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[Sub-Series] Newsletters & Publications > Tom Neal Newsletters > Tulsa Family News
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Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Communities - Our Families of the Heart
March 15 - April 14, 1996, Volume 3, Issue .1
Anti-Marriage ¯ Run for gourLives, Part2
Efforts Explode
Around States I|
GOP Presidential Primary and
Anti-Gay Marriage Pledge
DES MOINES - A number of anti-gay
organizations - Colorado for Family Values,
the Christian Coalition, the Eagle
Forum, the Traditional Values Coalition,
and others - drew several thousand fundamentalists
together under an umbrella
groupknownas the National Campaign to
Protect the Sanctity of Marriage, asking
all the Republican presidential primary
hopefuls to sign their pledge against samesex
marriages. Not surprisingly, three of
the most outspokenly anti-gay candidates
talk show host Alan Keyes, Patrick
Buchanan, and Texas Sen. Phil Gramm -
were on hand to sign the anti-gay pledge
that declares that "the State should not
legitimize homosexual relationships by
legalizing same-sex ’marriage’ but should
continue to reserve the special sanction of
civil marriagefor onemanand onewoman
as husband and wife." The other leading
GOP hopefuls - Senate majority lea’fl~r
Bob Dole of Kansas, former Tennessee
Gov. Lamar Alexander and multi-millionaire
publisher Steve Forbes - all said
they would sign the anti-mama,g.e pledge
as well, even though they didn t actually
show up at the event.
Hawaii Anti-Marriage Efforts
HONOLULU-In their ongoing efforts to
try to extricatethemselves from the politically
and. socially charged issue of sanlesex
mamages, the Hawaii state Senate’s
judiciary committee has rejected 2 bills
and accepted one. The committee nixed
by a 1-6 vote a proposal that would have
simply legalized same-sex marriages in
the state. By a 3-4 vote, the senators also
rejeetedaprol~s,al thatwonldhavebanned
same-sex marriage in Hawaii. The lawmakers
finally agreed by a 5-2 vote to
accept a proposed measure that would
institute a statewide domestic partnership,
a compromise proposal that a state
see Marriage, page 3
’Don’t Ask, Don’t
Tell’ Doesn’t Work
WASHINGTON-Ajust-issued reported
says the compromise policy reached by
the Clinton Administration with Congress
that was aimed at lessening bias against
gays and lesbiansin the U.S. armed forces
is being widely violated by the military.
Pentagon officialS, however, insist that
.the so-called"don’task, don’t tell" policy,
m effect now for two years, is working
properly. The report by the Washington,
D.C.-based group, Service Members Legal
Defense Network, charges there is a
continuing pattern of abuse by the armed
service that has rendered the
Administration’s policy toward gays and
lesbians in the military as bad, if not
worse, than its predecessor. The organization
says that despite the seemingly
more lenient approach, the nation’s military
has recently been expelling more
see Don’t ask, page 3
: Legislative Update
¯ OKC Gay Man Helps On Anti-
Gay Measure, More on Way
: Several OKC sources have accused an
: OKC Gay man of misrepresenting him-
, .self as a spokesperson of the entire state’s
¯ Gay communities in a behind-the-scenes
¯ deal with OK House Majority Leader
:i Loyd Benson. Benson, aDemocrat who’d
introduced an anti-Gay resolution, #1045,
¯ condemning teaching homosexuality as
¯ "natural" lifestyle, and adoption or foster
¯ care by Lesbians, Gays or Bisexuals sub-
" stituted a bill allegedly at the urging of
: Keith Smith who’s recently returned to
¯ Oklahoma after a several year absence
"- andwho’s newly hired" as an ad. represen-
¯ tative for OKC’s The Perspective.
¯ The "new" language remains anti-Gay,
¯ condemning more specifically the Nat’l ¯
Education Assoc. for its Gay-positive
~ stands & stating that "those who engage
¯ in same-sex marriages should not be per-
, mitted to adopt or provide foster care."
~ Several legislators, specifically Norman
¯ rep., Laura Boyd, who had promised to
¯" vote against #1045, stated that they only
¯ voted for this revised language because
: they thought these changes were autho-
: rized by "your representative". Both in
," OKC and particularly, in Tulsa, commu-
¯ nity leaders have raised concerns that
¯ individuals lobbying the Legislature
¯ should be clear that they represent only
themselves unless they h~ve actually spo’-
: ken with community~oups first. No of-
, ricer of Tiiis~iOklahomans for Human
¯ -Rights, Rainbow Business Guild or
¯ PFLAG appears to have been contacted.
¯ House resolution #1045 passed 97-1.
¯ Tulsarep. Don Ross cast the only no vote.
¯ Members of several Tulsa groups orga-
¯ nized a calling campaign to thank Ross.
: East Tulsa rep. Betty Boyd (Demo.) said
: that the only call she received opposing
#1045 was TFN’s and strongly suggested
¯" that Lesbians & Gays need to speak up.
¯ Worse yet, religious political extrem-
," ists, Rep. Tim Pope and Bill Graves at-
; tachedanti-Gayamendments tootherbills.
¯ One (to HB 2554 concermng divorce law
changes) would ban the recognition of
: same-gender marriage by Oklahom~ if
¯ theHawaii courts allow theminthefuture
~¯ abnildl,thHeBoth2e0r5(3a)ttabcahnesdatodothpeti"oRnyaonr Lfoukstee’"r
¯ care by a"known homosexual, lesbian or
: see Sold Out. page 3
¯ II
!Native American
i Gay Men Gathering
¯ TheTulsaNativeAmericanMenAIDS
Project (TNAAPP) will hold a weekend
: retreat on May 24-26. The event is open to
¯" all Gay or Bisexual Indian menregardless
of tribe, blood quantum or HIV status.
~ Non-Indian parmers of attendees are wel-
¯
come.
¯ Those wlio attended a retreat in Feb.
pral~&I the event’s traditional dancer and
story-tellers and participants continue to
¯ meet weekly onWednesdays from 6-8pm.
," Future plans include a pow wow for Gay
& Lesbian Native Americans. Call 582-
¯ 7225, ext. 218.
:¯ TTrUusHteireessFiPrereTse.nWureitdhGAanytPi-rGofaeyssRoerAcomridd
Charges of Blackmail Against Univ.
by Tom Neal " terhead stationary, of the Paris-Jackson
In February, trustees of the University .
of Tulsa hired new president
Robert Lawless, currently
president of Texas Technical
University (Tech), to re~
place Robert Donaldson.
After the public announcement
of Lawless’ hiring on
Feb. 19th, major daily newspapers
across the Southwest
(Dallas Morning News,
Houston Chronicle, Daily
Oklahoman) and The Associated
Press carried reports
of anti-Gay comments made
by Lawless in a 1993 letter.
Lubbock news reports indicate
that Lawless responded
on Feb. 9 to a complaint
by a local resident,
Wayson Gerwig, about the
appearance on Tech’s campus by Rod & "
Bob Paris-Jackson. Bob Paris-Jackson
won notoriety as a top competition body "
builder. With his partner, fitness instruc’- :
tor Rod Paris-Jackson, the pair toured the
US (includingan appearance atTU) speak- "
ing on Gay & Lesbian marriages. :
.According to The Universttv Daily ¯
(UD), Lawless wrote, on Texas "~ech let- "
event as "’one of the. greatest disappointments
~n my role as President
at Texas Tech.’" He
added "the deviant lifestyles
portrayed by these individuals
is something I can never
condone, and hold in great
contempt."
Students from Tech’s
Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual
Students group (GLBS) attempted
to meet with Lawless
in Oct. of ’94, after thc
letter was mailed anonymously
to the GLBS. According
to the UD, the student
requestipg.the ~eeting
was told by ~’iess" assistant
that Lawless would not
meet with the student, his
opinions had~ noL changed,
and that he would not comment further.
That same October,The Lubbock Avalanche-
Journalreported that whenGLBS
officer Roy Mendoza took a complaint
about Lawless" remarks to the Texas Tech
Board of Regents, neither the board or
Lawless responded toGLBS concerns but
after the meeting, Tech released a written
see Lawless. page 2
:HIV. Education &
Recreation Center
¯ Bruce Begley, a Tulsa man living with
¯ AIDS, with several others, has begnn cre-
¯ ating a new sen’ice organization for per-
¯, sons living with HIV AIDS, The HI\"
Education&Recreation Center. Begley’s
: vision is for a place where persons living
¯, withAIDs(PLWA’s)couldgoforfitness,
¯ recreation and for services that supple-
" ment the existing HIV.AIDS agencies.
; Many in the Tulsa community have
¯ responded to his vision by joining the
-" board ofthenewly incorporated non-profit
: and by donating goods, services and
¯ money toward the HIV-ERC’s fund to
¯ apply for IRS ta~x -exempt status. Newly ¯
rettedboardmembers include local thera-
¯ pist, Sandra Hill, vice president, Steve
," Wilson, treasurer and local businessman,
: Scott Perry among others. Begley has
spoken to local organizations such as
i DignityiIn.tegrity and the Rainbow
Business Guild (RBG) about his vi,
¯ sion. The membership of RBG voted in
February to donate the balance needed to
¯ pay the IRS application fee.
¯ ,although Begley stresses that the HIV¯
ERC is intended to supplement existing
HIV services, he confesses he’s been
¯ shocked by some of the hostility that he’s
¯ experienced from other HIV services pro-
" viders. He says he repeatedly heard con-
" cerns about"duplicating services". Begley
says others have been more supportive,
¯ such as Janice Nicklas of the Community
Service Council and Hilary Kitz (ofMayor
¯ Susan Savage’s office) who’s active in
¯ HIV/AIDS volunteer work.
¯ see H1V-ERC, page 3
:INSIDE EDITORIAL P..2
DIRECTORY P., 2
NEWS BRIEFS P. 4
¯ HEALTH BRIEF~ P. 6
CALENDAR p. ~
: Unity Gardens
i First in Country
: While Lesbian and Gay activists
¯ struggle for the fight to have our relation-
" ships recognized in life, two Tulsa men,
~ Russell Langley-Stumpff and David
¯" Stumpff, are providing a place where Les-
¯ bians and Gay men can have their rela-
: tionships and identifies recognized in per-
: petuity. The men, who are partners in life
¯ as well as business, have created Unity
¯ Gardens, which may be the first project of
: its t~lae in the US. Unity Gardens is a
~ special part of Washington Memorial
¯ Cemetarvwhere LesbianandGay couples,
: family, find friends can either have burial
: plots; niches in the crematorium, or be
: remembered on a memorial wall that
¯ stands beside a scattering ground. ¯
¯ Unity Gardens will fly a rainbow Pride
flag at its center 24hours a day,and on the
¯ day of services, each of the 10 flag poles
¯ that mark the road to Unity Gardens will ¯
also fly a Pride flag under the regular
¯ American flags. And while Unity Gardens
are non-sectarian, religious o’r other
organizations can reserve a section for
their members which could have a reli-
¯ gious symbol marking their area. At least
one local congregation is said to be considering
this.
918.583.1248
POB 4140
Tulsa, Oklahoma
74159-0140
TulsaNews@aol.com
Publisher/Editor Issued on or before the 15th of each month, the entire contents of
Tom Neal this publication are protected by US copyright 1996 by Tulsa Family
Assistant Editor News and may not be reproduced either in whole or in part without
James Christjohn written permission from the publisher. Publication of a name or
Writers/contributors photo does not indicate that person’s sexual orientation.
Phyl Boler-Schmidt Correspondence is assumed to be for publication unless otherwise
Barry Hensley noted, must be signed & becomes the sole property of Tulsa Family
Pat Morehead News. All correspondence should be sent to the address above. Each
Staff Photographer reader is entitled to one free copy of each edition at distribution
JD Jamett points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.
The University of Tulsa has long sought to be
compared to the best private universities in the US:
Rice, Stanford, Yale, etc. However, somehow its
trustees and administrators haven’t figured out that
there is a connection between their actions and
TU’s continued failure to rank with these schools.
By hiring a documented, and at least publicly
unrepentant anti-Gay bigot, Robert Lawless, for its
new president, TU’s trustees again prove that they
just don’t understand that TU cannot embrace
prejudice and be a"world-dass"institution. Former
Texas Tech president Lawless certainly has aconstitutional
right to his bias,just as does a Klansman
or a white-supremacist, but usually those opinions
disqtmlify a candidate as a leader of university,
There is little doubt that if Lawless had been
speak)ng about Jews or Catholics, instead of Gays
and Lesbians,:when he said in 1993, "the deviant
lifestyles portrayed by these individuals is something
that I can never condone, and hold in great
contemPt,~’ :that Lawless’ hiring would not have
occurredl It certainly would not have without some
apology or repudiation, which he has refused to
make publicly forover three years.
Lawles~S; only regrets appear to have been made
only just a few weeks ago to the TU Search Committee.
This seems awfully late and mighty, convenient.
Some members of the Search Committee
claim thaLLawless while at Texas Tech didn’t
permit his .prejudice to affect his treatment of
openly Gay professors. However, other Tech
sources indicate that Lawless, in fact, attempted to
censor the speaking engagement of Rod & Bob
Paris-Jackson, about which his remarks were made.
It also is amply clear, from both the Tech newspaper
and the LubbockAvalanche-Journal. that Lawless"
alleged "’fairness" to professors did not extend
to Gay Tech students with whom he refused to
meet.
Even worse than Lawless’ "’regretted" remarks.
however, is the decision ofTU’ s Board ofTrustees’
Search Committee to recommend hiring Lawless
with full "knowledge of his remarks. This endorsement
Of 14i?~prejudice combines with the refusal
several Years ago of TU’s Board of Trustees to add
sexual ~nentation protections to TU’s non-discrimination
policy*, and with its recent firing of
openl~G~i3’ professor Jim Reid (see related editoria!),~
to?di~monstrate the comnutment of the Univcrs~
ty of Tulsa to "World-Class Bigotry" rather
than "World-Class Excellence." - Tom Neal
*prof. of law M. Chapman notes TU’s policy
may. or may not. provide bias protection stnce it
mc:ludes legally vague language rather than the
standard term. sexual orientation.
bisexual". Each bill was passed, as amended by the
House, 98-2. Longume political observers hope
that HB 2554 will not get.out of the Senate Judiciary
committee, headed by Sen. Bernice Shedrick
(D-Stillwater) and that the amendment language
attached to the popular "Ryan Luke" bill can be
removed in committee or in conference with the
House. These observers strongly recommend polite
calls to Sen. Shedrick’s office asking her to.help
eliminate the tmconstitutional anti-Gay provisions.
A Senator on the Judiciary committtee declined to
comment but added that he felt it likely that HB
2554 would not make it if enough calls were made.
(Senate switchboard: 405-524-0126)
Dr. James Reid vs. TU
Some will find Dr. James Reid’s choices in
activities & friends to be worse than the actions of
the University of Tulsa. His judgement was clearly
poor in getting involved in a friendship of some
intimacy (though no sex) with someone who was
initially his student. Videotaping their horseplay
(which is likely milder than some of TU’s former
fraternity hazing) also was foolish. But the actions
of the University’s officials, legal counsel, & professors
with their wanton disregard for their own
rules is more shameful than Reid’s video-taped
flogging. The surrender to the worst bias, disregard
for academic standards, the destruction of career of
a highly regarded scholar, and abandonment of fair
p!-.,,y suggest that the TU officials responsible are
the ones who deserve to be shamed publicly - if not
flogged themselves. - Tom Neal
TU :
osed to continuedfrom page 1,
less is morally opp "homosexual lifestyles
does not mean that he is a bigot".
Roselle Graskey, a member of Tech’s GLBS,
notes that Lawless" statements were a direct violation
of Tech:s "’student dignity handbook" which
calls on the university to help "’students learn to
recognize, understand and celebrate human
differences.... [including] lifestyle".
Graskey also charges that Lawless did not merely
speak out against Lesbians and Gay men, but actually
attempted to block the event by pressuring the
independent student board that made the decision
to invite the Paris-Jacksons. This claim is supported
by Lawless’ letter in which he says, "there is
a group ~)f individuals on this campus that serve as
an Advisory Board to the students who plan the
progranunihg in the UC [University Center]. These
advisers could have, and should have, acted responsibly
in their roles to identify this program as
being u/tfit for a university campus and vetoed it
from the slate of program offerings that were proposed."
(editor’s note: emphasis added)
Members ofTU’s Search Committee were aware
of Lawless’ remarks prior to recommending his
luting according to Business prof. PC Smith. Members.
of the Search Committee spoke with individuals.
on the Tech campus, who claim that Lawless
did not discriminate against openly Gay professors
arid even experienced some harassment from anti-
Gay forces when he did not block an openly Gay
prof. from an endowed chair. Several TU sources
claim that these remarks no longer represent his
views, teasingly implying that Lawless had some
personal reasons for either his hostility or for his
alleged change of heaxt. However, all the members
of the Search Committee who are TU trustees and
who we were able to contacted refused to discuss
the matterm any substantive way. One referred all
"calls to trustee Fulton Collins who refused to return
phone calls, although Collins spoke readily to The
Tulsa Worm(The Wormowners, RobertandRoxana
Lorton are both TU trustees). Lawless also refused
to return repeated calls. TU press representative,
Michele Cruncleton, specifically stated "I’m not
going to let you speak with him [Lawless]."
Also in February, the TU board of trustees voted
unanimously to fire Jim Reid, a tenured Gay professor
of physics. Dr. Reid was accused of sexual
harassment by a 26 year old, one-time student,
Marlin Pohlman. Copies ofTU documents indicate
that trustees fired Reid despite the findings of the
majority of a University Appeals Board that Dr.
Rcid’s procedural rights were violated and that TU
see TU, page 10
Tulsa Clubs & Restaurants
*Bamboo Lounge, 7204 E. Pine
*Barraccuda’s, 2405 E. Admiral
*Concessions, 3340 S. Peoria
*Ground Zero, 311 E. 7th
*Lola’s, 2630 E. 15th
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd
832-1269
582-4340
744-0896
585-5622
749-1563
834-4234
585-3405
660-0856
584-1308
Tulsa Businesses, Services, & Professionals
Dermis C. Arnold, Realtor
746-4620
*Assoc. in Medical & Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard
743-1000
Kent Batch & Associates, Health & Life Insurance 747-9506
*Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71 250-5034
Brookside Jewdry, 4649 So. Peoria 743-5272
Creative Collection, 1521 E. 15 592-1521
Cherry St. Psychotherapy Assoc. 1515 S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742~9468
D’Antiques, 1508 E. 15th
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th
Don Carlton Mitsubishi, 4423 S. Memorial
*Elite Books & Videos, 821 S. Sheridan
Express Pools & Spas, 6310 S. Peoria
Fidelity Home Health Care, Inc. Coweta
Foxlinx, Computer Consultation
I xaune M. Gross. Financial Planning
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly
*Imaginations, Lincoln Plaza, 15th & Peoria
* Interuational Tours
JD Images, Photography
Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15
Kelly Kirby, CPA, POB 14011, 74159
Loup-Garou, 2747 E. 15
Lean Aun Macomber, Realtor Associate
Massoud’s Jewlery, The Farm, 51st & Sheridan
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31 st
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 PI
David A. Paddock, CPA, 4308 S. Peoria, Ste. 633
Puppy Pause II, 1 lth & Mingo
*Ross Edward Salon, 1438 S. Boston
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square
Scott Robison’s Prescriptions, see ad for 3 locations
Southwest Viatical, 4146 S. Harvard, Ste. F-5
Thomas Chiropractic Clinic, 4138 S. Harvard, Ste. C-1
Kellie J. Watts, attorney
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling
592-5356
749-3620
665-6595
838-8503
743-9994
486-1174
690-2974
744-0102
745-1111
584-4606
341-6866
621-5597
599-8070
747-5466
742-1992
671-2010
663-4884
584-3112
663-5934
664-2951
747-7672
838-7626
584-0337
749-6301
743-2351
747-3322
742-8868
493-1959
743-1733
Tulsa Organizations, Churches, & Universities
*Agape" Christian Fellowslup, 2 l st& Sheridan 599-7688
*Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Ca’. 2627B E. 11 628-0594
*B!IJG Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa Canterbury Ctr. 583-9780
*Chapman Student Center, University of Tulsa
*Conununitv of Hope (United Methodist), 1703 E. 2nd 585-1800
Dignity/Integrity (Lesbian/Gay Catholics &Episcopalians) 2984648
*F~unily of Faith MCC, 5451-E So. Mingo 622-1441
*Free Spirit Lesbian Center call for location &info: 587-4669
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827
Friends in Umty (African-Amer. men), POB 8542, 74101 .425-4905
Indian Health Care, Save the Nation
584-4983
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437
*MCC of Greater Tulsa, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715
~HIV Resource Consortium, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
749-4194
NAMES PROJECT, d-154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
748-3111
PFLAG , POB 52800 74152 749-4901
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118 74104
"- R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network
749-4195
Rainbow Business Guild, POB 4106, 74159
665-5174
*Shanti Hotline
749-7898
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights, (TOHR) POB 52729 74152
TOHR Gay HelpLine (Info.) 743-4297
Tool Box Technicians, 1338 E. 3rd
584-1308
T U L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc.-
838-1222
*Tulsa City Hall, Cafeteria Vestibule, Ground Floor
*University Center at Tulsa
Beaver Dam Store, 1/2 mi. N. of Dam on Hwy. 187
*Jim & Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main
DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St.
*Emerald Rainbow, 45&112 Spring St.
King’s Hi-Way, 96 Kings Highway, Hwy. 62W
*MCC of the Living Spring
McClung Realtors
Rock Cottage Gardens
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East
The Woods, 50 Wall St.
501-253-6154
501-253-7457
501-253-6807
501-253-5445
800-231-1442
501-253-9337
501-253-%82
501-253-8659 800-624-6646
501-253-6001
501-253-8281
service members for homosexuality,
which thegroup charges violates the policy
by harassing servicemen & women believed
to be gay. The group estimated that
~t cost the federal government $21.3 million
to train replacements for the gay men
and lesbians discharged by the military.
During a press conference, Defense Secretary
William Perry said the charge of
witch-hunts against gays in the military is
a serious allegation & will be examined
qarefully.
Policy Appealed in Federal Court
SEATTLE- The Defense Dept. policy
.prohibiting gays and lesbians from serving
openly in the U.S. armed forces is
again being challenged. The case, brought
on behalf of former Navy Petty Office
Mark Philips, is being argued before the
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Attorneys
from theACLU,representing Philips,
contend the "don’t ask, don’t tell" policy
adopted by Congress and the Clinton
Administration violated the equal protection
& free speech provisions of the Constitution.
Philips was serving on the aircraft
carrier USS Nimitz in 1992 when an
officer asked him about his sexual orientation.
Philips answered honestly & was
discharged. Now 25 years old, Philips
served nearly 6 years before being kicked
out of the Navy and received a number of
commendations for his performance, inc.
dudinga Bronze Starfor service in Desert
Storm. U.S. District Court in Seattle last
year rejected Philips’ lawsuit, agreeing
with government attorneys that his none
of his constitutional rights had been violated
by the policy.
Red Rock Mental Health
of Oklahoma City has opened a Tulsa
office providing individual and group
therapy, HIV education & prevention.
