Greg&#13;
Louganis at a VIP Reception at7pmin the&#13;
Grille Room at The Summit Club on the&#13;
31 st floor. The Summi t Club is located in&#13;
the Bank of America Building at 15 West&#13;
6th Street. Free parking available in the&#13;
building. Admission is $50. An Open&#13;
Reception and Silent Auction will begin&#13;
at 7 pm at The Summit Club on the 31st&#13;
floor. All proceeds will benefit TOHR’ s&#13;
fight for GLBT equality in this region.&#13;
The Benefit Dinner begins at 8 pm at&#13;
The Summit Club on the 30th floor. Guest&#13;
speakers are Margarethe Cammermeyer&#13;
and Greg Louganis. Please joinTOHR in&#13;
presenting its wall-deserved "Community&#13;
Hero" awards to three high school&#13;
students who have shown extraordinary&#13;
courage in dealing with their sexuality:&#13;
Will Allen, Emily Sisemore, and Matthew&#13;
Holloway. An interpreter for the&#13;
deaf will be provided.&#13;
Tickets are available for the VIP Reception&#13;
and the Benefit Dinner by "calling&#13;
743.4297, or by mailing ticket requests to&#13;
TOHR, P.O. Box 2687, Tulsa, OK74101,&#13;
or by dropping by the Center on the corner&#13;
of38th and Peoria between 6 pm and 9 pm&#13;
Sundays through Friday and Noon to 9&#13;
pm on Saturday.&#13;
Millennium Pride Parade&#13;
Saturday, June 10th&#13;
The Millennium Pride Parade will beffin&#13;
at 11 am at the Tulsa Gay Community&#13;
Services Center at 38th and Peoria. Grethe&#13;
Cammermeyer and Greg Louganis will&#13;
serve as Co-Grand Marshals. Organizers&#13;
claim it will be bigger and more colorful&#13;
than before. The Parade will follow the&#13;
same route as last year from the Center to&#13;
Veteran’ S Park at 18tk and Main.&#13;
Deveroe ::.Fontaine, Green ~Country Drop-offpoints are set along the Parade&#13;
~Oogg,e.rs, DanHale, Miitthew Holloway, Routethis year. Buses!shuttles will begin&#13;
~H~’l.~a’..~s Horribles, KriS Kohl~.CeCe.. ~ ~mn’mg at 8!30 a;m, Please park your&#13;
¯~roi,x,~taRichards,Tabith9Tayl0r,--: veliid~ at Veteran s Park and catch ~e&#13;
T~aT Neill, ’Victoria Turelie,:R~becea . bu~ofShtittleonthenorthsideofVeteran s&#13;
U.ngermah,.ahd Komona Wannaliiya, -.’Park. --’There is no charge to ride the bus/&#13;
All events tke!d at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center are fundedin part b~r a grant-from&#13;
the Tulsa Performing Arts Center Trnst.&#13;
uNIi"ED - An Art Exhibit&#13;
Tuesday, June 6th&#13;
An Art Exhibit entitled "United" will&#13;
have an opening reception at the Recep-&#13;
!ion Hall of All Soul’ s Unitarian Church&#13;
beginning at 6 pm. Wine and soft drinks&#13;
~vill be available. Hors d’ oeurves will be&#13;
fPrereO.VAideldl bSyouTlsWUCnaittaerriinang.CAhdumrcihssiios nloiscated&#13;
at 2952 South Peoria.&#13;
Artists: Otto Decker, John Duvall, Jody&#13;
Ellison, Dana Gilpin, P.S. Gordon David&#13;
Halpern, Isaac Harper, Ken Johnston,&#13;
Elizabeth Joyner, Kraig Kallenberger, C.&#13;
LynnMallett, KathleenPendergrass, Mary&#13;
Schepers; Kelley Vandiver, David&#13;
Vamecky &amp; others.&#13;
shu..tt!e.&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
Saturday, June 10th&#13;
The Millennium Pride Festival (formerly&#13;
the Picnic) will begin at 11 am at&#13;
Veteran’s Park. There will be dose to&#13;
fifty booths, as well as food vendors, beer&#13;
and soft drinks, and lots of activities.&#13;
Margarethe Cammermeyer and Greg&#13;
Louganis will give the opening remarks.&#13;
TOHR’ s "Community Hero" awards will&#13;
be given to three courageous local teenagers:&#13;
Will Alien, Matthew Holloway, and&#13;
Emily Sisemore. Entertainment go on all&#13;
afternoon and into the evening. A sixteenteam&#13;
volleyball tournament will run&#13;
throughout the day on three volleyball&#13;
courts. There is also a Celebrity Dunk&#13;
Tank with Audra Sommers, Dyke Divine&#13;
and David from gay.tulsa.org, Tom Neal&#13;
ofTulsa Family News, Marty Newmanof&#13;
the Human Rights Campaign, and more.&#13;
by James Christjohn ~ ¯&#13;
I’m not sure which is the greater trag- "&#13;
edy: the sinking of the ship and its aftermath&#13;
- or the creation and execution of "&#13;
this musical. Don’t get me wrong, the "&#13;
performances were OK, for the most part,&#13;
some were excellent, and there were afew&#13;
songs thatmade the show somewhatworth&#13;
the time it took to watch it. But it was a&#13;
remarkable example of how easy it is to&#13;
get Tony Awards these days.&#13;
At the time this disaster (the musical)&#13;
struck, it was the only original American&#13;
musical offering on Broadway. Everything&#13;
else was Lloyd Webber (i.e., English)&#13;
or French. So, to get a Tony, you&#13;
need to: 1. merely be American; 2. write a&#13;
musical: 3. base it on something historical,&#13;
but only superficially. Take known&#13;
names and make up cartoonish characters&#13;
to go with them; 5. even if what you write&#13;
is unfocused and mediocre, if there are no&#13;
other Americans writing musicals, you’ll&#13;
get a Tony.&#13;
If you’ re wanting a mildly entertaining&#13;
evening with some really bad staging,&#13;
scenery, and costumes that dwarf the set,&#13;
and NO historical accuracy (other than&#13;
the fact_the ship sank), by all means waste&#13;
your money.&#13;
The show itself is historically inaccurate&#13;
to the point of sheer ridiculousness.&#13;
That wouldn’ t be such a peeve with me if&#13;
the marketing weren’ t hyping it as being&#13;
historically accurate, claiming the "story&#13;
is told truthfully" and that "historical accuracy&#13;
of Titanic (the musical) makes it&#13;
an ideal show for parents to share with&#13;
school age children." Only if the parents&#13;
wish to point out how inaccurate the marketing&#13;
can be and musicals hyped as historically&#13;
accurate aren’ t. And it wouldn’ t&#13;
be so bad if the actual stories - as told in&#13;
the transcripts of the inquiries, easily come&#13;
by in paperback form - were as dramatic&#13;
as you can get. The), didn’ t need to ~nake&#13;
up half of what the,’,’ did.&#13;
Thorn Sesma, who portrays Thomas&#13;
Andrews, the Titanic’s Designer, sang&#13;
like he had a mouthful of marbles. He&#13;
seemed to have a speech impediment,&#13;
making it hard to understand what he was&#13;
saying. And youknow, if you’ re on stage,&#13;
evenifyouaremic’ d,DON’TMUMBLE.&#13;
This was.,rampant during the evening....&#13;
One man, whose Iin~s throdghout&#13;
song ~ere "Not a ibit not .a aide&#13;
¯ repeated ad.~auseum, s~,t~a,.d..ed~!jke"Noti!’:&#13;
: bitch, not a,iittl~ bitch. ~ I ldd.you noti..&#13;
Marcus ~:Ch.a,it, who" played, stoker ."&#13;
Fredefiek.~.~tt,. ~d"a ,:bi~athless fali&#13;
setto q0altty-that .s~ded:lik¢ .an&#13;
ment ~betw.’.,e~n MiChael ~Ct~w.ford,aniti.~&#13;
Andy Gibb. Even though he Was nile d tO&#13;
the hilt (as all were), y.oo, coul~l understand&#13;
him at times, due to his breathless&#13;
"Phantom of the Opera/Michael&#13;
Crawford’~ style of singing. His vibrato&#13;
was annoying as well, distracting from&#13;
one of the most powerful songs in the&#13;
show. When he whispers, you can’ t hear&#13;
him, when he belts, he reveals a glorious&#13;
voice, a wonderful tenor.&#13;
Timothy A. Fitzgerald, as Fleet, the&#13;
lookout spotting the iceberg, has the most&#13;
wonderful voice, perfect for the song "No&#13;
Moon", arguably the best song in the&#13;
show, and the most haunting. Lyrically,&#13;
it’s one of the better moments, and&#13;
Fitzgeraldhandles it withgrace andbeauty,&#13;
which he has plenty of in terms of stage&#13;
presence. Pity the authors did away with&#13;
the other lookout (one of those little inaccuracies);&#13;
"No Moon" would have been&#13;
awesome as a duet.&#13;
The standout performances were the&#13;
three Kates, immigrants in steerage revealing&#13;
their dreams of a new life&#13;
America. Meiissa Bell, Kristi Barber,&#13;
Kate Jetmore were excellent in the"&#13;
gest roles in the play. They had the&#13;
successful song in the show in term&#13;
revealing character and furtheriv&#13;
story, revealing the hopes and dre:&#13;
the immigrants of the time.&#13;
TomGamblin, in my opinion the su c,&#13;
gest male actor, was an excdlent foil and&#13;
future husband as Jim Farrell, who Kate&#13;
Murphy decides will be her husband. It is&#13;
their story which is the most effective in a&#13;
show that tries to tell the story from too&#13;
many perspectives. It was their characters&#13;
I actually cared for, and it was their moments&#13;
that worked in an otherwise dismal&#13;
script.&#13;
Theragtime song,"Autumn," and afew&#13;
other songs were memorable for their&#13;
melodies. That’ s about all that can be said&#13;
for them. The book, well, I say keep a&#13;
couple of lines that were humorous, and&#13;
start over. I was disappointed. It seemed&#13;
like an inventive premise, and one which&#13;
could havemade history entertaining. The&#13;
staging was weak, particularl y when the&#13;
iceberg was sighted by the one lookout.&#13;
The set did tilt at the end (like we’ ve never&#13;
seen that before), but the set was mosdy&#13;
made up of very inaccurately drawn and&#13;
painted drops that looked like something&#13;
out of a high school production. After&#13;
Jekyll and Hyde’s detailed lab, Beauty&#13;
and the Beast’s castles and villages,&#13;
Titanic’ s drop-heavy scenery was a bit of&#13;
a letdown.&#13;
On Broadway, the show had a three&#13;
levd set, making several of the numbers&#13;
quite different. Here we were treated to&#13;
awkwardly stage numbers, wlfich basically&#13;
left the cast walking in circles representing&#13;
different levels and areas of the&#13;
ship, which ended up quite muddled ~n&#13;
terms of telling who was where on the&#13;
ship. At one point, as characters were&#13;
stepping in and out and around, it became&#13;
quite ridiculous. The tableau, which was&#13;
originally to have shown the ship striking&#13;
the iceberg, was nothing more than a very&#13;
small model of the ship, withlights, pulled&#13;
across the stage - no ice in sight. The&#13;
model boat, lit up :with Chxistmas lights,&#13;
being pulled across the stage was quite&#13;
humorous. And the promisedcollision&#13;
tableau, hyped beforetheshow opened on&#13;
Broadway, is still missing. . .&#13;
I really liked the cheesy and totally&#13;
hilarious flame effect of the boiler room&#13;
furnaces. This little .bit of very Obvious&#13;
whitedothbeing blownupwards by afan,&#13;
not even dose to the scale of what the&#13;
flames in those boilers must have been&#13;
like. Now I’m quite willing to suspend&#13;
disbelief, but this went far beyond what&#13;
could be expected. It looked like these big&#13;
burly men were shoveling coal onto bic&#13;
lighters. Iwas rolling withlaughter. Yeston&#13;
also says "themusic is the scenery." Well,&#13;
ithas to be, since apparently they couldn’ t&#13;
afford paint or artists from the look of it.&#13;
The drops seemed to come in at the wrong&#13;
scenes, particularly in the opening. I understand&#13;
theatre is representational by&#13;
nature, but here we’ re dealing with a very&#13;
famous boat.&#13;
The problem with the show is that it&#13;
tries to tell too many stories, and because&#13;
of that, it’ s hard to really care about any of&#13;
the characters, who are portrayed as caricatures&#13;
anyway. At the end, youjust don’ t&#13;
care. OK, the set rises at one end on&#13;
hydraulics, see Titanic, p. 8&#13;
by Lamont ]~indstrom, Ph.D.&#13;
Vexillology. There’s an arcane word "&#13;
for you. It means the "study of flags." :&#13;
Thousands of rainbow flags are soon to ¯&#13;
wave as we enter the season&#13;
of Gay Pride celebration.&#13;
Gay flags, like Gay&#13;
Pride, are fairly recent inventions.&#13;
Gilbert Baker&#13;
sewed up the first rainbow&#13;
flag for the 1978 Gay Freedom&#13;
Celebration in San&#13;
Francisco.&#13;
Over the past two decades,&#13;
Freedom has made_&#13;
way for Pride and the rainbow&#13;
flag has lost some&#13;
stripes. Baker’s original&#13;
creationboasted~eight colors,&#13;
each of which represented&#13;
a fine ideal: orange&#13;
is healing; yellow the sun;&#13;
green is nature and blue&#13;
art: indigomeansharmony&#13;
while violet stands for&#13;
spirit: redis life and, last&#13;
butnotleast,pink symbol-&#13;
.1zes sex.&#13;
Pink went first. A company&#13;
Baker approached to&#13;
produce his flag commerdally&#13;
couldn’t locate any&#13;
pink nylon.&#13;
And the next year, when the San Francisco&#13;
parade committee adopted the flag&#13;
as a symbol, symmetry required yet another&#13;
reduction. The parade decorator demanded&#13;
that the route feature three colors&#13;
on the left and another three colors on the&#13;
right. Indigo disappeared. In its short lifetime,&#13;
the rainbow flag has lost both sex&#13;
and harmon.y. Something of a .parable,&#13;
perhaps, of modem Gay life.&#13;
Archaeologists have dug up flag-like&#13;
symbols from civilizations in both Old&#13;
World and New. Humans, from our beginmngs,&#13;
have imagined a variety of symbolic&#13;
objects to represent social groups.&#13;
Anthropologists call a symbol that stands&#13;
for a group a "totem."&#13;
Today’ s flag clearly derives from these&#13;
original totems..In many societies, animals&#13;
are the preeminent totemic figure,&#13;
andanimal totems surviveinto thepresent.&#13;
Small town businesspersons divide up&#13;
into coteries of Elks, Lions, and Moose.&#13;
Andthink ofthe Britishlion, orthe American&#13;
eagle, or the Canadian loon, or the&#13;
California bear. And don’ t forget the Gay&#13;
bear. These totems decorate our flags and&#13;
our money.&#13;
A variety of things besides animals&#13;
symbolize groups. The rainbow is an archetypal&#13;
totem that we share with Austra=&#13;
lianAboriginal bands amongvarious other&#13;
peoples around the world..Rainbows are&#13;
syi~b01ic~dl~ p~tentl~0~ in nature and in&#13;
a number of religious traditions. Some&#13;
folks complain about aGay appropriation&#13;
of the_rainbow., tote.m~ just ~as some old&#13;
ftohgeieW~?ogrdri.p~ea~ythtohtmthee~y :’~mnerroy io6rfilgiveerluys,.,’e&#13;
othdS,~i~, hav~ ebbed rainbows ineluding&#13;
Jesse Jackson’s coalition, the&#13;
Uuivei~ity 6f Hawai~i’s football team,&#13;
and the US Army’ s 42nd Division. I acquired&#13;
one of my rainbow flags from an&#13;
innocent straight friend who bought it&#13;
planning to display his.concerns for the&#13;
environment.&#13;
~/tere is no end of social and psycho-&#13;
- logical theory that attempts to explain&#13;
why we dream up totems to represent our&#13;
groups. A century ago, the pioneer soci-&#13;
Because flags stand&#13;
for group, Gays had&#13;
no need for a flag&#13;
until we conceived of&#13;
ourselves ~1~ ~t&#13;
eolleetlve --or a&#13;
¯ eommumty as&#13;
some of us llke to say.&#13;
Baker’s needlework&#13;
in 1978 signified&#13;
the transformation&#13;
of homosexuality&#13;
from a psyckologleal&#13;
condition to a&#13;
political identity.&#13;
ologist Emile Durkheim remarked that&#13;
totems are sacred just because they stand&#13;
for the group. Our human societies exist&#13;
before any one of us is born, and they will&#13;
continue after we die. Society,&#13;
thus, is "supernatural."&#13;
We make into a god&#13;
what has shaped us and&#13;
what sustains us as individuals.&#13;
But it’s hard to&#13;
grasp concepts so abstract.&#13;
Instead, wefocus our feelings&#13;
and .affiliations upon&#13;
the totem - the sacred being&#13;
whosematerial formis&#13;
the flag.&#13;
We are good at creating&#13;
solidarities - only human&#13;
groups_ often define&#13;
themselves largely by opposing&#13;
themselves to some&#13;
other. We pledge allegiance&#13;
tO ourown totem as&#13;
a symbol ofourselves. And&#13;
we express distaste for our&#13;
enemies by despoiling&#13;
their flags, as Palestiuians,&#13;
Israelis, and members of&#13;
various high school bands&#13;
are wont to do.&#13;
It is pretty clear&#13;
Durkheim was right about&#13;
that sacredness. We have&#13;
¯ fervent Congressmen in Washington each&#13;
¯ year in a frenzy to outlaw sinful desecra-&#13;
¯ tions of the American flag.&#13;
¯ Perversely, some South Caroliniansjus-&#13;
¯ tifyofficial display oftherebel Confeder- ¯&#13;
ate flag as mere historical commemora-&#13;
¯ tion. But everyone knows that echoes of&#13;
¯ their antebellum religion are also at work ¯&#13;
here.&#13;
Because flags stand for group, Gays&#13;
¯ had no need for a flag until we conceiv~l ¯&#13;
of ourselves as a collective - or a "com-&#13;
" mlmity" as some of us like to say. Baker’ s&#13;
; needlework in 1978 signified the trans-&#13;
. formation of homosexuality from a psychological&#13;
condition to a political iden-&#13;
Since this time, we have put into play&#13;
various other symbols, including pink and&#13;
black triangles borrowedfrom Nazi prison&#13;
wear, theLambdacharacterfrom the Greek&#13;
alphabet, and the red ribbon.&#13;
Of these, the rainbow stretches the farthest.&#13;
I have seen rainbow flags unfurled&#13;
in Japan, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Den-.&#13;
mark, andbeyond. Theflag’ s global spread&#13;
testifies to the rise of a transnational gay&#13;
community. Think of this as flags parade&#13;
b~this summer. Long may the rainbows&#13;
wave on our totem poles.&#13;
Lament Lindstrom teaches anthropology&#13;
at the University oJ Tulsa.&#13;
The protesters wre joined by the Rev.&#13;
Bishop C. Joseph Sprague from No. Illinois.&#13;
Local architect and activist Sue&#13;
Knause noted that the police were "fabulous"&#13;
with some officers stopping to have&#13;
their photos taken with some of the more&#13;
famous arrestees. And their jddge, she&#13;
adds, said, "keep up the good work -I&#13;
stand with you today."&#13;
While the protests did not change the&#13;
policies, organizers have promised that&#13;
1,000 arrestees at the next conference. A&#13;
principal orgamzer of this action was&#13;
Tulsan Karen Weldon. Info. contact&#13;
Soulforce at the Gay Community Center.&#13;
to benefit Saint Joseph Residence +&#13;
Regional AIDS Interfaith Network&#13;
Saturday, June 3rd, 10-5, +_ Sunday, June 4th, 1-5&#13;
$10 donation at the door or in advance.&#13;
David Daniel, 1603 S. Carson&#13;
Wiley Parsons, 1601 S. Carson&#13;
Monty + Jane Butts, 240 E. Woodward Blvd.&#13;
Brett + Maricarolyn Swab, 2112 So Norfolk Ave..&#13;
Dr. Robert &amp; Dena Hudson, 2707 S. Rockford Rd.&#13;
Tickets for this tour may be obtained at each home.&#13;
For more information; call Charles Faudree, Inc: at 747-9706.&#13;
METROPOLITAN TULSA&#13;
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE&#13;
salutes&#13;
Humanity Unites for&#13;
Human Ri$lhts&#13;
Millennium Pride 2000&#13;
and&#13;
honors Tulsa’s&#13;
Lesbian and Gay .’.,.&#13;
Chamber of Commerce members&#13;
for their leadership on&#13;
business, civil rights and health issues&#13;
in the Tulsa community.,&#13;
To join MTCC, call 585-1201.&#13;
IGTA member&#13;
Call 341.6866&#13;
]. X,otuerSr onrmaot ,i,no. on maol ,on.&#13;
Massage Therapy Services&#13;
Edgar O. Cruz, L.M.T.&#13;
Pager: 918-889-5255&#13;
Voice Mail: 918-697-9282&#13;
Lic. #C4133&#13;
CountryClub Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
David Kauskey&#13;
3310 E, 51st, 747-0236, Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pm&#13;
Tulsa’s only&#13;
body-piercing&#13;
Poweful&#13;
Images:&#13;
portrayals of&#13;
Native America&#13;
GilcreaseMuseum&#13;
1400 Gilcrease Museum Road&#13;
5 9 6 2 7 0 0&#13;
and as many as 15 in larger communities&#13;
- sit as the board of civil authority to&#13;
certify yoter checklists or to hear tax appeals.&#13;
They also have the option of officiating&#13;
atweddingceremonies. Beginning July 1,&#13;
they’ll also have the authority to officiate&#13;
at civil unions. The one catch is if they do&#13;
one, they’ 11 have to doboth. That’ s enough&#13;
to prompt some justices to quit the marriage&#13;
business because they oppose the&#13;
civil unions law.&#13;
Experts, such as lawyer and former&#13;
Deputy Secretary of State Paul Gillies,&#13;
who have been guiding justices through&#13;
thenew responsibilities, say that’ s fine, so&#13;
long as they don’t discriminate. Under&#13;
Vermont’s non-discrimination laws, if&#13;
justices perform weddings for heterosexual&#13;
couples, they may not refuse to&#13;
perform civil unions ceremonies just because&#13;
those couples are homosexuals.&#13;
Some justices have put out the word&#13;
that they’re happy to officiate at civil&#13;
unions ceremonies. "I feel they deserve&#13;
it," said Huntington justice Don Dresser,&#13;
who has officiated at two weddings. "It’ s&#13;
thelaw and I’mcomfortable with it. I have&#13;
a lot of Gay friends... I’m going to treat&#13;
everyone the same."&#13;
Some Gays and Lesbians who happen&#13;
to be justices say they’re excited that&#13;
they’ll be able to officiate at civil unions&#13;
ceremonies. ’Tmexcited. I’mso thrilled,"&#13;
Hurlie said. "This is really an honor to&#13;
certify civil unions for folks."&#13;
So, now, what’ s left is to determinejust&#13;
what ceremonies should be. The short&#13;
answer is that whatever is done for a&#13;
Wedding would work for a civil union.&#13;
"’The big question was, "What do .you sa.y&#13;
at the end?’ ’I hereby .. what?’ "" Gillies&#13;
said. "We suggested:’ I hereby certify this&#13;
civil union.’"&#13;
Markowitz said her office did not want&#13;
to dictate the words, but she recognized&#13;
they would carry emotional weight. "The&#13;
justice has to say sonaething that shows&#13;
the imprimatur of the state is making the&#13;
union official, whether it’ s a marriage or&#13;
a civil union," Markowitz said. "The most&#13;
straightforward, kind of sticking to the&#13;
law pronouncement would be: ’I now&#13;
certify your civil union.’ Really, that’s&#13;
what a person is doing."&#13;
There are some traditions to follow,&#13;
though. There have beena few religious&#13;
faiths, for example, who bless same-sex&#13;
relationships. The Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Society is one. The Rev. Brendan Hadash&#13;
of the St. Johnsbury Unitarian church, for&#13;
example, estimates he’ s performed probably&#13;
20 opposite-sex marriages and about&#13;
an equal number of same-sex commitment&#13;
ceremonies over the years.&#13;
He’ s developed a series of phrases and&#13;
uses the one that the couple finds most&#13;
comfortable. "I usually pronounce that&#13;
use: "I recognizeyouas spirituallyunited,"&#13;
or "You are now joined as wife and wife,&#13;
which I find a little odd. Others are "You&#13;
arejoined as spouses, partuers, iovers~" or&#13;
"I declare that you are now.united inlove,&#13;
that you are duly wed."&#13;
With the civil unions law, though, he’ 11&#13;
be adding one phrase to his blessings. "At&#13;
the end of the service I used to always&#13;
make a point of saying, ’By the power&#13;
vested in me by my denomination, I declare&#13;
you...’ "Hadash said. "Now I can&#13;
say ’by.the power vested in me by the&#13;
church - and the state.’ "&#13;
It also culled data from two other academic&#13;
studies that studied the Gay and&#13;
Lesbian population: the National Health&#13;
and Social Life Survey and the General&#13;
Social Survey.&#13;
Starting with the 1990 C~nsus, respondents&#13;
living with a person of the same sex&#13;
had the option ofchecking off "unmarried&#13;
partner" in the section that asks for the&#13;
relationship between people. Other options&#13;
included "husband/wife," "roomer/&#13;
boarder," "housemate/roommate" or&#13;
"other nonrelative."&#13;
The study said that among men aged&#13;
25-34 living with amale parmer, 29% had&#13;
at least a college degree, and 13% a graduate&#13;
degree, compared with 13% and 4%&#13;
for men with female parmers.&#13;
However, within the same age group,&#13;
men with a college degree and a female&#13;
partner had mean earnings of $29,162 a&#13;
year, compared with $28,618 for samesex&#13;
unmarried partnered men with a college&#13;
degree. For those with graduate de-&#13;
~4ees, the discrepancy grew to nearly&#13;
,000 - $36,072 to $32,465.&#13;
Of men aged 35-44 with unmarried&#13;
partners of the same sex, 32% graduated&#13;
from college, and 24% had a graduate&#13;
degree, compared with 13% and 7% for&#13;
males with a female partner.&#13;
Within the same age bracket, males&#13;
with college degrees and same-sex partners&#13;
had mean earnings of $36,054 per&#13;
year, compared with $38,629 for those&#13;
with female partners.&#13;
The same discrepancies were not found&#13;
among Lesbians, Sanders said. For instance,&#13;
women aged 35-44 with college&#13;
degrees and with a same-sex partner had&#13;
mean earmngs of $28,387, while those&#13;
with a male partner had mean earnings of&#13;
$28,734; of those with graduate degrees&#13;
in the same age range, the figures were&#13;
$34,427 for women with same-sex partners,&#13;
and $34,295 for those with male&#13;
partners.&#13;
Sanders shied away from saying it was&#13;
definitive proof of discrimination against&#13;
Gays. He instead suggested one reason&#13;
may be that Gays tend to enter more fields&#13;
that offer lower salaries. The study also&#13;
found that 22% of Lesbian couples living&#13;
together have children, compared to 5%&#13;
of Gay couples living together. Sanders&#13;
said that may show that Gay couples have&#13;
less pressure to get higher-paying jobs.&#13;
"This is the tip of the iceberg in terms of&#13;
finding out who the Gay and Lesbian&#13;
community is," said PaulaEttelbrick, family&#13;
policy director ofthe National Gay and&#13;
LesbianTaskForce. "Whatthey also point&#13;
out it is the clear problem ofhow to define&#13;
what it is to be Gay or Lesbian."&#13;
OK Spoke Club&#13;
TheOK Spoke Club is beginning its rides&#13;
again. A long ride (20 miles plus) will&#13;
begin, atZiegler Park at 7:30am’on June&#13;
3rd &amp; 24th. Length and destination to be&#13;
determined at the ride. Water and helmet&#13;
". are required.&#13;
¯ A short ride(5 miles) along the Katy&#13;
’: Bicydep~in Saii.d)SiJfings will beginat&#13;
. 6:30pmonJuneT~atid21s’t. Wateriand&#13;
¯ helmet~ate ~tr0ngly r~mmelided...: ¯ :&#13;
Af6:30plh, a short fide will begin at the&#13;
Pride Cent~L 3749 S. Peoria, rea~ parking&#13;
¯&#13;
lotonJune24th. Waterandhelmetstrongly&#13;
¯ recommended.&#13;
¯ Info: POB 9165, Tulsa, Ok 74157,&#13;
¯ email: Okiebicycle@prodigy.net&#13;
] www.geocities.com/westhollywood/pa-&#13;
¯ rade/3301&#13;
Humanity Unites&#13;
for Human R lhts&#13;
Diversit Celebration 2000&#13;
Grand Marshalls for the Millennium Pride Parade&#13;
Dr. Grethe Cammermever&#13;
Oistin~luished Veteran of the United States Armed Forces&#13;
Gre~! Lou~lanis&#13;
US O!~mpie Champion&#13;
Pride Week Events&#13;
Interfaith Worship Service&#13;
Performing Arts Center, Williams Theatre&#13;
Speaker: the Reverend Dr. Mel White&#13;
Friday, June 2, from 7pro (free)&#13;
Interfaith Soulforce Workshop&#13;
Performing Arts Center, Norman Studio&#13;
Led by the Reverend Dr. Mel White&#13;
Saturday, June 8, 2 - 5pro (free)&#13;
Humanity Unites For Human Rights&#13;
Black Tie Optional Dinner&#13;
Speakers:&#13;
Greg Louganis and Grethe Cammermeyer&#13;
Summit Club, 7pro reception, Bpm dinner&#13;
Friday, June 9th, $75 person&#13;
Benefiting Tulsa Oklahomans for Human&#13;
Rights, the parent organization of the&#13;
Gay Community Center&#13;
TOHR Follies: 1OO Years of Broadway&#13;
Performing Arts Center, Ooenges Theatre&#13;
Saturday, June 8, 8pm, $15&#13;
United Art Exhibit, Opening Reception&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 So. Peoria&#13;
Tuesday, June 6, 6 - 8pro&#13;
Millennium Parade 2000&#13;
Saturday, JunelQ, llam&#13;
From the Gay Community Center to&#13;
Veterans Park at 18th and Boulder&#13;
Pride Festival, Veterans Park, llam - 8pro&#13;
Free shuttle from Veterans Park to Parade.&#13;
Mini-Film Festival&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
Thursday, June 8, z~ - till it’s over...&#13;
For more information about these events,&#13;
call 7~8-~297 (Gays).</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, June 2000; Volume 7, Issue 6</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>James Christjohn&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers</text>
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              <text>Bomber of London&#13;
Gay Pub Pleads Guilty&#13;
LONDON (AP) - A man accused of setting off~in~bs&#13;
i Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulaans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
: Tulsa’s Largest Circulation CommunityPaperAvailable In More Than 75 City Locations&#13;
Louganis to Lead Pride 2000&#13;
¯ Olympic Champion Will Be Parade Grand&#13;
¯ Marsha|l and Black Tie Dinner Speaker&#13;
The Rev. Mel Whiteto Begin Week’s Events&#13;
TULSA - Some Gay community observers might have thought Rights, the parent&#13;
apparently targetedatracial minorities andGays pleaded "&#13;
guilty to three counts of manslaughter late in February "&#13;
and admitted causing three explosions thatinjuredmore&#13;
than a hundred people. David Copeland, 23, admitted "&#13;
planting the bomb that killed three people on April 30,- "&#13;
at the Admiral Duncan, a Gay pub in central London. "&#13;
Prosecutors did not immediately accept the ¯&#13;
manslaughter pleas, and a further hearing was set for "&#13;
sometime in March. Copeland also admitted ¯&#13;
responsibility for explosions .on April 17 in Brixton, a :&#13;
south London neighborhood with a large black ¯&#13;
population; and April 24in Brick Lane, an east London "&#13;
neighborhood with a large Banglades.~ population. "&#13;
NY State’s 1st Gay Mayor "&#13;
PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (AP)-. Dan Stewart, New&#13;
York’s first openly Gay mayor, is intimately acquainted ."&#13;
with Gay-bashing bigots..AYter all he used to beone.."&#13;
"When I was in high school, two boys went to court over .&#13;
the right to go to the prom together," Stewart said. "I ¯&#13;
spoke out loudly against them on TV, on the steps of the&#13;
RhodeIsland Supreme Court. Imade amockery ofthem&#13;
- because I knew who I was, and I was scared ~to. death&#13;
people would find me out." ¯&#13;
Two decades later, Stewart has no such fears. He was "&#13;
open about his homosexuality when he ran for mayor of ¯&#13;
this lakeside city near the Canadian border last fall. "I&#13;
told the people,’Iam what ! am- Takeme or leaveme,"’ :&#13;
Stewart said."Itold them, ’Ifyouchooseto takeme, I’m "&#13;
going to do one hell of ajob for you. But if you choose ¯&#13;
not tO take me because I’m Gay, I understand. I used to :&#13;
be prejudiced too." :&#13;
Asittumedout, his sexualitywasn’tanissue. Perhaps ¯&#13;
it would have been, had hebronght a male partner to a :&#13;
political event during his,six years on the City Council. ¯&#13;
But Stewart keeps his personal life out of the public eye :&#13;
~- mostly 60 miles away in Montreal, where his partner ¯&#13;
lives. It also helped that his opponent, the five-term "&#13;
Democratieincumbent, was knOWn for supporting Gay ."&#13;
and Lesbian issues such as nondiscrimination statutes, ¯&#13;
and had long enjoyed the endorsement of Gay lobby ."&#13;
groups. "The.race was on community issues," Stewart "&#13;
said. "My opponent never used the words ’sexual ¯&#13;
orientation. ’" ¯&#13;
Buoyed by endorsements from Republican Gov. ¯&#13;
George Pataki and the city police union, the former Air °&#13;
Force sergeant and long-haul trucker won by a narrow ¯&#13;
margin, becoming one of five openly Gay city mayors ¯&#13;
in the country. "&#13;
In some ways, Stewart has taken more heat for being "&#13;
GOP than for being Gay. The Empire State Pride :&#13;
Agenda didn’t endorse him until the llth hour - and&#13;
then, he insisted that part of the Gay lobby group’s "&#13;
$1,000 campaign donation go to the Republican Party. :&#13;
"I always get thesame thing (from Gays) wherever I&#13;
go: How canyon be Gay and be a Repubhcan. What as&#13;
wrong with you?Are you insane?,’"- said Stewart, a tall, "&#13;
dapper man with an enthusiastic manner and a dimpled :&#13;
grin. "But there’s a change going on. In exit polls over ¯&#13;
the past 10 years, consistently ~a third of people who ¯&#13;
identified themselves as Gay have said they voted "&#13;
Republican." :&#13;
In a recent interview in his second-floor City Hall ¯&#13;
office, see Mayor, p. 7 "&#13;
that the annual pride festival organizers would be hard pressed to&#13;
top their accomplishments of 1999 withUS Congressman Barney&#13;
Frank, Democrat from Massachnsetts, serving as grand marshall&#13;
of Tulsa’s first Gay Pride Parade.&#13;
However, event organizers fromTulsa Oklahomans for Human&#13;
Rights, have, at the very least, matched the stature of last year’s&#13;
speaker with US Olympic champion, Greg Louganis, to se’ive as&#13;
Grand Mhrshall for the Millennium Pride Parade this June.&#13;
Louganis’ appearance will cap a week of Pride events which&#13;
will begin with aninterfaithworship service featuring the Reverend&#13;
Dr. MelWhite. White is known as an author, forhis autobiography,&#13;
"’Stranger at the Gate," and formerly as a ghostwriter for right&#13;
wing religious leaders like Jerry Falwell. White more recently&#13;
has been leading a social change organization, Soul Force,&#13;
modeled on the ideas of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mohatmas&#13;
Ghandi.&#13;
Like White, Louganis is also an anthor and an actor as wall as&#13;
an athlete. His autobiography, "Breaking the Surface" topped the&#13;
New York Times bestseller list, and as a lecturer, he has spoken&#13;
about his chall~nges with a difficult childhood, his struggles in&#13;
coming out and with dyslexia, his experience with domestic&#13;
violence and with being HIV positive.&#13;
Louganis wonhis first Olympicmedal, a silver, at age 16 in the&#13;
1976 Games. In 1984, at age 24, he won two gold medals, one for&#13;
the platform and one for the springboard - the first man in 56&#13;
years to accomplish this feat. In 1986, he again won awards the&#13;
same events in the World Championships, and then in 1988, won&#13;
double gold medals for diving in two consecutive Olympics.&#13;
Louganis will speak at a black fie optional dinner to be held at&#13;
the prestigious Summit Club on Friday, June 9th. Tickets for th,e,&#13;
event are $75/person and there will be a VIP reception at $50~&#13;
person. These events will benefit Tulsa Oklahomans for Human&#13;
: Vermont:Married or Partners?&#13;
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - Lawmakers debated last ~nonth&#13;
whether to limit aproposed domesticpartnership system to stonesex&#13;
couples or to allow opposite-sex and blood-relative couples&#13;
to qualify, also. There are some in the Legislature who believe&#13;
that broadening the proposal might make it more politically&#13;
palatable to a greaternumber ofpeople, improving its d~ances of&#13;
passing. But others argue that such a revision would diminish the&#13;
central aimofthelegislation beingdraftedby theHouse Judiciary&#13;
Committee: providing therights andprotections ofeivil marriage&#13;
to Gay and Lesbian couples.&#13;
As the Judiciary Committee prepares to finish its work on the&#13;
bill,that debate is coming into sharper relief. Members of the&#13;
committee faced the issue, along with the potential political&#13;
implications. "Iunderstand that there are people who see expanding&#13;
this ... enhances the attractiveness of the legislation," said&#13;
Committee Chairman Thomas Little, R-Shelburue. "’But I’m not&#13;
sure we have the time to expl.ore all that stuff." "I support that in&#13;
prineiple, but it’s a significant diversion from what we’ve been&#13;
working on," said Rep. Steve Hintgen, P-Burlington. "q hope it&#13;
doesn’t drive this to a halt." "ff you don’t do it you might drive&#13;
it to a halt," said Rep. Michael Vinton, D-Colchester.&#13;
In sum, that’s what the comunttee faces. In recognition of that,&#13;
Little has been trying to develop a companion to the domestic&#13;
partnership systemknown as reciprocal benefits, that falls short&#13;
of the marriage-like benefits that would be provided to Gay and&#13;
Lesbiancouples. Thereciprocal benefits,.however, might include&#13;
workers’ compensation benefits that could flow to a reciprocal&#13;
benefits partner, certain inheritance and real estate and other&#13;
property benefits.&#13;
Althouglino votes have been taken,noconsensus has developed&#13;
in the Judiciary Committee that opposite-sex couple should be&#13;
included in the domestic partnership system, which the panel has&#13;
taken to calling "civil domestic unions." There also has not been&#13;
a lot of discussion in the committee about permitting blood&#13;
relatives- such as two brothers, two sisters, a brother and a sister,&#13;
or a daughter and her elderly mother - to become domestic&#13;
partnerships.&#13;
¯ But such expansions have been discussed down th~hall in the&#13;
Ways and Means Committee, the tax-writing panel that will have&#13;
to review the tax implications of the bill Rep. Albert Perry, DRichford,&#13;
see Vermont, p. 5&#13;
orgamzation of the&#13;
Gay Community&#13;
Center and&#13;
Oklahoma’s oldest&#13;
Lesbian and Gay&#13;
non-religious&#13;
organization.&#13;
Organizers&#13;
anticipate that the Greg Lougams&#13;
parade will follow&#13;
the stone route as last year, beginning at the Ga~’&#13;
Community Center.at 37th and Peoria and ending.&#13;
at Veterans Park at 18th and Boulder. The parade&#13;
will begin at llam. The Pride Festival will also&#13;
begin at Veterans Park at 1 lain and will continue&#13;
till about 7 or 8pro, finishing off the week’s events.&#13;
TOI-IR organizers include Kerry Lewis as&#13;
chairperson of the overall effort, "Htunanity United&#13;
for Human Rights - Diversity Celebration 2000,"&#13;
Greg Gatewood,TOHR presidentandfestival chair.&#13;
Audra Sommers, parade chair, Lynn Moesteller,&#13;
sponsor chair, Mitchell Savage, media chair, Kris&#13;
Kohl, festival entertainment chair and Ned Bruha,&#13;
in charge of festival booths and beverages.&#13;
Other Pride events include a Soul Force workshop,&#13;
led by the Rev. Mel White, to be held in the&#13;
Performing Arts Center (PAC) LowerLevelTheatre&#13;
onJune3, Saturday,from 2-5pro (free). That evening&#13;
also at thePACDoenges Theatre,theTOHRFollies,&#13;
not seen for a number of years, will reprise, 100&#13;
Years of Broadway with tickets available through&#13;
the PAC. see Pride, p. 11&#13;
:&#13;
Gordmans recently invited diva Audra Sommers&#13;
to try shopping with them again after shefirst&#13;
receivedpoor treatment atthe Yale Ave. store.&#13;
Sommers praised the Corporate and store&#13;
managementfor their.responsiveness,&#13;
Gay Men’s Chorale to&#13;
¯ Hold Spring Concert&#13;
¯ TULSA- Council Oak Men’s Chorale will present&#13;
¯ two concerts on Friday and Saturday, April 7 &amp; 8&#13;
¯¯ at 8pm in the John Williams Theatre of Tulsa’s&#13;
¯ Performing Arts Center. The concerts, entitled&#13;
"’Harmonic Diversity" will feature music from&#13;
~ Broadway tunes, 5O’s &amp; 60’s pop songs, "sea&#13;
¯ chanteys," a Welsh lullaby, and a baroque piece.&#13;
-" The Green Country Cloggers will perform a cameo&#13;
¯ number.&#13;
: The Council Oak Men’s Chorale is a fellowship&#13;
of Gay men dedicated to musical excellence who&#13;
: seek to provide a source ofpride, unity and support&#13;
," and to present a positive image for themselves, the&#13;
¯ Gay community and to society, as a whole. The&#13;
¯ group is a chapter of the Tulsa-baSed Vocal Pride&#13;
Foundation, and a member of GALA: the Gay and&#13;
" Lesbian Association of Choruses.&#13;
&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Full Moon Cafe, 1525 E. 15th&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
*The Mix, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
*Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*The Storm, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’s, 21145. Memorial&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583~6666&#13;
749-4511&#13;
749-1563&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
83~ ~234&#13;
835-2376&#13;
585-3405&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584-1308&#13;
Tulsa,Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Advanced Wireless &amp; PCS, Digital Cellular&#13;
*Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Kent Balch &amp; Associates, Health &amp; Life Insurance&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 523 1 E. 41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*.Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807e S. Peoria&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
74%1508&#13;
743-1000&#13;
747-9506&#13;
250-5034&#13;
665-4580&#13;
712-1122&#13;
712-9955&#13;
494-2665&#13;
743-5272&#13;
746-0313&#13;
581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
622-0700&#13;
749-3620&#13;
58%2611&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838-8503&#13;
712-9379&#13;
592-0460&#13;
744-9595&#13;
610-0880&#13;
628-3709&#13;
808-8026&#13;
742-1460&#13;
459-9349&#13;
744-7440&#13;
745-1111&#13;
341-6866&#13;
712-2750&#13;
582-3018&#13;
747-0236&#13;
582-8460&#13;
599-8070&#13;
747-5466&#13;
585-1234&#13;
584-3112&#13;
663-5934&#13;
664-2951&#13;
838-7626&#13;
743-4297&#13;
747-5932&#13;
834-0617&#13;
,747-4746&#13;
’749-6301&#13;
260-7829&#13;
481-0558&#13;
835-5563&#13;
743- 1733&#13;
665-2222&#13;
592-0767&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th&#13;
*Devena’s Gallery, 13 Brady&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon 584-0337,&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main ""-&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E 55th H.&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp;financial planning&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 19 E. Brady&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Howers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2rid floor&#13;
Rainbowzon the River B+B, PUB 696, 74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-7921&#13;
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Fay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counsding&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, PUB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. PUB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center. 2207 E. 6 583-7815&#13;
*B/L!G/T Alliance, Univ. ofTulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th PI. &amp; Florence&#13;
*ChurchoftheRestorationUU, 1314N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*CommunityofHope United Methodist, 2545 S. Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*Ddaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, PUB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
*Free Spirit Women’s Center, call for location &amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, PUB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
PUB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
o-mail: TulsaNews@earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors: ~-&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche,&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom, Esther Rothblum, Mary Schepers&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1st of each month, the entire contents&#13;
of this publication are protected by US copyright 1998 by&#13;
Td~ /:~.,,.z~ N~, and may not be reproduced either in&#13;
wholeorin partwithout writtenpermissionfromthepublisher.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’s&#13;
sexual orientation. Correspondence is assumed to be for&#13;
publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property of T~~ ~:~ Ntau¢, Each reader&#13;
is entitled to 4 copies of each edition at distribution&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., PUB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
*HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
*Tulsa C.A:R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194&#13;
*Holland Hall _School, 5666 E. 81st 481-1111&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
*House of the H01y Spirit Minstries, 3210e So. Norwood&#13;
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437&#13;
*MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral H.. 748-3111&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. forWomen, PUB 14068,74159 365-5658&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), PUB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa&#13;
PFLAG, PUB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
*Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
*R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 584-2325&#13;
O’RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults&#13;
O’RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth&#13;
St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
St. Dtmstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140&#13;
*St. Jerome’s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
*TNAAPP (Native American men). Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
Tulsa Okla. forHuman Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
T.U.LS.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
*Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307 E. 38,74105 743-4297&#13;
UnityChurch ofChristianity,3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
*Borders Books&amp;Music, 3209NWExpressway 405-848-2667&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music. 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
TAHLEQUAH&#13;
*Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
*Tablequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900&#13;
*Green Country AIDS Coalition, PUB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001 N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
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Autumn Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
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MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
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Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
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White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U 134&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
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* is where you can lind TFN. Notall areGay-owned but all are Gay-friendly.&#13;
by Michael Kuchwara&#13;
DENVER (AP) -The audience is greeted&#13;
by a bare, black brick wall, a single light&#13;
and a row of wooden chairs and desks.&#13;
Later, a few video screens and film clips&#13;
are added.&#13;
¯ Still, nothing else is reallyneeded to tell&#13;
¯ the story of Matthew Shepard and the&#13;
effect his-murder had on the town-of&#13;
¯ Laramie, Wyo. It is a spartan, yet&#13;
¯ appropn,’,ate setting for "The Laramie&#13;
Project, astirring, emotional tale, almost&#13;
¯ epicinscaleas itswirls through thedetails&#13;
of this young gay man’s brutal death and&#13;
¯ how the residents ofLaramiedealtwithit.&#13;
The-play, which had its world premiere&#13;
¯ in February at the DenverTheater Center,&#13;
¯ presents a cavalcade of characters&#13;
¯ portrayedby eightactors from theTectonic&#13;
TheaterProject, aNewYork-based troupe.&#13;
¯ They even play themselves.&#13;
"TheLaramie Project," writtenby these&#13;
¯ actors as well as otherTectonicmembers&#13;
including founder Moises Kaufman, was&#13;
drawn from their interviews with more&#13;
than 200 people. Yet it is more than just&#13;
,docudrama. It is a story of feeling as well&#13;
¯&#13;
as fact. Each gets its fair share of stage&#13;
¯ time, grounding the evening in reality&#13;
¯ without sacrificing the emotional intensity&#13;
of people trying to deal with their hopes,&#13;
¯ fears and prejudices.&#13;
¯ What makes "The Laramie Project" so&#13;
¯ intriguing are its shades of gray. Nothing&#13;
is simple. There are no easy answers in&#13;
coming to terms with Shepard’s death.&#13;
¯ Kaufmanandctmpanypresenta variety&#13;
¯ of memorable portraits culled from their&#13;
taped interviews. There’s Reggie Fluty,&#13;
¯ thepolicewomanwhountied Shepardfrom&#13;
¯ the fence post. As vividly portrayed by&#13;
¯ Mercedes Herrero, Fluty is a vibrant&#13;
¯ woman, confronted with something so&#13;
¯ horrific that she says, at one point, "They&#13;
¯ show showed me a picture.., days later&#13;
I saw a picture of Matthew... I would&#13;
¯ have never recognized him."&#13;
¯ Equally unnerving are comments from&#13;
Rulon Stacey, spokesman at the hospital&#13;
where Shepard died. In Greg Pierotti’s&#13;
intense performance, Stacey breaks down,&#13;
¯ watclfingthecourageofShepard’sparents&#13;
¯ as they confront their son’s death. Pierotti&#13;
also gives weightandan emotional honesty&#13;
: to the commonsense statements from a&#13;
¯ priest, Father Roger, who decides to get&#13;
¯ involved in leading a vigil for Shepard.&#13;
What ties the townspeople together are&#13;
¯ their efforts to understand. As the doctor&#13;
¯ who first treated Shepard when he was&#13;
¯ broughtintoaLaramiehospital emergency&#13;
¯ room says,"This is something thatoffends&#13;
us. I used that word a little earlier and I&#13;
¯ think that’s a good word. It offends us!"&#13;
Stephen Belber excels at two of the&#13;
¯ showier roles in the play - particularly a&#13;
¯ tough-talking taxicab driver who&#13;
¯ epitomizes the "live and let live"&#13;
¯ .philosophy that threads its way through&#13;
." the speeches of many of the many of&#13;
¯ people interviewed.&#13;
¯ Right now, "The Laramie Project" is&#13;
¯ still undergoing changes. Thirty minutes&#13;
; were cut from the play after the .first&#13;
¯ preview. Even now at two hours and 45&#13;
minutes, it could use more of a trim.&#13;
: Shepard himself is not a character in&#13;
¯ "The Laramie Project," but his presence&#13;
¯ haunts the play. It hovers sweetly yet&#13;
sadly over the entire proceedings, as well&#13;
¯&#13;
as the town he loved so much.&#13;
That is only appropriate. As one of the&#13;
residents says at the end of the evening,&#13;
’¢I’he last thing Matthew Shepard saw on&#13;
¯ this Earth were the sparkling lights of&#13;
Laramie, Wyo."&#13;
Lesbian Survey Results&#13;
In the past two years, you may have seen an&#13;
amlouncement about a study on how "Lesbians and thei?&#13;
sisters are similar or different." This mmouncement&#13;
appeared in 200 Lesbian mad Gay/Lesbian periodicals&#13;
(including Tulsa Family News). It was also sent to 614&#13;
Lesbian/Gay religious orgamzations; 105 Lesbian bars:&#13;
54 women’s bookstores; 346 cmnpus Lesbian/Gay&#13;
Bisexual/Transgender groups; and 83 groups listed as&#13;
"’etlltlicimttlticul tural."&#13;
Tiffs research was conducted by Esther Rothblum, a&#13;
liprofessor&#13;
of psychology&#13;
at the University&#13;
of Ver-mont, who&#13;
studies Lesbi~m igsue~.&#13;
She was interested~in&#13;
how Lesbians mid their&#13;
heterosexual sisters&#13;
differ on demographic&#13;
factors.&#13;
For exanlple, manv&#13;
studies about Lesbimas&#13;
have found them to be&#13;
highly educated, not&#13;
very religi,ous, and&#13;
livi~’lg in l:u’ge cities.&#13;
Obviou_’~ly, this does&#13;
not describe all&#13;
Lcsbia~, but there&#13;
mav be reasons why&#13;
Lesbimls are differeut&#13;
flom women iu the&#13;
general U.S.&#13;
population.&#13;
.... eontrlbutes&#13;
to [Lesbian]&#13;
demoSraphle&#13;
factors?&#13;
¯ .. }-][ere are some&#13;
speeulatlons:&#13;
- Hi her&#13;
education&#13;
may result in&#13;
beeomln&#13;
Lesbian . . Y&#13;
For example, Lesbians may move to large cities to find&#13;
other Lesbians, to moveaw@froth their parents and their&#13;
politically conservative home town, or to be more&#13;
anonwnous. Similarly, Lesbians nmy have high levels of&#13;
education bccanse they didn’t get married innnediately&#13;
after lugh school, or didn’t have clfildren at a you age.&#13;
In this study, Rothblunt conipared Lesbians’~vith thei?~&#13;
sisters. Unlike members of other minority groups (e.g.,&#13;
African-Americans, Jews, inunigrants), Lesbians (mad&#13;
Gay men) differ m one importm~ respect in that their&#13;
sibhngs me generally members ofthe domimmt gr0tq~&#13;
(hctcrosexnalsL In the case of biological sisters, thex&#13;
would share the stone race m~d etlmicitv, and have had th~&#13;
s~une parents. The\ mav also bc close in age. So tiffs&#13;
method would allo~, vou’to exmnine the lives of Lesbimls&#13;
side by side with sistel.s who m-e not Lesbian.&#13;
A total of 1,2(~- questiotmmres were requested bx&#13;
email, telephouc, or mail. mad 762 of these were retullmd.&#13;
Ilcrc are the results of the 184 sister pairs iu which one&#13;
was Lesbim] mid the other \vas heterosexual:&#13;
- Lvsbians arc older thm] their heterosexual sisters.&#13;
- Lesbiaus are also more likely to be first-bores when&#13;
looking at ages of all l)rother’s mad sisters. (This is&#13;
interesting, because research on Gay men has sho~vn&#13;
thcnt to be younger sons.)&#13;
- Lesbians have higher levels of education th,’m do diet r&#13;
heterog~’,~Ual sisters.&#13;
- Heterosexual women are more likely to be&#13;
homemakers than their Lesbian sisters. There ,are no&#13;
differences in other types of employment status, or on&#13;
occupational level.&#13;
- Because Lesbians have higher educationM levels,&#13;
they would be expected to have a higher individual&#13;
income. Still, Lesbians mad dleir heterosexual sisters had&#13;
similar individual mid fanlily incomes.&#13;
- Heterosexual women were part of formal religions iu&#13;
adulthood, whd’~as L~lSfan~ Were mtte likely to endorse&#13;
altenmtive spiritual beliefs.&#13;
- Lesbians were more likely to be living with a female&#13;
partner or living alone. Heterosexual sisters were more&#13;
likely to be married, li vh~g with:a,~ale p.,?r,mer, m~d living&#13;
with children&#13;
- For those wonlen . in a relationslfip&#13;
with a partner (121 Lesbians ,and 149 heterosexual&#13;
women), heterosexual women have been in this&#13;
relationsltip for a longer time period ( 11.4 years) than&#13;
Lesbians (6.87 years).&#13;
- Lesbians were more likely to be"]iving in a large city&#13;
than their heterosexual sisters.&#13;
- There is no sig~fificant difference in how many years&#13;
sister pairs have been living in their current location.&#13;
- But Lesbians live further from their previous location&#13;
than do heterosexual sisters.&#13;
¯ by Dave Fleischer&#13;
: Senior Fellow, Policy Institute&#13;
¯ National Gay and Lesbian Task Force&#13;
¯ As ourcommunity faces anew wave of Millennial anti-&#13;
" Gay ballot measures, it would be easy to be fearful about&#13;
¯ our prospects. After all, eight out of twelve votes on&#13;
¯ homophobic referenda went against us in 1998 and 1999&#13;
¯ alone. Yet the shocking thing about our cotmnumty&#13;
¯&#13;
losing so many elections is that we actually "know how to&#13;
¯ win them.&#13;
What effective strategy&#13;
¯ persuades voters to stand&#13;
:-, with-us? After six years&#13;
¯ training Gay, lesbian,&#13;
¯ bisexual and transgender&#13;
¯ (GLBT) leaders around the&#13;
¯ country to run for office and&#13;
¯ manage campaigns, I know&#13;
¯ it’ s when we "come out mad ¯&#13;
talk" - engage voters one-&#13;
¯&#13;
on-one and ask them what&#13;
¯ they think.&#13;
¯ Vehen we do, the fuzz)’,&#13;
unflattering image of us as&#13;
¯ oddities from an X-Files episode dissolvcs._ Voters&#13;
¯ reconsider who we are and are much less likely m fall&#13;
¯ for propaganda that makes us out to be something we’re&#13;
¯ not.&#13;
Just as importantly, what proven strategy identifies&#13;
¯ voters who are already supportive? The very stone&#13;
¯ conversation. Because when we do "voter I.D.’" -askiug&#13;
¯ each voter "Can we count on your vote’?" - we build a&#13;
¯ reliable list of Gay and pro-Gay voters to whom ~ve can&#13;
¯ return, to turn out our vote, election after election. Since&#13;
¯ many of our strongest supporters often miss clectious, ~vc&#13;
_. lose without this kind of follow-up.&#13;
Making a voter I.D. list isn’ t glamorous, but it makes or&#13;
¯" breaks our campaigns across the country. Maine offers a&#13;
useful case study. In February 1998, fineGLBTconmlunit3&#13;
¯ lost Maine’s state-wide law bmnung discrinlination ou&#13;
the basis Of sexual onentation. It had taken Maine leaders&#13;
ten years to pass the law: die Christian.C.oalition erased it&#13;
ten months after it passed, despite a vali-anl battle bv our&#13;
How did we lose? The New York Times post-electiou&#13;
analysis was ~ shockingly clear. It quoted a Bowdoin&#13;
.: College professor with 25 years, of Maine polling&#13;
¯ experience, who said, "Maine is no more mtolcrmn than&#13;
¯&#13;
other states, and given a well-lq_ln "gay;-rights- c&amp;mpatgn,&#13;
would likely split into tw.o canlps, with 55%. supporting&#13;
’Gay rights’ mad 45% against." A well-rim cmnpaign is&#13;
built on turmng out its base. The low turnont of pro-Gay&#13;
voters cost us the election.&#13;
How did the Christian Coalition tuna out ~ ts supporters.&#13;
¯ when we couldn’t? They prepared for the election by&#13;
starting tQ identify their voters well m ad\m~ce. Eigl~t&#13;
months before electiol~ day, the Cln’istian Coalitiou&#13;
gathered 58,000 petition si~latures to call the February&#13;
1998 election. They began the cmnpaign With the name,&#13;
address and phone number of 58.000 voters who they&#13;
could turn out to vote.&#13;
Pro-Gay activists started withno sitnilar list. We cotfld&#13;
have- m November 1995. voters across Maine defeated&#13;
ml m~ti-Gay measttre. But the "95 cmnpaign didn’t talk&#13;
with voters oue-on-ouc to idenlify our supporter,s. Of the&#13;
221.562 people who voted with us, our comnmnity eudcd&#13;
"... eight out of twelve votes on&#13;
homophoble re~erencla went-a.~M~nst&#13;
us in 1998 and 1999 alone.&#13;
Yet the shoekin$ thln$ about our&#13;
eommunlty losln$ so many eleetlons&#13;
is that we actually&#13;
hnow how to win them . . 7’&#13;
the canlpaign -l~aowing the&#13;
nmnc. address and phone&#13;
number of fewer than 3000&#13;
Gav.and pro.Gay,voters. - -.&#13;
X\~ began the" 98 cmnpmgn&#13;
with 30(~) on our list..versus&#13;
58,000 on theirs. Whc~&#13;
e]ectiou day ’98 crone, wc&#13;
lost by 7.299 votes, bccansc&#13;
83,409 who voted wiOa us in&#13;
"95 didn’t ttma out to vote&#13;
again in "98. We lost Ihal&#13;
election, but we shouldnt&#13;
lose [le~’l - so long as&#13;
lcmn from theexpencucc.&#13;
For cxmnple, wc will likely fnce an anti-’Gay repeal&#13;
vote just like Maine’s m *’liami-Dade Couutx The&#13;
upconm~g cmnpmgl~ is hatmtcd bx the one wc losl [111977&#13;
It Anita Brvaut"s "’Save timChildren" cauapai~n&#13;
Fortunatel y, key leaders in SA VI ~ Dade, the local lmlnan&#13;
rights group, Jorge Murstfli. Shcila O’Fmlell, Gcore&#13;
Kctclholm. mid Griscl R~xlrigncz, have begun to bnihl&#13;
their list. By lcachiug lcssous flom other canq)aigus, thcx&#13;
have motivated their vohmtccrs to talk face-to-face&#13;
VOleI’S.&#13;
On July 29. SAVI~ l)adc had its biggest voter I&#13;
success v~t. In twelve hours. 300 volunteers had facc-tofacc&#13;
couversations with 4.909 voters. SAVE Dadc has&#13;
~dreadv built its list to iududc 15.000 Gay and pro-(~a&#13;
vol~rs.&#13;
Ofcourse. 15.0(~) i s not cu~)n~ h. ’l’bc Chfis finn ( ~o~ d i u&#13;
will begiu their cmnpmgn with a lisl of 33,000 SUpl)ortcr~&#13;
of their own. Ihe number ol l)ClH~on ~igllaturc~ Ihc~&#13;
to put lhc issue on lhc ballot&#13;
Butdm SAVE l)adc strategy to invite our fi’icnds to Ihi&#13;
election ~s a winning one. On July 29, as they realized&#13;
what they had done and bcguu, Shcila O’ Farrell c-nmilcd&#13;
me: "’Well. Dave. you szfid 6.000 and I laughed. You ~aid&#13;
30 phonc bm~k~ with 10+ vohmtccrs m~d I rolled m~ c~&#13;
And tomght we exceeded any expectations I ever had&#13;
do you kuow what? 1 guess that trap we teach rcall’&#13;
woi:ks~ I think 1 had quit bclicvmg thal Thanks&#13;
cliallenging mc "&#13;
In tough elections, there is uo SmUt Claus. XVc have&#13;
~lOW who our friends ;u’c if we xv~uit to win:’]’o klloXv xx&#13;
they ~u-c, wc have lo ask. onc-oll-OllC. Then wc C~l~&#13;
thai List mid check il twice - and win the Iougla election.&#13;
that lic almad&#13;
- Lesbimls live flirther from their lnother :rod from thcilfather&#13;
than do their heterosexual sisters&#13;
- l~sbim~s have moved to fl]cir CUlTent locatiou because&#13;
of their oxvn cducatiou. I [ctm’oscxtud women have movcd&#13;
to their cu~ent location because of their partuer’s job.&#13;
- Lesbians have higher self-esteem titan do their&#13;
beterosexuM sisters&#13;
-There are at differences bet~veen sister pmrs ou any&#13;
measure of mentM health (such as depression, m~xietv.&#13;
etc,)&#13;
z Lesbians and their hEterosexnalsigters ~e 6x~ctlx the&#13;
san~e average height (5 feet 5 inches) but Lesbians w~igh&#13;
more (161 lbs on average) than do hctcroscxn~d sisters&#13;
(143 lbs). -Lcsbimis are more likel~ to have been in&#13;
l)sychotherapy than their heterosextu~ sisters.&#13;
- Both sisters tend to have heMth insurance, but&#13;
heterosexual sisters are more likely to have health&#13;
insurance through their parmer, and to have dental&#13;
lnstlr~lce,&#13;
hnplications:&#13;
HeterosexuM women ~e more like census data of U.S&#13;
women than are Lesbians on: m~age, living wifl~ rome&#13;
pm’tner Ctfildren Religion ~ucation Population density&#13;
Convelfience smnples of~sbim~ flint fiud that I ~sbim~s&#13;
live in l~ge cities, ~e lfighly educated, have a lo~v&#13;
income relative to education, and may not be religious,&#13;
may~morerepresentative ofthe ~sbians who p~ficipate&#13;
m Lesbian communily organizatious ~md c\cnt.s&#13;
What is it about being a Lesbian that contributes to&#13;
dcmoglaphic factors? llcrc arc some speculations:&#13;
13cing older and firsl boru may result in Increased&#13;
education.&#13;
- Not bciug mmTied or havi~ tg children at a yotmg age,&#13;
living Mone and/or not beiug in a long-term rclationslfip&#13;
umv. result iu highcr education and geographic mobility.&#13;
tli~hcr education may result iu becoming I.csbimi&#13;
- Liging in l~ge cities nmy expose women to l.esbian&#13;
" d0nmlfinifies. ............&#13;
Wlmt is it abont being a Lesbian that contribntcs&#13;
mental health and other factors’? Ilelc arc some&#13;
specu.lati ous:&#13;
- Do l.esbians reln~fin&lt;~m~l:byedin order to mmff}ain&#13;
hcMth insurance whereas liet:~ro~eXnM lnm’ried&#13;
can become homenmkers due to their husbands’ 6cncfits?&#13;
- Are Lesbiaus less focused ou weight and appearance?&#13;
Or do heavier young women become ~sbians m~d!or&#13;
increase edncadon becanse of fewer dating or relatiouship&#13;
options?&#13;
- Does Lesbians" greater use of psychotherapy account&#13;
for dmlack ofmentM hemth differences between ~sbians&#13;
(a stiglnatized group) and their heterosexnM sisters?&#13;
- Does belonging to a supportive conmm~fity account&#13;
for Lesbians’ higher self-esteem&#13;
A&#13;
Newspapers Refuse to&#13;
Print PFLAG .Listing&#13;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A family of weekly&#13;
newspapers distributed free to 126,000 Central Coast&#13;
households and businesses has created an outcry over&#13;
its refusal to publish news deemed favorable to Gay&#13;
orpro-choice viewpoints. More than adozeneditorial&#13;
employees of tWO of ~he papers have quit since the&#13;
policy came to ,light last week.&#13;
The papers, which circulate in San Luis Obispo,&#13;
Paso Robles andAtascadero, have beenhit with about&#13;
400 cancellation-requests. Earlier this week, about&#13;
100 people protested outside the County courthouse&#13;
in San Luis Obispo, some carrying signs that read,&#13;
"No Bigotry. in My ~owa,’:&#13;
: The c~rttro~er~y:ste:r0s from:a ¢:ommuuity calendar&#13;
listing; for~ Parents, Friends and ~Eamily~0f Lesbians&#13;
ahd ~ays~ Bisexuals .and Transgendered Persons,&#13;
which ran in the’Atascadero Gazette from Nov. 25&#13;
until Feb..17.~’=That’ s whe,n the paper’s editor, Ron&#13;
Bast, wa~ ioid tlie chain S owner had 6rdered the&#13;
listing pulled.Bast-said he was told there were to be&#13;
no storie~ tli~ ~lit~ed Gays or abortioninafavorable&#13;
light. He has since quit, saying he believes the paper&#13;
has failed in its mission to provide unbiased coverage&#13;
of the community.&#13;
Civil rights acavists, meanwhile, said theywere&#13;