Therapy is available to PLWA’s, their
loved ones and individuals at risk of HIV
infection. Betsy Murphy, MSW, CTRS is
co-ordinator. Contact: 584-2325, fax, 582-
2384, 302 S. Cheyenne, #108, 74103.
and AIDS
First Regional
Begley’s sense of what is needed is "
based in part in his own experiences with
local HIV/AIDS service organizations -
both as a client and as an advocate for "
other clients who are more ill. His vision "
ultimately would include weight and fitness
equipment, swimming, tennis, in essence,
a health club for the community. "
He’d als0 like to have on site counselors "
tO. help with, mental, ~health issues, and ¯
drug and alcohol problems. One service ¯
he’d like to see offered wouldbe prescrip- "
tion medicine assistance that would"kick- ¯
in" after PLWA’s have reache.d the limits ¯
of assistance that other agencies provide. "
Musing over the personal attacks that
he’s experienced thus far, Begley notes
that in Tulsa some other social service
agencies that provide assistance for lower "
income persons, Project Get Together, ¯
Neighbor for Neighbor and Catholic
Charities, all duplicate some of the same ¯
services but all seem to co-exist. He just .
shakes his head in wonder that trying to ¯
help folks in need brings out a fist instead ¯
of a welcoming hand. :
For more information about or to do- ."
hate to the HIV-ERC, write Bruce Begley, ¯
president, 1210 S. Cheyenne, Ste. 208,
Tulsa 74119 or call 587-1059. ."
commission impaneled to study the ques- "_
tion had put forward after the state su- ¯
preme court made it clear that there was a .
good chance Hawaii may be legally re- "
quired to recognized gay andlesbian mar- ."
riages. A just-released Honolulu Adver- ¯
tiser-Channel 2 News poll indicates that, ¯
despite the state’s strong liberal reputa- :
tion. 71% of the voters polled said they ."
oppose same-sex marriage, while only :
18% said they favored extending mar- .
riagerights to same-gender couples. Some o
9% of those polled indicated they were ¯
undecided or didn’tknow. As anindicator ¯
of how worried some state lawmakers are .
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Keynote speaker:
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Tuesday, April 2, 8am-5pm
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Registration: $35, includes lunch, breaks and materials.
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becoming, 8 state representatives, backed
by Pat Robertson’s American Center for
Law and Justice, have filed a court motion
to be allowed to intervene in the suit that
initially raised the same-sex marriage issue
in the state. The brief in the case is
strongly critical of the Hawaii attorney
general’s office for not adequately defending
the state against the lawsuit.
Anti-Marriage Legislative Update
State legislatures around the country
are continuing in their efforts to ban samesex
mamages, although with very little
actual effect it seems. In New Mexico,
Senate majority leader Tom Rutherford
sent an anti-marriage resolution on the
issue back to the rules.committee because
no hearings had been hdd.The proposed
measure would ask voters there to amend
the state constitution. The resolution is
thus dead for this session.
Washington state Republican legislators
have all but conceded that a proposed
ban on same-sex marriage in the state will
probably never make ~t out of a state
senate committee controlled by the Democrats.
Washington state Senate leader Sid
Snyder said the anti-gay measure was not
slated for committee hearings and will be
allowed to die there. The Washington
House of Representatives had approved
the measure on a 60-36 vote to prohibit
same-sex marriages in the state.
Gov. Bill-Janklow has signed a bill
approved recently by the South Dakota
legislature that would refuse recognition
in the state to same-sex couples that might
be legally married elsewhere and that
restricts marriage to opposite-sex couples
only. The measure, which died last year in
the legislature and looked as if it would
suffer the same fate again this year when
a committee voted not to report the measure
to the legislature for a vote, is the 2nd
to become law. One immediate - and
surprising - side-effect of the bill being
signed into law is that Jacques Soukup
and KirkThomas. notable balloonists who
are also longtime partners, have withdrawn
their support for the Governor’s
Cup hot-air ballooning event in the state.
The 2 men, founders of the Soukup &
Thomas International Balloon and Airship
Museum in !vfitchell, S.D., told the
Governor’s Cup committee that they
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couldn’t be "associated with a government
that has just passed a mean-spirited
and hateful piece of legislation that hurts
US.’"
In Illinois, a bill preventing thc state
¯ from recognizing same-gender mamagc
¯ passed a state senate committee ou
: Wednesday, March 6, with little opposition.
Same-sex marriages "’would destroy
¯ thedefinitionofmarriageas wcknow it,"
: said state Sen. Peter Fitzgerald (R-
: Inverness), the measure’s sponsor. The
¯ bill. which passed 8-2, now goes to the
¯ Senate floor. It puts same-sex Weddings
~ on a listofmarriages barred in Illinois. "’If
: we let homosexuals marry, what’s next’?"
¯. said David Curtin, executive director of
the Illinois Christian Coalition.
And according to a report in the gay
paper, Wisconsin Light, state Rep. Dean
Kaufert has announced plans to intr~xiucc
a measure barring same-sex mamagcs in
the state as well. The paper reports the
measure has not yet been drafted.
Lawmakers have voted 86-11 in the
Iowa House of Representatives for a bill
that would prohibit the state from recognizing
same-sex marriages. Some political
observers in the state have suggested
the legislation, which was introduced by
state Rep. Steve Grnbbs (R-Davenport),
was mainly a partisan issue because
Grubbs is running for the Republican
nomination to unseat U.S. Sen. Tom
Harkin, a Democrat.
In Alabama, State Sen. Bill Armistead,
who recently led a battleto keep a gay and
lesbian conference from being held on the
campus at the University of Alabama, is
proposing a"marriage protection act" that
he says would strengthen traditional heterosexual
marriages by barring the statc
from recognizing same-sex marriages,
even if legally recognized elsewhere.
Michigan state Rep. Deborah Whyman
has drawn fire for introducing a bill in the
legislature that would forbid reco~fizing
same-sex marriages in the state, even if
see Slates, page 11
News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News ¯ lowed to join the nation’s mili- sexuals andpeople withdisabili- " policy is reviewed by the Euro- " Columbia; and Winnipeg police
Tutu & Anglican Leaders ."
Call for Change
LONDON-Hundreds ofprominent
Episcopal clerics from
around the world signed an ad- ~
vertisement commending the ]
Lesbian and Gay Christian ¯
Movement on the ~roup’s 20th :
anniversary ofworking to change
the Anglican Church’s views on ¯
homosexuals. Bestki~ownofthe -"
signatories of the ads, which ]
appeared in Anglican, Methodist
and Catholic religious publications
in Britain, was Desmond
Tutu, Archbishop ofCapeTown,
South Africa. Tutu was joined in
signing the ads by three other
Anglican primates from around
the world, as well as several bishops
from theChurch of England,
as thedenomination was about
to begin its annual synod. The
three other church primates included:
Archbishops Richard
ltolloway of Scotland, Michael
Peers of .,Canada, and Bishop
Fxtmrnd Browmng of the United
States. Although not attending
the cfiurch synod, Tutu spoke on
the BBC ~’Radio Sunday" show
via telephone. "’If we say that
relationships where there is fidelity
between one couple a~e
acceptable, whv.,should we not
extend, the san~e, conditions to
stone-sex relationships?" Tutu
told the BBC, say~ing it was simply
a "matter ofjustice, compassion
and consistency’" for the
church to accept that there are
homc/sexual Clergy, who technically
are barred from being ordai~
edin the Anglican Church.
So. Africa A nti-Bias Laws
CAPE TO\V..~.. South Africa -
Politicians,nfilitary leaders and
defense indnstry representatives
have begun discussions on the
role mid nature of South Africa" s
maned’forces, includingwhether
gays and lesbians should be altary
force. The meeting is expected
to produce a report later
this year that would be used by
the defense mimstry to guide it
in formulating specific policies
concerning the armed forces.
Defense ministry, officials noted
that the national armed services
in the country have never actu.
ally had any policy excluding
individuals based on their sexual
orientation, but African National
Congress officials have pushed
for including the topic of sexual
orientation in the defense review
discussions South Africa’s interim
Constitution includes prohibitions
against discrimination
based on sexual orientation, but
the complex process of getting
from the interim document to a
final Constitution faces a number
of difficulties andANC leaders
are making a determined effort
to try to keep it headed in the
most progressive direction.
Also according to Mpho
Makwana, director of the equal
opportumties office in South
Africa’s Labor Dept., the government
~s wor’king on a comprehensive
program for affirmative
action that would "’include
mainly blacks, but also women,
homosexuals and handicapped
people." Makwana made the
statement during a roundtable
discussion earlier this year broadcast
on South Africa’s TV1. He
did not give d.etails of the affirmative
acnon plans, but
Makwana said it would"not be a
stand-alone lmv, with a quota for
compames to implement affirmative
action and punishing the
company which does not comply."
Instead. he said the plan as
being developed would aim at
getting firms to include personnel
training andhuman resources
development programs to encourage
blacks, women, homoties
already wor’king in a company
to move into middle- mad
upper-management in that finn.
CompuServe Reinstates
Internet Groups
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Compu-
Serve Inc., the computer on-line
g~ant ownedby H&RBlock, says
it has given its 4.3 million subcribers
access again to somc
200 Intemet newsgroups that it
had banned in Deceniber alter a
German state prosecutor questioned
whether the groups included
illegal sexually .related
materials. The compnter sen’ice
said at the time that it could not
selectively restrict Interact materials
bv comatry mad had therefore
blocked access to the groups
to all its subscribers. Included
among some of the balmed
groups were several that contain
explicidy adult material. But a
number of the banned
newsgroups were gay and lesbian
discussion and support
groups, including one for
younger gays that specifically
barred pornographic ulaterials.
CompuServe says it will now
give its subscribers software that
will let them pick which - if any
- material they don’t want to be
able to access. The finn believes
parents will use the bloc’king
utilities to keep children from
seeing or reading nmtefial they
don’t deem appropriate.
: UK to Keep Military Ban
: LONDON - The Daily Tele-
: graph reports that based on a
vet-to-be-released report by the
~ ]3ritish MinistryofDefense, gays
and lesbians constitute an "affront
to service people" and will
] not be allowed to serve in the
] British military. But the defense
¯ ministry report also predicts that
¯ when a legal challenge to the
United Kingdom’s anti-gay
~_ pean Court of Human Rights, ¯ arrested Robert E. Welsh, 24.
the govennnent is "’likely to lose" The fourth suspect in the killing,
¯ thecase, which may not come to " Gary A. Kuffner, 27, also of
¯ afinaldecisionbytheEUcourts " Winnipeg, is currently being
¯
before the year 2000. The paper sought. Last year in a high-pro-
¯ said the 450-page nmfistry re" " file investigation of Canadian
¯ port, which it had obtained, is ¯ armed forces, McKay acknowl-
¯ expected to be released soon and " edged - and publicly renounced
¯ concludes that while changing ~ - his ties to several nee-Nazi &
: attitudes about lesbians and gay ~
¯
mcn may justify further reviews ¯
¯ of the and-gay ban in the future, ~
¯ "it may equally be that the per- ¯
:~ manent features of the military
¯¯ enviroument are such that it will
¯ never be possible to integrate
homosexuals" in the nadon’s
: maned forces.
3 Charged in Killing Of
¯ Canadian Man
: WINNIPEG, Calmda-Canadian
: authorities have arrested 3 men
¯ and are seeking a 4th - who are
¯ believed linked to white su-
:. premacist and nee-Nazi organi-
: z,ations - in comaection the brutal
1991 mad-gay murder ofGordon
Kuhtev. Kuhtey was killed on
’ the mo’nfing ofWinnipeg’s 1991
~ gay pride celebration, June 30,
¯ as he walked along a riverbank ¯
footpath. AccordingtoWimfipeg
¯
police, Kuhtey was suddenly
confronted by at least four young
men who savagely beat him in
the head, then tossed him into
the nearby river and proceeded
to hurl stones at his floating body.
He died of massive head injuries.
Althongh Wilmipeg authorities
had little luck in tracking
down Kuhtey’s killers, the police
homicide and hate crimes
refit kept the case open and dog-
" gedly continued their investigation.
In late February their persistence
paid off and the 29th
Calgary police arrested Matthew
A. McKay, 25, in that city;
Penticton Royal Canadian
Mounted Police also arrested
Jmnes R. Lisik, 22, in British
white supremacist groups.
Anti-Gay Crimes in SF
SAN FRANCISCO -The S.F.
~olice department’s hate crimes
unit says that bias-based crimes
rose 23% to 350 incidents in
1995 over the previous year, the
anti-gay and -lesbian incidents
constituting both the largest
single category and the largest
increase. The hate crimes unit
reported that 144- or41% - of all
such crimes reported in .1995
were based on sexual orientation
and that anti-gay incidents
increased nearly a third last year
over 1994. Police said it was not
dear whether the number of reported
incidents reflected an actual
surge in anti-gay attacks or
was a result of greater willingness
on the part of gays and
lesbians to report such incidents
because of increased publicity
of attacks.
Anti-Gay Attacks
Ignored in Kentucky ,
MOREHEAD, Ky. - Morehead
State Ulfiversity officials disagreed
with an instructor’s claim
that.an attack on a female student
was part of a patteru of
campuswide gay-bashing at the
school. Three masked men
jumped out of hiding on Feb. 5
and verbally and physically assaulted
a 20-year-old female student
on a campus walkway,
punching her in the face and
stomacK RogerHolbrook, coor~
dinator of investigations for
MSU police, said the student
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News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News
believed the attack was related " another high school that trig- " arrested them at an adult book- cious of his motives, which place at a state-funded facility.
to "the friends or acquaintances ¯
she keeps." But MSU English
instructor Patti Swartz said sh_ej
is outraged at the university ¯
administration’ s lack ofresponse ¯
following theincident, which she ¯
labeled a gay bashing. Swartz
has written letters expressing her
concern to MSU President "
Ronald Eaglin and the vice presi- ¯
dents of student affairs and aca- ¯
demic affairs saying the attack ¯
_was just the latest in a series Of ¯
anti-gay and -les~bian attacks.
Utah: NotO Eq ual Access "
SALT LAKE CITY - The Utah ¯
Boardof Education is writing to "
the state’s congressional delega- "
tion asking them to back federal ¯
legislation that would make it ¯
legal for local school districts to -"
decide what nonacademic clubs "
can be allowed on their cam- ¯
puses. The Salt Lake City school
¯
board has also writing a similar "
letter condemning the federal ¯
governmentforforcing theboard ¯
to ban all non-academic clubs "
just so schools there wouldn’t "
have to recognize a gay and les- ¯
bian club that students had asked ¯
to form. The Salt Lake City let- "
ter says the school board was ¯
forced into the ban "’under du- ¯
ress" because of a federal law "
guaranteeing equal access to "
school actavitles for all groups .
and clubs. Although the letters
both blame federal laws for the
dilemma they’rein, both of them ."
carefully sidestep mentiomng .
that the law - the Equal Access
Act - was sponsored by Sen. ¯
Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) so that "
Bible clubs and religious ori- ¯
ented groups could meet in public
schools.
Meanwhile, a group of stu-¯"
dents at Cottonwood High .
School have am~ounced plans to
launch a gay-straight student alliance
similar to one proposed at ¯
gered a national furor. Students
Cara Varallo and Brin Bon say
they met with Cottonwood Principal
Michael Bennett to discuss
creatinga gay-straight club next
fall at the school. On Feb. 20, the
Salt I~ake City School Board
voted4-3 to end all nonacademic
clubs rather than allow ~the gay
school club. The Cottonwood
students, say .they ,already have
10 students to join the club.
Gay Studies at Berkeley
BERKELEY, Calif. - The University
of California at Berkeley
this semester has begun its Lesbian,
.Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender (LGBT) Studies
minor, the first gay studies minor
in the University of California
system. The new minor, part
of the College of Letters and
Science’s Undergraduate Interdisciplinary
Studies (UGIS) department,
offers four basic core
courses and a list of electives
dealing with homosexuality, past
and present. Initial plans for the
minor got started when students
at the school in- 1990 protested
about the lack of a gay studies
program at the university. Some
2.0, active UC staff, faculty and
students have been involved in
formulating the curriculum.
CA Court Rules Against
Undercover Stings
SAN FRANCISCO - The California
supreme court has unanimously
ruled in favor of 2 Santa
Clara (Calif.) County men- Dennis
Baluyut and Job Lopez - saying
a pattern of anti-gay discrimination
in police arrests was
sufficient to demonstrate they
were being singled out by authorities
in a pohce sting operation
by Mountain View police.
Attorneys for the city’s police
had argued that the 2 men had to
legally prove the officers who
¯ store for soliciting sex with an
¯ undercover officer had intended
¯ to single out gays for arrests.
¯ Baluyut and Lopez filed a law-
. suit, arguing that arrest records
¯ alone showed a pattern of dis-
" cnmination by police in arrest-
. lng gays in such sting opera-
" t.ions, mid the state’s high court
¯ Sided with the 2 men on appeal.
Kentucky Privacy Bill
¯¯ FRANKFORT, Ky. - Ithadmore
to do with the kinds ofenormous
¯ computer data files maintained
¯ On pe0pid by bank~, credit agdn-
¯ cies, and other public and pri- ¯
vale organizations, but the stun-
" ningly simple idea of adding an
¯ explicit right to privacy to the
Kentucky constitution has law-
" makers and politicians through-
" out the state worried about a
¯ "hidden agenda" covering ev-
¯ erything from abortion rights to
¯ sodomy. But the proposed
¯ amendment to the state’s "Bill
; of Rights" was introduced by
¯ one of the legislature’s most re-
" spected lawmakers, state Rep.
¯ Joe Clarke, a member of the
¯ House since 1970 and its one-
" time speaker. What’s more,
¯ Clarke, a Danville, Ky., Demo-
¯ crat, says he’s not overly con-
. cerned that his proposed consti-
" tutional amendment might le-
¯ galize sodomyormake anti-abor-
¯ tion restrictions void. Among
¯ other things, Clarke noted that ¯ the state supreme court has al-
¯ ready ruled that there is an im-
¯ plied right toprivacy in the Ken-
" tucky constitution and that it
¯ means laws against sodom) are
¯ themselves unconstitutional. So
¯ Clarke says he’s not especially ¯
concerned that enshrining the
¯ right to privacy in the constitu-
¯ tion would have much impact
one way or the other on social
legislation. Even so, Clarke says
fellow lawmakers remain suspimakes
him pessimistic about its
chances. "I think it’s an important
issue....I don’t think it has
much of a chance this tilne.’"
New Hampshire Policies
CONCORD. N.H. - A group of
, parents aud other concerned citizens
have filed suit against the
Merrimack school board in U.S.
District Court, char~ng that the
¯ ¯ board’s recently adopted policy
of prohibiting any materials that
have "the effect of encouraging
or supporting homosexuality as
a positive lifestyle alternative"
violatedFirst Amendment rights
of free speech. The suit claims
that the policy has led to books
being removed from schools,
classroom discussions being cut
off, and curriculum topics being
restricted. At a press conference,
Debra Herget, one of the plaintiffs
in the suit and the mother of
3 children attending schools in
the district, said, "’This policy
¯ .hurts and distorts the education
¯ of students every day. Now is
¯ the right time to put au end to it
¯- and return to the sound policies
which have always guided our
children’s education in the past.’"
Recently, the New
Hampshire’s legislature voted
293-35 to send a proposed measure
adding sexual orientation to
the state’s civil rights statutes
for "’extended stud)’.’" The move
effectively puts the proposal on
hold for this year while a legislative
committee studies the measure
and reports back to the full
legislature next fall.
Alabama Gay Conf.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The
Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual College
Conference of the Southeastern
United States went ahead
at the University of .Alabama,
more or less without incident,
despite attempts by state officials
to block the confab taking
Just days before the conference
was slated to start, a federal distrier
courtjudge rejected the statc
attorney general’s argument that
the confereuce was illeg~d and
ruled that the conference would
go ahead as plmmed. As the conference
itself got started, the
managerofWMCF-TV, a Christian
Broadcasting Co. television
affiliate~ charged the statiou’s
First Amendmentrights had been
violatedwhen organizers refused
to let his TV crew videotape the
conference’,s, w~rkshops. Organizers
of the meeting; however,
said videotaping the event wotfld
have been disruptive and would
have violated the privacy rights
of those attending.
Mont. Sodomy Law Out
HELENA, Mont. - Moutana
District Court Judge Jeffrey
Sherlock has ruled that the state" s
sodomy law is ,an unconstitutional
infringement of privacy
protections guaranteed under
state law. State officials are expected
to appeal the ruliug to the
state supreme court, although the
attorney general’s office gave
no indication of its intentions
about the ruliug, which orders
the state not to enforce the law.
The 1973 felony statute "called
for up to 10 year~ in prison and a
fine of up to $50,000. No one
had ever been prosecuted under
the law.
Judge Denies Custody
RICHMOND, Va. - A Virginia
judge has again rejected an appeal
by lesbian mom Sharon
Bottoms in her 3-year efforts to
gain custody of l~er son Tyler.
Ironically Judge \Villimn B’oice
questioned Bottoms" financial
ability to care for her son, while
he criticized herfor si~nng a
$75,000 contract to allow ABCTV
to make a television movie
about her struggle for custody.
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AIDS & Young People
AIDS Policy Office has issued a report on
the epidemic that indicates little or no
progress is being made in lowering the
HIV infection rote amongAmerican young
people. At a press conference, Patricia
Fleming, the AIDS policy office director,
described the report on AIDS and American
youth "a call for action" to intensify
AIDS prevenuon efforts in the country’s
schools and communities with a greater
role for young Americans in the fight
against the epidemic. Health officials say
the teenage infection proportion is about
the same as it was in the mid-1980s,
despite dramaficall.,, increased awareness
of the disease. That means many adolescents
either are not getting the message
about AIDS prevention, or they do not
have the skills or desire to protect themselves
from being exposed to the virus
even if they "know how it is spread.The
only declinein infection rates among racial"
or ethnic groups was among young
white males.
KS Virus Identified
SAN FRANCISCO - Researchers at the
University of California at San Francisco
report in the journal Nature Medicine that
they have finallyidentified thc,_organism
that causes Kaposi "s sarcoma, a once-rare
skin cancer that now strikes thousands of
people with AIDS. Kaposi’s Sarcoma was,
in fact, the first indication noted by doctors
in 1981 that some unusual h~alth
problem was affecting gay meu. The researchers,
headed by Dr. Don Ganem at
UC-SF, isolated the microbe, -known as
KS-associated herpes virus or human
herpes virus 8 (HHVS). It ~s one of a
growing number of retro-viruses that scientists
ha~,’e only just begun discovering
and identifying in the past few decades.
HIV Strain Raises Fears of
Heterosexual Epidemic+,~-
BOSTON" - Writing in the journal Science.
Dr. Max Ess%x of the Harvard AIDS
Institute warns that new-Asian and Afrb
can strains of HJ3,; spwad much more
easily among heterosexuals than prev~z_-
ouslv identified HIV-1 strains of the
rus. :’If it takes holdh~(~h ~ewest) we
could face a much mote sig~tificant epii
demic among he.teri~sext~ls(~" Essex
warns. Researchers have found that a strain
of the virus found in Thailand thrives in
the reproductive tracts ofwomen, making
it far more likelvoio betrangmitted during
heterosexual rutercourse than the HIV-1
strains common in the West.
FDA Considers Growth
Hormone
WASHINGTON - .Ma advisory panel of
the Food & Drug Administration has begun
reviewing an application for fullscale
marketing of a growth hormone by
Serene Laboratories Inc. of Norwell,
YAass., as a way to fight AIDS-related
weight loss, one bf the most serious medical
complications faced by people stricken
with the disease. In later stages of the
illness, between 15% and 40% of those
with AIDS suffer from this wasting syndrome,
making them far more susceptible
to infections. AIDS experts estimated that
9 out of 10 AIDS deaths in the U.S. are
related to excessive weight-loss problems.
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biomedical finn, at one time had considered
marketing the growth hormone as an
AIDS medication, but gave up on the
plan. Now Serene has applied to the FDA
for permismon to begin full-scale marketmg
of its growth hormone, known as
Serosfim, for people with AIDS who are
experiencing severe weight loss problems¯
Implant to Fight Eye Infection
\VASHINGTON~’~ Chiron Corp., based
in Emervville, C~if., has won federal
approval’to be~n marketing ofan implant
used to treat an AIDS-related infection,
known as CM,¥;Tetinitis, that causes blindness.
The Food & Drug Administration
gave the firm the green light to begin
marketing Vivrasert, which is surgically
implanted in the eve of the patient where
it releases aconfint~ous dose ofganciclovir,
an anfiviral medicine that combats the
infection for up to 6 months. Between 15
percent and 40 percent ofAIDS patients
in the U.S. Suffer from CMV infections.