appalled at the action ofcompany owners Mary and&#13;
DavidWeyrich."Hehas th~ fight todothi~ofcourse,&#13;
¯ incorporating as a nonprofit organization, outlining&#13;
: possible programs and figuring outhow to pay for the&#13;
¯ gathering place.&#13;
: Travis Blackwell, 33, co-chairman of the planning&#13;
~ committee, said he hoped the center would be a place&#13;
¯¯ for anyone to getin touch with the Gay community.&#13;
"And I hope it will raise asvareness, understanding&#13;
: and tolerance for the lesbian, Gay, bisexual and&#13;
transgender community," Blackwell said. "That’s.&#13;
one aspect. Theotheris actually having a central place.&#13;
where we cau all be safe and meet and take part in&#13;
programming and workshops and things that better&#13;
each of us as well as our community as a whole.’"&#13;
Gay centers across the country offer everything&#13;
from soccer leagnes to medical services, counseling&#13;
-and day.care. Although cities nationwide of about the&#13;
same size as-Charlotte have had. them.for years, no&#13;
other North Carolina city has a center, qocai ;Gay&#13;
leaders ,said.&#13;
In 1996, Mecklenburg County commissioners cut&#13;
arts funding after a local production of the Pulitzer&#13;
prize-winning play "Angels in America," because of&#13;
its homosexual content. And last year, Samantha&#13;
Gellar won a contest for young playwrights in 1999&#13;
with her story of two women who meet on a bus, fall&#13;
in love and share a kiss. The contest sponsors would&#13;
not allow it to be performed, saying its subject matter&#13;
was not appropriate for the festival’ s middle and high&#13;
school audience. .&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
MCC-United&#13;
Sunday Worship Reverend Cathy Elliot&#13;
11=00 am Pastor&#13;
623 N. Maplewood 9181838-1715&#13;
" ~ i" f"~ .........&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2~Lg South Yale, Sundays at llam, "/49-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
hnttheparttliatupsetmepers°nallyisthathehadaI MiSSiSsippi Lawmakers&#13;
representing this as atmecommuuity .newspap~," Move to Bar Adopbons said Robyn Murphy, past president ~of.the central, i&#13;
Coast Gay and.L~bian Alliance. . .... i , , . . ; JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Mississippi lawmakers&#13;
The vtfeytichs m-owned billlioard giant Martin.i moved, to bar Gay couples from adbpting children&#13;
Mediabefoxe thecompany wassold fo~$610 mi’llion, with a Tuesday debate about morality and the fea~ of&#13;
great deal of support starting out because he was&#13;
HOUSE OFTHE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
t... ,~,~,~ ~,,. :rt..,~..,, u~,~. ~ \Ve~,~,~ : e~ag homosexuality. The executive director Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm&#13;
Wim,~v Tlu~_v mtMi~ho~l a ~lat~mt~.nt ~,i Ihe~r ° Of~Misst$$1[~!. ~list Cofl¥1~aUon Boald teld a&#13;
p.mt.os.op.n.~.tn..re.ce.nt.e.m.uoUS.. .t.n..c. issu~c ~nas ¯. ~Hou.s~e su.b..c-m.n.:m.m.ee..th.at.e.h¯iidr©n rinsed&#13;
~,:~z,’~n~’~’~ ~1~ U~ith ;nt,~orilW mtt4 ~ih0 tnd~ Wifl~ - ¯ Ilomosexuals 0~i10,1~ more mt~v to ue troy.&#13;
.... ~:~..~.~ .... ............. ¯....-, ..... ~ ...... Opponentssmdtheyfeareddieadoptionbanwould ’ ~ " [&#13;
....=~,, v~v,,-- " ¯ ’ ** * " ..... " ...... v....................... Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
~ ~ .... ° " ....¯ "- -;: = ;’d -~ ; onentauon =s irrele ant m adopttons; .... ......&#13;
uast ann omer mrmer stm;ers Sma mey m not , ¯ ,~,~-~; t,^^,,_:,,= ~:=,~:.....&#13;
editorial content of the publicattons when theylbegan ¯ . _~ :_ ,t.~. r... u..... ~. a:.~. -&#13;
m.~t.rj.ous, xnep,a~e,rs,ue~g~o:p~p~nexntgmt~t~.um ~r,: Barber said he eame to the Capitol on behalf of a Aft~l"Hours AppointmerltsAvailabl~&#13;
wire iwo more scneameo . . . , , .&#13;
................. s saidthe : Gaycoupletrymgtoadoptachild ‘They re upstanding 2865 E. Skelly Drive, Suite 21.5, 745-1111&#13;
Wevrichs ar~ notdictatino content. iuSt our ¯. etuzens~ ~neynappentouenomosexna~ -notrelevant.&#13;
philosophy, which has ~. d~ from day one."&#13;
"The staff onboard has a dear understanding of the&#13;
Weyrichfamilyandtheirvalues," he said. "Inpublisher&#13;
meetings throughout the pastmonths,wehave covered&#13;
these topics in depth."&#13;
He said-the Gazette papers, which promote&#13;
themselves with the slogan "Hometown Journalism&#13;
at its Best" on the bottom of each front page, also&#13;
refuse advertisin,g from nightclubs and tobacco&#13;
companies. ~’We ve picked.up 13 new advertisers&#13;
because of this," Hansen said. "We’ve received 400&#13;
e-mails this week that arejustpo,sitive mid supportive.&#13;
Pemple resiXct,,us for’what ~ve ve Said ~and that we&#13;
stand up for it.&#13;
One observer says the debaie has at least one upside&#13;
- forcing residents to discuss the meaning of the First&#13;
Amendment. ’YI’he idea that free speech and a free&#13;
press is being discussed is extremely healthy,!’ said&#13;
Randall Murray,a California Polytechnic,,U,niversity,.&#13;
San Luis Obispo, journalism professor¯ While not&#13;
embracing~Weydchor..his,views, ~ereali~.Lhat he is&#13;
peffecdy secure to set editorial policy. Rather than&#13;
impose on him ,o,ur editorial policing, the remedy is&#13;
coUnter-speech. " i ’ ~: "&#13;
Charlotte Gays Plan&#13;
Community Center&#13;
CHARLOTTE (AP) - Charlotte, the city that has&#13;
drawn national attention in recent years for its anti-&#13;
Gay atmbsphere, could have its first-ever community&#13;
center for Gays as early as 2002.&#13;
The Community Center Planning Committee will&#13;
spend the next six months scouting for a location,&#13;
¯ They would make good parents," Barber said.&#13;
" The Rev. Jim Futral, the Baptist leader, said by&#13;
~ allowing Gays to adop,t., the state would encourage&#13;
¯ homosexual lifestyles. These kids will be influenced&#13;
¯" in a way wedon’ t want them tO beinfluenced," he said&#13;
: during the hour-long meeting. Rep. John Reeves, RJac.&#13;
kson, the subcommittee chairman, said the bill&#13;
was not meant to punish Gay people but was "trying&#13;
to do what’s right by the children." Rep.. Gary&#13;
Chism, R-Columbus, said legislators should be&#13;
concerned about children and "we shouldn’t place&#13;
them. in a lifestyle that’s unnatural." "It gives an&#13;
indication to thatchild that this is aproperrelationship,"&#13;
Chism said.&#13;
Mississippi is among five states this year debating&#13;
legislation over adoptions, by Gays, according to&#13;
Hector Vargas,’a lawyer for the Washington-based&#13;
National Gay and Lesbian TaskForce~o,The others.are&#13;
. Hawaii, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah: vargas&#13;
said judges’ rtmin consideration "should be whether&#13;
or not the parents are a loving couple and can provide&#13;
for the child." "&#13;
The bill also says that the state will not recognize&#13;
¯ adoptions by Gay couples in other states. That&#13;
: provision could be unconstitutional, Vargas ~id.&#13;
"_ Several states have been sued over policies banning&#13;
¯ Gays from adopting.. Only Horida statutorily bars&#13;
" Gay couples from adopting.&#13;
~ Robin Lemer, staff attorney for the American Civil&#13;
¯ Liberties Union in Mississippi, said state lawmakers&#13;
: shouldbe worried about crime committed by children&#13;
¯ who grow up without families. ’‘The greater issue is&#13;
" how can we best raise children to be good adults," she&#13;
said.&#13;
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The Episcopal Church Welcomes You&#13;
Georgia Hate Crimes Bill&#13;
ATLANTA (AP)- Several hours after Palm Sunday&#13;
seryices ended at Red Oak United Methodist Church,&#13;
parishioners found themsdves watching from the&#13;
cemetery outside as the ehnrch was Consumed by fire&#13;
set by monists. "I stood there in the graveyard with&#13;
mymembers, singing while it burned down," saidthe&#13;
.Rev. John W: Pace, pastor of the black church in&#13;
Stoekbridge. ’ It was hopeless. We could not stop the&#13;
fire."&#13;
Pace says his congregation was victimized by a&#13;
hate crime. And he wasn’t alone in asking the Hons~&#13;
~ J~.di~ary C0mmitte,elo appr~ove stiffer penalties.for&#13;
cn.mes .~lotivated by race, religion, gender or sexnal&#13;
onentataon.&#13;
Committeemembers also hear~~rom arabbi whose&#13;
-synagogue was vandalized and a Gay mm~ who was&#13;
assaulted with a knife at his throat. "Terrorism has an&#13;
impact both on the victims and an .impact on the&#13;
community at !arge," said Sen. Vincent Fort, DAtlanta,&#13;
~e bill s author. "Hate crimds are terrorism&#13;
because of that fear."&#13;
Barron Segar,.a professional fund-raiser, told the&#13;
committeehow he was~surrounded by eight menafter&#13;
-leaving aGay nightclub in Atlanta:in 1992. One ofthe&#13;
men grabbed Segar from behind and helda knife to&#13;
¯ But Rep. Dan Grossman, D-Denver, and other&#13;
: oppo.nents said the Vermont Legislature appears to be&#13;
¯¯ moving towardrecognitionof ’~domesticparmerships’’ rather,than same-sex marriages. The final vote came&#13;
¯ after opponents argued it was a simple attack on ¯&#13;
homosexuals. "Thebillis nothingmore than something&#13;
: based on fear and I think it is an irrational fear,’"&#13;
: Grossman said. "What horrible thing would happen&#13;
: to us. It s gratmtous and mearisspirited:’" ~, - :&#13;
¯ Supporters denied that. "It’s based oh the&#13;
¯ accumulated wisdom and experience of cultures for&#13;
¯ 7,000 years," said Rep. Shawn Mitchell, RBroomfield.&#13;
"We alwayshave i:ecognfized as-self-&#13;
!eviklent that marriage i~s~joinih~dfopt~site m~mbers&#13;
:~ .,o~ the human species." Pas~hail !said ~h~ Offered the&#13;
measnre as a reiriforcement OP’gootl publicpolicy."&#13;
Gay Teens Ask.&#13;
,Peers For Tolerance&#13;
MIDDLETON, Wis. (AP) - Cal!ing.for an end to&#13;
harassment and narrow-mindedeess, a group of Gay&#13;
and Lesbian teen-agers and their friends,is trying to&#13;
¯ persuade a majority of teachersand students to sign a&#13;
p edge ..calling for tolerance_ 9.f ~students of all&#13;
hi.s .thro.at. "This is what we do to (Gays)," the man i b~k.:grounds and persuasions..! .... : - . . .&#13;
,:v, s;xtut.d~,:~uxs~i;n~g:;.a~n.~,=e.~.p,i.,t.~h.e=t..f~o.r~~=h2o~~.a,:,;o,_s~.e:.x-~u..a.l.s....~~:.e.~a.~l’,t.~~k.e.r...¯ , ~ndse,y.Clough., one of t.he s.~,d.e.nts o~g.amzang the - ~.,.~.~.~;mto ~g~uuuu mau-m¢ men scattere~; u o pma- ge0~,o~ nve.~ stud _s_he. ~dent.do.;~~ es-w...i.m... the GaY&#13;
hves-w~th;’me~erV day: tstilt~liaTe=iti!~h~es,’’ ¯ coun~.l!mty m. part tw.eause a ~e friend of her&#13;
;Sdgari~"dt~B~ifhly~~ttaek~dis d0h; ( Tli~se~’~r~ed tw~ : family lost a partner to AIDS.. 8hedeS..eti’bed, her&#13;
" W~eks mtail ...... ..... " ,, ~. childhood as extremely difficiilt~ .r and said she has&#13;
:: :;~ Rabbi;,TS.= ¯Robert Iehay of ~-Coni~te~ati~ix:,or: found. ,Goys and.lesbians to be’,~’0_~e.~0f the most&#13;
: VeShalrmre~lled:h0w ~e synagog~e.~ ~D~I~alb. ¯ und..d.~smnd.ingpe°ple I’ve met in.~y~|ifei:r .&#13;
"- C0tmtv ~ag vandalizex~1~4,e~;ffi-th~ag~iV",~ai~t’~ " ] ne stug~nt ~oup says its goalis to get most of the ¯d .. - , .r..’~ ¯ M ~1-~ ¯ " ,-~ " ¯ ::Nl~ri:sw~ligas~dthewords~bloodsuek~r~~ ot~b~t~ " : school s 1,600 students and 200. teachers.to s~gn a&#13;
,~Sihee’thetL~I~l~ysaid,:the c0n~i~galion ~~-had:a ."-pled~e’.~f!~lerance andinthe.p~to~e~at the&#13;
police.om~atev~’serv~ce~unetion=indMing_ i s¢.h~l a~qepts a!l students.....&#13;
weddings .iWe~sleepat¯ni~ht;’;hesaid::"Bat~livavs ~. :rng~schoolisoftenaprimepla~efor~a.ystudents&#13;
" t~i.tll;an.e~ie :6~,, .in case~°omea,~,;; k~,,,~a,,~ ,,,-: -~ : ¯ to be dbused, accordimz to a reoort last. Year bv the&#13;
" Fort~s bill ¯passed -the Senate,bv~jttst’two~rtes ~ Gay,...L~,~fib!an and Strmght Educatto.n Network. The&#13;
-. ~arlier thi’s m~nth, Thebi!t~,a!lr~S.~n~es to ii~se -. gr°up~,~9_Yed teens in32 states imd f~un~ that 91&#13;
percent of Gay and lesbian teens reported&#13;
up to five years in cases Where.~ey determine the : "homo.phobic" remarks at school and 69perccnt said&#13;
victims were chosen because of race, color, religion,&#13;
national origin, ancestry, ei’hnicity, gendei, disiibility&#13;
or s~xiial 0dentationl ...... .&#13;
COlorado -Ban-on&#13;
Gay Marriage Advances&#13;
DENVER, (AP) - A marriage.between, one man and&#13;
one woman would be the 0uly uniOn r~cogni2ed as&#13;
.legally validby the state under a’bill approved by&#13;
House lawmakers. The House,-which approved the&#13;
.measureon a 36-29 vote; sent it to-the-Senate, where&#13;
-it- probabl.y wDuld :pass,.,according to Sen. Mark&#13;
Hillman, R-Burliugton. Senators approved a shnilar&#13;
proposal earlier this inonth. Gov. Bill Owens has said&#13;
he.would sign the bill if approved by the I eegislature.&#13;
In its original version, House Bill 1249 would have&#13;
authorized courts to enforcenbnee0n0~nic provigions&#13;
of prenuptial ¯contracts Spousoring Rep; "Mark&#13;
Paschall, R-Arvada, succeeded Monday in.stfippi.ng&#13;
all language from the bill-and substituting it with&#13;
provisions to ban same-sex.marriages and to ensiire&#13;
the state, would not recognize S,’une-sex marriages&#13;
,pefformedJoutside~tsbordet~: :=:~ ,:, ~,,&#13;
As it did Moilday, the Hbuse on :ruesda) .rejected&#13;
a motiOn ,to~ send the bill to- the:House~:Jddiciary&#13;
Committeeforapublic hearing. Moderate~Republieans&#13;
_. on.. that, com~ttee.lastl v~ab joined.~t~b~rats in&#13;
kiliing a-’.similar;bill2 Coni~nitteemeinb~sargued~hat&#13;
they should be allowed.to, giv~ ~the-bill a(public~&#13;
hearing; but Paschall and other supporte,,r.s~ said¯ the~&#13;
-concept l~as :had extensive public input.&#13;
obvious, transparent attempt to kill the bill, said&#13;
House Majority Leader Doug Dean; R-Colorado&#13;
Springs.&#13;
He and other supporters said the measure is&#13;
necess.ary to avoid forcing Colorado to officially&#13;
re¢ogmze same-sex marriages performed elsewhere.&#13;
Supporters said a recent ruling by the Vermont&#13;
Supreme.Court called for legislative action on samesex&#13;
mamages, and that action could mean official&#13;
recognition of such unions.&#13;
¯ theyexperieneedsomeformofharassmentorviolence.&#13;
" Patrick Kelly, an openly Gay freshman, said that&#13;
while Middleton tends to be more accepting of Gay&#13;
: students,thanmany otherhigh schools, there is always&#13;
¯ room forJmprovement.&#13;
¯ "’ LisaAarli, a teacher who advises the student group,&#13;
says she has seen great enthnsiasm over the pledge&#13;
¯ event. "It’ s given a lot of kids someflfiug to Nab onto&#13;
for a lot of different reasons," she,said. :’The kids on&#13;
¯ the margins ,are being pulled into something big m~d&#13;
¯ prayerful in tke school." . ....&#13;
¯&#13;
said he beieved the l~gislature sliotfld be.as.inclusive&#13;
¯ as possible in the bill nmv, rather th,-m have to face&#13;
~ such questio~m agMn some other, time. "My persom~&#13;
¯ opimon is I don?t wm~t to have to.go t~ough ins for&#13;
" another reason. I don’ t want another ~gislature to go&#13;
" tl~ough ~s," he said.&#13;
Little wo~d prefer to keep tfie_~co~.e:.’of the bill&#13;
focused on the Gay and ~sbi~conples who sued for&#13;
" the fight tomTy in the fi~st place..~at’s ~vhy the&#13;
qivii d0m~l[¢.u~on bill~so~eloselyznfi~ors~age&#13;
¯ statutes. ?We haven’t seen ~y, eviOence that people&#13;
¯ that ~e.bro~ers and sisters, bro~ers ~d ’bro~ers,&#13;
" sisters: ~d sisters seek to eslablishthe:s~e,.Nnd of&#13;
" : inti~m~ -~i!~~:ha~e~felt~th~&#13;
discfi~fio~~their efforts toestablis~$~ly&#13;
: u~," ~tfle sMd. ’~e desi~ of the ~iIl, we hope, is&#13;
" to ereate~ a NNo~on" ~vherN~e~ ~ n6-~:~ateriM&#13;
¯ ~ ~, 7 " -~ ~’ ¯ ~:,..~ =~ .: ~:.~;,~ ~,,,~ : ~. ~:~.~ . ¯ff~en~ between ~fir~age-~fl domeshc"umons)&#13;
~d t-herefore no consti~utionM differe-n~’~between&#13;
" ~ tWO."&#13;
. However at a r~ent Repub]i~ S~te Co--tree&#13;
: meet~g, Ve~ont Republic.s rejected, at least&#13;
¯ tempos]y, a push by the p~ty’s state chM~,&#13;
" Pa~ck G~, for a ConsdmdonM ~en~ent&#13;
" supporting opposite-gender m~fiage o~y, The&#13;
¯ pro~sM stated ~atbemuse ~e state Supreme Court’ s&#13;
: derision in B~er v. State open~ ~e door for s~e-&#13;
. gender m~age, ~e OenerM Assembly shoedbe~&#13;
¯e pro~ss of ~en~ng ~e constitution.&#13;
’4,&#13;
JeSSeJackson&#13;
Get H!Y Test&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Rev. Jesse :&#13;
Jackson stuck a cotton swab between his ."&#13;
cheek and gums Thursday to demonstrate :&#13;
how easy it is to take an oral test for the ¯&#13;
virus that causes AIDS and to encourage ."&#13;
other black Americans to be tested. "&#13;
’q’he crisis has not left. It is no longer "&#13;
fron.t-page. It’s not gunfire. It’s not ."&#13;
cocame, crack or heroine. It:s not gang ¯&#13;
warfare," said the civil rights leader, "&#13;
speaking at the Max Robinson Center of "&#13;
the Whitman-Walker Clinic, in one of the ¯&#13;
capital’s poorest neighborhoods. "But&#13;
nobody is safe," Jackson said. "I want to "&#13;
send amessage to everyAfrican-American :&#13;
that does not know his or her HIV/AIDS ¯&#13;
status to get tested." ."&#13;
Jackson, who said he had taken a blood "&#13;
test for the virus years ago, took the newe~ ]&#13;
oral test to draw attention to the issue as ¯&#13;
hundreds of people gathered in ¯&#13;
Washington for the Johns Hopkins "&#13;
University 2000 National Conference on&#13;
African-Americans and AIDS¯ ¯&#13;
Theresults ofJackson’s testate expected "&#13;
to be ready Saturday but, as is common :&#13;
practice, they will remain confidential. It ¯&#13;
was-not immediately clear if Jackson "&#13;
would release results of his test. "&#13;
Blacks make up 13% of the U.S. ;&#13;
population, but they account for 57% of ¯&#13;
all new HIV infections detected and nearly’,.:&#13;
half of all cases of full-blown AIDS, "&#13;
according to the Centers for Disease ;&#13;
Control and Prevention. Additionally, ¯&#13;
more treatments have become available, ¯&#13;
but AIDS deaths among blacks increased ¯&#13;
45% between 1991 and 1996, even as ¯&#13;
mortalityamongwhites decreasedby24%, "&#13;
statistics show. "&#13;
Jackson .called on the president, first :~&#13;
lady and leading presidential candidates&#13;
to set an example by submitting to testing,&#13;
noting, "The first issue is to remove the&#13;
taboo and reststance to testing."&#13;
Patent Could Block&#13;
AIDS Research&#13;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A feud between&#13;
two groups of researchers over who owns&#13;
the rights to a gene helpful inAIDS therapy&#13;
threatens to slow the development ofnew&#13;
drugs and treatment, The Los Angeles&#13;
Times has reported. Maryland-based&#13;
HumanGenomeSciences securedapatent&#13;
earlier in February ~hat gives it a 17-year&#13;
claim on a gene that apparently controls&#13;
how AIDS begins infecting its victims.&#13;
However, thebiotechfirm only isolated&#13;
and decoded the gene. Company officials&#13;
acknowledge they had no knowledge of&#13;
its use when they applied.for a patent in&#13;
June 1995. Agroup ofacademic scientists&#13;
say they were the ones who proved the&#13;
gene could be used tO explain why. some&#13;
people repeatedly exposed t6 HIV never&#13;
develop the disease.&#13;
Meantime, the patent, gives Human&#13;
Genome Sciences control over who can&#13;
use the gene in commercial,devel’0p~ient&#13;
of new AIDS drugs, potentially limiting&#13;
the practical use ofthe academic research.&#13;
The ownership decisionby the U.S. Patent&#13;
andTrademark Office outraged the group&#13;
ofacademic scientists whosay thebiotech&#13;
firm co-opted their discovery.&#13;
"If the patent office awards a patent to&#13;
someone who clones a gene, even though&#13;
they have no notion of its function and no&#13;
real idea of its use, that would be like&#13;
saying, ’I found a fungus, therefore I&#13;
should get credit for penicillin,"’ said the&#13;
University of Maryland’s Dr. Robert&#13;
:Gallo, Whoheaded the group,of academic&#13;
researeher~ studying HIV infection.&#13;
That group and several other&#13;
independent researchers learned in late&#13;
1995 that the gene is a so-called "viral&#13;
receptor" that the HtV virus attaches to.&#13;
They also discovered that defective&#13;
versions of the gene generate a protein&#13;
that suppresses infection by preventing&#13;
HIV from attaching to cells. "The&#13;
likelihood is that this is the molecule that&#13;
needs to be used for the virus to go from&#13;
one person to another," said New York&#13;
University’s Dr. Dan Littman, who also&#13;
contributed to the academic study.&#13;
William Haseltine, chairman and CEO&#13;
of Human Genome Sciences, maintains&#13;
companyresearchers did extensive work&#13;
isolatingthe gene that justifies the firm’s&#13;
ownership of the patent. Haseltine said&#13;
thepatentwill notimpede outsid~ research,&#13;
adding that the company is making the&#13;
gene available to academic researchers at&#13;
no cost. He said the patent will only stem&#13;
the unauthorized use of the gene for&#13;
commercial purposes.&#13;
AIDSactivists havereacted withvenom&#13;
toward the company, which they accused&#13;
of capitalizing on the suffering of others.&#13;
"’These guys are the robber barons of the&#13;
geneticage," saidGreggGonsalves, policy&#13;
director of the Treatment Action Group, a&#13;
New York-based AIDS lobbying&#13;
organization. ’q’his is not about making&#13;
progress on AIDS; its about making&#13;
money.’"&#13;
Meantime, the U.S. patent office plans&#13;
to enforce new guidelines in March that&#13;
would require applicants to better&#13;
demonstrate the function and usefulness&#13;
of discoveries. Officials at the National&#13;
Institutes of Health, however, complain&#13;
that the new regulations fail to go far&#13;
enough.&#13;
i Clinton Plan May&#13;
¯ Benefit HIV Postive&#13;
¯¯ WASHINGTON (AP)- In an experiment&#13;
that could significantly, expand federal&#13;
¯&#13;
benefits to patients with the AIDS virus,&#13;
~ the Clinton administration is allowing&#13;
.. Maine to provide Medicaid payments to&#13;
¯ people are HIV-positive but do not yet&#13;
¯ have AIDS. Previously, patients could&#13;
; notqualifyuntil theyhadfull-blownAIDS.&#13;
¯ Health Secretary Donna Shalala said ¯&#13;
Thursday that Maine would be the first&#13;
¯ state to offer such a plaff,"whichcan give&#13;
." more people living with HIV access to&#13;
¯ promising therapies.’" Several other states&#13;
: are looking at offering a similar plan,&#13;
¯ officials said. "Betterresearch, prevention&#13;
¯ and treatment is helping people with this ¯&#13;
¯ disease livelonger, healthier lives, even&#13;
as.we continue our search fora cure," said&#13;
~ Shalala at a conference on black people&#13;
¯ with AIDS.&#13;
¯: Recentstudies have showfl that the early&#13;
use of.AIDS-fighting drugs can slow the&#13;
." disease and increase life expectancy.&#13;
However, many people with HIV&#13;
¯ _generally do not qualify for Medicaid,&#13;
¯ which provides health insurance to low-&#13;
" income Americans, until they have&#13;
¯ symptoms and are considered disabled." ¯&#13;
Without the plan, "the Medicaid&#13;
¯ program was in the untenable position of&#13;
¯ having to wait until someone grew so sick&#13;
¯ with AIDS that they became disabled" ¯&#13;
before treatment and drugs conld be made&#13;
¯ available, said Francis Finnegan, Maine’s&#13;
¯ Medicaid director. ¯&#13;
¯ The state’s five-year demonstration&#13;
projectbeginsinSeptember.Tobeeligible,&#13;
¯ a participant must be HIV-positive and&#13;
¯ haveanincomeofless thanabout $25,000,&#13;
¯Timothy W. Daniel&#13;
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1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway,-Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointments are available.&#13;
January April July October DecOnber&#13;
Even Out Your&#13;
Monthly Electric Bills.&#13;
At PSO, we know that changing&#13;
weather conditions ,throughout the&#13;
year can cause your monthly electric&#13;
bills to rise and fall dramatically.&#13;
Which can make it hard to plan your&#13;
household budget. That’s why~&#13;
ourAverage Monthly Payment phn,&#13;
could be your budgeting solution.&#13;
W’~da~you pay about the&#13;
same each month, because ifs based&#13;
on yowprevious 12 months us~e..&#13;
That makes budgeting a breeze.&#13;
AnO best ofall, ifs free. AMPis just&#13;
on~ of several fiem’ble payment&#13;
options PSO offers_you. For more&#13;
informatibn,.We’re a~filable 24 hours&#13;
a day. Or.~’~p forAMP on our&#13;
website at ~vw.csw.com.&#13;
PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF OKLAHOMA&#13;
A Central and South West Company&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, PC&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
a professional corporation.&#13;
Lesbians and Gay men face many special&#13;
tax situations whether single or as couples.&#13;
Electronic filing is available for faster refunds.&#13;
747-5466&#13;
4021 South Harvard-Avenue, Suite 210, Tulsa 74135&#13;
Are You Gay or .Bisexual?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
Tulsa s Two-Spirited Indian Men’s&#13;
Support Group is here-for you! ~_~’/,~&#13;
’ Evening sup~ group meetings ¯ , ¯ Sho~ trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ [ Free HIV testing&#13;
~or informat~n call Tul~ Native American AIDS Prevention Proj~t&#13;
~’:~whlch is three times the federal poverty ,:&#13;
level. Before the plan, only children, .:&#13;
pregnant women and the elderly or&#13;
disabled with incomes below the poverty ! the 37-year-old mayor mused:about&#13;
level were eligible for assistance. The surprising twists and turns in his life. "It’s&#13;
benefitpackage will indudedrugtherapy,&#13;
office visits, lab services, case&#13;
management, hospitalizations, mental&#13;
health and substance abuse services.&#13;
About 1,300 Maine residents are&#13;
infected with HIV and 350 have AIDS,&#13;
according to the Maine Bureau of Health.&#13;
The new waiver will allow the state to&#13;
offer treatment to about 300 people who&#13;
couldn’ t otherwise afford it. Officials said&#13;
the early intervention is expected to reduce&#13;
the need for costly hospitalization and&#13;
prevent addi tional infections.&#13;
Nationally, about 900,000 people are&#13;
infected with HIV, a third of those with&#13;
full-blown AIDS, said Kathryn Bina, a&#13;
spokeswoman for the federal Centers for&#13;
Disease Control and Prevention. A third&#13;
of those whose HIV hasn’t progressed&#13;
into AIDS, about 200,000 people, don’t&#13;
know they have the disease, she said.&#13;
Claudia French, acting executive&#13;
director ofAIDS Action, a national AIDS&#13;
support group, said more states need to&#13;
ad’o~t suchaplan. ’~roday’s announcement&#13;
will prolong the lives of low-income&#13;
Mainers with HIV, but we want all HIVpositiveAmericans&#13;
tohave access to drugs&#13;
that could keep them from developing&#13;
full-blown AIDS," said French.&#13;
’Shooting Gallery’:&#13;
to Open in Sydney ¯&#13;
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)- This nation’s :&#13;
first experimental heroin "shooting ¯&#13;
gallery" will open later this year in a "&#13;
former pinball parlor in Sydney, the&#13;
Uniting Church, which will run the 18- "&#13;
month government-approved trial, "&#13;
announced at the end of February. "&#13;
The Site in Kings Cross, a suburb :&#13;
notorious for drug use and prostitution, "&#13;
has been approved by New South Wales :&#13;
police and the state’s health department. :&#13;
It will be run by an expert on AIDS and ¯&#13;
aim to provide a clean, safe environment :&#13;
for addicts to take their drugs. "Our&#13;
primary aim in operating the medically&#13;
supervisedinjecting centeris to save lives,"&#13;
said Uniting Church spokesman Rev.&#13;
Harry Herbert."&#13;
New South Wales state premier Bob&#13;
Carr said he understood concerns of local&#13;
residents who have fought to prevent the&#13;
gallery being opened, but said it would&#13;
help improve public health. "We think it&#13;
mayhelp save lives and get the problems&#13;
out of the streets of Kings. Cross into a&#13;
medically-supervisedlocation,’? Cartsaid.&#13;
Thecenter’ s medical director Dr. Ingrid&#13;
van Beck said about 200 addicts would ¯&#13;
use the center to shoot up when it opens, :&#13;
possibly as early as July,, just weeks "&#13;
before Sydney hosts the 2000 Olympic&#13;
Games. .&#13;
United Nations drugs experts this week "&#13;
condemned "shooting galleries" but&#13;
authorities in Sydney and two other cities&#13;
have said they will forge ahead with plans&#13;
to open them.&#13;
Want to get involved?&#13;
Need to get tested for HIV or&#13;
a Coming Out Support Group?&#13;
Call 743-GAYS (4297)&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community&#13;
Services Center&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
the&#13;
: ~a strangejourney," he said,, shaking&#13;
¯ his head. "I started drugand alcohol abuse&#13;
: when I was around 10," he said.&#13;
¯ The drug and alcohol abuse worsened&#13;
when h_e was a teen-ager having conflicts&#13;
with his policeman stepfather and&#13;
struggling with the emer~ng realization&#13;
that .he was Gay.&#13;
"I joined the military when I was 18 to&#13;
escape a lotof things, and because I wanted&#13;
~o be somebody," Stewart said. "And, I&#13;
onestly thought that in the military, I d&#13;
go straight. It didn’t quite work out that&#13;
way. I found more Gay people in the&#13;
military than I’d ever known."&#13;
His eight years in the Air Force brought&#13;
him to this city of 21,000 on the shore of&#13;
Lake Champlain. When his tour of duty&#13;
ended, he started driving a tractor trailer.&#13;
Then came a drug and alcohol relapse.&#13;
"I fell flat on my face," Stewart said.&#13;
With the help of a network of friends,&#13;
Stewart struggled to overcome his&#13;
addictions. "I sobered up on Dec. 14,&#13;
1988, and I’ve been clean and sober ever&#13;
since." It was the recovery process that&#13;
led Stewart out of the closet. "I was 26&#13;
years old, sitting in the basement of a&#13;
church at a recovery meeting at 1 a.m. on&#13;
New Year’s Day. I said, ’I can’t stav sober&#13;
!,f, I .keep hiding the truth,"’ Stewart said.&#13;
It lifted a huge burden. When you live a&#13;
lie, you suffer the consequences."&#13;
Backin the eabofabigrig, he considered&#13;
his furore. "I wanted a sense of inclusion&#13;
in the system, having a positive role,"&#13;
Stewart said. He got involved with the&#13;
AIDS activist group, ACT UP, handing&#13;
out condoms on the street. His activism&#13;
ultimately led him into mainstream&#13;
politics.&#13;
Of roughly 500,000 elected officials at&#13;
the local and national level across the&#13;
country: about 180 are openly Gayand the&#13;
vast majority are Democrats, according to&#13;
the Gay &amp; Lesbian Victory Fund, a&#13;
.Washington-based group flint seeks to&#13;
¯ increase the number of Gay and lesbian&#13;
¯ public officials. "It’s hard to overstate the&#13;
. value of having outstanding opeul3,,’ Gay&#13;
~ and lesbian people in public office, said&#13;
¯ Sloan Wiesen, a spokesman for the Gay &amp;&#13;
: Lesbian Victory Fund. "When Gay and&#13;
straight legislators are working together&#13;
: on less contentious issues, like education,&#13;
; health care, or fixing roads, people are&#13;
¯ more inclined to stand up f0rfairness&#13;
¯ when a nondiscrimination issue comes&#13;
: up," Wiesen said.&#13;
Stewart hopes the national attention he "&#13;
¯ en.j,,o,ys,by .virtue 0f,,b~,ing aGayRepublican&#13;
Will neip the city. I m invited to all these&#13;
events - the State of the State address, the&#13;
State of the Union. It gives me the&#13;
opportunity to get the message out that&#13;
Plattsburgh exists, and we need" things&#13;
here. A lot of people around the country&#13;
want to help, because they want to see me&#13;
succeed."&#13;
Stewart does have some regrets. 0~e is&#13;
that he never worked up the courage:to&#13;
talk to his mother about the fact that he’s&#13;
Gay before she died in a car acdident four&#13;
years ago. "I was making visits to the&#13;
White House on Gay issues, but I was&#13;
afraid to talk to my own mother about it.&#13;
It shouldn’ t have been that way," Stewart&#13;
said, his voice trailing off.&#13;
Another regret was that he taunted the&#13;
boys who wanted to go to the prom at&#13;
Cumberland High School.&#13;
see Mayor, p. I1&#13;
TWO REVIEWS AND A MUSE!&#13;
[love John ~Villiams’ film scores. I&#13;
really do; they are sweeping, grand things,&#13;
alwaySsuitable for driving to, especially&#13;
the S~.Wars and Indiana Jones scores¯&#13;
Hedidagreatjob.on 1979’s&#13;
Draciihi, d~ea~iiig, an&#13;
o~atie score that soared&#13;
andswooped al,ong with&#13;
Dr~c~ffd~tly..It s my all=&#13;
score.- too :bad it h~Snot&#13;
been reissued comp!etdy&#13;
as some of his others have¯&#13;
What happened was, way&#13;
backwh~,scores were not&#13;
released in the version&#13;
heardin the film. Williams&#13;
was 7::..notorious for&#13;
rerecording .chopped up&#13;
bits~iof, his: sc0~ds, edited&#13;
t6gethdri .....ahogether&#13;
diffe~gntly ~ft0ffa~the film,&#13;
aadrdea~edas the ori&#13;
mdtifnpicture s’dundtrack&#13;
qt is a nice thing to&#13;
wish for&#13;
peace ~ndha~mony&#13;
amm~.~p~oipl~&#13;
I wonder if it will&#13;
’ever kappen. ~&#13;
One can, only hope&#13;
that. Deganawida&#13;
will come along and&#13;
help create a world&#13;
that engenders&#13;
with .a just-too~tight cardboard Slip case&#13;
covenng the CD case mid the thick liner&#13;
notes abit too tightly, so that getting die&#13;
blasted tiring out is enough to prejudice&#13;
your listeafing experience (childproofCD&#13;
cases?).If you’re a purist&#13;
and a Williams collector.,&#13;
.this is for you. If not, well,&#13;
rent the film.&#13;
~ .Jomme~he~mndoahhas&#13;
a uewirelease out,and it is&#13;
well worth seeking out mid&#13;
buying. A member of the&#13;
Wolf Clan of the Oneida&#13;
(Iroquois) Indians in New&#13;
York, Joaame has put out a&#13;
:number of bestselling,&#13;
award-wi~ufing CDS that&#13;
arejustincredible tolisten&#13;
to (Orenda, ~Matriarch,&#13;
Lifeblood)¯ She_has a&#13;
lovely, clear,: bell-like&#13;
voice that .Ires an intimate&#13;
quality to it that can’t, be&#13;
:beat. Sheap,,l~ffed in Peter&#13;
Whnt~.y0a ggt Wasnot the laarmony anaong Buffet.t" S y Spirit,:- A&#13;
s0u.fidi~,.a~(.~,er~annoying d-f- ¯ ~,, " 1 ’~.- .- Jotmley in,Dance, Drum,&#13;
to~p.ufiS.~!, b.uLa reerea.ted&#13;
~re~ng~ peop,es_~. : ~ .-m!d:,~oug",,:-and opened&#13;
.~rms.~...ash:..o[~,hat rmght ’ : :.. " :~ :;. ’- ~Wo.odstock ~94. :She:~has&#13;
ha~g:~n~n!h9 soundtrack at somepoint~ ;. beenailed~-aa!~i-ve Ameii.can:yersion of&#13;
In!re.a~..~ ca~_e~.,, this was disap~ointing, ~; Enya,:.a.1,.lhough; L.~eall~-!-hiak.,that’s&#13;
This,~beguntochange,firstwithpufists ,~ ,c,ompari~g:,oa.pl~e~.:,~,d,+,oranges.&#13;
rais~g~:S~jhenwithrecordcompanie,s : Pea~gmai~er,_SJoameyr:i:sanenchanting&#13;
,a,ct~[yt,iste~nipg. The score to Williams - r ~lbmn:, wi~h beautiful~melodies. Iti~ sung&#13;
Close-Eae0unters of the 3rd Kind".was ~ in her~nativg~Oneida Jaaguage, and- the&#13;
one::of .the. first to be remastered and ~ liner;aotes~.~conta_;n the :story. :and a&#13;
rel~:witli all cues (music bits) int.act.. ¯ trans!afioa:~into:English of:/he lyrics: It is&#13;
~di]s:reallygreat~sincemuchofw.hat , the.p~effeet:~bumt~li-ght~some,oandles,&#13;
mad~ the sou~dtrack~so great were ~CU! : and relax -~ith, with-its genre :melodies&#13;
¯ ."~" ~. " ’: : "- ’.~ ’ ~ ’6 --~ ....~z ~-~ ~ ,:~-~-~,~,~-,. ,~;’,’::-, ,~:’L~"~’J-~ . ~nta~t. ~twas also great. Then the S-.~y~ i,. mumc,-ofLtl~ ~f~ri~:~ of,~.lroqums&#13;
V~$i ~l~gy was. released with:.,t..b.~;~: Co~f~%~li~x~i~ihg,~t6~er-~ter&#13;
sou~atra_~ks"intact. That was beyond"~:~ many.:cemu~eS-ofW-~;-~-tli~M61iav~k,&#13;
wonderful. Now, Rhino records has ~ ~Onei~;.Onoiidaga, Cayuga; Seneca; and&#13;
released, something score purists have " TuscaroralndianNations.~’Peacemaker’s&#13;
desired since-the film came out: The&#13;
"Superman". soundtrack, complete, and,&#13;
no pun intended, uncut.&#13;
Great in that the quality of sound is&#13;
incredible for a score recorded in 1978,&#13;
great that the record companies are&#13;
releasing complete sets ofsoundtrack CDs.&#13;
Notso.hot after a listen and the realization&#13;
that Williams copying Williams is not&#13;
really worth a 2" CD set, because almost&#13;
every cue on the two CDs (despite what&#13;
the liner notes claim) is almost lifted note&#13;
- for.~ note/from Star Wars. Oh a few&#13;
sequences are rearranged, but "Luke&#13;
Skywa~ker!s~" i.Theme" is clearly&#13;
recognizable in one cue, and the original&#13;
openingnotesfrom"StarTrek" are audible&#13;
in another; in.what one might surmise to&#13;
beatributes,Williams borrowing ofthemes&#13;
is nothing new;’,many classical references&#13;
abound in Star Wars; but to blatantly&#13;
borrow so much from oneself is just&#13;
lazi~s~’~ ~:of.. li.ke~a~in~;i’~Well, I&#13;
don~f~[lik¢i~ri~ti~t,g~~,,w.hat&#13;
can r.borrow from the .~,~gltv~l,~ear~&#13;
S~n~.~ays,~eco~zes. T0,~,fair,&#13;
m~be~h~J~.t d~dd’"~h~,~e-lmucl~ tim.e .~d&#13;
that. w~- tiieifio~t practic~i, s01ution~- ai~d&#13;
maybe-theirwas why a fully complete&#13;
score was never released.&#13;
Still, it’ S a pleasant listen, especially if&#13;
you recall the thrill of Christopher Reeve&#13;
in blue tights and hotpants fondly, as I do.&#13;
Who paid attention to the score? I must&#13;
say that Rhino has done a fine job on the&#13;
remastering; the sound quality is, as I&#13;
said, incredible. The packaging is odd,&#13;
: Journey isdedicated-to children&#13;
¯" everywhere and to th0se striving forpeace&#13;
¯¯" betweenpeople andharmonyfor all living things.&#13;
¯ Peacemaker’ sJourney tells the storyof&#13;
¯ Deganawida and Hiawatha, who smv the&#13;
tribes warring ambngst themselVes, and&#13;
: sought to bring peace and harmony to the&#13;
¯ people~ -Relationships ~etween the tribes&#13;
¯" had deteriorated into constant war, blood&#13;
: feuds~and revenge killings. In danger of&#13;
: self-destruction; the Iroquois were saved&#13;
¯ by the sudden appearance ofa Huron h01y&#13;
¯" man known as the "Peacemaker."&#13;
: Deganawida (Two RiverCurrents Flowing&#13;
; TogetheO re.ce~yeda vision from the&#13;
¯ Creator of peace’and cooperation among&#13;
". all Iroquois.Apparently he was hindered&#13;
2 by either.a language or speech difficulty,&#13;
:... but :~ganaw,ida~ ~eaxttialty,, w:o~ ~the&#13;
¯ support of Hiawatha (.Mionwatha - He ¯&#13;
Makes Rivers), an Onondaga who had&#13;
~ beeo~n~..~:;Mg~aw.~:~ar~ ~i,ef. With&#13;
:: t.h~irfighiiii~Mdjoin i6~th~inale~i~ue.&#13;
: ~~end tdiS~fii Degan~widablotted 3ut&#13;
: thesun"t;6:~dh~,~il~:tfieS:’,elucima~t;’~,i~oi~r&#13;
¯ eclipse, visible ’ih(upstate New York&#13;
." occurred in 1451 suggesting another&#13;
~ possible¯ d~t~ for these events. The&#13;
¯ formalion ofthe League ended the warfare&#13;
: between itsmembers bri~ging the Iroquois&#13;
: a period of unprecedented peace and&#13;
¯ prosperity. It also brought political unity&#13;
¯ and military power.&#13;
: "Peacemaker’s Journey" will be&#13;
~ releasedMarchT, 2000. seeAmuse, p. 11&#13;
The University of Tulsa&#13;
The Bisexual, Lesbian, Gay &amp; Trans Alliance&#13;
presents&#13;
ANiOKLAHOMO PROMO 2000&#13;
2-’~ightSi.~~di’,~y ~f:C£11~loid Scintillation&#13;
B+~n+i’:~,+++~m+~:~+~*~@+~;~;Chi.~olls, and Out of Se~on&#13;
Friday, Ma~h 24, 7- I2:0~ midnight&#13;
.GOd Shave (he Queen,Watermelon Woman&#13;
Indecent Acts: O~car Wilde, Cynam, P~t~ in Motion,&#13;
and C~sh&#13;
Sunday, March~ 26, 2-7pm&#13;
Different for Girls, All Over Me, Under Heal, and&#13;
Our Mom’s a Dyke ,.+&#13;
Chapman Hall Theater, 2835 East Fifth Street&#13;
: -. :’- ~.: (not~the+:Alleri~Chapman~Activity Center)&#13;
Eas{ of Delaware Avenue on the University of Tulsa campus.&#13;
Please look lL~r rainbow flags to lead you in off Delaxvare Avenue.&#13;
¯ Thi+ ex;+fit is offered in +6iijunction withomyn,~&amp;&#13;
Hentage-Month. Actlvtt~es.&#13;
P!.eg.s,e=,&lt;+c~+ntact,..~g. J~6~s~+~at’ 63.1~:~3 i:!5 to make arrangements&#13;
for accessibility, accommodations.&#13;
A&#13;
Jurnpin ",&#13;
Singin " .&#13;
Movin"&#13;
and Groovin"&#13;
Good Time!&#13;
Warren Vach4&#13;
and the&#13;
NEW YORK CITY ALL,STAR BIG BAND&#13;
and direct from London!&#13;
THE JIVIN’ LINDY HOPPERS&#13;
Sunday, March 19 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tulsa Performing Arts Center, Chapman Music Hall, 3rd &amp;.Cincinnati&#13;
Tickets: $15,-$20, $2S,&#13;
*Includes post-performance swing dance&#13;
’ Discounts a~aihble ~or~gr6h’p~ and’ ~tudents&#13;
Call: 596-7111 or Outside Tulsa:~1-800-364-71il&#13;
"Online:.’Rrano.tulsapac.com&#13;
Tulsa PerformmgSA~s Center Trust&#13;
Holland Hall&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
MIDDLE &amp; UPPER SCf-IOOL TESTING (GRADES4 - ll)&#13;
PRIMARY SCHOOL TOUR (AC~ 3 - GRADE 3)&#13;
PRIMARY SCHOOLTESTING ~qDERGARTEN- GRADE 1)&#13;
To reserve your place, please call the&#13;
i Admlssi~n Ot~ce at .,t81-1111, exte~i~n 25 t.&#13;
5666 E. 8 Ist Stre~J~.~ Bet~eea~le.&amp; Sheridan ~ Tulsa ~ www.hollandhalLorg&#13;
HSllatid Hall admits q~lifid’~studm~i ivfit~ ~egard to rat6 sex, religion, national or ethnic origin, or physical disability.&#13;
Church,of the Restoration&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
11 am, Sunday, 1314 North Greenwood, 587-1314&#13;
by Mary Schepers, Do-lt-Yourself-Dyke&#13;
There was your DIYD, on her knees,&#13;
aching, throbl~ing~-on the verge of tears -&#13;
wondering why her mouth says "yes"&#13;
when her brain screams "No, no, no!" No,&#13;
gentle readers, we are not revie~ving the&#13;
DIYD’s-latest forays into courtship, but&#13;
~rather her most recent&#13;
Volunteereffort to help out&#13;
a friend in need. As you&#13;
accumulate handy skills&#13;
..~and .-become geuerally&#13;
perceived as arather useful&#13;
indiv:idual, expect to be&#13;
asked to help out others.&#13;
This is quite fair; after&#13;
all, most ofus, your DIYD&#13;
included, have accumulated&#13;
skills and learned&#13;
lessons (someti~nes not&#13;
positive ones) from those&#13;
who:have helped us on our&#13;
ownprojects: Quidpro qu,o&#13;
is a conunon currency tn&#13;
the world of home&#13;
improvement; the student&#13;
evolving into the teacher is an apt, and&#13;
expected, metaphor. -&#13;
" In short,_darlings;give backwhat has so&#13;
generously been shared.withyou~Orbegin&#13;
ficcumulating favors(that can be repaid&#13;
later in yourown moments Ofdire need:It&#13;
is common proffer; it is cxpected,~and it’&#13;
is honorable, and as sly as your DIYD&#13;
may seem, she is absolutely honorable..&#13;
Therein lies the.theme; the exemplar.&#13;
and the moral of our m0nthlytale. Listen’&#13;
closely and ieani from yore DiYD.-And&#13;
remember that this is a. cautionary story;&#13;
not a vehicle for blame,unlessR is your&#13;
poorDIYD’S~ whodidn°taskforsufficient&#13;
"There was your&#13;
DIYD, on her&#13;
knees, aehln~.,&#13;
thr0bhi O;on the&#13;
ver~e o~ tears -&#13;
wonderln$ why&#13;
her mouth says&#13;
’yes" when her&#13;
: infomiation before promising her vast&#13;
¯. array ofskills, tools and energy to a friend&#13;
: The particulars of die story ,’ire not&#13;
~ important. What matters is that a favor&#13;
¯¯ was asked of the DIYD - to help lay tile.&#13;
¯ Rule number one: if the task at hand is one&#13;
that you are not only good at, but have a&#13;
particular vanity over,&#13;
watch out! You m’e very&#13;
susceptible! Alld the&#13;
DIYD is the tile and grout&#13;
di~’a. Having refitedevery&#13;
c6nv~i~tionatstiffaeeinher&#13;
liouse, she finds herself&#13;
wonderizi~,7 Liii unguarded&#13;
moments, whether the&#13;
garage or the front porch&#13;
could, benefit from the&#13;
tasteful application of&#13;
ceramic tile. She was, m&#13;
fact, ripe for the phscking.&#13;
She graciously agreed.&#13;
Wlfich brings us to rule&#13;
nmnber two: agree on and&#13;
set all the parameters&#13;
around the proposed&#13;
! project befom.taldng it On: For those o,,f&#13;
you.whoshudderat theword "bom~dafies,"&#13;
¯" find a word thai works, b~t doi t~ al!ddo it&#13;
: thoroughly. This not only protec.ts you&#13;
~ from unpleasant surPrises, but the party to&#13;
i whom you are lending assistance aswelE&#13;
Nothing can sour a friendship like an&#13;
: ~tmisin4¢rpretedand goneaw.ry. ’&#13;
: Both sid~ should knowwhat is expected,&#13;
¯ ’ what wil! actually occur, ~hat amount of&#13;
¯ dme is involved, how~.much work is&#13;
: inv61vht, hoW much each person is.&#13;
: responsible for, and~ whatthe fairexchange&#13;
will, be. Any changes should be&#13;
E comm,tmi.¢ated u~ front:..,., ." _’ .’," "&#13;
50 New-Books at the Library&#13;
by Barry Hensley&#13;
Tulsa City-County Library&#13;
Over the last few momhs, .the Tulsa&#13;
City-Cotmty Libraryhas acquired dozens&#13;
of recent tides of interest to the gay&#13;
community. Cheek your local branch&#13;
library for these dries, or call the Readers&#13;
Services department at 596-7966.&#13;
LESBIAN FICTION&#13;
Shy Girl by Elizabeth Stark&#13;
Tipping the Velvet by Sarah Waters&#13;
Hers 3: Brilliant New Fiction by Lesbian&#13;
Writers&#13;
6th Sense: A Cassidy James Mystery&#13;
by Kate Calloway&#13;
Bogeywoman: A Novel by Jaimy Gordon&#13;
Lost Daughters by J. M. Redmann&#13;
November Ever After by Laura Tones&#13;
The Other Woman by Ann OiLeary&#13;
The Vintage.BookoflnternatiomdLesbian&#13;
Fiction&#13;
GAY MALE FICTION&#13;
Breakfast with Scot by Michae! Downing&#13;
Comfort and Joy by Jim Grimsley&#13;
Justice at Risk: A Benjamin Justice ~iYnkStSelriypbbyyJoRhintaMCiorregsain,Wilson&#13;
Surrender.Dorothy by Meg Wolitzer&#13;
Minions of the Moon by Richard Bowes&#13;
Capital Queers by Fred Hunter&#13;
EveryManfor Himselfby OrlandOudand&#13;
His 3: Brilliant New Fiction by Gay&#13;
Writers&#13;
LESBIAN NONFICTION&#13;
The Queen of Whale Cay by Kate&#13;
Surmnerscale&#13;
TheWhole Truth:A Case ofMurderon the&#13;
Appalachian Trail&#13;
by H. L. Pohlman&#13;
Monologues and Scenes for Lesbian&#13;
Actors by CarolynGage-&#13;
Janet, My Mother; and Me: A Menloir of&#13;
Growing Up by William Murray&#13;
Baby Precious Always Shines: Selected&#13;
Love Notes by Gertrude Stein&#13;
Lesbian Health: Current Assessment and&#13;
Directions&#13;
My Lesbian Husband: ALandscape ofa&#13;
Marriage by Barrie Borich&#13;
Hunting the Witch byEllen Hart&#13;
ApplesandOranges:MyJourney Through&#13;
Sexual Identity I~y Jan Clausen&#13;
RestrictedAccess: LeSbians on Disability&#13;
To Believe in Womem ’What, Lesbians&#13;
Have Done for America by’ Lillian&#13;
Faderman&#13;
GA~ MALE NONFICTION&#13;
How to Survive Your Own Gay L~e&#13;
by Pet~ Brass " .&#13;
VulgarFavors:Andrew Cunanan,G’ianni "&#13;
Versace, and the Largest FailedManhunt&#13;
in U S. History by Maureen Orth&#13;
Crisis ofDesire by Robin Hardy&#13;
Love in A Different Climate&#13;
by Jeremy Seabrook&#13;
Finding the Boyfriend Within&#13;
by Brad Gooch&#13;
When It’s Time to Leave Your Lover&#13;
by Neil Kaminsky&#13;
see Read, p. 1:&#13;
by Lamont Lindstrom, Ph.D.&#13;
"Faggots !" I was sitting inmy car talking&#13;
to my friend Errol when I heard the word.&#13;
One of ErroF s cantankerous neighborsno&#13;
pal, obviously - had barked at us as he&#13;
marched past the car. I didn’t know&#13;
whether tO feel outraged or amused. It had&#13;
been a long time since anyone "called me a&#13;
name, at least publicly. Sticks mad stones,&#13;
I thought. And did I really mind being a&#13;
faggot anyway?&#13;
Still, the hairon my neck Stood up.&#13;
Rude slurs are good e~idence of the power&#13;
of words. Even-if 0nly symbolic, words&#13;
have an ~mpact. Some words ,are deeds.&#13;
Linguists study "’speech acts" that shape&#13;
or change the world. Utterances like "I&#13;
promise, "I apologize," "I resign," or "[I&#13;
name you] faggot!" have serious&#13;
consequences (as anyone knows who has&#13;
been "pronounced" man or wife).&#13;
Language can’carry either a positive or&#13;
a negative charge. Both sacred speech and&#13;
profane speech are dangerous. In many&#13;
religions, no one knows the name of god.&#13;
Or even where onedo..,e.s; the deity’ s name&#13;
is never uttered aloud, Magical words can&#13;
change the world. The secret word&#13;
"sesame" opens the cave. Abracadabra&#13;
pulls the rabbit from the hat. Uttering a&#13;
sacred name can have unintended&#13;
consequences. You might wake sleeping&#13;
gods. It’s safer to steer clear of charged&#13;
labels.&#13;
A similar sort of ritualized avoidance of&#13;
naming characterizes many kinship&#13;
systems around the word. Son-in-laws&#13;
never pronounce the personal names oftheir&#13;
wives’ parents, and .vice versa. In&#13;
other societies, brothers and sisters avoid&#13;
¯ in public? Who can use which word, and&#13;
¯¯ in which context? "Gay" and "Lesbian"&#13;
have recently become broadly accepted&#13;
¯ terms for homosexuality. Some have also&#13;
¯ attempted to revaluate "queer."&#13;
Revaluation succeeds when the labeled&#13;
¯ themselves embrace a slur as their own,&#13;
defusing its negative charge. Thus,"Queer&#13;
Theory" is currently being taught in&#13;
¯ Ameficau umversities.&#13;
Then there’s "faggot." Faggot, as a&#13;
negative homos’exual label dates back&#13;
¯ onlyto 1910, although it was used as early&#13;
¯ as the late 16th century to slur women. In&#13;
¯ fact, a number of today’s Gay slurs -&#13;
¯ including the term "Gay" itself- were ¯ first applied to women. A "Gay" woman&#13;
¯ in 1650 Faagland was a prostitute. Robert&#13;
¯ Scott’s Gay Slang Dictionary (online at&#13;
http:/!~vww.hurricane.net/.~vizard/&#13;
19.htnfl) lists 156 synonyms for"fag" mad&#13;
¯ more appear else~vhere in the dictionary.&#13;
(Scott also has 37 terms for "Lesbian.")&#13;
These include Spmfish-derived’~maricon"&#13;
~ and "’pato," French "tapette" (although&#13;
¯ pede ~srmss~n~),~dd~sh fe~,ele, and&#13;
¯ British/Australian "poofter." Then there&#13;
are the more obscure "’cot betty,"&#13;
¯ "daffodilly," "fu," "whoopsie boy," and&#13;
"uffimay" - "muffie’" in Pig Latin.&#13;
~’Faggot,’" unlike "Gay". or "Queer,"&#13;
~ still remains impolite. The ~vord is&#13;
¯ dangerously profane.. Not many of my&#13;
¯ academic colleagues are willing to teach&#13;
¯ courses ~in "Faggot Theory." But the profane is always close to the sacred.&#13;
." Because of its charge, "faggot" is more&#13;
¯ hurtful but also thusmore useful indefining ¯&#13;
who and what we are. When we name&#13;
¯ each other by the word, we make a strong,&#13;
each other’, s names like hot potatoes. ~ pt~blic claim to belong to a shared world&#13;
Anthropology suggests" that such ¯ .~oFfaggotry. So, still sitting in ~ny 4,’if; I&#13;
"avoidance relations" smooth over areas&#13;
of potential social conflict.&#13;
Negativel5 charged words are equally&#13;
powerful. The profane also carries a&#13;
wallop. A curse c,’m kill. The villagers I&#13;
lived with in Vanuatu were always fearful&#13;
when someone spoke evil of thegn. Even if&#13;
someone swore without thinking, in the&#13;
heat of an angry moment, the ancestr~fl&#13;
ghosts ufight hear and punish the person&#13;
who cursed, or the person who ~vas cursed.&#13;
or both.&#13;
Sociologists of the 1970s formulated&#13;
what tlaey called "labeling theory?" They&#13;
analyzed the ways in which lal~els, like&#13;
faggot, impact both society and the&#13;
individual. Socially. an arsenal ofnegative&#13;
labels maintains power inequalities. Those&#13;
on the bottom of the social ladder shoulder&#13;
the brunt of these terms. Individually,&#13;
such slurs unavoidably tinge our sense of&#13;
who we are. Like muttered curses, they&#13;
can harm. Even if we are of the strong,&#13;
"words may never hurt us" sort, we still&#13;
have to take into account their social&#13;
currency:We must respond tO slurs ifonly&#13;
to deny their validity and power over us.&#13;
Labeling theory in the 1970s particularly&#13;
noticed ethnic slurs the N word, the H&#13;
word, and all those othe~ lfibels ,that~e&#13;
today t66 impolite to say. Dhrin~"~iE last&#13;
generation, American speech etiquette&#13;
(what socio-linguists call "pragmatics")&#13;
has shifted to make use of these labels&#13;
hazardous. More recently, the same has&#13;
occurred with words like faggot. In a way,&#13;
however, new politeness rules give these&#13;
words even more power than they once&#13;
had, as Errol’ s neighbormay have realized.&#13;
There is a politics of labeling here.&#13;
Whose words will become the standard&#13;
labels - the one everyone safely may use&#13;
jnst gave that !@#S% the evil-eye.&#13;
But in 1996, at a Gay pride parade in&#13;
Providence, R.I., he took the opportunity&#13;
to make ,’unends,&#13;
"’I stood tip in t¥ont of 3,000 people mad&#13;
lnade a public apology to the Gay&#13;
couununity aud the two gentlemen who&#13;
went to that prom together," Ste~vart said.&#13;
"It was very emotional." "&#13;
Stewart 1]as been criticized bv some iu&#13;
the Gay connnumty for not being more&#13;
out froht with his personal relationslfips.&#13;
He bristles at that.&#13;
"’My personal life is extremely private,"&#13;
he said. "People have a lot of gall to&#13;
impose their opinions on someone who’ s&#13;
trying to make a difference - to tell me&#13;
that because I’ ve reached a certain stature,&#13;
I have to promote some Gay agenda."&#13;
’~¥qaen it comes to being a role model,&#13;
Stewart believes it’ s more important to be&#13;
a greatmayor than to spotlight his personal&#13;
life. "Having-openly Gay elected people&#13;
gives us our place at the table mad proves&#13;
that we are just as capable as anybody&#13;
else," Stewart said. "And it helps change&#13;
people’s minds abont how to consider&#13;
Gay people in their daily lives. It’s all&#13;
about being positive in what you do."&#13;
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Tulsa Locatioi~s~ - "&#13;
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Sapulpa Location:&#13;
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@Origin. 18+. Additional features from 67&#13;
!n April of this year the "Warrior in Two&#13;
Worlds" documentary will air nationally&#13;
on PBS. Keep an eye open for the exact&#13;
time and date in your area. This is a&#13;
compelling story of Eli Parker, a Seneca&#13;
Chief and a Union general in the Civil&#13;
War. Joanne wrote the sound track.&#13;
It is a nice thing to wish for peace and&#13;
harmony among peoples; I wonder if it&#13;
will ever happen. One can only hope thal&#13;
_ Deganawida will come alo~ag and help&#13;
create a word that engenders harmony&#13;
among differing peoples. Maybe then there&#13;
will be no more Gay bashing, lynching,&#13;
genocide... Sometimes, with news of&#13;
another Matthew Shepard-like case&#13;
-coming along once a week, it’s hard to&#13;
believe any change is occurring. Yet, I&#13;
watch TV, and see Will and Grace, and&#13;
many other shows that have or feature&#13;
Gay/Lesbian characters, I see films that&#13;
are about Gay folk even showing here in&#13;
the crotch of the bible belt (Beautiful&#13;
Thing, for instance) and can see a&#13;
difference. Because when I grew up, the&#13;
onlyimage I had ofGay folk were the man&#13;
mentioned in the book on birds and bees&#13;
my parents gave me at 14 - published in&#13;
1945 - that stated homosexuals were men&#13;
who hung around playgrounds in trench&#13;
coats offering you candy. I remember&#13;
thinking - in a rare moment when I wasn’t&#13;
busy suppressing, repressing and denying&#13;
- that that was what I had to look forward&#13;
to? That’s what I was? Ick. And the news&#13;
at the time, if Gay folk were mentioned at&#13;
all, "was nothing but images of the most&#13;
whacked out, far out people on the planet.&#13;
Lovely.&#13;
Now, kids have it much easier. Is it&#13;
paradise? No. Obviously not, and there&#13;
are people who are very much fighting to&#13;
prevent growth and understanding, and&#13;
raising monsters all around us. As Melissa&#13;
Etheridge wrote in her song "Scarecrow"&#13;
on the albttm "Breakdown": "’We all gasp&#13;
’this can’t happen here’, we’re all much&#13;
too civilized, where can these monsters&#13;
hide?’" She answers: "But they are&#13;
knocking on our front door, They’re&#13;
rocking in our cradles, They" re preadfing&#13;
in our churches, And eating at our tables."&#13;
And she’s absolutely right; that’s exactly&#13;
where they are. The boogeymen are out&#13;
there; and occasionally they do get you. In&#13;
another song on the same album, she&#13;
writes: "There is no marc, There are no&#13;
secrets, We all begin this race at the start,&#13;
But I have come this farWith a truth of the&#13;
heart. Deep down inside I think we’re all&#13;
the same. Try not to judge someone And&#13;
never shame. I do bdieve that people are&#13;
good. They just want hope and respect&#13;
And to be understood. Sometimes it hard&#13;
sometimes it’s strange But the truth of the&#13;
heart is people can change"&#13;
And this is true; I’ve seen it happen. Far&#13;
too infrequently, but it can happen. And&#13;
that’s the hope that can feed the fire of&#13;
change, andkeepus going whenit gets too&#13;
much. And it does feel that way,&#13;
sometimes. I had gotten to that point, after&#13;
seeing the internal strife within the&#13;
communities, as well as from outside.&#13;
How can we hope to change the world&#13;
when we can’t even agree amongst&#13;
ourselves? I’ d certainly decided it wasn’ t&#13;
worth an effort. Butmy best friend Karin,&#13;
aftermany years ofcomplainingabout the&#13;
world, has finally taken steps. To at least&#13;
make an attempt. And her doing so has&#13;
reignited a flame within me. And if that&#13;
spark might ignite another, then perhaps&#13;
the tamers of the world can unite. And&#13;
thus is hope reborn, like a phoenix frown&#13;
the ashes. And the world has changed; it is&#13;
so much easier tocome out earlier. There’ s&#13;
less a chance ofsomeone being afraid that&#13;
they’re the only one - like I did, There&#13;
were no role models. There were no out&#13;
Gay folk that I could talk to. There were&#13;
few resources available even at.the library,&#13;
unless it was reinforcement of the writing&#13;
in that booklet morn and dad gave me.&#13;
Thanks to the folks who were willing to&#13;
come together and fight and be,,,~ocal ~md&#13;
out when it was much more dangerous to&#13;
do so, the younger Gay folk do have&#13;
options we older folk didn~ t have. For thai&#13;
reason alone, the fight must continue. So&#13;
get involved, even if it’s coming out to&#13;
someone youhaven’ t yet. The only way to&#13;
dispel the lies and misi~ffonnation of the&#13;
radically wgong is to present ourselves as&#13;
we are - hmnan beings. That h~s done&#13;
more to change folks around me tha_u all&#13;
the marching and worn out footwear in&#13;
the world. And what is it that we all seek,&#13;
really? Not sex; and people who think&#13;
that’s what it’s all about are just plain&#13;
wrong. Tell them so. It’ s about the right to&#13;
love without being discriminated against.&#13;
And if they give you guff about that, just&#13;
tell them what author Lynn Flewelling&#13;
told me: Love is love.&#13;
Tuesday, June 6th, an art exhibit,&#13;
"United" will openandonThursday, June&#13;
8th, there will be a film night. Locations&#13;
and times will be announced later.&#13;
For more information about these&#13;
events, call the Gay Community Services&#13;
Center at 743-4297 (Gays). Groups who&#13;
want to enter a float in the parade are&#13;
encouraged to attend the float clinic on&#13;
March 11 from 1-4pro at the Center.&#13;
Gay Men’s Friendships: Invincible&#13;
Cotnmunities&#13;
by Peter Nardi&#13;
The Elusive Embrace: Desire and the&#13;
Riddle ofldentity&#13;
by Daniel Mendelsolm&#13;
Prayer Warriors by Stuart Howell Miller&#13;
Widescreen Dreaths : Growing Up Gay at&#13;
the Movies&#13;
by Patrick Horrigan&#13;
Victory Deferred: How AIDS Changed&#13;
Gay Life in America ¯ by Johi~-Manual Andriote&#13;
; OF INTEREST TO EVERYONE&#13;
¯ Gay Parents/Straight Schools: Building&#13;
¯ Comnfftnication attd Trust&#13;
by Virginia Casper&#13;
¯ Witness to Revolution: The Advocate&#13;
¯ Reports on Gay and Lesbian Politics&#13;
¯¯ 4 Steps to Financial Securityfor Gay attd&#13;
Lesbian Couples&#13;
¯ by Harold Lustig&#13;
Multicultural Detective Fiction: Murder&#13;
¯ from the Other Side&#13;
Outon Stage: Lesbian andGay Theatre in&#13;
". the Twentieth Century&#13;
¯ by Alan Sin.field ¯&#13;
TheQueerSixties by PatriciaJuliana Smith&#13;
¯&#13;
Gaylaw: Challenging the Apartheid of&#13;
¯ the Closet&#13;
¯ by William Eskridge&#13;
: To Be Continued, Take Two&#13;
i by Michele Karlsberg&#13;
Disidentifications: Queers of Color and&#13;
¯ the Performance ofPolitics ¯&#13;
by Jose Munoz&#13;
"- SomethingInside: Conversations with Gay&#13;
¯ Fiction Writers&#13;
CouNCiL oak meN’S c or&lt;aLe&#13;
presents&#13;
an~eclectic mix.of.choral.literature ranging from Baroque to Broadway,&#13;
from pop classics of the ’50s and ’60s to a bawdy sea chantey&#13;
aod an American Folk song featuring the Green Country Cloggers.&#13;
Friday and Saturday, April 7 &amp; 8, 2000 at 8pm&#13;
Williams Theatre, Tulsa Performing Arts Center&#13;
(reception following)&#13;
Tickets: PAC box office, 596-7111 in Tulsa,&#13;
1,800-364-7111 or online at www,tulsapac.com&#13;
council oak a fellowship of gay men dedicated to musical excellence in&#13;
the performnnce of choral literature:, providing a source ot"&#13;
pride, unity, and support, w;h{]e presenting a positive image&#13;
for ourselves, our community, and society as a whole.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION about the council oak me~’s Cl~oI~aLe and its parent organization,&#13;
the non-profit Vocal Pride Foundation,visit our award-winning website at www.counciloak.org.</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, March 2000; Volume 7, Issue 3</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
</text>
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                <text>Tom Neal</text>
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                <text>James Christjohn&#13;
Barry Hens;ey&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers</text>
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              <text>Brief for Dale v. BOy Scouts&#13;
by Tim Talley, Associated Press ~rite~ -&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Some state lawmakers&#13;
demanded in mid-April that Oklahoma Attorney General&#13;
Drew Edmondson withdraw from participating in a&#13;
U:S. Supreme Court case on whether to allow Gay boys&#13;
and men in the Boy Scouts of America. Resolutions&#13;
were f’ded in the state House and~ Senate opposing a&#13;
friend-of-the-court briefEdmondson filed supporting a&#13;
New Jersey court decision that ordered the Boy Scouts&#13;
to reinstate a homosexual scout leader.&#13;
"I think it is a dark day for Oklahoma that we have&#13;
taken this stand, by and through our attorney general, in&#13;
favor of Gay rights and against the Boy Scouts," said&#13;
Rep. Frank Davis, R-Guthrie, a former scout master&#13;
whoseresolutionhas70co-authors.Aresolutionpassed&#13;
by the Senate says Edmondson’s position "is in dramarie&#13;
opposition to the moral ideals of.our state and is&#13;
inappropriate in this case of first impression before the&#13;
United State Supreme Court."&#13;
In a statement, Edmondson saidhe respects the views&#13;
of lawmakers who oppose his action. But the attorney&#13;
general said the state’ s position see Attorney; p. 2&#13;
Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
: ,~. Tulsa’s Largest Circulation Community PaperAvailable In More Than 75 City Locations&#13;
¯ Co!legeHill Presbyterian&#13;
::Church Welcomes Gays&#13;
TULSA - This last Palm Sunday, the Session (the board of&#13;
directors) of College Hill Presbyterian Church, one of Tulsa’ s&#13;
older"mainline" congregations, voted 13 yes, zero no’ s with one&#13;
abstention to become officially a member of"More Light Presbyterians."&#13;
College Hill, located a block west of the University of&#13;
Tulsa is the first Presbyterian congregation in Eastern Oklahoma&#13;
(o. take the position of welcoming&#13;
all to attend and serve&#13;
the church regardless of&#13;
sexual orientation.&#13;
More Light Presbyterians&#13;
is a national network of&#13;
churches and individuals&#13;
working for justice, love and&#13;
the full embrace and inclusion&#13;
of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual&#13;
and Transgendered&#13;
persons and their families.&#13;
The name is taken from the&#13;
words of the Rev. John&#13;
Robinson (c. 1620),"we limit&#13;
not the truth of God to our&#13;
poor reach of mind - by notions&#13;
of our day and sect - crude, partial and confined. No, let a&#13;
new and better hope within our hearts be stirred, for Godhath yet&#13;
more light and truth to break forth from the Word."&#13;
The decision for College Hill came after more than 14 months&#13;
ofprayer, study and discussion. Acongregational voteon several&#13;
statements and positions, one affirming open inclusion, another&#13;
reaffirming the mission statement of More Light Presbyterians,&#13;
and for becoming a More Light congregation passed, 87%, 90%&#13;
and 80% respectively. .&#13;
Pastor Radford Rader noted, "College Hill has long been a&#13;
congregation which has stood for jnstice issues and with groups&#13;
of people who others ignore or exclude.., we cannot remain in&#13;
the closet, but want to rejoice in who we are as a family of faith.&#13;
¯ .we are blessed by our Gay and Lesbian members."&#13;
College Hill’ s history is one of s0cialjttstice, seeChurch,p.11&#13;
College Hill Presbyterian&#13;
GI,s Mom Suing Arm i- Supreme Court Hears Gay Civil&#13;
WASHINGTON(AP)-Them°ther°fas°ldiermur- " R|ghts Case: Dale vs. BSA dered in his barracks believes the Army’s attitude ,&#13;
toward Gays created the atmosphere that led to the&#13;
killing. Patricia Kutteles of Kansas City, Mo., said she&#13;
would file a claim with the Army, seeking roughly $1.8&#13;
million in damages for the death of her son, Pfc. Barry&#13;
Wincbell,21. Shesaidfellow soldiers believed Winchell&#13;
was Gay and harassed him for months before he was&#13;
beaten to death while sleeping in his cot last July at Fort&#13;
Campbell, Ky. The Army knew about the harassment&#13;
but did nothing to stop it, she said. "We want theArmy&#13;
to be held accountable," Kutteles said.&#13;
Pvt. Calvin Glover, 19, of Sulphur, Okla., was convicted&#13;
of premeditated murder and sentenced to life in&#13;
prison for the attack. Another soldier was givena 12.5-&#13;
year sentence for lying to investigators and obstructing&#13;
justice. Thekillingprompted criticism ofthePentagon’ s&#13;
policy onhomosexuals in the military. Under the policy&#13;
known as "don’t ask, don’t teli.;’:~,Gay-members of the&#13;
military can continue to serve.as Ibng as they keep their&#13;
sexual orientation to themselves.&#13;
Kutteles’ attorney,Adam Pachter, saidheplans to file&#13;
under a federal law that allows people to seek reimbursement&#13;
from the military for injury or death. The&#13;
claim will be sent toMaj. Gen. Robert T. Clark, the&#13;
commander of Fort Campbell, but Army Secretary&#13;
Louis CaldemprobAbly’will make thef’mal decision on&#13;
whether to pay, Pachter said. Kutteles’ claim also alleges&#13;
Fort Campbell officials ignored underage drinking&#13;
on the base and did not provide a way for soldiers to&#13;
call 911 from the barracks.:Glover has said he had been&#13;
drinking prior to theattack~ Maj. Pamela Hart, an Army&#13;
spokeswoman, declined to comment on the claim but&#13;
said soldiers cannow reach 911 from their barracks. She&#13;
also said soldiers hadreceived additional training about&#13;
the military’ s policy on Gays.&#13;
Kutteles said her goal is to get the Army to admit&#13;
wrongdoing and take corrective action. "I don’t think&#13;
you~put aprice on your child’ s life,’.’ she said. "Your&#13;
world is changed if you lose a child. Nothing caa ever&#13;
rip3at it."&#13;
¯ WASHINGTON, D.C. - Boy Scouts of America (BSA) is not&#13;
¯ entitled to expel an exemplary member who is openly Gay from&#13;
¯ its ranks, the National Gay and LesbianTask Force said at the end&#13;
¯ ofApril as theU.S. SupremeCourtwas hearingargumentsinBoy&#13;
Scouts of America v. Dale. The ruling on the case will likely be&#13;
: issued before the term ends in early summer.&#13;
: ’q’he Boy Scouts’ mission is to promote model citizenship and&#13;
¯ integrity," said Panla Ettdbrick, NGLTFFamily Policy Director.&#13;
: "It is ridiculous and wrong to exclude a man whose outstanding&#13;
¯ personal character fulfills this mission simPlY because he is&#13;
¯ Gay."&#13;
-" "The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case on appeal by the&#13;
¯ BSA after the August 1999 unanimous decision of the New&#13;
¯¯ Jersey,Supreme Court. The court found that the BSA falls under&#13;
New Jersey’ s anti-discrimination law and cannot deny any per-&#13;
" son "accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges"&#13;
: because of sexual orientation.&#13;
¯ Because the Scouts do not organize for a specific anti-Gay&#13;
¯ message; the New Jersey Supreme Court also found that the&#13;
¯ inclusion of openly Gay assistant scoutmasterJames Dale would&#13;
¯ not violate the BSA’ s First Amendment rights offree association&#13;
¯ and free speech.&#13;
." ~I’llis case represents a classic struggle in our country?s ever-&#13;
" evolving democracy," said Ettelbrick, a veteran attorney and&#13;
: national expertLon legal-issues facing.the Ga~y~ lesbian~ bisexual&#13;
¯ and transgender community. "It is the stragglebetween agroup’ s ¯&#13;
right to establish its own values and the government’ s obligation&#13;
¯ to ensure that the law does not give effect to those private biases&#13;
when they are used to inhibit equality." .. . ~&#13;
: Ettelbrick praised the Lambda Legal Defense and Education&#13;
¯&#13;
Fund, which has served as lead counsel for James Dale and has&#13;
¯ assembled a broad collection of groups to sign friend-of-the-&#13;
. court briefs. Those groups range from NGLTF and the National&#13;
¯ Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)&#13;
: to the attorneys-general of 10 states, including Oklahoma Attor-&#13;
: ney General Drew Edmondson (see related story this page).&#13;
¯ NGLTF’ S brief can be found online via I..ambda’ s website at&#13;
: http:/Iwww.lldef.org/sectionslseetionsldalepresskit/&#13;
: amicusaclu.html.&#13;
i&#13;
Vermont Governor&#13;
Signs Gay Union Bill&#13;
by Ross Sneyd, Associated Press Writer&#13;
¯ MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - Gov. Howard Dean ¯&#13;
signed into law on Wednesday, April 26, 2000, a&#13;
¯ bill making Vermont the first state to give Gay and&#13;
’ Lesbian couples all the rights and benefits of mar-&#13;
¯ riage - without legally declaring it a marriage. ¯&#13;
"I think the powerful message is that in Vermont,&#13;
¯ we tend to value people for who they are, not what&#13;
¯ they are," the Democratic governor said after the&#13;
House gave the measure final approval Tuesday.&#13;
° The bill, which House members supported 79-68,&#13;
¯ arrived at the governor’ s deskjust before lunch and&#13;
¯ was signed quietly prior to a2pmnews confe~e,nce, ¯&#13;
Vermont lawmakers didn’t use the term mar-&#13;
" riage to describe the official state sanction. Instead&#13;
¯ they set up aparallel track of"civil tmions," which&#13;
¯ would give Gay and Lesbian partners the property&#13;
and other legal fights of spouses. Such unions&#13;
¯ would become legal July 1. No state has ever gone&#13;
¯ so far in recognizing the relationships that Gay and&#13;
"- Lesbian couples form.&#13;
." Three couples and the lawyers who sued in 1997&#13;
¯ when they were denied marriage licenses watched&#13;
in the crowded Housechamber as the final roll was&#13;
¯ called and House representatives agreed to minor&#13;
." changes made by their colleagues in the Senate.&#13;
¯ Stacy Jolles and Nina Beck stood cradling their 5-&#13;
¯ month-old son, Seth. PeterHarrigan stood embracing&#13;
Stan Baker, who held a small necklace from&#13;
¯ which his parents’ wedding rings dangled. And&#13;
¯ Holly Puterbaugh held hands as Lois Famham&#13;
¯ wiped tears fromher eyes. "This isn’ tmarriage, but&#13;
it’ s ahuge and powerful bundle ofrights that we’ ve&#13;
¯ finally gotten," Baker said moments after the vote.&#13;
¯ After the vote, Rosana Vestuti, 41, of Montpelier,&#13;
sat on a window seat as legislators, Gay and&#13;
." Lesbian couples and thepress milled about. "It’ s so&#13;
¯ nice. I have all this in my eyes," see Vermont, p. 7&#13;
¯ OKC Gay Group Meets&#13;
With Daily Oklahoman&#13;
OKLAHOMACITY -Leaders in OklahomaCity’ s&#13;
are hailing an early April meeting with Sue Hale,&#13;
: the new executive editor of the Daily Oklahoman.&#13;
¯ The Daily Oklahoman which was characterized in ¯&#13;
the Columbia Journalism Review as "the worst&#13;
: newspaper in America" has been known for its&#13;
¯ unfair treatment of Lesbian and Gay issues, not ¯&#13;
only on the editorial pages but in regular, "objec-&#13;
¯ five" newscoverage.&#13;
¯ Those who met with Hale are participants in a&#13;
¯ new speakers bureau. "Speakers for Gay and Les-&#13;
¯ bian Issues" was organized with the goal of reach-&#13;
¯ ing out to the straight commtmity to facilitate ¯&#13;
¯ understanding of the realities of.being Gay and&#13;
Lesbian. Karen Pars0ns,Nathaniel Batchelder, Paul&#13;
¯ Thompson, and Rob Abiera attended the meeting&#13;
¯ with Hale, a thirty-year veteran of the Daily Okla-&#13;
" homan.&#13;
¯&#13;
Hale was chosen to be the successor to Stan&#13;
¯ Tiner, who left the Daily Oklahoman after several&#13;
¯ months of working to remold the paper into a more&#13;
¯ progressive, contemporary medium which would&#13;
¯ more accurately reflect the diversity of Oklahoma&#13;
." City.&#13;
¯ Halewas approached after reports.began to surface&#13;
of her interest in "social justice" issues. And&#13;
¯ though homophobic diatribes continue to grace the&#13;
editorial page - still under the firm control of&#13;
¯ Patrick McGuigan - the rest of the paper was ¯&#13;
showing signs of neutrality, if not being outright&#13;
; Gay-friendly.&#13;
¯ One place where the paper was showing signs of&#13;
¯ openness has been in the movie reviews. Kathryn&#13;
; Jenson White had come from the Oklahoma Ga-&#13;
: zette (OKC’ s alternative weekly) and had always&#13;
¯ been of decidedly liberal persuasion. It did not take&#13;
¯" long after Tiner’ s departure to see that she would&#13;
: continue to be so, and when two GLBT-themed&#13;
: Oscar coatenders see Daily, p. 11&#13;
_;&#13;
!&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’ s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
Full Moon Care, 1525 E. 15th&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Sqtmre&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*The Storm, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainb0w Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’s, 2114’S: Memorial&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E: 3rd&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
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*The Yellow-Bri~k-Road.Pub,~-2630,E...1$th, ........ ;749~1563&#13;
Tal~a~BtlstPiesse~Set~ices, &amp;: Pcofe~s~o~als~.~.; :&#13;
Advanced Wireleg~&amp;::P~,S~ Di~ithl Cellulhi ~ ~ ~ i.tJ ~ q47:q508’&#13;
*Assdd ih~19I~d!&amp;:M~fi¢~l ~da]ttl)2325 8’: H~ii~c~a~ 74g-’~i000’,&#13;
Kent Balch &amp;Assr(~htes, Health &amp; Life Insurance 747-9506&#13;
*Barnes &amp; N~bl~’ B66ksellers, 8620 E. 71 250-5034&#13;
*Barnes &amp;N0bl~Broksellers, 5231 E. 41&#13;
Body Piefdfigby Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; MUsic, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders BOoks’ &amp;MUsic, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brooksid~ J~w~lfy,4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD War~hogs~,’3807c S. Peoria&#13;
*Cheap Thrills~ 2640 E. 1 lth&#13;
Cherry Stl Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis&#13;
665-4580&#13;
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494-2665&#13;
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295-5868&#13;
581-0902, 743-4H7&#13;
Community Cleani~ag, Kerby Baker&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney&#13;
*Deco to Dfsco, 3212 E. 15th&#13;
DoghouSe oti:Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp;Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon ~"58420337,&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main ,., " ’-.&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th PI:&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med: Ctr.&#13;
.Gay &amp; Lesbian-Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Learme M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra’ J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th&#13;
*Jared’ s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Kerfs Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2nd floor&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, POB 696,74101&#13;
Richard’ s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
Teri Schutt Rex Realtors 834-7921,&#13;
Scribner’ s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
622-~0700-&#13;
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Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc.POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 -587-7314o&#13;
Bless Ttl~ LO~d at~All Tirn~ -Chflstian Ce-n’tdr/2207 E. 6 58327815-&#13;
*B/LiG/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th P1. &amp; Florence&#13;
*Churchof:the RestorafionUU., t3t:4N:Greenwood 587-1314"&#13;
*CommtmityofHopeUnitedMethodist,2545 S. Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Comrmmity Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’ s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*DelawarePlayhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
*Free SpiritWomen’ s Center, call for location&amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend ForA Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@ earthlinlc net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche,&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom Esther Rothblum, Mary Schepers&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1 st of each month, the enttre contents&#13;
hi" this ubli t~on e protecte~l bv US copyright 1998 8y&#13;
~/~ ~ :ahd~may~hd~,be~ep~oduoed e~tlaer m&#13;
~ w,hol¢ort~p.a~_ ~’~l~OUt w~atte~a p~.r0~SSlQ~~ro~ ~publisheir. ~&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not.indicate a person’ s&#13;
sexual orientation. Corr~spbndeii~ i~assumed to be for.&#13;
publication" unlessootherwis~noted,, must be signed &amp; becomes.&#13;
the ao_l¢ property ofr~ ~’~.’. Nt,w4 Eachreader&#13;
is entitled to 4 copiesof each editt0n at distribution&#13;
pointsJ Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
: Interfaith AIDS Ministries&#13;
: Dear friends,&#13;
¯ The present realities of HIV/AIDS and&#13;
: decreased focus on and interest in HIV-&#13;
: related issues have made providing HIV/&#13;
: AIDS servicesadifficnltifnotimpossible&#13;
r task. This is true on a national as well as&#13;
: local level, Late last fall Interfaith AIDS&#13;
: Ministries (IAM) received a letter from&#13;
: AIDS National InterfaithNetwork (ANIN)&#13;
that itwas closing its doors," as a result of&#13;
: financial difficulties which cumulatively&#13;
¯ .v". und" e,.r~l",nc.d ~I ’ ~ Vl"l~b,"l i "&#13;
: reaht~l~s ~a~e~t ~n~pq~s~ble,. ~o ttmcgqq&#13;
¯ :..is With deep r~gret that I must announce&#13;
: that the boardof Interfaith AIDS Minis-&#13;
¯" ’tries has’made the decision to discontinue&#13;
: client services.&#13;
: I have for srme time continued as the&#13;
¯ directorona.volunteerbasis at the board"g ¯ reques ; L’.am no longer able to d.o&#13;
¯ Work-~.~,~.~ and personal responslbl,~i,7&#13;
582-0~38 ties maKeit impossible forme to continue&#13;
¯ Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st. 481-1111 ¯&#13;
HOPEI HiV-.Outredch,Pi?~vefifibn:,Edt~cafion 834-8378&#13;
: .*H0us.e. O~ the Holy Spitff ~_~nstri¢s,.32!0~ s~~. ’Nb~wood .......&#13;
:::-iii~e~ ~iDS MJnislii~s/~ ...... 4381~437, 800-284-2437 ."&#13;
:."¥~C~~ United~-i623 :N. Mapi~w00d~: " ~ 838-i715&#13;
¯ NAMESPr0ject,.3507 E. Admiral- PlY . 748-3111 . ¯&#13;
NO.W, Nat’l Or.g for Womeri;"POBlZ!0.68174159 365-5658&#13;
¯ OK Spokes Club (bic~clifig), POB 916~,-.74157 " .&#13;
¯ *OSU-TUiSa ’ " ’ ¯&#13;
¯ ..PFLAG, POB 52800, 74152 749-4901 :&#13;
¯&#13;
*Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674 "&#13;
¯ Prime-Timer~P.O. Box 52118, 74152 "&#13;
¯ R.A.I:N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network~ ........ 749-4195 ¯&#13;
¯Red Ro~k Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 ..... 584~2325 ¯&#13;
; O’ RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults&#13;
O’RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth "&#13;
St. Aidan’ s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882 ¯&#13;
¯&#13;
St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140&#13;
¯&#13;
*St. Jerome’ s Parish Church, 205 W. King .582-3088 "&#13;
¯" *Tulsa,~ea United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171 ¯&#13;
¯TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225 ¯ ¯&#13;
Tulsa County HealthDepartment, 4616 E. 15 595-4105 :&#13;
¯&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only "&#13;
¯ TulsaOkla. for HumanRights, c/o The PrideCenter 743:4297&#13;
¯ T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform!Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule ¯&#13;
: *Tulsa Community College Campuses "&#13;
¯ *TulsaGay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105 743-4297 ¯ ¯&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity,3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833 ¯&#13;
Friead~,..in ~nity Social Org., i~i3 8~2~ 7..4 !.0. !&#13;
HIV~.~ente~2~i’38Chas’. Page Blvd. " -- 583-6611 : to do thejob rrsponsibly. It requires more ........&#13;
*Tulsa C.A.R:E.S., 3507 E. Admiral- 834-4i94~. time and energy than I am now able to&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
¯ OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 3209 NW Expressway 405-848-2667&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
¯¯ TAHLEQUAH&#13;
Stonewall League, call for information: 918~456-7900&#13;
¯ *Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900&#13;
¯ Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
¯ NSU School of Optometry, 1001 N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
: EUREKASI~;RINGS, ARKANSAS.&#13;
"~ Auttmm’ Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
¯&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent’ s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
DeVito’ s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
Emerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St,&#13;
: MCC:0f the Living Spring&#13;
: Geek to Go!,TC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
¯ Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
¯ Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’ s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
: White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
: JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134 417-623-4696&#13;
501-253-7734 "&#13;
501-253-7457 :&#13;
501-253-6807 "&#13;
501-253-5445 ¯&#13;
501-253-9337 :&#13;
501-253-2776 "&#13;
501-253-5332 .&#13;
501-624-6646 "&#13;
501-253-6001 "&#13;
501-253-4074&#13;
¯&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Not allare Gay-owned but allare Gay-friendly.&#13;
commiLAnd there is no one wilting and&#13;
able to take my place.&#13;
The bisard has made the decision t~&#13;
continue IAM’s existence, at this time.&#13;
IAM’s board will continue to meet periodicallyand&#13;
monitor the changing reali:°&#13;
ties of HIV/AIDS, its effect on our community&#13;
and any future role IAM may play&#13;
inmeeting needs. It is the ministry’ s hope,&#13;
of course, that the future will bring a cure.’.&#13;
that some day gatherings will be in remembrance&#13;
only.&#13;
The board and I wish to express our&#13;
deepest appreciation for you support of&#13;
the work of this ministry over the many&#13;
years of its existence. Without that support&#13;
IAM would not have been able to&#13;
serve the hundreds of individuals which it&#13;
has assisted withpractical, emotional, and&#13;
spiritual support. Thank you on behalf of&#13;
thosewehave served for themany gifts of&#13;
your time, your talents, and your support.&#13;
I appreciate the opporttmity the ministry&#13;
has provided me to serve those affected&#13;
by HIV/AIDS and to get to know&#13;
and work with all of you. It has been very&#13;
hard for me to step away from this work&#13;
knowing there is so much more to be&#13;
done. However, I know I have reached&#13;
that place where, even though there is alot&#13;
more I would have liked to have done, I&#13;
have done all I can do for now. I would ask&#13;
that you continue your prayers of those&#13;
living:~ith and affected by HIV/A~DS&#13;
and fofthOse who minister to them, for a&#13;
cure for this,devastating disease, and frr&#13;
those who have served Interfaith AIDS&#13;
Ministries. Thank you and God bless you.&#13;
Faithfully,&#13;
- Chaplain Diane Zike, Director&#13;
"focused on the issue of state’s rights"&#13;
and that the high court’, s ruling in the case.&#13;
"will have no direct effect in Oklahoma."&#13;
"Oklahoma does not have the same antidiscrimination&#13;
law as New Jersey,"&#13;
Edmondson said. "For me and my office,&#13;
this matter was soldy decided on the&#13;
advancement of states’ rights."&#13;
Theissue ofstates’ rights involves powers&#13;
reserved to the states under the 10th&#13;
Amendment and immunity from lawsuits&#13;
under the 1 lth Amendment.&#13;
Edmondson, a former Boy Scout and&#13;
see Attorney, p.7&#13;
by Christopher Graft, Associated Press Writer&#13;
On the day Unilever bought Slim-Fast for $2.3 billion&#13;
and Ben &amp; Jerry’s for $326 million, it was the smaller&#13;
purchase that captured the headlines and attentionnationwide.&#13;
TheNew York Times, The Washington Postand The&#13;
Associated Press were among the major news organizations&#13;
that focused on the purchase of the tiny ice cream&#13;
company, mentioning the acquisition of the much-larger&#13;
Slim-Fast only to savor the unusual pairing of the fatten,&#13;
ing and dieting duo.&#13;
ceutical industry or whoever is his enemy of the moment.&#13;
It is remarkable, actually, that Vermont gets as much&#13;
attention as it does - through Ben, Jerry, and Bernie, and&#13;
through U.S. Sens. Pat Leahy and Jim Jeffords and Gov.&#13;
Howard Dean, all of whom have images of straight&#13;
talkers in a business full of bluster. I suspect the nation’ s&#13;
high interest in things Vermont has something to do with&#13;
"... More and more in recent years Vetmont&#13;
has been out front in tackling tough Why? Why does a $326 million purchase gain more&#13;
attcntionthatva$2.3~billionone?Qu~fle-simplybecauseno ¯ probl.ems. There is something about the&#13;
one ldab~s 6r~ cares ~h6 !o~vns Shn~-Fast." ~ . , ~ ¯ . ¯&#13;
Butdle k~d~Be~duidflie ’ldid,&amp; J " ~’" ""~ ~ ,.small ~s~ze of the state that allows exper~-&#13;
¯ ! y ,, ! , y.:,. . ’. erry. mlamey care . .... ¯ ¯ : ¯&#13;
who owns th~s’c0mpa@.~ h~;ce ~dffay~ b~fi ~ttnazed’l~ ~. :nlentat~i0ii. Aiad ther is something a~ well&#13;
the wide interest in Ben &amp; Jerry’ s. By the news media.&#13;
And by peo_p,te in general. Because, to be blunt about it,&#13;
Ben &amp; Jerry s is a tiny company, with an insignificant&#13;
share of the ice cream market. The appeal, though, stems&#13;
from the fact there are two real guys at the heart of this&#13;
company; two guys who want t6~do good.&#13;
No faceless multinational ctlialj._"~,y with layers of&#13;
bureau...cracy. This xs Ben and Je~’.~,~-stlll doing a little&#13;
scooping here and there, and always keeping their eyes on&#13;
social concerns. And that strikes a nerve with the publicl&#13;
Twoguys who want to do good. Helping out the little guy&#13;
by earmarking 7.5% of the pretax p.r.ofits for charity and&#13;
running campaigns to help children and savethe family&#13;
farm. Two guYS. Doing good.&#13;
Bernie Sanders strikes that same nerve. This past week&#13;
found him gushingly profiled in the New York Times and&#13;
prominently featured in the Boston Globe, the National&#13;
Journal.and on Nagonal Public Radio. H~ is just one of&#13;
435 members of the U.S. House - and ye’~ he reaps far&#13;
more than his share of publicity - just like Ben and Jerry&#13;
do. Why? Because he, too, strikes a nerve. Bernie is the&#13;
fighter for the little guy, taking on the powerful pharma-&#13;
" about the attitude of its polltieal leaders&#13;
¯ and people, an attitude that champions eivll&#13;
i&#13;
r~ghts and foeuse~ on the little guy.&#13;
: As difficult as it seems for some people,&#13;
the debate this year over extending&#13;
i&#13;
benefits to Gay and Le~hian couples&#13;
is part of that tradition..."&#13;
: theseindi~iduals, but it als0 has s0me~ng to do with the&#13;
state, its people and its heritage.&#13;
¯ In a time when many people feel disconnected from&#13;
~ their communities, when they feel overwhelmed by the&#13;
¯ stresses and strains of everyday life, Vermont seems to&#13;
¯ offer an anchor and a hope. Vermont is small enough.to&#13;
retain the seBs¢ of community lost elsewhere, and is&#13;
¯ unafraid to try the unconventional - to stand up for the&#13;
¯ litde guy. ¯&#13;
Ben, Jerry, Bernie and the others are not creating a new&#13;
image for Vermont: They are simply building on what&#13;
Editor’s note: the following are remarks made by new&#13;
NGLTF Executive Director Elizabeth Toledo at the National&#13;
Press Club at apress conference held on April.25.&#13;
"Good morning. I am here this morning to discuss the&#13;
state of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender&#13;
movement (GLBT) for equality in the United States.&#13;
As many state legislatures across the land wrap tip their&#13;
work and adjourn, we are seeing a frenzied pace of&#13;
legislative activity surrounding GLBT issues. For only&#13;
the second year in our movement’ s history, we have seen&#13;
bills favorable to our community outnumber unfavorable&#13;
bills - and the ratio is rapidly increasing.&#13;
So far this year, the National Gay and Lesbian Task&#13;
Force has tracked 466 bills, of which 288 are favorable&#13;
and 178 are unfavorable. By comparison, last year, we&#13;
tracked 269 favorable bills and 205 unfavorable bills.&#13;
A trend has emerged which shows that although the&#13;
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender population remains&#13;
under fierce attack, the movement toward civil&#13;
rights for all is steadily gaining strength.&#13;
Today the Vermont House of Representatives is poised&#13;
to give final approval to a bill that would allow same-sex&#13;
couples the right to enter into official civil unions sanctioned&#13;
by the state. If approved and signed into law, the&#13;
Vermont bill will do what no state has ever done before&#13;
- it will pr0~ide same~s,¢x couples wi~ al! of the fights,&#13;
benefits iitid ~i~0fi-iilsNties Of niarfiag~ thai a state can&#13;
offer.&#13;
Vermont has garnered a lot of attention, and rightfully&#13;
so. But did_you know_ about Georgia? Indiana? Mai_ne?&#13;
Alabama?’GeOrgia this Tear foi~ ,the firs:t!time ever: has&#13;
passed and enacted a hate crimes law. Indiana has passed&#13;
and enacted a hate crimes data collection law. While not&#13;
a full-blown hate crimes law, it represents the first rime&#13;
hidianalegislators have everreacted favorably to aGLBT&#13;
issue. Maine has passed and forwarded to the voters a&#13;
full-scale civil rights law that includes sexual orientation.&#13;
In Alabama, the House has passed an historic bill adding&#13;
.sexual orientation to the existing hate crimes law. Thebill&#13;
is scheduled to come up for a heating in the Senate&#13;
tomorrow.&#13;
Five states - Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire,&#13;
New Mexico, Wisconsin - have defeated attempts to&#13;
either pass or strengthen anti-same-sex marriage laws.&#13;
¯&#13;
The pace of activity this year continues a trend we first&#13;
¯ noticed in 1999, a breakthrough year for the GLBT&#13;
; .- movement. Last year’ s legislative victories included his-&#13;
" toric advances in such disparate states as California,&#13;
: Kentucky, New Hampshire and Nevada. In California,&#13;
legislators passed and the governor signed a trio of bills&#13;
: "...Vermont has garnered a lot of&#13;
: attention, and ghtf lly But did&#13;
you know about Georgla.9&#13;
Indlana.~ Maine.9 Alabama?&#13;
Georgia this year for the first time ever&#13;
has passed and enacted a hate erlmes&#13;
law. Indiana has passed and enacted a&#13;
hate cr~mes data collection law..."&#13;
that established a statewide registry for same-sex couples,&#13;
added sexual orientation to thenondiscrimination clauses&#13;
under the state Fair Employment and Housing Act and&#13;
offered public school students some protection against&#13;
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.&#13;
In Kentucky, tWO cities..and two_ 9oun.ties ad~pted, pro-&#13;
GLBT civil rights measures. In New Hampshire, a law ¯&#13;
preventing same-sex couples from adopting children was&#13;
repealed. And Nevada became the 1 lth state to ban job&#13;
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.&#13;
~While we hav~ l~geiy ~picked-ul~iii flJ~ ~e’a~’2000 -&#13;
where we left off, the news is not all good. Two states -&#13;
Utah and Mississippi -have passed bills preventing "&#13;
same-sex couples from adopting children. Two state "&#13;
legislatures - Colorado and West Virginia- passed laws&#13;
preventing same-sex couples from marrying, and Call- "&#13;
fornia voters approved a measure banning the state from "&#13;
recognizing same-sex marriages in other states. The "&#13;
number of states that have explicitly passed laws banning&#13;
same-sexmamagewill reach 33 ifthe Colorado governor ,’.&#13;
signs that statefs legislation. :&#13;
Such activity reflects the unfortunate reality of our ,"&#13;
movement. There is a checkerboard quality to the legal ¯&#13;
and cultural victories for the LGBT movement, and too "&#13;
¯ was there. This state has always been seen as a bastion of&#13;
¯ common sense and a breeder of courageous people.&#13;
Yes, Vermont’ s pastoral image is of a bygone era of&#13;
¯ village squares and hillside farms. But its political image,&#13;
its heritage, in fact, is of courage, of caring, of going&#13;
¯ where others fear to tread.&#13;
Ralph Flanders was about as conservative as they&#13;
~ come. But he had the courage to stand up in the U.S.&#13;
¯ Senate and call for an end to Joe McCarthy’ s red-baiting,&#13;
¯ taking a stand that for Flanders was steeled in the values ¯&#13;
in the Bill of Rights. And so it was for George Aiken,&#13;
¯ fighting against :the banks, the rai!roadS, and~ flae marble&#13;
¯ and:~~ani,t.~i,n~t.u.stries in the ’3Os~ and spegaki~g up yche,It&#13;
¯¯ - others,would not .about the~ ,folly’,.of,Vietnam. :, . . . ..&#13;
More and mpre in. recent ~ears V,e.rmont:has been out&#13;
¯ front in tackling tough problems. There is something&#13;
: about the small size of the state that allows experimenta-&#13;
¯ tion. And there is something as well about the attitude of&#13;
¯ its political leaders and people, an attitude that champions&#13;
¯ civil rights and focuses on the little guy.&#13;
¯ As difficult as it seems for somepeople, the debate this&#13;
¯ year over extending benefits to Gay and Lesbian couples&#13;
¯ .is part of that tradition. Again the eyes of the nation are on&#13;
~ the state. Certainly there is apprehension and even oppo-&#13;
¯ sition, but it is reassuring and pleasing to see how much&#13;
: applause thereis. A South Carolinanewspaper writes that&#13;
¯ "Vermont has offered a sensible model for secular civil&#13;
¯ unions;" theArizonaDaily Star says "this is probably the ¯&#13;
¯ best solution possible to an emotional, important debate&#13;
that strains the bounds of Americans’ tolerance and&#13;
¯ respect for each other," and the Concord (N.H.) Monitor&#13;
; says Vermont has "passed what was a test of conscience."&#13;
¯ A tourist promotion campaigns a few decades back&#13;
¯ proclaimed that Vermont is what America was. It is more&#13;
¯ accurate today to say that Vermont is what America&#13;
¯ wants to be.&#13;
often the difference between legitimacy and illegitimacy&#13;
in the eyes of society may rest on something as arbitrary&#13;
as a state boundary. Many residents of thiS country&#13;
assume that the great strides of the civil rights movement&#13;
have afforded broad protection against discrimination for "&#13;
all. In fact the legal reality is that those of us in same sex&#13;
relationships have notbeen fully protectedfrom discrimination&#13;
in housing,jobs, family law, education - virtually&#13;
every aspect of our lives is subject to discrimination and&#13;
sadl y, hate violence or harassment remains a reality in&#13;
every state in the nation.&#13;
Too often the cultural strides that are made in the&#13;
media, in places or worship, in schools and universities&#13;
and in the workplace are misinterpreted as a sign that&#13;
equality has been won.&#13;
I’ll give you an example. The National Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Task Force frequently receives phone calls from&#13;
same-sex couples asking for alist of states in which they&#13;
can legally marry. These individuals see shows like Will&#13;
and Grace or Dawson’ s Creek. They worship in churches&#13;
or synagogues that welcome them. They are out in the&#13;
workplace or at school. They just assume, like many&#13;
heterosexual Americans, that the barriers of discrimination&#13;
have been eradicated.&#13;
The reality, of course, is quite different¯ Not a single&#13;
state allows same.sex mamage. 39 states allow Gay,&#13;
"Lesbian, Bisexual:and Transgender employees.to be fired&#13;
from ourjobs. 28 states lack hate crimes law s that include&#13;
sexual orientation. 18 states criminalize loving, same-sex&#13;
relationships.&#13;
.~ " T~day the GLBT movement i~ at a crossroads We.are&#13;
under open assault by those who would deny us basic&#13;
.human rights., and at the same time the nation.is witnessing&#13;
a surge in support for our cause. Ourtives, our&#13;
liberty, our pursuit of happiness depend upon our ability&#13;
to build strong political infrastructure and organize on the&#13;
state and local level.&#13;
Local orgamzing has always been the trademark of the&#13;
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. Fortunately, we&#13;
are not alone. Today, the state and local political infrastructure&#13;
of the GLBT movement in the United States is&#13;
stronger than it has ever been before.&#13;
In 1996, NGLTFhelped found the Federation of Statewide&#13;
LGBT Political Organizations. see NGLTF, p. 11&#13;
College Course to Focus&#13;
On Net Hate Groups&#13;
BOSTON (AP) - One shows an image of a slain Gay&#13;
man burning in hell Another claims the FBI has&#13;
declared war on white Christians. A third pretends to&#13;
pay homage to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., then&#13;
suggests the civil rights leader was a sex fiend, a&#13;
communist and a "plastic god." They ~e radical,&#13;
hate-driven Internet sites and they are increasing&#13;
rapidly. This fall, they also will be the basis for a&#13;
communications class at Emerson College called&#13;
Hate.com. Robert Hilliard, an Emerson communications&#13;
prof~e,ssor, vlans to use ,the sites to examine how&#13;
radical gxpups use fi!e Internet to recrmt new members.&#13;
" "&#13;
Hilliard became interested in extremists~ when.he’&#13;
stumbled across a far-right talk radio show, and later&#13;
wrote abookonthe topic withBoston College professor&#13;
Michael Keith. "We began to listen and we said,&#13;
’Here we were, communications professionals and&#13;
we didn" t know about these people,’" Hilliard said.&#13;
"People have got to know what these people are&#13;
saying." Their book, "Waves of Rancor: Tuning in&#13;
the Radical RighC’ was well-received and ended up&#13;
onPresident Clinton’ s summerreading list. Hilliard’ s&#13;
says his class will .examine how the groups target&#13;
xmpressionable youth, how they multiply and how&#13;
they foment rage¯&#13;
More than 300 extremistWeb sites are on the&#13;
Internet today, ranging from neo-Nazi alliances to&#13;
Gay and Lesbian haters to Holocaust denials sites,&#13;
according to the watchdog Southern Poverty Law&#13;
Center¯ In 1998, the group counted 254 such Web&#13;
sites, up from 163 in 1997.&#13;
Experts say extremists are careful’not to urea away&#13;
viewers with upfront, inflammatory statements or&#13;
epithets. Instead, rock music and games draw in new&#13;
members gradually. OneNeo-Nazi site features bands&#13;
like RaHoWar, which stands for Racial Holy War.&#13;
"Others attract viewers with seemingly mainstream&#13;
articles, but the articles can lead to racist and conspiratorial&#13;
theories bolstered with passages from the&#13;
Bible and alternative historians.&#13;
Hilliard plans toinvite some hate site creators to the&#13;
class, giving them a chance to defend their work. One&#13;
rote creator satdhe s open to such challenges. I thi&#13;
the media is extremely biased against my point of&#13;
view and I want to provide an alternative to their&#13;
news," said Don Black, creator of Stormfront, one of&#13;
o.. the Web’ s oldest white nationalist sites.&#13;
Hilliard and others emphasize that extremist sites&#13;
are fully protectedby the First Amendment and stress&#13;
they are not calling for their removal. However,&#13;
Hilliardmakes no bones abouthis hopes that students&#13;
work to combat them. ’q?hese are people saying’We&#13;
must arm ourselves for a holy war to rid the world of&#13;
those who are not white, Aryan Christians or those&#13;
who disagree with our points of view,’" he said.&#13;
Idaho Public TV Faces&#13;
Program Challenges&#13;
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho. (AP) :-Adding adisclaimer to&#13;
.controversial programming on Idaho Public Television&#13;
may pacify prograrnm~ug restrictions from the&#13;
.Legislature while allowing the stationto keep federal&#13;
funding.&#13;
Idaho Board Of Education member Curtis ’Eaton&#13;
¯ proposed.Friday the board require PublieTelevision&#13;
tO air a disclaimer stating the station does not sanction&#13;
acts or events depicted in programming. In a letter&#13;
dated,April 13, Eaton asked.the ¯board to consider the&#13;
option-as a way torectncile what he describes aft&#13;
contradictory statements in recent.legislation that&#13;
require theboard to regulateprogramming deemed to&#13;
promote acts illegal in Idaho.&#13;
The controversy over programming began last.&#13;
spring, when Idaho Public Television General Manager&#13;
Peter Morrill decided to air"It’ s Elementary," an&#13;
hour-long documentary abouthow five public school&#13;
districts across the country dealt with teaching kids&#13;
about homosexuality. Christian conservatives lobbied&#13;
the board to veto the program, but in June 1999&#13;
the board voted unanimously not to interfere with&#13;
Morrill’ s programming decision.&#13;
But the Legislature got involved this spring by&#13;
including restrictions in a funding package for the&#13;
network that reouire the board to monitor and reject&#13;
programming that "promotes, supports or encourages&#13;
the violation of Idaho criminal statutes." Because&#13;
sodomy is illegal in Idaho, the bill could be interpreted&#13;
tomeanprograms like"It’ s Elementary" should&#13;
be cut. Or, because robbery is an Idaho felony, documentaries&#13;
about legendary thieves Bonme and Clyde&#13;
mightbebarred. ButboardmemberHarold Davis said&#13;
he agreed with the restrictions and felt "It’ s Elementary’&#13;
crossed the line iiito promoting "the Gay&#13;
lifestyle." Heopposed Eaton’ s proposal, saying itwas&#13;
not sufficient to meet Legislative demands for new&#13;
policy.&#13;
Methodists Callings,For:+&#13;
Investigation of Bishop&#13;
SACRAMENTO (AP) - Some parishioners want&#13;
religious leaders to investigate the United Methodist&#13;
Church bishop who decided not to charge 68 ministers&#13;
who attended and endorsed a Lesbian wedding.&#13;
The western region of the United Methodist Church’ s&#13;
College of ~3ishops received two letters from parishioners,&#13;
asking for aninvestigationinto whether Bishop&#13;
Melvin Talbert disregarded church laws, including&#13;
one banning same-sex unions. Bishop Elias Galvan of&#13;
Seattle, a member of the religious body, said the o&#13;
letters would be reviewed to see if they merit complaint&#13;
status.&#13;
John Stumbo, a Fort Valley, Ga., lawyer and member&#13;
of the Coalition for United Methbdist Accountability,&#13;
said the complaints centered around comments&#13;
Talbert made when he announced that there&#13;
was no basis f01~ a trial. At the time, Talbert said it was&#13;
more important for the church to be all-inclusive than&#13;
to puuish someone for blessing a union not officially&#13;
sanctioned by the churcJa; But Stumbo said Talbert&#13;
and the church’ s investigative committee disregarded&#13;
a church law against homosexual, marriage in reaching&#13;
their decision,&#13;
If the-College of Bishops finds grounds for complaint,&#13;
a separate committee wouldinvestigate whether&#13;
Talbert should be tried in a church court, which would&#13;
have the power to impose a number of penalties,&#13;
including expulsion. Talbert’ s secretary said thebishop&#13;
was travding and could not be reached for comment.&#13;
The Rev. Don Fado of St..Mark’ s United Methodist&#13;
Church in Sacramento performed the January 1999&#13;
ceremony for churchmembers Ellie Charlton, 64,and.&#13;
Jeanne BametL 69. He and 67 other ministers offiCiated&#13;
en masse at the ceremony.&#13;
University Denial of&#13;
Benefits Ruled Legal&#13;
P1TTSBU-RGH (AP) - The University of Pittsburgh&#13;
has-legally denied health benefits to same-sex partners&#13;
of employees, an AlleghenyCounty judge ruled.&#13;
Judge Robert Gallo said that Pitt’ s policy is neutral&#13;
because health benefits are offered to all employees&#13;
regardless of sexual orientation, and Pitt also denies&#13;
benefits to unmarried partners of heterosexual employees.&#13;
"This ruling dearly iupholds what has been&#13;
the university’ s .position, thr0~ghout these proem,dings&#13;
- namely that the universityhealth benefits plan&#13;
is legal and nondiscriminatory," Pitt spokesman Ken&#13;
Service said.&#13;
But. Deborah Henso~, ia’former Pittinstn~ctorWho-’&#13;
sued when the university denied benefits to her Le~.-&#13;
bian partner, said she’would appeal to Common~&#13;
wealth Court. ’~Fhis is.important in terms of fairness.,,&#13;
and equality," Hens,on s~d.."pitt has .l~e~¯ ~gh~ng&#13;
tooih and nail, inmy opiuion,tojus,tff,y~ disenmina~tton&#13;
against Gay and Lesbi~in persons. Henson and six&#13;
others were plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging that Pitt&#13;
violated a city ordinance banning discrimination&#13;
against Gay~ and Lesbians. I-Ienson’ s attorneys had&#13;
wanted the case to be heard by the Pittsburgh CommissiononHumanRelations,&#13;
whichhears complaints&#13;
about violations of the city ordinance.&#13;
Ga!lo said the commission has nojurisdiction over&#13;
Pitt. In November, Gov. Tom Ridge signed a law&#13;
exempting state universities and colleges from being&#13;
forced by city anti-discrimination laws to provide&#13;
same-sex benefits. Pitt is a state-affiliated institution.&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
¯ MCC-Un=ted&#13;
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11:00 am&#13;
1623 N. Maplewood&#13;
Reverend Cathy Elliot&#13;
Pastor&#13;
918/838-1715&#13;
Community&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at llam, 749-0595&#13;
.... A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm&#13;
3210b S. Norwood, Info: 224-4754, Chris or Sharon&#13;
- Sandra Hill&#13;
Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
Counselor, Certified Hypnotherapist&#13;
Psychotherapy &amp; Clinical Consultation&#13;
After Hours Appointments Available&#13;
2865 E: Skelly Drive, Suite 215,745-1111&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa- O’RYAN&#13;
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Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment&#13;
Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
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~9413 E. 31St St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
918-663-5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-444-5934&#13;
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Ghild, Family, Individual &amp; Gouplo Psychothorapy&#13;
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Tulsa, Oklahoma 74114-3518&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743-4297) .. i .&#13;
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Daytime appointments availal~le.&#13;
Call for more information;&#13;
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The Episcopal Church Welcomes You&#13;
"Recognizing that Pitt’ s health care contract on its&#13;
face prohibits Pitt from providing benefits to both&#13;
same sex and heterosexual unmarried couples, making&#13;
n~ distinction between the two, it is dear that the&#13;
commi ssion would be precluded from finding that an&#13;
unlawful practice hadbeen committedbyPitt," Gallo’ s&#13;
written ruling said.&#13;
Other universities in Pennsylvania that offer samesex&#13;
benefit~ include the University of Pennsylvania,&#13;
Swarthmore College and DickinsfnCollege. C.amegie&#13;
MdlonUniversity.faculty earlier this monthaccepted&#13;
a recommendation-that the:,.university ,provide samesex&#13;
benefits as wall..CMU’ s board of trustees must&#13;
approve the recommendation as well before samesex&#13;
benefits will be extended, according to university&#13;
spokesman Don Hale.&#13;
BOSh&#13;
on Vermont Civil Unions&#13;
¯ Clark delivered opening and dosing arguments ¯&#13;
while Richard Van Wagoner, another Salt Lake City&#13;
¯ lawyer, grilled Seidel on her decision to disqualify&#13;
¯ PRISM but sanction the Polynesian Club and the&#13;
¯ Odyssey of the Mind Club. ’Seidel also nixed a&#13;
¯ women’ s literature club, saying she had suggested a&#13;
¯ genderless literature club instead. Campbell seemed&#13;
¯ particularly interested in that decision a~d asked for&#13;
¯ district records on it. ~ "....&#13;
." The judge frequently turned oia Dan: Larsen, an&#13;
¯ assistant Utah state attorney general d~fending the&#13;
¯ school district, attacking his argiamentsand declaring&#13;
school administrators were not hb~v~:the law. Dis-&#13;
- trict Superintendent Darlene Roblds: who was in the&#13;
¯ courtroom but did not testify, S~iid tti~ school board&#13;
¯ "wasla:t tr~_’0g to violate studen[s" ~F,ifst Amendment&#13;
¯ ~nghk~ and welcomed any ~]anfi~ohC ~ ll~ear~&#13;
"bring on, the m~tte~r~ ,&#13;
TEMPLE,Texas (AP)-Republican presidential candidate&#13;
George W. Bush refused to be drawn into&#13;
comment on Vermont’s civil unions, which would&#13;
grant to same~sex couples some 300 state benefits of&#13;
marriage, including medical decision-making, tax&#13;
breaks and inheritance. Bush has opposed recognizing&#13;
same-sex unions in Texas. "They have a right to&#13;
pass a law," Bush said. "It’ s the right of the state to&#13;
.make that decision just like it’s the right of the state&#13;
of South Carolina to make the decision on the flag."&#13;
Bush also met with a group ofGay Republicans last&#13;
week in Austin and said he was "a better person" for&#13;
heating their stories but still disagreed with them on&#13;
Gay marriage. The Texas governor answered questions&#13;
after making an elementary school appearance&#13;
to_~,r.omote "character education" on the anni .v.ersary&#13;
of the Columbine shootings.&#13;
School District InC0urt&#13;
Fi0r Rejecting Gay Club&#13;
SALT Li~KE CITY (AP) - A fede~r,al judge recently&#13;
shai~ly questioned a’s~hoor distiict s refuSai.to’sanctibia’&#13;
"d" ’ ~~d:¢rff ~ dub ’ that would-focus:,on:Gay "~-:&#13;
IJYe:sbjan~ssu¢si"’~ust (~ecaus~ yo~gof6"safi’6ol’d~i&#13;
m~y~.~0!~ -th~ii,~’~iis~ Aiii~iidifiefi{iights; U..S,"&#13;
Di~ft Jildg~ Teiah’ chmp~~tttold’.a lawyer for’the&#13;
S~,t-~ .city’s~tiool ~’~&amp;:Campbell made.no&#13;
d~Li~ionlasr m’or~,...B.~t.~:.i.s e.x_pected’t0 nile ~60n&#13;
o..n~a’reqye~ by stud~,nt org~:z~r~’i6b~c~ia~lVadnfiil:&#13;
is~t6r~ find .~_~ "PRrSM~’Peoi~l~ R~spectingIm~&#13;
pdrt~t s~iAl Mov-&amp;ia~nt~= ter@o:rary school privileges.&#13;
Campbell will then’decide the crux of the case:&#13;
w3aether schoql 9ffici~s violated the First Amendmeat&#13;
or their own-policy in sh~bb~ag., PRISM:Tot-?&#13;
merly the Gay-Straight Alliaiice and_now, reconsti-.&#13;
ttitM M’ii~i" aii ac~id’6G~i~ ib~ar to satisfy new district:&#13;
c[abrules, -&#13;
_ .Cynthia ~¢i_.dd i. the_Oi,S_tri’~? s._as~istani,~upe~nten-:&#13;
¯ dent, struggled on the stand Tliurs~y.~0¢xplaii~ why.,&#13;
PRISM didn’ t.qualify as, an academic_club;.contend:&#13;
ing,it represents a~ narrow..viewpoi~ o.n ~.~.erican&#13;
hist6ry and sociology In 1996, the school districi&#13;
el.i_nu,’na,ted all nonacademicdubs’i:aiher.than idlow&#13;
Qay .dubat East RighS&amp;ooL ambve.that ,was&#13;
in~federat court..... .....",.. ~ .... ~, , ,.&#13;
,,7i?ne,G~y,~cltlb ~, 0n!y .n~et ~t’e~ ,h~ ~s&#13;
qo~.l~.u~:~.g,rpup. thin, must ~efi( siJa~e aiii£.~hy&#13;
insurance~ Th~~i~a’l~ ;sn ’t~16~l t6 liand ~tU~t t’l,y..¢~ oL&#13;
c~uh ~ha~e.t0~ay.fQr~ :,es si Coh~:saia’.’C6iien ~’d:&#13;
i~qrpos; ,oLtll.e .cfii~ is tbi~i~ss history"f~bifi:the&#13;
pcrsp.e.,,~tive~ of’G~y~ a~a)’?!;~in~."Seida ti~Z them&#13;
~O~i~ :Uec~U~ ~e’d0ii~t t~ch c,,urri~ulum from the&#13;
viewpini:dfGays and Legblans. ’. .&#13;
Stephen.Clark, l¢.gal director for the American&#13;
Civil ,Liberties, U,ni"on of Utah, argued that the denial&#13;
was a straighff0.r~v)ffd First Amendment v,iolation.&#13;
Clark also contends the district manipulated its own&#13;
club policy and sealed its decision against PRISM&#13;
with a new, still unwritten rule disqualifying clubs&#13;
advocating an "exclusive viewpoint" of subjects.&#13;
Lesbian Housing Rights&#13;
NEW YORK (AP) - A lawyer for a Lesbian medical&#13;
student asked a state appeals court to order Yeshiva&#13;
University to let the woman and her domestic partner&#13;
live together in school-subsidized housing.&#13;
James Esseks told a five-judge panel of the New&#13;
York State Supreme Court’ s Appellate Division that&#13;
Yeshiva’ s policy discriminates on the basis of marital&#13;
status and sexual orientation in violation of city and&#13;
state law. Esseks said the university pern-ts married&#13;
students to live in school housing only with spouses&#13;
and children. Because Gay couples cannot legally&#13;
marry, the policy has a disparate, discriminatory&#13;
impact on them, he said. Esseks represents Sara&#13;
Levin, 28, of San Francisco, a fourth-year student at&#13;
Yeshiva’ s Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Yeshiva&#13;
University is the oldest andlargest institution of&#13;
higher education under Jewish auspices in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
University Members&#13;
Protest Anti-GaY Slurs&#13;
GORHAM, "{~/Iaine (AP) - Abou(.125.~t_udent~, staff&#13;
and administrators attended ameeting following three&#13;
incidents o£ anti-Gay bias at the University of Southern&#13;
Maine. One student and two others were arrested&#13;
_ by GorhamandUSMpolicein connection with one of&#13;
" the three_’in.cidents, all of which took place during a&#13;
¯ one-week period earlier this spring. President Rich-&#13;
- : ard Pattenande assured participants.at Wednesday’ s&#13;
:Tmeeting that anti-Gay acts will not be tolerated.&#13;
:’ "USM stands unflinchingly for equality~. -. homophobid&#13;
has.no place at USM," Pattenande said..&#13;
The incidents began on the weekend of April 8-9&#13;
when anti.Gay graffiti was foundin Woodward Hall.&#13;
The graffiti referred to a resideatadvisor. The next&#13;
incidenthappened on April 13 when the same&#13;
Woodward resident advisor and anotheradvisor intervenedin&#13;
an out-of-control party. Both were taunted&#13;
~ with violent, anti-Gay threats. Last Saturday, another&#13;
¯ dormitory.staff workerfoundawritten-anti-Gay death&#13;
threat had been slipped under her’dtbr~" .......&#13;
’ Alhb:ama Hate:i::Cii :i:mes&#13;
Law Revision In:Trouble&#13;
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - At:i~n-danc~..at. a Senate&#13;
comfifittee meeting could determine the fate Of&#13;
lcgist~tif~;to ~;po,laxkA!.~b._a~a,~’.A~h~.qrim,es !~w to&#13;
indud~NXnald~r~e~a~:.ti...on.!.7~.e.t)i:!$ pa~red~R~&#13;
49-39:on.April 6..George, Olssom Mbntgomery .area&#13;
coordinator for-the Gay and Le~ian,Al!iartc,e .of&#13;
Alabama~,s~d ’.~e ,J~c!~ci_ary _Co~t.t~~: sharply&#13;
which commi.B~me,_~a~bcrs shoN,upat tlag~tiil~eting.&#13;
Committee, cL~irman.:Rodger,:,Smi,ih~ianan, a&#13;
supporter Of the bill, agreed thdco~tteeii spfit 50-&#13;
50 and,attendance,could determine t!~.outcome.&#13;
Alabama law already mandates, mini.mm:n prison&#13;
terms that felons must serve for crimes motiyated by&#13;
race, color, religion, national origin, :ethnicity or&#13;
physical or mental disability. For instance,, if a person&#13;
committed a crime that is normally punishable by one&#13;
to 10 years in prison, the hate crimes law mandates the&#13;
person must serve at least two years in prison.&#13;
TB Spreading In&#13;
Transgender Group&#13;
ATLANTA (AP) - A tuberculosis outbreak&#13;
in the Transgender commtulities of&#13;
Baltimore and New York City may be&#13;
spreading to 0ther:cities, the government&#13;
said recently. The Centers for Disease&#13;
Control and Prevention confirmed 26 active&#13;
cases and 37 dormant cases of tuberculosis,&#13;
most of them connected to members&#13;
of the transgender community inthe&#13;
two cities.&#13;
The’ CD~,, ~s~ th~t~m~ig~asgender to:&#13;
encbn~Ss~"cro~-~dr~ss~dr~,~ those who&#13;
haveig~.,derg0~eI&#13;
and indi~id~Jai~ ~tio ~re’plafining to un~&#13;
dergo sex-change operations. All of the&#13;
cases in Baltimore were men except for&#13;
fourwomenwho w’ere eitherfamilymembers&#13;
of the men or health care workers&#13;
who treated them. Many had a strain of&#13;
TB treated with common antibiotics. The&#13;
government said 62% of the tuberculosis&#13;
patients tested positive for HIV, the virus&#13;
that causes AIDS. People with HIV are&#13;
susceptible to tuberculosis and could die&#13;
if not treated.&#13;
Transgenders often travd to many cities&#13;
frequenting social clubs and participaring&#13;
in fashion and dance competitions.&#13;
"Frequent travel and social network links&#13;
identified among the Baltimore andNYC&#13;
cases have raised concern that thi~ strain&#13;
¯ . may be circulating in other’~ities&#13;
among young, mobile transgender persons&#13;
withHIV infection," theCDCsaid in&#13;
a report¯&#13;
The CDC is checking for additional&#13;
cases linked to the same strain in Atlanta,&#13;
"Baltimore, Boston,NewYorkCity, Philadelphia&#13;
and Washington, D.C.&#13;
Actor Bruce Willis&#13;
Donating to Charity&#13;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - There’ s more to&#13;
theBruceWillis appearances on"Friends"&#13;
than a potential ratings boost. The actor,&#13;
who agreed to be a guest star on NBC’ s&#13;
"Friends" for three episodes during the&#13;
May ratings "sweeps," is donating earnings&#13;
from the show to five charities. The&#13;
amount of money wasn’ t disclosed.&#13;
The American Foundation for AIDS&#13;
Research, AIDS Project Los Angeles, the&#13;
Elizabeth Glaser PediatricAIDS Foundation,&#13;
the Rape Treatment Center and&#13;
UCLAUnicamp for underprivileged children&#13;
will share the money, Willis publicist&#13;
Paul Bloch said.&#13;
On "Friends," Willis plays the widowedfather&#13;
ofRoss’ new girlfriend. Willis&#13;
became friendly with "Friends" actor&#13;
Matthew Perry when they both starred in&#13;
the movie "The Whole Nine Yards."&#13;
Study on Prison&#13;
Sex in Kentucky&#13;
MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) - A Morehead&#13;
State University professor is conducting a&#13;
study on prison sexuality, a topic he says&#13;
has been shrouded in silence but must be&#13;
dealt with. The information could be used&#13;
to combat the spread of AIDS and improve&#13;
prison safety. Christopher Hensley,&#13;
a sociology professor who directs&#13;
Morehead’s Institute for Correctional&#13;
Research and Training, said the survey is&#13;
the first of its kind in Kentucky.&#13;
Hensley studied prison sex in Oklahoma&#13;
and found that nearly one in four&#13;
male prisoners had engaged in sexual&#13;
activities with fellow inmates. Overall.&#13;
13.8% of all prisoners said they had been&#13;
: "threatened sextmlly" by other inmates&#13;
: and 1.1% said they had been raped.&#13;
". If they have AIDS or another sex~mlly&#13;
¯ transmitted disease, they’ll be spreading&#13;
: it to their partners, he said. "These people&#13;
: are g,oing to be getting out of prison and&#13;
¯¯ they re going to be having sex with their&#13;
wives or husbands," Hemley said.&#13;
: The sweeping 46-question survey .,asks&#13;
¯ about jailhouse consensual sex,&#13;
: autoeroticism and rape. About 3,600 of&#13;
: Kentucky’ s 15.300 prisoners have been&#13;
¯ asked to participate. The survey is volun-&#13;
!, ~tary and_anonymouL Funded in part b~ a&#13;
.: ~$1,600 ~ant from ’Morehe~id~State,! the ":~i ~ques~i~res have~n ~ent to i.m~tes&#13;
¯ ’. dt three Of the state’ s .12 male prisons and&#13;
: toinmatesatthestate’sonlyfemaleprison.&#13;
¯ Results will be released this fall.&#13;
Hensley’ s research has "extraordinary&#13;
value," said Cindy Stmckman-Johuson, a&#13;
professor of psychology at the University&#13;
of South Dakota. But~topic is so taboo&#13;
that few scholars focus on it, she said.&#13;
"We should have hundreds of people&#13;
studying it," Struckman-Johnson said.&#13;
"Sex inprisonis amajor cause ofviolence&#13;
... of upset and turmoil, a major cause of&#13;
disease."&#13;
Prisoners’ rights advocates also say the&#13;
sexuality data could be useful. "Prison is&#13;
a very violent place and ff (officials) can&#13;
get a better idea about the reality ofprison&#13;
rape and what’ s going on, hopefully they&#13;
caTu be more prepared to deal with that&#13;
issue," said Kara Gotsch, a public policy&#13;
coordinator with the Washington, D.C.-&#13;
based National Prison Project of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union.&#13;
Struckman-Jotmson said some prison&#13;
administrators try to quash these kinds of&#13;
studies out of concern about negativepublicity.&#13;
But Morehead State administrators&#13;
and Kentucky prison officials approved&#13;
Hensley’ s study.&#13;
Hensley also has co-written an article&#13;
on conjugal visitation in Mississippi, and&#13;
his study on consensual homosexual activity&#13;
in male prisons in Oklahoma is&#13;
scheduled for publication in December in&#13;
a prison-related academic journal.&#13;
Russian Prison&#13;
For HIV+ Inmates&#13;
MOSCOW (AP) - Authorities in a Siberian&#13;
region plan to open a separate prison&#13;
for inmates infected with HIV, the virus&#13;
that causes AIDS, a news report said last&#13;
month.&#13;
About 600 HIV-positive convicts are&#13;
serving time in prisons of the Irkutsk&#13;
region, and another 300 infected people&#13;
are held in pre-trial detention, said Boris&#13;
Gronik, chief of the regional Justice Ministry&#13;
branch in charge of prison administration.&#13;
Gronik said afflicted inmates&#13;
present a danger to other prisoners, and&#13;
need to be removed; the ITAR=Tass news&#13;
agency reported. "Unless they are all gathered&#13;
in one place, the situationmayget out&#13;
of control," Gronik was quoted as saying.&#13;
Russia already has one special prison&#13;
for HIV-positive convicts, ITAR-Tass&#13;
said. The jail is located in the Baltic Sea&#13;
enclave of Kaliningrad, which has one of&#13;
the highest concentrations of AIDS cases&#13;
in Russia.&#13;
In a separate development, authorities&#13;
in the southern Siberian republic of&#13;
Buryafia, next door to lrkutsk, said 101&#13;
HIV cases have been registered in the&#13;
republic, up from 24 at the start of the&#13;
year, ITAR-Tass reported.&#13;
HIV has been spreading fast in Russia&#13;
and more than 30,000 registered cases&#13;
March.&#13;
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Call JOHN RAGAN, the friend!y, caring real estate agent who understands&#13;
your special needs! 918-583-2125 800-559-1558 ~.NewNest.com&#13;
reviewed by Barry Hensley . In the mid 1960’ s, Garlandstarted re-&#13;
Tulsa City-County Library ¯ cording her memories and feelings on a&#13;
Judy Garland’ s fascinating and tumul- " reel to reel tape recorder. Theoretically, it&#13;
tuous.life has become the subject of yet ¯ was to be a verbal, and hopefully moneyanothercontroversialbiography,&#13;
thistime " making autobiography, butinreality,forby&#13;
Gerald Clarke, author tifiedbyherfavoritewine,&#13;
of "Capote." Goddess of "Extraordinarily Blue Nun, it became a ti-&#13;
Gay men of a certain age, . oor, at~ ehoosln , . ~ade.ag~in~t~pe°p!eand&#13;
Judy died inlJun~iof. 196~,~ ¯-P. .... ~,~ :- ¯ ~ .; cbmpafli~s~ "who"~ had a week. before’thei tone.-" .... hn,s t~ d.s",,,:the ""~ ’.wronged her. C~arlde&#13;
wall rio.t in York,&#13;
her 77 ..... "s. ems especially proud&#13;
which started the modem that he had access to these&#13;
Gay rights, movement.&#13;
From Dorothy in "The&#13;
Wizard of Oz," through a&#13;
series of film successes, to&#13;
someembarrassing television&#13;
performances, and, fin.&#13;
ally., to aging songstress&#13;
staging substandard tunes&#13;
written by her lover, Judy&#13;
Garland’s career was a&#13;
rollercoaster ride unparalleled&#13;
in showbiz history.&#13;
. .Through thenewspapers, radio and television,&#13;
the public eagerly watched her&#13;
career rise and fall many times over a&#13;
thirty year period. Each triumphant performance&#13;
was soon followedby some sort&#13;
of disaster. Extraordinarily poor at choosing&#13;
husbands, the public followed her&#13;
volatile personal life as well, although&#13;
they were probably unaware of a few&#13;
Lesbian encounters that are mentioned in&#13;
Get Happy. Cycling down to an untimely&#13;
an-d-litigation filled end, Judy’s stormy&#13;
life finally exhausted and frustrated her&#13;
friends, fans and family. Her story is one&#13;
of the greatest indictments against the&#13;
excessive use of drugs and alcohol that&#13;
American popular culture has produced.&#13;
After ten years of interviews and meticulous&#13;
investigation, Clarke has written&#13;
ahuge tome, second only to GeroldFrank’ s&#13;
700 page biography, "Judy," in 1975.&#13;
Clarke had access to the personal diary of&#13;
Dottle Ponedel, Judy’ s longfime makeup&#13;
woman, who apparently found that Judy&#13;
was the most interesting thing in her life.&#13;
Clarke also interviewed many of Judy’ s&#13;
costars, friends, directors and conductors,&#13;
including Arfie Shaw, Lena Home, and&#13;
Judy’ s mostinfluential husband, SidLuft.&#13;
she said, wiping the tears and gesturing at&#13;
the joyous chaos on the House floor.&#13;
Their jubilahon was matched by anger&#13;
among opponents, who have complained&#13;
that lawmakers weren’ t listening to their&#13;
concerns. "The people of the state of Vermont&#13;
will be back in November and this&#13;
legislation will be repealed," said John&#13;
Nelson, a 70-year-old retired salesman.&#13;
The state Supreme Court unammously&#13;
ruled in December that the couples were&#13;
being unconstitutionally denied therights&#13;
and benefits of mamage. The legislature&#13;
decided to establish a parallel system for&#13;
Gays rather than broaden marriage statues&#13;
to include Gays and Lesbians.&#13;
The civil unions essentially duplicate&#13;
marriage, but are not recognized under&#13;
federal law denying Gay couples benefits&#13;
such as Social Security andirmnigrafion.&#13;
Under the law, Gay ~ouples will be&#13;
able to go to their town clerks and have&#13;
their unions certified by a judge or by a&#13;
member of the clergy. Breakups will be&#13;
handled in Family Court.&#13;