Public-Private Vaccine Venture
WASHINGTON - Government AIDS
officials have unveiled plans for a cooperative
private-public venture aimed a
developing an AIDS vaccine by the year
2002, largely by removing government
and bureaucratic obstacles that havemade
some companies shy away from work on
vaccines. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National
Institute of Allergy & Infectious
Diseases said it will be years before any
vaccine ~s likely available, but the joint
project may help smooth out and speed up
the process. The cooperative project involves
basic medical research being done
by federal agencies that private pharmaceutical
and biomedical firms involved in
the project could use in developing possible
vaccines. The project also would
establish specific clinical criteria for
safety, testing and evaluation of effectiveness
trials of such vaccine candidates.
CDC: AIDS Continues Spiral
ATLANTA The Centers for Disease
Control has released its latest AIDS data,
covenng the period from 1993 to 1994,
that shows the disease continued for the
2rid year in a row to be the leading cause
of death among Americans between the
ages of 25 and 44. The detailed statistics
also indicated that the epidemic continues
to grow fastest among African Americans.
In that age category, nearly a third of
all deaths among black men are now attributed
to AIDS; some 22% of the deaths
among black women; 20% of deaths
among white men; and 6% among white
women.
Asia & Africa AIDS Prevention
BALTIMORE - Amid much of the grim
news about the global spread of HIV that
researchers heard at the annual meeting of
the American Association for the Advancement
ofScience,justconcluded here,
was actually some good news from regions
in Africa and Asia. Dr. Thomas
Quinn of Johns Hopkins University reported
that efforts launched in the early
1990s when the government of Thailand
began realizing the nation was quickly
heading for an HIV crisis have made a
dent in the rate ate virus is spreading in
parts of the country. Widespread distribution
of condoms, tough police regulation
of brothels, and a nationwide treatment
program for sexually transmitted disease,
Quinn says, have made dramatic reductions
in the spread of HIV. "When you put
all this together,what was then witnessed
in Cheng Mai and in Bangkok and several
other places was a steady decline in the
growth rate ofHIV infection," Quinn said.
Buffer-Stumpff Funera Home
Tulsa’s only Gay-owned Funeral Home, Crematory, and Cemetary
Russell Langley-Stumpff, Pre-Needs Counselor, & David Stumpff, Owner
& Companions
At Butler-Stumpff Funeral Home, you and your family will be
treated with dignity, compassion, and pride. Whether it is your given
or chosen familywho needs our services, you can be who and what you
are and you will not be discriminated against.
Weoffer our exclusive $2820 complete funeral plan, no added costs.
If you have a policy somewhere else, you can transfer your policy to
us, and may be due a cash refund if you paid more for what you have
now.
. Our journey through life should be done with pride; shouldn’t our
journeythrough death be done with pride as well? For more information,
p!easg;g[! Russell Langley-Stumpff at 918-587-7000 for all. of
your pre~neett arrangements.
(insurance policies are available with no health questions asked)
2103 East Tfiird
O fioma 74104
918"587-7000
WHAT IS .VIATICATION?
Viatication is the process through which a person
living with an terminal illness can receive a cash payment
from the face value of their insurance policy.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE FORA
VIATICAL SETTLEMENT?
Generally, to be eligible for a viatical settlement you
must have a documentable terminal illness, and life
insurance coverage in either an individual term, whole
life, or a group policy.
HOW MUCH IS MY
POLICY WORTH?
The value of your life insurance policy m a viatical
settlement is determined by the specifics of your policy
and your umque medical situation. Not every policy is
suitable for viaticatmn, but settlement offers typically
range from 60% to 90% of a policy’s face value, depend-’
ing on the specifics of your policy and medical history.
A
UALITY
LIFE
ATIVE
HOW DOESA SETTLEMENT
WORK?
With your written permission, we gather medical and
insurance records with which to determine your policy’s
value. Then, a settlemnt offer ~s presented to you. You
may always decline the offer with no obligation whatsoever.
Should you accept the offer, payment is made
directly to you. You pay nothing else on your policy, and
you owe us nothing.
IS VIATICATING MY
POLICY THE RIGHT
CHOICE FOR ME?
Many factors influence whether viaticating your life
insurance is the best financial alternative available for
you. Southwest Viatical can discuss all of the factors with
you and your family in person, in detail and can recommend
an experienced Certified Financial Planner to assist
you in planning the best outcome from your unique
financial situation.
HOW IS SOUTHWEST
VIATICAL DIFFERENT?
Today; many companies offer viatical settlements,
doing business only by bulk advertising and 1-800 nunlbers.
They transfer your ~nsurance and medical records
bv mail, and do business from another state.
At Southwest Viatical, we believe you should be assured
of complete confidentiality and the best possible
service by working with us in person, face-toq’ace. \Ve
are involved on a community level, and are responsible
directly to our local community.
By working with you in person, but at the stone time
having access to nationwide financial resources, we are
able to deliver the best value ou your policy availablc
toda3. And because of our established resources, we can
deliver a settlement in less than a third flae tune other
compames take by mail, typically in fewer than 30 days.
We’ll do what it takes
to find the best solution for you.
Southwest
Office~ -- K llyKirby
¯Texas " - ...... i?.):~- O~ahoma Representative
-~..:..:~:::~..:..:.................... :..!’.~-. Tulsa, OK 74159,1011
91~747-3320
ATTEhlT!Ot !
ANNOUNCING A SE~.ON~ RETREAT
GAY/BISEXUAL/XAE N!
FOR
Sponsored by TNAAPP
Weekend Retreat for Gay/Sisexual Men
of Native, American Descent
WHEN: May 24-26, 1996
For More Information Call Today
582~7225, Extension 218
IT’S FREE! IT’S FUN!
SIGN UP TODAY!
SPA~E IS LIMITED!
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NAME:
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"TULSA FAMILY NEWS COMMUNIT CALEND R
.SUNDAYS
Agape’ Christian
Fellowship .
Worship Service, 10:30 am _"
Sheridan Center, Suite H ¯
21 st & Sheridan, 599-7688 ,"
¯ Bless the Lord At All
Times Christian Center
Sunday School, 9:45 am
Worship Service, 11 am
2627b East 11th 583-7815
Community of Hope
(United Methodist) ;
Worship Service, 6 pm ¯
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800 -"
Family of Faith
Metro. Comm. Church
Adult Sunday School, 9:15
Worship Service, 11 am
5451-E South Mingo.
Info: 622-1441
o
Metro. Comm. Church
of Greater Tulsa
Worship Service, 10:45am
1623 N. Maplewood
Info: 838-1715
BisexuaL/Lesbian/Gay
Alliance - Univ. of Tulsa
6:30 pm at Canterburv
5th & Evanston, 583-9~80
MONDAYS
HIV Testing
TOHR Clinic
Free & anonymous testing
using fingerstick method.
No appointment required.
Walk in testing: 7-8:30 pm
Results hours: 7-9 pm
Info: 742-2927
." Lambda Bowling.League
¯ Sheridan Lanes ¯
¯" 8:45 pm
3121 S. Sheridan .
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
2rid Monday of month,
6:30 pm
~4154 S. Harvard
Info: 749-4901
OTHER GROUPS
The Technicians, Leather
org., Info c/o 621-5597
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform
& Leather,. Seekers Assoc.
Info: 838-1222
The Banned, OK Gay Band
Practice weekly in OKC
Info: 838-2121
TUESDAYS
HIV+ Support Group
HIV Resource Consortium
1:30 pm
4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
lnfo: Wanda @ 749-4194
Shanti-Tulsa, Inc.
HIV/AIDS Support Group
&
Friends & Family
HIV/AIDS Support Group
7 pm, call for location:
749-7898
Community of Hope
Grief Group, 6 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
Womens Grief Group
6pro, ButleriStumpff
Funeral Home
2103 E. 3rd St.
lnfo: 585-1800
¯ WEDNESDAYS
Authority OfThe Believer
¯ Bible Study, 7 pm
¯ MCC of Greater Tulsa
¯ 1623 N. Maplewood
: Info: 838-1715
Bless The Lord At All
Times Christian Center
Prayer & Bible Study
7:30 pm 2627-B East 1 lth
Call 583-7815 for info.
Family Of Faith MCC
Praise & Prayer 6:30 pm
Choir Practice 7:30 pm
545 I-E South Mingo.
Call 622-1441 for info,
Community of Hope
(United Methodist)
Service for Peace, 6:30 pm
Bible Study, 7 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
TNAAPP
Tulsa Native American
AIDS Prevention Project
Support group
for Gay & Bi Native
American Men, 6 pm
at Community of Hope
1703 E. 2rid
582-7225 or 584-4983
THURSDAYS
16-Step Empowerment
Group For Women
: Community of Hope
¯ 1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
¯ Co-Dependency
Support Group
7:30, Family of Faith MCC
5451-E S. Mingo, 622-1441
HIVTestingTOHRClinic
Walk in testing: 7 - 8:30 pm
Results hours: 7 - 9 pm
Info: 742-2927
Tulsa Family Chorale
Weekly practice~ 9:30 pm
Lola’s 2630 E. 15th
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
1st & 3rd Thursdays
4154 S. Harvard, 749-4901
Alternatives
Weekly social events for
LGBT men & women, 7 pm
Info: 646-5503
Substance Abuse
Support Group
for persons with HIV AIDS
4154 S. Harvard, Ste. G
3-4:30 pro, Info: 749-4194
SATURDAYS
St. Jerome’s Ecumenical
Catholic Church
Mass, 6 pm
Garden Chapel
3841 S. Peoria
Info: Father Rick
at 742-7122
Narcotics Anonymous
Meets weekly at I 1 pm
Confidential support for
recovering addicts.
Community of Hope
1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585= 1800
.NAMES Project
AIDS Memorial Quilt
Sewing Bees
3rd Sat. of each month
Info: 748=37t 1
~... ~q.t "
OTHER GROUPS
Gay & Lesbian St~utent
Association
TJC Southeast Campus,
Info: 631-7632
SWAN-Single Women’s
Activity Network
Call 832-2121
TOHR Helpline
Daily 8-10 pm
For info. ~r to vohmteer:
743-GAYS
SATURDAY, MARCH 16
Gaylapalooza, 8 pm
Tulsa Performing Arts Center
110 E. Second, Info: 596-7111
SUNDAY, MARCH 17
Miss Gay South USofA
Silver Star Saloon
9 pm, 1565 S. Sheridan, Info: 834-4234
FRIDAY, MARCH 22
Lola’s 2nd Anniversary Party
11 pro, 2630 E. 15th, Info:-749-1563
TUESDAY, MARCH 26
Rainbow Business Guild:
City Councilor Gary Watts
7 pro, Chinese Buffet, 6219 E. 61
Dinner Meeting, Info: 665-5174
FRIDAY, MARCH 29
Community ofHope Movie Night &
Discussion: Priest
7:30pro, 1703 E. 2rid, Info: 585-1800
SUNDAY, MARCH 31
St. Jerome’s Catholic Church
The Passion ofOur Lord
6 pro, The Garden Chapel, 3841 S. Peoria
Info: page Father Rick at 646-7116
and
Family ofFaith MCC Palm Sunday
11 am, 5451-E S. Mingo, Info: 622-1441
TUESDAY, APRIL 2
Women &AIDS Conference. 8am- 5 pm
Chapman Activity Ctr., Univ. of Tulsa
5th St. west of Harvard, Info: 743-4297
and
Tulsa Oklahomansfor Human Rights
Community Meeting, 7 pm
Chapman Activity Ctr., Univ. of Tulsa
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3
FamilyofFaith MCC Spy Wednesday
6:30 pm, 5451-E S. Mingo, 622-1441
THURSDAY, APRIL 4
Maundy Thursday at
Family ofFaith MCC
7 pro, 5451-E S. Mingo, 622-1441, and
St. Jerome’s Catholic Church
6 pro, The Garden Chapel, 3841 S. Peoria
and The First Day ofPassover
FRIDAY, APRIL 5
Good Friday at
Family ofFaith MCC
7 pm, 5451-E S. Mingo, Info: 622-1441
and
St. Jerome’s Catholic Church
6 pm, The Garden Chapel~3841 S. Peoria
SATURDAY, APRIL 6
The Great Vigil ofEaster
St. Jerome’s Catholic Church
6 pm, The Garden Chapel, 3841 S. Peoria
SUNDAY, APRIL 7
Easter at
St. Jerome’s Catholic Church
8:30 am, The Garden Chape, and
Family ofFaith MCC
11 am, 5451-E S. Mingo, 622-1441, and
Agape Christian Fellowship
21st & Sheridan, Info: 599-7688, and
MCC ofGreater Tulsa
1623 N. Maplewood, Info: 838-1715
TUESDAY, APRIL 9
AIDS Coalition ofTulsa
Mental Health Needs of
HIVIAIDS Providers.
Noon - 1:30 pm, Mental Health As’soc.
1870 S. Boulder
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10
The Technicians ( [2ather org.)
7:30 pm, Rum Runner’s Hideaway, formerlv
Jesse’s
822 ~o. Sheridan, 835-6535
FRIDAY, APRIL 12
Safe, Haven, a free, non-political, nonreligious,
non-recovery-oriented social
gathering for LGBT young adults. 18-30
Family of Faith MCC. 8 - midnight
5451-E S. Mingo, Info:-622:1441
SATURDAY, APRIL 13
Dignityllntegrity Meeting
Lesbian/Gay Cathohcs & Episcopalians
5 pm, St. Dunstan’s Episcopal Church
5635 E. 71st, Into: POB 701044, 74170
Out & About
by JD Jamett
" I was truly out & about this past several
weeks. Did vou that Kansas City has river
boat casino~? Well this poor l~oy fo_..und
out andlost afew dollars whileroymo!her
became the Queer/of the SLots. Then it
was out of K.C.and down to New Orleans
for the Pantheon Leather Awards. This
was truly an experience unto itself. Just
ask Larry Everett (International Mr.
Leather) how goodhe looks in a feathered
mask and .boa, and how he and 2 other
international title holders ~practically
brought down the house. Also ~e former
Oklahomam (oops - Oklaho-woman?)
received one of the Reader’s Choice of the
Year awards from the Leather Journal
(Pantheon Leather Awards is the Leather
Journal’s and the leather community’s
Academy Awards). see JD, page 13
mm mm mmmmm mmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
The-University of Tulsa
presents
¯¯¯
¯
¯: A Weekend of One Act Plays
¯¯ April 12, 13, & 14, Fri. &.Sat. at~7pm, Sun. at 2pm & 7:30prn
¯ Theatre 2, Kendall Hall, Free to the public. ¯¯ including
¯¯ On Tidy Endings by Harvey Fierstein
¯ HlVariations: Cater Waiter, ¯¯ Andre’s Mother, and Mr Rosen’s Son
¯
¯ (both on Sunday at 2pm)
¯ Also, Diaries
¯ An original one-act musical of politics, religion and Gay life.
¯¯
by Jennifer Hoyer, Gabriel Washam,& James Gregory
¯ Mon, April 29 at 7pm in Chapman Hall
¯¯
For more info, call 631-2566
mmnmmm mmmmmmm mm mm mmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Saint Jerome
Ecumenicaf
Cathdic Church
Tile Key. Father
Ricf~ Hoffirujswortfi, P~stor
Pmje Father Ric~ at 62~6-7116
for more information.
It is )tot the judqraents ~m.en
which open 5r shut
Gates of Heaven. - St. Jerome
SCOTT
ROBISON’S
PRESCRIPTIONS
Serving Tulsan’s
Since 1947
Major credit cards
In-store charges-or
Direct insurance billing
for your convenience!
3 locations to serve you:
Hillcrest
Physician’s Building
1145 So. Utica
743-2351
Utica Square Area
1560 East 21st, Ste. 104
743-2351
The Plaza
8146-D South Lewis
299-1790
FUNERALS JUST
NEVER SEEMED
RIGHT FOR MY FAMILY...
THE CREMATION
SOCIETY WAS CREATED
FOR PEOPLE LIKE ME.
eniqv being ourselves. A funeral seems
ostentatious and can cost a lot of money.
simple., dignified cremation
iust seems to fit our lifestyle.
Cremat o Society
of Oklahoma
2103 East Thii~d, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104.1842
918-599-7337 or toll-free, 800-994-7337
_ Telephone:._.__=
¯ TU’s clear regulations. During that meet-
- ing, Dr. Reid claims, he was pressured and
¯ intimidated by TU s counsel, Fred Corengaged
in selective enforcement of its " nish. Reid, who holds dual citizenship
sexual harassmentpolicy,specifically be- from Canada and the United Kingdom,
cause the complaint involved same-gen- . adds that as a resident alien, he did not
derparticipants,andsadomasochisticcon- " know exacdy what his rights were and
duct.. This board concluded that TU did
¯ that he was fearfd of being deported,
: not prove as required that Dr. Reid had " even though he’d committed no crime.
¯ engaged in sexual harassment. . d ~ ~ Furthermore, the Appeals Board f.oun_d
~- ~fthesevenmembersoftheUABoar ,.. ~i that~iri the:heating Reid f’mally received,
four found the sanction of firinglo be too,.:, the i:eview ,e,ommittee improperly resevere
and of those, three stai~dthat the:~ ¯ stridted)Reid s attoraey from adequate
sanct|on was disproporfouate to the mis-: " access to Pohlman f0r cross-exzmiuation
conduct provenandrecommendeda’sanc- ~." and that TUcounsel improperly asserted
tionotherthandisnussal,addingth~it . ~ . attorney-client;privilege on the part of
procedural violations so colored the~ ~ Provost Lewis.-Dune,an, Vice-Provost
decision,..that the sanction is fundamen-~ ~ Allen Soltow,. Physics chair Kenneth
rally unfair". > : : - , . :~ KuenlaoldandTU Gen. Counsel,Barbara
.~ccordingft0 .Reid,. he and Marlin : Geffem ’. :. ~ " ~:, : ..’ . i:
Pohlman beb,ame invol.ved in a consen-:. Despite,the numerous finding of sensual,
non4exual, Social friendship that
began when Pohlman was a student in
Reid’s class. Reid notes that Pohlmanmmntained
the friendship long after the
class ended, accepting invitations to visit
Reid in Iris home and complaint, nolonger
even was aTU student but never-the-less,
TU officials provided him with housing
,’rod,also legal counsel, Fred Cornish. Cor-
~fish also happened to be representing the
umversitv at the same time. This alleganon
is jdst one of the many procedural
v~olauons of TU’s own regulauons.
Other procedural violations found
against TU by its own Appeals Board
include no notice of the meeting at which
Reid was charged, though he was not
.~iven written notice of the charges as is
~equired,immediately suspended, was escorted
by armed guard from campus, and
not being given adequate time to retmn
counsel - all of which were violations of
: ous improprieties on ihe part of the Uni:
¯ versity of Tulsa and its agents, and the
recommendation by the majority of the
: University Appeals Board that a milder
: sanction is appropriate, Pres. Robert
¯ Donaldson sent a letter to iheTU trustees
: claiming theAppeals Boardrecommended
: termination. All the trustees of the Uni-
¯ versity ofTulsapresent votedunanimously
: on Feb. 7 to fire Dr. James Reid, thus
: destroying his career. Keith Bailey, chair-
: man of the board of trustees of the University
of Tulsa only would say that it would
: no[ be appropriate to discuss Dr. Reid’s
¯ case.
: Reid, who’s since moved to the Northwest,
has been reduced to menial labor
: and the kindness of old friends. While he
: admits to poor judgement in his friend-
: ship with Pohlman, he says that TU’s rife
with rumors of heterosexual misconduct
see TU. page 13
RIBBON ’
MAY 25 7:50P."vl
TULSA ICE ARENA
6910 S. 1015T E. A’v~E
7IST AND Mg’,IGO BEHDCD THE F2 PRICE ST( YRE
.AA.,L T.,ICKET PROCEEDS TO BENEFtT
READ ALL ABOUT IT
Reviewed by Barry Hensley
Tulsa City-County Library
Joining the growing list oftitles
.about coming ofage in the.1990s
is this eye-0pening example by
Linnea Due. With seven lengthy
essays, Due takes us on a tour
across the United States, highlighted
by interviews with Gay
and Lesbian youth. From Portland,
Oregon to New Orleans to
Hai’vey MilkHJgliSdhoolinNew
York City, we meet many witty,
defiant and frustrated youth who
arecoming to terms with their
sexual orientation and surroundings.
An interesting entry centers
around a young man, John, who
grew up in Colorado Springs,
during the Amendment 2 battle,
and is now attending a Santa Fe
high school He tries very hard
to not believe the terrible things
he has heard about homosexuals,
but he doesn’t get the support
or information from farnily,
friends or soc,ety to make informed
decisions. He is constantly
told that being gay is a
choice, and the depths of his
despair are revealed as he sarcastically
responds, "Sure, I
choose to have a horrible life.
How about you?"
Other youth we meet include a
young, black woman dealing
with the twin pressures of racism
and homophobia, kids at the
Harvey Milk "’Queer High
School" inNew Yorkand a group
of French Q~ter teens banding
together for supporL:.There ~is. an
overwhelming sense of frustration
and lack of confidence in
these kids countrywide. As a
group, they are discouraged at
the lack of guidance and support
from older Gays and Lesbians,
while at the same time acknowledging
the difficulties, from a
legal and social perspective, that
the older generation has being
mentors.
The bottom line, if this book’s
entries are representative of
QSueer youth in general, is that
despite the advances that have
been made for Gay equality
through the years, growing up
Gayis still a very traumatic and
confusing time. This book is a
wake up call to those who are
concerned about the suicide rates
of Gay teens and the mental
health of growing minds.
¯ , " Forotherlibrarybooksofsimi-
¯ ’Jar interest, including Passage of
] Pride: Lesbian and Gay Youth
: Come of Age, by Kurt Chandler,
¯ please call your local branch library
or the Readers Services
] Departmeni at the Central Li-
: brarv at 596-7966.
they were legally performed elsewhere,
and for calling for a boycott
of Hawaii if courts there
legalize gay and lesbian weddings.
She said the state should
boycott any non-essential travel
to Hawaii if the courts there declare
same-sex marriages are le=
gal under that state’s constitution
"to punish this kind of madness."
The
marriages has swept rapidly
throughout s~ate legislatures
through the c0untry~ but so far;
the Michigan ~roposai is the,firs~
to call for a boycott of Hawaii if
the courts rule’in favor 9f same~
sex unions.
Sen. Jim Holcomb (R-Sullivan.
County) sponsored a bill to ban
same-sex marriages in Termessee
and refuse to recognize any
such marriage that might be legally
performed in any other
state. The bill overwhelmingly
passed the Senate by a vote of
31-0-2.
A committee of the Colorado
House of Representatives has
approved proposed legislation
that would barrecognizing samesex
marriages that might be legal
in other states.
In Maryland, Delegate Emmitt
Bums introduced a measure that
would bar recognizing same-sex
marriages in the state, declaring
such marriages "repugnant" to
public policy.
Eureka Springs 9th Annual May Fine Arts Festival
Jim & Brent’s Bistro Calendar of Events
Benefit Show for IAM
American Theatre Company
presents "Camping with Henry
&Tom", anew historical fiction
by Mark St. Germain, April 12-
20, 1996. ATC has generously
donated their 8pm,Thurs., April
11 preview performance to benefit
Interfaith AIDS Ministries
at the PAC John H. Williams
Theatre. Tickets are $8. Call 438-
2437 or 663-5372.
The author. St. Gemmin. dcscribes
this work as "a fiction
suggested by facts". Ttmt Prcs.
Harding went camping with
Henry Ford and Thomas FAison
is fact; their "escape" from the
media-packed Cmnpsite is tictional.
Their ensuing conversation
is not only thought-provoking
but, at times, very humorous.
ii ?i " Eocafion, location, location
~. Fog Sale By Owner
-~ Eurek.a.. Springs, Arkansas
Income Properties
Flexible terms- owner willing to carry paper.
-. Take advantage NOW of this rapidly growing market!