volatile personal life&#13;
as wall, although&#13;
they were probably&#13;
naware d a few&#13;
Lesbian encounters&#13;
that are mentioned in&#13;
~et Happy’..."&#13;
tapes, although at leastone&#13;
other Garland biography&#13;
has utilized them. Thecontent&#13;
of the tapes is very&#13;
interesting, although painfully&#13;
sad, as she lashes out&#13;
at the people who .made&#13;
millions off of her name&#13;
but left her penniless.&#13;
With the exception of&#13;
some films and her celebrated&#13;
Carnegie Hall concert,&#13;
Clarkelargely ignores Garland’ s professional&#13;
life, preferring to give us lurid&#13;
gossip and personal problems instead of&#13;
analyzing her varied career. In fact, of the&#13;
almost 500 pages in this book, only four&#13;
are dedicated to’q’heJudy GarlandShow,"&#13;
the 1963 CBS series that was the last,&#13;
sustained effort of her career (and which&#13;
is currently available on DVD.)&#13;
Reviewers and fans seem intensely polarized&#13;
about their opinions of this book.&#13;
(Check out the Amazon.corn reviews!)&#13;
While listing over 50 pages of notes and&#13;
acknowledgements, Clarke often relies&#13;
on unverifiable comments, some of them&#13;
quite ugly. He also seems obsessed with&#13;
Judy’s sex life, a topic well covered in&#13;
Judy Garland: The SecretLife ofanAmerican&#13;
Legend, by David Shipman. However,&#13;
his decade ofresearch pays off occasionally,&#13;
with someinteresting stories and&#13;
comments, although we must be aware&#13;
that what we are reading is quite probably&#13;
as much a juicy novel as it is a serious&#13;
biography. Either way, it’ s an intriguing&#13;
read.&#13;
Check out Get Happy, as well as many&#13;
of Garland’ s films or music at any branch&#13;
Library, or call Central at 596-7977.&#13;
the parent of a former Boy Scout, said&#13;
there have been 255 requests for the state&#13;
to join friend-of-the-court briefs since he&#13;
became attorney general in 1995. The&#13;
state has signed on to 111 of them, 68&#13;
dealing with states’ rights. "In making&#13;
those decisions, we have always tried to&#13;
focus on the legal issues rather than the&#13;
political ones," he said.&#13;
But lawmakers said Edmondson’s action&#13;
makes ~*. appear the state opposes the&#13;
right of the Boy Scouts to choose their&#13;
own leaders.&#13;
"’Drew Edmondson has put Oklahoma&#13;
on record in the highest court in the land&#13;
as being in favor ofthe homosexual movement&#13;
against the Boy Scouts," said Rep.&#13;
Bill Graves, R-OKC,-an outspoken opponent&#13;
of civil rights for Gay people. "I&#13;
thought the decision by the New Jersey&#13;
Supreme Court was an outrage," Graves&#13;
said.&#13;
Editor’s note: the switchboardfor the&#13;
Oklahoma House of Representatives is&#13;
800-522-8502.&#13;
Editor’s lugte: due to gremh’nesqueglitches&#13;
tn the e-mail, our regular "Amusements"&#13;
column byJim Christjohn never got to the&#13;
editorial desk. Unfortunately this came to&#13;
light at first::lighr’the mormng before&#13;
going to’.press, andbeing brave, but northat&#13;
brave, :I dtdt no:t invoke the wrath of&#13;
the dembn~ by Waking him at 5:30am.&#13;
Future issues.~willfeature interviews by&#13;
Christjohn: with members of the cast of&#13;
cal, will be at the&#13;
Tulsa Performing&#13;
Arts Centerbeginning&#13;
May 30 thro’&#13;
June 4th. As the&#13;
promoters, the&#13;
Tnlsa-based Celebrity&#13;
Attractions,&#13;
note interest&#13;
in the ill-fated&#13;
ship has been _ ~om Sesma&#13;
great, resulting in&#13;
televisionprograms, a"major motion picture,"&#13;
novels and "even a cookbook."&#13;
Indeed.&#13;
The show was written by Peter StOne,&#13;
known for other shows: 1776, T~e Will&#13;
Rogers Follies, My One &amp; Orii~, and&#13;
music and lyrics are by Maury Yeston ..&#13;
(Nine, Grand Hotel).&#13;
Titanic wonmultiple’q’ony" awards~in&#13;
1997 and New York Observer critic, Rex&#13;
Reed claims, " you will never see anyder&#13;
of wonders, to TULSA! This Pulitzer&#13;
and Tony award winning work by the late&#13;
Jonathan Larson-was introduced to Tulsa&#13;
theatre and media, folk at a.recent PAC&#13;
reception.&#13;
Coordinated by the ever gracious and&#13;
lovely Tracey Norvell, fed a grea~ llmch&#13;
by the Polo GrilF s Tal.madge Powell, and&#13;
wowed by perfomances by two .current&#13;
Broadway casrmembers flown into Tulsa&#13;
forithe; ~vent.,~’sa~_~ hear,~d.: the veff~ .era&#13;
ergetie,(~md:cute-)-p~.~l~!ce~, Jeffre~ ~!1~&#13;
deseribethe off-off&#13;
Broadway .and&#13;
shaky origins of&#13;
Rent, as well as the&#13;
tragic death of an&#13;
aeortic aneurysm&#13;
of composer/&#13;
writer Jonathan&#13;
Larson on the very&#13;
eve of the show’s&#13;
successful opening.&#13;
Larson drew&#13;
inspiration for&#13;
Rent from Puccini’s La Boheme but set&#13;
his work in New York’ s East Village and&#13;
with people living with HIV (rather than&#13;
TB), Lesbian lawyers, drag queens instead&#13;
of Parisian poets and painters.&#13;
The music draws on!the traditions of&#13;
American gospel and in the words of.the&#13;
Houston Chronicle~ "Rent .is that rare.&#13;
musical whose content and style areo£the&#13;
present rather than the past..&#13;
words of pro.d.ucer Jeffr,y Sellers~ tradithing&#13;
this impressive anywhere elser on’ tional :upt wn . t_h_eatre;,t.e..Broadway,&#13;
Broadway." Certainly,Titanic seems cer~ .... was not-:~’our.characters ;,our stories, our&#13;
tain t0 pl~hse the target audience ofCelebi; "" music, i. 2;.S~1~8 addecL that ,The.New&#13;
rity Attractions and to bring in any nlmi: "~ York Ti~oa~.s,:q,a~:.,ed ;~e~t~Ya, shimm~&#13;
ber ofcharter buses full of traditional ~ea~ ¯ choonpceufrowr-i~ffei h~iAm.mmeri~_d.c’w~n.-ith th~Pe~q~ng&#13;
theatr~igoers. ~ ....&#13;
Theatre Tulsa Goes Gay!?!_,-. ~ Arts Center’s..director~-.33lm~e~i~ iii~t&#13;
.......for T~s.a.;:R.¢.n.tj~!O~ag0~erdue!&#13;
Tulsa Family News is delighted to re.:., Rent 9Li.t.lbe ip:Tulsa, f,om Augusi 29Rt&#13;
ceive notice that&#13;
TheatreZul~a’ S final&#13;
seasonproductionis&#13;
theTerrence&#13;
McNallyhit,Lips&#13;
Together, Teeih&#13;
Apart."&#13;
It Will run April&#13;
28, 29, and May3-&#13;
6 at8,l~.~,; ~e~e_w.ill&#13;
be a:~ma~lee&#13;
all&#13;
PAC Jolm~H.&#13;
............Io tP+~9..Pt., 3rd :~ith&#13;
-I ev.~i~n.g and marl:&#13;
nee,performances.&#13;
Tickets, range, be:..&#13;
$25 to.$55&#13;
,a~..dgQ:on ~.ale on&#13;
June 12. Call 596-&#13;
7111,800-364-&#13;
~731I. or go to&#13;
Willidins :Tkeatre.’ ..... :&#13;
Veto S~fanic~directs this "adult sitmi:"&#13;
tion" drama:~dae elegant beach house "&#13;
on Fi~I~taii~i:~;brother and sister and&#13;
their i(d~tig~e~pouses attempt to cel-:&#13;
ebrat~i=tll~-~t~6~li:0f July. Surrounded 6if:&#13;
bo.th s[d~Tb,~]~e~ii~ve h~ses~Ga~.~i~ieff:~ "&#13;
me" two sfi~:~i~t ~codpqeg’exi~Xa*&#13;
own!ives ~[li~it;sorrow, and agnawmgup.,,~&#13;
t~my~!~es their‘ affluen! hab’-’&#13;
it~ hfid]SeR~ pi~jii~li~s ~i~zle~n the:sum:~&#13;
,"~l)~:" ~" ?’Q *~ "~ .... - ;....&#13;
~’;" ~i’¢ " ~ "&#13;
Tl~eT~fl:aa 1§’one~,~(e!,ty-~Ndest&#13;
arts ,0.~g. a~!..~a,tlons ..and -ael~owle~t~mg&#13;
Gay~i~ ,th~"th~iff~ is ’a big step, n~ot t6 ¯&#13;
me~tidff~cNali~ is one Of&#13;
temporary pla~fights so check this production&#13;
out, W~:don’t get that many ¯&#13;
chances trsee theatre in Tulsa which&#13;
acknowledges-the eXistence ofGaypeople: "&#13;
525,600 Minutes :&#13;
Having said that, the extraordinary new&#13;
Ameficanmusical, Rent, is coming, won- "&#13;
;~ Do, you got:Hope? ~&#13;
Fran~_.~,C.~thy Kc~ting’, sfavodte~ulsa&#13;
designer_ ,~gd..H!.V/AtDS .. fund.raise-~,~&#13;
Charles-Faudree,-once again has, o~ga;&#13;
nized theHopeCafid~eli.~ht~0urforea~!y,&#13;
June. TI~.,"~,eve~t not,rnly,heips i~aise f~d~i&#13;
groups;p~c~yide~car~, toW-opl,e liv~:ii~&#13;
see some6fTulsa s mostbeau~i~f~@~,&#13;
rated, homes.- ......... -,.:~....&#13;
The pub!ic:tour on SituMay, i~; 3rd&#13;
and Sunday~ Jun¢.4th i%~tures fiv~ l~0mes&#13;
for a donation ofonly $10. Ticke,ts fi3r tliis&#13;
tour may be obtainld a~ each..home ¯&#13;
There is also a donor tourfeaturing four&#13;
more homes on Iune 1 for those who&#13;
donate $125. And patrons (donations of&#13;
more than $450) will gather at Doug &amp;&#13;
Susan Pielsticker on June 10th.&#13;
For more information, call Charles&#13;
Faudree, Inc. at 747-9706.&#13;
I&#13;
to benefit Saint Joseph Residence +&#13;
Regional AIDS Interfaith.Network&#13;
Saturday, June 3rd, 10-5, + Sunday, June 4th, 1-5&#13;
$10 donation at the door or in advance.&#13;
David Daniel, 1603 S. Carson&#13;
Wiley Parsons, 1601 S. Carson&#13;
Monty + Jane Butts, 240 E. Woodward Blvd.&#13;
Brett + Maricarolyn Swab, 2112 S. Norfolk Ave.&#13;
Dr. Robert &amp; Dena Hudson, 2707 S. Rockford Rd.&#13;
Tickets for this~,t~Jr may be obtaL"gd at each home.&#13;
For more intormation, call Charles Faudree, Inc, at 747-9706.&#13;
THE MUSEUM SHOP&#13;
AT PHILBROOK&#13;
748.5304&#13;
April 29, May 5 &amp; 7, 2000&#13;
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At PS0, we kn0w ihat,changing .... "same each month, because ifs basedweather&#13;
condi~qp~:throughout~e&#13;
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Which can make it hard to plan your&#13;
householdlmdget~That’s,why~&#13;
our Average Monflxly Payment plan,&#13;
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PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY. OF OKLAHOMA&#13;
A Central and South West Company&#13;
by Busaba Sivasoboom&#13;
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - They&#13;
giggled like girls and limp-wristed their&#13;
high-fives, but when these players spiked&#13;
a volleyball, opponents knew they were&#13;
facing some of the meanest men on a Thai&#13;
Bacldin 1996, a transvestite volleyball&#13;
team with a woman coach overcame an&#13;
anti-homosexual campaign to keep them&#13;
out and competed!ha meffs national club&#13;
volleyball championship They wonboth&#13;
the tournamentandthehearts.of the crowd.&#13;
Now; their tale has been turned into a&#13;
movie titled "Satree-lek," or "Iron Ladies,"&#13;
and it’ s quickly turning into one of&#13;
the biggest box office hits in Thai history&#13;
- while spotlighting the country’s ambiguous&#13;
feelings about transvestites and&#13;
homosexuality.&#13;
DirectorYongyootThongkongtoon said&#13;
that on the surface, Thai society is open&#13;
and tolerant of transvestites and homosexuality.&#13;
The two are often equated in the&#13;
popular mind, though not all transvestites&#13;
are homosexuals, or vice versa.&#13;
Transvestite cabarets are popular with&#13;
tourists and several television shows feature&#13;
transvestites-prompting an edict last&#13;
year by the government to broadcasters to&#13;
tone it down. The order, however, has&#13;
widely been ignored.&#13;
ButYongyoottoldTheAssociatedPress&#13;
that transvestism was a lifestyle far removed&#13;
from that led by most Thais, and&#13;
his debut film takes a look at how other&#13;
people : react to having transvestites as&#13;
neighbors, rivals and colleagues.&#13;
In the movie, the team was insulted by&#13;
words and gestures at the beginning of the&#13;
tournament. However, when they showed&#13;
they could play as well, and better- than&#13;
their rivals, they gradually gained respect&#13;
from fans and other players.&#13;
"I chose to present it as a comedy,&#13;
because I thought a drama might be boring,"&#13;
said Yongyoot, who formerly directed&#13;
TV commercials. "An audience is&#13;
more easily attracted by a comedy film."&#13;
When the movie began showing nationwide&#13;
in March, it became an instant&#13;
hit and pulled in more thaii 100 million&#13;
baht ($2.7 million) in thefirst month, 10&#13;
times what it cost to make.&#13;
That already makes it second Thai film&#13;
in all-rime box office receipts behind the&#13;
A walk-through butterfly exhibit at the&#13;
Tulsa Zoo and Living Mus~umwil! open&#13;
onMay 6 and will continue through October&#13;
8. The exhibit is open from 10am -&#13;
5pmand visitors canexperiencehundreds&#13;
ofnative butterflies up-el0seand in flight.&#13;
Nearly 30 species of North American&#13;
butt.efflies.and ~ few s,p~..’es ofmoths will&#13;
be represented itl an enel6~&amp;l garden setring,&#13;
near the Animal Kingdom Building&#13;
and features a variety offlowering plants.&#13;
This exlfibit is free wi~ the ~regular Zoo&#13;
admission.&#13;
Wings ofWonderis set withina30x 96’&#13;
greenhouse covered with a light mesh to&#13;
contain the animals. The exhibit features&#13;
a "chrysalis house" where visitors can&#13;
watch as each butterfly emerges from its&#13;
chrysalis or pupa and prepares for flight.&#13;
Winding stone pathways, a water feature,&#13;
benches, andeducational exhibits enhance&#13;
the exhibit area.&#13;
Wings of Wonder is dedicated to increasing&#13;
visitor knowledge and appreciation&#13;
of butterflies which are signature&#13;
150 million baht (dlrs 4 million) earned&#13;
by "Nang Nak," last year’ s arty retelling&#13;
of an old ghost legend that is credited with&#13;
giving a new breath of life to the moribund&#13;
Thai film industry.&#13;
Pakorn Pimton, a transvestite and coordinator&#13;
of the Gays Against AIDS group,&#13;
said he was unsurprised by the success of&#13;
the movie and he hoped it would open&#13;
useful debate. Gays are accepted as entertainers,&#13;
Pakom said, because Thais d(,&#13;
see movie stars and television program&#13;
hosts as serious. ,~ -&#13;
"Howe~,ifthey go beyond’that line to&#13;
be a doct~,~polifiCi~, banker Or top~nfili,~&#13;
tary official - I guess the answer is no,&#13;
Pakorn said. "We still use a two-tier measure&#13;
for members of our society." Violence&#13;
against homosexuals is rare in Thailand,&#13;
Pakorn said, but many barriers remain&#13;
against open homosexuals. The Gay&#13;
rights movement is weak. His group regularly&#13;
receives calls fromhomosexuals who&#13;
-fear coming out of the closet because they&#13;
risk their jobs or status.&#13;
Kitikorn Meesapya, senior psychologist&#13;
at the Department of Mental Health’ s,&#13;
said that Thais can accept homosexuals&#13;
that keep a low profile. Homosexuals in&#13;
Parliament and the military are well treated&#13;
until their lifestyles are publicly exposed&#13;
- a fairly rare occurence. "But then they&#13;
will fac~ harsh criticism from society,"&#13;
Kitikorn said, expressing hope that&#13;
"Satree-lek" might encourage more tolerance&#13;
and help some people to express&#13;
themselves as homosexuals.&#13;
For Kongrith Singnukote, one of the&#13;
1996 champion players, the film’ s strongest&#13;
pointis that it’*talks about peacefully&#13;
living together in society by accepting the&#13;
differences of each person." Kongrith&#13;
works as a bank teller. He goes to work in&#13;
men’s clothes, but wears makeup and&#13;
¯" speaks in a girlie voice. All his colleagues&#13;
¯ know he is a transvestite. Kongrith says&#13;
: he gets teased a bit, but no one has ever&#13;
¯ shown violence toward him. He says he is&#13;
: grateful that his family accepts him as he&#13;
: is.&#13;
: Being the subject of a hit movie hash~ t&#13;
¯ raised.his celebrity ambitions,however,&#13;
and he doesn’t see a career for himself&#13;
: beyondretail service. "I know that thereis&#13;
¯¯ a barrier for us," he says. "For now, I’m&#13;
satisfied at being what I am."&#13;
¯ species for conservation. By fostering a&#13;
greaterunderstanding of theneeds and the&#13;
¯ life,cycle of butterflies we can hdp con-&#13;
" serve these delicate creatures.&#13;
-" In addition tothe butterfly enclosure,&#13;
: knownas"Butterfly Landing," the grounds&#13;
¯ aroundtheexhibithavebeen planted with&#13;
: butterfly-attracting plants to encourage&#13;
:&#13;
v~s~tataon by someof our natt,~e butterfly&#13;
residents. Thebutterflies exhibited inside&#13;
¯ Butterfly Landing have not been taken&#13;
~ from:the wild but are procured through&#13;
¯ certified butterfly suppliers. ¯&#13;
¯ Exhibits describing the lifecycle of the&#13;
butterfly, the differences between moths&#13;
¯ and butterflies, common butterflies of&#13;
¯ Oklahoma, chrysalis and butterfly !dent!-&#13;
: fication, and about attracting butterflies&#13;
¯&#13;
to yards will be included in the exhibit.&#13;
¯ Also planned for this summer is a vision&#13;
¯ exhibit that will enable visitors to see like&#13;
: a butterfly. The Animal Kingdom Build-&#13;
. ing will also house agift cart specializing&#13;
¯ in butterfly-related books, souvenirs, and&#13;
gifts. Info: 669-6600 orwww.tulsazoo.org&#13;
r&#13;
by Lament.. Lindstrom, Ph.D.&#13;
What do you call a dead Blond in a&#13;
closet?&#13;
- a 1964 hide and seek champion!&#13;
The recent flush of&#13;
Blendjokes is an interesting&#13;
cultural phenomenon.&#13;
Jokes are more than just&#13;
funny. They are also dangerous&#13;
because they are&#13;
polilical. Overthepastfew&#13;
decad~s~: change~ iri&#13;
Amefi’~t"~ ~olitib~[ arena&#13;
have affectedboth the content&#13;
and practice Ofjoking.&#13;
Itis alittleless easy than&#13;
it used to be to joke about&#13;
ethnic and religious&#13;
groups, handicap, gender,&#13;
or gender-orientation.&#13;
Blonds have emerged as a&#13;
safe target in politically&#13;
conscious, if not always politically correct,&#13;
America. Andmanyjokes that previously&#13;
featured Jews- or Blacks or Gays&#13;
have been reworked into Blond jokes.&#13;
This is not to say that offensive joking&#13;
has disappeared. Rather, it is just a little&#13;
less public. American politeness conventions&#13;
demand that I should not tell a joke&#13;
whose "butt" is in my audience, unless I,&#13;
too, am in the targeted category, or unless&#13;
I already have a close relationship’~vith&#13;
those I potentially offend. But I can joke&#13;
all I want as long as the butt can’ t hear me,&#13;
or if I do indeed intend to offend.&#13;
Thewebsite, www.whitepride.com, for&#13;
example, offers along list of by now very&#13;
stale Jewish, Black, and "faggot" jokes.&#13;
Here’ s a sample groaner from the"white&#13;
pride" boys:&#13;
Why was the faggot fired from his&#13;
job at the sperm back?&#13;
- for drinking on the job!&#13;
Jokesters sometimes complain about&#13;
the "political correctness" that has narrowed&#13;
the contexts in which they can&#13;
safely perform. "Come on, it’s only a&#13;
joke!" But of course jokes aren’t just&#13;
jokes. They are also assertions about the&#13;
world, or at least one particular view of&#13;
the world. The lines that jokes ckaw between&#13;
the funny and the unfunny reflect&#13;
local understandings of normality. Jokes&#13;
are potent oral texts that, retold over and&#13;
over again, maintain certain ways ofthinking&#13;
about people and behavior.&#13;
Why do brides wear white?&#13;
- so they will match the other&#13;
domestic appliances!&#13;
.Even ironic jokes, such as this, refresh&#13;
established ways of thinking about men,&#13;
women, and the gendered division of labor.&#13;
In particular, the swarm of jrke~&#13;
flying constantly around a community&#13;
protects existing systems of inequality.&#13;
People joke "downwards" more than&#13;
they do upwards.~ :People joke far more&#13;
often about the powerless than they&#13;
about the powerful. There are far more&#13;
jokes about women than there are about&#13;
men. "More jokes about ethnic and religious&#13;
minorities thanthe white-bread Protestant&#13;
mainstream. More jokes about the&#13;
handicapped than about the able. More&#13;
jokes about the old than the young. More&#13;
jokes about Oklahoma than about California.&#13;
Do you know what an Oklahoma&#13;
divorce and a Texas tornado have&#13;
in common? - in both cases&#13;
¯ somebody is gonna&#13;
¯ lose a trailer house!&#13;
And there are many more jokes about&#13;
being Gay than about being&#13;
Straight. We usually&#13;
"~V’hy is it so hard abide by the politeness&#13;
constraints ofjoke-telli~,&#13;
for women to find in fact, because we realize&#13;
that jokes (even "just-amen&#13;
that are jok~sT’) have this political&#13;
" weight. ,Th..o~sewhofeel tSe&#13;
sensitive, earing,, ~ ’ Sfing~hidd~n ’within the&#13;
.a.n..d ’geed-look"m&#13;
- because those guys&#13;
already have&#13;
ho rlends!?’&#13;
laughter sometimes protest&#13;
when etiquette breaks&#13;
down.&#13;
GLAAD, the Gay &amp;&#13;
Lesbian Alliance Against&#13;
Defamation, for example,&#13;
has attempted to police the&#13;
telling ofcertainGayjokes&#13;
in the m~ss media, notably&#13;
on a number of morning radio shows&#13;
whose sleazy hosts are keen to boost their&#13;
market share. Such policing, of course, if&#13;
successful merely shrinks the arenas in&#13;
which Faggot jokes are safely told. They&#13;
still circulate freely in less public Spaces.&#13;
Each time I teach Cultural Anthropology,&#13;
I have my students as a group collect&#13;
jokes from their friends. I figure that these&#13;
joke archives provide good evidence about&#13;
which of the joints of American society&#13;
currently ache the most.&#13;
Last week, the students broughtin about&#13;
150 jokes. For the first time in years, none&#13;
ofthese was a"faggot"joke. And the only&#13;
ethnic joke was turned in by a clueless&#13;
Japanese woman, happily ignorant of the&#13;
American politics of public joking. Instead,&#13;
nearly half the collection consisted&#13;
of Blond jokes. Blonds, poor things, are&#13;
nowadays the butt of choice when American&#13;
jokesters are nervous and unsure of&#13;
our audience.&#13;
What do Blonds put behind their&#13;
ears to attract boyfriends?&#13;
- their ankles!&#13;
Our collection also included several&#13;
"counter-jokes" whose butt is strategically&#13;
reversed. There are, for example,&#13;
Brunette jokes - the futile ripostes of oppressed&#13;
Blonds. There are also "stupid&#13;
men jokes" - invented jokes that attempt&#13;
to counteract the dominant targeting of&#13;
women within the’universe of American&#13;
jokes.&#13;
Why did God create man?&#13;
- because a vibrator can’t&#13;
mow the lawn!&#13;
While these attempts to resist inequality&#13;
by shifting a joke’s target upwards&#13;
may have only limitie~." politigal,fimpact, it&#13;
sfillfecls"goodtolaflgh.: ~:: ~ -~’~&#13;
Why is it so hard for women to&#13;
find men that are sensitive,&#13;
caring, and go~dqo~king? -~&#13;
because those guys _~&#13;
already have boyfriends!&#13;
LamontLindstrom teaches anthopology&#13;
at the University of Tulsa.&#13;
Romantic W ekend Package.--&#13;
Accommodations Frida3, Saturday or Sunday night. Bottle ofwine, souvenir&#13;
keepsake millennium corkscrew ¯ Souvenir etched glasses ¯ Specialq chocolate&#13;
tklights ¯ Deluxe continental breakfast ¯ Late checkout ¯ Specialq rooms $I80&#13;
¯ Deluxe rooms $160 ¯ Valid weekends in February. Does not include taxes&#13;
Tulsa’s Premier Boutique Hotel&#13;
14t~ &amp; Main ¯ Tulsa ¯ 587.8200&#13;
Member: Historic Howls ofAmerica&#13;
Featuring The Chalkboard Restauram, a dining landmark&#13;
IGTA&#13;
Calmlem3b4er1.6866i’!~&#13;
International&#13;
ToUrsformore information.&#13;
Massage Therapy Services&#13;
Voice Mai!~:918-697:9282&#13;
Lic. #C4133&#13;
Country Club Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
David Kauskey&#13;
3310 E. 51st, 747-0236, Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pro&#13;
"All About MyMother" and"Boys Don’ t&#13;
Meet Local&#13;
Guys for&#13;
Hot Ti&#13;
@Odgi&#13;
Cry" - actually showed up in OKC, she&#13;
madeit abundantly clear that shehad been&#13;
completely won overby them and was not&#13;
about to be shy about saying so in print.&#13;
Sympathy towards GLBT issues might&#13;
be expected from someone like White,&#13;
but it was definitely a surprise to see the&#13;
much nibre conservative reviewer, Jerry&#13;
Shottefi~irk, being taken in by the Ma-&#13;
.donna:Rupert Everett"Next BgstThing."&#13;
¯ election - and what could be the most&#13;
¯ importantelectionofourgeneration. The&#13;
: GLBT voting bloc has proven to be one of&#13;
¯¯ the most powerful constituencies in the&#13;
country in recent election cycles. If our&#13;
¯ voters are motivated to the polls and elect&#13;
¯ supportive leaders, we could have the ¯&#13;
opportunity to shape groundbrealdng le-&#13;
: gal protection. If the nation elects leaders&#13;
¯ who are hostile to all that NGLTF stands ¯&#13;
for, we could witness a serious backlash&#13;
¯ to our h~rd-won gains.&#13;
¯ Dr. Martin Luther King. once said the ¯&#13;
moral arc of the universeis long but bends&#13;
Surprises were cropping up in the rest .: toward justice. Dr. King was right - but&#13;
!~f th~ p,gper ~. W~I!, indu~g the busi- ¯ with our continued o!;gahi~gg g~ad motif&#13;
~es .,~..; o ~ .w~i~ g~ ~)le on .~_~o ~,~ ~jzatmn, we~make ~at,ii~.~;0’~,.~&#13;
:~est~c p~mership~ p,6ilc~es..a~.ong OkI’fi- ¯ much more qmckly&#13;
fioma compames- mcludiffg qu,otes from: $~,,-.~oundectir~1973, ttie&#13;
~Lucent’s I~aren Par~ons w~o is involved : Lesbian Tbsk Force W~’l?s to~iiniinate&#13;
inLuqent~sLesbianandGayemployees’ ¯ prejudice, uiolence andiwustice against&#13;
;brgani’zafion, EQUAL!. :- Gay, Lesbian, Bisexualgtn~l T~ransgen-&#13;
: Striking, 5wey r, was.a group of :. &amp;red people at the local, state dnd naarticles;&#13;
oii 1~hate crimes in the Sun- ¯ tional level. As part ofdbrOaddr ~Ocial&#13;
iday, March 20 issue. Mostof these ar- : justicemovementforfreOdom;]usticeand&#13;
titles appeared in ~ Community see- : equality, NGLTF is creattYg d Worm that&#13;
fion, Milch w’as’d~_i’ilh~lPdedia.the late : ~respects and celebrates_ ttie’diversity of&#13;
~F,dition ’on Stmday’. The~e, in b!a~k and .’. ’human expression and identity where all&#13;
White, was the opeii as~ertidii.’.tiia~ Okla- i .people mayfully participate in society.&#13;
h°ma City"s Human Rights CASmmlssi°n i&#13;
I ] .Was abolished by(the City Council bemuse&#13;
they iesent&amp;!havingt.6 deal with&#13;
the issue. 0fiG@’Ri~h?s, cbml~iete, with&#13;
~uote by c.ottt~,¢ilmenqbi~r~Je@ Fo~hee: " During WWII, the church Sheltered.Japa-&#13;
.-.; "The councilis tiredof.th6is~ue’hlways ; nese-American students who were given&#13;
being b~ought forward, and flae vehicle the opportunity to study atTU ratherth~a,n,,,&#13;
that is alWays brin~g.i’.t forward is the " beincarceratedinAmerican"internment&#13;
human rights comm, ss~on...~ If the vehicle&#13;
is bringing you dompany that you&#13;
don’ t want ... then you do away with the&#13;
vehicle."&#13;
In meeting with Hale, Speakers for Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Issues hoped that they would&#13;
open a dialog between the Daily Oklahoman&#13;
and the Gay and Lesbian community&#13;
of Oklahoma City. According to Speakers,&#13;
Hale provided them with many opportunities&#13;
by asking many questions&#13;
about Gay and Lesbian issues. Speakers&#13;
for Gay and Lesbian Issues noted the&#13;
positive trend in the paper’ s coverage of&#13;
Gay issues.&#13;
Hale revealed that those changes had&#13;
come at a price: while the articles on hate&#13;
crimes had generated both positive and&#13;
negative responses fromreaders, some of&#13;
the negative responses had been vicious&#13;
and involved actual threats. But, Hale also&#13;
said she was not going to let that stop her&#13;
from continuing to cover controversial&#13;
issues. She said that when a story generates&#13;
strong reactions on both sides, she&#13;
knows she’ s doing her job right.&#13;
This federation consists ofpolitical groups&#13;
that fight for equality. In just four years’&#13;
time, the Federation has grown to represent&#13;
members in every state in the union,&#13;
gro,wthinsuch ashort&#13;
period of time.&#13;
With the Federation’s help, last year&#13;
NGLTF was able to produce the largest&#13;
:~ grassroots mob~fion:inputmoyem~ntfs&#13;
history. We helped organize some 350&#13;
rallies and other events in all 50 state&#13;
capitols, plus D.C. and Puerto Rico, during&#13;
a one-week period. Our campaign -&#13;
called Equality Begins at Home- and the&#13;
work of the Federation paved the way for&#13;
the wonderful successes we have seen in&#13;
the past year.&#13;
Now many state legislatures are wrapping&#13;
up their business and adjourning.&#13;
Attention will soon shift to the November&#13;
camps. Later the church was involved in&#13;
the "Sanctuary" movement which offered&#13;
relocation of Central American political&#13;
refugees, both documented and-undocumented.&#13;
Aletter issued tomembers ofthe church,&#13;
signed by Rader and Clerk of the Session,&#13;
Kathy Evanson, notes, "None of these&#13;
actions changes who we are as a congregation;&#13;
but, they declare who we area and&#13;
what we want to be in our relationships&#13;
with one another. We are still a loyal,&#13;
supporting congregation of the Presbyterian&#13;
Church,U.S.A. We have done nothing&#13;
improper according to our&#13;
denomination’ s constitution. We are not&#13;
changing any signage, letterhead, preaching&#13;
or program. We are declaring inclusion&#13;
and affirmation of all our members&#13;
and our openness to a group of people&#13;
long rejected and stigmatized by society,&#13;
and within the Christian commtmity...&#13;
College Hill is a majority "straight"&#13;
church but with visible and welcome Lesbian&#13;
and Gay families.&#13;
Editor’s note: Tulsa Family Newspublisher&#13;
and editor, Tom Neal is a member&#13;
of College Hill Presbyterian Church.&#13;
An Evening With&#13;
The Quilt&#13;
On Thursday evening, May 25, the&#13;
NAMES Project Tulsa Area Chapter of&#13;
the AIDS Memorial Quilt will sponsor an&#13;
evening of meditation and remembrance&#13;
at Fellowship Congregational Church,&#13;
2900 So. Harvard in Tulsa, from 7-9 pm.&#13;
You. are invited to drop in anytime&#13;
during this time period to meditate, pray,&#13;
or simply view the Quilt. Feel free to stay&#13;
just afew minutes, or as long as you wish.&#13;
The NAMES Project Tulsa Area Chapter&#13;
invites everyonewhohas been touchedby&#13;
the AIDS pandemic to take a moment&#13;
from their evening to remember and reflect.&#13;
For more information, please contact&#13;
the NAMES Project Tulsa at (918)&#13;
748-3111 or TulsaQnilt@usa.net&#13;
Humanity Unites&#13;
f’or Hu’man Rights&#13;
Diversity .Celebration 2000&#13;
Grand Marshalls for the Millennium Parade&#13;
Dr. Grethe Cammermeyer&#13;
Distinguished Veteran of the United States Armed Forces&#13;
Gre£! Lou~lanis&#13;
US Olympic Champion&#13;
Pride Week Events,&#13;
.Interfaith Worship Service&#13;
The Tulsa Performin£l Arts Center&#13;
Speaker: the Reverend Dr. Mel&#13;
W.hite, author and activist&#13;
Friday, June 2, from 7pro (free)&#13;
TOHR Folbes.&#13;
1OO Years of Broadway&#13;
Saturday, June 8, 8pm, $15&#13;
PAC Doenges Theatre&#13;
Black Tie Optional Dinner&#13;
~i:Featuri~ 6re~q Louganis&#13;
The Summit Club&#13;
Friday, June 9th, $75 person&#13;
VIP reception at $50 person.&#13;
Benefitin~l Tulsa Oklahomans for&#13;
Human Ri/thts, the parent&#13;
or~Ianization of the&#13;
Gay Community Center&#13;
Millennium Pa~de 2000&#13;
Saturday, June IO, llam&#13;
Beginning at the Gay Community&#13;
Center at 87th and Peoria and&#13;
endin~i at Veterans Park&#13;
at 18th and BouIder&#13;
The Pride Festival&#13;
Veterans Park, llam 8pro&#13;
For more information about these&#13;
events, caIl 748-4297 (gays).</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Mary Schepers</text>
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              <text>Deputy Police Chief To&#13;
Speak At TOHR, Nov. 14&#13;
TULSA (TFN) - Tulsa Deputy Chief of Police Bobby&#13;
L. Busby will be the featured speaker at the Nov.&#13;
meeting of Tulsa Oldahomans for Human Rights&#13;
(TOHR) at the Gay Community Services Center at 21st&#13;
&amp;Memorial.The meeting begins at 7:30pm. Topics for&#13;
discussion with the ChiefBusby will include expanding&#13;
Tulsa’s "diversity" training for new police recruits and&#13;
for in-service training to include sexual orientation as&#13;
wall as rate and etlmicity. Also on the agenda will be&#13;
discussion of recent police visits to local Gay and&#13;
Lesbian_nightclubs. All are invited to attend.&#13;
TOHR will also hold a new volunteer orientation on&#13;
Nov. 9th at 7pm at the Center. Center organizers also&#13;
held an openhouse for thenew facility in October. They&#13;
note that about 80 people attended the event including&#13;
a substantial number of visitors in town for a leather&#13;
event. TOHR also hosted a Feastfor,~riends dinner&#13;
with raised over $1,000 for The NAMES Project.&#13;
Hate In Vermont&#13;
BROOKFIELD, Vt. (AP) - Mark Hackett was&#13;
thunderstruck when he looked at the fence facing property&#13;
he owns on Vermont Route 14. "Exaente the Fag,"&#13;
it declared, its message clear despite the misspelling.&#13;
Hackett, who is Gay, rents the property to two families,&#13;
one of whom has been feuding with the property&#13;
owner next door on whose fence the hate message was&#13;
spray-painted. Although Hackett as landlord has been&#13;
only peripherallyinvolved in the neighborhood dispute,&#13;
its message was obvious to him.&#13;
"It’s clearly there for me to see.., the message to my&#13;
tenant was,’ Seehow yourlandlordlikes that,’ "Hackett&#13;
said. "I just think the ’Take Back Vermont’ message is&#13;
making it OK to say stuff like that. I don’t have a&#13;
problem with people voting Democratic or Republican&#13;
or supporting any candidate they want... But you start&#13;
seeing that stuff around the state and it’s not about&#13;
politics, it’s about hate."&#13;
And it is happening more and more around Vermont&#13;
in this heated and polarized campaign season. In&#13;
Burlington, the Outright Vermont office has taken to&#13;
locking its doors and taking other security precautions&#13;
after two differentmen walked into the office on Oct. 13&#13;
and threatened to kill a staff member. "The first one&#13;
basically asked her what she was going to do to eliminate&#13;
herself, then told her if she didn’t eliminate hersdf&#13;
he would," see Vermont, l~. 2&#13;
DIRECTORY P. 2&#13;
EDITORIAL P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P. 4&#13;
HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
¯ Servin Lesbian Ga Bisexual + Transg~n~er_ed ~ul__Fa~s_, ~r Fa~ili~.~ Friends&#13;
: Gays Excluded From&#13;
i Tulsa’s "Diversity"&#13;
¯ Metropolitan Ministry Lauds Local Mix&#13;
: But Sees On!y Race, Religion + Ethnicity&#13;
¯ NEWS ANALYSIS ~- When is "diversity" not diverse? Only in&#13;
¯ Tulsa where "do-gooder" organizations, like Tulsa Metropolitan&#13;
¯&#13;
Ministry (TMM), the National Conference on Community and&#13;
¯ Justice (NCCJ), and others can sin~ the praises of interfaith&#13;
¯ tolerance andunderstandingwhile excluding or ignoringLesbian&#13;
¯ and Gay Tulsans, regardless of faith.&#13;
In this case,TMMissued a"Statement in Support ofDiversity"&#13;
¯ which defines diversity only in terms of race, ethnicity and&#13;
¯ religion. TMM’s newexecutive director theRev. StephenCranford ¯&#13;
stated that he did not know if the omission was deliberate.&#13;
However, TMM staff said that the text of the statement was&#13;
written by TMM board president, Dr. Sandra Rana, who is a&#13;
leader in Tulsa’s Islamic community. Members of Tulsa’s Is-&#13;
" lamic community have made hostile remarks towards Gays on&#13;
¯&#13;
several occasions, most recently when a Muslim representative&#13;
¯ at a NCCJ Trialogue on Marriage said that his society would&#13;
¯ murder any Gay men who attempted to marry each other. Dr.&#13;
’ Rana did not respond to messages left about the "Statement in&#13;
¯ Support of Diversity".&#13;
TMMhas a history of mostly ignoring Lesbian and Gay issues&#13;
¯ with one notable exception: the support of an amendment to ¯ Oklahoma’s hate crimes statute whichTulsa Representative Don&#13;
: Ross introduced in the legislative session prior to last year’s.&#13;
¯ Radford Rader, pastor ofCollegeHill Presbyterian Church, an ¯&#13;
officially welcoming congregation of Lesbians and Gay men and&#13;
¯ member of the TMM executive board, responded that the state-&#13;
" ment was meant to address racial and ethnic diversity because of&#13;
¯ the coming of the KKK. It was written right before the incident ¯&#13;
¯ at the Jewish cemetery. Rader stated that he did not feel that the&#13;
exclusion was deliberate.&#13;
see TMM, p. 9 ¯ Gay Grandmothers Just&#13;
Want to See Grandkids&#13;
TULSA (TFN) - It’s a sad story when families get caught up in&#13;
¯&#13;
homophobia and prejudice. It’s common when couples separate&#13;
after one or the other parent realizes that they are Lesbian or Gay.&#13;
¯ And when thelegal systemgets involved, often the Gay parent ¯&#13;
loses, though around the US and evenin Oklahoma, courts cases&#13;
." are holding that Lesbians or Gay men are not ipso facto bad&#13;
¯ parents. But when grandparents are involved, it’s even more ¯&#13;
difficult because the law defers almost completely to parents.&#13;
¯ That’s where two Tulsa women, Julene and Schrie, find&#13;
¯ themselves. Both were once married to men and have children ¯&#13;
fromthose relationships.&#13;
¯ Some of those kids have no problem with their Lesbian moms.&#13;
¯ And one of them didn’t have a problem with them, when she&#13;
¯ needed free babysitting and before she was married to a man ¯&#13;
who’s areligious fundamentalists. Now the daughter and the son-&#13;
¯ in-law who says he’s the head of the house find that "it’s in the&#13;
¯ best interest of the kids" that the kids not see their grandmother&#13;
¯ or her partner who’s just as close. ¯&#13;
Legal experts hold out little hope, and even if there were&#13;
¯ grounds for a court case, judges andjuries in Oklahoma are often&#13;
¯ .not sympathetic. But this does not deter friends of the women ¯&#13;
¯ who praise them for their kindness and support to their friends and employees when they find themselves in need.&#13;
¯ The women own a local dub out on Garnett which while it is&#13;
not a Lesbian or Gay oriented venue has patron who are remark-&#13;
" able supportive of the pair.&#13;
¯ Bar employee, Tummy Peevyhouse, was particularly outspo-&#13;
¯ ken in her concern for her friends and employers, as was also a&#13;
¯ bar patron, Tommy Clown. Frustrated by the limitations offered&#13;
by the legal system, Peevyhouse’s response was if the law allows&#13;
¯ this [situation], then the law needs to be changed.&#13;
¯ Meanwhile, the grandmothers just wait and have faith that as ¯&#13;
their grandsons reach legal maturity, they will reassert them-&#13;
" selves and come to see them on their own.&#13;
HEAR the Quilt&#13;
World AIDS Day- Dec, 1&#13;
¯ Council Oak Men’s Chorale Benefit&#13;
¯ TULSA-The fifth andlargestdisplay ofTheNAMES&#13;
Project will behddat tbeTulsa Conventi,o,.n Centeron&#13;
¯ on December 1 - 3. The event entitled, HEAR The Quilt" will open with student tours during daytime&#13;
¯ hours on World AIDS Day, Friday, December 1.&#13;
The opening ceremonies for the general public for&#13;
¯&#13;
"HEAR The Quilt" will be proceeded by the tradi-&#13;
] tionalWorldAIDS Day candlelightmarch.Themarch&#13;
¯ will begin at the Courthouse Plazajust west of 5th and&#13;
¯ Denver at 6:30, Friday evening.Marchers are encour- ¯&#13;
aged to bring organizational banners andbells; candles&#13;
¯ will be provided. Parking is available at the Conven¯&#13;
tion Center garage. The march will follow a short&#13;
¯ route through downtown Tulsa and will return to the&#13;
convention center for the Quilt’s opening at 8pro.&#13;
This display of the Quilt will feature 188 sections&#13;
¯ of the Quilt, each twelvefeet square. The display will&#13;
, be free and open to the public. Organizers note that&#13;
¯&#13;
the Quilt has the power to teach, to touch hearts, and&#13;
¯ to change minds.&#13;
In conjunction with the "HEAR The Quilt" Dis-&#13;
" play, the Council Oak Men’s Chorale under the&#13;
¯ direction of Rick Fortner will perform at Hope Uni-&#13;
¯ tarian Church, 8432 South Sheridan Road, Tulsa on&#13;
: Saturday evening,December2 atT:30pm. Admission ¯&#13;
is free, with a suggested $10 donation. Proceeds will&#13;
¯ benefit the NAMES Project Tulsa Area Chapter.&#13;
There also. will be an interfaith worship service&#13;
(coordinated by Reverend Cathy Elliott, pastor of&#13;
MCC United Church) to be held at the Quilt display&#13;
¯ on Sunday, Dec. 3at 9:30am.&#13;
¯ For more information, call (918) 748-3111 or send&#13;
e-mail to info@TulsaQuilt.org ¯ Maine To Vote Again&#13;
On Gay Civi,I Rights&#13;
¯ HALLOWELL, Maine (AP) - Maine’s latest refer-&#13;
" endum on civil fights for Gay citizens resurrects&#13;
¯ familiar arguments on both sides, but this time propo-&#13;
¯ nents have polished the proposal and picked up a&#13;
¯ potentially influential ally. In wirming support from&#13;
the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, backers&#13;
have sought to buttress an exemption for religious&#13;
¯ institutions. They have also sought to counter claims&#13;
¯ that the measure would award anything special or&#13;
¯ endorse specific sexual behavior.&#13;
Last time around, the Catholic church sat out the&#13;
¯ dection debate, saying it could not support a law&#13;
¯ enacted by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Angus&#13;
¯ .King because of ambiguities in its language. The&#13;
¯ enacted measure was repealed in February 1998&#13;
¯ before it ever took effect by a rare "people’s veto"&#13;
¯ referendum vote. The outcomein that special election&#13;
: was 51% for repeal and 49% against.&#13;
~ This time, with numerous other matters on state&#13;
¯ ballots expected to produce a bigger voter turnout,&#13;
¯ approval of Question 6 would again expand the ¯&#13;
Maine Human Rights Act. The proposal would in-&#13;
" dude the category of"sexual orientation" in a list of&#13;
¯ groups protected against discrimination in the areas&#13;
¯ of employment, housing or access to public accom- ¯&#13;
modations and the extension of credit. The new&#13;
version, however, approved by the Legislature and&#13;
signed by the governor in April, is more limited than&#13;
the repealed law. "We’ve repeatedly said work needs&#13;
to be done to clean up the language," says Catholic&#13;
diocesan spokesman Marc Mutty. "And we did that."&#13;
Besides the religious exemption, the new version&#13;
specifies thatno change in affirmative action requirements&#13;
is intended and see Maine, p.3&#13;
Tulsa~Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb, 1926 E. Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119&#13;
835-2376&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Shelida~, 834-4234 ~&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, i649 S~. M~in 585,3405&#13;
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial §~920836&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
~&#13;
1584-1308&#13;
*The Yellow Brick Road Pub, 2630 E. 15th 749-1563&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nieole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Border~ Books &amp; Music, 2740 E.21&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria&#13;
*Cheap Thrills, 2640 E. llth&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
743-1000&#13;
250-5034&#13;
665-4580&#13;
712-1122&#13;
712-9955&#13;
494-2665&#13;
743 -5272&#13;
746-0313&#13;
295-5868&#13;
581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
622-0700&#13;
749-3620&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838-8503&#13;
369-8555&#13;
712-9379&#13;
592-0460&#13;
744-9595&#13;
610-0880&#13;
628-3709&#13;
808-8026&#13;
742-1460&#13;
459-9349&#13;
744-7440&#13;
745-1111&#13;
341-6866&#13;
712-2750&#13;
582-3018&#13;
747-0236&#13;
582-8460&#13;
599-8070&#13;
747-5466&#13;
585-1234&#13;
584-3112&#13;
663-5934&#13;
664-2951&#13;
838-7626&#13;
743-4297&#13;
747-5932&#13;
834-0617&#13;
834-7921, 747-4746&#13;
749-6301&#13;
260-7829&#13;
481-0558&#13;
835-5563&#13;
743-1733&#13;
665-2222&#13;
592-0767&#13;
*Deco to Disco; 3212 E. 151h&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
Encompass Travel, 13161H N. Memorial&#13;
Ross Edward Salon 584-0337,&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 551h P1.&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planniug&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 151h&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B,POB 696, 74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors&#13;
Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
PaulTay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling&#13;
*Wherehouse Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
FOB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159. e-mail: TulsaNews@earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor: Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + eontributom: James Christjohn. Karin Gregory, Barry&#13;
Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche. Lament Lindstrom. Esther&#13;
Rothblum, Mary Schepers, Hughston Walkinshaw&#13;
Mem~ber of The Associated Press.. ~ _ ~ ~ ,&#13;
Issued 0ffor,befot~ th6 1 ~t of~ each month,~entire contents&#13;
Of this publicatioxi are protected by US 6opyright 1998 by&#13;
To/.~/:k~,,~ N~and may not be~ptoduce~ eitherin whole&#13;
or in part without written permission from the publisher.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a person’s&#13;
sexual orientation. ~orrespondence is assumed to be for&#13;
"pi~blication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp; becomes&#13;
the sole property of TM-~/c¢,,,,~... Nv~,. Each reader is&#13;
entitled to 4 copies of each edition at distribution&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
¯ *Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
¯ Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
¯ *Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
¯ *Free SpiritWomen’s Center, call for location&amp;info: 587-4669 ¯&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
¯ Friends in Unity Social Org., POB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd, 583-6611&#13;
¯ *Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
¯ *HouseoftheHoly SpiritMinstries,1517 S. Memorial 224-4754&#13;
¯ *MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715 ¯&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral P1. 748-3111&#13;
¯&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, POB 14068, 74159 365-5658&#13;
¯ OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 74157&#13;
¯ *OSU-Tulsa ¯&#13;
PFLAG, POB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
¯ *Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674&#13;
¯ Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
¯ R.A:I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195 ¯&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 584-2325&#13;
: St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
¯&#13;
St. Dtmstan’,s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140&#13;
¯ *St. Jerome s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
¯ *TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
~ Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
¯ Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only ¯ Tulsa Okla. for Human Rights, c!o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
: T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
¯ *Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
; *Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
¯ *Tulsa Gay Community Center, 21st &amp; Memorial 743-4297&#13;
¯ Unity Church ofChristianity,3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
.. BARTLESVILLE&#13;
¯ Barflesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
¯ TAHLEQUAH&#13;
: Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
¯ Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900&#13;
¯ Green Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-936~3&#13;
¯ EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
www.gaytulsa~.org - website for Tulsa Gays &amp; Lesbians : Autumn Br~,eeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23 501-253-7734&#13;
T,,t~ ^~-~.A~=~~ Cha;-bh~i; ~:chOOIS&amp;~. Universities "- Jim &amp;Brent s Bistro 173 S. Main 501-253~7457&#13;
A!~r~ ~Xrr~t+~,~~r~tT~ 7’h~:~ [-’ ~ ’~ ~ ~ :~ "~~-95~....~eVito~s’R~S~L -5 Ce~ter~ St.’’ t. ~ ..... ,. ,: 1, ~ ~,1-~53~&#13;
~1 So~sU~Ch~ch, 2952 S. Peofia 743-2363 : ¯~dR~nbow, 45 ~!~ Spnng ’St: .....5.01.2.5.3 ~5&#13;
Black &amp; ~te, ~c. ~B 1~01, T~sa 74159 5~-7314 ¯ MCC of ~e ~ving Spring 501-253-9337&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6&#13;
B/.L/G/T-Alliance, Univ, of Tulsa United Min. Ctr.&#13;
Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th P1.&#13;
Church of the Restoration UU, 1314 N.Greenwood&#13;
*Community of Hope Church, 2545 S. Yale&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware&#13;
583-7815&#13;
583-9780&#13;
585-1201&#13;
&amp; Florence&#13;
587-1314&#13;
747-6300&#13;
749-0595&#13;
748-3888&#13;
712-1511&#13;
Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429 501-253~2776&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery 501-253-5332&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans ....... 501-624-6646&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East 501-253-6001&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St. 501-253-4074&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134 417-623-4696&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Not all are Gay-owned butall are Gay-friendly.&#13;
said Keith Elston, executive director of the&#13;
group dedicated to Gay and Lesbian youth.&#13;
"The other one was much more blunt that he&#13;
was going to ’kill fags.’ "&#13;
Burlington police are investigating the&#13;
incidents, but there have beenno arrests and&#13;
cOauretffUiglhatbVoeurtmtro~nntgh.at9s pbregcvoidme~e .msauf.ec.hty mt°oir.tes&#13;
staff, volunteers and especially its clients.&#13;
From tasteless bumper stickers to graffiti&#13;
on highway pavement, it’s apparently become&#13;
socially acceptable in the political&#13;
climate of 2000 to use derogatory terms for&#13;
Gays and Lesbians that once were considered&#13;
epithets. There have been scattered but&#13;
persistent reports at schools across the state&#13;
about anti-Gay incidents and harassment.&#13;
On the pavement of the road approaching&#13;
the Champlain Bridge near Fort~i~conderoga&#13;
inNew Yorksomeonerecently spray-painted&#13;
in large white letters "FAGS," with arrows&#13;
pointing over the bridge into Vermont.&#13;
"How much more explicit can you be&#13;
about creating an aura of fear for day-to-day&#13;
life?" said Lynne Bond, a psychology professor&#13;
at the University of Vermont who has&#13;
studied Gay and Lesbian issues.&#13;
Vermont’s new civil unions law, granting&#13;
most of the rights and benefits of marriage&#13;
to same-sex couples, clearly has prompted a&#13;
broad public discussion about the lives of&#13;
Gays and Lesbians. There are deeply held&#13;
beliefs about the morality - or some would&#13;
say immorality - of homosexuality. But&#13;
before the civil unions debate, those beliefs&#13;
were rarely expressed in langnage that’s so&#13;
offensive to Gays and Lesbians.&#13;
"It seems to me that some people, have&#13;
broken out of the social constraints of civility&#13;
that I think people were honoring during&#13;
thelegislativeprocess," said BethRobinson,&#13;
the Middlebury attorney who argued the&#13;
lawsuit that led to civil unions.&#13;
People who oppose civil unions say&#13;
they’ve been unfairly maligned becausejust&#13;
they don’t agree with the law. They complain&#13;
that they’ve been described as bigots,&#13;
hate-mongerers and homophobes. They say&#13;
that their ’Take Back Vermont’ signs and&#13;
other political placards havebeen knocked&#13;
over, defaced with Gay symbols and stolen.&#13;
"I think there have been ugly incidents on&#13;
both sides," Republican gubernatorial candidate&#13;
Ruth Dwyersaid atadebatein Lyndon&#13;
Center last week.&#13;
Still, it once was eousidered ill-mannered&#13;
at best to use such terms as fag and dyke aad&#13;
queer in civil conversation. The anger over&#13;
civil unions appears to have erased that&#13;
unwritten rule in Vermont, at least for the&#13;
time being. And that makes many Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Vermonters feel as if they’re under&#13;
attack, even if it’s a small minority of civil&#13;
union opponents who:are behind the hate.&#13;
~ : ~ ~P~@I’O~6*~[re~, frimtrated lthat&#13;
1 didn-t~get ~d~* ~ivil ~iOrls bill killed&#13;
Legislature, some of them have taken it.&#13;
upon themselves to link an ominous, mystical&#13;
Gay agenda to the civil union bill,"&#13;
- Elston.said. ’,’They’ve.been-falsely suggest~&#13;
ing that there s something in the civil unions&#13;
bill that requires the teaching of homosexuality&#13;
in schools. They’ve been foolishly&#13;
suggesting that Outfight teaches homosexuality&#13;
in the schools, that we’re distributing&#13;
pornography." see Vermont, p.3&#13;
World Watch:&#13;
News Not Covered in Our Daily&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor/gadfly/publisher&#13;
It’s old fashioned to place as much import on a daily&#13;
newspaper but then as a newspaper publisher and editor&#13;
of now seven years, I am somewhat committed to the&#13;
concept. Unlike the internet, radio and television, those&#13;
more ephemeral of media, the printed word, even on acid&#13;
filled newsprint leaves a legacy, a picture of where we are&#13;
and where we were, in a way that is more accessible and&#13;
probably more permanent.&#13;
This new and irregularly published column, like much&#13;
ofthis newspaper’s coverage, intends to bring to attention&#13;
things which otherwise might not get addressed.&#13;
Andwhile our daily newspaper, The Tulsa Worldis not&#13;
the worst newspaper in America, it does have some&#13;
foibles, some journalistic lapses which stem from its&#13;
parochial circumstances: a privately owned, smaller town&#13;
paper with a historically greater emphasis on coverage of&#13;
wealthy whites, rather than minority citizens and issues.&#13;
It’s better than it used to be but...&#13;
We are in the height of the United Way campaagn, and&#13;
as in years past, The Tulsa World is a major supporter of&#13;
TulsaAreaUnitedWay (TAUW). This is notintrinsically&#13;
a bad thing. TAUW does do much good for many. But&#13;
TAUW also funds organizations which engage in discnminatory&#13;
practices and itself may discriminate. There&#13;
are ongoing questions about the true percentage of funds&#13;
which go to services rather than administration.&#13;
Onemight think that The Wormwouldat least look into&#13;
these issues. But year after year, The World’s coverage of&#13;
United Way is a public relations flakmeister’s dream,&#13;
with shamelesslypromotional stories aboutTAUWfunded&#13;
agencies which nm during the United Way fundraising&#13;
campaign.&#13;
Canwedoubt thatifTAUWwere funding’~penly racist&#13;
or anti-semitic agencies that The World would write&#13;
about it? Despite claims of separation between the newsroom,&#13;
and advertising and ownership, The Worm has a&#13;
clear conflict of interest between its promotion of United&#13;
Way and its commitment to good journalism.&#13;
The World will change when they know that their&#13;
readers like you andme find their practices unacceptable.&#13;
Not to pickonJoe Worley, executive editor butultimately&#13;
he’s responsible for the decision to coddle Tulsa Area&#13;
United Way and its bad mannered (and in one case,&#13;
clearly lncohapetent) management. Joe’s ntunber is published&#13;
on page A-2 everyday. Let him know when The&#13;
World’s doing a good job of covering Lesbian and Gay&#13;
issues (overall, they’re doing better these days) but also&#13;
let him know what’s not working too.&#13;
’In the current, embittered political atmosphere, it is&#13;
difficult to counter such arguments. And so it feeds on&#13;
itself and results in slogans that once would have been&#13;
considered epithets being painted on a neighbor’s fence.&#13;
Although it’s unpleasant for many Vermonters, regardless&#13;
of their homosexuality, people who have been&#13;
involved said they will continue speaking out. "You have&#13;
to just keep on.telfing the truth, over and over again,"&#13;
El~n ~akl. !’Everyti~n~,thCy ~ylie~ ~a~bgut you,’yqq l~av¢&#13;
t~ exp0~e. ~em ~s [i~e~ on~!,Y0q ~aYq ~to ~t~lil,th~ .tnifl~&#13;
people hear that message."&#13;
"They Don’t Want Civil Rights, They Want Special Rights"&#13;
Early this morning, before I was really awake, or maybe&#13;
late last night drowsing with the television on, the history&#13;
channel was showing footage about the struggle Black&#13;
Americans had to end legal segregation. This part ofrecent&#13;
American history is a particular interest of mine but this&#13;
was mostly things I’d heard or seen before. But then there&#13;
was an image that caught my attention, one I’d never seen&#13;
before.&#13;
An old black and white image showed a white Southerner&#13;
marching with a placard Saying, "They don’t want&#13;
civil rights, they want SPECIAL rights!" And here I&#13;
thought that particular carnard wg~ newly minted to&#13;
mischaracterize the desire of Lesbian and Gay persons to&#13;
live our lives relatively unmolested, with a some semblance&#13;
of the same opportunities which non-Gay citizens&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Perhaps I should not have been surprised. In the fight&#13;
over whether Lesbian and Gay Americans should serve&#13;
openly in defense of our country, almost word-for-word&#13;
rhetoric was trotted out to oppose Gays as was used to&#13;
oppose racial integration of the US military.&#13;
Prejudice, like taxes and death, is, it seems, fundamental&#13;
to the human condition, with Americans, like others,&#13;
occasionally transcending our biases. After many shameful&#13;
years of oppression, Americahas slowly set aside some&#13;
of its racism. But different prejudices, seeing a void, have&#13;
come forward.&#13;
In response, we can do several things. Many simply seek&#13;
to live their own lives, quietly, avoiding harassment as best&#13;
as possible. Others speak out as best they can. But all who&#13;
are citizens can vote, and after the election, can contact&#13;
those who are supposed to be representing us.&#13;
Of course, in Oklahoma, this is often an exercise in&#13;
frustration. Our elected federal leaders are nearly all dedicated&#13;
to attacking or restricting the rights of Lesbian-and&#13;
Gay citizens - and their staff are usually rude and arrogant.&#13;
But not to hold them accountable is to let them&#13;
assume that all agree with their prejudice.&#13;
Needless-to-say, in this election, if you are reading this&#13;
before Nov. 7th, please consider the difference between&#13;
the Republicans and the Democrats. As bad as the Democrats&#13;
may be in Oklahoma, on a national level, that party&#13;
has clearly talked and walked the talk. Positions for fair&#13;
treatment of Lesbian and Gay citizens are in the Democratic&#13;
platform and have been honored in action by the&#13;
national party, not perfectly, but under Clinton and Gore,&#13;
more than ever before.&#13;
Bush and the Republicans may have moderated some of&#13;
their anti-Gay, neo-nazi rhetoric (though not the Oklahoma&#13;
party) but this is the party which brought us years of&#13;
indifference to the HIV/AIDS crisis under Reagan, as well&#13;
as a documented hostility to addressing anti-Gay hate&#13;
crimes, let alone civil rights issues like employment, fair&#13;
housing, military service, legal recognition, of our relationships&#13;
and families, etc.&#13;
It’s not that I especially like Gore, or that Bush isn’t an&#13;
idiot, it’s just that given the choice, we have no choice.&#13;
This guy will be making the next Supreme Court appointments.&#13;
And decisions which have been crucial to our lives&#13;
(like Bowers v. Hardwick which said that straight oral sex&#13;
is constitutionally protected but the same act for Gays can&#13;
be a felony crime, Dale v. the Boy Scouts of America,&#13;
Colorado’s Amendment 2) have all been mostly narrowly&#13;
decided cases. Another Scalia, or Clarence Thomas, the&#13;
type of choices we’ve seen from Republican presidents,&#13;
would not bode us well.&#13;
Vote like your life depends on it- in many ways, it does.&#13;
-Tom Neal, editor &amp; pubisher&#13;
that there would .be no. requirement for employers to&#13;
provide benefits for the partners of Gay and Lesbian&#13;
workers.&#13;
"The diocese has never been opposed to any of the&#13;
proposals," Mutty says. But he says changes this year not&#13;
only made it possible for the church to sign on as an&#13;
advocate, but were also aimed at making the measure&#13;
acceptable to a majority of people statewide.&#13;
Michael Heath of the Christian Civic League of Maine,&#13;
a leader of one of the major groups opposing the measure,&#13;
says the shift from neutrality to advocacy by the Catholic&#13;
diocese was a major setback. The prospect of a busy&#13;
balloting day is also a concern for opponents, he says. "If&#13;
there’ s a big turnout of voters, then a lot of sort ofimpulsive&#13;
voters are going to be there," Heath says, fretting that those&#13;
unfamiliar with details of the proposal may not appreciate&#13;
its impact.&#13;
Heath says the morality of homosexuality remains central&#13;
to the debate and that conferring rights with this&#13;
proposal could lead to further Gay demands. "It lays the&#13;
foundation for a lot of other things," Heath says.&#13;
Observers on both sides suggest much of the Maine&#13;
electorate appears-to have grown weary of the issue, which&#13;
in one form or another has occupied debate on public&#13;
policy for at least two decades. In 1992, the first local Gay&#13;
fights law was passed by the Portland City Council. Three&#13;
w.gr~s later, Maine~ vot.,¢,r~,~rejected a proposal to prevent&#13;
municipal and other government bodies.in the state from&#13;
passing laws barring anti-Gay discrimination.&#13;
In 1997, after years of legislative warring, a state civil&#13;
rights law was enacted. But just months later, the people’s&#13;
veto vote forced by opponents repealed that. "It was very&#13;
close the last time it went around. I know there’s been a lot&#13;
of work on both sides," says bakery worker Sara Wagner&#13;
in Hallowell. "I hope it passes." In a brief, streetside&#13;
interview, Wagner said her awareness of discrimination&#13;
facedby people sheknew ofmade the ballot questionmore&#13;
than an abstract matter of principle. "It has real life implications,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Heath, in contrast, maintains the proponents’ claims of&#13;
acturd discrimination are specious. "It’s obviously not&#13;
widespread," he says.&#13;
Earlier this month, in response tO an inquiry by one of&#13;
the referendum bill’s leading legislative champions, Attorney&#13;
General Andrew Ketterer advised that ~at least the&#13;
threat of discrimination is real under existing statutes.&#13;
"The federal and state law, as currently written and interpreted&#13;
by the courts, do not prohibit the denial or termination&#13;
of employment, the denial of credit, the denial of&#13;
public acco~nmodation or the denial of housing because of&#13;
sexual orientation," Ketterer wrote.&#13;
The most recent campaign finance reports show that&#13;
supporters from the Maine Coalition for Equal Rights,&#13;
now known as YES on 6, reported donations of nearly&#13;
$260,000 and expenditures of $240,000.&#13;
The Christian Action League collected $37,500, but is&#13;
also opposing proposals on video gambling and doctorassisted&#13;
suicide. According to a recent poll by the Portland&#13;
research firm Critical Insights Inc., respondents favored&#13;
the referendum by 59% to 29%, with 11% undecided.&#13;
Question 6 on Maine’s ballot asks:&#13;
"Do you favor ratifying the action of the 119th&#13;
Legislature whereby it passed an act extending to all&#13;
citizens regardless of their sexual orientation the&#13;
same basic rights to protection against discrimination&#13;
now guaranteed to citizens on the basis of race, color,&#13;
religion, sex or national origin in the areas of employment,&#13;
housing, public~acco.ram~datipa~.a~d~cr~edi[ .and&#13;
where th~ a~t expregs’ly~s~te~&#13;
confers legislative approval Of, or sp~,i~ d’gtig tb;&#13;
any person or group of persons?"&#13;
¯ Okla. Reps. = Total Zeros&#13;
: Not that it should come as any surprise to anyone, but&#13;
¯ the Human Rights Campaign, HRC, reports in their&#13;
¯¯ scorecard for the 106thCongress thatOklahoma’s Representatives&#13;
and our Senators, Largent, Cobum, Watkins,&#13;
¯&#13;
Watts, Istook, Lucas, Nickles and Inhofe received total&#13;
¯ zeros on 10 questions about legislation of concern to Gay&#13;
¯ citizens. This is why voting matters, friends. - TFN&#13;
Scouts Fire Gay Man&#13;
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) - A Boy Scout&#13;
executive was stripped of his Eagle Scout status and&#13;
fired by the Boy Scouts of America National Council&#13;
10 days after he publicly admitted he is Gay, his&#13;
attorney said. Len Lanzi, Boy Scouts Los Padres&#13;
Council executive director, worked for the scouting&#13;
organization 14 years before he was terminated by&#13;
mail.&#13;
"We plan to pursue all legal remedies available to&#13;
him," said Lanzi’s attorney, Steven Serratori, whose&#13;
Century City firm specializes in employment law "I&#13;
think it’s fair to say that everybody is surprised at the&#13;
arrogance of the Boy Scouts," Serratori said. "To think&#13;
in this day and age that they think they can fire&#13;
someone based on their sexual orientation..." A U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court rnling last summer upholding the Boy&#13;
Scouts" right to exclude Gay members does not apply&#13;
to its employees, the lawyer said.&#13;
Lanzi, whose territory includes Santa Barbara and&#13;
SanLuis Obispo counties, is believed to be the highestranking&#13;
Boy Scout executive to publicly acknowledge&#13;
his homosexuality since the Supreme Court ruling in&#13;
June.&#13;
Los Padres Boy Scout boardmembers told the Santa&#13;
Barbara News-Press their options were limited because&#13;
of the national council’s policy on Gays. "We&#13;
could contradict the national Boy Scout policy, and&#13;
possibly risk the whole council being decommissioned,&#13;
orwecan go along with firing him," said Karl Eberhard&#13;
a member of the Los Padres Boy Scouts board. "I&#13;
maintain that the whole thing is completely idiotic," he&#13;
added.&#13;
Neighbors Don’t Mind&#13;
Alabama Ga " Nudists&#13;
WAVERLY, Ala. (AP) -h grovel road winds through&#13;
John Bales’ wilderness resort. It looks like any of the&#13;
paths leading to huntinglodge_s wherecountless Southern&#13;
men spend weekends this time of year. Then, you&#13;
come to the sign: "Clothing optional area."&#13;
This isn’t your ordinary, out-of-the-way spot in the&#13;
woods of east Alabama. Bales owns Black Bear Camp,&#13;
a 33-acre resort catering to Gay men who enjoy nature&#13;
au naturel.&#13;
Black Bear Camp isn’t for hunting. It’ s for socializing.&#13;
The clientele tends to be Gay men best described&#13;
as the rugged type: Many have beards and bellies and&#13;
would rather sit around the lodge watching football on&#13;
TV than go to a Gay bar. "Probably more than 50% of&#13;
our customers are married or divorced with kids,"&#13;
Bales said. "’We don’t get the flamboyant type."&#13;
There were rumblings when another clothing-optional&#13;
campground for Gay men opened near the south&#13;
Alabama town of Geneva a couple of years ago. A&#13;
Lesbian-operated retreat where guests wear clothes,&#13;
Camp Sister Spirit, drew heated protests in 1993 after&#13;
opening in rural Mississippi.&#13;
But Bales hasn’t heard any complaints from surrounding&#13;
Lee County or nearby Waverly, a town of&#13;
" h&#13;
160 people, many,of them elderly. I know my ne.l.g .-&#13;
bors. They know I mGay, and they know I opened ttus&#13;
place," he said. "There hasn’t been a problem with it."&#13;
Many residents don’t know the camp exists: Bales&#13;
doe’Sn’t adverd~ locally, and there are no signs indicatinglthat&#13;
a dbfhing-opti0nal resort for Gays is just&#13;
off busy U.S. 280. But people who do know about the&#13;
camp don’t seem concerned about what’s going on in&#13;
the woods north of Auburn. "If that’ s what turns them&#13;
on, let ’em go on," said Waverly town clerk DeLene&#13;
Cawley. "If I belonged to a nudist colony that’s where&#13;
I’d want to be."&#13;
A leader of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Alabama&#13;
isn’t surprised by the lack of controversy. "As&#13;
long as there’s no loud music and people keep to&#13;
themselves I wouldn’t think people would have a&#13;
problem with it," said David White.&#13;
Bales, a 57-year-old math professor at Tuskegee&#13;
University, didn’t set out to get into the clothingoptional&#13;
resort business. He began buying land around&#13;
Little Loblockee Creek in 1982 and began building&#13;
1ears later with plans for the camp to provide a source&#13;
of income when he retires in 2009.&#13;
There’s bunk space for 24 in the 3,600-square-foot&#13;
lodge, whichhas a tin roof and all the comforts ofhome&#13;
plus some: Internet access, satellite TV, a hot tub and&#13;
an above-ground swimming pool with deck. Bales has&#13;
had as many as 30 customers on a weekend, but the&#13;
more typical crowd is six or seven.&#13;
"It was not my original intention to be clothingoptional,"&#13;
he said. "But shortly after I opened, I began&#13;
to get inquiries from clothing-optional groups asking&#13;
whether that was allowed. "It didn’t take me long to&#13;
realize that the remoteness and seclusion of the camp&#13;
made than a natural option and a good niche market to&#13;
enter."&#13;
With prices ranging from $8 for daytmae guests to&#13;
$40 a night for double occupancy bunks, Bales hopes&#13;
to break even this year as far as operating costs go. He&#13;
weeds out the occasional unannounced visitor just&#13;
looking for a good time. "No one wants to come down&#13;
here and have people who are looking at naked guys&#13;
and propositioning them for sex," he said. "That will&#13;
drive away my business.’"&#13;
Journalist Group Calls&#13;
For Partner Benefits&#13;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Society of Professional&#13;
Journalists approved a resolution calling for&#13;
news organizations to provide benefits for domestic&#13;
parmers of their Gay and Lesbian employees. .&#13;
The measure was opposed by some SPJ members&#13;
who said the professional organization should not get&#13;
involved in employment matters such as benefits.&#13;
Delegates approved the resolution by a margin of 85 to&#13;
36 at SPJ’s national convention.&#13;
Sally Lehlman, SPJ’s diversity chair, said the resolution&#13;
would ensure that Gay and Lesbian journalists&#13;
are not treated "like second class citizens in the newsroom."&#13;
"It’s not about employment from our perspecfive.&#13;
It’ s about fairness and accuracy in content, which&#13;
emerges in part from fairness in the newsroom," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Mark Scarp, an editorial writer for the Scottsdale&#13;
(Ariz.) Tribune, and member of SPJ’s executive committee,&#13;
said the group should follow its precedent of&#13;
leaving employment issues up to unions. "I personally&#13;
support domestic partner benefits but I believe it qualifies&#13;
as an employer-employee relations issue," Scarp&#13;
said. "We’re a professional association and I felt it&#13;
wasn’t appropriate for us to make a determination on&#13;
such an issue."&#13;
A few years ago, SPJ comuussioned a survey on&#13;
reporters’ salaries, but would not get into trying to&#13;
persuade employers to improve pay, Scarp said.&#13;
Gay Couple Get&#13;
Abducted Child Back&#13;
CATHEDRAL CITY, California (AP) - A 10-yearold&#13;
boy abducted by his grandfather who accused the&#13;
child’s caretakers of promoting a Gay lifestyle has&#13;
been returned to the couple. Miguel Washington was&#13;
surrendered to authorilies by relatives in Pennsylvania&#13;
and returned to the home ofhis uncle, Paul Washington&#13;
Jr., and Timothy Forrester. "Right now he’s really&#13;
happy to be home," Washington Jr. said. "We’re absolutely&#13;
elated. Our family is united again."&#13;
An attorney for Paul Washington Sr. and Sandra&#13;
Washington, Mignel’s grandparents and Washington&#13;
Jr.’s parents, said his clients intend to pursue custody.&#13;
"My clients don’t feel that’s the best home for him,"&#13;
said attorney Bill Hence Jr. "I’m very disappointed in&#13;
the agencies that were supposed to be protecting the&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
MCC-United&#13;
Sunday Worship Reverend Cathy Elliot&#13;
11:00 am Pastor&#13;
1623 N. Maplewood 918/838-1715&#13;
Community&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at llam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm, Sunday Eve. Service, 6pm&#13;
1517 S. Memorial, 628-0802, Info: 224-4754&#13;
The Open Arms Project&#13;
Young Adult Support Group&#13;
Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment&#13;
Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers&#13;
9413 E. 31st St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
918-663-5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-444-5934&#13;
Family Owned &amp; Operated&#13;
Trinna L. W. Burrows, LSW, ACSW&#13;
Child, Family, Individual &amp; Couple Psychotherapy&#13;
(918) 743-9559&#13;
2121 South Columbia, Suite 420&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74114-3518&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
21st Street &amp; Memorial&#13;
Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743-4297)&#13;
6-9 pm, Sunday - Friday&#13;
12-9 pm, Saturday, all sales benefit the Center&#13;
3 Strand Communications&#13;
Long Distance 4.9C/minute&#13;
$4.99 monthly fee&#13;
24 hours a day - 7 days a week&#13;
Call 447-8602&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa&#13;
Free Confidential HIV Testing&#13;
Walk-in Clinics&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs., 5 -8 pm&#13;
at the Center, 1307 East 38th&#13;
Daytime appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
KEVIN BURLESO N&#13;
Keller Williams Realty&#13;
712-2252&#13;
Burleson@kw.com&#13;
2651 East 21st Street, Ste. 100, Tulsa 74114&#13;
An Independent Member Broker&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, PC&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
a professional corporation&#13;
747-5466&#13;
4021 South Harvard Avenue, Suite 210, Tulsa 74135&#13;
fights of the child." A hearing was scheduled for&#13;
December.&#13;
Miguel was born to Angelena Washington, the&#13;
younger Washington’s mentally disabled sister, who&#13;
was impregnated while living in an assisted-care facility,&#13;
family members said. At the time, family members&#13;
informally agreed to have him raised by Washington&#13;
Jr., a hardware store salesman, and Forrester, a teacher.&#13;
Riverside County Deputy District Attorney Tex&#13;
Ritter said his office had not decided if charges will be&#13;
filed in the abduction. The elder Washington picked up&#13;
Miguel for an overnight fishing trip on Oct. 6 andnever&#13;
brought him back, Washington Jr. said.&#13;
Instead, Washington and For/ester received a letter&#13;
from a Los Angeles law firm Oct. 7 stating that Miguel&#13;
had been removed from their home and accusing the&#13;
pair of "actively promoting or influencing a Gay&#13;
lifestyle for the minor." The letter cited Miguel’s&#13;
participation in ballet and "Gay art class" instead of&#13;
baseball as one reason for the boy’s removal.&#13;
Germany Ready to&#13;
Recognize Gay Partners&#13;
BERLIN (AP)-Germany’s governing coalition wants&#13;
to pass a law giving equal legal status to Gay couples&#13;
early in November, politicians stated. Leaders from&#13;
the Social Democratic and Greens parties said they&#13;
plan to have the Bundestag, the lower house of parliament,&#13;
approve the bill Nov. I0.&#13;
Conservatives, however, control a majority in the&#13;
upper house of parliament and have criticized the law.&#13;
To get around their opposition that could scuttle the&#13;
bill, lawmakers laid out a plan Friday to divide the&#13;
legislation into two parts.&#13;
The government majority in parliament would pass&#13;
administrative regulations creating the legal frameworkforGay&#13;
couples without the upper house’ s agreement.&#13;
However, the upper house will still be called on&#13;
to approve lifting the disadvantages to Gays contained&#13;
in labor and tax codes.&#13;
ACLU Trying Bias&#13;
Reduction Program&#13;
ATLANTA (AP) - Georgia is one of three states&#13;
chosen by the American Civil Liberties Union to pilot&#13;
a program to educate teachers about bullying of Gay&#13;
and Lesbian students.&#13;
The ACLU says students who identify themselves&#13;
as Gay are more than four times as likely to suffer&#13;
bullying than heterosexual students. Gary Weber, legal&#13;
director of the Georgia ACLU, said Gay students&#13;
also have higher rates of absenteeism and suicide. The&#13;
program will use panels - including a Gay student,&#13;
perhaps a parent of a Gay student, a school administrator&#13;
or classroom teacher and an attorney - to explain&#13;
the legal liabilities schools face if they ignore harassment.&#13;
TheACLU will begin contacting schools in November&#13;
to schedule traimng sessions. Districts that refuse&#13;
the training may be called by an ACLU attorney to&#13;
briefly explain legal liabilities. Kentucky and Indiana&#13;
are the other two pilot states. No date has been set for&#13;
expanding theprogram, which was developed in northern&#13;
California, to other states, ACLU spokesman Eric&#13;
Ferrero said.&#13;
Big .Brothers, Big Sisters&#13;
Bans Gay Volunteers&#13;
OWENSBORO, Ky (AP) - The local chapter of Big&#13;
Brothers-Big Sisters, which links children with adult&#13;
mentors, will no longer allow Gays to participate in the&#13;
program. The board voted 10-9 to bar openly Gay&#13;
volunteers following a closed-door meeting.&#13;
Board members had raised concerns about health&#13;
issues and fear that it would create confusion among&#13;
childr+n over sexual orientation matters, said Sue&#13;
Krampe, executive director. The debate on whether to&#13;
conunue to allow Gays to mentor children surfaced&#13;
recently after Brian Combs, a case manager and minister&#13;
at Christ View Christian Church, quit after learning&#13;
a homosexual was a mentor in the program.&#13;
The board was deadlocked in a vote earlier this&#13;
month. Combs had been the only person to raise a&#13;
complaint prior to the first vote. But since then, the&#13;
agency has fielded 18 telephone calls in opposition to&#13;
allowing Gays in the program, Krampe said.&#13;
Volunteers had been asked their sexual orientation&#13;
during the initial screening process and parents were&#13;
allowed to veto amatela based on their answers.&#13;
Nationally, only a "handful" of the 500 chapters of&#13;
the American Big Brothers-Big Sisters prohibits homosexuals~&#13;
from mentoring children, Krampe said.&#13;
Each local chapter can set ~ts ownpolicies on the issue.&#13;
she said.&#13;
Newspaper Chain to&#13;
Offer Partner Benefits&#13;
GRANDRAPIDS, Mich. (AP)- Six of the eight Booth&#13;
newspapers in Michigan will offer benefits to partners&#13;
of Gay employees starting in January. The papers that&#13;
will offer the benefits are The Ann Arbor News. The&#13;
Bay City Times, The Flint Journal, The Jackson Citizen&#13;
Patriot, the Kalamazoo Gazette and The Saginaw&#13;
News. The eight Booth newspapers are owned by&#13;
Advance Publications, based in New York.&#13;
George Arwady, publisher of the Kalamazoo paper,&#13;
said the new benefits were "pretty well accepted" by&#13;
employees. "It’ s a matter of equitable treatment for our&#13;
employees," Arwady said. "We have not made a big&#13;
deal out of it, mad it’s not a big deal."&#13;
Margaret DeRitter, an editor at the Gazette, said she&#13;
was pleased by the amaouncement. "I wasn’t aware of&#13;
employees internally pushing for.it," said DeRitter,&#13;
who is Gay and a 12-year employee of the paper. "I&#13;
thought it was great the company would do this without&#13;
any prompting from the staff. It says they value all&#13;
of their employees and want to be fair and equitable."&#13;
Mother of Slain Soldier&#13;
Appeals Army Decision&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP)-The mother of a FortCampbell&#13;
soldier who was murdered in iris barracks is seeking to&#13;
overturn the denial of her $1.8 million wrongful death&#13;
claim against the Army Kutteles sent an appeal of the&#13;
Sept. 27 decision by the military to Army Secretary&#13;
Louis Caldera. Kutteles, of Kansas City, Mo., said&#13;
fellow soldiers believed Winchell was Gay and harassed&#13;
him for months before he was beaten to death&#13;
with a baseball bat while sleeping in his cot July 5,&#13;
1999 at a post in Kentucky. The Army knew about the&#13;
harassment but did nothing to stop it, she said.&#13;
Pvt. Calvin Glover of Sulphur, Okla., was sentenced&#13;
to life in prison for murdering Winchell. Another&#13;
soldier was given a 12 1/2-year sentence for lying to&#13;
investigators. The Army inspector general issued a&#13;
report in July on Winchell’s murder.&#13;
The report found evidence of low morale mad anti-&#13;
Gay behavior among members of Winchell’s unit, D&#13;
Company, 2nd Battalion of the 502nd Infantry Regiment.&#13;
It concluded, however, that the chain of command&#13;
at Fort Campbell responded,a:ppropriately with&#13;
respect to enforcing the Pentagon S policy of permitting&#13;
Gays to serve in the military so long as they keep&#13;
their sexual orientation private.&#13;
Kutteles says should Caldera side with her, the&#13;
Army wouldbe taking full responsibility for Winchell’s&#13;
death. "We have to do this for our son’s sake. He died,&#13;
and I want his death to be meaningful," she said. "I&#13;
want other mothers and fathers not to have to go&#13;
through this."&#13;
Easier-to-Swallow&#13;
Anti-AIDS Pills&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP).- The government&#13;
approved a new easier-to-use version of a&#13;
standard AIDS drug that may ease patient&#13;
complaints that the medicine is too hard to&#13;
swallow. The drug is ddI, often used in the&#13;
multi-drug cocktails that AIDS patients&#13;
take to fight the virus. Until now, patients&#13;
havehad to chew, or dissolve in water, two&#13;
large, bitter-tasting ddI pills twice a day.&#13;
Those pills also frequently were blamed&#13;
for diarrheaand other gastrointestinal side&#13;
effects.&#13;
The Food and Drug Administration approved&#13;
a once-a-day capsule version of&#13;
ddI. Swallowing the capsule, to be sold&#13;
under the brandname Videx F_C, means no&#13;
nasty taste problem. An FDA spokeswoman&#13;
said thenew ddI may cause fewer&#13;
dangerous interactions with other medications&#13;
that AIDS patients take, because the&#13;
capsule does not contain abuffering ingredient&#13;
used in thechewable version.&#13;
Also, manufacturer Bristol-Myers&#13;
Squibb contends a special coating on the&#13;
new version means it may cause fewer&#13;
gastrointestinal side effects. Although&#13;
Bristol-Myers never ddirecdy compared the&#13;
old and new ddI to prove that, the FDA&#13;
said getting rid of that old buffering ingredient&#13;
may indeed help.&#13;
Bristol-Myers did notreveal whenVidex&#13;
EC would begin.selling, or if it would cost&#13;
the same as the old version,-,.&#13;
Researchers &amp; Drug&#13;
Co. Dispute Results&#13;
CHICAGO (AP)-A study suggesting that&#13;
a vaccine-like AIDS treatment is ineffective&#13;
has provoked a public dispute between&#13;
the manufacturer that paid for much&#13;
of the study and doctors who say the company&#13;
tried to squelch their research.&#13;
The study’s conclusions, published in a&#13;
recent Journal of the American Medical&#13;
Association, echo doubts aboutHIV- 1 Immunogen&#13;
that were expressed several years&#13;
ago by advisers to the U.S~ Food and Drug&#13;
Administration. The results suggest that&#13;
when added to the drug regimen for HIVinfectedpatients,&#13;
HIV-11mmunogenfailed "&#13;
to reduce the risk of devdopingfull-blown ¯&#13;
AIDS. The drug cames the brand name ..&#13;
Remune. ¯&#13;
Immune Response Corp., the drug’s "&#13;
manufacturer, contends that researchers "&#13;
omitted favorable data and skewed the&#13;
results. The company entereda fairly com- .&#13;
mon arbitration process during which it "&#13;
tried to produce "a more balanced manu- :&#13;
script," said Dr. Ronald Moss, the ¯&#13;
company’s vice president of medical and "&#13;
scientific affairs. Instead, the researchers "&#13;
~~:.~¥i~lated daeir~eonttaomalagreement and i&#13;
r. 1~blish~in~oinpletefindings;Moss ~aid.~ ....&#13;
"It seems like tabloid journalism that "&#13;
lAMA would not investigate this further" "&#13;
before publishing, Moss said,&#13;
HIV-1 Immunogea was developed by ."&#13;
the late Dr. Jonas Salk, who created the ."&#13;
first polio vaccine. It was developed be- ."&#13;
fore powerful "drug cocktails" including ¯&#13;
protease inhibitors became standard HIV :&#13;
treatment, and Immune Response says :&#13;
subjects’ use of such drugs affected the :&#13;
findings in the JAMA study. ".&#13;
Dr. James Kahn of the University of&#13;
California at San Francisco, the smdy’s&#13;
lead author, said the company withheld&#13;
important data and then tried to suppress&#13;
publication.&#13;
The company denies both claims. In an&#13;
arbitration complaint last month, Immune&#13;
Response also demanded $7 million to&#13;
; 10 millionfrom Kahn and the tmiversity,&#13;
claiming dissemination of the negative&#13;
findings caused,it financia], harm, university&#13;
attorney :Christopher Patti said. The&#13;
university contends Kahn was-allowed to&#13;
publ.ish the results.&#13;
The study of2,527 patients inthe United&#13;
States found that Remune did boost levels&#13;
ofinfection-fighting white blood cells, but&#13;
the authors questi,o....n~fl whether the effect&#13;
was clinically significant.&#13;
JAMA editor Dr. Catherine DeAngelis&#13;
defended thejournal’s decision to publish.&#13;
’q’his study stands on its own scientific&#13;
merit," she said. "It was peer-reviewed as&#13;
~uch." In a JA1V[A editorial, she said the&#13;
dispute illustrates what can happen when&#13;
disagreement erupts between researchers&#13;
and a funding sponsor who "has a proprietary&#13;
interest in the findings."&#13;
Moss said the study was published without&#13;
the consent of some of the researchers.&#13;
The company and one of the dissenting&#13;
researchers, Dr. John Turner of Graduate&#13;
Hospital in Philadelphia, drafted a letter&#13;
Monday to DeAngelis, decrying publication&#13;
of a manuscript that contains "incomplete&#13;
and inaccurate information." The&#13;
final manuscript contains "some major&#13;
statistical flaws," said Turner, who believes&#13;
HIV-1 lmmunogen can slow disease&#13;
progression. "ff I were HIV-positive,&#13;
I would batter down any door necessary to&#13;
get it, period," Turner said.&#13;
Doctors Org. Cites&#13;
Conflicts of Interest&#13;
CHICAGO (AP) - A funny thing happened&#13;
to Dr. Jerome Kassirer at a recent&#13;
lecture to medical students about financial&#13;
conflicts of interest for doctors: It turned&#13;
out the free buffet was provided by amajor&#13;
drug company. Kassirer had a blunt message:&#13;
Medical schools and training programs&#13;
"must teach that there is no free&#13;
lunch. No free dinner. Or textbooks. Or&#13;
even a ballpoint pen."&#13;
From freebies for medical students to&#13;
research funding that can taint study results&#13;
to the growing practice of marketing&#13;
prescription medicine direcdy to consumers,&#13;
drug_companies have a growing and&#13;
sometimes unseemly influence on doctors,&#13;
according to articles, studies and editorials&#13;
published recently in the Journal of&#13;
the American Medical Association.&#13;
The relationship between research and&#13;
indus~try appears to beunde.r growing scm-&#13;
’ fihy~The edit6fof, the:New’ E~tgl~tnd Journal&#13;
of Medicine wrote an extraordinary&#13;
critique in May, saying scien.ce_ is being~&#13;
compromised by the growing influence ot&#13;
induslry money. That same month, the&#13;
Harvard Medical School said it would not&#13;
ease its conflict of interest standards, considered&#13;
the toughest in the nation, and&#13;
Dean Joseph B. Martin called for a national&#13;
dialogue on the issue.&#13;
Most experts agree that research needs&#13;
industry dollars. The top 10 pharmaceuti-&#13;
Power&#13;
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Service Is Now Available 24&#13;
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These days, traditional 8-5 business hours&#13;
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1Nblie Settee C Imy dOkhhoma&#13;
Mary Schepers&#13;
and&#13;
Kathleen Pendergrass&#13;
and several other artists&#13;
present a showing and sale of:&#13;
Clay sculptures, pottery anF:Lddcorative&#13;
work, silk batik paintings, etchih and&#13;
lithographs; jewelry and beadwork,&#13;
handcrafted bath soap and salts and more.&#13;
Saturday, November 11, 10 - 6pm&#13;
2727 East 56th Street&#13;
743-6740&#13;
Oklaiaorna NAI,L.\I... covdia!iv ~.t~,v~v~ v,ott&#13;
to a chocolate and champa~r~~ ~ete in&#13;
support of abortion and reprt~d~ctive&#13;
rights in Oklahoma&#13;
Celebrating 27 Years of Choice&#13;
Sunday, November 12, 2000. 1:3(.1 - 3:30 p.m.&#13;
:"~’° fob~heldat Resonat~~e - " ~&#13;
Champagne, Coffee, Chocolates&#13;
$25 per ~ndividual&#13;
[’lea.~ R.S.V.P. to the NARAL L)ffice: 4.4-9585&#13;
cal companies spent nearly $23 billion on : days, washing the condoms with water&#13;
clinical research last year- more than the ¯ and soap afteruse. Researchers will check&#13;
nearly $18 billion provided by the Na- : the condoms for rips or tears and examine&#13;
tional Institutes of Health, JAMA editor ." the participants to make sure that’reuse&#13;
Dr. Catherine DeAngelis said. ¯ doesn’t cause rashes or irritations.&#13;
The problem is when researchers have " "In terms of the whole spectrum of birth&#13;
f’mancial interests in companies funding " control, it’s not the best," Said Barbara&#13;
their work. DeAngelis said such research ¯ Lea-Kruger, spokeswoman for the Viris&#13;
lower in quality and more likely to " ginia Department of Health’s HIV/AIDS&#13;
report findings favorable to the company, division."Butifwe’retalkingaboutwomen&#13;
One study found ,that. 7,6 percent of the : who don’t have access to other forms of&#13;
faculty researchers at the University of ¯ birth control and who come from a culture&#13;
California at San Francisco~aad personal " wheremenareless willing touseacondom,&#13;
financial ties to their drug company sport- " it’s a Viable alternative."&#13;
sorslastyear.Mostwereshort-termspeak- :&#13;
ing engagements or consulting agreements Seniors &amp; HIV/AIDS with minimal payments. ¯&#13;
State and federal-guidelines require re- CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Older people&#13;
searchers to disclose certain financial ties, . sometimes have an awkward approach to&#13;
and a UCSF policy prohibits faculty in- ¯ sexual issues that puts them at risk for&#13;
volvedinindustry-sponsoredresearchfrom " HIV, health counselors say.&#13;
receiving any compensationfrom the corn- " SusanJ. McCollum, who teaches people&#13;
pany during the study. 50 and older about the risks of contracting&#13;
Elizabeth Boyd and Lisa Bert, with HIV, said older people must be aware of&#13;
UCSF’s Institute for Health Policy Stud- the risks. "It’s dangerous for any group of&#13;
ies, said a campus committee "worked to people to think they’re immune," said&#13;
accommodateallbutthemostovertlycon- McCollum, a counselor for Planned Parflicting&#13;
relationships in the interest of en- enthood ofStark County.&#13;
couraging its faculty, and, presumably, According to the U.S. Centers for Disencouraging&#13;
future outside investment in ease Control and Prevention, the number&#13;
the university." of older people becoming infected is in-&#13;
The authors suggested that financial ties creasing. An estimated 10.9 percent, of&#13;
may be more prevalent at other universi- men with HIV and 9.4 percent of women&#13;
ties with less stringent policies. A 1998- with HIV are 50 and older.&#13;
2000 study of 89 major universities found "People that age have not grown up with&#13;
that only 17-19%- had specific limits or condoms, like people who are in their&#13;
prohibitions on relationships with indus- 20s," McCollum said. "For a woman in&#13;
try. While most had co~fflict of interest her 60s to talk to a man about condoms..&#13;
policies, the3, were not as effective be- ." McCollum also said it’s an awkward&#13;
cause they don’t spell what is prohibited, adjustmentforpeoplewhoarenewly single&#13;
the authors said. after having been in along-term marriage&#13;
Dr. Jordan Cohen, president of the As- or relationship. "Women4Oandolderdon’t&#13;
sociation of Americau Medica! Colleges, want to grow old alone," McColhma told&#13;
announced that the group is forming a task The Repository for a story published Sunforce&#13;
to investigate conflicts of interest dav."They’reputtingthemselvesoutthere,&#13;
and reach a consensus on what types of but they don’t know enough, or they’re not&#13;
relationships with drug companies should able to talk about condoms. It puts them at&#13;
be allowed, a real disadvantage."&#13;
Around the world, an estimated 85,000&#13;
Women’s Corldo[~&#13;
women, middle-age and older, have been&#13;
infected with HIV. McCollum has had&#13;
May Help HIV Fight young women come for HIV testing who&#13;
want her to talk to their mothers about&#13;
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - A condom for risky sexual behavior.&#13;
women that never quite caught on in the KimJackson, spekeswomanfortheOhio&#13;
United States is being studied to see if AIDS Coalition, said that while her group&#13;
reusing it can make it more economical does not offer educational programs speand&#13;
help fight AIDS in developing coun- eifieally targeting seniors, older people do&#13;
tries. The United Nations AIDS program participate. "We have a general education&#13;
has been distributing the Reality Female program for people of all ages," Jackson&#13;
Condom to women in areas such as sub- said. "We are seeing more people that age&#13;
Saharan Africa, which has been-devas- attending our programs. We had several&#13;
tated by AIDS. people in their 70s at our last program."&#13;
The key to providing female condoms, Bonnie Bolitho, executive director of&#13;
which retail for $2 to $3 apiece, to poor " Planned Parenthood of Stark County, said&#13;
women is making them affordable, said ; many older people have the incorrect idea&#13;
Dr. Susan A. Ballagh, the clinical trial’s thatHIV-AIDS is a "homosexual" disprincipal&#13;
investigator~ ..-~ :. ~ ; :;~ .ease~~ thatit aff~ts O~[y yo~mgtpeople.&#13;
~;- -TheChicago-basedF.emal¢H~althCom~ i :. "rl~ere~.s tl~tse~e~that :~It-cot~’’~t"~pen’ to&#13;
pan~,theproduct’ssolemannfaclurer, sells ~ me,"’ she said. "You’re talking about of&#13;
the condoms to international family plan- ¯ group of people who have been monoganing&#13;
agencies for as little as 70 cents a , mous for most of their lives. Now, they’re&#13;
piece. ; at a different stage of life. Some haven’t&#13;
But women’s condoms could be even ¯ put a lot of thought into how it (HIV)&#13;
more economical if they were reused. Re- ¯ affects them."&#13;
searchers at Eastern Virginia Medical " According to Bolitho, "It’s the age-old,&#13;
School arerecntiting 80 couples to test the ; overarchiugproblemoftalkingaboutsexu_&#13;
condoms. Half the couples will use the ¯ ality, and it’s plain old-fashioned denial.&#13;
condom once. The other couples each will ; Denial is one of our great enemies."&#13;
use a single condom five times over 15 ~&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, entertaiment editor ] child out once in a while. I wasn’t expect-&#13;
Hey folks, welcome to the time of the ¯ ing a great movie, but it surprised me. The&#13;
year when we celebrate the fact that the " filmis well acted - hard to find in a movie&#13;
Indians helped the&#13;
pilgrims onlyto be&#13;
thanked with&#13;
slaughter and removal&#13;
from ancestral&#13;
lands. Go&#13;
America!&#13;
The first thanksgiving&#13;
was basically&#13;
afour day celebration/&#13;
party&#13;
wherein the Native&#13;
Americans provided&#13;
the food, fun,&#13;
and games. It really&#13;
wasn’t about&#13;
religion at all, as the&#13;
lore surrounding it&#13;
wouldhave youbelieve.&#13;
Anditwasn’t&#13;
too long after that&#13;
whentheEuropean&#13;
invaders started&#13;
getting a bit greedy for the profits land&#13;
conld bring from new immigrants, and so,&#13;
in the name of- God, "took" the land from&#13;
the Natives. Oh, and there was a religious&#13;
aspect to it, once the "pilgrims" figured&#13;
out how to work the land from the Natives&#13;
and didn’t need them anymore..,,It was&#13;
either convert or die for the heathen Nafives.&#13;
Ah, the things the don’t tell you in&#13;
school - or church.&#13;
On to more cheerier thoughts - I drug&#13;
my curmudgeonly editor to afilm recently.&#13;
(Well, OK, he wanted to go, too, and&#13;
hasn’t been terribly curmudgeonly lately.)&#13;
We saw "The Little Vampire." OK, now&#13;
stop laughing. It’s good to let the inner&#13;
li...We saw&#13;
"The Little Vampire."&#13;
OK, now stop laughing.&#13;
It’s good to let the inner&#13;
child out once in a while.&#13;
I wasn’t expeetlng a great&#13;
movie, but it surprised me.&#13;
The film is well acted -&#13;
hard to find in a movie&#13;
starring children;&#13;
well written;&#13;
and superbly filmed... "&#13;
starting children;&#13;
well written; and&#13;
superbly filmed.&#13;
And it had something&#13;
for everyone&#13;
- it didn’t "talk&#13;
down" to kids, nor&#13;
did it avoid being&#13;
funny in an adult&#13;
way.&#13;
The film is&#13;
’~’:~-m~bout a young&#13;
Americanboy who&#13;
moves to England&#13;
due to his father’s&#13;
business. HE’s&#13;
miserable,being an&#13;
outsider - and&#13;
picked on at school,&#13;
in particularby two&#13;
twins. It certainly&#13;
broughtback some&#13;
memories in that&#13;
respect. I knew a pair of twins who were&#13;
the scourge of Hurst Junior high, and it&#13;
was kind of like watching a flashback -&#13;
except with better accents. Anyway, our&#13;
hero has a fixation with men in capes -&#13;
sound familiar? (Hint: Read last month’s&#13;
column.)&#13;
And Io and behold, he meets a boy&#13;
vampire, and they form a close friendship.&#13;
This results in many misadventures, including&#13;
foiling a would be vampire hunter&#13;
and the aforementioned bullies. I highly&#13;
recommend seeing this film, because it’s a&#13;
fun ride, entertaining, while putting forth&#13;
some good-thoughts. A lot of care andlove&#13;
went into this film, and it shows.&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
OF THE&#13;
S£ASON!&#13;
COUNCIL OAK&#13;
MEN’S CHORALE&#13;
ALL SOULS UNITARIAN&#13;
Tmditionalists,ofcourse, abhorthat each " Choralewillperform.AndonDec.9,there&#13;
year December holidays begin earlier and " will be a gala dinner in the Great Hall,&#13;
earlier. Christmas in September isincreas- ¯ Chaired by friends to the community,&#13;
ingly a reality. Catherine Seger&#13;
But one of the&#13;
local traditions&#13;
which we don’t&#13;
mind seeing early&#13;
nearly so much is&#13;
Philbrook&#13;
Museum’s annual&#13;
holiday celebration&#13;
and exhibition,&#13;
Home for the Holidays.&#13;
The event&#13;
kicks off with the&#13;
Festival of Trees.&#13;
T,he ~Fe~sfival&#13;
tures trees,&#13;
wreaths, and more&#13;
by local artists, designers&#13;
and school&#13;
children. The event&#13;
is chaired by Lou&#13;
Hodgson and caterer&#13;
Mark Lackey&#13;
is artist liaison.&#13;
At the museum members’ opening on&#13;
Dec. 2 at noon, the Council Oak Men’s&#13;
and Hillary Kitz.&#13;
And of course, local&#13;
A-listers,&#13;
Talmadge Po-well&#13;
and Steve Wright&#13;
are helping out by&#13;
chairing the Patron&#13;
Party and&#13;
Treeview.&#13;
The featured artistforHomefor&#13;
the&#13;
Holidays is Lisa&#13;
Regan of the GardenDevaSculpture&#13;
Co. Regan, whose&#13;
work is seen&#13;
through out Tulsa’ s&#13;
gardens, has been&#13;
shown in Better&#13;
Homes and Gardens,&#13;
shows her&#13;
work at Mayfest.&#13;
Her commemorative ornament, shown&#13;
" above, .is an aluminum tree with bead&#13;
¯ accents.&#13;
E[ecUon Day, Nov. 7&#13;
Who Will Pick the&#13;
NEW SUPREHES?&#13;
Decisions we make at the ballot box will resonate for&#13;
decades, including the make-up of the Supreme&#13;
Court. Our choice: continue the path of progress or&#13;
take a sharp U-turn back to the anti-glbt politics of&#13;
the ’80s. We need your voice for our jobs, for our&#13;
families, for our lives.&#13;
HUMAN&#13;
RIGHTS&#13;
CAMPAIGN&#13;
COME OUT VOTING ¯ www.hrc.org&#13;
Tuesday, November 7&#13;
Election Day&#13;
HRC WATCH PARTY&#13;
Because win or lose, it’s good to be among friends&#13;
9 PM&#13;
3340 South Peoria, Tulsa, OK&#13;
Must be 21 Cash Bar&#13;
HRC envisions an America where lesbian and&#13;
gay people are ensured of their basic equal rights.&#13;
You can help us do our work by joining us for&#13;
either or :both of ~the:se~ ev~t..s~ (or by jgining&#13;
~HRC - ’ ii~’~ !j~ :i~3-" ~i ~li !~8~[2913 ;r emaii&#13;
hrctulsaoHahoma@ aol.com).&#13;
HUMAN&#13;
RIGHTS&#13;
CAMPAIGN~&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor/publisher&#13;
Although the National Conference for Community and Justice claims to be an anti-hate&#13;
group, for at least the last 4-5 years this anti-bias organi~tion has activdy discriminated&#13;
against Gay &amp; Lesbian Tulsans as well as failing to speak out when Gay &amp; Lesbian&#13;
Tulsans were targets of physical violence as well as recipients of legislative and other&#13;
attacks on their civil rights.&#13;
At their Trialogue on Marriage, hosted by Boston Avenue Methodist Church (a church&#13;
which has been host to several events at which Lesbian and Gay Tuls’ans were attacked&#13;
or excluded), Trialogue organizer Mr. Levson, then cantor of Temple Israel, stated that&#13;
JOI g&#13;
0 II B&#13;
HATE&#13;
he and other NCCJ organizers deliberately excluded same gender mamage from&#13;
discussionbecauseitwouldhave been"too controversial." This was done despite thefacts&#13;
that the issue could not have been more prominent in public discussion because of court&#13;
cases in Hawaii, and even though the issue is still in debate in many Christian denominations&#13;
and in several Jewish organizations.&#13;
NCCJ has repeated been asked to reform their actions: to add openly Gay or Lesbian&#13;
persons to their board of directors, to speak out on legislative issues, to live what they say&#13;
they are about.&#13;
To date, they have refused to do so, preferring to raise substantial sums from Tulsa&#13;
"society" events such as honoring Bob Lorton, owner ofThe Tulsa World for his "human&#13;
rights" work despite the fact that The World for at least 15 years had documented anti-&#13;
Gay business practices which they publicly defended and despite The Wordls&#13;
acknowledgement of racist hiring practices in their newsroom in response to an EEOC&#13;
complaint.&#13;
Some Gay community observers, however,&#13;
wonderhow it is that the hate groups,&#13;
like the KKK, don’t manage to forget&#13;
Lesbians and Gay men including them in&#13;
their hate rhetoric, but the folks who supposedly&#13;
are "allies" manage only to hear&#13;
the KKK’s racist and anti-Sem~itic comments.&#13;
Groups who endorsed the "Statement in&#13;
Support of Diversity" include a number&#13;
who have been supportive of Lesbians and&#13;
Gay men. These include: Community of&#13;
Hope, All Souls, Hope and Community&#13;
Unitarians, Fellowship Congregatxonal&#13;
¯ Church- UCC, Jewish Federation ofTulsa&#13;
and even the Metropolitan Community&#13;
¯ Church United (MCC). Calls to All Souls,&#13;
MCC-United, and Fellowship Congrega-&#13;
¯ tional were not returned. Perry Simons,&#13;
¯ executive director of Jewish Federation&#13;
¯ said that organization does not discrimi-&#13;
: hate on sexual orientation.&#13;
¯ In contrast, Father Rick Hollingsworth,&#13;
¯ oftheParishChurchofSaintJeromewrote&#13;
¯ a letter in protest of the the "Statement in&#13;
¯ Support of Diversity"&#13;
¯ In it, he notes that, "The Parish Church&#13;
,¯ of St Jerome is certainly in support of&#13;
celebrating and supporting the wonderful&#13;
¯ diversity, which surrounds us in our beau-&#13;
" tiful city... I am concerned however that&#13;
¯ the statement on diversity see TMM,p. 10&#13;
Name Games by Michael Craft&#13;
Reviewed by Barry Hensley&#13;
Tulsa City-County Library&#13;
It takes a speci~ talent to pull off a&#13;
murdermystery novel andone ofthebetter&#13;
Gay mystery series, Mark&#13;
Manning mysteries by&#13;
Michael Craft, has a clever&#13;
new entry, Name Games.&#13;
Delving into an unlikely&#13;
topic, the world of minia-&#13;
.tures, Craft has created a&#13;
fun, although not particularly&#13;
suspenseful mystery.&#13;
Set in rural Wisconsin,&#13;
main character Mark Manning&#13;
is now the publisher of&#13;
the local newspaper and&#13;
leading a very open and out&#13;
life with a longlime partner,&#13;
while raising a neglected&#13;
nephew. The big&#13;
news in town is the upcoming&#13;
Midwest Miniatures&#13;
Society Exhibition, which&#13;
attracts enthusiasts worldwide.&#13;
Two of the most&#13;
prominent figures in this&#13;
little underworld, Carroll&#13;
Cantrell and Bruno&#13;
Herisson , who happen to&#13;
be arch rivals, are being&#13;
"...Anthropologist&#13;
Sherry Ortner,&#13;
drawing on the&#13;
French feminist&#13;
Simone Beauvolr,&#13;
once proposed that&#13;
’Man is to CultUre as&#13;
Woman is to&#13;
Nature.’ Ortner was&#13;
seeking a reason for&#13;
why, almost everywhere,&#13;
people value&#13;
what men do more&#13;
than they value what&#13;
women do.. ¯ "&#13;
homophobic District Attorney, Harley&#13;
Kaiser, and a New Age feminist, Miriam&#13;
Westerman, who is somehow convinced&#13;
that Gay pom"hurts women." Add to this,&#13;
the nephew, Thad, trying outfor the school&#13;
play and Mark’s lover,&#13;
Nell, who is trying to decide&#13;
whether to move his&#13;
architectural practice to the&#13;
small town from Chicago.&#13;
When Cantrell (who has&#13;
man3, health problems) is&#13;
discovered murdered, the&#13;
exhibitionis turned upside&#13;
down and things really get&#13;
uncomfortable when the&#13;
Sheriff becomes the primary&#13;
suspect. Manning,&#13;
aided by his sleuths at the&#13;
newspaper, set out to clear&#13;
the Sheriff.&#13;
The characters inName&#13;
Games are nicely drawn,&#13;
if a bit stereotypical ]]ae&#13;
town, Dumont, is remarkably&#13;
(and a bit unrealistically)&#13;
progressive and unconcerned&#13;
about the iGay&#13;
influence~ ofManning and&#13;
his cohorts. (Could there&#13;
really be a town like this in&#13;
today’s America?)&#13;
flown in. Grace Lord, a sweet little old&#13;
lady,is hosting and coordinating the ev~nt.&#13;
The Sheriff, Doug Pierce, a closeted Gay&#13;
man, is in the midst of a reelection bid&#13;
while dealing with a pornography trial&#13;
involving "dirty book stores" on the edge&#13;
of town. The trial is being pushed by the&#13;
is not as broad as it should be. This is&#13;
evidenced I believe by the omission of&#13;
Sexual Orientation as part of that diversity&#13;
in the statement.&#13;
Gay and Lesbian persons are an integral&#13;
part of Tulsa’s rich diversity which When&#13;
joined together with other forms of diversity&#13;
create community. When Rabbi Marc&#13;
Fitzerman was speaking this last Sunday&#13;
at the rededication, He was very dear,&#13;
’Those whohate Jews, usually hate Catholics,&#13;
Those who hate Catholics usually&#13;
hate Gay and Lesbian people...’&#13;
As a Pastor of a Parish which primarily&#13;
serves the Gay and Lesbian community&#13;
and as a religious leader who is openly&#13;
Gay, I am unable to sign the document&#13;
without the inclusion of Sexual Orienta-&#13;
The obligatory sex scenes are really just&#13;
¯¯ uninspired dream sequences, and leave a&#13;
little too much to the imagination. The&#13;
¯ mystery is a fun and exciting ride, but it is&#13;
¯ certainly nothing special. In fact, this ¯&#13;
novice mystery reader managed to figure&#13;
] our whodunit long before the end of the&#13;
¯ for Human Rights (TOHR) said that the&#13;
lack of inclusiveness raised concerns and&#13;
~ would likely be addressed in upcoming&#13;
: organizational meetings for a formal response.&#13;
:&#13;
:&#13;
and love diversity. We have many reli¯&#13;
gions, many nationalities, many cultures&#13;
here, and we’re taught to respect them.&#13;
¯ When the hell ~s someone going to respect&#13;
¯ us for our diversity? If you want to do&#13;
: something to help, there’s a number to&#13;
¯ call, and an ever popular website to visit.&#13;
¯ It’s the Human Rights Campaign Founda-&#13;
¯ uon, 800-498-0382, or www.hrc.org. ¯&#13;
When we stand up and show people that&#13;
¯&#13;
we do exist, especially in great numbers,&#13;
¯ then things are going to happen. Or, as&#13;
¯ Melissa Etheridge said, "when you free&#13;
uon as-part Of that .,diu~si.ty..._,: i ¯ " your mind, a rockin’ jam will follow." If&#13;
Our people have~J~en, the Unfox~:unate .:, we can each one of us find one person, or&#13;
victims of bigotry, prejudice and hate ¯ child, to reach, then we’ve taken the first&#13;
crimes for centuries, including the holocaust.&#13;
To not speak openly about these&#13;
issues promotes the silence, which has&#13;
imprisoned Gay and Lesbian children of&#13;
God for far too long."&#13;
Father Hollingsworth toldTulsa Family&#13;
News that he read his letter to his congregation&#13;
and that the response has been overwhelmingly&#13;
supportive of his position.&#13;
Greg Gatewood of Tulsa Oklahomans&#13;
¯ steps in stopping fascism. Hitler ended up ¯&#13;
in a bunker, having shot his wife and&#13;
¯ sticking the guninhis mouthbefore shoot-&#13;
" ing. I think many Other fascists (read&#13;
¯ fundamentalists) forget that fact. Hatred&#13;
¯&#13;
turns inward, but not before the hater has&#13;
¯ devastatingly hurt others. Something that&#13;
¯ shouldbetaughtinEVERY SundaySchool&#13;
-" class. And please remember one thing:&#13;
: VOTE!!!!!!!&#13;
Timothy W. Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fight for justice&#13;
&amp; equality for Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury, Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appoinlments are available.&#13;
Are You Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
Support Group is here:f0r yotJ!:~’ " ~’~’~.~" ~-’-"&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HlVtesting&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
918.588.1900, x4275 or x4276&#13;
-International&#13;
Fresh Start&#13;
Seeking men &amp; women to help with&#13;
expansion in the area. Must be independent,&#13;
goal-oriented, have a great attitude&#13;
and excellent people skills.&#13;
Call 663:5323.&#13;
Country Club Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
David Kauskey&#13;
3310 E. 51st, 747-0236,~ues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pm&#13;
ody&#13;
TI- ,ll&#13;
Tulsa’s only&#13;
professional&#13;
body-piercing&#13;
- College Hill&#13;
Presbyterian Church&#13;
In response to God’s Love,&#13;
College Hill Presbyterian Church&#13;
is a commtmity of God’s people&#13;
called to tell others the&#13;
Gospel of Jesus Christ&#13;
through worship,&#13;
servzce, and evangelism.&#13;
To nurture our faith, we gather for&#13;
worship, prayer,&#13;
study and fellowship.&#13;
Trusting in a living, loving God,&#13;
we seek to become a compassionate&#13;
voi~ for peace andjustice.&#13;
Our congregation.welcomes all&#13;
persons who respond in trust and&#13;
obedience to God’s grace&#13;
in Jesus Christ, and desire to become&#13;
part of the membership and ministry&#13;
of Christ’s church.&#13;
M~a~~s!~.9~ ~-:,Opt: ~-.~i!...~9,Pl..~.&#13;
regardless of race, .ethnic origin,&#13;
worldly condition, marital status, or&#13;
sexual orientation.&#13;
Sunday Worship. 1 lam&#13;
712 S. Columbia Ave., 592-5800&#13;
(One block west of Delaware and the&#13;
University of Tulsa Campus)&#13;
by Karin Gregory&#13;
"Man Shot in Local Gay Bar", "TeenagerAssaulted&#13;
Because Suspects Believed&#13;
HimGay","’We Don’t Have Hate Crimes&#13;
in Brown County’".&#13;
Seems everywhere you look now, there&#13;
are hate crimes against the G/L/B/T com-&#13;
~’munity, or-alleged hate&#13;
"!crimes~ or people denying&#13;
;hate crimes exist. There&#13;
are even those very few Who&#13;
deny homosexuality exis ts,&#13;
and I believe our Dishonorable&#13;
George W. Bush to&#13;
beamong them (I don’t~ve&#13;
up a chance to let you all&#13;
know you MUST vote November&#13;
7).&#13;
Interesting news about&#13;
the teenager. Not that it&#13;
doesn’t happen at every&#13;
.school, but the school&#13;
where this took place is the&#13;
same one from which our&#13;
disti9,guished arts and entertainment&#13;
editor .graduated.&#13;
Back in those days,&#13;
we didn’t have hate crimes. Wall, we did,&#13;
but we didn’t call them that. Boys who&#13;
were Gayjust had to be beaten up and take&#13;
it "like a man", or they had to develop&#13;
those queen-like attitudes of death that&#13;
would scare any quarterback into his tiny,&#13;
homophobic, neanderthal area of his body&#13;
called a mind.&#13;
One of my friends, the one who thinks&#13;
we’re all going to hell, says all Crimes like&#13;
murder, assault, rape, etc. are hate crimes.&#13;
I disagree. There are certainly crimes of&#13;
passion. There are premeditated crimes.&#13;
There are even assaults with deadly weapons&#13;
with intent to kill. But they are for a&#13;
purpose - to either get rid of someone so&#13;
disturbing to you (like a wife, husband,&#13;
mother-in-law), or to get money to buy&#13;
drugs, cigarettes, or "fabulous" outfits.&#13;
The people committing these crimes may&#13;
hate the person AT THAT TIME, but not&#13;
always. In other words, the criminals&#13;
aren’t their own self-proclaimed Adoif&#13;
Hitlers, who have decided to take all logic&#13;
and reason and bury them, sending us back&#13;
into theDarkAges. But thereAREpeople&#13;
who are self-proclaimed Hirers, whether&#13;
they want to believe it or not, spreading&#13;
NOT the words of Jesus, but the words of&#13;
hate to a nation.&#13;
Maybe they weren’t the ones who beat&#13;
up Matthew Shepard and lefthim to die, or&#13;
the ones who had a direct hand in James&#13;
Byrd’s death, or the people who raped&#13;
BrandonTeena, only to shoothim to death&#13;
repeatedly, later. But they had a hand in&#13;
each one of these deaths. For eachone&#13;
you-reading:this..fight now, there are at&#13;
least 20 (at least in Texas and Oklahoma)&#13;
ignorant people who believe that homosexuality&#13;
isn’t something you’re born with.&#13;
That you can change if you want to. That&#13;
you’ve chosen to be laughed at, beaten up,&#13;
fired from your job, ostracized from your&#13;
families. These are the people who have&#13;
raised the suspects in the above headlines.&#13;
They’ve "carefully taught" their children&#13;
to, as the "South Pacific" song goes, "hate&#13;
-"...Bach in those days,&#13;
we didn’t have hate&#13;
crimes. Well, we did, but&#13;
we didn’t call them that.&#13;
Boys who were Gay just&#13;
had to be beaten up and&#13;
take it "llke a man", or&#13;
they had to develop those&#13;
queen-llke attitudes of&#13;
death that would scare&#13;
any quarterback into his&#13;
tiny, homophoble,&#13;
neanderthal area of his&#13;
body eafled a mind...."&#13;
all the people their relatives hfite." Many&#13;
of them, of course, in the name of Jesus.&#13;
Stealing a line from an old Woody Allen&#13;
movie,"ifJesus came down and saw what&#13;
was going on in his name, he’d never stop&#13;
throwing up."&#13;
If you’ve read my columns from the&#13;
beginning (and I thank&#13;
BOTHofyou,by the way!),&#13;
you know I’m a fledgling,&#13;
coming out only after everyone&#13;
else has not only&#13;
blazed the trail for me, but&#13;
made that trail a four lane&#13;
highway! So no, I’ve&#13;
NEVER experienced what&#13;
most of you have in your&#13;
"out" lives. I still think I&#13;
can walkhandinhand with&#13;
a woman in public, or kiss&#13;
her on a residential street&#13;
in Dallas (and have!), and&#13;
not receive any flack from&#13;
it. But I taught public&#13;
school for eight years, ten&#13;
years toomany, and Iknow&#13;
whatkids say to each other,&#13;
not caring that their words hurt. More&#13;
importantly, I’ve heard teachers and other&#13;
school staff go on the attack against gays,&#13;
saying that the Bible doesn’t condone it.&#13;
We’ve had this discussion before, but I&#13;
just want to let you know that your childrenmay&#13;
be being taughtbyahomophobic&#13;
teacher. And believe me, teachers still do&#13;
have influence on children. So children&#13;
are taught to hate another child because&#13;
that child may be different. Obviously, if&#13;
I can look through a gay newspaper and&#13;
pick out,just by going through one quarter&#13;
of it, three separate stories on hate crimes,&#13;
there’s a problem. One that needs to be&#13;
addressed. Well, it’s been addressed, but&#13;
many ar~turning their heads. While crime&#13;
is rampant on the streets, and hate crimes&#13;
against the G/L/B/T community has skyrocketed,&#13;
thelegislature still cools its heels&#13;
over this issue.&#13;
It shouldn’t have to take television to&#13;
fire me up, but watching highlights from&#13;
the "Equality Rocks" concert onVH-1 did&#13;
it for me. During the evening, the parents&#13;
of several hate crime victims, Matthew&#13;
Shepard’s parents and James Byrd’s parents&#13;
among them, gave a small speech that&#13;
had the more than 45,000 audience crying&#13;
openly. Then Melissa Etheridge, herself&#13;
not able to contain tears, sang her song&#13;
about. Matthew Shepard, "Scarecrow."&#13;
How can people, after watching that,&#13;
still believe that these boys should have&#13;
died? How can anyone hate a group of&#13;
people just because they .are different?&#13;
How can they facethemselve~inthemom- *.&#13;
ing,-knowin~ thav they~ce*contril~me~.., in&#13;
ANY way, to these deaths? How many&#13;
times can we turn away and do nothing?&#13;
We have a revolution going on in this&#13;
country. Most people don’t want to believe&#13;
it. They’d rather dose their doors.&#13;
Hell, so would I, but I can see the revolution&#13;
coming even stronger than before.&#13;
.The one consistent thing thatI was taught&#13;
mschool about the United States is that we&#13;
are a melting pot see Lesbian, p.lO&#13;
Healing&#13;
VROJECT&#13;
AIDS Memorial ~.uilt ~&#13;
wareness"&#13;
World AIDS Day Candlelight Memorial March&#13;
Friday, December 1st, 6:30pm&#13;
Tulsa Civic Center Plaza, 5th &amp; Denver&#13;
The NAMES Project Quilt Opening, 8pm&#13;
This advertisement is donated by Tulsa Family News. TFN appreciates the opportunity to support this showing of the Quilt, and The NAMES Project.</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, November 2000; Volume 7, Issue 11</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>James Christjonh&#13;
Karin Gregory&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers&#13;
Hughston Walkinshaw</text>
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              <text>Police Censor Books at ° Gunman Shoots Six; Borders, Barnes &amp; Noble Kills One in Virginia&#13;
¯ . ROANOKE, Virginia (AP) - A man accused of ¯ rehant$ Told to Wrap Up Art and fatally shooting another man and wounding six&#13;
"History Books, Straight Sox How-to’s " others inside the Backstreet Cafe, a Gay bar, °n the&#13;
: TULSA- Prodded by Tulsa City Councilor, Todd Huston, Tulsa " evening of Sept. 22 has been arraigned on first-&#13;
" police vice squadofficers visitedBorders Books &amp;Music at8015 " degree murder charges.&#13;
¯ So. Yale Avenue, selected a number of books, presented them to The Commonwealth of Virginia’s Attorney&#13;
¯ store staffand suggested that they "shrinkwrap" those rifles. This " Donald Caldwell said additional charges such as&#13;
: was in response to a constituent complaint made to Huston ~ aggravated malicious wounding or malicious&#13;
: according to Charlie Jackson, Deputy Chief, Tulsa Police.&#13;
¯ wounding were possible. Malicious wounding&#13;
¯ Jackson noted that after the visit to the South Yale Borders ¯ charges carry up to 20 years in prison, whereas&#13;
¯ -~ store about which there was a citizen complaint, vice officers of " attempted murder charges carry up to 10 years.&#13;
: their own initiative went to the 2740 E. 21stSt. Borders as well " Ronald Edward Gay, 53, the man accused in the&#13;
¯&#13;
as Barnes &amp; Noble Bookstores at 5231 E. 41st St. and 8620 E. " shootings, acted because of long-standing anger at&#13;
"rrial o! Accused o! 71stSt. wheretheywent throughthestoreselectingbooks which thejokespeoplemadeofhisl~,tname, police said.&#13;
bookstore staff say the police indicatesd they must shrinkwrap, "He admits to shootingpeople, police investigator&#13;
Gay Man’s Death Moved " store staff also said the officers stated that they were no,&#13;
° Lt. WilliamAlthoff toldTheWashingtonPost. "He&#13;
intending to arrest anyone, told us people made fun of his name... He told us&#13;
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) The first Marion County ¯ Accordingtobookstoresources,TulsapoliceSergeantCalhoun " that he was upset about that.’"&#13;
teen-ager to be tried inthemurder of aGay black man ¯ and Corporal Best of the "sex crimes" unit said that the ¯ Dznny Lee Overstreet, 43, was killed at the&#13;
willfacejurorsinRaleighCountyinNovember.Marion" shrinkwrapping was required under Oklahoma state statute, title" scene. One other victim, IrisPageWebb,41,wasin&#13;
County Circuit Court Judge Rodney Merrifield late in ¯ 21, 1040.76. This statute regulates the display of materials " critical condition after being shot in the neck.&#13;
SeptembersignedanordermovingDavidAllenParker’s ¯ "harmful to minors" and requires covering materials which ¯ According to police, Gay went to a tavern that&#13;
first-degree murder trial to the southern West Virginia : depict "... nudity, sexual contact, sexual excitement, or : night and asked directions to the nearest Gay bar,&#13;
county. A copy of the order does not set a trial date, but " sadomasochistic abuse...when thematerial orperformancelacks ’ telling people he wanted to shoot Gays. Someone&#13;
JudgeMen-ifield’ssecretarysaiditistentativelysched- : seriousliterary, scientific, medical, artistic, or political value for gavehimdirectionsandimmediatelycalledpolice,&#13;
uled for Nov. 15. Merrifield had verbally approved a ¯ minors..." with minors defined as less than 18 years ofage. ¯&#13;
whowerelookingforGaywhentheshootingreport&#13;
change of venue earlier this week after a preliminary : Typically the "shrinkwrap" requirement has been applied to " came in.&#13;
hearing that has been continued to Oct. 12. ~ sexually oriented magazines such as Playboy, Penthouse, Men, " John W. Collins, 39, was one of those wounded.&#13;
Lawyers for Parker and co-defendant Jared Wilson, ¯ etc. but not to most books. Collins told the Post that the gunfire erupted just&#13;
¯ both .17, had suggested Raleigh County as a possible ¯ Chief Jackson claims that the officers did not threaten the ¯ after he and Overstreet, a friend, hugged. Gay&#13;
venue, arguing media coverage of the murder in north- " bookstore staff with arrest but merely sought their cooperation. "stood up as I was letting go of the hug, and he was&#13;
central West Virginia has made it too difficult to find " Bookstore sources who’ ve requested to remain anonymous in. turning and he was also reaching into his black&#13;
impartial jurors. Attorney Stephen"Fitz said Monday ¯ order to protect themselves from retaliation characterized the trench coat," said Collins, who was shot in the&#13;
that Raleigh has a diverse population and probably has ¯ police visit as intimidation- particularly in light 6f the arrests of " stomach. "I saw the gun come out of his pocket...&#13;
had far less exposure to ~e case Prosecutor Richard " several sales clerks for the sale of Penthouse magazines a year or " Everything was like in a millionth of a second.’"&#13;
Bunner did not object to the move. " so ago. They noted that the officer by mentioning that they didnot " Gay left the bar after the shootings but was later&#13;
Parker and Wilson are charged with beating and ¯ intend to arrest at this time, raised the issue as a possibility and ¯ found by police about two blocks away. Officers&#13;
kickingtodeath26-year-oldacquaintanceArthur"J.R." ¯ that they felt coerced into cooperating.&#13;
" found a 9 mm pistol in a trash can near the bar.&#13;
Warren on July 4, see Trial, p.3 " see Bookstores, p. see Shooting, p.3&#13;
Local HRCEvents HRC: More Benefits Gay Center To Hold&#13;
Grand Re-opening TULSA-Local Human Rights Campaign (HRC) activ -&#13;
ists in cooperation with the national organization are&#13;
encouraging voter registration drive up fill October 13.&#13;
Those interested in registering can stop by Democratic&#13;
party headquarters, Republican party headquarters, the&#13;
offices of the League ofW0menVoters, any tag agency,&#13;
theTulsaCounty ElectionBoard (No; DenveratEdison).&#13;
Call formore information at 584.2918. HRCwouldalso&#13;
like to send voter registration volunteers to any event or ¯&#13;
organization andasks thatorganizers againcall 584.2918.&#13;
For Halloween this year, HRC is sponsoring two"&#13;
performences of Helga’ sHorribles, in "Scenes from ¯&#13;
Little Shop of Horrors" at Renegades on Sun, October ¯&#13;
29 at 3pro and again at 7pro. Tickets are $10 each and ," "Domestic partner benefits are increasingly becoming a stanproceeds&#13;
benefit HRC-Tulsa. Renegades is also a " dard business practice in corporate America," said Kim I. Mills,&#13;
sponsor and there will be a cash bar. Youmust be 21yo. " education director of the Human Rights Campaign. "Employers&#13;
Seating is limited to only 100persons at each perfor- ¯ have discovered that these benefits hdp attract and keep the best&#13;
WASHINGTON (AP) - More employers - including more than&#13;
a fifth of Fortune 500 companies - are offering health insurance&#13;
coverage to the partners of Gay employees, according to a report&#13;
by a Gay civil rights group.&#13;
The study, by the Washington-based Human Rights Campaign,&#13;
found that 3,572 companies, colleges and states and local&#13;
governments offered or have announced they would offer health&#13;
insurance covering their employees’ domestic partners. This was&#13;
up 25% from a year ago, when 2,856 employers extended such&#13;
benefits.&#13;
The findings were included in the group’ s annual "State of the&#13;
Wor,k~,lacefor Lesbian, Gay,Bisexual andTransgenderedAmericans.&#13;
¯ Law Group to Hold Hate Crimes Panel&#13;
¯ TULSA (TFN) - Tulsa Oklahomans for Human&#13;
" Rights (TOHR) will hold a Grand Opening event&#13;
¯ for the recently relocated Tulsa Gay Community&#13;
¯ Services Center on Friday, October 20 at 7pro. The&#13;
¯ new location is 2114 So. Memorial adjacent to&#13;
: longtimeLesbianbar,TNT’ s. TOHR’ s also will be&#13;
¯ holding a "garage" sale to benefit the Center on&#13;
." Saturday, Oct. 14 from 8am-noon. Donations of&#13;
¯ goods are welcome and may be dropped off at the&#13;
¯ Center before the sale.&#13;
¯ On Oct 14, TOHR will also sponsor a Feast for&#13;
Friends dinner to benefit The NAMES PROJECT.&#13;
¯ The dinner, called "Tulsa - The Center of the&#13;
Universe" will be al fresco at the downtown sculp-&#13;
¯&#13;
ture entitled, ’’The Center of the Universe" located&#13;
mance. Reservations may be guaranteed by mail to&#13;
1107 E. 19th, Tulsa,OK74120 orby credit card over the&#13;
phone. Organizers promise big drag, big hair, big voices&#13;
&amp; big fun - ’cuz size matters!&#13;
HRC also is sponsoring an election watch party at&#13;
9pm on Tuesday, November 7 at the fabulous I.D. Bar&#13;
on Brookside at3340 S. Peoria (formerly Concessions).&#13;
There will be multiple video screens to monitor the&#13;
election returns and lots of hot music to enjoy while the&#13;
future is determined. There will be a $10 cover charge,&#13;
but that will drop to only $5 if you are wearing the "I&#13;