Call 501-253-7729 or write
POB 341, Eureka Springs, AR 72632 for further details.
Real Estate is a great investment. Bring us an offe!!
AUTHENTIC
ITALIAN
CUSINE
FRESH
RAINBOW
TROUT
o[ Eureka Springs
Recommended by The New York Times
(5011 253-6807 ~ Center Street
Closed Wednesdm Eureka Springs, 4R 726.¢2
Thurs. May 2nd, Silence With A Voice
Gay & Lesbian Art Exhibit 5-10 PM, Dinner Will Be Served 6-10 PM
at. May 4th, Listen! Look At Me.t Visual Performance Art On The Passion, Pain,
Politics & Power of Lesbian Women. Soap & Vick Events.
A uniquely artistic show where art performs & poetry, dances.
Sun. Mother’s Day 12th, A Mother’s Love.. ?
An eclectic artcollcction of motherS.’ lives, loves & dedicationtd &eir children.i
9-11 PM. Gwendolyn’s Superb Sunday Brunch WillBe Served 9 AM - 3 PM.
Jim s Dinner Served 5-11 P~I
Tues. May 14th, Poetry On Planer Hill, OlJen Mic[ 6-8 PM.
Thurs. 30th & Fri. 31st, Bistro B~at Etc.
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It’s adream - way intothe future. Itmay
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Note: Dear readers, Should you ever
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Keep on reading] - Leanne
"People don’t plan to fail,
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"People don’t plan to fail, they fail to plan."
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Mention this ad and receive
a no cost initial consultation.
by professors and admi~s~ators. He
names names - of the former ]aw professor
who was said to sleep with his students
or the English professorwhoimpregnated
a student attending his class. He tells of
rumors that even circulate about Pres.
Donaldson. And these rumors aren’t limited
to him - many students around TU
can name the same names and details.
But he notes with bitterness that these
folks don’t seem to receive sanctions, or if
they do, they’re nothing like what he’s
experienced. Reid feels that only anti-
Gay and anti-s/m bias can explain why
other professors who clearly appear to
have had sex with their students remain at
TU while he had a friendship that involved
no more intimacy or actions than
between twomen boxing is gone. "Rugby
players engage in more vi,olence and contact
than we did but rugby s socially sanctioned
and s/m is not," he adds.
When told of how Lesbian and Gay
faculty on campus whom he once thought
were friendly now malign him, citing his
poor grooming or too casual dress, Reid
justcomments onhow sad it is that they’re
so scared now. He says they know if it
happened to him, it could happen to them
too. He thinks that TU trustees, counsel,
administrators, all know that their actions
are indefensible, but they thought they
couldjustcover it all up, or thathe couldn’t
get any help, .oi: that he’d be too intimidated.
For the future, Reid’s working with
national legal aid orgamzations to pursue
a lawsuit. Meanwhile, one faculty member
with a penchant for gossip says what
really got TU scared was Pohlmar] threatening
to take his video to TV’s Hard
Copy. Reid says maybe he’ll do it instead.
JD cont’dfromp. 9
Well, this month’s feature is as downhome
and friendly as a bar can be. That’s
rightput on any ofyour favorite drag from
leather to lace to good old denim for this
establishment and get ready for a good old
time at the Silver Star Saloon. This club
has been home to such events as Mr.Tulsa
Leather, Mr. Oklahoma Leather, Miss
Central State, and on March 17th, the first
Miss South USofA pageant. The owners,
John & Steve, are some of the nicest guys
.I know. They have been active in supportzng
HIV/AIDS fundraisers and community
events like the Pride Picnic over the
past 4 years: they will celebrate the Silver
Star’ anniversary on April 15th.
Weekly events include such things as
Wednesday nights Drag Rodeo Roundup
with Courtney Farrell (love you, missy)
and Sunday nights with tight buns and big
chests, oops, I meanmale dancers from 10
to close. This bar has lots room on the
dance floor for those who like country or
good dance music. They also have pool
tables and darts.
In closing, as Dorothy said, thereis no
place like home and the people you love
(remember to tell them that - it will make
their day and yours). Until Toto comes
home, see ya out &about.
Photos, JD damett, 621-5597
Kellie J. Watts
Attorney at law
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Serving a Diverse Community
by Jean-Pierre, TFN Food Critic
Those of us who had the privilege of
growing up in the Southwest have had
plenty ofopportunity to eatMexicanfood.
Remember the day~ ,~lien~ff~-were butch
littlejunior high hellions and competed to
see who could eat the most platefuls of the
all-you-can-eat special at Casa Bonita?
Well, we’ve grown up and discovered
that Mexican food can be more than a
hedonistic glut-fest or a midnight trip
through theTaco Mayo drive-up window.
Quite by accident, we came across the
Santa Fe. Mexican Restaurant-at 1515
South Sheridan inTulsa;.just north Of the
Silver Star Saloon. It’ s been there for four
years, owned and operated by the
Contreras family, some real Mexico Mexicans,
with traditional family recipes and a
talent for good food in a comfortable and
relaxed atmosphere. And, as a smaller,
family restaurant, the waiters and waitresses
don’t run frenetically from table to
table and none of the faux-Mexican decoration
or.m~sic rears its ugly head as we
see so:-oft~nfi~iithe chain establishments.
Theb~i~appears unpretentious and
the inside decor is quite modest. Butprices
are extremely reasonable for a large plate
of excellent-,[~. On weekdays, there is a
luncheon biiffei’for $5:50 per person, and
most of the a la carte entrees are $4.50.
There are smo-kigg and non=smOking sections
anda:ifull~!~i[~,~,ensed bar.
Several ~=tast~:~!:~ups are available as
starters. The ~o~.~e is a spicy pork and
hominy mix .~*:i~:lots of coriander and
peppers: Th~rfi ig"~m unusual chicken and
ve~aicelfi sbup;;;vhich we expected to
resemble something along the line of
: Campbell’s chicken noodle, but which
: was a full flavored red stock, full of bro-
¯ ken pieces of angel hair pasta noodles. A
chicken tortilla soup is also available.
: Guacamole salad is one of the tdling
: signs of freshness with Mexican food. As
¯ youmay know frommaking guacamole at
: home, once cut, the avocado very quickly
~ turns brown on exposure to air, so lemon
¯ or lime juice is squeezed on to the cut
surfaces to retard discoloration. The
~ guacamole at SantaFe was freshly made,
: chunky, and bright green, with no trace of
¯ browning and no taste of citrus juice--
: this is amazing and most enjoyable.
." This place has some of the best tamales
: we’ve ever eaten in Tulsa, made b.y hand
:¯ and Steamed the traditional way m corn
husks. These tamales taste like what you
¯ might be served by a friend’s mother at
¯ the family dinner table, not like what
¯ we’ve come to expect from restaurants. ¯ Vvqaile all of the traditional Mexican
_" entrees are on the menu, you may espe-
¯ cially want to try the chicken enchiladas,
¯ which are juicy and mouth-watering. ¯
Watch out, though, because we did find a
¯ bone chip in the chicken on a recent visit.
The enchiladas and other entrees are
¯ available with several sauces,and we com-
" mend to you the mole sauce. Mole (pro-
" nounced, "MOH-Iay") is a traditional
¯ Mexican sauce made from unsweetened
chocolate and hot peppers. The Spanish
~ conqmstadors were introduced to choco-
¯ late by the Aztecs and took the cocoa
: beans back to Europe, where the sugar
¯ started to be added. This Mexican sauce is
¯ not sxveet, tastes like nothing .you can
~ imagine, and is delicious.
¯ The dessert list inclUdes a tasty little-
" tan, an individual egg custard baked with
caramelized sugar that forms a brown
bittersweet sauce.
Our only complaint is the complementary
salsa served is a bit too thin and
watery, but it i s tasty and does appear to be
freshly made onions and cilantro have a
distinctive tastewhenfresh andnot canned
or bottled.
In themoodfor good, home-style Mexican
food in a casual setting? We heartily
recommend Santa Fe for great food at a
surprisingly cheap price. And, don’t forget
to mention you read about them in
Tulsa Family News.
Santa Fe Mexican Restaurant, 15i5
S. Sheridan. Prices: inexpensive. Service:
casual. Hours: 11 am - 9 pm; till
10 p.m. on Fri-Sat; closed Sun. Payment:
Visa, Mastercard, AmericanExpress,
Diner’s Club, Carte Blanche; no
checks. Non-smoking area: Yes. Alcohol:
Full bar. Opinion: A List.
THE PERFECT
WAY TO SHOW
APPRECIATIOH
MINGOVALLEY ~ ~
7Z ts,. 663-5934 "
Daphane Cooper
by James Christjohn
Well, it’s not often that a critic gets to
¯ put his money where his Mac is, but now
¯ is the time. I’m pleased to announce that ¯
I amdirecting"HIVariations" - three short
¯ plays - during the weekend of one-acts at
~ TU on April 14 in Theatre 2 in Kendall
¯ Hall, 2pm. Ya’ll get to see if I really do
¯ know what I’m talking about.
¯ "HIVariations" are three plays centered
¯ aroundthereactions of family and spouses ¯
to the loss of a loved one due to HIV -
¯
"Cater Waiter", now in production as a
¯ fflmstarfingDavidDrake, Andre’s Mother
¯ by T,,errence McNally; and "Mr. Rosen’s
Son . While the subject itself is rather
¯ - dark, there is humor in these shows. The
¯ cast includes Brad Luna, Karin Sandmel, ¯
¯ VivicaWalkenbach, and JohnWeller. On
the samebill, Harvey Fierstein’s"OnTidy
¯ Endings" is being produced, and some
¯ early Tennessee Williams works are included
in the weekend’s festivities. The
¯
plays on Friday and Saturday start at 7pm,
~ Sunday’s plays are at 2 and 7:30pm. The
¯ weekend of one-acts ~s free to the public.
By the way, I’m still casting the part of
¯
Mr. Rosen - 50-60 year old NYJewish
¯ man. If you or someone you know fits the
¯ bill, please call me at 583-1248. In addi-
¯ tion, the performance of an original one-
: act musical dealing with politics, religion
¯ and gay life, "Diaries" by Jennifer Hoyer,
with lyrics and music by Gabriel Washam
¯
and James Gregory, all TU theatre stu-
¯
dents, will be held Mon, April 29 at 7pro
¯ in Chapman Hall.
¯ Phantom was Phabulous! I was irasee
next page
THEOFFICIAL 25TH MISS GAY
PERFORMINGARTSCENTER
APRIL 96, 7:30 pM
UPLES
An Official Preliminary to
Miss Gay Oklahoma America
Head Co-Judges:
Miss Gertrude Garnet
Miss Gay Oklahoma America
and
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Miss Oklahoma USofA
Advance tickets NOW available through
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Phone ordered accepted, Visa/MC accepted.
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For more information, write to:
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Portions of proceeds to benefit
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pressed with the quality of the cast, and the amazing voices.
ls it just me, or did anyone else think that the Phantom was
really after Raoul, who was really Phamily, and only using
Chri stine as a method of getting closer to him? Then, in the
end when the Phantom realizes that, unfortunately, Raoul
really does seem to be straight (NOT!), that he should let them
go live together? Just an interpretation all my own. Really, the
show is a spectacle worth seeing. I must admit, in all my years
of performing and viewing plays, I’ve never seen an inanimate
object (a chandelier) get applause before. The second act
kind of loses steam, as though the author thought, "OK, I’ve
got the characters into these situations, now how do I get them
out?" and lost track of the play itself. The first act is wonderful,
though, and the second is only affected in minor ways.
Tulsa’s Irish Festival occurs in Riverparks 3/15-16, and
should make for an interesting day at the park. I’m going to be
on the lookout for so~e leprechauns to get lucky with... I
mean, er, to helpme with luck! As in "Pot o’ gold" kinda stuf!!
OK, time to getmyselfoutof the corner here, before the Editor
finds out I’ve slipped this into the column ...
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First 30 words are $10. Each
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e47956
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I’M OUT, ARE YOU?. GWM, 6’1 ", 265,
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(McAlester) e49183
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NOW AND THEN. GWM, 6’1 ", 190,
brown hair, green eyes, seeks others for
occasional encounters. (Muskogee)
e32992
LOCAL MEN WANTED. GWM,5’I 1",
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shaven, seeks local guys for fun friendship
and more. Ca me. (Tulsa) ’e49331
NO NONE NITERS. GWM, 25, tall,ban
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variety of interests, smoke/drug/disease
free, seeks others, 20-30, for f~n friendship
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not into one night affairs. Give me a call.
(Tulsa) ~34529
I’M LONELY AND LOOKING. GWM,
28,masculine, brown hair and eyes, 6’3",
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about everyth ng. Please be discreet¯
(Fayetteville) e6581 ¯
STRAIGHT OR BI A TURN ON. GW~,
very submissive, seeks masculine and
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for fun, pleasure and more. Please leave a
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seeks others for fun, friendship and more.
Leave me a message. (Truman) ~48086
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¯r49141 ’
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e47744
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interests, late 40’s seeks other~ for fun and
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Please leave a message. (Tulsa) ~25993
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area, 28, 5’11", blonde hair, blue eyes,
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guys tor passion and more Call me soon
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fun. Give me a call. (Tulsa) e34324
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,5 6 , black hair, brown eyes,
new to area, very romantic, seeks
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possibly more. If this nterests you,
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GIRL TALK. Bi Curious WF,
5’11",16.% 24, blonde hair.
eyes, v~riety, o~ interests, ot;~ do.:~:
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Fina ly....Unity Gardens
A final resting place in peace, unity and pride...
located in Washington Memorial Gardens ~.Cemetary
4300 E. 91st Street South
On 91st Street between Yale & Harvard
Actual
We
to ol
We offer
in
Gardens has been desi ned for
Gay and Lesb:
those "
9mmunity,
there no cemetar, in ¯ lsa
allow s toge~
recogmzing as a cou
or/ Ion as an indi ddual?
is no place i Un will,
[TIL ~!
the y in the United States
of our cemetary just for
Lesbians, and their family and friends.
spaces, columnburium for cremated remains,
scattering gardens with a memorial wall,
.s new.ly expanded and renovated section of
gton Memorial Gardens Cemetary.
The Pride flag will proudly fly in the center of Unity Gardens
to always remind us of our struggle in life for unity and pride.
If you have purchased a plot elsewhere,
you may be able to transfer or trade your burial plots.
For.more information, please call Russell Langley-Stumpff at 918-587-7000.
***Owned and operated by Butler-Stumpff Funeral Home***
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periodical
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[1996] Tulsa Family News, March 15-April 14, 1996; Volume 3, Issue 4
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Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.
Description
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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).
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level.
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.
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Tulsa Family News
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Tom Neal
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March 15-April 14, 1996
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James Christjohn
Phyl Boler-Schmidt
Barry Hensley
Pat Morehead
JD Jamett
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Tom Neal/Tulsa Family News
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Tulsa---Oklahoma
Oklahoma---Tulsa
United States Oklahoma Tulsa
United States of America (50 states)
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Tulsa Family News, February 15-March 14, 1996
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Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Communities - Our Families of the Heart February 15 - March 14, 1996, Volume 3, Issue 3
National News
Clinton Slams HIV+
Military Discharges
WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration
has announced that it believes the
HIV discharge provision in the $265 billion
Defense Department’s 1996 authorization
defense authorzafion bill is unconstitutional
and has ordered the Justice
Department not to defend the provision.
That provision, written by arch-conservalave
Rep. Bob Dornan, R-Calif., would
discharge within sxx months, regardless
see Clinton, page 3
Anti-Marriage Bills
ExplodeAround US
PIERRE, S.D.- Sparked by the likelihood
that state courts in Hawaii will soon declare
same-sex mamage legal there, a
rapidly growing number of state legislatures
throughout the country have started
arush to outlaw gay and lesbian marriages
from being recognized locally, even if
they should be legal elsewhere in the U.S.
Legislatures in at least 18 states: AL, AK,
CA, CO, GA, HI, ID, IL, IA, MO, N19I; RI,
SC, SD, TN, VA, WA, WI - had various
versions of"gay miscegenation" proposals
before thein at press tame.
In Virginia, where same-sex marriages
are already forbidden by state law, under
pressure from Radical Right Gov. George
F. Allen, the Virginia Housing DevelopmentAuthority
has reversed a 1994 policy
and now effectively prohibits mmaamed
or gay and lesbian couples from getting
see Marriage, page 3
Gay Morn Appeals
Custody DecisiOn
PENSACOLA, Fla. - Mary Ward has
appealed an August ruling that ordered
her 11-year-old daughter be given over to
the custody of the child’s father, who was
convicted of killing his first wife.The decision
last year by state Circuit Court
Judge JosephTarbuck stunnedmany when
he ruled in favor of John Ward, the girl’s
father, who served 9 years in prison for
killing his first wife during an argument
over custody of their daughter. In deciding
against Mary Ward, Tarbuck ruled
see Morn, page 3
Tennessee Sodomy
Law Thrown Out
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. ~ The Tennessee
Court of Appeals has ruled unanimously
that the state’s anti-gay sodomy statute is
unconstitutional. In overturning the state
law the court ruled that the right to privacy
includes "the fight of the plaintiffs to
engage in consensual, private, non-commercial
sexual conduct" that were none of
the state’s business because they involve
"intimate questions of personal and family
concern." State officials gave no immediate
indication of whether they would
appeal the ruling to the state supreme
court or not, but most rights advocates
expect an appeal.
FUSO: Friends in Unity
Social Organization
Tulsa’s organization forAfrican-American
Gay men ~s expanding its efforts to
meet both social and health needs of their
immediate community, and the larger one.
Over the past year they’ve established a
RAIN team, which has its first client, and
which may be the only all African-Amencan
team in Oklahoma. Its leadership also
is working on the non-profit’s tax-exempt
status with the Internal Revenue Service
so that they can actively seek grant funding
to provide HIV education and care.
Ultimately they would like to provide
case management, peer education, information
and referra! services, HIV testing
and counseling, health and nutrition, and
substance abuse counseling and a food
bank in North Tulsa.
Over this last year, FUSO has donated
canned goods to Our House, made a gift to
the victims of theOKCbombing They v e
helped to represent Tulsa African-A~eri ¯
cans by sending representatives to Hoist
ing the Bamwr. the state HIV AIDS con.
ference in OKC addressing issnes of
people of color and also participated in the
statewide HIV/AIDS conference held last
summer at the Doubletree Hotel, Warren
Place. Its members marched in the "95
Tulsa AIDS Walk and the World AIDS
Day March held at University of Tulsa.
Derrick Davis, who is one of FUSO’s
officers, has been nominated to be cochair
of the Multi-Cultttral AIDS Coalition.
FUSO also is participating in the
planning of the Women and AIDS conference
that will be tleld in April.
Last Labor Day, FUSO held a successful
Labor Day Weekend event with guests
see FUSO, page 10
Vicious Pink, In the Red?
OKC-owned Store Closes
Vicious Pink, a Gay-oriented gift store
owned by Anthony Klatt of Oklahoma
City has closed after barely 6 months. The
store located in Concessions at 3340 So.
Peoria opened with ambitious plans and
claims of being the largest such establishment
in the state.
Kirk Glines, one of the owners of Concessions,
indicated that he and his partner
Terry Kerns will reopen the shop themselves,
possibly by March 1st. Klatt also
opened a shop, Dusty Roads, in the Silver
Star Saloon. Star owner, John Rothrock
could not say whether Dusty Roads was
still in business, noting that it was closed
without explanation for a week recently
and had not been dependably open.
Tulsa Man Seeks
Relief From Threats
A 31-year 01d Tulsa man’s been driven
from one home, has had to send his children
away for their safety, has had other
members of his family threatened and
may have to flee his new apartment, all
because he’s living with AIDS. Roscoe
Pilant, who goes by the nickname, JR,just
wants to be left alone to hve, and to work
when he can. However, despite having
swastikas and death threats marked on his
door and threats to murder him left on his
answering machine, Tulsa Police initially
were hardly cooperative. And as a result
of his complaint, investigation by legalaid
attorneys have discovered that the
Oklahoma S tate Bureau of Investigations
might have been violating the OK hate
crimes statute by not keeping statistics on
hate crimes directed toward any disabled
persons, including those living with AIDS.
Pilant says his troubles began when he
had to take a HIV related medical absence
from work. After he returned, he feels that
his employer, a national finn, fired him
becauseof his HIV status. After the finn
was contacted by Oklahoma Legal Aid
attorney Darlene Shadid andwas informed
that discrimination based on HIV’AIDS
status is illegal under federal law, the
Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA),
he returned to work. And then the harassment
began.
see Threats, page 2
Lesbian & Gay
Domestic Violence
Two police officers from Tulsa area
police departments spoke to the members
and guests of Tulsa Oklahomans for Hnman
Rights (TOHR) about do~nestic violence
issues, both within and out the LesbianGay
con~nunities. Both officers who
are 10 year plus veterans work pmnanly
on domestic violence (hereafter abbreviated
as DV). Each gave profoundly sobering
statistics on the extent of DV. For
example, they noted that 50% of US
women ~vi!l be DV violence victims, that
wom_en are at a 9 times higher risk of
injury in their homes than they are on the
street, and that every 15 seconds a women
is beaten in her own home. The officers
outlined some of the social psycholoNcal
dynamics of DV noting the stages of the
syndrome and gave details of legal opti’ons
and other resources to help victims
and to identify abusers.
The officers who had dealt with Lesbian/
Gay DV issues bemoaned the lack of
research in this area but noted that the
causes are similar to those of DV for
heterosexuals. They suggested that 30%
of Lesbian/Gay relationships have some
DV problems but they suspected that these
cases tended to be underreported because
the criminal justice system rmnains
homophobic. They also stated that Lesbian
relationships appear to be more physically
violent than those of Gay or Bi men.
Also, Gay men may not report DV when
it happens because the general perception
is that DV ouly happens to women and
often the agencies that deal with DV are
not well equipped to help men.
Saks 5th Avenue to
Show AIDS Quilt
DKNY Fashion Fundraiser-2/29
Tulsa’s Saks Fifth Avenue will display
10 sections of The NAMES PROJECT
AIDS Memorial Quilt on February 21 to
March 1st. Saks Fifth Avenue is the first
corporation to spensor a multi-site display
with 45 Saks Fifth Avenue stores and
60ff5th’s outlet centers showing memorial
panels that are geographically specific
to the store’s site.
Later this year, the panels displayed in
Tulsa will join the nearly 32,000 panels
now in the Quilt. The Columbus Day
weekend (Oct. 12-13) display on the Capitol
Mall in Washington, DC will be the
first time in four years that the Quilt has
b~en seen in its entirety as it has grown so
large. All fifty US states are represented
as well as 39 other countries. Panels made
by Saks Fifth Avenue associates from
across the US will be exhibited in New
YorkCity in August before going to Washington.
On February 29~ Saks Fifth Avenue,
Tulsa will present a DKNY Fashion extravaganza,
Give My Regards to Donna,
to benefit the Hope Candlelight Tonr. A
silent auction and fashion show, featuring
local celebrities, will unveil DKNY’s
spring collection and be Tulsa’ s exclusive
launch of DKNYfor Men. A few models
are Debbie Campbell, I.J. Gannam,
Aleksandr Lunev, Beth Reng,’d, Kevin
Steincross, Mike Jones and Sonya Colberg
Nanc3 Renberg, Charles & Francie
Faudree. Hope Candlelight Tour benefits
St. Joseph Residence and RAIN, the Regional
.-kIDS Interfaith Network
INSIDE-] EDITORIAL P. 2
DIRECTORY P. 2
NEWS BRIEFS P. 4
HEALTH BRIEFS P. 6
CALENDAR P. 9
EUREKA PAGE P. 11
Music for Life John McCarthy and Beverly Stanley,
chairing the Walk for Ltfe committee,
have zumounced that a "Blues" Festival
will kick off tiff s 3’ear’ s series of events for
the fourth annual Walk for Life Campaign.