voted" sticker.&#13;
Lastly, HRC is always looking for new members.&#13;
Membership runs $35. Info: 584.2913.&#13;
DIRECTORY P. 2&#13;
EDITORIAL P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P. 4&#13;
HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
¯ workers, a critical consideration in the current tightjob market."&#13;
." The report called a "landmark move" the announcement in&#13;
¯ June by Big Three domestic automakers - DaimlerChrysler,&#13;
General Motors and Ford - and the United Auto- Workers that&#13;
¯&#13;
domestic-partner benefits would be offered to their more than&#13;
¯ 400,000 employees. ’’This marked the first time that virtually an&#13;
¯ entire sector of American commerce, along with its leading&#13;
¯ union, decided collectively to provide domestic partner ben-&#13;
" efits," the report said.&#13;
¯ Fortune 500 companies offering or planning to offer domestic&#13;
¯ partner benefits increased from 70 in August 1999 to 102 last ¯&#13;
month. In addition, 41 of the top 50 companies in America&#13;
¯ prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, the report&#13;
¯ said.&#13;
-" "All the signs point to private and public employers continuing&#13;
¯ to institute nondiscrimination policies and domestic partner&#13;
: benefits," the study said. However, it noted that there is nofederal&#13;
¯ law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation, nor is&#13;
¯ there one in 39 states, although President Bill Clinton issued an&#13;
executive order in 1998 prohibiting such discrimination in the&#13;
¯ federal civilian work force.&#13;
¯. The number of cities and counties that prohibit discrimination&#13;
based on sexual orientation rose from 16 in 1980 to 116 in 2000.&#13;
: next to the Old U~ion Station on the pedestrian&#13;
¯ bridge. The dinner is $20 and reservations may be ¯&#13;
made by calling 743-4297. Those who just want to&#13;
¯ attend the dessert finale may go the Allan Chapman&#13;
Activity Center atthe University ofTulsaat8:30pro.&#13;
A $10 donation is requested.&#13;
: TOHR will also present a National Coming Out&#13;
Day (NCOD) panel at its monthly membership&#13;
¯ meeting on Oct. 10 at 7:30pm, and at TU on&#13;
¯ Thursday, Oct. 12, the University ofTulsa College ¯&#13;
of Law Lesbian Gay Bi Trans Law Caucus will&#13;
’ sponsor a Hate Crimes Panel discussion from noon&#13;
- 2 p.m. The panel, which will be held in TU’s Moot&#13;
¯ CourtRoom of John Rogers Hall located at Fourth&#13;
¯&#13;
Place and Florence Avenue, will address the valid-&#13;
" ity of Hate Crimes legislation, opposition to the&#13;
¯ Hate Crimes Prevention Act and other topics of&#13;
". relevance. Linda Lacey, a TU college of law pro-&#13;
, fessor, will moderate.&#13;
¯ The program is free and open to the public. For&#13;
¯ more information, call Courtney Sdby at 836-&#13;
: 9107.&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’ s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb,. 1926 E Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
*The Yellow Brick Road Pub, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
712-2324 :&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119 :&#13;
835-2376 :&#13;
744-4280...;&#13;
745-9998 ¯&#13;
834-4234 :&#13;
585-3405 :&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584-1308&#13;
749-1563&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, ServiCeb~ &amp; pi’ofessiohals&#13;
"Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E.-41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria&#13;
*Cheap Thrills,.2640 E. 1 lth&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615-&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa. OK 74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@ earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker 622-0700&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
*De,co to Disco, 3212 E. 15th&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
Encompass Travel, 13161H N.Memorial&#13;
Ross Edward Salon 584-0337,&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th PI.&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’ s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques.. 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha ....&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, POB 696, 74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-79,21,&#13;
Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling&#13;
*Whereh0use Music, 5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
James Christjohn, Karin Gregory, Barry Hensley, J.-P.&#13;
Legrandbouche, Lamont Lindstrom Esther Rothblum, Mary&#13;
¯ Schepers, Hughston Walkinshaw&#13;
¯&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
..... l~U~d bh’o~lsdfbre the lit of ~gcti month; th~~ritite contents&#13;
743-1000 i&#13;
250,503:4 of thi~ °publication are protected by US copyright 1998 by&#13;
665-4580 : T~,~" ~:~ N~v~ and may not be reproduced either in&#13;
712-1122 -" whole or in part without written permission from the pub-&#13;
712-9955 "&#13;
494-2665 lisher. Publicafi0n of a name or photo does not indicate a&#13;
743-5272 ~ person’ s sexual orientation. Correspondenceis assumedto be&#13;
746-0313 " for publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp;&#13;
295-5868&#13;
becomes the sole property of T~,~ /z~ N~v,~ Each&#13;
r~ader is. entitled to 4 copies of each editionat distribution&#13;
749-3620 points. Additional Copies are available by ~1"1~’583-1248.&#13;
744-5556 ¯&#13;
838-8503 " HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583~-6611&#13;
369-8555 ¯ *Tulsa C.A:R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral 834,4194&#13;
712-9379 ~ Holland Hall School, 5666-E. 81 st 481-1111&#13;
592-0460 : HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Educauon 834-8378&#13;
744-9595 " *House of the Holy Spirit Minstries, 1517 S. Memorial 224-4754&#13;
610-0880 " *MCC 7United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
628-3709 NAMES Project, 3507 E Admiral PI. 748-3111&#13;
808-8026 " NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, POB 14068, 74159 365-5658&#13;
742-1460 " OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 7415~&#13;
459-9349 :;--*OSU~Tulsa&#13;
744-7440 ..... PFI~G, POB 52800, 74~52 :;~_~.¯ 749-4901&#13;
745-1111 " *.Planned Parenthood, 1007 SYffeoria 587-7674&#13;
341-6866 ; Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
712-2750 ; R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
582-3018 ¯ *Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 . 584-2325&#13;
747-0236 : St. Aidan’s Epis(opalChurch, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
582-8460 " St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E:-71.st 492-7140&#13;
599-8070 ¯ St. Jerome s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
74%5466 " *Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
585-1234 " *TNAAPP (Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
584-3112 "- Tulsa County Health Department, 46 16 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
663-5934 ’ Confidential HIV Testing -~by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
664-2951" Tulsa Olda. for Human Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
838-7626 : T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
743-4297 " *Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
747-5932 *Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
834-0617 ; " *Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307E.38,74105 743-4297&#13;
747-4746 " Unity Church of Christianity,3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
749-6301, ". BARTLESVILLE&#13;
260-7829 . Bartlesville PublieLibrary, 6!30 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
481-0558 : OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
835-5563 ..&#13;
743-1733 ¯ Borders Books &amp; Music, 3209NW Expressway 405~848-2667&#13;
665~2222 "¯ Borders Books.&amp; Music~ 300 Norman Center 405-5734907&#13;
592-0767 " TAHLEQUAH -&#13;
www.gaytulsa.org - website forTulsaGays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa; POB 4337, 74101 579-9593- ¯&#13;
All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria~ 743-2363-&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314 "&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207E. 6 583:7815&#13;
B/L/G/T Allian0p, univ: of Tulsa United Min: Ctr. 583~9780 ¯&#13;
Chamber of -comm~ide- Bld~:," 616 ~s. B6st6fi .... 585-1201&#13;
¯Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th Pl. &amp; Florence -"&#13;
Church of the Restoration UU, 1314 N.Greenwood 587-1314 "&#13;
¯Community of Hope Church, 2545 S. Yale 747:6300&#13;
¯Community UnitarianzUniversalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council O~ ~en’s Cl~6rale " 748-3888 "&#13;
¯Delawar~Playhouse;-15il S. Delaware 712-1511 ¯&#13;
¯Democratic Headquarteis, 3930 E: 31 742-2457 ¯&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa - Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp; ¯&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140 "&#13;
¯Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777 ¯&#13;
¯FrceSpirit’Women’sCenter, callforlocation&amp;info: 587-4669 ¯&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827 "&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., POB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
¯ Stonewall League, call for information: - ’~i8456-7900&#13;
Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church -9t8:456-7900&#13;
Green.Country AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
-o .NSU School of Optometry, 1001N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesfing every other Tues. 5:30:8:30~ ~tll for dates&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
.... 50i 1253-"]4_47’&#13;
501-253-6807&#13;
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50i-624-6646&#13;
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EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
Autumn Br~,e~,ze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
Jini &amp; Breht "S Bisttt, I73 S. Main&#13;
DeVito,’s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
Emerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek toGo!,PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Hans&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134&#13;
Scouting~for All Opposes the&#13;
"Scout’s Honor Act"&#13;
Congressman Tom Tancredo of Colorado&#13;
has introduced counter-legislation,&#13;
currently being referred to as the Scouts&#13;
Honor Act (H.B. 5306). The bill was&#13;
introduced along with twenty-three cosponsors,&#13;
on T.Uesday, Sept. 26&#13;
Accorditi~ to AFA (editor’s note:&#13;
Amerfcah "F~mily Association, a rightwing&#13;
lobbying group) Director of Governmental&#13;
Affairs PatrickTrueman,"AFA&#13;
suppo.r.ts Colorado Rep. Tancredo’s,&#13;
Scouts Honor Act, which prohibits the&#13;
¯ Useoffederal funds todiscriminate against,&#13;
investigate, or deny access to public prop-&#13;
" erty or facilities to the Boy Scouts of&#13;
¯ America. In addition, the bill says that no&#13;
entity that accepts federal funds can compel&#13;
the Boy Scouts to accept members&#13;
¯ who do not share their beliefs.’"&#13;
The Scout’s Honor Act would protect&#13;
¯ the BSAwho dearly identifies as an organization&#13;
that discriminates against gay&#13;
¯ youth and adults and atheists to not be&#13;
~ denied access to public facilities or funding.&#13;
How can-we allow our tax dollars to&#13;
¯ support an organization thatprofesses bigotry&#13;
against a segment of our society.’?&#13;
Tiffs is unthinkable and should not be&#13;
tolerated. Scouting For All asks that you&#13;
speak out LOUD to oppose this ACT!!!!&#13;
¯ Rep.Tancredofeels thatifhecangetmany&#13;
¯ more sponsors on thebill, the Houselead-&#13;
. ership may bring it to the floor for a vote.&#13;
." Encourage your congressperson not to&#13;
¯ support- the bigoted Scout’s Honor Act!&#13;
¯ ACTION NEEDED: Contact your&#13;
member of Congress immediately and&#13;
~ ask that he or she not support the Scouts&#13;
¯ Honor Act which is an Act supporting&#13;
, bigotry in our society. Contact your Representative&#13;
by calling the capitol switchboard&#13;
at (202) 225-3121.&#13;
~ Scouting For All also encourages you&#13;
; to send Rep. Tancredo a note telling him&#13;
¯ thathis actions are disgusting and support&#13;
¯ bigotry in America. He should be advocating&#13;
that the BSA discontinue its discriminatory&#13;
policy against our Gay youth&#13;
and Gay adults and also atheists. His actions&#13;
are a disgrace. Write to:&#13;
- tom.tancredo@mail.house.gov&#13;
- Scott Cozza,president, Scouting ForAll&#13;
www.scoutingforall.org&#13;
* is where you can find TFN. Notall are Gay-owned butall are Gay-friendly.&#13;
Log ~Cabin Republicans&#13;
to Bill Clinton&#13;
Thefollowing is the text ofa letterfrom&#13;
Rich Tafel, executive director ofLog Cabin&#13;
Republicans, to President Bill Clinton on&#13;
the issue offunding theAIDS Drug Assistance&#13;
Program.&#13;
September 27, 2000&#13;
Dear Mr. President:&#13;
I am writing to you again on an ~ssue of&#13;
great importance to millions of Americans&#13;
-~funding for theAIDS Drug Assis-&#13;
’ tanc~ Program in theRyatr~White CARt~&#13;
Act. Since 1995, we have consistently&#13;
¯ asked your Administration to ensure that&#13;
¯ your annual budget requests reflect the&#13;
: real ne~ds in. the ADAP program; and&#13;
unfortunately your .bUdgets have fallen&#13;
drastically short each and every year, and&#13;
each year the Republican Congress! has&#13;
put millionS:ofMollars more into the pro-&#13;
, gram to ansv¢~¢~ the call. This year, your&#13;
: budget request fell short again.&#13;
¯ In your budget request for Fiscal Year&#13;
~ 2001, you asked for a $26millionincrease&#13;
~ in ADAP funding, while the projected&#13;
¯ need was higher, see Letters, p.3&#13;
Unfortunately, theneed has only increased since then.&#13;
Thanks to the enactment of an important minority OUtreach&#13;
program, spearheaded by the Congressional Black&#13;
Caucus, enrollment in the ADAP program by minority&#13;
patients has increased throughout the year. This has&#13;
given tremendous hope to so manyAmericans with HIV&#13;
that they will have access to life-savittg treatments cnrrenfly&#13;
out of reach. Overall, state and territorial AIDS&#13;
directors have reported that the projected national need&#13;
ftr ADAP will be closer to $130 million more than the&#13;
previous year. Your budget request will not cover this&#13;
additional need, and many of these new enrollees may&#13;
face lotteries, rationing or simply a closed door.&#13;
The Republican Congress has carried the ADAP program&#13;
every year, despite the failure of leadership from&#13;
your Administration. I respectfully ask again, Mr. President,&#13;
that you become an active participant inmeeting the&#13;
ADAP needs for so many Americans with HIV/AIDS,&#13;
and submit a request to Congress for an increase of $130&#13;
million for this life-saving program in your Statement of&#13;
Principles before budget negotiations end for the year.&#13;
I appreciate your urgent consideration of this issue.&#13;
- Sincerely, Rich Tafel, executive director&#13;
"It sounded like firecrackers at first," said a woman&#13;
who said she was sitting in a booth when the shooting&#13;
began. She asked not to be identified for fear she might&#13;
lose.her job. "I looked up and saw people falling to the&#13;
ground," she said. "You could feel the wind off the&#13;
bullets, they were so close."&#13;
Darlene Overstreet, Danny Overstreet’ s sister, said her&#13;
brother, who was Gay, visited the Back Street Cafe often.&#13;
He worked as a telephone operator and lived alone in a&#13;
house with his poodle. "He was a wonderful person. He&#13;
helped everybody," Darlene Overstreet said. "He just&#13;
stopped by to have a beer, that’ s all."&#13;
Members of the Washington-based National Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Task Force came to Roanoke for a candlelight&#13;
vigil after the shooting. Flowers, cards and balloons were&#13;
placed outside the bar by members of the community.&#13;
Mayor Ralph Smith saidat anews conference after the&#13;
event. ’Tm shocked and saddened by this terrible, terrible&#13;
crime .... Any time one member of our community&#13;
is hurt, we all suffer by that same hand."&#13;
¯ Censorship Through Inti midation&#13;
¯ by Tom Neal, editor &amp;publisher&#13;
The recent visits by Tulsa police to local booksellers&#13;
raise very serious concerns about censorship, grand or&#13;
petit, direct or indirect, by our local government.&#13;
The method used is frankly ingenious in skirting First&#13;
Amendment protections as it depends on intimidation to&#13;
accomplish that which it is not legal to do otherwise.&#13;
What I mean is that even though most, if not all of the&#13;
materials which Tulsa police collected in the stores are&#13;
clearly protected under the U.S. Constitution’s First&#13;
¯¯ Amendment, by merely showing up in the stores identifying&#13;
themselves as law officers and requesting limiting&#13;
." access to these materials, Tulsa police succeeded in&#13;
¯ obtaining the collaboration ofthebooksellers. Andifthey&#13;
¯ self-censor, then thepolicenever have to prove their case, ¯&#13;
they never have to be held responsible for their probable&#13;
¯&#13;
misapplication of an Oklahoma statute.&#13;
_" Note that the police claimed they were not seeking to&#13;
.. make any arrests during these visits, see Censor, p.9&#13;
! b~AAlIl Gthororeugh the years of our nailon’ s history, the American dreamhas unfolded with a deeper meaning. Today, it is&#13;
: a mystery that Thomas Jefferson could have written the powerful and inspiring words of our Declaration of&#13;
: Independence ~. and not free his slaves. Today, it is a mystery that our founders in Philadelphia could have written the&#13;
United States Constitution ? yet not allowed women to vote. Yet America has taken the inner meaning and power of&#13;
our founding documents, and given them new life in each generation.&#13;
then nmning over him with a car to disguise his injuries&#13;
as a hit-and-rtm.&#13;
In his order changing the venue, Merrifield cited a vigil&#13;
for Warren that drew more than 500 people to the courthouse&#13;
steps days after the murder. The rally also attracted&#13;
national Gay- and civil-rights activists and an anti-Gay&#13;
group from Kansas.&#13;
News organizations .have since saturated the region&#13;
with coverage innewspapers, andonradio and television,&#13;
Merrifield said. The Dominion Post of Morgantown and&#13;
the Times-West Virginian of Fairmont have each file&amp;&#13;
more than 25 stories, he said. "Nearly. all of these newspaper&#13;
articles have been located on the front page and, in&#13;
fact, mostofthese articles have been thelead story for that&#13;
particular day," Merrifiel~d wrot~ T.I~.~voe~ag¢ ,has con~&#13;
rained detailed infOiinafion~ about tbe.inv~ti~afion°and&#13;
clearly illustrates that many Marion County residents&#13;
"havebecome emotionally involvedin this case and have&#13;
prejudged:the defendant’s guilt," he said.&#13;
Parkerhas already confessed to beating.Warr,en~but the&#13;
judge has ~yet to d~eide:~w.hether jurors will hear that&#13;
confession.~ In his Statement-to Sheriff" s Detective C.L.&#13;
"Chip" Phillips; Parker admitted beating Warren after&#13;
discovering he had-toldrothe~ peo.p!.¢, about a sexual&#13;
relationship he claimed to have with.~Parker. Wilson told&#13;
Phillips that he went along with the beating because he&#13;
was afraid of Parker, who had threatened to beat him, too.&#13;
But defense teams argue that both boys’ confessions&#13;
were improperly obtained. They say neither was informed&#13;
of his right to an immediate juvenile detention&#13;
hearing. They also contend Phillips delayed moving the&#13;
boys from GrantTownto the courthouse sohe could dicit&#13;
the confessions. Phillips denies any wrongdoing.&#13;
NEW SUPREHES? Nationat Coming Out D~, Oct. 11 - E|ecUon Da!/, Nov. 7&#13;
COME OUTVOTING .* www.hrc.org&#13;
El HUMAN&#13;
RIGHTS&#13;
: I believe very deeply that the time has come in America to widen the circle of fairness and dignity to include our&#13;
¯ ~friends, neighbors, ct-workers, and relatives in the gay and lesbian community. I am running for President to fight for&#13;
." all the people. That is why the ideals of fairness, equal opportunity, and non-discrimination are at the very heart of my&#13;
¯ campaign for President. - ¯&#13;
In the past seven years, we have taken.great strides. We have appointed the first openly gay and lesbian people to&#13;
¯ high-ranking posts in our nation’ s history. We have made our government the largest employer in the world with a&#13;
: strong non-discriminati0n policy covetingsexual orientation. Wehave boosted funding for AIDS research, prevention,&#13;
¯ and treatment. We have created a new White House- Office of. National AIDS Policy. We fought insurance ¯&#13;
.discrimination against people with pr~--~xi~fing conditions Wehelp~lmore people with HIV-AIDS get access to health&#13;
¯ ! am.personallY very ~)roud tO have beenthe first Vice President ever to speak at a public event with a gay rights&#13;
organization. I believe it is partly because of that record and commitment that I have been endorsed by gay andlesbian&#13;
¯ leaders and civil rights organizations across this cduntry. But ]~don’ t want to rest on that record ? I want to build on it.&#13;
¯ When people filled with hate target Gaysadd Lesbi~ang, Jews;Blacks, Latinos, and Asian-Americans, it is clear that&#13;
hate Crimes are notjust like other erimes: As President, with your help, I will.lead the fight for a tough law to stiffen&#13;
the penalties for crimes~of hate&#13;
We need to do morb th battle HIV and AIDS 9 here at home and around the world..At the beginning of this.year, I&#13;
had the opportunity tO address the United-Nations Security Council about the threat that AIDS poses to the stability and&#13;
security of AfriCa and the world: As President, withy0ur help; I will lead a worldwide effort to fight HIV and AIDS.&#13;
I believe wemust takebold stepsto~give all.ourpe0p!ethe best health care in the.world. Weneed to dedicate ourselves&#13;
to provide access ,to.qua!ity heal~ coverage.to every.child and extend coverage to millions of adults by~ ~e:et~d 9f ~e&#13;
ne~t t~residenfial term. :we needtO-~,tnfinue resear~into-HIV andAIDS and ~r~;clde ad~quat~ fhh~ng fdr i~."’~ riced&#13;
to give real prescription drug benefit to senioi:sand people with disabilitie.s who are on Medicare.&#13;
Weneed a strong, enforceable Patients’ Bill of Rights because it’ s time that we take the medical decisions away from&#13;
~ the HM.O accountants and insurance company bureaucrats, and give them back to the doctors, nurses, and health care&#13;
~ professionals. Americans:deserv.e the best health care, not just the cheapest.. " .... ~ ~’. ’ ’ ~ ......&#13;
¯ We must also take strong new action to ban discrimifiation andmake sure every Americhn can re~iz~hi~.:6~ her&#13;
~. potential. As President, I will re-issue the executive order banning discrimination in the federal w0J:kfo~ce. An’d i Will&#13;
¯ fight to pass the Employee Non-Discrimination Act, which will prohibit job discrimination on the basis of sexual&#13;
¯ orientation.&#13;
In this campaign, there are real differences on these basic issues of fairness. My Republican opponen.t strongly&#13;
¯&#13;
opposes hate crimes legislation. He opposes a simple law to outlaw discrimination inhiring, firing, and promotionbased&#13;
¯ on sexual orientation, In fact, right now, in Texas and in 38 other states, you can be legally fired just because of your&#13;
: sexual orientation. If I am entrusted with the Presidency, we will fight to correct that injustice.&#13;
¯ The stakes are enormous in this election. We know what will happen if the Republicans take back the White House.&#13;
¯ And America cannot afford to go back to the neglect and divisiveness of the Bush-Quayle years.&#13;
¯ Instead, we must move forward to create the America of ~.highest ideals. That is why I need your help and your&#13;
hard work. Join withmein this campaigii~and togetherwewill win notjust vttes, but powerful new victori~s.~oi dignity&#13;
Lesbian Wins Visitations&#13;
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - The Rhode Island state&#13;
Supreme Court last month recognized new rights for&#13;
Gay and Lesbian couples raising children. In a 3-2&#13;
decision, the courtruled that ConcettaDiCenzo could&#13;
not prevent her former partner Maureen Rubano from&#13;
asking the Family Court for the right to visit the son&#13;
they raised together. The decision gives de facto-"in&#13;
fact" - parents the same rights to petition for visitation&#13;
as biological and adoptive parents.&#13;
"The fact that DiCenzo not 0nly gave birth to this&#13;
child but also nurtured him from infancy does not&#13;
mean that she can arbitrarily terminate Rubano’ s de&#13;
facto parental relationship with the boy, a relationship&#13;
that DiCenzo agreed to and fostered for many&#13;
years," Justice Robert Flanders wrote in the majority&#13;
opinion. The ruling was based on state law allowing&#13;
any interested party to "bring an action to determine&#13;
the existence or nonexistence of a mother and child&#13;
relationship." The justices also noted the Family&#13;
Court has jurisdiction over cases involving the paternity&#13;
of children born out of wedlock.&#13;
Attorney Cherrie Perkins,whorepresented Rubano,&#13;
a 53-year-old professor of clinical psychiatry at the&#13;
medical school at the Unive,~sity of Massachusetts,&#13;
said her client cried when she heard of the ruling.&#13;
"She’ s now not on thin ice any more. She’ s on pretty&#13;
solid ground," Perkins said.&#13;
DiCenzo’ s attorney, Rosina Hunt, said the ease has&#13;
drained her client emotionally and financially. "The&#13;
big thing for her is she wants to keep her son in a Stable&#13;
home and she doesn’ t want to go through this," Hunt&#13;
said.&#13;
Similar cases began surfacing in courts around the&#13;
country in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and claims&#13;
by "co-parents" generally were rejected, said attorney&#13;
Mary Bonauto of Gay &amp;’Lesbians Advocates &amp;&#13;
Defenders of Boston, which filed a brief in support of&#13;
Rubano. Recently, however, courts in a handful of&#13;
states, including Massachusetts andNew Jersey, have&#13;
decided to recognize the legal status of non-biologi~&#13;
cal parents.&#13;
"This decision puts Rhode Island in line with the&#13;
majority of recent decisions on the topic, although&#13;
this is an issue that is still hotly contested among the&#13;
states," said Bonauto, who lead the fight to legalize&#13;
same-sex civil umons in Vermont.&#13;
Rubano and DiCenzo decided tO have a child&#13;
together while they were living in Millville, Mass.&#13;
DiCenzo underwent artificial insemination from an&#13;
anonymous sperm donor and on Dec. 15, 1991,&#13;
DiCenzo gave birth to aboy. Thecouple sent outbirth&#13;
announcements identifying them both as the child’ s&#13;
parents, and had the last name of Rubano-DiCenzo&#13;
listed onboth the birthand baptismal certificates. The&#13;
couple raised the child together for several years and&#13;
the boy called Rubano her "heart room."&#13;
In 1996, the pair split up and DiCenzo, now 43,&#13;
moved to Cumberland. The next year, the two signed&#13;
a Family Court consent order that granted Rubano&#13;
permanent visitation rights on a periodic basis. In&#13;
exchange Rubano waived "any claim or cause of&#13;
action she has or may have to recognition as a parent&#13;
of the minor child." But then DiCenzo, believing&#13;
Rubano’ s visits were "disruptive and confusing" to&#13;
theboy, told Rubano thatno further visitations would&#13;
be permitted.&#13;
Rubano appealed to Family Court, asking a judge&#13;
to enforce the earlier order. DiCenzo argued the&#13;
Family Court lackedjurisdiction to eater the order in&#13;
the first place. The Family Court, unsure how to&#13;
proceed, requested that the Supreme Court rule on the&#13;
case. Perkins believes the decision clears the way for&#13;
the Family Court to allow visitation.&#13;
Hunt expressed coneeru that the finding may pave&#13;
the way for third party parent claims from grandpareats,&#13;
ex-boyfriends and others. The General Assembly&#13;
may want to consider changing the law, she said.&#13;
But Perkins said she sees the ruling as a boon to&#13;
both Gays and heterosexuals. "You could be&#13;
somebody’ s second wife or husband and essentially&#13;
raise their children and if you got divorced, you could&#13;
haveno rights," Perkins said. "We think that the court&#13;
was actually looking for a way to redress alot ofholes&#13;
in the law because’ families are changing over time&#13;
and this was maybe the ease to do it."&#13;
Idaho PFLAG Chapter&#13;
Make Case for Inclusion&#13;
SANDPOINT, Idaho (AP) --The area’ s Parents and&#13;
Friends of Lesbians and Gays chapter will make its&#13;
proposal tojoin the town’ s list of credible commtmity&#13;
organizations. The organization hosted the ACLUsponsored&#13;
slide show and talk, "The Gay Life in&#13;
Idaho: Idaho’ s Little T01d History," created by Alan&#13;
Virta, head of the Boise State University library’s&#13;
special collections. "It’ s amazing what you find here&#13;
and there in the official records," he s aid. "S ometimes&#13;
trial transcripts give a lot of information."&#13;
Virta’s 45-minute show includes Idaho’s reaction&#13;
to the 1895 Oscar Wilde trial in London - the playwright&#13;
was charged with homosexuality -and the&#13;
1955 boys ofBoise scandal, a homosexual witchhum.&#13;
Parents Jim and Barbara Hansen started the&#13;
Sandpoint Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.&#13;
They say that, so far, they have not been the targets of&#13;
harassment in an area of Idaho typically known for its&#13;
conservatism. "I find this a very open-minded community,"&#13;
Jim Hansen said. "There’s more suppoyt,&#13;
strokes, affirmations here than I ever thought possible.&#13;
That keeps me going.’"&#13;
Michigan College Offers&#13;
Partner Benefits&#13;
MARQUETTE, Mich. (AP) - Northern Michigan&#13;
University faculty members have ratified a three-year&#13;
contract that gives them 3.5% annual pay increases&#13;
and same-sex domestic partner health benefits. The&#13;
contract for the Northern Michigan chapter of the&#13;
American Association of University Professors was&#13;
ratified by a 159-33 vote, The Mining Journal reported.&#13;
The union has about 290 members.&#13;
The university’ s board of control is to consider the&#13;
agreement Oc~ 6. Other changes include retirement&#13;
contributions of 15.64% of annual salary, and extension&#13;
of health insurance benefits to same-sex domesuc&#13;
partners.&#13;
Gay Games 2002:&#13;
Anyone Can Compete&#13;
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -For those who’ ve dreamed&#13;
of competing in the Olympics but failed to meet the&#13;
athletic requirements, there’ s still hope: they can sign&#13;
up for the Sydney 2002 Gay Games. The event is open&#13;
to everyone. "There is no minimum standard required&#13;
to participate," Game Gibson, chief executive officer&#13;
of the Sydney Gay Games, noted. "No one is excluded,&#13;
regardless of gender, sextmlity, race or physical&#13;
ability."&#13;
Organizers expect the two-week event, which includes&#13;
a weeklong cultural.festival and opens Oct. 25,&#13;
2002, to attract over 14,000 participants from at least&#13;
78 countries. There are more than 10,000 athletes&#13;
¯ competing in the Olympics.&#13;
Gibson also said the Gay Games, whiCh will attract&#13;
mostly Lesbian, Gay, Transgender and Bisexual competitors,&#13;
have found their biggest sponsor. San Francisco-&#13;
based Gay.com, an online supplier of services&#13;
to the homosexual community, has entered into a $1.5&#13;
million agreement to be the event’ s official. Internet&#13;
media sponsor,.he said.&#13;
The competition, which will run from Nov..3 to&#13;
Nov. 9, 2002, has 31 sports; some with a distinctive&#13;
Australian flavor, chairwoman Colette Steer said,&#13;
including netball and touch rugby. Butother sports on&#13;
the agenda include Olympic events such as badminton,&#13;
baseball, athletics, field hockey, tennis, swimming&#13;
and volleyball.&#13;
The sports will be held in two main zones - Olympic&#13;
Park and around Sydney Harbor. As well as the&#13;
official sports, the sixth edition of the Gay Games will&#13;
feature exhibition events such as surfing and surf&#13;
lifesaving, dragon boat racing and what organizers&#13;
are calling "mind games" - ehes s, bridge, backgammon&#13;
and mahjong.&#13;
Steer played softball in the 1998 Gay Games in&#13;
Amsterdam. She recalled with emotion waving he,r&#13;
"little pink flag, as one does" ~t the Gay Games&#13;
opening ceremony. The Gay Games are "an opportunity&#13;
to celebratewhatweare.., and to enjoy ourselves&#13;
a&#13;
United in&#13;
God’s Love&#13;
MCC.United&#13;
Sunday Worship Reverend Cathy Elliot&#13;
11:00 am Pastor&#13;
1623 N. Maplewood 918/838-1715&#13;
Community&#13;
Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at llam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, SundaySchool, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm, Sunday Eve. Servic~ 6pm&#13;
1517 S. Memorial, 628-0802, Info: 224-4754&#13;
Sandra Hill M.s.&#13;
Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
Counselor, Certified Hypnotherapist&#13;
Psychotherapy &amp; Clinical Consultation&#13;
After Hours Appointments Available&#13;
2865 E. Skelly Drive, Suite 215,745-1111&#13;
The Open Arms Project&#13;
Young Adult Support Group&#13;
Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
Meet Others in a Safe Enviroment&#13;
Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
Trinna L. W. Burrows, LSW, ACSW&#13;
Ghild, Family, Individual &amp; Gouple Psychotherapy&#13;
(918) 743-9559&#13;
2121 South Columbia, Suite 420&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74114-3518&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
.Tulsa Gay Community Services Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743-4297)&#13;
6-9 prn, Sunday - Friday&#13;
12-9pm, Saturday, all sales benefit the Center&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, PC&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
a professional corporation&#13;
747-5466&#13;
4021 South Harvard Avenue, Suite 210, Tulsa 74135&#13;
TOM NEAL&#13;
BUILDING &amp; GARDEN&#13;
DESIGN&#13;
583- 1248&#13;
Red Rock Tulsa&#13;
Free Confidential HIV Testing&#13;
Walk-in Clinics&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs., 5 -8 pm&#13;
at the Center, 1307 East 38th&#13;
Daytime appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
KIN WILKS Independent Consultant for&#13;
357-1757&#13;
in~a matter of hours&#13;
o~P~-N~RMS,OPENMINDS,OPENHF_At~&#13;
Saint Aidan&#13;
4045 N. ~incinnati. 425-7882&#13;
Saint John&#13;
4200 S. Atlanta Plabe. 742-7381&#13;
Saint Dunstar~&#13;
5635 East 71st, 492-7140&#13;
Trinity&#13;
501 S. Cincinnati, 582-4128&#13;
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You&#13;
in that fiee and open--and tolerant environment,"&#13;
Gibson said.&#13;
Over 15,000 people competed in the Amsterdam&#13;
Gay Games. The first Gay Games were held in 1982&#13;
in San Francisco. Organizers said the influx of nearly&#13;
35,000 visitors to Sydney for the games and festival&#13;
will injectabout $55millioninto the region’ s economy.&#13;
On the Net: www.Gaygamesvi.org.au&#13;
Gov. Ventura to Offer&#13;
Partner Benefits&#13;
ST. PAUL (AP) - If his administration moves forward&#13;
with a plan to provide benefits for domestic&#13;
partners of state employees, Gov. Jesse Venturawould&#13;
demand proof of a committed relationship, he said in&#13;
September.&#13;
"There will be documentation signed; there will be&#13;
contractual things that will go on between these&#13;
people," Ventura said. "It’s not like a fly-by-night&#13;
relationship, where, ’Gee I met someone in the bar&#13;
and now I’m going to make them a domestic partner&#13;
for a week and a half.’ "&#13;
Few other details emerged about the possible extension&#13;
of health and insurance benefits to domestic&#13;
partners, a still-in-the-works proposal Venture’ s ad..&#13;
ministration disclosed recently.&#13;
Employee Relations Commissioner Julien Carter&#13;
said if the proposal is confined to same-sex couples&#13;
only, he expects it to affect about 1% of the state’s&#13;
53,000-member workforce, or 530 employees. It’s&#13;
not clear if heterosexual domestic partners would be&#13;
covered. "There are a series of decisions to be made&#13;
and that definition of domestic partner is one of&#13;
them," said Ventura’ s spokesman, John Wodele.&#13;
If heterosexuals are included, Carter said his&#13;
department’s best estimate is that 3% of employees&#13;
would take advantage of that arrangement. "We just&#13;
don’ tknow for sure what the best planning number is,&#13;
but it seems to be in (he ballpark," he said.&#13;
Ventura stressed during his weekly radio show that&#13;
the state needs to do something to stay competitive&#13;
with the private sector: Both are fighting to attract&#13;
new employees in a tight labor market. "What are&#13;
they going to pick?" Ventura said of prospective&#13;
hires. "They" re going to pick the company that gives&#13;
them the best benefits, the best working conditions.&#13;
That’ s what this issue is greatly about."&#13;
Even before Venmra’s staff finalized the plan,&#13;
conservative lawmakers discounted its chances. "I&#13;
don’t think it’s going to fly," said state Rep. Tony&#13;
Kielkucki, R-Lester Prairie. "He’ s got more support&#13;
for unicameral than he has for this one." An effort&#13;
failed this year to get a constitutional amendment On&#13;
the ballot for a one,house Legislature.&#13;
Vermont, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington. and Massachusetts&#13;
offer benefits to domestic partners, according&#13;
to OutFront Minnesota, an advocacy group&#13;
for Gay, Lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities.&#13;
Fort Worth city council mulls ban on Gay bias&#13;
FORT WORTH-, Texas (AP) - For the third time in&#13;
eight years, a measure that would protect sexual&#13;
orientation under Fort Worth’s anti-discrimination&#13;
law is being discussed by.members of thecity council.&#13;
The current drive to add sexual orientation is&#13;
being led by Councilman Chuck Silcox; a conservative&#13;
Republican who ended discussions of a similar&#13;
proposal in January 1999.&#13;
Under the proposal,. Gays and .-Lesbians would be&#13;
added to the list of protected cl~S in Fort Worth’ s&#13;
anti-discrimination ordinance. The list already indudes&#13;
race, creed, color, religion, gender, disability,&#13;
national origin and family status. City officials said&#13;
violation of the anti-discrimination ordinance is a&#13;
.nfisdemeanor.&#13;
!n recent editio~as of the For/~’orth Star-Tdegram.&#13;
Sitcox said his posit~o,? on tee issue changed after&#13;
was approached by a Fort \Vor{h man who lost Ms job&#13;
after .his employer discovered he was Gay "I didn"&#13;
realize we had the kind of problems out there that we&#13;
do," Silcox said. "I doff t like the idea t~hat people are&#13;
losingjobs over this. Anytime there is discrimination,&#13;
we need to draw the line."&#13;
Nebraska Amendmentto&#13;
Outlaw Gay Marriages&#13;
KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) - The chief supporter and an&#13;
opponent of a state ban on same-sex marriages predicted&#13;
extremely different outcomes if the proposed&#13;
constitutional amendment is approved by voters in&#13;
November. The predictions varied from prohibiting&#13;
homosexual couples from adopting children to outlawing&#13;
all business partnerships between two people&#13;
of the same sex.&#13;
Initiative 416 would define marriage in Nebraska&#13;
as a relationship between only a man and wo~nan, and&#13;
prohibit any "civil union, domestic partnership or&#13;
other similar same-sex relationship."&#13;
At a sometimes-heated fonun before the state’s&#13;
daily newspaper editors, an opponent of the measure&#13;
argued that it is poorly written and threatens the&#13;
legality of all relationships between two people of the&#13;
same sex, such as business partnerships,joint ownerships&#13;
and contractual agreements. "Passage of the&#13;
amendment will lead to years of litigation that will be&#13;
costly to the state and its taxpayers," said Linda&#13;
Richenberg of Nebraska Advocate for Justice and&#13;
Equality.&#13;
The amendment would simply prohibit same-sex&#13;
marriages from being recognized by the state, said&#13;
Guyla Mills, chairwoman of the Defense of Marriage&#13;
Amendment Committee, which collected more than&#13;
the required 105,000 signatures to put the question on&#13;
the ballot. Mills said many constitutional lawyers&#13;
have reviewed the ballot language and say it is clear&#13;
on its intent. "This amendment is not about taking&#13;
rights away from anybody. It is about protecting the&#13;
time-honored tradition of marriage," Mills said.&#13;
Under the measure, homosexual couples - including&#13;
someone who works for state government or the&#13;
University of Nebraska system would be prevented&#13;
from sharing state insurance benefits. It also would&#13;
prevent Gay and Lesbians from adopting children.&#13;
She said it will not impact the insurance providers in&#13;
the state or the insurance policies of private businesses&#13;
and corporations.&#13;
Richenberg argued that if voters approve the ban.&#13;
Nebraska will earn a reputalaon as a hostile place to&#13;
work and live, prompting an exodus of ho~nosexuals&#13;
and their families who have been productive members&#13;
of the state’ s work force. "We don’ t want to see&#13;
anyone leave the state because of this," Mills said.&#13;
"Wejust don’ t think a minority ofpeople should have&#13;
the right to redefine marriage for everybody."&#13;
Mills pointed out several times that both of the&#13;
state’s senate candidates, Republican Don Stenberg&#13;
and Democrat Ben Nelson, plan to vote in support of&#13;
the same-sex marriage ban.&#13;
Richenberg said the amendment is unnecessary in&#13;
a conservative state like Nebraska, where there is not&#13;
a push to legalize same-sex unions. "A vote against&#13;
416 is not going to legalize same-sex marriages," she&#13;
said. "Same-sex marriages do not exist in Nebraska,&#13;
and there will be no change."&#13;
The forum was sponsored by the Nebraska Associated&#13;
Press Association.&#13;
Lesbian Denied Right to&#13;
. Legally Change Name&#13;
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - A Lesbian who wanted to&#13;
hyphenate her na03e to in.cldde ’that of hbr longume&#13;
partner i’s @pealing the decision of a judge who said&#13;
a name change would create the impression the two&#13;
women were married. The American Civil Liberties&#13;
Umon of New Jersey has appealed Superior Court&#13;
Judge Anthony J. Iuliani’s decision ~o deny Jill&#13;
Bacharach’s application ’ to change her name. At a&#13;
hearing m Augus|o !uliani deniext fi~e Cedar Grove&#13;
woman’ s petiti-’,~, sayi~g he feared it wo~d create the&#13;
appem’a~m~ that she and imr female ,~artner were&#13;
roamed, said ACLU staff{" attorney J.C. :~Nver. Sam.esex&#13;
uNons ~z,: not !egaily recogxfizcd in ~iew Jersa y&#13;
arid in every state except. Vermont.&#13;
"I have ~ever expecied this sort of discrimination&#13;
from a court of taw’y said Bacharach, 32.&#13;
Salver said the judge’ s concern about the appearance&#13;
of a same-sex union is an improper basis to deny&#13;
a name change. . . see Name, p. 7&#13;
Not EnoUgh Dollars : m~nt in emergency rooms, wbich is more&#13;
For Homeless Sick " expensive than standard care. Emergency&#13;
rooms also don’ t offer AIDS patients the&#13;
NEW YORK (AP) - They carry their&#13;
life’ s possessions on withering backs and&#13;
hide death within their broken bodies.&#13;
Some spent anentirelifetimeonthe streets, ¯&#13;
searching for a home under a molding&#13;
cardboardboxin atrash-strewn alleyway. ¯&#13;
Others are teens who ran from something ¯&#13;
but stumbled into a life far worse; they "&#13;
trade sex for a night in a bed. Still more "&#13;
believe their luck has run out after re- ¯&#13;
centlylosingjobs,apartments and friends,. "&#13;
But every day, a small handful of the ¯&#13;
thousands of homeless men and women&#13;
living with AIDS in New York City make ¯&#13;
a tremendous effort rarely taken by their&#13;
brethren. They seek help. They fight for ¯&#13;
life, no matter the inevitable future.&#13;
Scientists haven’ t cured HIV or AIDS,&#13;
but their powerful .drug concoctions that&#13;
keep people alive longer create a curious "&#13;
problem. Public and non-profit agencies&#13;
already struggle to pay for their existing&#13;
cases. Now they wonder: How can we "&#13;
possibly help the new people infected "&#13;
with the virus?&#13;
"Today, people think the ePidemic is ¯&#13;
over," said Gina Quattrochi, the president "&#13;
of the National AIDS Housing Coalition "&#13;
andtheexecutivedirectoratBaileyHouse, :&#13;
a private center in Greenwich Village ¯&#13;
helping homeless AIDS survivors. "The ¯&#13;
reality is people are living much ~nger, "&#13;
but the vast majority are disabled.&#13;
Currently, Congress is debating next ¯&#13;
year’ s budget. Advocates like.Quattrochi "&#13;
requested increasing the $232 million&#13;
budgetby $60 million- and were worried ¯&#13;
when President Clinton proposed upping "&#13;
it to just $260 million. Disappointment "&#13;
has turned to fear because Senate leaders ".&#13;
don’ twantto increase the appropriation at ¯&#13;
all.&#13;
"It’s thin. We have to get it up," said "&#13;
U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., a longtime&#13;
supporter of homeless _&amp;IDS services&#13;
who pushed the House to propose "&#13;
increasing funds to $250 million. "This&#13;
country i" s ro"m"ng i"n mortey." ¯&#13;
Expending millions of dollars .for AID.S- "&#13;
exclusive assistance meets resistance m .&#13;
every case. ’qqaere has always been pres- ¯&#13;
surefrom thefarright to portray itfor drug&#13;
addicts and queers," Quattrochi said, adding&#13;
that others question the need to fund&#13;
specific AIDS housing when so much&#13;
housing is already available.&#13;
Quattrochi says only half of Bailey&#13;
House’s residents are Gay or Lesbian.&#13;
She noted that at least 450,000 Americans&#13;
with AIDS nee~l, housing, and that’s a&#13;
conservative estimate because some&#13;
haven’t learned they have the illness or&#13;
are mentally ill andmay neverknow. New&#13;
York, the city that served 1,200 homeless&#13;
people with AIDS in 1988, now assists&#13;
more than 27,000. That total is steadily&#13;
increasing as it has for the past few years,&#13;
said Ruth Reinecke, a spokeswoman for&#13;
the city’ s Division of AIDS Services.&#13;
A Brooklyn federal judge’s decision&#13;
earlier this week shows the city apparently&#13;
hash’ t adjusted wall to the surging&#13;
numbers. The judge, who slammed the&#13;
Division of AIDS Services for "chronically&#13;
and systematically" delaying or terminating&#13;
assistance, ordered the agency&#13;
placed under federal oversight for three&#13;
years. The city plans to appeal the decision.&#13;
Quattrochi says if members of Congress&#13;
wouldlook at operations like Bailey&#13;
House, they’ d understand why advocates&#13;
plead for more money. The alternative,&#13;
she says, is that health care costs will soar&#13;
when homeless AIDS patients seek treatcounseling&#13;
that could hdp decrease the&#13;
spread of HIV.&#13;
Bailey House, one of many nonprofit&#13;
groups that assist the city in serving the&#13;
homeless AIDS population, started when&#13;
the virus was first identified and it was&#13;
still consideredby many as homosexuals’&#13;
punishment from God. The 6 1/2-story&#13;
building, set m the primest of real estate&#13;
along the Hudson River, nurtured homeless&#13;
AIDS survivors.&#13;
In 1995, Bailey House added a vocational&#13;
studies program because clients&#13;
lived longer thanks to the drug cocktails&#13;
and weren’t interested in just wasting&#13;
away. Three years later, Bailey House&#13;
opened the program to anyone with AIDS&#13;
living in New York. "I wanted to do&#13;
something productive with my life," said&#13;
Sean Ransom, 31, who contracted the&#13;
virus in the late 1980s and sought help&#13;
four years ago. "I didn’ t want to... take&#13;
my reeds and wait to die."&#13;
Those medications - a triple combination&#13;
of drugs - have doubledthe average&#13;
time it takes for the HIV infection to&#13;
developinto AIDS, said ProfesssorAlvaro&#13;
Munoz of Johns Hopkins University’s&#13;
School of Public Health. They also increased&#13;
the average survival time ofAIDS&#13;
sufferers from 18 months to six years.&#13;
In the late 1980s, residents in Bailey&#13;
House stayed an average of three months,&#13;
and their stay almost always ended at a&#13;
funeral home. These days, they stay abont&#13;
three years, if not longer. !¢lany walk out&#13;
on their own, often to Bailey House-assisted&#13;
apartments.&#13;
Beyond treatment, stable housing is&#13;
crucial to every patients’ health, Quattrochi&#13;
says. Two-thirds of AIDS patients cite&#13;
housing as a top priority,just below medical&#13;
treatment. Living on a friend’ s couch&#13;
or moving between shelters, patients find&#13;
~t difficult and tiring to get continual care;&#13;
the effort weakens the body and strengthens&#13;
the disease - a deadly duo. Patients&#13;
also must live with failing organs, and&#13;
need refrigerators to keep their medicine&#13;
effective.&#13;
Stable housing becomes a primal urge,&#13;
Quattrochi says. "Let me put it this way,&#13;
what I always ask people is, ’Where do&#13;
you want to be when you have the flu?’"&#13;
she said. "You want- to be at home."&#13;
These problems becomeremote when a&#13;
homeless person wakes up after a night&#13;
under crumbled, urine-stained newspapers.&#13;
Medications? It’ s doubtful they have&#13;
any. It’ s often little better in city-run shel-&#13;
¯ ters.&#13;
Derryck, who declined to g~ve his last&#13;
¯" name, lived in emergency housing offi-&#13;
".. cially called Single Room Occupancy&#13;
: Units, but known by residents as bare-&#13;
." boned welfare hotels. He could touch all&#13;
¯ four walls from the middle of his cubicle.&#13;
"- Occupants shared a single bathroom, and&#13;
he shudders when remembering the filth.&#13;
¯ Prostitutes, drugs, loan sharking, he re-&#13;
: calls, this placewas amodernday Sodom&#13;
: and Gomorrah.’And Derryck, who is 50,&#13;
¯&#13;
concedes he was lucky to live the,re.&#13;
"There s even a lack of bad housing, he&#13;
¯ said glumly.&#13;
¯ But Derryck found his way to Bailey&#13;
: House. Now hecansitonhisbedinhis 85-&#13;
¯ square-foot home, with its view of the ¯&#13;
Hudson River, watch TV, grab a snack -&#13;
or his medications -from h~s mini-fridge,&#13;
_" or use his personal bathroom. "It works&#13;
¯ for me,"he said with a grin as smoothjazz&#13;
~ sauntered out of his stereo’s speakers.&#13;
: Behind him hung posters of singer&#13;
Financial Planning With A&#13;
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Commitment to gay men and lesbians clear. Just as we have extended domestic partner&#13;
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that, the window looked out onto the water.&#13;
As he spoke, a sailboat sliced through&#13;
gusty winds as it cruised south heading&#13;
out into the open bay.&#13;
HIV Prevention Ad&#13;
Banned from TV&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A set of television&#13;
ads that depict bare-chested men&#13;
and a male-to-female transgender delivenng&#13;
an HIV prevention message have&#13;
been pulled from daytime TVat a Bay&#13;
Area station. Rather than run the 30-second&#13;
ad during afternoon talk shows, KGO&#13;
Channel 7 offered to run the ads - which&#13;
encourage HIV-positive men and women&#13;
to practice safe sex and be honest with&#13;
partners about their status - after 10 p.m.&#13;
so that fewer children would see them. A&#13;
Better World, the San Francisco advertising&#13;
agency that purchased the spot, chose&#13;
the original time frame because researchers&#13;
have discovered 3 and 4 p.m. shows&#13;
are popular with Gay men.&#13;
However, KGOleaders say that the ads&#13;
clash with afternoon viewer expectations.&#13;
"With a Rosie (O’ Dounell) episod,°, with&#13;
’NSYNC, or another pop culture guest on&#13;
it, it would be a little eyepopping for a&#13;
commercial like this to show up," said&#13;
David Metz, director of programming&#13;
services at KGO.&#13;
Les Pappas, president of the agency.,&#13;
called KGO’s decision homophobic.&#13;
"We’ ve done the research to find out what&#13;
our target audience is watching, and&#13;
they’ re watching Rosie and Oprah. We&#13;
don’t want to be relegated or banished&#13;
until after 10 p.m.," Pappas said.&#13;
ABetterWorldcreated the $345,000 ad&#13;
campaign for the city’ s health department&#13;
after a study last month that fond the rate&#13;
of HIV infection among Gay men in San&#13;
Francisco is climbing at an alarming rate.&#13;
New HIV infections in the city increased&#13;
form 498 in 1997 to 790 last year, according&#13;
to the Health Department study.&#13;
NYC Loses Case&#13;
Over AIDS Care&#13;
NEW YORK (AP) - A federal judge has&#13;
ruled the city mistreated poor people with&#13;
AIDS by subjecting them to bureaucratic&#13;
mismanagement and delays in housing,&#13;
health and other benefits. In his ruling,&#13;
U.S. District Judge Sterling Johnson said&#13;
officials violated theAmericans with Disabilities&#13;
Act by "chronically and system.-&#13;
atically failing to.provide (AIDS patients)&#13;
with meaningful access to critical subsistence&#13;
benefits and services." Hecalled the&#13;
consequences "devastating."&#13;
The opinion stems from a class-action&#13;
lawsuit filed in federal court on behalf of&#13;
25,000 plaintiffs dtywide whohaveAIDS&#13;
or other HIV-related illnesses.&#13;
Johnson’s ruling detailed testimony -&#13;
heard earlier this year at a bench trial - by&#13;
plaintiffs who described getting the rtmaround&#13;
from the Division for AIDS Services&#13;
for months, if not years. The judge&#13;
appointed a federal magistrate to monitor&#13;
the agency over the next three years.&#13;
Michael Hess, the city’ s counsel, criticized&#13;
the ruling and promised an appeal.&#13;
"Very frankly, I think it’ s very flawed,"&#13;
Hess said, adding that thejudge’ s opinion&#13;
was "very poorly done and contains a lot&#13;
of errors that I hope will be corrected."&#13;
Hess said Johnson relied on informauon&#13;
that was more than five years old.&#13;
Statistics cited by Johnson showed that in&#13;
one out Of three cases, the city failed to&#13;
meetits own30-day deadline for responding&#13;
to requests for services. He ordered&#13;
the city to comply. The ruling was the&#13;
latest in which Housing Works has succeeded&#13;
in forcing Mayor Rudolph&#13;
Giuliani’ s administration to overhaul portions&#13;
of its policies.&#13;
In 1999, U.S. District Judge Allen&#13;
Schwartz found that city officials had&#13;
acted with "retaliatory intent" against the&#13;
nonprofit group, which has been a relentless&#13;
critic of Giuliani’ s policies on AIDS.&#13;
Vatican Officials:&#13;
Still Noto Condoms&#13;
VATICAN CITY (AP) - A Vatican official&#13;
said recently that two American Jesuits&#13;
have distorted church positions b,,y suggesting&#13;
that the Vatiean has become more&#13;
tolerant" about the distribution of condoms&#13;
to fight AIDS. Monsignor Jacques&#13;
Suaudeau said the Vatican stance hasn’ t&#13;
changed, although the church must not be&#13;
seen as indifferent to AIDS sufferers and&#13;
the battle to stop the disease’ s spread.&#13;
Some in the church have been seeking a&#13;
softening in the position of the Vatican,&#13;
which has been accused by some governments&#13;
of hindering the AIDS battle.&#13;
Writing in the Sept. 23 issue of&#13;
"America," a Jesuit magazine, the authors&#13;
pointed to an April article written by&#13;
Suaudeauin the Vaticannewspaper. They&#13;
said it contained important signals: That&#13;
while some individual bishops have repudiated&#13;
local HIV prevention programs&#13;
that include the distribution of condoms,&#13;
"the Roman curia is more tolerant on the&#13;
matter."&#13;
The article was written by the Revs.&#13;
John Fuller, an associate professor of&#13;
medicine at Boston University School of&#13;
Medicine, and James Keenan, professor&#13;
ofmoral theology atWestonJesuit School&#13;
of Theology in Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Suaudeau called the article a"pretext to&#13;
relaunch the argument." "This is a manipulation.&#13;
It is blown up and exaggerated,"&#13;
he told The Associated Press. In his&#13;
article, Suaudeau endorsed sexual abstinence&#13;
and chastity as the methods to prevent&#13;
AIDS, citing church programs to&#13;
promote that.&#13;
Suaudeau’ s article went on to say that&#13;
the use of condoms in Thailand "had&#13;
particularly good results for these people&#13;
with regard to the prevention of sexually&#13;
transmitted diseases. It said the use of&#13;
condoms in those circumstances "is actually&#13;
a ’lesser evil’" but then added that "it&#13;
cannot be proposed as a model ofhumanization&#13;
and development."&#13;
Suaudeau said he wrote the article to&#13;
show the Vatican was not indifferent to&#13;
the AIDS problem.&#13;
Easier Access to&#13;
Needles in NM&#13;
SANTA FE (AP) - State health officials&#13;
want to change New Mexico’ s Controlled&#13;
Substances Act to state that pharmacists&#13;
who prbvide syringes to intravenous-di’ug&#13;
users are not guilty of distributing drug&#13;
paraphernalia. State officials say the&#13;
change would help combat the spread of&#13;
infectious diseases like HIV and Hepatitis&#13;
B and C. The Pharmacy Board decided to&#13;
back the change, which would need to be&#13;
passed by the Legislature and signed by&#13;
Gov. Gary Johnson. In 1997, Johnson&#13;
signed into law the Harm Reduction Act&#13;
that made New Mexico the second state in&#13;
the nation to create a state-funded needleexchange&#13;
progran~ for drug users.&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, entertainment editor ." homoerotically tinged moments, and it&#13;
Happy Samhain! (pronounced "sow- ¯ features Amanda Bearse playing Straight.&#13;
eft’- it’ s Gaelic) We turn in the wheel of " (She was the next door neighbor on"Martheyearto&#13;
theseasonofthethinning ofthe ¯ lied With Children", who came out a few&#13;
veils, when people all over the word felt ¯ years back.) Roddy McDowell is fabuthe&#13;
shifts that marked th~ time of honor- " lous as an inept bachelor vampire hunter&#13;
ing th.eir ancestors. " - One wonders why he never married -&#13;
Samhain in pagan Celtic Britain, was a .* "nudge, nudge, wink, wink." The charactime&#13;
forhonoring the spirits of those that " ter, I mean. And Stephen Geoffreys turns&#13;
have passed on, as in a touching perwell&#13;
as the day of - .I love vampire Elms, and f0rmance as the&#13;
the dead in Spain " " lonelyoutcastwho&#13;
andMexico.Itwas ~]alS is tlae ]~est tlme of year. gets seduced by&#13;
an important boll- Chris Sarandon’ s&#13;
day all over the Of course, ~t’s even l~etter ff ever-so-handpre-&#13;
Christian some vampire.&#13;
world, enough so ~t~s a darl~, w~indy, stormy Ue’s another one&#13;
that when the that could show up&#13;
Church took over, ni~lat w~tla t:launder craslaln~ outside my winthey&#13;
renameditAll dow any time. It’ s&#13;
Hallow’s Eve and and l~htnln~ flash~n~ and.., a fun film, and&#13;
All Saints Day. It - worth the cost.&#13;
shrunk from a oh~ sorry~ ~ett~n~ a bit caught Available on&#13;
three day festival, DVD.&#13;
to a one day cel- up ~n the deser~ptlon.&#13;
For those that&#13;
ebration. In&#13;
Storms do that to me.&#13;
like Tom Cruise&#13;
Amelica, it was " " with fangs (he retrivialized&#13;
into&#13;
w]aere was I? fusedtodothekiss&#13;
Halloween. So, with Antonio&#13;
just for old times’&#13;
O1~ yes, vampires and film. Banderas - was&#13;
sake, take a mo- " " this due to his inment&#13;
that day to "’" security with his&#13;
remember those loved ones who have own sexuality since it was inthe script?),&#13;
passed on. "Interview With The Vampire" has been&#13;
I love vampire films, and thisis thebest rereleased on DVD with new documentime&#13;
of year. Of course, it’ s even bet{er if tary footage and a few other extras thrown&#13;
it’sadark, windy, stormy night with thtm- " iu. Brad Pitt plays Lestat, and the now&#13;
der crashing and lightning flashing and. quite grown up Kirsten Dunst turned in a&#13;
¯ oh, sorry, getting a bit caught up in the stellar performance as an adult trapped in&#13;
description. Storms do that to me.. a child’ s body. Good for the moody vetowhere&#13;
was I? Oh, yes, vampires and film. pire types.&#13;
One of the best verslons of the Dracnla For fans of the original Hammer&#13;
legend, although the critics ripped it to Dracnlas, there are two on DVD: Dracnla,&#13;
shreds, is the 1979 Frank Langella fea- Prince of Darkness, the first sequel with&#13;
ture. Langella’ s Drac would be welcome ChristopherLee, after"HorrorofDracula"&#13;
to show up outside my window anytime (unavailable on DVD - dammit!); and&#13;
and suck anything he wanted. The film, Satanic Rites of Dracula, which was the&#13;
directed by John Badham, also stars Kate last Hammer Dracula with Chris I~e. It&#13;
Nelligan and Laurence Olivier in his last was a rather inept handling of putting&#13;
film performance. While there are times Drac in what was them "modem" times&#13;
thepacingtrudgesabitslowly, overallthe (1973). Only for those diehr~;d&#13;
film is one of the lnshest productions of "I)racufans". who can’t stand to have&#13;
the legend I’ve seen, even though it is completecollections.Still,it’safunromp,&#13;
based more on the play than the actual and the costumes are well worthlaughing&#13;
book. That didn’ t really bother me, picky at. Did people really wear that then? LOL&#13;
purist that I am, and the Dracula in this The only one with any style was Drac, in&#13;
filmhas quiteadry sense of humor that is timeless black and long cloak. Dracula,&#13;
easy to miss if you ares’ t prone to catch- ~" PrinceofDarkness, atleastkepthiminthe&#13;
ing it. It is widely available on DVD, and " 1800’ s, although Lee is left with little to&#13;
although the print they used to transfer . do but hiss and look menacing. Still, it’ s a&#13;
from is prone to noise (specks where the ¯ much better picture, and a fun romp.&#13;
film has started to come off the magnetic " Wemer Herzog’ s remake of Nosferatu&#13;
strip it’ s on), it is still a great atmospheric " is available, but unless you want to be&#13;
thrill for the buck. bored to tears with Drac’ s eternal anguish&#13;
Stay away from Coppola’s version, . over killingthings, pass. It really is&#13;
thoug]~ ~t~ s b!9ody awful and really sucks " "DraculaNeeds Prozac"., and Klaus Kinski&#13;
- i’n a b~id’Wa~ (Pun intendedl) is So wtfiny in the part, that youjust wanna&#13;
Nosferatu, the first Dracula film ever slap him after 5 minut,e~s. And talk about&#13;
made, and regarded as a masterpiece of ° pace.., those 2 hours-seem like 2 days.&#13;
th~Germanexpressionisticcinema,isalso Again, only for the hardcore collector,&#13;
a~lable,.meticuloi~sly restored, and with although afterhearing so much about it, it&#13;
a.~gry interesting commentary on DVD. was nice to finally see it. Or not. Always&#13;
-?irected by F.W: Murnau, ,an openly spoken of as a "classic," it m~es me&#13;
ga~ director, the homoerotic ~ndertones wonder wlm decides what w~il be deemed&#13;
~ake fi~ walt worth having, or at least, aclassic andjt~st how hard they need robe&#13;
renting. Re-scored wifia the original or- hit upside the head with the inteliigencc&#13;
chestra~:ion, it is a fascinating ,ook at d_m stick.&#13;
Nstory. Produ~din !92~.,itacmNiyholds If 3 ou re m the moodfor something in&#13;
tap wel! today, a more literary vein, I czm heartily recom-.&#13;
For those seekiv.g .lus~ a fun romp mend "Desrnond", by Ulysses Deitz. A&#13;
through vampire fi.hn!,’md with fang-in- weL writtensagaofamodemvampinthe&#13;
cheek, there s l~ngm Night", about a Anne Rice tradition, this one does not shy&#13;
vampireandhisghoul, who happens to be away from the fact that, yes indeed, the&#13;
male. They have a couple of lovely vamps are Gay. see Jim, p. 9&#13;
Tuesday, November 7&#13;
Election Day&#13;
HRC WATCH PARTY&#13;
Because win or lose, it’s good to be among friends&#13;
9 PM&#13;
3340 South Peoria, Tulsa, OK&#13;
Must be 21 - Cash Bar&#13;
HRC envisions an America where lesbian and&#13;
gay people are ensured of their basic equal rights.&#13;
You can help us do our work by joining us for&#13;
either or both of these events (or by joining&#13;
HRC - it’s just $35, call 584~2913 or email&#13;
hrctulsaoklahoma@aol.com).&#13;
HUMAN&#13;
RIGHTS&#13;
CAMPAIGN~&#13;
TULSA&#13;
Sunday, October 29th 3:00 PM &amp; 7:00 PM&#13;
Helga’s Horribles&#13;
Present scenes from&#13;
"The Little Shop of Horrors"&#13;
!7th &amp; Main, Tulsa, OK&#13;
Limited Seating&#13;
Call 584-~913 for reservations&#13;
Must be 21 - Cash Bar&#13;
A survey of books which Tulsa police&#13;
required to be shrinkwrapped in Borders’&#13;
October 14&#13;
8:00 pm&#13;
Friday&#13;
O~tober 20&#13;
21st St. location turned up at least 20&#13;
wrapped tifles over half of which were&#13;
Gay and Lesbian interest books, the other&#13;
half being mostly how-to sex guides for&#13;
heterosexuals. Among the Gay rifles were&#13;
serious art monographs on the mid-century&#13;
photographer, George Platt Lynes,&#13;
controversial photographer Robert&#13;
Mapplethorpe, and photographer David&#13;
LaChappelle. Also chosen were history&#13;
books like "Who’s a Pretty Boy Then?&#13;
150 Years of Gay Life in Pictures" and&#13;
"Nothing But the Girl, The Blatant Lesbian&#13;
Image" and "Gay Planet, All Things&#13;
for All Gay Men." Only one title of all&#13;
those wrapped, an art book by Tom of&#13;
Finland, appeared possibly to meet the&#13;
standard for shrinkwrapping.&#13;
The police move has raised alarm in&#13;
local ACLU (American Civil Liberties&#13;
Union) activists andGay community leaders.&#13;
William Hinkle, attorney, PFLAG&#13;
and ACLU activist responded to the police&#13;
actions, saying "[they] can’t d,~ that.&#13;
¯. absolutely [not]." Hinkle further characterized&#13;
the law as "blunt instrument,"&#13;
that if indeed the books were in violation&#13;
of an Oklahoma statute, then an arrest&#13;
should have been made. Kerry Lewis,&#13;
v?’g president of TOHR (Tulsa Oklaho~&#13;
mans for Human Rights) and an attorney&#13;
with a prominent Tulsa finn, called the&#13;
police actions "really kind of scary" and&#13;
indicated that TOHR was very interested&#13;
in the impact of this action. Lewis noted&#13;
thafthere appeared to be some other actions&#13;
on the part of Tulsa police, a recent&#13;
i.d.-check in a Tulsa club, that raised&#13;
concern about a resurgence of anti-Gay&#13;
harassment by Tulsa police.&#13;
Other issues:&#13;
Police Chief Ron Palmer stated that he&#13;
did not issue the order for this action. Nor&#13;
did Mayor Susan Savage know of the&#13;
incident. City standards do restrict city&#13;
councilors (legislative branch) from directing&#13;
city employees to-perform actions.&#13;
City councilor Gary Watts said that&#13;
the mayor and chief of police have given&#13;
permission for city councilors to talk directly&#13;
to majors and deputy chiefs but that&#13;
had he had a similar complaint he would&#13;
have told the constituent to call the police&#13;
directly. Watts said if a city councilor&#13;
gave an order to the police, it was wrong,&#13;
and if the officer took the order, it was&#13;
doubly wrong.&#13;
Corporate spokespeople for both Borderand&#13;
Barnes &amp;Noble responded. Sandy&#13;
Spears, district manager for Barnes &amp;&#13;
Noble said they follow state and local&#13;
ordinances but we don’t censor..." Borders&#13;
representatives in a conference call&#13;
claimed that they have a"dear dedication&#13;
to the First Amendment but they are also&#13;
conscious of the community they’re in."&#13;
Borders representatives claimed they have&#13;
always shrinkwrapped some books and&#13;
that some come that way from the printers.&#13;
(All of the Gay rifles TFN examined&#13;
had locally applied bar code tags under&#13;
the shrinkwrap indicating that these had&#13;
not originally been wrapped.&#13;
Borders representatives also claim that&#13;
any customer can remove shrinkwrap in&#13;
order to view a book but also acknowledged&#13;
that they post no signs to let customers&#13;
know about that option. They also&#13;
acknowledged that to some customers the&#13;
presence ofthe shrinkwrap was intimidating&#13;
- that it appeared to send a message&#13;
that the materials were illicit.&#13;
seeming concern about Gay patrons.&#13;
Tulsa County District Attorney Tim&#13;
Harris stated that he had not been consuited&#13;
before this action commenting that&#13;
he’ s often seen as acting in coordination&#13;
with this,sort of action but had not done&#13;
so. Borders spokespeople indicated that&#13;
they will send their regional management&#13;
to visit Tulsa stores sometime in the next&#13;
few weeks to review the situation.&#13;
See editorial: Censorship Throug,;~ Intimidation,&#13;
p. 3&#13;
No dancing around the subject here. And&#13;
it’ s a compelling story as well, with style&#13;
and wit. One of my favorites.&#13;
John Peyton Cooke’ s "Out for Blood"&#13;
is another excellent book with wall-written&#13;
characters and a fun romp through&#13;
vampland. It’ s worth hunting for in used&#13;
bookstores or garage sales, since it’ s unfortanately&#13;
out of print.&#13;
There are two anthologies out that are&#13;
worth the reading - the stories are hit and&#13;
miss, but there’ s more hits than misses, so&#13;
it’s worth the time - "Brothers of the&#13;
Night", and "Sons of Darkness", edited&#13;
by Michael Rowe and Thomas Roche.&#13;
The covers are awful, but it just goes to&#13;
prove the saying,"You can’ tjudge a book,&#13;
etc." I’d say about 95% of the stories are&#13;
excellent, which makes the 5% bearable.&#13;
And there’s something for everyone. I&#13;
usually don’ t care much for anthologies,&#13;
but these are worth picking up. Stay away&#13;
from"Vampires Anonymous". That’ s the&#13;
worst piece of dreck I’ ve read in many a&#13;
year of reading vampire fiction. That’ s it&#13;
for the "Things that go boink in the night&#13;
section." I mean, bump, yeah, bump!&#13;
Still, ifyouknow of anyone with a cape&#13;
And there’ s something for everyone. !&#13;
usually don’ t care much for anthologies,&#13;
but these are worth picking up. Stay away&#13;
from"Vampires Anonymous". That’ s the&#13;
worst piece of dreck I’ ve read in many a&#13;
year of reading vampire fiction. That’ s it&#13;
for the "Things that go boink in the night&#13;
section." I mean, bump, yeah, bump!&#13;
Still, ifyou know of anyone with a cape&#13;
feti sh, hates daylight, and has been around&#13;
200 years but only looks 30-something, is&#13;
allergic to garlic, and has a really good&#13;
immune system, send him to me... being&#13;
bitten can be fun, and the neck is one of&#13;
my favorite e-zones...&#13;
But by merely talking about the possibility&#13;
of arrests, they clearly raise that as&#13;
threat if the bookstore staff doesn’t do&#13;
what the police suggest/demand.&#13;
Also, troubling is the role of TulSa City&#13;
Councilor Todd Huston. While Chief&#13;
Palmer claims that Huston did not violate&#13;
city standards by contacting city staff&#13;
because he did not "order" them to take a&#13;
particular action (councilors are not permitted&#13;
to direct city staff but are required&#13;
to go through the executive branch, i.e.&#13;
the mayor or chief or deputy chiefs). But&#13;
any casual observer will see thatcomment&#13;
by an elected official to mid-level officers&#13;
is more likely to be heeded than the complaint&#13;
of an ordinary citizen.&#13;
And given the scandal related to former&#13;
city councilor Anna Falling about orders&#13;
given to city employees, Huston should&#13;
have gone through the chain of command&#13;
of the mayor or at least the chief ofpolice.&#13;
Surely then more consideration would&#13;
have been given to the dubious constitutionality&#13;
of this action, see Censor, p. 10&#13;
by Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Last week my friend Henry heard a&#13;
thud. Henry was hanging out at his new&#13;
boyfriend’s apartment in San Francisco&#13;
when something big&#13;
crashed upstairs. "It’ s that&#13;
annoying yobbo in the&#13;
third floor apartment at it&#13;
again," or so they thought.&#13;
Henry’s boyfriend explained&#13;
that no one in the&#13;
building.liked the guy. He&#13;
was catty and manipulative-&#13;
the Richard Hatch of&#13;
the apartmentbuilding. No&#13;
boyfriends ever knocked&#13;
on his door.&#13;
Three days later an ambulance&#13;
arrived. Theparamedics&#13;
carried down a&#13;
body from the third floor.&#13;
Unlike TV’ s Survivor, the&#13;
neighbor was the first to&#13;
go, not the last. He had&#13;
been lying deadjust above&#13;
Henry’ s head for several&#13;
days. Luckily, San Francisco&#13;
weather can be cool,&#13;
even in September.&#13;
The ambulance drove&#13;
off but Henry still felt creepy. The guy&#13;
upstairs was no more butstill a presen,.~&#13;
remained. A few days later, Henry was&#13;
bending over working in the garden at the&#13;
back of the building. Suddenly he shivered.&#13;
It felt like someone was watching&#13;
him. He looked up quickly at the blank&#13;
window of the third floor apartment. Was&#13;
somebody still there?Was that aface? His&#13;
boyfriend’ s mother, too, got goosebumps&#13;
in the garage when she walked by the dead&#13;
guy’ s car. The bitter queen, it seems, was&#13;
now a ghostly voyeur.&#13;
Henry isn’ t thrilled to spend the night at&#13;
ahaunted apartment house, even one with&#13;
Gay ghosts. Death has been no stranger to&#13;
the Gay community, especially since the&#13;
early 1980s, andmany ofus are hauntedin&#13;
one way or another. Still, lurking spirits&#13;
who cling to home can be annoying (even&#13;
if good apartments are hard to .find in San&#13;
Francisco). Luckily, Henry’ s boyfriend&#13;
had already made plans to move. The&#13;
ghost can keep the place.&#13;
My friends on Tauna - a South Pacific&#13;
island I once haunted mysdf- were similarly&#13;
nervous about ghosts. Folks there&#13;
are prone to stumble across spirits at any&#13;
moment. Even though people mostly run&#13;
into the ghosts of dead loved ones (morn,&#13;
dad, grandpa), they aren’ t toohappy about&#13;
these encounters. If the dead are making&#13;
themselves known, there must be a reason.&#13;
Ghosts can help you. But they can&#13;
also hurt you too, especially if they are&#13;
I didn’ t meet a~y~Gay:gh~osts imTamaa&#13;
but there is a rather tricky Bisexual spirit&#13;
living on the island: the dreaded and seductive&#13;
Nakwa. People have sex with&#13;
ghosts. What we think are "wet dreams,"&#13;
Islanders ~+piaiii akOff~~akwa ~ptrit&#13;
sneaking ~tb bai With :thdm~. A mail: (a&#13;
straight on~ atl~ast)!~s that he is&#13;
having sex With ti ~tiful:w0man ~ but&#13;
it’ s actually the ~iiOst Onlypretending to&#13;
be a woman. Perfidious Nakwa steals the&#13;
dreamer’ s semen and then changes its sex&#13;
from female to male. It next creeps into&#13;
the bed ofa sleeping woman, appearing as&#13;
ahandsomeguy. Ithas sex with the sleeper&#13;
and impregnates her with sperm stolen&#13;
from its previous victim. Such ghostly&#13;
pregnancies can be deadly. The woman&#13;
"...Anthropologist&#13;
Sherry Ortner,&#13;
drawln~ on the&#13;
Freneh feminist&#13;
Simone Beauvoir,&#13;
~,~nee proposed that&#13;
’Man is to Culture as&#13;
Woman is to&#13;
Nature.’ Ortner was&#13;
seekln~ a reason for&#13;
why, almost everywhere,&#13;
people value&#13;
what men do more&#13;
than they value what&#13;
women do..."&#13;
¯ may die unless her false pregnancy is&#13;
~ diagnosed and treated by local healers.&#13;
," Ghosts you meet while awake can also&#13;
¯ make trouble._ One day a young woman&#13;
named Risi just vanished.&#13;
Her family panicked. Nobody&#13;
disappears in this intimate&#13;
society where everyone&#13;
always knows everyone&#13;
else’ s business. We&#13;
rushed to the graveyard&#13;
and blew triton shell trumpets&#13;
loudly to put-the spirit&#13;
world on nouce:&#13;
buuuuuuu! Village theory&#13;
was that the girl’s grandmother,&#13;
who had died the&#13;
previous year, had come&#13;
back to fetch Risi to keep&#13;
her company in "the other&#13;
side" - the world of the&#13;
spirits.&#13;
Four days later a somewhatbedraggled&#13;
Risi wandered&#13;
back into the village.&#13;
It wasn’t grandmother,&#13;
so it turned out,&#13;
but rather a handsome&#13;
ghost she didn’ trecognize.&#13;
¯ He grabbed her by the arm&#13;
and pulled her off deep into the forest -&#13;
¯ highup on the mountainside where people&#13;
¯ ordinarily are afraid to walk. Risi admit-&#13;
" ted that she had "cooked" for the spirit.&#13;
¯ Her folks immediately suspected that she&#13;
¯ and the ghost had had sex. When a girl ¯&#13;
¯ cooks for aguy, she’ slikely offeringmore&#13;
than just yams and taro.&#13;
¯ Somehow Risi managed to escape and&#13;
¯ find her way back home. Her family was&#13;
¯ going to have to be on guard the next few&#13;
¯ months to make sure that Risi hadn’t&#13;
¯ come home with a spirit child in her&#13;
¯ Womb. ¯&#13;
That was her story at least, and none&#13;
¯ doubted it - except me, just a little, but&#13;
¯ only becauseI’veneverrunintoanyhorny ¯&#13;
¯ ghosts myself. But when Henry told me&#13;
about his Gay ghost, I wondered if per-&#13;
" haps randiness is why the spirit refuses tO&#13;
¯ leave the building. The guy. got no saris-&#13;
" faction while aliVe; he now haunts lzs&#13;
¯ luckier neighbors ~ staring, for example,&#13;
," at Henry’s handsomebehind. Maybe&#13;
¯ Henry should ask the ghost out on a date. ¯&#13;
Hall6ween would be perfect.&#13;
Last but hardly least is the failure of the&#13;
bookstores to defend First Amendment&#13;
protections. What is most troubling was&#13;
the corporate response which was not to&#13;
reassure Gay &amp; Lesbian customers that&#13;
our books will not be wrapped but which&#13;
was to defend their fight to shrinkwrap&#13;
books. Wrapping books, even if you can&#13;
open them (if you knOW to ask)C-sends a&#13;
message that some subjects a~ebad. It&#13;
isn’ t grand censorship in theformofmaking&#13;
the materials unavailable but it is petit&#13;
censorship and it is still objectionable~&#13;
This may seem a small issue - after ,all&#13;
it’ s just a bit of shrinkwrap -but this is&#13;
how rights are lost, through a slow process&#13;
of erosion. Citizens might want to&#13;
contact their councilors and demand that&#13;
we keep our police officers out of the&#13;
bookstores (and who knows what next,&#13;
our libraries?) and out on the streets.&#13;
Timothy .W. Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fight for&#13;
justice &amp; equality for&#13;
Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury,&#13;
Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointmenls are available.&#13;
Are You Gay. or Bisex.ual?&#13;
Are YOU Native Amer|can?.&#13;
Tulsa’s Two-Spirited Indian Me¢n’s _ /&#13;
~uEpvpeonrtinGgrosuupppisorhtgerreoufoprmyoeue,tings ~j ’-&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops ~!~&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free H V testing&#13;
For information callTulsaNative American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
IGTA member&#13;
Call 341.6866&#13;
nternationa&#13;
Toursformoreinformation.&#13;
Massage Therapy Services&#13;
Edgar O. Cruz, L.M.T.&#13;
Pager: 918-889-5255&#13;
Voice Mail: 918-697-9282&#13;
Lic. #C4133&#13;
Country Club Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
David Kauskey&#13;
3310 E. 51st, 747-0236, Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pm&#13;
:T]ulsa !s on!y&#13;
professional&#13;
body-piercing&#13;
College Hill&#13;
Presbyterian&#13;
Church&#13;
In response to God’ s Love,&#13;
College Hill Presbyterian Church&#13;
is a community of God’ s people&#13;
called to tall others the&#13;
Gospel of Jesus Christ&#13;
through worship,&#13;
service, and evangelism.&#13;
To nurture our faith, we gather for&#13;
worship, prayer,&#13;
study and fellowship.&#13;
Trusting in a living; loving God,&#13;
we seek to become a compassionate&#13;
voice for peace and justice.&#13;
Our congregation welcomes all&#13;
persons Who respond in trust and&#13;
obedience to God’s grace&#13;
in Jesus Christ,&#13;
"and d~sire to become part.lof tlie~&#13;
membership and ministry&#13;
of Christ’ s church.&#13;
Membership is open to all people&#13;
regardle..~s of race, ethnic origin,&#13;
worldly dondition,madtal statuS, or&#13;
, ’i, s~xual orientation.&#13;
Sunday Worship 11am&#13;
712 S. Columbia Ave., 592-5800&#13;
(One block west of Delaware and&#13;
the University of Tulsa Campus)&#13;
by Karin Gregory ;&#13;
By now votes are tallied and the facts ¯&#13;
speak for themselves: Dr. Laura ."&#13;
Schlessinger’ s television talk show, after ¯&#13;
being on air only three weeks, is going ;&#13;
into hiatus for "retooling."&#13;
Doesn’ t that mean a major&#13;
make-over? It does in my&#13;
vocabulary. It also means&#13;
"trouble.’"&#13;
This is probably-due&#13;
more to the fact that Dr.&#13;
Laura’s show is BORING&#13;
instead of controversial,&#13;
and has also landed dead&#13;
last in ratings among talk&#13;
shows on television (and&#13;
among many other shows&#13;
as well). However, I figure&#13;
that the people .over at&#13;
stopdrlaura.com are giving&#13;
themselves a pat on the&#13;
back for a job well done&#13;
since their first two protests,&#13;
in Chicago and Dallas&#13;
back in April, made the public more&#13;
aware of this woman’ s dangerous rantings.&#13;
These two major city demonstrations&#13;
weren’t the last, and August 26, Austin,&#13;
Texas held a protest outsideits CBS affiliate&#13;
station, KEYE-TV, "The Eye of Austi..".&#13;
The protest was organized chiefly by&#13;
stopdrlauraanstin.com. How do I know&#13;
this? I was on the front lines. Having&#13;
broken my footjust a week earlier, I went&#13;
down to march (as best I could) with other&#13;
Gay/lesbian/straight concerned citizens&#13;
who didn’t want the show to air at its&#13;
scheduled 4 pm ttme slot. Their reason?&#13;
CbJldren at home, many without parental&#13;
supervision, would watch Dr. Laura and&#13;
receive her message, thus ensuring that&#13;
homophobia stays alive and dangerous in&#13;
Texas. Every Fundamentalist Baptist is&#13;
ensuring that as we speak. We don’ t need&#13;
more help from a television talk show&#13;
wannabe.&#13;
Meeting with the assistant of&#13;
stopdrlaura.com, Andy Thayer, was an&#13;
experience. He’ s been to most of the Dr.&#13;
Laura protests in most of the states in the&#13;
country. That’ s lots of traveling. When I&#13;
heard there would be about one hundred&#13;
protesters, I was exhilarated and stopped&#13;
thinking about the pain inmy footandmy&#13;
hideous lack of sleep from the night before.&#13;
But as 11 am approached, it was&#13;
obvious there would only be about30--35&#13;
participants in this protest. The demonstmtionoutside&#13;
the television stationlasted&#13;
approximately anhour, alongafairlykigh&#13;
traffic areain Austin. Mostcars that drove&#13;
by included sympathizers, those agaiast&#13;
the Dr. Laura talk show.&#13;
Weheard from a local Christian miaister&#13;
who had recently officiated at the&#13;
funeral of a Gay boy killed in a bashing.&#13;
He said that for a week after the funeral he&#13;
listened to a local Christian radio station&#13;
and heard endless Gay bashing from the&#13;
"Christians." He made the point that not&#13;
only should weblame Dr. Laurafor spreading&#13;
hatred about Gays, and this radio&#13;
station, but we should ultimately look to&#13;
ourselves to see what .we could do to&#13;
prevent this abysmal crime from happening&#13;
again. Withonly35protesters present,&#13;
it looked like the rest of the Gay/Lesbian]&#13;
Bisexual/Transgendered community of&#13;
Austin just didn’t care. Do you care? Do&#13;
you have what it takes to stand on a street&#13;
corner and protest? Sure you do. That’s&#13;
the easy part. The difficulty comes in our&#13;
everyday lives when we continually hide&#13;
"...Do you have what it&#13;
takes to stand on a street&#13;
corner and protest~&#13;
Sure you do.&#13;
That’s the easy part.&#13;
The dlffieulty comes in&#13;
our everyday lives when&#13;
we eontlnuaily hide who&#13;
we are, or when we just&#13;
want someone else to take&#13;
up the cause because it’s&#13;
become too dlffieult&#13;
beatin, our heads aCalnst&#13;
that wall.. 7&#13;
who we are, or when we just want someone&#13;
else to take up the cause: because it’ s&#13;
become too difficult beating our heads&#13;
against that wall. Having that door&#13;
slammed in our face. Being turned down&#13;
for thatjob. Tryingto reach&#13;
a community that should&#13;
understand one another,&#13;
but instead tries to fight&#13;
forMs/her space and keeps&#13;
others out. Only when we&#13;
stand united will anyone&#13;
take us seriously. Look&#13;
what that’s done for the&#13;
religious right. They have&#13;
a whole damn political&#13;
party on their side. Join&#13;
the battle for yourselves&#13;
and your partners. As they&#13;
sing in Les Miserables,&#13;
"This is the music of a&#13;
people who will not be&#13;
slaves again." Join in the&#13;
crusade. You won’ t know&#13;
what you’ re missing until&#13;
you do.&#13;
¯ Lesbian couples break up; separate--It&#13;
was bound to happen, you say. It couldn’ t&#13;
" last forever, especially in Hollywood.&#13;
: Well, one couple breaks up ("I could have&#13;
¯ seen that coming from day one") and one&#13;
¯&#13;
couple separates ("This was out of left&#13;
." field"). The former quote could be said of&#13;
¯ the break up of the three and a half year ¯&#13;
relationship ofEllen DeGeneres andAnne&#13;
; Heche. Umm, not too surprising. In fact,&#13;
¯ since thenews was armounced1as tmonth,&#13;
tabloids have announced the reasons for&#13;
¯ the breakup: Ellen Finds Anne in Bed&#13;
¯ With Another Woman; Ellen Finds Anne&#13;
¯ in Bed With Another Man; Ellen’s Ex&#13;
Pregnant. I-Immm, why doesn’t ELLEN&#13;
¯ get any action? The day the couple an-&#13;
. nouncedtheirbreakup, A~tme Heche"sup-&#13;
¯ posedly" went for a drive in very sunny, ¯&#13;
hot weather with the top down on the&#13;
¯ convertible. Not too swift for someone&#13;
: SO fair skinned. Later, after "suppos-&#13;
¯ edly" suffering heat stroke,Anneknocked&#13;
¯&#13;
on a stranger’s door and began talking&#13;
." about God and spaceships. Ellen, if you&#13;
¯ were theonewhokickedherout, all Ihave ¯&#13;
tosayis: Waytogo, Grrl!&#13;
; More surprising was the. separation of&#13;
; rock star Melissa Etheridge and ten year&#13;
¯ partnerJulieCypher. Again, anotherpress&#13;
." announcement.Whatisitaboutthesefour&#13;
¯ women that makes them tell all to the&#13;
¯ world? In this case, Etheridge and Cypher&#13;
¯ split on extremely amicable terms, even&#13;
; buying two separate houses next d~or to&#13;
;- one another, so their children won t feel&#13;
the separation. They will still have their&#13;
¯ two mommies beside them. Well, that’ s a ¯ way to do divorce all right, especially&#13;
¯ withchildreninvolved.However, theway&#13;
¯ Melissaimmortalizes her andJulie’ s fights ¯&#13;
into her songs, I can’ t wait for Melissa’ s&#13;
¯ next album, already being recorded.&#13;
¯ Can anything be learned from these ¯&#13;
separations?Well,if you’re a Witty come-&#13;
" dielme, don’ t get involved with a flalse. If&#13;
¯ you have one of the strongest pers0nali-&#13;
," ties on the planet, then maybe you&#13;
¯ shouldn’tgetinvolvedwiththeotherstron- ¯&#13;
gest personaiiiy on the planeL in other&#13;
¯ words, You can "come to:my windoff"&#13;
¯ because ’Tmthe only one",b~tyoubett~&#13;
not be"stronger thmi me" or I n~ighthave&#13;
¯&#13;
a "breakdown."&#13;
¯ Gregory, a former schoolteacher and&#13;
¯ journalist is based in Ft. Worth. Her cur¯&#13;
rent theme song appears to beJillSobule ’s&#13;
"I Kissed a Girl."&#13;
Walk for Life 2000&#13;
8th Annual&#13;
Tul,sa AIDS Walk&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7, 9:30am&#13;
Veteran’s Park, 21st &amp; Boulder&#13;
For more information, call 585-5551.&#13;
Donations will be increased by 50% with&#13;
matching dollars through the generosity of&#13;
the Elton John AIDS Foundation, The Walk is&#13;
sponsored by the Community Service&#13;
Council, and will benefit the Tulsa Community&#13;
AIDS Partnership (TCAP).&#13;
The Walk is an all volunteer effort and there&#13;
are no administrative costs.&#13;
Tulsa Family News is proud to donate this advertisement in support of the Walk&#13;
and the Tulsa Community AIDS Partnership (TCAP)</text>
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                <text>[2000] Tulsa Family News, October 2000; Volume 7, Issue 10</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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Karin Gregory&#13;
Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers&#13;
Hughston Walkinshaw</text>
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              <text>Two Teens Indicted In&#13;
Murder of Gay Black Man&#13;
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) - Two 17-year-old Marion&#13;
County boys were indicted at the end of August for the&#13;
murder of a Gay Black man. Jared Wilson and David&#13;
Allen Parker ofGrantTown were each charged as adults&#13;
with first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit&#13;
murder in the July 4 death of Arthur "J.R." Warren.&#13;
They are accused of beating and kicking Warren, 26,&#13;
then running over him with a Camaro to disguise his&#13;
injuries as a hit-and-run. If convicted, they could be&#13;
sentenced to life in prison.&#13;
A 15-year,old witness, Jason Shoemaker of Grant&#13;
Town, has been charged as a juvenile with being an&#13;
accessory after the fact for allegedly helping the older&#13;
boys dispose of evidence. Conviction on that misdemeanor&#13;
offense could mean up to.a year in jail.&#13;
Shoemaker has testified that Warren was beaten and&#13;
kicked with steel-toed boots in a.hous¢.then put in a car.&#13;
He was still alive and begging t6 be taken home when&#13;
the other boys dragged him from the car on a Grant&#13;
Town road to kick and beat him some more. Parker then&#13;
drove over Warren four times, the boy said.&#13;
see Murder, p. 11&#13;
Los Angeles Dod.gers&#13;
ApOlogize to Lesbians&#13;
WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) - The Dodgers&#13;
apologized Wednesday to a Lesbian couple ejected&#13;
from Dodger Stadium earlier this month after the two&#13;
shared a kiss during a game against the Chicago Cubs.&#13;
’‘i was troubled.., because ofwhatit implied about the&#13;
Dodger organization," said team President Bob&#13;
Gratiano. "It means a lot to me that you are Dodger&#13;
fans," he said to Danielle Goldey and Meredith Kott.&#13;
"We will continue to do the right thing," Graziano&#13;
said.&#13;
The two were escorted out of the ballpark on Aug. 8.&#13;
Goldey and Kott say they were not initially told why&#13;
they were being ejected, but later they were told that&#13;
someone complained and said children should not be&#13;
exposed to "those people."&#13;
The couple said their companions, a heterosexual&#13;
couple, also kissedbut werenot ejeeted. Because ofthis,&#13;
they felt the action of the eight security guards was&#13;
discrimination.&#13;
Besides the public apology, the Dodgers donated&#13;
5,000 tickets to three Gay and Lesbian organizations&#13;
and promised sensitivity training for their employees.&#13;
’’I think they stepped up to the plate more than they&#13;
had to,"Goldey said. "All we wanted was an apology ...&#13;
I’m very proud to be a Dodger fan."&#13;
’’I’m extremely happy with the results," Kott said.&#13;
The couple was going to file a civil rights lawsuit if&#13;
the Dodgers didn’t apologize, said their lawyer Bernie&#13;
Bemheim. see Courts, p. 3&#13;
U_! DIRECTORY P. 2 ~ EDITORIAL P. 3&#13;
US &amp; WORLD NEWS P. 4&#13;
~,~ HEALTH NEWS P. 6&#13;
Z ENTERTAINMENT P. 8&#13;
GAY STUDIES P. 10&#13;
Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsans, Our Families + Friends&#13;
Tulsa + US Protests of Boy&#13;
Scouts’ Anti-Gay Policies&#13;
" OKC/TULSA (AP/TFN) - A handful of demonstrators asking&#13;
¯ the Boy Scouts to stop discriminating against Gay scouts and&#13;
" leaders took their message to the streets Monday, August 21,&#13;
° targeting motorists at a busy intersection not far from the Last&#13;
o FrontierBoy Scout headquarters inOklahomaCity (OKC) andin ¯&#13;
front of the Indian Nations Council in the Brookside neighbor-&#13;
" hood in Tulsa.&#13;
The Tulsa and Oklahoma City rallies were part of an effort&#13;
¯ plannedin atleast 36 cities and 21 states initiated by Scouting For&#13;
All, a national nonprofit organization formed by Steven Cozza,&#13;
" 15, of Petaluma, Calif. Cozza started Scouting For All several&#13;
¯ years ago after his father was removed as a Scout leader for&#13;
.-. supporting Gay civil rights.&#13;
Cozza, who said neither he nor his father is Gay, left the Boy&#13;
¯ Scouts about six months ago after becoming an Eagle Scout.&#13;
¯ Cozz~ said he no could longer support the program because it&#13;
discriminates. "Scoutmasters are people to look up to. What’s&#13;
" wrong with being influenced by a Gay man? Someone’s sexual-&#13;
: ity has nothing to do with his character or personality," he said.&#13;
¯ The dozen OKC protesters held signs that read "Scouting&#13;
¯ should be for everyone", "Open scouting to Gays" and "Honk for&#13;
~ Gay Boy Scouts". People honked. In Oklahoma City, a couple of&#13;
: people shouted obscenities and one truck driver shouted, "You&#13;
[ guys are wrong"but i,n Tulsa, most of those commenting as they&#13;
¯ drove by were supportive of the demonstrators who averaged&#13;
-" about 20 over a couple hour period.&#13;
." Kent Doss, a 21-year-old student a! the University of Okla-&#13;
¯ homa and an Eagle Scout, attended both the Oklahoma City and&#13;
° the Tulsa protests. Doss, who is Gay, became an Eagle Scout in&#13;
¯ 1997. He had been in scouting since the third grade. "Even after&#13;
." that many years of hard work it’s just not worth it because of the&#13;
~ negative influence," he said. ’’It is so hypocritical Everything I&#13;
¯ grew up with has been ignored," Doss said. ’q don’t want to&#13;
." abandon the scouts. I want to be apart of the dialogue, but I’m not&#13;
~ proud of scouting." In Tulsa, Doss did turn in his uniform, his&#13;
¯ merit badges and his Eagle Scout award.&#13;
¯ In June, the US Supreme Cotvt ruled 5-4 that Boy Scouts of&#13;
~ America (BSA) can bar Gays from serving as troop leaders.&#13;
¯ see Scouts, p. 2&#13;
Walk For Life 200-0&#13;
-" TULSA (TFN) - For the pasl seven years, AIDS activists,&#13;
[ caregivers, people living with AIDS/HIV, and others have come&#13;
: together to walk to raise money for I-IIV/AIDS care-giving and&#13;
¯ education agencies. Their services include n~lical assistance,&#13;
_" prevention efforts, transportation, support groups, and home and&#13;
." hospice care.&#13;
¯ Walkers are asked to solicit pledges prior to this year’s event&#13;
[ and to bring their pledge sheets and those donations to the Walk&#13;
_" which will be held on Saturday, Oct. 7, at 9:30am at Veterans’&#13;
¯ Park, located at 21st &amp; Boulder. The Walk will begin and end at&#13;
: the park going down the River Park to the 31 st Pedestrian Bridge&#13;
." and returning.&#13;
¯ Donations to Walk for Life 2000, the 8th Annual Tulsa AIDS&#13;
¯ Walk will be increased by 50% with matching dollars through the&#13;
: generosity of the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The Walk is&#13;
~ sponsored by the Community Service Council, and will benefit&#13;
.- the Tulsa Community AIDS Partnership (TCAP).&#13;
¯ The Walk is an all volunteer effort and there are no admiuistra-&#13;
"_ five costs. For more information or for pledge forms, call 585-&#13;
¯ 5551.&#13;
:US Court Rules Gay Mexican&#13;
¯ Citizen Eligible for U,S, Asylum&#13;
[ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A cross-dressing, Gay Mexican man&#13;
¯ persecuted in his homeland is entitled to asylum in the United&#13;
¯ States, a federal appeals panel ruled in August.&#13;
-" The decision by three judges of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of&#13;
¯ Appeals expanded the social circumstances of persecution that&#13;
¯ immigration officials must consider during asylum hearings.&#13;
¯ Federal. courts have already allowed asylum for a variety of&#13;
¯ political and social reasons, including a woman’s fear of genital&#13;
: mutilation in her African homeland. Just last month, the 9th&#13;
¯ Circuit ruled that an Armenian who says he has was given an&#13;
¯ ultimatum to become a Communist or leave Armenia deserved&#13;
¯ another bid for asylum.&#13;
The case involves Geovanni Hernandez-Montiel, a Gay Mexi-&#13;
" can citizen who dresses and behaves as a woman. Hetestified that&#13;
¯ he was persecuted by his family, school officials and police, who&#13;
" he said sexually assaulted him. see Asylum, p. 9&#13;
Gay Services Center&#13;
Moving to Memorial&#13;
TULSA (TFN) - After several years in Brookside,&#13;
Tulsa’s Gay Community Services Center is rdocating&#13;
- likely to a building near 21st and Memorial.&#13;
After the ownership of the current location&#13;
changed, TOHR (Tulsa Oklahomans for Human&#13;
Rights, sponsoring organization of,\the center) had&#13;
to fight a legal battlejust to finish the current lease.&#13;
The new owners have spent considerable funds to&#13;
update the location in order to lease it at much&#13;
higher rates. None of the other original tenants still&#13;
remain.&#13;
TOHR president Greg Gatewood noted that the&#13;
new center will have about the same amount of&#13;
space as the current one but may have slightly&#13;
lower operating costs. The new space will still have&#13;
a Pride Store, the Nancy McDonald Library, and an&#13;
expanded TOHRmembers only free video lending&#13;
library. Volunteers to help prepare for the move&#13;
and to move are quite welcome, Gatewood added&#13;
and can call the Center at 743-4297 for details.&#13;
TOHR events for September include: a protest&#13;
planning meeting to respond to the upcormng visit&#13;
to Tulsa by radio "therapist" Dr. Laura on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. 5th at 7pm at the Center (current location at&#13;
37th &amp; Peoria, 2nd floor), new Center volunteer&#13;
orientation on Wednesday, Sept. 6th at7pm,TOHR&#13;
membership meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 12 at&#13;
7:30pm. This meeting will feature a presentation of&#13;
an A&amp;E (Arts &amp; Entertainment Network) program&#13;
onhate crimes. Votes on the nominating committee&#13;
for next year’s officers and on bylaws revisions&#13;
will also be held. And planning for next year’s&#13;
Pride events, Diversity Festival and Parade will&#13;
begin on Saturday, Sept. 9th at 1 lain at the Center.&#13;
On Friday, Sept. 29, 8pm, there will be a video&#13;
release party for Diversity 2000, a commemorative&#13;
video created by BoyBlue Productions in support&#13;
of TOHR. It will include highlights of all Pride&#13;
Week events including: see Video, p.8&#13;
¯ Florida Politicians Push&#13;
Federal Hate Crime Bill&#13;
- WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Two Republi-&#13;
¯ can congressmen are touting legislation that would&#13;
~ expand the federal government’s rolein investigat-&#13;
~ ing and prosecuting crimes based on sexual often-&#13;
, tation, religion, gender or ethnicity.&#13;
, U.S. Reps. Bill McCollum of Orlando and Mark&#13;
¯ Foley of West Palm Beach said while they may be&#13;
¯ members of a conservative political party, that&#13;
¯ doesn’t mean they find hate crimes against Gays&#13;
¯ and other historically persecuted groups any less&#13;
-" foul than Democrats do. "The issue is not Gay&#13;
: rights, the issue is hate crime," McCollum said&#13;
¯ Tuesday while meeting with Jewish leaders. "When&#13;
¯ someone is brutalized or killed.., it is fundamen-&#13;
: tally wrong."&#13;
¯ The bill would provide grants of up to $100,000&#13;
¯ for the investigation,and prosecution ofhate crimes&#13;
in all 50 states. It also would give federal authori-&#13;
¯ ties the ability to prosecute hate crimes under&#13;
¯ interstate commerce laws.&#13;
o According to the Southern Poverty Law Center,&#13;
¯ Florida ranks second in the nation in the number of&#13;
[ active hate groups. FBI statistics show a total of&#13;
" 7,755 bias-motivated criminal incidents were re-&#13;
. ported in 46 states and the District of Columbia in&#13;
. 1998, down about 10% over 1997.&#13;
Angela Lampert of the Jewish Federation of&#13;
" Palm Beach County said the group strongly sup-&#13;
. ports the bill. ’’We think hate crimes are abhorrent&#13;
¯ and do not need to be tolerated," Lampert said after&#13;
¯ meeting with McCollum and Foley at Temple Beth&#13;
¯ El in West Palm Beach.&#13;
In July, the Senate passed similar legislation as&#13;
¯ an amendment to a defense department appropria-&#13;
" tions bill. This adds offenses motivated by sexual&#13;
; orientation, sex or disability to the list of crimes&#13;
¯ covered under federal law. McCollum, chair of the&#13;
¯ House Subcommittee on Crime, and Foley hope to&#13;
¯ pass the House version in the same way.&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Chasers, 4812 E. 33&#13;
*CW’s, 1737 S. Memorial&#13;
*Club Cherry Bomb, 1926 E. Pine&#13;
*Club Vortex, 2182 S. Sheridan&#13;
Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
*The Star, 1565 Sheridan&#13;
*Renegades!Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main&#13;
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial&#13;
*Tool BOX, 1338 E.’ 3rd&#13;
*The Yellow Brick Road Pub; 2630 E. 15th&#13;
;712-2324&#13;
610-5323&#13;
583-2119&#13;
835-2376&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
834,4234&#13;
585-3405&#13;
660-0856&#13;
584- t308&#13;
749-1563&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Advanced Wird~ss &amp;~PCS,Digital Cdlular&#13;
Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71&#13;
Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 5231 E. 41&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. P~oria&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria~&#13;
*Cheap Thrills, 2640 E. 1 lth&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
.747-1508&#13;
743-1000&#13;
250-5034&#13;
665-4580&#13;
712-1122&#13;
712-9955&#13;
494-2665&#13;
743-5272&#13;
746-0313&#13;
295-5868&#13;
581-0902, 743-4117&#13;
622-0700&#13;
749-3620&#13;
744-5556&#13;
838-8503&#13;
369-8555&#13;
584-0337, 712-9379&#13;
592-0460&#13;
744-9595&#13;
610-0880&#13;
628-3709&#13;
808-8026&#13;
742- 1460&#13;
459-9349&#13;
744-7440&#13;
745-1111&#13;
341-6866&#13;
712-2750&#13;
582-3018&#13;
747-0236&#13;
582-8460&#13;
599-8070&#13;
747-5466&#13;
585-1234&#13;
584-3112&#13;
663-5934&#13;
-664-2951&#13;
838-7626&#13;
743 -4297&#13;
747-5932&#13;
834-0617&#13;
747-4746&#13;
749-6301&#13;
26o-7829.&#13;
481-0558&#13;
835-5563&#13;
743-1733&#13;
665-2222&#13;
592-0767&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 331 t S. Peoria&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sheridan&#13;
Encompass Travel, 13161H N. Memorial&#13;
.Ross Edward Salon&#13;
Events Unlimited, 507 S. Main&#13;
Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906,E. 55th PI.&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st&#13;
Leatme M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E Skelly&#13;
*International Tours&#13;
Jacox ANmal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th&#13;
David Kauskey, Country Club Barbering&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E.. 15&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 308 South Kenosha&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo&#13;
*The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2nd floor&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, PUB 696, 74101&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-7921,&#13;
Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis&#13;
Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling&#13;
*Wherehouse Music,,5150 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Whittier News Stand, 1 N. Lewis&#13;
www.gaytulsa.org - website for Tulsa Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, PUB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
All Souls,Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria. 743~2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. PUB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center, 2207 E. 6 583-7815&#13;
B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa United Min. Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th P1. &amp; Florence&#13;
Church of the Restoration UU, 1314 N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*Community of Hope Church, 2545 S: Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa- Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, PUB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
*Free Spirit Women’s Center, call for location &amp;info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, PUB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
PUB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@ earthlink.net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Seal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn. Karin Gregory, Barry Hensley, J.-P.&#13;
Legrandbouche, Lamont Lindstrom, Esther Rothblum, Mary&#13;
Schepers, Hughston Walkinshaw&#13;
" Member of The Associated Piess ...........&#13;
Issued on orbefore the let of each month~2the endre contents&#13;
of this pubhcation are protected by US copyright I998 by&#13;
T~ ~1 Nt,w,t and may not be reproduced either in&#13;
whole or in part without written permission from the publisher.&#13;
Publication of a name or photo does not indicate a&#13;
person’ s sexual orientation. Correspondence is assumedto be&#13;
for publication unless otherwise noted, must be signed &amp;&#13;
becomes the sole property of Tt,~ /:,~ Ntsu4~ Each&#13;
reader is entitled to 4 copies of each edition at distribution&#13;
points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., PUB 8542, 74101&#13;
HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd.&#13;
*Tulsa C.A.R.E.S., 3507 E. Admiral&#13;
Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education&#13;
*Houseofthe Holy SpiritMinstries, 1517 S. Memorial&#13;
*MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral P1.&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, PUB 14068, 74159&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), PUB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa&#13;
PFLAG, PUB 52800, 74152&#13;
*Planned Parenthood, -1007 S. Peoria&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8&#13;
St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati&#13;
St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st&#13;
*St. Jerome’s Parish Church, 205 W. King&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430 S. Boulder&#13;
*TNAAPP (Native American men), Indiau Health Care&#13;
Tulsa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15&#13;
582-0438&#13;
583-6611&#13;
834-4194&#13;
481-1111&#13;
834-8378&#13;
224-4754&#13;
838-1715&#13;
748-3111&#13;
365-5658&#13;
749-4901&#13;
587-7674&#13;
749-4195&#13;
584-2325&#13;
425-7882&#13;
492-7140&#13;
582-3088&#13;
583-7171&#13;
582-7225&#13;
595-4105&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
Tulsa Okla. for Human Rights, c/o The Pride Center 743-4297&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform~Leather Seekers Assoc. 298-0827&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Hoor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Community College Campuses&#13;
*Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105 743-4297&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity, 3355 S. Jamestown 749-8833&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
Bardesville Public Library,, 6"00 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 3209 NW Expressway 405-848-2667&#13;
Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
TAHLEQUAH&#13;
Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900&#13;
Green Country AIDS Coalition, PUB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001 N. Grand&#13;
HIV’testing every other Tt~es. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
Autumn Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23 501-253-7734&#13;
Jim &amp; Brent’s Bistro, 173 S Main 501-253-7457&#13;
DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St. .501-253-6807&#13;
Fanerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St. 501-253-5445&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring 501"-253-9337&#13;
Seek to Go!, PC Specialist, PUB 429 501-253-2776&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery 501-253-5332&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans 501-624-6646&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East 501-253-6001&#13;
White Light, 1 Center St. 501-253-4074&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134 417-623-4696&#13;
* is where you can trmd TFN. Not all are Gay-owned butall are Gay-friendly.&#13;
Hesaid he first thought the Dodgers might&#13;
have a policy against Gay and Lesbian&#13;
couples showing affectionin theball park.&#13;
"I’m frankly shocked," Bernheim said.&#13;
’q’heir response is atypical and outstanding."&#13;
He said the Dodgers have donemore&#13;
to make amends than any other corporation&#13;
he’s dealt with.&#13;
Goldey and Kott have been invited to&#13;
sit behind home plate to make up for the&#13;
game they missed.&#13;
¯ - - "It i-s not trivial-to-be thrown ouf’Of&#13;
p.u,b’,!.]c..p.l~ac:eb~as~ed Of, who YOU "are,"s"d&#13;
Jon Da~cids0n 0f the Lambda L~g~i’ D~-:&#13;
fense and: Edlacafion Fund, a Gay advocacy&#13;
group. ’q’his result is a home run for&#13;
all concerned."&#13;
The ruling may also permit the 6.2-mib&#13;
lion-member organization to reject Gays&#13;
as members. The Boys Scouts consider&#13;
homosexuality contrary to their oath .requiring&#13;
scouts tube "morally straight:"&#13;
The90?ye~ff-Oldorganization says its goal&#13;
is to ’l~iS~’itle educational programs for&#13;
boys and young adults to build character,&#13;
to train in the responsibilities of participating&#13;
citizenship and to devdop personal&#13;
fitness.¯&#13;
EdmrddresidentJustin Spears, aformer&#13;
Boy Scout l~ader, said he doesn’t know if&#13;
he want~.:..Ms 8-year-old son to become a&#13;
Boy Scoii~ because of the stance against&#13;
Gays. "Even though they have a legal&#13;
mandate, this discrimination needs to be&#13;
stopped," he said.&#13;
In Tulsa, longtime PFLAG (Parents,&#13;
Families and Friends of Lesbians and&#13;
GayS) activist Cathy Hinkle marched and&#13;
spoke ofhow her Gay son was a scout but&#13;
would have been barred under the BSA&#13;
policy. Hinkle was joined for part of the&#13;
protest by the new pastor of All Souls&#13;
Unitarian Church.&#13;
The OKC demonstrators marched to&#13;
the headquarters, where former scout&#13;
member Jim Craig, turned in his handbodkin&#13;
prdtest to Jim Russnogle, director&#13;
of field services for the Last Frontier&#13;
Council. "In Boy Scouts I learned a lot&#13;
about Boy Scout law. I believe scout law&#13;
is not being followed," Craig said. "A lot&#13;
of kids:that are Gay might not be tempted&#13;
to co~Iv;uicide if they had more support."&#13;
"&#13;
Russnogle read from a statement that&#13;
said that the Boy Scouts respects their&#13;
rights, and ask that the rights of the BSA&#13;
also be respected. "We believe avowed&#13;
homosexuals should not be role models;"&#13;
Russnogle read. He added that he is sorry,&#13;
that Dose. no longer wants to be consid;,~&#13;
ered an Eagle Scout, "But if that is his&#13;
opinion, I respect that."&#13;
Rob Abiera, owner and operator of&#13;
Ga~,0k~:(0m said thedemonstration was -&#13;
called to show supportfor Gay Boy Scouts&#13;
and Scout Masters and to educate how&#13;
Gay Scouts face discrimination. "We&#13;
know that the Boy Scouts has~been a&#13;
pioneer in reaching out to minorities and,¯.&#13;
should continue that effort in reaching out&#13;
to Gays. It is completely inconsistentwith&#13;
what they have done in the past," Abierav ~&#13;
said.&#13;
Demonstrators were turned away from&#13;
the national Boy Scouts ofAmericaheadquartersMonday&#13;
afterpresenting a 55,000-&#13;
signature petition protesting the&#13;
organization’s ban on Gay troop leaders.&#13;
Fewer than a dozen demonstrators, some&#13;
wearing Boy Scout uniforms, see p. 3&#13;
were met by a security guard and not allowed past the&#13;
front desk. A secretary who refused to give her name said&#13;
she would forward the petition to the organization’s&#13;
president. The protesters hadhoped to talk withleaders of&#13;
the organization or at least schedule a meeting.&#13;
’"vVe’re disappointed," said Dave Rice, a former Scout&#13;
leader who marched in Irving. ’°We don’t like confrontation.&#13;
We like to sit down, shake hands and discuss a&#13;
solution that’s mutually beneficial."&#13;
In Seattle, more than_ 100 people rallied~ in protest&#13;
Monday night. One, former Eagle Scout Doug Barnes,&#13;
said he planned to send hisbadge back. Another, Jon&#13;
Wartes, said he already had done so. "Does the Boy&#13;
Scouts of Americareally understand the hurt that they’re&#13;
doing?" said Wartes, who became an Eagle Scout in 1959&#13;
and wrote part of the Boy Scout handbook.&#13;
At the Washington, D.C. protest, Graham Segroves&#13;
wore his Boy Scout shirt complete with his Eagle Scout&#13;
badge and other honors. Now with the National Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Task Force, Segroves, 25, said he did not realize&#13;
he was Gay until he left the scouts eight years ago.&#13;
Segroves said he hopes President Clinton will agree to&#13;
a task force request thathe resignhis honorary presidency&#13;
of the Boy Scouts He also is watching for congressional&#13;
action on a proposed "Scouting f0~ All" act, which seeks&#13;
to revoke the Boy Scouts’ congre~slbhal charter.&#13;
The Supreme Court decision has ~IS0 left compames&#13;
that donate to the Boy Scouts of America in a quandary:&#13;
their employment policies contradict the Boy Scouts’&#13;
court-upheld right toban Gay troop members. The stance&#13;
already has cost the Scouts financial support from companies&#13;
such as Levi Strauss &amp; Co: arid Wells Fargo.&#13;
Others, concerned about hurting the beneficiaries of such&#13;
funding - the boys themselves - are w~ighing their&#13;
options.&#13;
Chase Manhattan Corp. is considering revoking its&#13;
contributions. ’XDn the face of it, some issues appear to be&#13;
in conflict with our commitment to diversity," spokesman&#13;
Jim Finn said. ’%Ve will make a final determination&#13;
on this soon. It’s notsomething we are going to let rest for&#13;
a long time." Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. in New York, which&#13;
gives between $100,000 and $150,000 a year, is "actively&#13;
reviewing" its relationship with the Scouts, said spokesman&#13;
Joe Cohen.&#13;
Media company Knight Ridder has asked "that funds it&#13;
gives to the UnitedWay notbe directed to the Boy Scouts&#13;
because it conflicts "with the company’s philosophy on&#13;
people and di~cersity, and the company could not support&#13;
such a discriminatory stance," said Polk Laffoon, vice&#13;
president of corporate relations.&#13;
The Tulsa Area United Way (l’AUW)does fund the&#13;
Indian Nations Council of the BSA. TAUW’s director,&#13;
Kathleen Coan, at a mid-summer news conference was&#13;
asked, "since TAUW doesn’t fund racist or anti-semitic&#13;
organizations, why it funds non-profits (BSA, Big Brothers&#13;
and Big Sisters of Green Country, the American Red&#13;
Cross) which discriminate against Lesbian and Gay&#13;
Tulsans?" Coan, responding with obvious anger,, stated&#13;
that she was "quite proud" of thefunding decisions which&#13;
TAUWhas made, and made no effort to explain orjustify&#13;
those decisions.&#13;
Steve Tumbo, of the public relations firm Sctmake,&#13;
Brookey Turnbo, and a recent addition to the Tulsa Area&#13;
United Way board was present at that press conference&#13;
and also reacted angrily to questiond aboutTAUW bias.&#13;
Mr. Turnbo, a longtime supporter of the National&#13;
Conference for Community and Justice, a Tulsa "human&#13;
rights" organization with a history of anti-Gay discrimination,&#13;
had promised to respond to inquiries about&#13;
TAUW’s funding of anti-Gay groups if the concerns&#13;
were expressed by letter. To date, TFN has received no&#13;
response to a letter sent in April.&#13;
Turnbo also was the organizer a few years ago of a&#13;
conference which claimed to be about diversity butwhich&#13;
failed to include Lesbians and Gay men in any of its&#13;
planning and Turubo also refused to alter the event even&#13;
when the matter was brought to his attention and individuals&#13;
were willing to volunteer to help correct the&#13;
exclusion.&#13;
Tumbo’s firm enjoys a privileged relationship with&#13;
Tulsa’s establiskment frequently working closely with&#13;
Tulsa mayor, M. Susan Savage, the Chamber of Commerce&#13;
and Tulsa Public Schools, frequently being involved&#13;
in bond and other elections.&#13;
Assault at Rose Hill by Tom Neal, editor/publisher&#13;
It was a picture perfect "photo op." The rabbi, draped&#13;
with his prayer shawl, was flanked one one side by&#13;
Mouzon Biggs of Boston Avenue Methodist Church,&#13;
Black pastor Dr. McCutchen, and the Bishop (Catholic)&#13;
of Tulsa, Edward Slattery, and on the other side by our&#13;
mayor, M. Susan Savage, and Sheryl Siddiqui of Tulsa’s&#13;
Islamic Society.&#13;
.M1 were gathered in the 100 plus degree heat and sun&#13;
to condenm a horrible act of desecration: the toppling of&#13;
Jewish tombstones in Rose Hill Cem-&#13;
: the Nadonal Conference of Christians and Jews) sends&#13;
¯ letters to the World condemning firemen who put Chris-&#13;
" tian holiday decorations up and condemns anti-Semetic&#13;
¯ attacks on Joe Lieberman but never to my knowledge has&#13;
¯ responded publicly to attacks on Tulsa’s Gay Commu-&#13;
¯ nity Center, to anti-Gay Oklahoma legislation, to the&#13;
¯ beating of Orr and Beauchamp, or even to the murder of&#13;
¯ Mathew Sheppard.&#13;
However, the organization has engaged in deliberate&#13;
¯&#13;
and conscious acts of anti-Gay discrimination, most&#13;
recently at an event at Bigg’s BOston&#13;
etery. And Rabbi Fitzerman of Congregation&#13;
B’nai Emunah put in context&#13;
just precisely how this act hurt, of&#13;
how it invoked memories of Nazi&#13;
atrocities with a story of a road to one&#13;
Nazi labor/death camp being paved&#13;
with Jewish tombstones.&#13;
But when push comes to shove, this&#13;
still was a crime against property - not&#13;
a taking oflife. Was it an assault on the&#13;
psyche of a community? Of course!&#13;
Not unlike the year-in and year-out&#13;
psychic assaults on Gay Tulsans from&#13;
our own elected leaders (members of&#13;
the legislature, our governor, our congressman,&#13;
our sen~ttors, our district&#13;
attorney),as well as from individual~&#13;
like Jonathan Brian Duke, the man&#13;
who was caught in the cemetery. According&#13;
to the Tulsa WorM, Duke had&#13;
been accused of harassing two Gay&#13;
men who lived near him.&#13;
Indeed, ifyouknew who and what to&#13;
look for, Tulsa’s Gay community was&#13;
wall represented in the crowd. I suspect&#13;
that after Jews, we may have been&#13;
the largest single group. There were&#13;
"baby" Gays in rainbow beads and&#13;
: shorts, a young lesbian couple quietly&#13;
: holding hands leaving the ceremony&#13;
] after all was over, establishment Gays&#13;
¯ from the Church of Saint Jerome, even&#13;
somehardyhumanrights activists from&#13;
: Oklahoma City who dropped every-&#13;
: thing to come to be here in solidarity.&#13;
"So when Rabbi Fitzerman&#13;
says he’s grateful to llve in&#13;
an "open eommunlty,"&#13;
one that "embraces&#13;
diversity," "a place of&#13;
profound moral health,"&#13;
I am grateful that for&#13;
Tulsa’s Jewish eommunlty,&#13;
this may finally be true.&#13;
I hope so.&#13;
But for Gay people dearly&#13;
this is not yet true. For&#13;
Gay Tulsans, Tulsa&#13;
remains a place of deep&#13;
hypoerlsy, where our&#13;
tax dollars,&#13;
and our talents are&#13;
greedily taken but our&#13;
exlstenee is mostly&#13;
denied when not&#13;
speeffleally condemned. "&#13;
- Tom Neal&#13;
Amazingly, Rabbi Fitzerman did&#13;
Avenue Methodist Church. And in a&#13;
particularly cynical fundraising ploy,&#13;
NCCJ honored Robert Lorton, owner&#13;
and publisher of the Tulsa WorM, a&#13;
business knownfor at least fifteen years&#13;
for its anti-Gay discriminatory business&#13;
practices, its "humanitarian" of&#13;
the year.&#13;
So when Rabbi Fitzerman says he’s&#13;
grateful to live in an "’open community,"&#13;
one that "embraces diversity,"&#13;
"a place of profound moral health," I&#13;
am grateful that for Tulsa’s Jewish&#13;
community, this may finally be true. I&#13;
hope so.&#13;
But for Gay people clearly this is&#13;
not yet true. For Gay Tulsans, Tulsa&#13;
. remains a place of deep hypocrisy,&#13;
where our tax dollars, and our talents&#13;
are greedily taken but our existence is&#13;
mostly denied when not specifically&#13;
condemned. It is a place where even&#13;
our presence in human rights groups is&#13;
begrudging and is predicated on our&#13;
not getting "’uppity." (Note how these&#13;
groups much prefer to have non-Gay&#13;
Gay advocates like Nancy McDonald&#13;
rather than actually have Gay people at&#13;
the table. Note also that this is no&#13;
cnttcism of Nancy’s good and hard&#13;
work. She’s not responsible for their&#13;
prejudice.)&#13;
And while Gay people seem to get&#13;
the connection between anti-semitism&#13;
and anti-Gay values, the ~luestion remains&#13;
whether Tulsa’s Jewish commention&#13;
Gay people along with Jews, Catholics, Blacks,&#13;
Asians and Hispanic Americans as those .who are attacked&#13;
because we do not fit some "mythological profile"&#13;
of a "true’.’ American. But as a long observer of Tulsa’s&#13;
so-called "human rights" community, it is hard not to be&#13;
somewhat bitter at the contrast between how seriously&#13;
assaults on Tulsa’ s Jewish community are taken as compared&#13;
to those on Tulsa’s Gay commumty.&#13;
Let us merely start with who was on, and who was not&#13;
on, the dais! While there seems to be evidence that Gays&#13;
were also targets 6f Jonathan Brian Duke, and there&#13;
certainly are Gay community leaders who were concerned&#13;
and attending the event, like Father Rick&#13;
Hollingsworth of Saint Jerome, or members of Tulsa&#13;
Oklahomans for Human Rights (TOHR), we were not&#13;
represented.&#13;
Duke had not attacked Cathohcs but the Catholic&#13;
bishop was on the dais. Nor did he attack Methodists but&#13;
Mouzon Biggs was there. Nor had he attacked Blacks but&#13;
one of the most senior Black clergymen was there. Nor&#13;
did he attack Muslims but Siddiqui was invited to the&#13;
dais.&#13;
Can anyone remember when ever our mayor has attended&#13;
a Gay event? She’s usually conveniently out of&#13;
town. Sure she sends her best bud, Hilary Kitz, whom we&#13;
adore but it’s not the same. We did not see her at the&#13;
memorial hdd in City Hall Plaza for Mathew Sheppard,&#13;
nor did she release comment about that crime, or more&#13;
relevantly did she comment on the brutal Brookside&#13;
beating ofTony Orr andTim Beauchamp- indeed a local&#13;
crime. Nor has our mayor responded to now years worth&#13;
of calls for diversity training for police and other city&#13;
workers which actually includes Gay people in the "diversity."&#13;
Nor did she add her voice to the effort to amend&#13;
our state hate crime statute to include "sexual orientalion."&#13;
Local ’’human rights" organizations like the National&#13;
Conference for Community and Justice (NCCJ, formerly&#13;
munity does. While Tulsa’s Jewish community by an3’&#13;
standard is successful in business and in political impact,&#13;
and is influential due to those talents in wild disproportion&#13;
to its numbers, it still seems to bdieve that it cannot&#13;
risk expending its "’capital" to help Gay people. And it is&#13;
also, frankly, a community which has not dealt with its&#13;
own prejudices against Gay people, its homophobia and&#13;
Its heterosexism.&#13;
Part of the reason that things are better in Tulsa forJews&#13;
is that non-Jews made the effort to try to make things&#13;
better. It’s morally right for those still excluded to call on&#13;
those who’ve been helped to turn and to help those still&#13;
left behind. Tulsa’s Jewish community and Tulsa’s Gay&#13;
community have much in common.&#13;
Unlike racial minorities, neither community is an "onsight"&#13;
minority. We are known by our actions, by going&#13;
to our places of worship’or our community centers, or&#13;
businesses. We are subject to similar pressures to just&#13;
"convert." And we share the horror of Nazi persecution,&#13;
a fact finally acknowledged by organizers of the local&#13;
Holocaust interfaith remembrance event this year, albeit&#13;
only after much cajoling and the intervention of one&#13;
blessedly open minded Tulsan, herself the daughter of&#13;
Holocaust survivors.&#13;
The rabbi’s inclusive language is a good start. God&#13;
forbid that there should be a next time for suchan event&#13;
but when next there is a shared stage, an effort at representing&#13;
the"diversity"ofour town, maybe thenone of our&#13;
leaders will be on the dais. And maybe just like the Gay&#13;
people who were in that 100 degree heat, who understand&#13;
that an attack on Jews is an attack on us too, Tulsa’s&#13;
Jewish commumty will throw their influence behind the&#13;
Gay commumty’s efforts for fair treatment by our law&#13;
enforcement system, by our legislature, and by our community&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The God of Israel commands, "... justice,justice, shalt&#13;
thou seek..." You don’t have to be a Jew or a Christian&#13;
to honor these words.&#13;
Universal Florida To&#13;
Offer Partners Benefits&#13;
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Universal Florida will start&#13;
offering health and other benefits to domestic partners,&#13;
both Gayand straight. The benefits, which will&#13;
take effect Oct. 1, also will cover dependents of&#13;
domestic partners.&#13;
’This is a part of our ongoing efforts to recognize&#13;
the diversity of the team members in our workforce&#13;
and to provide an array of benefits and services&#13;
sufficient to be recognized as an employer of choice&#13;
in this very dynamic Orlando labor market," said an&#13;
internal Universal document obtained by The Orlando&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
Walt Disney World Resort, Orlando’s largest employer&#13;
with more than 55,000 workers, has offered&#13;
health benefits to employees’ Gay partners since&#13;
1996. But Disney doesn’t cover heterosexual partners&#13;
of employees tmless they are married.&#13;
Disney doesn’t plan to change its policy regarding&#13;
unmarriedheterosexual partners, said spokesman Bill&#13;
Warren. "It’s our position that there is a legal remedy&#13;
to be’formally married, and Seeg those benefits with&#13;
heterosexual couples," Warren said.&#13;
Universal, the area’s fourth-largest employer with&#13;
11,800 employees, will extend the benefits to any&#13;
domestic, partner 18 or older who has lived with the&#13;
employee for at least six months. In addition, the&#13;
theme park resort’s statement said, partners, must&#13;