Mark Snider, renowned Tulsa musician,
has organized an outstanding
evening of the "Blues" featuring local
musicians. The event will be held at the
Sunset Grill, 3410 South Peoria on Tuesday,
March 12. The admission donation
of $5 will include two raffle tickets for
items donated by the Blue Rose Cafe, the
Doubletree at Warren Place, and the Celebrity
Club, to nmne a few. K-MOD
Radio and Budweiser will join the Sunset
Grill as hosts and Paine Webber and Roche
Laboratories are patron sponsors.
This event is the first of several plam~ed
to raise funds for Tulsa area HIV/AIDS
support agencies. Other events include an
art show in June and ajazz festival in July,
and the 4th Walkfor Life to be at Riverside
Park on October 12. Proceeds from the
1995 Walk went to 12 Tulsa community
HIV/AIDS related non-profit age~l~ies.
918.583. 1248
P(~. 4140
Tulsa, Oklahoma
74159-0140
TulsaNews@aol.com
Publisher/Editor Issued on or before the 15th of each month, the entire contents Of
Tom Neat this publication are protected by US copyright 1996 by Tulsa Family
Assistant Editor News and mav not be reproduced either in whole or in part withot{t
James Christjohn written permission from the publisher. Publication of a name or
Writers/contributors photo does not indicate that person’s sexual orientation.
Phyl Boler-Schmidt Correspondence is assumed to be for publication unless otherwise
Barry Hensley noted¯ must be signed & becomes the sole property of Tulsa Family
Pat Morehead News. All correspondence should be sent to the address above. Eaci~
Staff Photographer reader is entitled to one free copy of each edition at distribution
JD Jamett points. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.
Using Gays as the scapegoat for the demise of the
family is; reprehensible nonsense.. Unfortunately,,
in order, to get in good with.Pat Robertson’ s Christian
Coalition, Republican presidential candidates
are all too willing.to go along with the lie that Gay
people are somehow, a.threat.to.thefamilv.
Wqaoles~le divorce among heterosexuals doe;
the real damage. With a 50% divorce rate. adultery,
abused women, financial conditions that require
both parents to leave children home alone, abandoned
and abused children and so forth, it doesn"t
take much effort to see that heterosexuals have
succeeded quite well in crippling the family without
any he!p:from Gays and Lesbians.
-~- J.J. Stogsdill, Broken Arrow
I recently had the distinct pleasure Of being one
of the stops along District 6 City Councilor. Art
Justiss" campaign tour. I felt like I shouldn’t be the
ordy one who has the advantage of "knowing how
Mr. Justiss feels about Gay rights in Tulsa before I
cast nay vote in the up-coming elections for City
Council.
My partner and I asked Mr. Justiss about the
status of the Human Rights Depar.~nent (Committee
on Sexual Orientation Discrimination) Proposal
to the City of Tulsa. Mr. Justiss said that he
would never put such a thing on the City Council
agenda and he felt :quite confident that no other
councillor would either. When questioned about
why he was too afraid to even consider a proposal
from one of the city’s own commissxons. Mr.
Justiss admitted that he didn’t want to "’take the
heat.’" He told us that to put something like the
current proposal on the agenda would be political
suicide. Of course, he added that he wouldn’t
discriminate on the basis of "’race, color or sexual
preference," but he felt protections for Gays against
discrirmnation had no place in city government.
Mr. Justiss’ visit to our home was a reminder to
him that .there are Lesbians alive and living in
Tulsa, OK and a reminder to us that we can’t vote
for a representative who will only entertain ~ssues
and concerns that are popular. - Kharma R. Amos
. Many of the threats were specific in saying that
if he returned to work he would die. Pilant feels his
privacy was deliberately compromised by co-workers
who posted his unlisted number counter to his
request.
When Pilant first reported the phone messages
and the graffiti on his door, Tulsa police did not
even send out an officer. Calls to the Mayor’s
Action hotline were also unhelpful. However, after
intervention by community-activist Nancy
McDonald, li~ing up to her appellation "Saint
McDonald", Tulsa police were more responsive
and took more thorough reports.
Pilant also nbted that Claudette Peterson, director
of Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights’
(TOHR) HIV Testing Clinic was helpful in getting
him assistance as was former TOHR president,
Kelly Kirby, through whose contact, KJRH, Ch. 2
became aware of Pilant’ s dilemma and reported on
by Phvl Boler-Schmidt
,:~ .A t~ureka. Spri_ngs man i.s dead. A 17-year-old
Who admitted to the "killing has not been charged.
And, the whole event is shrouded in mystery.
This is what we -know. The "killing o~curr~d at a
~popular local lake park where the young mau was
helping his; ~andmotlXe~- cSaretake th~ i-esort for the
Winter. It happened at night. The dead man, in his
forties and -knownby his friends to be a closeted gay
man. was shot at point blank range in the face with
a shotgtm. The young man did not have the gun at
his immediate disposal, but had to go to another
room, locate the gun, find the shells, load the
weapon, then return to the place where he shot and
killed the victim.
The young man has said that he awoke with a
start to find the he was being sprayed with ejaculate
as the older man was masturbating all over him. He
says he killed the man in self-defense. There aren’t
many Queers in these parts who are buying that
story. The police have been silent. The ~oroner’s
report is not due out of Little Rock for a few weeks.
No arrest has been made, no charges filed. It is
minored that the dead man was found completely
nude though there is no official word on this.
I have decided not to publish any names here so
as not to interfere with what the police are calling an
ongoing investigation. Since there have been no
public statements made regarding the case, I am
giving law enforcement authorities the benefit of
the doubt that they will continue to investigate this
case. and if the facts warrant it, an arrest will be
made. The benefit of the doubt. For now.
I’ve spoken with a number of Gays mad Lesbians
about tiffs issue. No one is taking it lightly. There is
some fear that, if the case is swept under the carpet,
and the young man is not charged, it will send a
signal that it is okay to kill Queers because no one
will do anything at~out it. I remain hopeful though
skeptical.
The facts that we DO "know are alarming. Even if
the young man’s story is true, how could it possibly
be grounds for murder’? Semen in these circumstances
is not a deadly weapon, certainly not enough
justification for murder. Most assuredly not - if he
was free enough to leave, mad chose to go to another
room, find a shotgun, load it, and return to the
scene. Justhow frightened for his life could the
young man have been? see Murder, page 3
it. Attomey Darlene Shadid said she was told by
sources in OSBI and the Tulsa DA’s office that a
decision had been made, apparently informally at a
seminar in the past couple of years, not to consider
persons living with AIDS to be disabled, despite
federal law on the matter. Later, Shadid determined
that OSBI appeared not to be keeping any statistics
on hate crimes based on any disability of any kind.
In response toTFN, Tim Hams ofthe Tulsa District
Attorney’s office indicated that their office would
enforce the Oklahoma hate crime statute as it applied
to disability and noted thatnew DALaFortune
has participated in the Say No to Hate Coalition for
some time. Director of the Oklahoma State Bureau
of Investigations (OSBI), Dwade Langley said that
they would keep statistics on hate crimes based on
disability but that they were entirely dependent on
the local law enforcement agencies to report the
incidents to them.
Meanwhile, JR Pilant hopes that he can return to
a quiet life with his children and family sal’e from
hate and intimidation.
Tulsa Clubs & Restaurants
*Bamboo Lounge, 7204 E. Pine 832-1269
*Barraccuda’s, 2405 E. Admiral 582-4340
*Concessions, 3340 S. Peoria 744-0896
*Ground Zero, 311 E. 7th 585-5622
*Lola’s, 2630 E. 15th 749-1563
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan 834-4234
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main 585-3405
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial 660-0856
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308
Tulsa Businesses, Services, & Professionals
Derails C..Arnold, Realtor 746-4620
*Assoc. in Medical & Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard 743-1000
¯ Kent Balch & Associates, Health~& Life Insurance ~ :*Barnes & NobLeBooksellers,-8620 E. 71 747-9506
. ~ 250-6034
" Brookside Jewelry, 4649 So. Pec~ria . 743-5272
¯ Creative Collection, 1521 E. 15 592-1521
¯ Cherry St. Psychotherapy Assoc. i~)5S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117
¯ Tim Daniel, Attorney ~ ~ 352-9504, .800,742-9468
DAnnques, 1508E 15th 592-5356
i *Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th 749-3620
¯ Don CarltOn Mitsubishi, 4423 S. Memorial 665-6595
~ *Elite Books & Videos, 821 S. Sheridan
838-8503
i Express Pools & Spas, 6310 S. Peoria 743-9994
; Fidelity Home Health Care, Inc. Coweta 486-1174
¯ Foxlinx, Computer Consultation 690-2974
Leanne M. Gross, Financial Plarming 744-0102
*Sandra J. Hill;MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly 745-1111
*Imaginations, Lincoln Plaza, 15th & Peoria 584-4606
*International Tours 341-6866
JD Images, Photo~aphy 621-5597
; Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15 599-8070
Kelly Kirby, CPA, POB 14011, 74159 747-5466
Loup-Garou, 2747 E. 15 742-1992
Lean Ann Macomber, Realtor Associate 671-2010
Massoud’s Je~vlery, The Farm, 51st & Sheridm] 663-4884
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3 584-3112
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31st 663-5934
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 P1 664-2951
David A. Paddock, CPA,-4308 S. Peoria, Ste. 633 747-7672
Puppy Pause II, llth & Mingo 838-7626
*Ross Edward Salon, 1438 S. Boston 584-0337
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square 749-6301
Scott Robison’s Prescriptions, see ad for 3 locations 743-2351
Southwest Viatical, 4146 S. Harvard, Ste. F-5 747-.3322
Thomas Chiropractic Clinic, 4138 S. Harvard, Ste. C- 1 742-8868
Kellie J. Watts, attorney 493-1959
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling 743-1733
Tulsa Organizations, Churches, & Universities
*Agape’ Christian Fellowship, 21st& Sheridan 599-7688
*Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Ctr. 2627B E. 11 628-0594
*BiLiG Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa Canterbury Ctr. 583-9780
*Chapman Student Center, University of T{tlsa
*Community of Hope (United Methodist), 1703 E. 2nd 585-1800
Dignity!Integrity (Lesbian/Gay Catholics &Episcopalians) 298-4648
*Family of Faith MCC, 5451-E So. Mingo 622-1441
*Free Spirit Lesbian Center call for location &info: 587-4669
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827
Friends in Unity (African-Amer. men), POB 8542, 74101 425-4905
Indian Health Care, Save the Nation 584-4983
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437
*MCC of Greater Tulsa, 1623 N. Maplewood ." 838-1715
*HIV Resource Consortium, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1 749-4194
NAMES PROJECT, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1 748-3111
PFLAG , POB 52800 74152 749-4901
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118 74104
R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195
Rainbow Business Guild, POB 4106, 74159 665-5174
*Shanti Hotline 749-7898
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Right~ (TOHR) POB 52729 74152
TOHR Gay HelpLine (Info.) 743-4297
Tool Box Technicians, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uuiform/Leather Seekers Assoc. 838-1222
*Tulsa City Hall, Cafeteria Vestibule, Ground Floor
*University Center at Tulsa
Beaver Dam Store, i/2 mi. N. of Dam on Hwy. 187 501-253-6154
*Jim & Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main 501-253-7457
DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St. 501-253-6807
*Emerald Rainbow, 45&1/2 Spring St. 501-253-5445
King’s Hi-Way, 96 Kings Highway, Hwy. 62W 800-231-1442
*MCC of the Living Spring 501-253-9337
McClung Realtors 501-253-%82
Rock Cottage Gardens 501-253-8659 800-624-6646
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East 501-253-600i
The Woods, 50 Wall St. 501-253-8281
home loans through the state housing
agency itself. The new definition.of a
household adopted by the VHDA states
that a "single-family loan can be made to
more than one person only if all such
persons ... are related by blood, marriage
or adoption or by legal custodial relationship."
Albert Eisenberg, one of theVHDA
commissioners, disagreed loudly with the
change. "It is bigoted nonsense elevated
to formal state policy," Eisenberg said of
the new policy, which he said may lead to
~xpensive legal court challenges as well
as possible trouble with federal housing
agencies that underwrite most of the loans
the Virgima agency makes. Most of the
state’s real estate organizations opposed
thenew definition, as did gay rights groups
and the ACLU, which said the change
would "inspire lawyers to look for loopholes."
In addition to Gov. Allen’s backing,
the rule change was also supported by
the Virginia Family Foundation and Concemed
Women for America, which argued
thatonly "traditional" families should
be given economic benefits from the state
agency.
However in Nebraska, an exception to
the "stop-the-wedding" frenzy has come
Nebraska where state Sen. Ernie Chambers
of Omaha has introduced a measure
that would amend Nebraska law to let
gays and lesbians legally marry in the
Cornhusker State. Chambers acknovCl--
edges that his proposal, LB1260, probably
won’t win approval on its first pass
through the state legislature, but he says
he’s determined and won’t give tip. ’q’his
is an issue related to civil rights mad civil
liberties that can’t be dodged by political
bodies,"-he says. "It has an impact on so
many people."
And in San Francisco, its Board of
Supervisors created a "civil ceremony to
solemnize" same-sex domestic parmerships
under the aegis of the county clerk’s
office, the city official who also perfolans
civil wedding ceremonies for heterosexual
couples. The measure, which would extend
no benefits beyond its symbolic ceremony,
is believed to be the first time any
govenfing body has moved to create a
civil rite to acknowledge same-sex umons.
A board committee quic"kly approved the
measure mad sent it on to the full board.
Five of the board’s 11 members are cosponsors
of the ceremony. The county
clerk’s office has estimated that adding
the ceremony would probably increase
the number of registered partners by 2 or
3 times. And with a $30 fee for the ceremony
itself, the clerk’s office also esti-
: mated the proposed rite could add close to
¯¯ $50,000 to the city’s coffers.
Back in Hawaii, Gov. Ben Cayetano
¯
has .suggested that the way for the state to
extricate itself from the ongoing controversy
of same-sex marriages is for the
¯ state to stop giving marriage licenses to
anyone and just offer domestic partnerships
to gay and non-gay couples instead.
¯ ’The institution ofmarriage shouldbe left
to the church," Cayetano is quoted as
saying in a report in the Honolulu Adver-
¯ tiser. ’q’he government needs to explore
its role in marriages. The government
: should not be in the role of sanctifying
marriages. That’s when they nminto problems."
State Senate leaders quickly said they
didn’t think the legislature was likely to
go along with Cayetano’s idea to pull the
plug on marriage. While legal experts say
.th.ey haveno idea if a state could even stop
~ssuing marriage licenses, they do agree
that the most important benefits of legal
marriage are derived from the federal
government in the form of income taxes,
Social Security benefits, and pensionregulations
- all ofwhich depend on state legal
definitions of a mamage.
Gay/Bisexual Indian Men Retreat
The Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention
Project (TNAAPP) is sponsoring
two free weekend camping retreats (Feb.
23-35 and June 7-9) to enhance cultural
awareness and HIV!AIDS awareness. The
retreat will include workshops addressing
HIV AIDS, self-esteem, safer sex negotiation
skills and cultural and traditional
values - all presented in a safe envlroment.
For a CONFIDEN~HAL application,
call B-rima or Keetoo~vala. at 918-582-7225.
Open Arms
Open Minds
Open Hearts
Saint Aidan’s
4045 No. Cincinnati. 425-7882
Saint John’s
4200 So. Atlanta Pl.. 742-7381
Trinity
501 So. Cincinnati. 582-4128
The Episcopal Church
Welcomes You
Wednesday, March 13 .......
s 5ob wi//ia,; s xbeat e x.[sa verfor. i 0 arts ce..t
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oftheir ability to serve in the armed forces,
the 1,049 HIV-positiveU.S. service members
and immediately cut off all health
care benefits to their dependents. Half
these service members are married and,
on average, they have served in the military
for a decade, according to the Pentagon.
Nearly 20 percent of them are officers.
Clinton legal counsel, Jack Quinn, told
reporters in making the announcement
that "the President has determined that
this provision is .unconstitutional and he
has therefore directed the Attorney General
not to defend it in court." The Pentagon,
Gay & Lesbian civil rights advocates,
AIDS activists and a number of
members of Congress oppose the provision.
But President Clinton signed the
appropriations measure because it is vital
to the country’s defense needs, in spite of
the Dornan provision.
A measure has also been introduced by
Sens. William Cohen (R-Maine) and Edward
Kennedy (D-Mass.) to repeal the
Dornan provision. A similar bill to overturn
the measure was introduced in the
Houseby Reps. PeterTorkildsen, R-Mass.,
Jane Harman, D-Calif., Connie Morella,
R-Md., and Ron Dellums, D-Calif. Elizabeth
Birch, head of the Human Rights
Campaign, applauded the \Kqaite House
announcement. "We asked him [Clinton]
to put the full force of his administration
behind overturning it and he has done just
that," she said. "This is precisely the kind
ofleadership we expect from Bill Clinton."
Winnie Stachelberg, HRC’s senior
health policy advocate, said, "q’hat [the
Dornan provision] ~ as one of the meanest.
most vindictive measures to come out
of the 104th Congress, and we will do
everything in our power to ensure,, repeal
of that discmninatorv measure, The
repeal bill is expected to have broad bipartisan
support in both honses,
Stachelberg said, noting that Georgia Sen.
Sam Numa, ranking Democrat on the Senate
Armed Services Committee, has called
the HIV expulsion measure "pmfitive."
Dornan and otherGOPextremists added
the HIV provision to the House version of
the defense authorization, but it was not in
the Senate bill. When the two versions
went to a House-Senate conference committee
for reconciliation, House Republicans
made sure this discriminatory measure
became part of the final bill,
Stachelberg said.
Currently, service members with the
virus that causes AIDS may serve their
country as long as they can perform their
duties, but they are not deployed overseas.
The same policy is applied to service
members who have other chronic medical
conditions such as diabetes, asthma, heart
disease or cancer.
The Human Rights Campaign is the
largest national lesbian and gay political
organization, with members throughout
the country. It effectively lobbies Congress,
provides campaign support and
educates the public to ensure that lesbian
and gay Americans can be open, honest
and safe at home, at work and in the
community.
that the daughter "should be given the
opportunity and the option to live in a
non-lesbian world." One new witness
slated to testify in the appeal will be
Michelle Mclr£nes, 25, the daughter of
John Ward and the wife he "killed. During
a television interview am~onncing that
she ~vould testify, McInnes said her father
also tried to molest her ~vhen she was 14
3ears old.
This reporter does not claim to be a
legal scholar, bnt from what I do kaaow,
the evidence points toward premeditated
mnrder, even if the provocation the young
man talked about happened in exactly the
way he said it did. I, for one, donbt the
story, but I also doubt there is any way to
disprove it. What will the offici~s cal[ it’?
Murder? Justifiable homicide? A -killing
in self-defense? A hate crone? Stay tuned.
I’ll keep you posted.
Sunday Services 11:00 am ¯ Wednesday Services 6:30 pm, 7:30 pm
Choir Practice ° Thurs. 7:30 pm Codependency Support Group
To do justice, love mercy & to walk humbly with our God... Micah 6:8
5451-E South Mingo Tulsa, OK 74146 . (918) 622-1441
Worship Service, 10:30 am
Sheridan Center, Suite H
21st & Sheridan
599-7688
News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News
Survey: Less Opposition
to Homosexuality
WAbH., D.C. - According to
the annual survey of college
freshmen around the country by
the University of California, the
nation’s students continue to
have less objection to same-sex
relationships. The survey, conducted
under the aegis of the
American Council on Education
and given to more than 300,000
freshmen entering some 641 colleges
and universities in the U.S,
fouud that o~fly about 31% of the
students this year believed that
homosexuality ~s wrong and
should be forbidden. That figure
is the lowest reported since the
survey started in 1987 when53%
said they disapproved of gay and
lesbian relationships.
Fed. Court Topples
Alabama Anti-Gay Law
MONTGOMERY, Ala. - U.S.
District Court Judge Myron Thompson
has declared a 1992 state
law prohibiting state agencies
frown using public funds in direct
or indirect support of gay and
lesbian orgamzations as unconstitutional.
The law was quickly
passed by. the state legislature
and signed into law after officials
at Auburn University g~ve
recognition to a gay student
group on the campus. Lawmakers
had argued that because sodtroy
is illegal in Alabama, no
state funds should be used to
support-the "’gay lifestyle." Judge
Thompson, however, ruled that
the law was simply an attempt to
restrict discussion at public
schools, an illegal restriction of
free speech.
’Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’
Hearing Begins
SFATTLE - The attorueys representing
Navy Lt. Richard
Watson, called the military’s
"don’t ask, don’t tell" policy on
gays and lesbians in the armed
forces"the height ofhypocrisy,"
arguing in federal court that it
was an unconstitutional invasion
of privacy. Watson, a 34-yearold
officer who was training to
eventually captain one of the
Navy’s nuclear-powered submafines,
has said he told his commandingofficer
he is gay to avoid
the possibility of being blackmailed
as his naval career advanced.
He continues to serve in
the Navy wlfile his case, one of
several like it, is in the federal
courts.
Canadian Censorhsip
Case: Mixed Ruling
VANCOUVER - The British
Columbia Supreme Court has
handed down a utixed ruling in
the case of the Little Sister’s
BookStore, a gay and lesbian
shop that had charged Canadian
Customs officials with unconstitutional
censorship. The provincial
high court declared that
Customs officials had in fact used
their power to seize published
materials counng into the countU
in ways that violated the
nation’s Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. Customs officials
have seized, and sometimes destroyed,
hundreds of gay m~d lesbian
books and magazines ordered
by Little Sister’s, maiulv
from UTS. publishers, claiming
the materials violated Canadian
pornography laws. The court
ruled that the Customs actions
"’in large part.., are die arbitrary
and improper consequence of a~
inadequate mad flawed admimstration
of the legislation.’" It also
ruled that the incidents involving
Little Sister’s were isolated
episodes, but constituted a"~ave
systemic problem." The most
d~sappointing part of the court
ruling, said Janine Fuller of Little
Sisters, was the justices’ failure
to declare the statute that gives
Customs officials the authority
to seize materials as unconstitutional.
Fuller called the failure of
the court to overturn die Customs
legislation "disappointing"
and said the store would be appealing
that part of the ruling,
but that she was otherwise
pleased with the rest of the high
court’s ruling. "Ttfis decision is
a complete vindication of thc
gay aud lesbian conmmmty and
the lives of its people mid for that
we celebrate die decision," she
said. "It has been a long, hard
climb. We haven’t quite reached
the smmnit but we’re dimm closc.
We are colffident that we will
succeed at the Court of Appeal."
Cincinnati Bias Costs
City $35 Million
CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati
Enquirer reports that the cit\"s
Convention & Visitors Bureau
says it has lost some $35 million
in tourist and convention income
because of an anti-gay measure
approved by voters in 1993 to
repeal an earlier anti-bias measure
that included gays mid lesbians.
The visitors bureau report
had been requested by the city
council and cited 10 ~arger national
organizations, including
die A~nerican Library Association.
that specifically mentioued
the repealed rights measure as
their reason for not holding conventions
in the city.
Catholic Bishops Speak
Upfor Gays in Zimbabwe
HAt~kRE, Zimbabwe - Gays
and lesbians in Zimbabwe have
gotten some limited support from
an unexpected source when the
country’s Catholic Bishops’
Conference issued a pastoral letter
denouncing attacks against
homosexuals. Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe, who is a
Catholic, sparked an international
flap last year when he refused
to allow a gay rights organization
in the country to operate
a booth at an interuational
book fair in the nation’s capital,
calling homosexuals"sodomists
mid sexual perverts" who ,are
"’worse than dogs and pigs." He
followed up later by saying the
gays and lesbians have "no
rights" in Zimbabwe and threatened
to imprison homosexuals.
Although the Catholic Church
considers homosextmlity a "disorder"
that should be dealt with
as sucll, the Bishops Coifference
letter condemned what it "called
"’any attempts toinstitute a witchhunt
or hate campaign" against
homosexuals. "It is therefore not
right for anyone, induding govenunent,
to harass, persecute or
torture people simply because
they are known to have this indination,’"
the Bishops’ Co~fference
letter said.
Anti-Bias Measure for
CA Students Dies
SACtL~kMENTO, Calif. - AB
1001, a proposed measure in the
¯ Califonfia legislature to bar discrimination
because of sexual
orientation in the state’s public
schools and universities, failed
by an 8-7 vote in the Assembly’s
education colurnittee. The measure,
introduced by Assemblywoman
Sheila Kuehl (DFa~
cino), has languished in the
committee since April 1995
when it failed to pass on a first
reading there. The vote against
sending the bill to the full Assembly
was along party lines.
Utah Wants to Stop
School Gay Group
SALT LAKE CITY - According
to a report in the Deseret
News, the Utah State Board of
Education has told state officials
to find "all available ~neans" to
control the kinds ofnon-curriculum
dubs that are formed at public
schools in the state.The move
is aimed at preventing a gay and
lesbian student club from being
formed at East High School in
the state’s capital city. C. Grant
Hurst, who introduced the directive,
told the newspaperit wasn’t
specifically about the gay dub at
the high school and said he was
concerned the current legal situation
could allow net-Nazi
groups to be formed at public
schools in Utah. Hurst admitted,
however, that he had gotten"numerous"
phone calls opposed to
the gay club and none about possible
net-Nazi dubs forming..
The board’s resolution speaks
only about the"formation of any
organizations, in schools, that
may create a disruptive or unsafe
atmosphere for children or
that may attract or entice children
tomake decisions tllat could
have a long-term negative impact
on their lives." The Utah
attorney general’s office told
educators late last year in a letter
that federal law and court rulings
mandate that scllool clubs
have to be treated equally no
matter how potentially controversial.
The board’s own attorney
late in 1995 said the only
way the state could keep the gay
dub at East High from forming
would be for all clubs to be prohinted,
stop receiving federal
education funds entirely,.or to
ask Congress to repeal the Equal
Access Act.
Rally Against Blocking
Gay School Clubs In Utah
SALT LAKE CITY - Hundreds
of gay rights activists, including
the parents of gay mid lesbian
teens, rallied outside the state
Capitol to protest a move by
conservative lawmakers who
have said the state should not
allow gay and lesbian student
groups in public schools, even if
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News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News
the state has to refuse a $100
million education grant from the
federal government or even bar
all student groups. Kelli
Peterson, the East High School
student who asked to organize
the gay and lesbian campus club,
told the cheering crowd she
didn’t try to start the group to
advocate homosexuality or to
recruit heterosexual classmates
into a "homosexual lifestyle."
In.stead, she said, "I started this
group to end the misery and isolation
of being gay in high
school."
Utah legisli~tors held a secret
meeting earlier in the week with
the state school superintendent,
the commissioner of higher education
and members of the Utah
Attorney General’s office, reportedly
to discuss legal methods
to prevent gay clubs from
being formed at schools in the
state. But Senate President Lane
Beattie dismissed the protest as
a tempest in a teapot. "The infermarion
given them was in error,"
he said. "It [the secret meeting]
wasnot an anti-gay, anti-lesbian
meeting. The meeting was not
held to discuss issues they tlfink
we discussed.’~ Beatrie said that
lawmakers at the meeting were
not anti-gay bnt were anti-immorality.
"That includes heterosexual
immorality as well as
homosexual iunnorality. We m’e
not going to allow immorality to
be taught or encouraged in our
public education system. Period."
But rights activists point
out that a measure that has not
yet been printed for public review
- SB 246 - would"prohibit
schools from supporting illegal
conduct" and may well mimic
an Alabmna state law barring
publicly supported schools from
supporting any orgmfizarion that
advocates illegal activities. That
Alabmna measure was specifically
aimed at preventing state
colleges from allowing gay and
lesbian student groups on campus
because sodomy is illegal in
Alabama, as it is in Utah. The
Alabamameasure, however, was
recently declared unconstitutional
by a federal court.
Episcopal Bishop
Faces Heresy Trial
WILMINGTON, Del. -Theheresy
trial of retired Episcopal
Bishop Alter Righter for ordainingan
openly gay priest is slated
to start before a panel of 9 bishops
Feb. 27, only the second
such heresy proceeding in the
history of the church although
the bishops who brought the
charges against Righter say it
won’t be the last. Righter, the
retired bishop of Iowa, ordained-
Barry Stopfel as a deacon in
1990. At the rime Stopfel not
only acknowledged that he is
gay, but also that he had been
living with his male partner
throughout his seminary studies.
The 10 bishops who brought
the charges against Righter say
bishops in New Jersey, Philadelphia,
Detroit and Washington
may also be charged With heresy
for similar ordinations if the
ecclesiastical court finds Righter
guilty.
TX Radical Right Wants
No Gays In Library
SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Antigay
flmdamentalists have tried -
so far without success - to keep
the Unity Foundation, an organization
that’s working on plans
to open a lesbian and gay community
center in this SouthTexas
¯ city, fromholding mmeetings in
the city’s pubhc library. Organizers
of the anri-gay group have
protested outside the library and
city hall, and say that homosexuals
shouldn’t be permitted to use
~ public facilities because sodomy
¯ is illegal under state law. But so
far the anti-gay protests have
been small and failed to draw
wide support, while a number of
mainstream religious leaders
have vocally backed the Unity
Foundation’ s rights both to meet
at the library and to work on the
community center.
San Francisco Police: A
’Commanding’ Lesbian
SAN FRANCISCO- As part of
sweeping changes from top to
bottom being instituted by newly
elected Mayor Willie Brown in
San Francisco, Melinda Pengel
has become perhaps the highest
ranking openly gay police officer
in any major U.S. police e
force. Pengel, who was in the
first class of women cadets to
join the SFPD in 1975 and iu
1994 became one of the
department’s highest ranking
officers when she was awarded
her captain’s bars, has now been
made a commander on the force
of some 2,000 officers. Colnmander
Pengel, 41, was named
to hernew rank by Brown’s handpicked
Police Chief Fred Lau.
The rank of commander is below
only the chief and deputy
chief officials. Among her new
duties, Pengel will oversee the
department’s pohcing efforts on
the city’s trouble-plagued public
transportation system. Pengel
said of the promotion, "It’s not
just for me; it’s for .the other
women in the department too.
We’re moving into a nmv era,
and I get to be a part of that."
Virginia ’Diversity’
Billboard Covered Up
CHRISTIANBURG, Va. - A
billboard erected recently in the
downtown area of this small
community of some 11,000
people west of Roanoke, proclaiming
simply that "Diversity
Enriches,’" has been covered over
by the owners of the billboard
after callers threatened to damage
the finn’ s property. The billboard
was paid for by an informal
group known as Gay &
Straight Citizens of Southwest
Virginia with the help of the
local chapter of PFLAG (Parents
& Friends of Lesbians And
Gays), and went up January 18.
Aside from the simple phrase,
"’Diversity Enriches," the only
other print on the rainbow billboard
was the much smaller
sponsorship tag for Gay &
Straight Citizens of Southwest
Virginia, which paid $450 for
having its sign up for a month.
But after au article with a photo
of the billboard appeared in the
local newspaper, Frank Amburn,
manager of the lo’cal office of
Outdoor East, the company that
owns the billboard space, says
his office was flooded with calls
complaining about the sign, including
several from people who
threatened to destroy other billboards
owned by the advertising
finn. At that point, Amburn decided
to cover up the billboard
out of fear for his company’s
property. The ad agency’ is refunding
the money paid for the
billboard space.
Forbes’ Gay Views
Become a Political Issue
DES MOINES, iowa- Dmnonstrating
once again - for better or
f6r worse - that gay fights can no
longer be separated from uational
politics, Republicau pres. hopefuls
have increasingly tried to
derail the unexpectedly surging
candidacy of multi-~nillionaire
Steve Forbes by portraying him
as "’pro-ga.v.’" In Iowa iu Jan.,
state cmnpaign officials who
were supporting Sen. Phil
Grannn’s bid, told reporters that
Forbes supports allowing gays
m~d lesbim~s to serve in the U.S.
military under the current "’don’t
ask, d’on’t tell’" compromise
policy. Recently, Forbes was
asked ifhe was in favor of allowing
same-sex marriages. Although
clearly uncomfortable
with the question, Forbes responded,"
Compassion is not approval.
There should be special
fights for none, equal rights for
all."
Brits Expected to Keep
Anti-Gay Military Policy
LONDON" - London ucwspapers
have reported that British
defense lmnistry officials remmn
opposed to ending the ban on
gays and lesbians in the nation’ s
armed forces. Several newspapers
reported that Michael
Portillo, the defense ~mnister,
will announce sometime in Feb.
the findings of a ministry review
of the policy excluding homosexuals
in the military, but several
ministry officials have atready
said the review found no
reason to change the policy. If
the govenunent keeps the current
policy there will almost certainly
be a legal challenge before
ihe European Court of fluman
Rights, where 4 discharged
gay and lesbian service members
have already’ applied for a
review of their case. The uational
gay rights group Stonewall
has also applied for pervm ssign
to appeal the policy to the
House of Lords, Britain’s highest
court of appeal.
Gay arit to Play Wilde
LONDON - Openly’ gay British
comic actor Stephen Fry, perhaps
best known to American
audiences for his portrayal of the
erudite and condescending butler
in the BBC,’PBS "Wooster
and Jeeves,’" says his next role
will be starnng in a film bio-pic
of 19th century playwright, wit
mad ben vivant , Oscar Wilde.
Wilde was finprisoned in 1895
for a sodomy statute violation.
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Lesbians & Gays face many special tax
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with sensitive & timely information.
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Drug Combo Treats Eye Disease
WASHINGTON - According to a report.
in the Archives ofOphthalmology, a daily
injecteddose of 2 drugs - foscarnet and
ganciclovir - is a more effective way to
combat the blinding AIDS-related eye
disease cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis
than either of the drugs used alone. Patients
in the research who were given one
or the other but not both drugs had recurring
CMV retinilis infections in a month
or two of starting the therapy. But patients
in the study who were given both drugs
were able to keep it under.control for 4.
months or longer.
Just Say No School Programs
WASHINGTON" - Part of the massive
welfare overhaul confessional Republicans
have proposed in this year’s ongoing
budget battle includes $75 millionin federal
funds for state schools to each students
the "gains to be realized by abstaining
from sexual activity" outside marnage.
The abstinence pro~am proposal
would provide money for schools to teach
youngsters that complete abstinence is
the oulv certmn wav to avoid unwanted
pregnancies and sex~ally transmitted diseases
such as AIDS. Ignoring gays and
lesbians ~vho cannot legally marry in this
country, the language of"ihe G~)P proposal
states: "A mutually faithful monogmnous
relationship in the context of
mamage is the expected standard of human
sexual activity" mad that sex outside
marnage "’is likely to have laarmful p~ychological
and physical effects."
Gay Medical Journal
NEWYORK-The Gay &Lesbian Medical
Assn. has announced plans to begin
publishing what it says will be the first
science journal devoted to medical issues
faced byhomosexuals. Thejournal, which
as yet has not been given a name, will
focus on publishing findings in research
on AIDS and HIV, mental health issues,
breast cancer and other medical issues.
FDA OK Sought for AIDS Drug
STOCKHOLM - The U.S.-Swedish drug
manufacturer Pharmica & Upjohn has
released preliminary data on ,still-incomplete
clinical trials of its drug Delavirdine
(also -known as Rescriptor) because early
results hold so much promise, the firm sa
vs. Hoping that the early results will help
get faster approval from the U.S. Food &
Drug Administration for the drug,
Pharmica & Upjotm said Delavirdine appears
to help some patients infected with
HIV stave off developing full-blown
AIDS. The firm said that preliminary data
from its ongoing tests with the drug indicate
that patients receiving Delavirdine
had been able to lower the amount ofHIV
in their blood system by at least 68% for
as long as 60 w~eks. Some 3,500 patients
have been participating so far.
Infants Shed HIV Completely
LONDON - According to researchers
reporUng in the medical journal Lancet,
nine infants who were infected with HIV
bv their mothers at birth have fended off
tl~e virus. Only a few such reports of HIV
relnisston have ever been reported, an~
those have beeu received with some skepticism.
But the uew findings - which come
from Italy, Belgium m~d Swedeu : may
not be so easiix disufissed. Of some 264
babies who were born HIV-positive, the
research team found nine who subsequently
became free of the virus. In seven
cases, both HIV tests used went from
positive to negative during the course of
the study; in the other two, the virus was
detected even though the antibody tests
indicated that the baby was not infected.
2 Different AIDS Epidemics
NEW DELHI - Max Essex of the Harvard
AIDS Institute said at a conference on
infectious diseases that increasingly there
are 2 different AIDS epidemics globally -
one in the Western industrial nations,
which is slowing, and another in Afr ica
and Asia, which is continuing to Wow
with noend in sight. Essex told the conference
that the 2 epidemics are spread by
different strains of HIV- 1, and that the B
and E strains of the virus behave differently.
Unpublished research by Essex and
his team at the Harvard institute, he said,
indicates that subtype E is more efficient
at infecting cells in the female reproductive
tract, so is more readily transmitted
during heterosexual sex. The E subtype is
largel y found in Africa and the Indian
subcontinent. But, Essex said, the viral
subtype that is largely responsible for the
AIDS epidemic in Europe and North
America - subtype B - targets different
body cells and seems more prone to being
passed on during anal sex, perhaps explaining
its predominance among gay men.
Essex noted that in the West, about 2
million people are infected and that that
number appears to have leveled off. But,
he said, there are an estimated 15 to 20
million cases in Africa and the Indian
subcontinent, and that number apparently
is continuing to grow unchecked.
"RELIEF FROM PAIN"
THOMAS CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
DR. REX M. THOMAS
DR. SHIRLEY A. THOMAS
FREE CON~(.LTATION
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
NO NEEDLES ACUPUNTURE
NECK & BACK PAIN
CHRONIC PAIN
ASSURED PRIVACY
NUTRITION COUNSELING
HEADACHES
CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME
4138 S. HARVARD. SUITE C-1
TULS& OK 74135 (918) 742-8868
Free & Anonymous
Finger Stick Method
By & for, but not exclusive
to the Lesbian, Gay, & Bisexual Communities.
Monday & Thursday evenings:
7-8:30 pm for testing, 7-9 pm for results.
Daytime testing, Mon-Thurs by appointment.
TOHR Tulsa Oklahomans
for Human Rights
742-2927
4158 South Harvard, Suite E-2
2 doors east of the HIV Resource Consortium
Look for our banner on testing nights.
Intimacy
for
Gay & Bisexual Men
A 10 WEEK THERAPEUTIC GROUP EXPERIENCE
The focus of the group will be the introduction of a
cognitive behavioral group model for examining intimacy
and .barriers to intimate relationships among gay and
bisexual men. This approach is skill-based, and builds
upon the strengths of group members while promoting
growth at intrapersonal, interpersonal and community
levels.
Facilitated by Richard Reeder, M.S.
When: Monday evenings, 7:00 - 9:00 P.M.
Beginning March 4, 1996
Concluding May 6, 1996
Cost: $25.00 per session or
$200.00 advance registration
Where: Cherry Street Psychotherapy Associates
1515 South Lewis
Tulsa, OK 74104
FOR INTAKE APPOINTMENT, PLEASE CALL 743-4117
THE GROUP WILL BE LIMITED TO 8 PARTICIPANTS.
A
QUALITY
LIF
ALTERNATIVE
WHAT IS VIATICATION?
Viatication is the process d~rough which a person
living with an terminal illness can receive a cash payment
from flae face value of their insurance policy.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR A
VIATICAL SETTLEMENT?
Generally, to be eligible for a viatica1 settlement you
must have a documentable terminal illness, and life
insurance coverage in either an individual term, whole
life, or a group policy.
HOW MUCH IS MY
POLICY WORTH?
The value of your life insurance policy in a viatical
settlement is determined by the specifics of your policy
and your unique medical situation. Not every policy is
suitable for viaticanon, but settlement offers typically
range from 60% to 90% of a policy’s face value, depending
on the specifics of your policy and medical history.
HOW DOES A SETTLEMENT
WORK?
With your written penmssion, we gather medical and
xnsurance records with which to determine your policy’s
value. Then. a settlemnt offer is presented to you. You
may always decline the offer with no obligation whatsoever.
Should you accept the offer, payment is made
directl y to you. You pay nothing else on your poli(y, and
you owe us nothing.
IS VIATICATING MY
POLICY THE RIGHT
CHOICE FOR ME?
Man?,’ factors influence whether vxaticadng 3’our life
insurance is the best financial alternative available for
you. Southwest Viatical can discuss all of the factors with
you and 3our family in person, in detail and can recommend
an experienced Certified Financial Planner to asnst
you in plmming the best outcome from 3our umque
financial situation.
HOW IS SOUTHWEST
VIATICAL DIFFERENT?
Today, many compames offer viatical settlements,
doing business only by bulk advertising and 1-8,00 numbers.
They transfer your insurance and medical records
by mail. and do business from another state.
At Southwest Viatical. we believe you should be assured
of complete confidentiality and the best possible
service by working with us in person, face-to-face. We
are involved on a commumtv level, and are responsible
directly to our local community.
By working with you in person, but at the same time
having access to nationwide financial resources, we are
able to deliver the best value on your policy available
today. And because of our established resources, we can
deliver a settlement in less than a third the time other
companies take by mail, typically in fe~ver than 30 days.
We’ll do what it takes
to find the best solution for you.
Southwest
Home Office
Dailas, Texas
800-559-4790
Kelly Kirby
Oklahoma Representative
POB 14011
Tulsa, OK 74159-1011
918-747-3320
AT! EN !iON!
r
I i I I
ANNOUNCING A RETREAT
GAY/BISEXUAL/vkE N!
WHO: Sponsore~ by TNAAPP
WHAT: Weekend Retreat for Gay/Bisexual
Native American Men
WHEN: February 23-25, 1996
WHERE: For More information Caii Today
582-7225, Extension 21~
IT’S FREE! IT’S FUN!
SIC;IV UP TOgAY!
FOR
t
NAME:
ADDRESS:
CITY:
TELEPHONE:
STATE: Zl P:
II
I
I
I
dUT ON DOTTED LINE & ,MAIL TO:
TNAAPP, 915 SOUTH CINCINNATI, TULSA, OK 74ff9-2000
YES! i AM INTERESTED IN COMING TO THE RETREAT
II
"TULSA FAMILY NEWS COMMUNITY CA EN’I R
SUNDAYS MONDAYS
Agape’ Christian ¯ HIV Testing
Fellowship TOHR Clinic
Worship Service, 10:30 am : Free & anonymous testing
Sheridan Center, Suite H
21st & Sheridan, 599-7688
Bl~ss the Lord At All
Times Christian Center
Sunday School, 9:45 am
Worship Service, 11 am
2627b East 1 lth 583-7815
Community of Hope
(United Methodist)
Worship Service, 6 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
Family of Faith
Metro. Comm. Church
Adult Sunday School, 9:15 :
Worship Service, 11 am
5451-E South Mingo.
Info: 622-1441
Metro. Comm; Church
of Greater Tulsa
Worship Service, 10:45am
1623 N. Maplewood
Info: 838-1715
Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay
Alliance - Univ. of Tulsa
6:30 pm at Canterbury
5th & Evanston,’ 583-9780
using fingerstick method.
No appointment required.
Walk in testing: 7-8:30 pm
Results hours: 7-9 pm
Info: 742-2927
Lambda Bowling League
Sheridan Lanes
8:45 pm
3121 S. Sheridan
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
2nd Monday of month,
6:30 pm
4154 S. Harvard
Info: 749-4901
OTHER GROUPS
: Tool Box Technicians,
: Leather org., Info c/o The
Too1 Box: 584-1308
T.U.L.S.A. Ti~sa Uniform
¯ & Leather Seekers Assoc.
Info: 838-1222
~ The Banned, OK Gay Band
Practice weekly in OKC
Info: 838-2121
TUESDAYS
HIV+ Support Group
HIV Resource Consortium
1:30 pm
4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
Info: Wanda @ 749-4194
WEDNESDAYS
Authority OfThe Believer
Bible Study, 7 pm
MCC of Greater Tulsa
1623 N. Maplewood
Info: 838-1715
Shanti-Tulsa, Inc. Bless The Lord At All
HIV/AIDS Support Group : Times Christian Center
.&
Friends & Family
HIV/AIDS Support Group
7 pm, call for location:
749-7898
Community of Hope
Grief Group, 6 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
Womens Grief Group
sponsored by
Community of Hope
6pm, Butler/Stumpff
Funeral Home
2103 E. 3rd St.
Info: 585-1800
¯ Prayer & Bible Study
7:30 pm 2627-B East 1 lth
Call 583-7815 for info.
Family Of Faith MCC
Praise & Prayer 6:30 pm
Choir Practice 7:30 pm
5451-E South Mingo.
Call 622-1441 for info.
Community of Hope
(United Methodist)
Service for Peace, 6:30 pm
Bible Study, 7 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
TNAAPP
Tulsa Native American
AIDS Prevention Project
Support group
for Gay & Bi Native
American Men, 6 pm
at Community of Hope
1703 E. 2nd
582-7225 or 584-4983
THURSDAYS
16-Step Empowerment
Group For Women
Community of Hope
1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
Co-Dependency
Support Group .
7:30, Family of Faith MCC
5451-E S. Mingo, 622-144 1
HIV TestingTOHRClinic
Walk in testing: 7 - 8:30 pm
Results hours: 7 - 9 pm
Info: 742-2927
Tulsa Family Chorale
Weekly practice, 9:30 pm
Lola’s 2630 E. 15th
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
1st & 3rd Thursdays
4154 S. Harvard, 749-4901
Alternatives
Weekly social events for
LGBT men & women, 7 pm
Info: 646-5503
Substance Abuse
Support Group
for persons with HIV’AIDS
4154 S. Harvard, Ste. G
3-4:30 pm, Info: 749-4194
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16
Community ofHope Movie Night &
Discussion: A River Runs Through It
6:30 pm, 1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17
Family ofFaith MCC Reclaim &
Recovery Workshop: Forgiveness
9-3 pm, 5451-E S. Mingo, Info: 622-1441
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18
Community ofHope
Companioning Celebration
2 pm, 1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21
St. Jerome’s. Catholic Church (ECC)
Fat Tuesday Party
Ash Wednesday Service
Info: page Father Rick at 646-7116
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22
Alternatives Social Groap - Dinner
7pm, Golden Corral, 71St & Mingo
Info: 646-5503
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24
Shanti Mardi Gr~ Ball, 8-midnight
Natl. Guard Armory, Fairgrounds "
Info: 749-7898
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29
Alternatives Leap Year Party
7pm, Bamboo Lounge, 7204 E. Pine
Info: 646-5503
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27
Rainbow Business Guild
7 pm, Full Moon Care, Cherry Street
Dinner Meeting with speaker.
Info: 665-5174
." FRIDAY, MARCH 1
¯ Community ofHope
¯ Movie Night & Discassion: Priest
: 6:30 pm, 1703 E. 2nd, hffo: 585-1800
OF
Safe Haven, a free, non-political, nonreligious,
non-recovery-oriented social
gathering for LGBT voimg adults. 18-30
: Family of Faith MC~, 8 - rmdnight
5451-E S. Mingo, Info: 622-1441
SATURDAY, MARCH 2
Rosary at St. Jerome’s Catholic Charch
The Garden Chapel, 3841 S. Peoria
Info: page Father Rick at .636-7116
TUESDAY, MARCH 5
Tulsa Oklahomansfor Haman Rights
Community Meeting, 7 pm
Chapman Activity Ctr., Univ. of Tulsa
5th St. west of Harvard, Info: 743-4297
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6 Marsha Stevens Concert
presented by Agape Christian Fellowship
7 pm, All Soul’s Unitarian, 2952 S. Peoria
Info: 599-7688
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6
NewLGBTPolitical Groap, I st Meeting
7 pm, Martin East Regional Library
2601 So. Garnett
SATURDAY, MARCH 9
Dignityllntegrity Meeting
Lesbian/Gay Catholics & Episcopalians
5 pm, St. Dunstan’s Episcopal Church
5635 E. 71st, Info: POB 701044, 74170
SATURDAY, MARCH 16
Gaylapalooza, 8 pm
Tulsa Performing Arts Center
110 E. Second, Info: 596-7111
SATURDAYS
St. Jerome’s Ecumenical
Catholic Church
Mass, 6 pm
Garden Chapel
3841 S. Peoria
Info: Father Rick
at 742-7122
Narcotics Anonymous
Meets weekly at l 1 pm
Confidential support for
recovering addicts.