have ’~oint responsibility for eachother’s financial&#13;
wdfare and basic living expenses," although it is not&#13;
dear how that would be proved. In addition to medical,&#13;
dental, vision and dependent life insurance, domestic&#13;
partners will be able to use Universal’s employee&#13;
assistance program, sctfolarships and other&#13;
benefits. Employees can enroll their partners in September.&#13;
Hate crimes increase&#13;
11.7% in Los Angeles&#13;
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hatecrimes increased 11.7%&#13;
in Los Angeles County last year, with blacks, Jews&#13;
and Gays the target of most attacks, the. Human&#13;
Relations Commission said. The increase was due in&#13;
part to better reporting of hate crimes, officials said&#13;
recently.&#13;
Last year’s attack on the North Valley Jewish&#13;
Community Center by a gunman led to an "unprecedented&#13;
awareness" ofhate crimes, said RobinToma,&#13;
acting executive director of the county Human Relations&#13;
Commission. Buford O. Furrow Jr., a white&#13;
supremacist, is charged with. shooting to death Filipino-&#13;
American postal worker 3oseph Ileto and then&#13;
wounding five people at the Jewish center.&#13;
Overall in 1999, the report said, 859 crimes motivated&#13;
by race. religion or sexual orientation-were&#13;
reported. That was up 11.7% from 1998. It was the&#13;
second-highest tally in 20 years, behind the peak year&#13;
of’ 1996, when 995 hate crimes were reported.&#13;
The upswing matched a 12% statewide increase in&#13;
hate crimes, announced last month by the state attorney&#13;
general’s office. The crimes ranges from crossbumings&#13;
to killings. Overall, blacks werethe most&#13;
frequent victims of hate crimes, but crimes involving&#13;
religion or sexual orientation saw the largest increases.&#13;
Hate crimes on school campuses .also rose&#13;
sharply for the second year in a row,jumping 58.7%,&#13;
from 46 to 73. Most of the crimes based on religion&#13;
were nonviolent, but more than half of those against&#13;
Gays and Lesbians were violent, the commission&#13;
said.&#13;
Univ. of Minnesota Alum&#13;
Donates for Gay Center&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A University of Minnesota&#13;
alunmus who made a fortune in the computer software&#13;
industry has donated $500,000 to the school for&#13;
an endowed Gay, Lesbian, bisexual and transgender&#13;
studies center.&#13;
The Steven J. Schochet Center for Gay, Lesbian,&#13;
Bisexual and Transgender Studies opened July 1.&#13;
Schochet, a 1959 graduate, said he faced many barriers&#13;
as a Gay man on campus and hopes the donation&#13;
will improve the climate for GLBT students.&#13;
The center will be responsible for coordinating&#13;
graduate studies, establishing archives and starting a&#13;
lecture series and community forums. ’.The goal of&#13;
the center is to enhance the creation of knowledge&#13;
about GLBT lives through academic studies and&#13;
community interaction," said Liunea Stenson,&#13;
Schochet Center program director.&#13;
Texas A&amp;M Waffles&#13;
COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) - A Gay civil&#13;
rights group urged Texas A&amp;M University to implement&#13;
an on-again, off-again ban on discrimination&#13;
again~st Gays. School presidentRay Bowen suspended&#13;
the policy change on Aug. 16, a few hours after it was&#13;
posted on the university’s Web site. In a vaguely&#13;
worded statement, Bowen said the issue needed more&#13;
study.&#13;
In a letter to Bowen, the National Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Task Force said Texas A&amp;M shouldjoin other major&#13;
universities around the state in prohibiting discrimination&#13;
against homosexuals. "Failure to expressly&#13;
-forbid discrimination also sends the message to the&#13;
campus community that (homosexual) people are&#13;
second-class citizens and that discrimination against&#13;
them is acceptable," said ElizabethToledo, executive&#13;
director of the task force.&#13;
Bowen has stated the matter will be reconsidered&#13;
after a better understanding by all confirmed parties&#13;
has been achieved, said university spokesman Lane&#13;
Stephenson.&#13;
"He has directed the matter to go through the Office&#13;
of the Dean of Student Life as the start of the process&#13;
of reconsideration," Stephenson said. "We are already&#13;
starting to have productive discussions within&#13;
the university community."&#13;
On the Net: .Texas A&amp;M University: http://&#13;
www.tamu.edu&#13;
Drag Queens-Invited to&#13;
Olympic Celebrations&#13;
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - The Olympics’ dosing&#13;
ceremony is going to be a drag. Drag queens will be&#13;
part of the Sydney 2000 games’ finale regardless of&#13;
what "right-wing reactionaries" think, ceremonies&#13;
director Ric Birch said at the end of August/&#13;
Themen dressedup in outlandish dresses, wigs and&#13;
makeup, will be "part of one tiny section" of the&#13;
dosing ceremony, a tribute to Australian films including&#13;
the 1994 cult hit ’.The Adventures of Priscilla,&#13;
Queen of the Desert," he said.&#13;
Some of the participants would be dressed in original&#13;
costumes, including a frill-necked lizard outfit&#13;
from the film, which features twodrag queens and a&#13;
transsexual driving a pink bus through Australia’s&#13;
Outback.&#13;
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper&#13;
sparked heated debate onradio shows. One, caller said&#13;
he would trade his dosing ceremony ticket after&#13;
hearing the news.&#13;
Birch directed the opemng ceremony at the 1992&#13;
Barcelona Olympics and was involved in the opener&#13;
at Atlantafour years ago. He said he was annoyed that&#13;
constant leaks were wrecking what should be a surprise&#13;
for the public. "I’m really disappointed at the&#13;
way the mediais gleefully trying to expose the secrets&#13;
that we call surprises," Birch told Australian Broadcasting&#13;
Corp. radio.&#13;
Photographs of the Olympic cauldron being lit in&#13;
rehearsals, which are usually kept under wraps, have&#13;
been printed. Speculation on who will ignite the&#13;
cauldron has intensified.&#13;
Birch said the inclusion of drag queens also reflected&#13;
one of Sydney’s mostcolorful events, the Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Mardi Gras, a Gay pridemarch and street&#13;
carnival that attracts hundreds of thousands of spectators&#13;
each year. "That’s part of Sydney life whether&#13;
(critics) like it or not." Birch said. "For the right-wing&#13;
reactionaries or whatever part of a community is&#13;
..outraged about it - well, they’re always going to be&#13;
outraged."&#13;
Olympics Minister Michael Knight said all the&#13;
plans forthe ceremonies had been approved by the&#13;
organizing committee’s board. "The dosing ceremony&#13;
runs for several hours and has a very different feel to&#13;
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Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
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opening ceremony - it’s a party," he said. "Fhe&#13;
athletes are going to be on the field from the word go&#13;
as part of this giant party celebration: The whole feel&#13;
will be one of great celebration and fi~n."&#13;
Same-sex Marriage Ban&#13;
Appears Headed to Ballot&#13;
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - It appears likely voters will&#13;
get a chance to decide whether to ban same-sex&#13;
marriages in Nebraska: A petition effort to place the&#13;
proposed constitutional an~endment on th~ ballot&#13;
gathered at leas t 19,000 more than the needed 105,214&#13;
signatures:, the Secretary Of State’ s,office announbed.&#13;
The same~sex p~tition was circulated: by the De-&#13;
[fehse: of Marriage Amendment Committee. With&#13;
signatures t¥om 82 counties counted, the total-verified&#13;
was 124,495. About 10% of the signatures were&#13;
determined to be invalid.&#13;
The petition effort was headed by Guyla Mills,&#13;
director of the NebraskaFamily Council and a lobbyist&#13;
for the Nonpartisan Family Coalifon- two groups&#13;
that support the peftion.&#13;
Mills said sheis confident that when all the signatures&#13;
are verified they will have about 45,000 more&#13;
thanwhat is required, and that will deter anyone from&#13;
thinking about challenging them.&#13;
At this time the Nebraska chapter of the American&#13;
Civil Liberges Union has no intention of challenging&#13;
anyof the signatures, even though it remains opposed&#13;
to. the amendment; said ACLU director Tim Butz. A&#13;
group organized to fight]he initiative, called the Vote&#13;
No on DOMA (Defense of Marriage Amendment)&#13;
Committee, also has no plans to challenge the signature&#13;
count. Other groups opposing the effort include&#13;
Nebraska Advocates for Justice &amp; Equality, a nonprofit&#13;
Omaha group, and PFLAG (Parents and Families&#13;
of Lesbians and Gays).&#13;
Butz said theACLU id researching what impact the&#13;
amendment would have on exisfng laws dealing with&#13;
business partnerships and existing legal agreements&#13;
between Gay and Lesbian couples. The ACIJd also is&#13;
looking into what impactit would have on companies&#13;
that offer same-sex health~benefits,-to workers. ¯&#13;
The proposed constitutional amendment will read:&#13;
’~Only marriage between a man and a woman shall be&#13;
valid or recognized in Nebraska. The uniting of two&#13;
persons of the same sex in a civil union, domestic&#13;
partnership, or other similar same-sex relationship&#13;
shall not be valid or recognized in Nebraska.’"&#13;
Nothing in current Nebraska law s.pecifically prohibits&#13;
same-sex marriage. Supporters of the petition&#13;
say it will clarify in the consmutlon that only marriages&#13;
of a man and woman are legal in Nebraska.&#13;
Thirt.y-tl~r.ee states have passed law s or amended their&#13;
const~tutxons to ban same-sex marriages.&#13;
Officials Say No to Two&#13;
Morns on Birth Certificate&#13;
DENVER (AP) -The state health department will&#13;
ask the Colorado Supreme Court to ban Lesbian&#13;
couples from placing both their nmnes on a baby’s&#13;
birth certificate, a health official said. The issue was&#13;
raised after two Boulder District Court judges allowed&#13;
seven Lesbian couples to place their names on&#13;
birth certificates. One of the women in each couple&#13;
was the birth mother. The judges said Colorado law&#13;
allows people who have :no biological,connection to&#13;
"a child tO ~ssume parentalrights ii~ certain situations.&#13;
The Department ofPublic Health and Environment&#13;
appealed, arguing that the judges had overstepped&#13;
their legal authority by creating a new_ kind of pare_ntchild&#13;
relationship.&#13;
"It needs to be the decision of the legislature rather&#13;
than the courts," said Cynthia Honssinger, a director&#13;
in the health department. But the Colorado Court of&#13;
Appeals turned down the health department’s request&#13;
to overturn the Boulder courts. The appellate court&#13;
said the health department didn’t appeal on time nor&#13;
should it have any interest in the matter.&#13;
Honssinger said the health department now plans&#13;
to ask theColorado Supreme Court to look at what the&#13;
Legislature intended when it enacted the Uniform&#13;
Parentage Act. Lawmakers wanted to help single&#13;
mothers get child-support payments from deadbeat&#13;
dads, she said.&#13;
Jeanine Pow, a lawyer representing one of the&#13;
Lesbian couples, said the law traditionally wants&#13;
what is in the "best interest" of the child, which is two&#13;
adults who are responsible for the child. "The health&#13;
department is wasting taxpayer money on punishing&#13;
the children of Lesbian mothers," she said.&#13;
The women in the seven Boulder cases want to&#13;
remain anonymous to protect their clfildren and themselves,&#13;
their lawyers said.&#13;
GayArts Group Sues San&#13;
Antonio; Claims Bias&#13;
SAN-ANTONIO (AP) - A chItural arts 2roup fliat]ost&#13;
Its c~ty fundlng.m 1997 armd 4omplaint~ ,o~er !ts&#13;
+ponsorship of ~i Gay and Lesbiati fihri fest~fil’&#13;
the city to court on accusations of violating the First&#13;
Amendment. Attorneys for the nonprofit Esperanza&#13;
Center contend the City Council cut off the organization&#13;
because of its viewpoints a violation of free&#13;
speech- mad because of pressure from residents who&#13;
told council members they opposed "promoting a&#13;
Gay lifestyle."&#13;
Also Suing the city are two groups under the 13-&#13;
year-old Esperanza’s fiscal umbrella, the San Antonio&#13;
Lesbian andGay Media Project mad the s~nall arts&#13;
gr,o,up VAN&#13;
~lie Esperanza_N~d other plaintiffs were singled&#13;
out by the city because of the viewpoints expressed by&#13;
~he Esperanza ~n a variety of ways, Esperanza lawyer&#13;
Am~; Kastely told U.S. District Judge Orlando L.&#13;
G,qrci~i iff0utlining their case.&#13;
The Esperanza Center filed suit after the council&#13;
voted in September 1997 to stop giving it money.&#13;
Although the couucil reduced funding to most arts&#13;
groups by 15% at the stone time, Esperanza was the&#13;
only one ~hat was cut off altogether.&#13;
Several residents had voiced their opposition to&#13;
financing Esperanza, saying they disapproved of the&#13;
behavior they believed the group was advocating.&#13;
The city’s Cultural Arts Board had recommended&#13;
$62~500 for Esperanza, which had been receiving city&#13;
money for ~even years. But after the council vote, the&#13;
cit)/ i~’ei~aJ:~ment 6f Ar~s .and dultural Affhirs also&#13;
withheld $14,000 from the Texas Commission on the&#13;
Arts, for a total loss of about $76,500.&#13;
Now, the group’s leaders are seeking the money&#13;
they believe they deserve. They’re also seekang an&#13;
order from the court to force the city to follow its own&#13;
criteria for granting arts funding.&#13;
But lawyers representing the city say council members&#13;
didn’t stra~: from the criteria. They say some&#13;
council members just didn’l support the Esperanza&#13;
Center while others wanted to divert some of the arts&#13;
funding toward more basic city progrmns.&#13;
For~ner councilman Jose Menendez testified that&#13;
while he had received several phone calls and letters&#13;
objecting to financing Esperanza, he simply felt that&#13;
artsfluading was not a priority. He said Iris district&#13;
needed sidewalks, speed bumps and more firefighters.&#13;
’qqae arts ~vas an area where we could get lnore money&#13;
for basic servxces."&#13;
The city’s law yers questioned whether Esperanza,&#13;
which used to be called the Esperanza Peace &amp;Justice&#13;
Center, should have been eligible for arts money in&#13;
the first place. Indeed, some council members had&#13;
viewed it more as a political organization than an arts&#13;
group, former councilman Roger Flores testified.&#13;
Eduardo Diaz, former director of the city’s arts&#13;
depar.tment: ~onceded~ ~upon, questioning.by assistant&#13;
city attorney. Amy Eubanks that Esperanza technically&#13;
is not an arts organization because its massion is&#13;
not exclusively the presentation or production of art.&#13;
¯ But-he-added that it has.been Esperanza’s practice&#13;
over the years to incorporate arts progran~s.&#13;
Diaz testified earlier that he had no doubt that&#13;
Esperanza met the criteria for funding He.said the&#13;
g up has been an acttve player tn cultural events&#13;
for many years. He said there are :other Ynon-arts"&#13;
groups that receive arts funding. At the time of the’ 97&#13;
cotmcil vote, the Witte Museum, primarily a natural&#13;
history and science museum, was among four organizations&#13;
that were receiving 70 to 75% of the total&#13;
amount of arts funding, Diaz said.&#13;
Esperanza execuuve director Graciela S anchez testified&#13;
the center has used arts programs to "g~ve voice&#13;
to the voiceless."&#13;
Medical Marijuana&#13;
To Be Investigated&#13;
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The University of&#13;
California, San Diego will soon begin&#13;
trials on medical marijuana at the nation’ s&#13;
first research center designed to explore&#13;
the drug’s therapeutic potential. Doctors&#13;
announced the Center for Medicinal Cannabis&#13;
Research as part of the state’s effort&#13;
to set medical guidelines following the&#13;
voter-approved medical marijuana law.&#13;
The center, headquartered in San Diego,&#13;
will begin distributing grants to conduct&#13;
clinical trials at lmiversities and research&#13;
centers throughout California as&#13;
early as January.&#13;
The studies will look at whether marijuana&#13;
is a safe alternative for treating&#13;
certmn kinds of medical conditions and&#13;
the best ways to administer it, such as ¯&#13;
through pills, patches or sprays.&#13;
’~Ourjobis to show if these products are ¯&#13;
helpful and we can answer t~.at defini- -"&#13;
tively," said Igor Grant, the center’s director&#13;
and professor of psychiatry at&#13;
UCSD. ¯&#13;
Gov. Gray Davis has already approved ¯&#13;
$3 malhon to fund theprogram first year&#13;
while legislation calls for a three-year&#13;
program. The center was set up in large&#13;
response to Proposition 215, the 1996&#13;
state initiative allowing seriously ill pa- °&#13;
tients to grow and use marijuana f~ pain o&#13;
relief, if they have a doctor’srecommen- o&#13;
dation. Measures similar_to the California ¯&#13;
initiative have passed in Alaska, Arizona,.&#13;
Hawaii, Maine, Nevada, Oregon and&#13;
Washington state. ¯&#13;
State Sen. John Vasconcellos, who ¯&#13;
pushed for medical marijuana, pelmed the ¯&#13;
program in 1996 but initially faced oppositionfromlaw&#13;
enforcement groups. Only ¯&#13;
after working with Attorney General Bill&#13;
Lockyer did Vasconcellos convincemany ¯&#13;
that research was a good idea.&#13;
"It’s been a very long road since the °&#13;
passage of 215 to even get as far as we had&#13;
with research," said Rand Martin, a ¯&#13;
spokesman for Vasconcellos. "We have °&#13;
had to deal with alot of political problems °&#13;
and the most exciting thing is that we’re ¯&#13;
putting the politics behind us." o&#13;
Proponents have long argued that marl- "&#13;
juanahelps patients with chronic pain and "&#13;
with AIDS, cancer and multiple sclerosis ¯&#13;
by relieving pain and nausea. Opponents .&#13;
of marijuana say scientific research is "&#13;
necessary.&#13;
’Wee consider research a good thing,’" -"&#13;
said Bob Weiner of the White House&#13;
National Drug Control Policy Office. "Fo "&#13;
have medicine determined by science and ¯&#13;
not by popular will is exactly what we&#13;
support." ¯&#13;
Doctors at UCSD’s center hope the "&#13;
research will eventually determine"&#13;
whether marijuana has medical benefits -&#13;
because current federal law says the drug "&#13;
has no medical purpose.&#13;
Trial patients will get marijuana from :&#13;
the National InStitute on Drug Abuse and -&#13;
researchers have pledged to follow all&#13;
medical guidelines. ’‘There’s been a long "&#13;
history of contention around cannabis and&#13;
it has been difficult to do research," said ,&#13;
Grant. "This it the ~first study that’s "&#13;
mulfidisciplinary. The state of California "&#13;
has taken the lead here." ¯&#13;
Malay AIDS-Group -&#13;
Protests Testing&#13;
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) -"&#13;
Malaysia’s biggest AIDS .aw.areness and, "&#13;
prevention body has protestea a proposat ¯&#13;
in a southern state to subject&#13;
"_ Muslim men to HIV tests before they are&#13;
¯ allowed to getmarried, anews report said.&#13;
." The criticism of the move by Islamic&#13;
¯ religious authorities in Johor state came&#13;
¯ fromPrimeMinisterMahathirMohamad’s&#13;
o° daughter, MarinaMahathir, an outspoken&#13;
: AIDS activist who heads the Malaysian&#13;
AIDS Council. "The assumption is blood&#13;
~ testing is somehow preventive, unfortu-&#13;
¯ nately it is not," Marina was quoted as&#13;
¯ saying by the Beriiama news agency.&#13;
"- Mandatory HIV testing was also a vio-&#13;
¯ lation of human rights, she said. AIDS&#13;
¯ activists would soon meet with state offi-&#13;
¯ cials to ’discuss the proposal, she was&#13;
~ quoted as saying.&#13;
° She told reporters that educating the&#13;
¯ public on preventive measures will be&#13;
¯ more effective in curbing the deadly dis-&#13;
" ease in the predominantly Muslim Southeast&#13;
Asian country where discussing&#13;
sexual issues in public is taboo and where&#13;
introducing sex education in schools is&#13;
being resisted by conservattves.&#13;
Over the weekend, top government officials&#13;
in Johor proposed compulsory&#13;
blood tests on Muslim men, a move that&#13;
would affect men in the dominant Malay&#13;
community. Johor chief minister Abdul&#13;
Ghani Othman was quoted as saying by&#13;
newspapers that it was part of efforts to&#13;
check the alarming rise of HIV cases in&#13;
the state. "In 1999 alone, there was a 73%&#13;
increasein ttIV cases among Malays compared&#13;
to the previous year,"he was quoted&#13;
as saying by New Sunday Times.&#13;
Clinton: "Break the&#13;
Silence’ about AIDS&#13;
ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) - Africans must&#13;
"break the siIence" about AIDS or risk&#13;
losing hard-fought democratic and economic&#13;
gains, President Clinton said Sunday&#13;
as the White House highlighted more&#13;
than $20 million in U.S. aid to fight AIDS,&#13;
malaria and other diseases devastating&#13;
Africa.&#13;
"In every country, in any culture, it is&#13;
difficult, painful, at the very least embarrassing,&#13;
to talk about the issues involved&#13;
with AIDS," Clinton said after touring a&#13;
health center in the Nigerian capital and&#13;
hearing the stories of several people living&#13;
with the disease.&#13;
Clinton’s two-day stay in Nigeria was&#13;
intended to underscore U.S. approval of&#13;
the 15-month-old democratic government&#13;
in Africa’s most populous nation, with&#13;
123 million people.&#13;
Along with dealing with the heavy&#13;
themes of AIDS and debt relief, Clinton&#13;
used the trip to get to know a country he&#13;
deliberated bypassed on his last trip to&#13;
Africa, in 1998, when it was under a&#13;
military dictatorship.&#13;
Led by a throng of singing children, he&#13;
trudged through the Nigerian village of&#13;
Ushafa on Sunday, past mud brick huts&#13;
and flimsy metal sheds, with scrawny&#13;
chickens scattering in his path.&#13;
"We want to help you build your&#13;
economy, educate your children andbuild&#13;
a better life," he told villagers, wearing a&#13;
cream-colored royal African robe given&#13;
to him by the village chief.&#13;
AIDS killed 2.8 million people worldwide&#13;
last year, and is now the leading&#13;
cause of death in Africa. The Clinton&#13;
administration will spend $9.4 million&#13;
this year for AIDS and HIV infection&#13;
prevention and care in Nigeria, $8.7 million&#13;
more for polio eradication and $2&#13;
million toward prevention of malaria.&#13;
In sub-Saharan Africa, 13 million children&#13;
have lost a parent to AIDS, and the&#13;
disease is reducing life expectancies and&#13;
Colle.ge Hill&#13;
Presbyterian Church&#13;
In response to God’s Love, College Hill&#13;
Presbyterian Church is a community of God’s people&#13;
called to tell others the Gospel of Jesus Christ through&#13;
worship, service, and evangelism. To nurture our faith,&#13;
we gather for worship, prayer, study and fellowship.&#13;
Trusting in a living, loving God, we seek to become a&#13;
compassionate voice for peace and justice.&#13;
Our congregation welcomes all persons who respond in&#13;
trust and obedience to God’s grace in Jesus Christ, and&#13;
desire to become part of the membership and ministry&#13;
of Christ’s church. Membership is open- to all people&#13;
regardless of race, ethnic origin, worldly condition,&#13;
marital status, or sexual orientation.&#13;
Sunday Worship 1 lam&#13;
College Hill Presbyterian Church, 712 S. Columbia Avenue, 592-5800&#13;
(One block west of Delaware and the University of Tulsa Campus)&#13;
Financial Planning With A&#13;
Clear Commitment.&#13;
At American Express Financial Advisors, we want to make our&#13;
Commitment to gay men and lesbians clear. Just as we have extended domestic partner&#13;
benefits to our lesbian and gay employees worldwide, we are committed to providing&#13;
~ound financial advice that specifically addresses the unique financial issues affecting&#13;
3ur lesbian and gay clients.&#13;
Nhether you’re single, in a committed relationship, or i:~ng for children, your American&#13;
Express financial advisor can help you take control ot’~#~rfinancial future. We can help&#13;
tOM:&#13;
Establish savings and investment plans&#13;
Protect your assets from unnecessary taxation&#13;
/X,void financial restrictions placed on unmarried cou pies&#13;
Avoid costly delays in the receipt of life insurance proceeds&#13;
series of Seminars given by&#13;
Theresa Barnard, American Express Financial Advisor&#13;
Where: MCC United When: 7:00 P.M,&#13;
1623 N Maplewood Ave&#13;
Financial Strategies for Gay Men &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Tuesday, September 5t" and Tuesday, October 10t"&#13;
Retirement Explore Your Options&#13;
¯ Create your Retirement Income&#13;
Tuesday, September 19th&#13;
¯ Estate Planning&#13;
Tuesday, October 24th&#13;
Please R.S.V.P.&#13;
with Theresa at&#13;
9~18-748-8191&#13;
ext.121&#13;
dimming development hopes across the ; Fe Maria, who asked that only her first&#13;
continent. "Is it harder to talk about these ¯ name beused, has gained weight and feels&#13;
thingsthantowatchachilddieofAIDS?" ," better, although the medicines give her&#13;
Clinton asked. "We have to break the ¯ headaches.&#13;
silence about how this disease spreads ; Dr. Ellen Koenig, an An~erican physiand&#13;
how to prevent it." ° cian who has lived and worked in the&#13;
Power About 2.6 million Nigerians, 5.4% of:&#13;
DominicanRepublicfor31 years, was the&#13;
the population, are afflicted with AIDS. ° impetus behind bringing the trial here.&#13;
That puts the country on better footing i And she insisted the company agree to&#13;
than many of its neighbors with higher ¯ continue paying for treatment after the&#13;
~onnc~~-~e1 ., infection rates, but in danger ofletting the:test.&#13;
disease gain ground, Clinton said. "AIDS ". "In some places, the drug companies&#13;
can rob a country of its future," Clinton ; come in, do the trial and then they leave,&#13;
¯ said. "I know you are not going to let that ¯ and the people don’t have the money to&#13;
happen to Nigeria.’" : buy the medicine," said Ceneyda Brito at&#13;
I~lbl|¢ S~l’~ice Cenlpan¥ of Oklahoma He promised continued U.S. support " the Dominican advocacy group AIDS&#13;
for Nigeria’s transition to democracy, but ," Action.&#13;
euslomer Santice Is Now Available 9.4 did not, as Nigerian President Olusegun&#13;
Hours A Day, Seven Days A Week. Obasanjo had hoped, agree to cancel or i Doctors Accused of cut the nearly $1 billion U.S. portion of .&#13;
These days, traditional 8-5.business hours Nigeria’ s $32 billion foreign debt, amove _" Improper HIVTesting&#13;
aren’t always convenient. So PS0 has made it thatwouldrequirecongressional approval..&#13;
Speaking to business executives later : JOHANNESBURG, SouthAfrica(AP)-&#13;
easier than ever for you to c0ntaet us. Sunday, however, Clinton said he sup- ." More than 50 physicians here are accused&#13;
of HIV-testing patients without their&#13;
Our Customer Service Center operates 24/7 rpioartssperenddusctihnegetxhteradmebot,nbeyutoonnilmy pffroNvigineg- -° knowledge or consent - and then passing&#13;
- offering ar0und-the-cl0ck answers to your lives anddiversifying the economy. ’q-here : on the result to the patients’ employers,&#13;
uestions - and better access to service, must be a dividend to democracy for the ° media reported at the end of August.&#13;
¯ ° The University of Witwatersrand’s&#13;
people of Nigeria," Clinton said. ¯&#13;
Now it’s easier for you to inquire Clinton, accompanied by danghter i AIDS Law Project has filed complaints&#13;
against the doctors with the Health Prac- about your monthly electric bill. Chelsea, began his day with services at a °&#13;
titioners AssociationofSouthAfrica. The&#13;
Or report a power outage. Or Baptist church in Abuja, and then ventured&#13;
outside the capital to get a firsthand -" tests were performed at the request of the&#13;
arrange to have your look Sunday at both the pageantry and ~&#13;
patients’ employers, the Johannesburg&#13;
F.-verty of life in Ushafa, a pottery-mak- ° newspaper the Saturday Star reported.&#13;
power turned on or ing center. ’‘icame to Nigeria to express ¯" Most patients were not given counsel-&#13;
. off. Our professionally the support of the people of the United "- ing before or after the test, the group said,&#13;
" States,"Clintontoldvillagersfromamake- ; adding that in some cases, test results&#13;
trained, friendly and shift platform. ~"VVe snpport your democ- "&#13;
were sent directly to the employer without&#13;
¯ informing the patient. knowledgeable customer racy. ""&#13;
I~LhairatAbdulrazaq Gwadabe, whorep- A positive result meant almost certain&#13;
service representatives are resents the village in the Nigerian Senate, "&#13;
dismissal, the group said. In a fifth of the&#13;
standing by to serve you. said she explained Clinton’s visit to vii- "&#13;
cases, the employee was a domestic&#13;
¯ worker. "It’s nothing less than total dis- All day, every day. lagers ahead of time¯ "I had to translate it - as the king of the world himself is coming. : crimination. The doctor is not concerned&#13;
¯ with the well-being of the patient, just the&#13;
To provide faster response The president of the world is coming to.. continued loyalty of the employer who&#13;
to your needs, we have listed their chief," Gwadabe said. "o wants to know if their employee is HIV&#13;
our t011-free numbers below. Dominican Republic : positivet,h"weitphroject.SaiJdennifer Joni, an attomey&#13;
Hosts Drug Tests : According to the Health Practitioners ¯ Association’s rules, HIV tests can only be&#13;
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Repub- : performed without a patient’s consent if a&#13;
lic (AP) - American researchers testing a o health professional has been exposed to&#13;
new AIDS drug needed patients who had : infection by a needle.&#13;
~ never received any treatment. The Do- ¯ Possible punishments for physioans&#13;
oi~ A~d Save mimcan Republic has them-by the thou- : found to break the association’s rules in-&#13;
|&#13;
sands. ¯ clude a warning, a reprimand, a fine of&#13;
"It seems like a win-win," said Joy : less than 10,000 rand ($1,450), and sus-&#13;
FoR&#13;
24 HOURS |I Schmitt, spokeswomanforAgouron Phar- : pensaon or removal fromthemedical reg- maceuficalsofLaJolla, California. People o ister. Abouta.2 million South Africans -&#13;
TOt.k’FREE SERVICE i "are getfingtreatment., and we’re get- : roug.hly 10% of the populafion~ - are HIV&#13;
I ting the patients we need for the trial." : pos~uve.&#13;
Agouron is using Dominicans to test its ¯&#13;
Customer Services: 1-888-216-3523 | capravinne because it canbe hardin the : Police Arrest Man I United Statesand Europe to find patients&#13;
Billing Inquiries: 1-888-216-3490 | who haven’t received any other treat-; For Spreading HIV&#13;
Outage Reporting: 1-888-218-3919 I ments, between health insurance and pub- -&#13;
|&#13;
lic health systems. NATCHITOCHES, LA (AP) - For the&#13;
Finding such people here was easy: ¯: second time recently, policehave charged&#13;
I More than 2% of the country’s 8 million ° a man with intentionally spreading the&#13;
Servici0 a Clientes: 1-888-216-3505 | people are infected with the AIDS virus - . AIDS virus. Eric Vashawn Alexander,&#13;
Preguntas S0bre su Cuenta: 1-888-216-3491 I&#13;
and few can afford medicines that cost : 26, was arrested and charged with inten-&#13;
I many times the average income. "No one ¯ tional exposing of the AIDS virus.&#13;
Palta De Suministr0:1-888-218-3924 ! helps you here if you have this disease," ¯ Alexander reportedly bit a man in the&#13;
said Fe Maria, who lived 13 years carry- " back as he intervened in a fight between a&#13;
I ing the AIDS virus without hope of get- i boyfriend and girlfriend, said police Lt.&#13;
I - ting treatment before going on the trial. " Chris Stanfield. During their investiga-&#13;
I ~"1~’~’.~ I Capravirine, which researchers hope" tion, officers learned that Alexander had&#13;
~~1~~,~&#13;
I will help fight off mutations of the-virus.,&#13;
tested positive for HIV. He was booked&#13;
I has already been through the safety phase " into the Natchitoches Parish Detention&#13;
of testing. In the current andcritical phase, Center. If convicted, he faces up to 10 Public Service Company of Oklahoma | 90 Dominicans and about 200 people in- years in prison, Stanfield said. Police also&#13;
I the United States and Canada are helping ¯ arrestedEamestWest,,onthesamecharge&#13;
............. ¯t test its effectiveness. Some participants " after receiving complaints that he allegget&#13;
a four-drug cocktail including " edly exposed four women to the AIDS&#13;
capravirine; others receiveadrug cocktail ¯ virus through unprotected sexual contact.&#13;
without capravirme.&#13;
by Jim Christjohn, entertainment editor&#13;
As an author who prides himself on&#13;
getting the facts correct (Never straight,&#13;
always correct); I have to own up .to an&#13;
error that appeared in print in the August&#13;
issue. I mistakenly attributed the appearanc~&#13;
to RENT hiTulsato the auspices of&#13;
~d~brity. AttraCtions. Thins¯ Was false, it&#13;
was actually SF~:Thea~cal Group with&#13;
¯ . . : .M~eh has been maded the-&#13;
Norvell, who tm~e show, inc|udln criticism o{&#13;
lamo izlng a drug-rldden life.&#13;
Not so. It poignantly points out&#13;
the effects -0f such a llfe. What&#13;
been promoting&#13;
RENT. My apologies&#13;
to all parties;&#13;
the error was actually&#13;
caught and&#13;
corrected before&#13;
press time (Thanks&#13;
Kristin!), but the&#13;
publisher used the&#13;
unrevised version&#13;
of the column at&#13;
press time. To err&#13;
is human, and it&#13;
can happen to the&#13;
best of us, no matthe&#13;
show is about, in my estimation,&#13;
is the pursuit of&#13;
dreams: and the most common&#13;
dream of all -&#13;
finding.love;{or that is common&#13;
to allof us. Gay, Straight.&#13;
ter how careful we ,,&#13;
try to be. Blael~. White. and so on...&#13;
So,.n6~v that the . .&#13;
"oopls,~.¢g60fed..... ’ " .,,-&#13;
p0rfi6n 6f~h¢ ~61Umnis out of the ~vas, on&#13;
withthe ~uia Stuff!-Hope you get a ~h’ance&#13;
to see RENT, it’ s a powerful show, and as&#13;
one friend ofmine remarked, is "bite) and&#13;
zippy." I’ll leave it to the reader to interpret&#13;
those comments-. I liked the choice of&#13;
words, personally. The show does reach&#13;
out and bite, and it does move zippily&#13;
along. The only problems I had were that&#13;
themix of the sound left the vocals muddy&#13;
&amp; almost inaudible under the guitars; and&#13;
that some of the performers need to work&#13;
on their diction. This observation was&#13;
echoed by TFN writer Karin Gregory in&#13;
Dallas, who saw the same touting show&#13;
down there.&#13;
This show is basically rock opera, sung&#13;
through almost entirely. That requires the&#13;
lyrics to be audible and clear, otherwise&#13;
it’s impossibleto understand the plot. I&#13;
knew the show, and still l~ad to strain at&#13;
many points to catch dialogue or lyrics.&#13;
Hopefully, these issues will be addressed&#13;
for die future shows in the rnn. In all other’&#13;
aspects, ~t was a powerful evening of&#13;
theatre and storytelling.&#13;
Much-has been made of the show, including&#13;
criticism of glamorizing a drugridden&#13;
life. Not so. It poigriantly points&#13;
out the effects of such a life. What the&#13;
show is about, in my estimation, is the&#13;
pursuit of dreams; and the most common&#13;
dream of all - finding love; for that is&#13;
common to all of us, gay, straight, black,&#13;
white, and so on. "Love is love", to quote&#13;
fantasy writer Lynn Flewelling. And as&#13;
such, should be respected and honored no&#13;
matter What form it takes. RENT illustrates&#13;
this in an upffont, grab you by the&#13;
shirt kind0f way?Sound of Music, it alia’ t,&#13;
sobe prepared.-&#13;
RENT explores the issues, of love and&#13;
its pursuff~ finding iL recognizing it; and&#13;
notletting fear, pri~le,and n~iSunderstanding,&#13;
and the defenses we all build to protect&#13;
ourselves deny the love we really&#13;
want to have. Fear can be an amazing&#13;
thing when it comes to that. In that sense,&#13;
REN~ is also about overcoming those&#13;
obstacles and recognizing that love is&#13;
hard to find, and shouldn’t be tossed away&#13;
when the genuine articleis found.Atimely&#13;
" Issue right now; as a friend of mine is&#13;
¯¯ taking a journey down that hard road that&#13;
I have taken so many times before, and am&#13;
" in the middle of right now.&#13;
Lots of things masquerade as love -&#13;
¯&#13;
control, fear, even hatred. The real firing&#13;
doesn’t land in your lap too often. Lot of&#13;
lookalikes do, the trick is distinguishing&#13;
¯&#13;
the real from the fake. And too often, the&#13;
-real is waF.to0&#13;
scary, and so is refused.&#13;
If you’ve&#13;
got the real thing,&#13;
hang onto it. Well,&#13;
join me on my&#13;
ramble, will&#13;
you?Dunno where&#13;
all that came from.&#13;
¯ . Well, I do, but&#13;
that’s a whole&#13;
book unto itself.&#13;
RENT succeeds&#13;
admirably inillustrating&#13;
¯the aforementioned&#13;
ideas,&#13;
albeit in a much&#13;
less lOngwinded&#13;
way (editorr s note:&#13;
indeed)¯&#13;
The ~tandout&#13;
songs were "I will&#13;
cover you , ’X)ne&#13;
song", m~d "’Without You", wlrich is by&#13;
far the most beantiful and-evocative song&#13;
in the whole show It captures exactly&#13;
how one feels when you know the one real&#13;
thing has gotten away from you, either by&#13;
circumstance, or worse, by your own&#13;
clioice. "Without you, the w.d,rld turns, but&#13;
I die too.., without you.. ¯ ....&#13;
Speaking of Dreams, Arturo Brachetti&#13;
was fabulous. Let me rephrase that...&#13;
Arturo Brachetti’s show was fabulous! I&#13;
hope most of you caught it, as it was an&#13;
excellent evening of theatre. The man is&#13;
literally a cast of thousands unto himself.&#13;
And his quick change of Scarlett pre and&#13;
post curtains was worth the price of admission!&#13;
His show was a fast paced conglomeration&#13;
of incredibly quick changes&#13;
that left yon wondering ’~aow did he ’o&#13;
that?", mixed with comedy, magic, and&#13;
excellent s torytelling. Andhe can do amazing&#13;
things with his hands. Making&#13;
shadowplays, I mean.&#13;
His theme? Dreams... Finding them,&#13;
¯ follo::-ing them, accomplishing them; and&#13;
: having, fun with your inner ~hild while&#13;
doin2 it Alternatively hilarious and p0ignant~;&#13;
his range ofcharacters and’ theatre&#13;
is amazing to see. He is a prime example&#13;
of what one can do with dreams, belief in&#13;
those dreams, and hard work - the two&#13;
main ingredients of magic. The other aspect&#13;
of that was the fact that, regrettably,&#13;
so many of Us h~ve that child within that&#13;
still has those dreams of ~hildhood, and&#13;
we lock them away. Arturo was all about&#13;
letting that child out to play, and having&#13;
fun, which showed in his production.&#13;
The show was excellent in all regards,&#13;
from the autobiographical structure that&#13;
set up the changes and made it an intimate&#13;
evening even for the PAC’s Chapman&#13;
Hall. Themusic ran the gamutfrom dance/&#13;
techno to classical, the lighting was fantastic,&#13;
and Arturo’s box was huge! Well,&#13;
at least the one onstage that served as sets,&#13;
movie screen, prop house, and costume&#13;
storage. At one pointed, he enacted an old&#13;
western playing every character, and it&#13;
was truly indescribably hilarious.&#13;
He also performed a series of vignettes&#13;
in tribute te film director see Arturo, p. 9&#13;
septem;ber&#13;
FRIDAY 8 pm SATURDAY’~NgH SUNDAY 3 pro°&#13;
september 22 s~ptember 2~3 ~’;~ :?’ september 24&#13;
Altan&#13;
"The hottest group in the Celtic realm these days."&#13;
The Boston Globe&#13;
September 12 at 8 p.m.&#13;
Chapman Music Hall .................&#13;
Tulsa PAC, 3rd &amp; Cincinnati&#13;
TULSA&#13;
PERFORI~ING&#13;
ARTS CENTER&#13;
TRUST&#13;
Tickets $14, $16, $18&#13;
Call 596-7111 spo,,,o,~&#13;
Outside ~ulsa call 1-800-364-7111 ~ ......... ?~’ "~:&#13;
Online: www.tulsapac.com&#13;
.~"&#13;
Presented by the .. Tulsa Performing&#13;
And you thought the ice cream man&#13;
brought joy to your street¯&#13;
Sure, popsides are great. But how about a&#13;
truckload of new channels, including WGN? How&#13;
about.a high-speed Internet that’s always on and&#13;
better priced? How.:about service so thorough and&#13;
sweet you, can almost ~taste it? Now these, these&#13;
are the things you can sink your teeth into.&#13;
We’.re in.gear.&#13;
COMMUNII~ATIONI~&#13;
665-0200&#13;
Tulsa’s PRIDE 2000!&#13;
VIDEO RELEASE PARTY&#13;
Now that summer’s end is in sight and cool weather a hopeful&#13;
prospect, the time is ripe to celebrate the Pride Week events that&#13;
began Oklahoma’s heat wave.&#13;
The Diversity Celebration 2000was a huge success that&#13;
attracted fabulous people, was spectacularly beautiful, socially&#13;
concious, wi.ttyand revealing. And its all on tape. This year Tulsa&#13;
Oklahomans for Human Rights has joined with BoyBlue&#13;
Productions in making a.professional commemorative video. It will&#13;
include highlights of all Pride Week events including: appearances&#13;
by Greg Louganis, Rev. Mel White and Grethe Cammemeyer~ the&#13;
enormous parade, the art show, follies, community heroes, festival&#13;
and the Soulforce. workshop.&#13;
Friday night’s release party will include.a preview of the video,&#13;
live performances and dancing. Details are pending but mark your&#13;
calendar for 8pro Sept. 29th. And you wilI of course be able to&#13;
purchase your copy at the party.&#13;
Proceeds from the sales of the Diversity Celebration 2000&#13;
Commerative Video will benefit the services and programs of&#13;
TOHR Orders may be placed in advance with visa or mastercard&#13;
by calling TOHR at 743-4287. Orders plaCed by Sept 22 will be&#13;
.available for pick up at the Release Party.&#13;
#&#13;
For your copies of Diversity Fest 2000&#13;
Contact the Tulsa Gay Community&#13;
Service Center, 743-4297, POB 2687, 74101&#13;
x $20.00 = $&#13;
MO, Check, Visa, MC, no cash please.&#13;
exp. date&#13;
Signature&#13;
Federico Fellini, who passed away afew&#13;
years ago. It was touching, but I don’t&#13;
think the audience "gotit."I doubtmost of&#13;
the audience had a clue who Fellini was.&#13;
At one point, the box split, and the curtains&#13;
were raised to reveal the work be-.&#13;
hind themagic.Anice touch, giving honor&#13;
and recognition to the work that goes on&#13;
behind the magic to make it happen.&#13;
It was truly a magical evening, and it&#13;
was funny to see the audience go from the&#13;
thought process of"What the hell is this?"&#13;
to ’qhis is so cool!" Armro was different&#13;
from anything Tulsa has seen, and it’s a&#13;
good thing. He soon held us all in thepalm&#13;
of his hand. Not as tasty as this writer&#13;
would have liked, but it was the markof a&#13;
true artist. Tulsa’s a tough crowd to win&#13;
over, especially for anything avant garde,&#13;
but Arturo did it magnificently. He’ll be&#13;
in a sitcom this fall, so that’ll be something&#13;
to watch for.&#13;
For our Lesbian readers, as wall as Gay&#13;
men, Janis Ian will be appearing in concert&#13;
at The Oklahoma Center for Poets&#13;
and Writers’ Celebration of Books, along&#13;
with. poet Maya Angelou, This occurs&#13;
September 29-30, and for more information,&#13;
call 594-8215.&#13;
In September, we have a few events&#13;
wc.-th catching: On the 12th, the Irish&#13;
music group Altan will make an appearance&#13;
at the PAC. They have had rave&#13;
reviews, and itlooks like a lovely evening&#13;
,,f traditional Irish music ahead. For tickets,&#13;
call 596-7122&#13;
September 14-23, Heller Theatre presents&#13;
"Art", a show about a painting that&#13;
engenders discussions of the quality and&#13;
meaning of.life itself. 746-5065. Theater&#13;
Tulsa offers up some pop culture with the&#13;
musical version of "Everything l Need to&#13;
Know I Learned in Kindergarten" September&#13;
15-23.&#13;
Tchaikovsky’s "Sleeping Beauty"&#13;
wakes in Tulsa as Tulsa Ballet presents&#13;
the venerable dance epic September 22-&#13;
24. (I wouldlove to see Matthew Bourne’s&#13;
take on this one! He’s the man behind the&#13;
homoerotic version ofSwan Lake. I doubt&#13;
that will happen in Tulsa, though TBT is&#13;
moving beyond a stdctly traditional approachunder&#13;
Maestro Angelini.)Go see it&#13;
for the music and the grace. For info, call&#13;
749-6006&#13;
Warren’s murder has drawnnational&#13;
attention from Gay and non-Gay civil&#13;
rights acti.vists, who fear he was killed&#13;
because of his race or sexual orientation,&#13;
or both. "At this point there is no evidence&#13;
of abate crime," Marion County Prosecutor&#13;
Richard Bunner said after the indictments&#13;
were issued. "If any evidence is&#13;
uncovered, appropriate action will be&#13;
taken."&#13;
Court records indicate Warren, Parker&#13;
and Wilson argued twice the night of the&#13;
beating - once about an unspecified rumor&#13;
that had circulated about Warren and&#13;
Parker, and the second timeabout $20 that&#13;
Wilson took from Warren’s wallet: The&#13;
beating began after the second argument.&#13;
The grand jury met for about 90 rain:&#13;
utes and then immediately issued the indictments.&#13;
Wilson had soughtto block the&#13;
grandjury fromhearing allegations against&#13;
him, saying he should nothavebeen transferred&#13;
to adult court. The Supreme Court&#13;
mined down his petition 3-0.&#13;
Wilson and Parker will continue to be&#13;
held in a juvenile detention facility until&#13;
their trial. If convicted they likely will&#13;
remain in ajuvenile facility until they are&#13;
21, at which point they wouldbe moved to&#13;
an adult facility. A trial date has not been&#13;
set.&#13;
." TULSA - Furniture queens can now re-&#13;
¯. joicet Tulsa is now home to an Odds &amp;&#13;
Ends Outlet Store, the fourth in the US&#13;
¯ which the distinguished Baker Furniture&#13;
¯ has opened. The store is located at 4329 ¯&#13;
So. Peoria, near the old John Zink prop-&#13;
" erty and is open 7 days a week. The store&#13;
¯ features Baker, MillingRoad, andMcguire&#13;
¯ furniture in a gallery like setting. ¯&#13;
Baker president, Chris Plasman, re-&#13;
" sponded to questions about the choice of&#13;
¯ Tulsa, saying, "residents in larger cities,&#13;
¯ such as Chicago and Atlanta, have been ¯&#13;
clamoring to get but we chose Tulsa.&#13;
¯ Certainly Tulsa’s demographics are very&#13;
¯ favorable, butthe decisionwas alsoheavily&#13;
¯ imquencedbytheresidents’ reputationfor&#13;
." uncompromising taste and style and a&#13;
genuineapp,r,eciation ofhistoryandcrafts -&#13;
: manship...&#13;
For more information, or store hours,&#13;
" call 746-0329.&#13;
¯&#13;
He was also hospitalized for a week after&#13;
being attacked with a knife by a group of&#13;
men who called him derogatory names,&#13;
he said. In 1995, he fled to the United&#13;
States and requested asylum, but was de-&#13;
At his hearing before immigration officials,&#13;
a Latin American history expert&#13;
testified that Gay men with female sexual&#13;
identities in Mexico are heavily persecuted&#13;
by the police and other groups and&#13;
are likely to become scapegoats for&#13;
Mexico’s economic and political problems.&#13;
The expert said Hernandez-Montiel&#13;
faced persecution if deported to Mexico.&#13;
Federico Gomez, press director of&#13;
Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission,&#13;
acknowledged that homosexuals&#13;
and cross-dressers still suffer from&#13;
discrimination, but added that he believes&#13;
Mexicans, in general, have become more&#13;
tolerant of people’s sexual orientation.&#13;
Gomez said he did not think the&#13;
Hernandez-Montiel case "reflected society&#13;
as the whole."&#13;
Judge A. Wallace Tashima wrote that&#13;
the appeals panel had determined that&#13;
’~3ay men with female sexual identities in&#13;
Mexico constitutea protected ’particular&#13;
social group’ under the asylum statute...&#13;
and that Geovanm is a member of that&#13;
group."&#13;
The Board of |mmigration Appeals had&#13;
contended that Hemandez-Montiel should&#13;
return to Mexico, saying he did not estalJlish&#13;
that he suffered abuse because of his&#13;
membership in a particular social group.&#13;
The appellate panel ordered the board to&#13;
reverse its decision and grant Hernandez-&#13;
Montiel asylum.&#13;
Want to get involved?&#13;
Need to get tested for HIV or&#13;
a Coming Out Support Group?&#13;
Call 743=GAYS (4297)&#13;
Tulsa Gay&#13;
Community&#13;
Services Center&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
by Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
When I was in highschool, my soon-tobe-&#13;
Gay friend Carl spent all hi s spare time&#13;
drawing fantastically elaborated plans for&#13;
pipe organs. In his&#13;
sketches, he piled keyboardbehindkeyboardand&#13;
rank onto rank. (All those&#13;
pipes and organs, of&#13;
course, should have gaven&#13;
me a clue.)&#13;
Since that year, I have&#13;
met many Gay guys with&#13;
considerable creative talents,&#13;
sometimes eccentrically&#13;
applied. One friend&#13;
constructs fantasy Christmas&#13;
trees. Another designs&#13;
websites. Another does&#13;
flower arrangements. Another&#13;
collects rococo pictures&#13;
of the Holy Mother.&#13;
Gays are deeply involved&#13;
in the fine and less&#13;
fine arts, from opera and&#13;
ballet down to cheesy TV&#13;
programs like Survivor.&#13;
When the AIDS epidemic&#13;
was at its worst, activists&#13;
invented the "Day without&#13;
Art" which foreshadowed how dull art&#13;
and culture would be in America should&#13;
all homosexuals ever pass away.&#13;
Why all this Gay creativity - creativity&#13;
which often is frenzied and even odd?&#13;
Anthropologist Sherry Ortner, drawing&#13;
on the Frenchfeminist Simone Beauvoir,&#13;
once proposed that ’Man is to Culture as&#13;
Woman is to Nature.’ Ortner was seeking&#13;
a-reason for why, almost everywhere,&#13;
people value what men do more than they&#13;
value whatwomen do. She concluded that&#13;
we associate women with nature, mostly&#13;
because women have kids. Women are&#13;
naturally creauve. Men, whose contributions&#13;
to making babies are momentary at&#13;
best, and much less embodied, have to&#13;
express our creativity by other means.&#13;
Ortner observed thathumans value culture&#13;
over nature. Culture is what preserves&#13;
us in nature. It tells us how to make&#13;
a living off the land. Whereas culture&#13;
protects, nature kills. Disease, aging,&#13;
drought, famine, earthquakes and tornados&#13;
may well be theendofus. Culture also&#13;
needs continuous reconstruction and cultivation.&#13;
We have to keep it all going and&#13;
we have to make sure to pass it down to&#13;
kids.&#13;
Given this preference for culture over&#13;
nature, Ortner concluded that men’s cultural&#13;
contributions are valued more than&#13;
women’s natural creativity. Others have&#13;
also pointed tomasculinejealousy offeminine&#13;
fertility. Womenunmistakably bring&#13;
new life out of their bodies. Less natural&#13;
men are driven to invent culture instead.&#13;
And we are jealous enough to insist that&#13;
our male creations - rituals, clubs, political&#13;
parties, novels, symphonies, paintings,&#13;
whatever- are somehow better, more&#13;
noble, and more enduring that just another&#13;
slobbery child. There is some truth&#13;
here, too. An ordinary human being lasts&#13;
little more than three quarters of a century&#13;
at best. Cultural creations-such as political&#13;
parties or rituals -may endure for&#13;
generations.&#13;
Gay men are particularly engaged in&#13;
cultural production insofar-as many of us&#13;
don’t contribute even the minor male donation&#13;
to human reproduction. Instead of&#13;
children, we have to live in our art, our&#13;
books, our sense of style (or maybe our&#13;
"...Anthropologist&#13;
Sherry Ortner,&#13;
drawing on the&#13;
French feminist&#13;
Simone Beauvolr,&#13;
once proposed that&#13;
’Man is to Culture as&#13;
Woman is to&#13;
Nature.’ Ortner was&#13;
seeking a reason for&#13;
why, almost everywhere,&#13;
people value&#13;
what men do more&#13;
than they value what&#13;
women do..."&#13;
dogs or cats). This is another instance- as&#13;
with penis size - where Gays are&#13;
hypermasculine. Gays who do not reproduce&#13;
naturally specialize instead in masculine&#13;
cultural creativity.&#13;
Some have criticized&#13;
Ortnerforoversimplifying&#13;
cross-cultural nuances of&#13;
male!female power relations.&#13;
Another sort of complication&#13;
comes from the&#13;
fact that many people disbelieve&#13;
an individual creativity.&#13;
Everyone, of&#13;
course, has a theory about&#13;
where new things come&#13;
from. But not everyone in&#13;
the world credits individual&#13;
creativity, orgenius,&#13;
or talent for the birth of&#13;
new things and new ideas.&#13;
Even in ,our own culture,&#13;
notions of creativity&#13;
aren’t that old. The English&#13;
noun "creativity"&#13;
only dates back to 1875 or&#13;
so. Before the modem era&#13;
- and the triumph of indiw[&#13;
dualism - our ancestors&#13;
talked instead of "inspiration,"&#13;
as others still do today. Once upon&#13;
a time, the word "’genius" referred to an&#13;
external spirit who inspired you with new&#13;
ideas. It did not mean some internal, mental&#13;
brilliance.&#13;
Onthe South Pacific island where I&#13;
once lived, nobody believes in creativity&#13;
in the sense of some mysterious&#13;
brainpower. Rather, clever people are&#13;
those with good ties to the world of ancestral&#13;
spirits. Nobody believes that men are&#13;
naturally more or less intelligent, either.&#13;
New ideas and new firings - if they are&#13;
worth anything - have to Come via inspi-&#13;
.ration from the ancestors.&#13;
Clever people are those with good communicauve&#13;
links with spirits, not those&#13;
who claim inborn talent. Men, for instance,&#13;
who come up with new songs&#13;
insist that they overhear these in their&#13;
dreams. Nobody would take credit for&#13;
composing a song by himself. If he d. 1,&#13;
how can it be any good? If you simply&#13;
make up something on your own, it obviously&#13;
can’t compete with music inspired&#13;
with spiritual wisdom.&#13;
But even on this Pacific island, men&#13;
manasecultural production although they&#13;
do so by monopolizing the means of inspiration&#13;
rather than the means of creativity,&#13;
as is the case here in America. Have a&#13;
look around at your culture, goodand bad.&#13;
Most of it is a male production, and a&#13;
notable ratio of that is Gay male productioLna.&#13;
mont Lindstrom, Ph.D., teaches anthropology&#13;
at the University of Tulsa&#13;
where he can be reached at: lamontlindstrom@&#13;
utulsa.edu&#13;
Hospice ofGreen Country seeks volunteers&#13;
to help provide care for patients and&#13;
their families who are dealing with issues&#13;
of terminal illness. Volunteers help run&#13;
errands and provide companionship.&#13;
For more information, call 747-CARE&#13;
(747-2273).&#13;
Volunteers are also needed at the Tulsa&#13;
Gay Community Services Center, 743-&#13;
GAYS (743-4297), to staff the Pride Store,&#13;
answer phones, pack boxes, catalogue&#13;
books and videos. Call for more info.&#13;
Timothy.W. Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fight for&#13;
justice &amp; equality for&#13;
Gays &amp; Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury,&#13;
Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointments are available.&#13;
Are You Gay or Bisex.u. al?&#13;
Are You Native American?&#13;
-Iulsa’s Two-Spirited Indian Men’s&#13;
Support Group is here for&#13;
¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ Free HIV testing&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
Call 341; 6866&#13;
Int rn.ational&#13;
ToursSormorein/ormat’on.&#13;
Massage TherapyS~&#13;
Edgar O. Cruz, L.M.T.&#13;
Pager: 918-889-5255&#13;
Voice Mail: 918-697-9282&#13;
Lic. #C4133&#13;
Country Cl ab Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
David Kauskey&#13;
3310 E. 51st, 747-0236, Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pm&#13;
lbody&#13;
Tulsa’s only&#13;
professional&#13;
body-piercing&#13;
HOLY TRINITY GREEK&#13;
ORTHODOX CHURCH&#13;
THUR’SAT 11-11&#13;
SUNDAY 11-3&#13;
by Karin Gregory, TFN correspondent "&#13;
With election year just around the cor- ¯&#13;
ner, I want to ask you a question: Aren’t "&#13;
you afraid? Many people want to bury ¯&#13;
their heads, but you just can’t this year.&#13;
It’s too important.&#13;
Are you registered? Do&#13;
you know the candidates&#13;
and what they support, tol -&#13;
erate, condone, condenm,&#13;
and deny? Looking athighlights&#13;
of the Rep.ublican&#13;
National Convention last&#13;
month (What-youthought&#13;
I’d watch the whole&#13;
thing?), I was interested in&#13;
many things they pointed&#13;
out, one of which was the&#13;
"leave no child behind"&#13;
theme Bush espoused.&#13;
Funny, when he was our&#13;
govemor’for afew months&#13;
before embarking on his&#13;
Presidential campaign, his&#13;
"leave no state behind&#13;
without a governor" theme&#13;
didn’twork so well forhim.&#13;
Make no mistake grrls -&#13;
this is one Bush you&#13;
DON’T want to push an)’-&#13;
where, especially into the&#13;
~Zqlite House!&#13;
Let’s look at the issues&#13;
facing all of us this year.&#13;
Many have spoken of a&#13;
"different kind of Republican"&#13;
in George W. Bush.&#13;
Hrnmmm, I wonder. The&#13;
Republicans made a great&#13;
showof including as many&#13;
minorities as they could&#13;
find on the streets of Philadelphia&#13;
to join their little&#13;
convention. Again, great&#13;
appointing Supreme Court Justices, and&#13;
Bush has at least one to appoint, if he’s&#13;
elected. How many of you think he’ll&#13;
appoint someone who’s sensitive.to Gay&#13;
civil rights? If anyone if raising ’his/her&#13;
hand - PUT IT DOWN&#13;
"...What 1;es&#13;
were working&#13;
the floor&#13;
the week of the i&#13;
Republican&#13;
"Convention? ¯ ¯ ¯&#13;
Our eonservatlve&#13;
friends made a b;g&#13;
deal about inclusion&#13;
- Hispanies, African&#13;
Amerieans, the&#13;
GaylLesbian&#13;
Community,&#13;
the Pro-Choieers.&#13;
Yep, they really want&#13;
the votes, don’t they?&#13;
These people were&#13;
wooed and charmed&#13;
in front of cameras,&#13;
but what&#13;
happened the&#13;
,’morning after"? "&#13;
NOW!&#13;
UnderBush,manylaws&#13;
brought about by the Supreme&#13;
Court, laws which&#13;
helped to make us a demoeracy,&#13;
could be overturned~&#13;
What would hap:&#13;
pen if the Roe vs. Wade&#13;
decision was overturned?&#13;
It could happen very easily.&#13;
Andwhat do youthink&#13;
would happen to the&#13;
progress of Gay and Lesbian&#13;
couplelaws that have&#13;
come about in the last few&#13;
years? Gays? Lesbians?&#13;
Able to have rights? Bush&#13;
already denies that Gays&#13;
and Lesbians should have&#13;
"special rights". Read that&#13;
as "equal rights" and you&#13;
have the makings of a fascist&#13;
country. The makings&#13;
of amanwho would make&#13;
Charlton Heston look liberal.&#13;
But there’s another&#13;
story to this "coupling" of&#13;
Bush and Dick. Yep, you ’&#13;
know what I’m talking&#13;
about. Or rather, who I’m&#13;
talking about. It’s the old- i&#13;
est story around. Weak&#13;
Texas governor runs for&#13;
President; weak Texas&#13;
governor wins primary;&#13;
weak Texas governor.&#13;
picks running mate; rtmshow.&#13;
The Republicans are like that, you&#13;
know. Every few years they assume a&#13;
different identity, muchlike a chameleon,&#13;
so they can get votes by convincing peg.ple&#13;
they’re something "different" this ttme.&#13;
Each time (I’m talking Reagan and&#13;
George, Sr. here) the public has been&#13;
fooledby the rhetoric, the nicely groomed&#13;
candidates, and the lies.&#13;
What lies were working the floor theweekofthe&#13;
RepublicanConvention?Well,&#13;
let’ s go back to those people picked from&#13;
the streets of Philadelphia. Our conservafive&#13;
friends made a big deal about inclusion-&#13;
Hispanics, African Americans, the&#13;
Gay/Lesbian Community, and even the&#13;
Pro-Choicers. Yep, they really want the&#13;
votes, don’t they? These people were&#13;
wooed and charmed in front of cameras,&#13;
but what happened the "morning after"?&#13;
Well, the Republicans got together and&#13;
voted onNOT including same-sex recognition&#13;
among couples, NOT including&#13;
Gays in hate crimes legislation, NOT including&#13;
Gay civil rights of any kind, and&#13;
NOT including abortion for any reason.&#13;
Yeah, lies, damn lies¯&#13;
Despite all this bravado show of inclusion,&#13;
the Republican ticket ofGeorgeBush&#13;
and Dick Cheney already shows aHUGE&#13;
bias - Bush and Dick. See? They just had&#13;
to get those "family values" in after all!&#13;
Many may be wondering why I’m so&#13;
worried about this election year. George&#13;
W. Bush is certainly not a strong politician,&#13;
given the fact he was a Texas governor,&#13;
the weakest form of governor. And&#13;
you may be saying, ’He doesn’t make the&#13;
rules; Congress does."&#13;
OK, but the President is responsible for&#13;
¯ ning mate has Lesbian daughter. WHAT?&#13;
Dick Cheney, so hell-bent to do every-&#13;
" thing Conservative in the book, has a Les-&#13;
¯¯ bian daughter? What I want to know is&#13;
¯ why would this man be a party to a party&#13;
that denies his daughter equal rights?Why&#13;
¯ would she want her father to run in this&#13;
¯ party?&#13;
: On yet another television news pro-&#13;
" gram, host Cokie Roberts asked Mrs.&#13;
: Cheney about the possible hypocritical&#13;
¯ effects this has on their family. Mrs.&#13;
: Cheney said her daughter’s lifestyle was a&#13;
." "private matter." Well, Mary Cheney has&#13;
¯ been very out for many years and has ¯&#13;
¯ worked for Gay civil rights for many&#13;
years. And I resent Mrs. Cheney saying&#13;
¯ that her daughter’s Lesbianism is a "pri-&#13;
¯ vate matter" as if the girl has a disease. ¯&#13;
¯ Sounds to me likemomis the sicko here. So why, if homosexuality is such a&#13;
¯ private matter, has George W. Bush sup-&#13;
- ported every anti-gay legislation? If ho-&#13;
¯ mo~exuality is a private matter, why does&#13;
¯ he thiM: he has the right to tell me with&#13;
¯ whom I sleep? Why do the Republicans&#13;
¯ want to make such a federal issue out of ¯&#13;
such a"private matter"? Is homosexuality&#13;
" only private to the privileged few, like&#13;
¯ Mary Cheney? Or is it a matter that will&#13;
¯ decide,muchlike the sexual revolution of ¯&#13;
the sixties, the very way people look at&#13;
¯ one another in the future? As human be-&#13;
" ings, not as Gay, Straight, Lesbian, Bi-&#13;
¯ sexual, Transgendered, etc., etc., etc.&#13;
] You have a decision to make. If you&#13;
¯ want ANY possibility of equality, make&#13;
¯ sure you are registered. Then make a date ¯&#13;
¯ with yourself to go to a little booth in November. You know what to do.&#13;
Walk for Life 2000&#13;
8th Annual&#13;
Tulsa AIDS Walk&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7, 9:30am&#13;
Vete ran’s Park, 21 st &amp; Boulder&#13;
Fo.r more information, call 585-5551.&#13;
Donations-will be increased by 50% with&#13;
matching dollars through the generosity of&#13;
-the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The Walk is&#13;
sponsored by the Community Service&#13;
Council, and will benefit the Tulsa Community&#13;
AIDS Partnership (TCAP),&#13;
The Walk is an all volunteer effort and there&#13;
are no administrative costs.&#13;
Tulsa Family News is proud to donate this advertisement in support of the Walk&#13;
and the Tulsa Community AIDS Partnership (TCAP)</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
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