Community of Hope
1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
NAMES Project
AIDS Memorial Quilt
Sewing Bees
3rd Sat. of each month
Info: 748-3111
OTHER GROUPS
Gay & Lesbian Sttulent
Association -
TJC Southeast Can~pus,
Info: 631-7632
SWAN-Single Women’s
Activity Network
Call 832-2121
TOHR Helpline
Daily 8-10 pm
For info. or to vohlntecr:
743-GAYS
SCOTT
ROBISON’S
PRESCRIPTIONS
,Serving Tulsan’s
Since 1947
Major credit cards
In-store charges or
Direct insurance billing
for your convenience!
3 locations to serve you:
Hillcrest
Physician’s Building
1145 So. Utica
743-2351
Utica Square Area
1560 East 21st, Ste. 104
743-2351
The Plaza
8146-D South Lewis
299-1790
Reviewed by Barry Hensley
Tulsa City-County Library
This entertaining anthology combines
essays, personal narratives and poetry regarding
the multitude of rites and phases
of lesbian life. Coming from the position
that the lives of lesbians are, in many
ways, very unlike the lives of heterosexual
women or gay men, Dyke Life
~ves an inside perspective of lesbian
marriage, parenting, stereotypes and lesbians
in corporate America, among 0{her
topics.
There are five parts to Dyke Life: 1)
Relating to Others, 2) Relating to Each
Other, 3) Sex and Gender Identity, 4)The
Public World, and 5) The Lesbian Body.
Each section includes several entries by
both well-known and obscure lesbian
writers. Some of the better-known authors
include JoAnn Lonlan, Del Martin,
Leslea Newman and Rutt~&im Robson,
all of whom have other books available in
the library.
The entry rifled "outing and the Politics
of the Closet," by Victoria Brownworth,
is an entertaining examination of the social
circumstances which make the outing
of women a difficult and sensitive proposition.
"Creating Lesbian Families," by
Heather Conrad and Kate Colwell shows
the challenges and controversies surrounding
lesbian parenting. One of the more
unusual entries is by Hon. PanlaJ. Hepner,
who is a judge on the New York State
Family Court. Her entry is titled, "Oy
Veh, t’he Judge on the Bench is a Dyke!’"
Another valuable entry is by Jeanne
Adleman, member of Old Lesbians Organizing
for Change (OLOC), who contributes,
"We Never Promised You Role
Models."
One of the best things about this book is
the extensive bibliographical information
that many entries contain. Often, not only
books and magazines are cited, but organizarions
as well, complete with address,
fax and phone numbers.
For aninteresting and enlightening treat,
check,out Dyke Life. This and other
books on similar topics are available at
Tulsa City-County Libraries. Please call
your local branch library or the Central
Library Readers Services Department at
596-7966, for more information.
traveling from around the region to participate
in a picnic mad other festivities.
Particular thanks went the support FUSO
received from METSAS, Metropolitan
Tulsa Substance Abuse Services..
On Feb. 15-19 , FUSO members are
joining with members of Brother to
Brother, an Oklahoma City organization,
to attend the 9th Annual National Black
Lesbian & Gay Conference, taking place
in Dallas, titled, Black Lesbians and Gqvs:
Continuing the Struggle.
FUSO meets the 1st Thursday of each
month at 6:30 pm at Rudisill North Regional
Library, 1520 No. Hartford, 596-
7280. The meetings and membership are
open to those 18 and above.
presents in concert
March 6th, 7prn
In Her
All Souls Unitarian
Church Auditorium
2952 South Peoria
For more information, call Agape"
Christian Fellowship at 599-7688
Tul~sa’s only Gay-owned Funera~ Home
Butfer-Stumpff
Funera¢ Home gg Crematory
~103 /3ast Tftird~ 587-7000
Complete Services Available. For Example, Only $2820 for Casket with
Complete Service. Includes: Quality Steel Sealer Casket in one of four colors,
Standard Single Lawn Crypt, Service at your church or in our chapel, Hearse,
Family Limousine, Pallbearers Limousine, Thank You Cards, Register Book,
Memorial Folders, Visitation, Embalming, Hairdressing, Cosmetic Services, All
Professional Services. If you have a prearrangement elsewhere, and paid too
much, transfer your policy and you may be eligible for a cash refund.
Wasfiin~Iton Memorial~ Gardens
4300 East 91st Street South
Special Offer! Burial Space for Just $200, pre-construction.
by Phyl Boler-Schmidt
An excitement has erupted in
Eureka Springs, and you’ll find
j.’ust about everyone talking about
it - gay, straight, businessman,
minister, lodging owner, photographer,
realtor, even computer
geek. Okay, especially computer
geek!
So, what’s :the fuss? ~ureka
now has a whole lot of information
available on the Internet and
WorldWide Web. Most of it has
just popped up, seemingly out of
nowhere, in the last month. And,
where is it coming from? Who
would spend a lot of time promoting
Eureka Springs?
Positive Idea Marketing Plans
(PIMP, for short) is the source of
all the hubbub, and not surprisingly,
PIMP is a family-owned
and operated company. Jan and
Kim Ridenour own PIMP, and
they. have put their company in
literal overdrive on this new
project since the year began.
You probably remember Jan
and Kim. They are the soon-tobe-
former owners of The EmeraldRainbow,
andKim frequently
writes the astrology column for
Tulsa Family News,
PIMP (among other things)
owns its own Web domain, and
the Ridenours have been processing
and publishing pages on
that domain (PIMPS.corn). Everything
imaginable is available
with the click of a mouse, mad
new pages are being added daily.
Just what is available for Eureka
on the Web? As of this
writing (you never know what
else will be there by the time we
are published and distributed)~
you can access pages about the
town of Eureka, complete with
gorgeous photographs, and there
is also a page about the Ozark
region.
When you first see the pictures,
some may seem familiar.
That’s because many of the pictures
are from the collection of
Susan Storch, master photographer.
Susan is responsible for
many of the photos that appear
on .postcards for Eureka and the
reg~oni And Susan’s shop, The
Imagery also has a page on the
Web, complete with more
samples of her work.
There is a page for Weddings
and Holy Unions and how to set
up the honeymoon of your
dreams right here in the Ozarks.
A standard wedding page also
exists (you know, standard - one
boy, ,one girl), complete with
more photos.
Pond Mountain, a favorite bed
and breakfast inn, has a page
complete with details on lodging,
wedding setups, honeymoons,
and breathtaking photos.
Two local realtor~ are represented
in the Enreka pages: Century
21 Woodland Real Estate, a
partly family-owned operation,
and McClung Realty, a regular
advertiser in these pages.
For those of you that were
fortunate to stop in and visit The
Emerald Rainbow in the past
year, you may have met Alice
P(ig) Bailey. Alice now has her
own page on the information
superhighway, and even has an
advice column. Stay tuned for
pig astrology.
There are a number offamilyspecific
sites as well. In addition
to the weddings and holy unions
page, there is a site for g/l/b/t
retreats, Our Worm Magazine is
published on line, and Guru to
Go, Kim’s astrology.page, is
there too. So, I guess you could
call tiffs Queer Eureka OnLine
too.
Local weather forecasts are
easy to access, and there is a
feature site of the week as well.
Yahoo, one of the premiere
Internet search engines can be
acces sed, and you can download
the latest in browser software.
I know of several more pages
that are in the making, and there
are listings of pages that are due
to be available soon. The Eureka
pages continue to grow in number
every time I look at the
WorldWi’de Web. But, it doesn’t
stop with Eureka Springs.
The Internet and the Web are
national and international communications
systems. I+inks tO
related sites can be found ~dl
over the PIMP pages, and other
companies that aren’t specific to
Eureka Springs have an opportunity
to get on the PIMP bandwagon
too.
If you have never had the opportunity
to browse around the
Web, it is a thrill you will not
easily forget. Once a person realizes
how easy ~t is to access an
entire world of information with
the click of a mouse, the task of
looking things up in a phone
book, a dictionary, or an encyclopedia
becomes downright
mundane.
For those of you who are already
on line: if you haven’t
used thatWebbrowser that came
with your signup package, give
it a try. You’ll never look at a
compute.r screenin quite the same
way again. And, if you want a
first place to look, use this address:
http://www.pimps.com/
For you experienced Web
browsers out there, go to the
address above, then put it on a
bookmark. New pages are being
added all the time. Follow all the
links on that front page, and you
could easily spend a couple of
hours just looking at what is
available in and near Eureka
Springs, and especially what is
available that isfamily-specific
If you don’t have a computer,
or hive one and have not vet
made the leap to cyberspace, n~w
is the time. An entire world of
information, resources, new
friends, business contacts, and
just plain fun is to be had.
Since I’m your basic computer
geek, this has been an especi,’dly
exciting time for me. I have
watched as numerous people
have accessed the Web for the
first time, and I gotta tell you, it’s
an amazing thing to see thc excitement
in the eyes of someone
who has just discovered the answer
to his or her dreams.
If you don’t have access to the
Interuet, find a friend who does.
Buy the beer and bribe your
friend into showing you how to
access cyberspace. If you do have
access, point your browser to the
address given above. You can
also reach PIMP by e-mail at
emerald@intellinet.com. If you
aren’t on line, or if youjust want
to talk to a real live human, call
501-253-2401. Be brave. Step
out. You’ll be glad you did!
Georgia Ragsdale, who has
filmed a movie, "’Never Met
Picasso, soon to be released, with
co-star Margot Kidder.
Their shows have been sellouts
wherever they’ve played.
Tickets for this "Doh’t-miss"onc
of a -kind show are available at
the PAC and Carson Attractions,
for S15.50 to $18.50. The show
has one performance at 8 pm
Saturday, March 16th
Mark your calendars now, because
this is one show yon won’t
want to miss out on, and it’s the
first of its kind in Tulsa.
That’s progress !
O000000000000000000
¯¯
A Friendly Place to Stay
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KING’S HI-WAY ¯¯ INN ¯
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96 Kings Highway, Hwy. 62 W
Eureka Springs, AR 72632
(501) 253-7311
1-800-231-1442
Jerry A. Wilson, owner
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MCC of the
Living Spring
...a community of friends...
Rev. Kermie Wohlenhaus
Pastor
We welcome you to attend!
Services held
Sunday evenings at 6 PM
17"Elk Street
(at the Unitarian Church)
Eureka Springs, AR 72632
501-253 -9337
¯ "T ¯ p ~
.
501-253-9682 (days)
OR 501-253-8969 (evenings)
Offerings include: Bed & Breakfast
Inns, Victorian Homes, Hotels/Motels,
Commercial Properties/Businesses,
Quiet Country Estates, & much more.
McClung Realty, Inc. has catered to the
diverse G/L/B/TG community in Eureka
.Springsfor over 20 years. Call or write
for a listing brochure. Or better yet, stop
in, and we’ll show you around.
We specialize in creative financing.
EUREKA SPRINGS
"Jim & Brent have opened the ultimate intimate local
eatery. A special, eclectic dining experience..."
Stop by our house for a taste of local flavor. Dine outside on
the patio & porch or ill our three beautiful dining rooms.
Fine food at an affordable price.
Green & Yellow Night
FAMILY NIGHT
Private Dinner Party, lstThurs, ofEach Month
6pm - Midnight, Dine, Drink & Relax Among Friends
Featuring Jim & Gwendolyn’s Select Dinner Entrees
& Brent’s Superb Desserts
"With Family In Mind"
Gay-owned, Operated & Rainbow Proud
20% of all proceeds will go to the support of family causes
D
OUT- OF-THIS-WORLD
PERFORMANCE AT A
OWN-TO-EARTH PRICE
’96 3"000GT
~.MITSUBISHI
The New Thinking in Automoo~les
",$27,497
Family Finances
by Leanne Gross
Happy New Year Everyone!! The only problem with
the new year - is now we have to pay the taxes for last
year. Here’s some thoughts on how to help you
decrease some of your taxableincome and help get the
new year off to a great start.
* For the individual Your 401K plan at work is
the best way to.stash retirment dollars and this will
lower your taxable income. You can also open an
Individual Retirment Account (I.R.A.); however, if
you have a retirment plan at work, there will not be
much room, if any, to deduct your I.R.A. If you do not have a retirment plan at your place
of employment, try opening an I.R.A. at your bank or with a financial consultant.
* If you are self-employed or a small company employer of25 or less employees, you
may ~ualify for the Simplified Employee Pension plan (SEP) A SEP provides an
employer with a simplified way to make contributions to an employee’s Individual
Retirement Account or Individual Retirement Annuity.
1. Employer contributions are made directly to SEP-IRAs set up for each employee
with a bank, insurance company or other qualified financial institution.
2. Employer contributions are tax deductible.
3. Contributions are not taxed currently to the employee.
4. Earnings accumulate income tax-deferred.
ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
1. ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION. No annual contribution is required. If a contribution
is made, the allocation must be the same percentage for each eligible employee.
2.INDIVIDUALLIMITS.The allocation of employer contributions to a participant’ s
account may not exceed the lesser of 15% of compensation or $22,500. For the selfemployed,
these values are reduced to 13.0435% and $19,565.
3. TIME OF CONTRIBUTION. Contributions can be made until the due date (plus
extensions) of the employer’s return.
4. VESTING. Vesting must always be 100%.
5. ADDITIONAL IRAs. Additional IRAs are permitted if the combination meets
overall ItLa~ limits.
6. WHO MAY PARTICIPATE? Any employee who is at least 21 and has
performed "service" in at lehst 3 of the last 5 calendar years must be permitted to
participate under the SEP, unless her total compensation is less than $400 for the ye.ar.
7. INVESTMENT OF PLAN ASSETS. Plan assets can be invested in most eqmty
products or debt instruments, but may not be invested in life insurance, "hard" assets,
or collectibles (except for U.S. gold and silver coins). Participants direct the funds
coutributed on their behalf.
8. WITH~DRAWALS. Participants may withdraw or cash-out at anytilne. However,
Timothy W. Daniel
Attorne3’ at Law
Know Your Rights!
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Personal Injury,
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& Workers Compensation
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma
Weekend and evening appointments are available.
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Cherry Street Psychotherapy
Associates
1515 South Lewis
Are you lookingfor a relaxed, amicable,
private atmosphere for therapy?
Our office provides a level of confidentiality
and comfort that enhances teh therapeutic process.
For further information, call 743-4117
Leah Hunt, MSW Judy Seymour-Taylor, CADC
Della Blackburn, CADC Richard Fleeder, MS
Serving a Diverse Community
withdrawals are subject to immediate taxation. Prior to age 59 1/2, there is an additional
10% excise tax, unless such distributions are made over the life expectancy of the IRA
owner or joint life expectancy of the owner and a designated beneficiary or because of
death or disability. Once the annuity format is chosen, it cannot be modified until the
later of 5 years or age 59 1/2 is reached, without a penalty.
I. ADVANTAGES TO EMPLOYER
1. Contributions are tax deductible.
2. Contributions and costs are totally flexible.
3. Reporting is very minimal -- no IRS or Dept. of Labor forms.
4. The plan is easy to understand by the employees.
5. The plan is easy to set up by merely completing IRS Form 5305-SEP*.
6. There is little or no administrative expense.
II. ADVANTAGES TO EMPLOYEES
1. Annual contributions are not taxed to the participant.
2. Earnings on the account are not currently taxed.
3. Participants have the right to direct investments.
4. Participants can also have a regular deductible IRA, if the combined accounts meet
overall IRA requirements.
5. Funds can be withdrawn at any time; e.g., in the event of an emergency, although
there will be penalties if the participant is not yet 59 1/2, unless the participant is
deceased or disabled, or a special annui.ty pay out (of substantially equal payments) is
chosen.
III. DISADVANTAGES TO EMPLOYER
1. Contributions must be made for part-time and seasonal employees.
2. Employees can withdraw the funds as fast as they are put into the account.
3. Employees are always 100% vested -- there are no forfeitures to reduce employer
contributions.
4. Employees control investments.
5. Allocation methods which reduce employer costs may not be used.
IV. DISADVANTAGES TO EMPLOYEES
1. There is no guarantee as to future benefits
2. Investment risks rest on the participant.
3. There is no assurance as to the frequency and amount of employer contributions.
4. Special lump-sum tax treatment of distributions is not available.
5. No tax-free disability pay out is available.
6. There are no forfeitures to be reallocated
7. Life insurance funding is not’available.
8. Cannot contribute over the 15% limit (compared to a 25% limit permitted tinder
Qualified Defined Contribution Plans).
9. Bankruptcy protection from creditors is uot afforded.
Pres. Clinton said during his "’S tate of the l’nion’" address, your retirement program
is going to be up to us. Talk to your employer. T,*~ke a look at your own plan. Today! !
"" My interest is in the future because I am going to spend the rest of my life there."
Charles F. Kettering
Photos, JD Jamett, 621-5597
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If you missed it the first time, don’t
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Making Sense: Innovative and
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Program begins February 20. Call T©HR for more
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by Jean-Pierre
It’s 2 a.m., the bars have closed, and
you’re hungry. Where in Tulsa can you
go’? The restaurants revxewed here are
open all night and have table service.
Clearly, the unquestionable winner in
the all-night category has to be the Village
Inn chain. While service quality varies a
bit from store to store, it is generally
reasonably prompt, and, as long as you.
d.on’t have any special requests or instructions,
reasonably efficient.
Breakfast is.Village Inn’s forte. They
" are Particularly known for theirextremely
fluffy omelettes, made so by a quick whirl
in the blender before cooking. Otherpopular
breakfasts are the several varieties of
"skillets", which feature diced potatoes, a
meat, and onions and other vegetables, all
sauteed together, and then topped with
eggs to order and a sauce or gravy ofsome
sort.
Of course, you can also get sandwiches
and regular diner food. We particularly
like the Cobb salad, of mosdy iceberg
lettuce, but topped with aplethora ofother
tasty items like bleu cheese, fresh bacon,
grilled chicken breast, an~ diced avocados.
Be sure and ask if the avocados are
ripe, since we were served hard and tasteless
avocados on several occassions. Those
of you not counting fat grams will no
doubt be quite favorably impressed by the
double cheeseburger, f~aturing two j’ulcv
hamburger patties, grilled onions, ba0o~
~trips, cheese, & thousand island dressing.
Our biggest complaint with the Village
Im] chain is that the3 close at midnight on
Sunday and Monday nights.
On those unfortunate nights, the default
choice has to be Kettle. We are sorry to
report that the corporate Kettle entity was
recently purchased by Denny’s. None of
the employees in any of the local stores
are able to tell us whether ornot there will
be any change in the restaurant’s Policies ,
orif the Kettle stores will become Dermy’s.
Kettle’s food is pretty standard and
generic fare. They also do a better job on
dinner entrees than most of their competitors,
but even so, none meet the excruciatingly
high Jean-Pierre standards.
Denny’s is the traditional American allnightrestaurant,
andis the standard against
which other competitors are measured.
Fortunately for those competitors, the local
Denny’s don’t meet the old Denny’s
standard.
Over the last three months, we made
twovisits each to three ofthe local Deuny’s
stores. In each case, the service was unacceptably
slow. Twice we heard patrons at
other tables get almost violently loud with
their server over delays, wrong orders,
and poor food. The most frequent problem
we encountered was cold .food. Runner
up was overcooked food. To make all
of. this worse, Denny’s famous budgetsaver
"Grand Slam"brealffast is not served
during the midnight to 6 a.m period.
Frequent road-trippers will no doubt be
familiar with the Waffle House chain.
Small and unpretentious, Waffle House
can serve a decent and cheap breakfast.
Unfortunately we found that food quality
vanes greatly from store to store.
All Waffle Houses have wmtresses that
call their customers "Hon." It’s a tradition.
But, what realh scares us at Waffle
House is the fa~t tl~at your short-order
cook works in full view.’Some thin2s are
probably better left unsaid.
Waffle House has an All You Can Eat
special for $4.59, slightly higher during
the 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. period, that is worth
yourmoney and probably the best way for
you to eat. The signature food is the pecan
waffle, which appears hot off the iron
golden brown, fragrant, and filled with
pieces of pecan throughout the batter.
We’ve never yet had a bad pecan waffle at
a Waffle House. Other items are not so
lucky. The grits we were served were a
congealed mass of got bathed in some
type of yellow oi!y substance we took to
be melted margarine.
Three ’local" restaurants exist Unfortunately,
with no nadonal standards to
meet, all three have definite short-comings,
and we tend to avoid them. They are
Mama Lou’s, Perry’s, and Kelly’s.
So, as you can see, goodreaders,Tulsa’a
late night dining scene Is not paricularly
condusive to the gourmet experience. We
do, however, have to ~ve honorable mentlons
to the Whataburger and Tact Cabana
chains. The food at Tact Cabana is
pretty good, although not as good as what
we’ve had at their San Antonio stores.
Also, a favorite spot we had to mention is
the Country Ketde/Texaco truck stop way
out east of town on 1-44. Technically, it’s
in Catoosa city limits, but just across the
highway is sti]l within Tulsa city limits.
Ourrecommendation?Hone vou~ gourmet
skills at home for your friends. Eat
before ten o’clock. Move to New York.
Otherwise, head to a Village Inn, maybe
eat at Tact Cabana, or try your luck with
a gamble at one of the other restaurants.
by James Christjohn ¯ If you missed the last two concerts in
the Celtic Music series at the PAC, you
: missed some great entertainment! Celtic
music is the great-grandperson of bluegrass
and country, yet has a quality all its
¯ own. Haunting and celebratory, often at
the same time, it is great music to dis-
, cover, or if you already have, to explore.
¯
Coming up is the third and final (sadly)
; concert of the Celtic Music Series, the
¯ Cassidys, 5musical Irish brothers (hate to
be in the middle of one of their family
¯ spats!),atthePAC nMarch 13. They ve
¯ played for two Presidents, and filled Ra¯
dio City Music & Carnegie Halls. This
will be their Tulsa debut. For info and
¯ tickets, call the PAC ticket office at 596-
: 7111. And doit soon, because these shows
¯ usually pack the house! ¯
For an amusing evening, don’t miss
¯ Broken Arrow Community Playhouse’s
¯ production of"the Lion in Winter. This is
¯ the last weekend to catch it; Friday & ¯
Saturday at 8pm and Sunday at 2pm.
¯ Catch the kiss in the second act - it’s quite
a show stopper! (Not to mention the numerous
pacemakers planted throughout
¯ the audience!) For info, call 258-0077.
¯ Well, I haven’t seen any ghosts lately,
¯ but I’ve been haunted by a Phantom. Yes,
he looms large on the horizon... Oh, never
¯ mind, that’s not him, just my shadow! I
¯ really must stick to that diet more stricdy.
¯ Where was I? Oh, yeah, Phantom. THE ¯
Phantom, of Opera fame, is arriving the
¯ 22nd, and will haunt the PAC until March
23 - they’ve added a week. According to
my info. The Phantom himself, Thomas
The Biggest GayAnd Lesbian Comedy Event EVE /
SATURDAY MARCH 16 8:00 PM
_~/~
Gay Stand-U p Comics
Perform in g
I¢|VIFI
The Gay Come~y Jam "Fr~,l, m" T~Jr~
From HDO
Gay Stand-Up Comedy
Nationally Recognized And Acclaimed
Gay And Lesbian Headliners
As Featured On HBO
And The Advocate Magazine With Spedal Guest:
BOB |/~11"1.1
GEORGIA RAGSD ALE
From HBO’s
The Rrst Openly C~y Comedian "Women Aloud"
To Appear On The Tonight .Show
Tickels A vailable At"
The Tulsa Performing Arts Center
Theatre Box Office
And
All Carson Attractions Ticket Locations
110 East Second Street
For Ticket/Show information.
(9 1 8) $ 9 6-7 1 I 1
Advance Ticket Purchase Recommended
Jmnes O’Leary (Another Celtic influ- ordering a cheap seat!
ence!), comes straight.... Let me rephrase There are Phantom performances set
that. He hails directly from the Broadway aside for visual and heanngimpaired folks:
production itself! If his name seems fa- An audio-described performance for the
miliar, check the liner notes on the origi- " visually impaired is scheduled for March
hal cast recording of Miss Saigon. He’s 16that2pm;andasignedperformancefor
also featured on the soon to be released
international symphonic recording of Miss
Saigon as well. No skimping on this show.
After all, they have rebuilt part of the
theatre just for the chandelier. So use lots
o’ hair spray, build up the chandelierproof
bouffant, and call the PAC at 596-
7111 for tickets (going fast, I hear). If you
want to have a gay old time and scare
people enmasse, groups of 20 or more can
call 254-1069 for group tickets. Tickets
run from $16.50 to $61.50. Interesti0g
juxtaposition ofnumbers, eh? Heaven hdp
you if you’re dyslexic & think you’re
the hearing impaired is scheduled for
March 17th at 2pm.
I am pleased to announce that
Gaylapalooza is coming to Tulsa for one
night only, March 16, at the PAC.
Gaylapalooza is an evening featuring four
acclaimed openly Gay comics: Scott
Kennedy and Kevin Maye, co-stars of the
’~3ay Comedy Jam, and appearances on
HBO’s Comedy Channel; Bob Smith, the
first gay comic ever to have his Own HBO
special and ~the first and only openly gay
comic to appear on the Tonight Show; and
see Comtc, page 11
How To Do It
First 30 words are $10. Each
additional word is 25 cents.
You .may bring additional
attention to your ad with:
Bold Headline - $1
Ad in capital letters - $1
Ad in bold capital letters - $2
Ad in box - $2
Ad reversed - $3
Tear sheet mailed - $2
Blind Post Office Box - $5
Please type or print your ad. received.
Count th~ number of words. TFN reserves
(A word for our purposes is a the right to edit
group ofletters or numbers sepa- or refuse any
rated by a space.) ad. No refunds.
Large Corner Let
3 Bdrm. Home in need of
Major repairs.
Appraised at 20 K+
All offers considcrcd.
Call 622-1441.
Send your ad &
payment to POB.
4140, Tulsa, OK
74159 with your
name, complete
address, day &
eve. numbers
(for our records
only).
Ads will run in
the next issue
after they are
¯ [] ¯ Keyboardist ¯
¯ Needed ¯
¯ ¯
¯ Sunday am and []
¯ Wednes.day pm ¯
¯ " ¯ Call ~-
¯ Fanfi.ly of-Faitli M(?~ " ~
¯¯ t6 inqtfire.
¯ " 622L1441L’ ¯
THAT PHONE!
HERE’S HOW IT WORKS:
1 ) To respond to these
ads & browse others
Call: 1-900-786-4865
2) To record your FREE
Tulsa Family Personal ad
Call: 1-800-546-MENN
(We’ll print it here)
3) To pick-up messages
from your existing ad
Call: the 900 number &
Press the star key (,)
Due to our large volume of calls
if you can’t get thru, simp y try
your call later.
900 blocked? Try 1-800-863-9200.
VISAiMC..
Questions Call: 1-415-281-3183
ALOT MORE THAN CURIOUS. Bi HM,
military, attractive, 32, some experience,
seeks others for fun and friendship. Please
leave a message. (Lawton) ~18853
Recording your ad:
Figure out what you want to say
before calling in. Write down what
you want to say. Keep it short and
simple. Just describe yourself and
what you’re looking for Our
computerized system will walk you
through the rest. Have a pen ready to
write down your box number.
GOOD aLE’ BOY. GWM, 135, 5’5",
blonde hair, hazel eyes, 35, varied interests,
seek GWM’s, 18-40, for friendship and
more. Please leave a message. (Manford)
e25103
NOW AND THEN. GWM, 6’1", 190,
brown hair, green eyes, seeks others for
occasional encounters. Please leave a
message (Muskogee) ~32992
ANYONE HOME?. GWM, big guy, seeks
others for fun in the sun Leave a message
and we’ll go from there. (Oklahoma City)
~47984
BIG AND FULL OF FUN. GWM, 5’11",
red hair, blue eyes, heavy set and fun, new
to area., very passive, seeks other men for
pleasure and more. Give me a call!
(Oklahoma City) e47707
BI YOU A COCKTAIL. Bi WM,
professional, seeks discreet, fun and safe
action Leave a message soon. (Oklahoma
Cityl ~47841
YOUNG LOVE. GWM, 19, alot of
interests, seeks others, under 25, for
relationship possibilities. No one night
stands,-please! (Oklahoma City) ~47711
MAN TO MAN. GWM76’5", 210, hairy
chest, taltoos, pierced, seeks others, 21-45,
for discreet male to male activities in my
home. Call me soon. (Oklahoma City)
~47731
BI AND BI. Bi WM, late 40% seeks other
Bi guys in the local area. Leave a message.
(Oklahoma City) ~47209
ARE WE A MATCH?. GWM, 5’11", 160,
brown hair, blue eyes, seeks local guys for
friendship and possibly more. Please
respond and I will answer as soon as I get
your message. (Oklahoma City) ~34851
LOOKING FOR INSTRUCTION. GWM,
seeks others for guidance and experience in "
this lifestyle. All calls will be answered.
(Oklaho~na City) ~39411
TULSA TWO STEP. GWM, 26, 5’7", 145,
good looking and in shape, seeks others, 18-
27, for friendship and fun. Please leave a
message. (lulsa) ~17238
FANTASY ISLAND. GWM, 41,5’11",
180, black hair, brown eyes, seeks others,
local and 18-42, into foniasies, for fun and
more. Please leave a message. (Oklahoma
City) n34286
WILLING TO LEARN. GWM, 31,6’,
blonde hair, brown eyes, new to this life,
seeks others to teach me more. Please leave
a message. (Oklahoma City) ~33975
SOUTHERN NIGHTS. GWM, 22, 250
Ibs, 5’6", looking for all local studs who are
interes~l in friendship, relationship, life and
laughter. If this sounds like you, leave me a
message for an immediate reply. (Oklahoma
City) ~47265
COWBOYS WANTED!. GWM, 5’8",
brown hair and eyes, 21, seeks other males,
good looking and well built cowboys
preferred, for friendship and more. Please
leave a message. (Oklahoma City) ~23376
NEW TO THIS. GWM, 27, 155, brown
hair, hazel eyes, newly divorced and
inexperienced, seeks others for experience
and friendship. Please leave a message.
(Oklahoma City) ~17465
ANNE RICE AND NIBBLING. GWM
2, 5 10 , blonde hair, hazel eyes, me&urn
build, seeks others for friendship and
relationship. (Oklahoma City) e1879~
81G GUY. GWM, 18, 5’10", 240, seeks
others for friendship and more. Please leave
a message. (Oklahoma City) el 8863
COUNTRY STUD PUPS SOUGHT.
GWM, 5’10", 1,50, brown hair and blue
eyes, good looking, seeks young males for
fun and good times. Please leave a
message. (Oklahoma City) ~ 16604
BUDDY TO BUDDY. GWM, 25, tall and
in good shape, good looking, masculine and
inexperienced, smoke/drug/disease fre~,
into sports, movies and all outdoor activities,
seeks buddies, 20’s-30’s, to share my life
and interests with. A close friendship is my
goal. Please respond. (Tulsa) ~34529
NIGHTS IN BLACK LEATHER. GWM,
Secretary of Tulsa Technicians, seeks other
men who are hairy, ’stoched, bearded and
masculine, to teach me more about Leather
and all that it implies. I want to know all
there is! (Tulsa) ~34324
DECENT MEN ONLY. GWM, 6’, 175,
good looking and in shape, seeks others with
same qualities. Leave a message. (Tulsa)
~4.7744
BAR FLIES BE GONEI. GWM, 28, 5’9",
155, good looking, straight acting, into all
out door activities, smoker and social
drinker, seeks others, 21-30, for fun,
friendship and possibly more. Bar flies need
no~" respond. (Tulsa) ~e42991
NO ONE NITERS HERE. GWM, 18,
seeks others, 18-21, for fun, friendship and
possible relationship. Please leave a
message. (Tulsa) ~ 11953
DO YOU WANT TO HAVE FUN?.
GWM, 6’1", 165, blonde hair, tanned and
hairy, seeks others for one on one or phone
fun. Please leave a message. (Tulsa)
~33414
DISCREETLY YOURS. GWM seeks straight
actina and masculine GWM’s for friends.
Pleas~ leave me a message. Firemen,
policemen and military a plus. (Tulsa)
~ 13775
TEACH ME TONIGHT. Bi Curious WM,
28, brown hair, blue eyes, 6’, 160, very
good shape, very inexperiericed, seeks very
straight acting and Discreet men for first time
pleasures. Please leave a message. (Tulsa)
~r!8134
LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCE. Bi Curious
Married WM, very a~active, good body,
6’1", 180, blonde hair, blue eyes, seeks
other white males for first time experience.
Please leave a message. No need to be
Discreet. (Tulsa) ~ 16302
GIRL TALK. Bi Curious WF,
5’11",165, 24, blonde hair, hazel
eyes, variety of interests, out doors
woman, Seeks Bi WF’s or Curious
WF’s, for friendship, exploration
6nd maybe more. Leave a
message. (Oklahoma) ~26249
LET’S LEARN TOGETHER¯
Extremely Bi Curious WF, new to
this life,. 22, ~’all and full figured;
seeks same ~or le~rning
experiences. Please leave a
message (Oklahoma City)
e27073
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED. GWF, 31, seeks
other females for fun, romance and
more. Please leave a message.
(Tulsa) ~27256
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
newspaper
periodical
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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[1996] Tulsa Family News, February 15-March 14, 1996; Volume 3, Issue 3
Subject
The topic of the resource
Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.
Description
An account of the resource
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).
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level.
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.
Creator
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Tulsa Family News
Publisher
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Tom Neal
Date
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February 15-March 14, 1996
Contributor
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James Christjohn
Phyl Boler-Schmit
Barry Hensley
Pat Morehead
JD Jamett
Rights
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Tom Neal/Tulsa Family News
Format
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PDF
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Language
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English
Type
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newspaper
periodical
Coverage
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Tulsa---Oklahoma
Oklahoma---Tulsa
United States Oklahoma Tulsa
United States of America (50 states)
Identifier
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https://history.okeq.org/items/show/507
Relation
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Tulsa Family News, January 15-February 14, 1996; Volume 3, Issue 2
Source
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https://history.okeq.org/collections/show/24
African Americans
AIDS/HIV
AIDS/HIV discrimination
AIDS/HIV drugs
AIDS/HIV research
arts and entertainment
attorneys
Barry Hensley
Bars
Bill Clinton
businesses
censorship
churches
custody
Darly Jay
Dave Fleischer
domestic violence
Don't Ask Don't Tell
estate planning
Eureka Springs
FUSO
gay panic
harassment
Health Briefs
heresy
homophobia
James Christjohn
Jean-Pierre Legrandbouche
Leanne Gross
marriage
Murder
Native Americans
performing arts
Phyl Boler-Schmidt
RAIN
restaurants
schools
sex education
Shanti
sodomy laws
Stephen Fry
That's Entertainment!
threats
Tom Neal
Tulsa Family News
Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights
Tulsa Oklahoomans for Human Rights
viatication
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[Sub-Series] Newsletters & Publications > Tom Neal Newsletters > Tulsa Family News
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Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Communities - Our Families of the Heart
National News
Oregon Murder ¯
......STSOCuKsTOpNe, Ccaltif..A-Triprpeedsotffebdy an i
anonymous caller, authorities in Stockton,
about 70 miles east of San Francisco, ~
January 15 - February 14, 1996, Vohlme 3, Issue 2
,have arrested-Robert. James- Acremant in.’--
connection.with the killingiearlier in De- :
.cember oftwoprominent lestiiaii activists "
¯
Run for Your Lives:
¯ OK House is In Session
¯ Legislators S.eekTo
"Endorse Bias In
i Adopti,on, Foster
Gare & Education
¯ ~,In what is becoming a regular legisla- ~n Medford, Oregon. Authorities have : ¯
confirmed that the man also confessed to :, ti~e kick in the pants forOklahoma Lesbith
.-~, t.:v. ~ ^r n _ :......~.__._ ¯ This drawing representing a gun target ¯ ans, Gay men and Bisexuals the Okla e earll,,.4 aadlng u,t a m,~, ,. LalllUllfl,H . _ . ¯ - .. , , - ,~-o--_~.t.....:t.:,:,. ,,__, ~_............ was left 3ee story below for details ¯ -homa House of Representatives is ised
. ’ see Ore on a e:12 .... - ’ ~ /. . :~ .to address at least two resolutions which
" ¯ -. " "~ ~ ~’~
~’~ .....
Younn Men Admit,. ..u .r-Hara sm,nt- ’.......H.ou.se.Re.so.lut.ion.s 1.04.5&.1046,i.n_tro.- ~ ¯ - -": " ~ OUCgO resp~uvely o\’ Ul~ Kepresema- Murder-of Gay Man ! H.,aLnoscoanl communiDileaaad es.orsn, ,k,’,ellb,-, :"z"v..-. l,on:°" su° ,dB oe, e°na°u"f ,readree""mckeaannd, ,’oneesx o-f
" HOUSTON - Authorities say Daniel C. : awoke to find "hate -.~.messages at theii~: ." press the position of the House of Repre-
Bean, 19, and Rodney H. Gauthier, 21, : home. Recently, theyf0und an.anti-Gay :- sentadves "regarding certain lifestyles"
two half-brothers who say they’re members
of a net-Nazi organization, have
admitted viciously attacking twogaymen,
one ofwhomdied ofmultiple stabwounds.
Frank Mangione, ’46, Was pronounced dead
on amval at a local hospital, and Kenneth
Stern, a friend who had been with
see Murder, page 3
Ge,o. rgia: Fed.eral-
Rultng on Marr,age
ATL’-XNTA - The U.S. Court of Appeals
in Adanta has ordered Georgia Attoruey
General Michael Bowers to explain in
court why his withdrawal of a 1991 job
offer to Robin Shahar after she had a
religious marriage ceremony with her
lover does not violate Shahar’ s free speech
rights under the U.S. Constitution. The
ruling could force the .state’s, attorney
general into a difficult court fight since it
would require him to establish a"compelling
governmental interest’: in changing
his mind about the job offer. Bowers"
office had argued that hiring Shahar after
the commitment cerelnonv would complicate
enforcement of the state’s antisodolny
laws and could be construed as an
endorsement of same-sex marriages. The
attorney general’s office said it was "’disappointed"
in die 3-judge panel’s ruling
and would ask for a review, either by ftfll
appeals court or the US Supreme Court.
Calif. GOP Tries-To"
Ban Gay Marriages
Thursday, Jannary 4, Califorlfia
Assemblymelnber Pete Knight unveiled
amendments to his bill, AB 1982, to prevent
Califonfia from recogmzing samesex
marriages.!egally pedbnned in other
states. Knight’s bill isiu reaction to the
expected legalization of stone-sex marriages
in Hawaii in the next two )’ears.
Knight’s bill has the backing of the
Assembly Republican caucus, and ,’dread)"
has 29 Republican co-sponsors. Kafight’s
stated reasoning follows: traditional marriages
are for procreation. S,’une-gender
couples can’ t "produce offspriug together,
[so] they must view marriage as just a
reservoir of economic perks." galight did
see CA-GOP. page 10
¯ (concentriccircles) with themessage,"tar-
¯ get practice-fags’: and on the reverse, ¯ vulgar drawings and comments.
¯ Kirby, fonner TOHR president, stated
¯ that this harassment is especially trou- ¯ bling since their address is not pul~lished.
¯ He added that the hate crimes unit of the
Tuls.a police depart, did send officers to
¯ investigate, even though under
¯ Oklahoma’s hate crimes law, attacks on the basis of sextml orientation are not
cov.ered. Kirby noted that these nughtjust
See Target, page 10
message marked on a. car window. Two : and regarding "celebration of a LeSbian
days later, tbeyfoundacrudedrawingon° .~ and Gay history month in the public
their porch. On one side therewas a target ._: schools". Both are simple resolutions and
: therefore would not have the force ot’lass"
¯ ACLU Continues to
Challenge Sex Law
The American Civil Liberties Union
: (ACLU) ofOklahoma recently received a
¯ setback to its challenge of Oklahoma’s
¯ "’sodom)"’ law.. Oklahoma City attoruey,
¯ Mark Hendricksen, with Marquette l_’ni-
¯ versitvprofeSsoroflaw Shirley \Vie_,aand
¯ with assistance from ~he Gay & Lesbian
Rights Project of the national’office of the
ACLU are preparing a petition to the
U~fited States S.up.reme Court for a review
of the late 1995decision of the Oklal~olna
Court of Criminal Appeals.
The circumstances ~f the -case follow! a
citizeu was approached by a undercover
OKCpolice officer. After extended flirtation
by the police officer who emphasized
see ACLU. page 10
Project-Open Mind
,Parents, Fanfilies and Friends~of Lesbiaus
and Gays, (PFL,~G), both the national
and local orgamzations ,are contilming
their Project Open Miud cmnpaign to reduce
hate langtmge and violence directed
toward Lesbians, Gay men, Bisexuals mad
those perceived to be. PFI.=~G National
,’umomiced that the law finn of Hogan &
tlartson LI.P will assist PFLAG at no
.charge (pro bond) in First Amendment
tssues raised by the threat of lawsuits
against PFL&G i’r0mthe Christian Broadcasting
Network (CBN).
Project Open Mind began with television
connnercials that featured anti-Gay
see PFLAG. page
House resolution 1045 declares that
¯"- "’homosexuality, lesbianism or bisexnal-
: ity’" should not be taught as "’natural
: lifestyles" in public schools, and that Les-
¯ bians, Gay men or Bisexuals should not
] adopt or’be foster parents and would
~. specify that the stone classes of citizens
] should not have "any special status under
¯ the law".
: ~ Resolution 1046 states the position of
: the House condemmng the National Edu-
~ cation Association’s (NEA) "call for "’the
¯ acceptance and tolerance of homosexual
behavior" and for "’celebrations of a Lesbian
and Gay History Month to ac"knmvledge
the contributions of lesbians, gays
¯ and bi sexuals, all ofwhich is inconsistent
with traditional values of this state...’"
Traditionall.v le~slation of this sort have
been filed by one or another of the OK
House’s Radical-Right members, typi-
"cally, Bill Graves ofOKC. \\’hat concerns
many longtime politi"cal observers is that
these have been filed by Democrats. Laurie
Phillips, co-chair of the Tulsa County
Democrat Party stated that tlfis "’flies in
the face of the principles of the Democrat
Party, not only the local, state & national
platforms but violates the constitution and
bylaws of the state Democrat part3".
tale observer suggested that the introduction
ofthese resolution might be a way
for the Democratic leadership to kee~
these issues under their control. The idea
is that a milder, non-binding resolution
would let legislators take an anti-Gay
lX?.sition for their ultra-conservative consutuents
at home but would allow those
Representatives to avoid a vote on an
actnal anti-Gay bill. However,.attoruev
Bill Hiulde rio’ted that even as a resolu’-
tion. Lesbians, Gay men mid Bisexnals
could be affected if agency heads chose to
reflect the views of the House in their
policies. Dept. of Hunwaa Senices (DHS)
officials said at this time, the agency does
not discriminate on the basis of sexual
orientation mid DHS staff knew of some
adoptions by Lesbian or Gay citizens.
DHS stall" stated their duly cdnceru was
with the quality of the hol~e for the chilsee
R.1045. page 10
¯ HIV Bias Lawsuit
Names Cafe Owner
¯ The Tulsa Federal Court will soou hear
.an HIViAIDS discriminatiou lawsuit
¯ which could be the first in the nallon
under the A~nericans with Disabi lilies Act
" (ADA). Local"society" "cafe owner, Tcrr3
_’~ ~T~urner; who mvns Capistrano inq "ticw "
¯ ’ Square andThe French Hen in sonth’l;ulsfi,
;.’ iS ~li¢ged to have ~’iolated the federal nou-
¯ discrimination law in what former cur
¯ ployee, Paul Saladin, claims was a wrong.....
¯ ful firing, Saladin had beeu emplo.vcd at
." The French Hen for over 8 years.
: Background
¯ Saladin’s spouse, FxtGandin, tested
i positive for HIV :’anti.bodies in=1987. In-/
¯ late 1992, Gaudin becanle ill and was
¯ ..diagnosed with AIDSin early 1 ~93. I)ur-
¯ mg this time, Saladin supported the finn-
¯ ilv and was Gaudin’s prilnary carcgivcr.
¯ A’lso during this time, Saladin becmnc a
¯ voluuteer with an HI\" AIDS hospice and
became a certified HI\" AII)S educator.
¯ Both Gaudin’s !llV status, illness and
¯ Saladin’s vohmteer work wcrc known to
most French Ileu employees and Saladin’..~
manager, Jemlifer \Vallacc. On occasion.
¯ French Hell CtlSlOlners who kllcw of
Saladin’s circumstances, would ask hiul
¯ about his spouse. \\.hilt he appears to
have been discreet about the subject.
Saladin did not hide his vohmtcer work or
his relationship with Gaudin.
History of this Case
In respouse to ,’m inqtury from l)r. &
; .Mrs. Spohr of Tulsa (according to pnblic
doculnents on file with the court), Saladin
¯ did uot mention either HIV or AII)S but
¯ did refer to Gandm’s T-cell count. On ¯
Sept. 17, 1993, the manager at that time,
¯ Je~mifer Wallace instructed Saladin not
¯ to discuss Gaudin’s HIV AIDS condition
¯ while waiting on tables, and further m-
Ibnned him that she hoped owner Terry
¯ Turuer did uot find out. According t~
¯ documents sublnitted to the court, Saladin
¯ agreed but objected and sought guidance
see ADA. page 3
Tulsa Prime Timers
¯ Raises $1000 For
Community Center
¯ Tulsa Area Prilne Tilners (’I’AVI’)
: hosted a holiday party and silent auction
¯ in December. With food prepared with ¯
TAPT’s gourmet group and items donated
¯
by TAPT’s members, the event raised
¯ S 1000 for creation of a Tulsa Couununitv
; Ceuter which lnembers of the group prt;-
¯ seuted to TOHR president, Dcbi Statues.
¯
Prime Tizners, which is ,’dread\" one of
¯ the fastest growing social orgam’zations,
¯ has expanded its membership to include
Gay mid Bisexual men over the age of 21.
¯
Formerly, membershipwas 40 and alx)vc.
EDITORIAL P. 2
DIRECTORY Po 2
," NEWS BRIEFS P. 4
¯ HEALTH BRIEFS P. 6
CALENDAR P. 9 ¯
EUREKA PAGE P. 11
918.583. 1248
P()B 414(/
Tulsa, Oklahoma
74159-o 14o
TulsaNews~ aol.com
Publish er/Editor Issued on or before the 15th of each month, the entire contents of
Tom Neal this publication are protected by US copyright 1996 by Tulsa F:amilv
Assistant Editor News and may not be reproduced either in whole or in part withot[t
James Christjohn written permission from the publisher. Publication of a name or
Writors/contributors photo does not indicate that person’s sexual orientation.
Phvl Boler- Schmidt Correspondence is assumed to be for publication unless otherwise
Barry Hensley noted, must be signed & becomes the sole property of Tulsa Family
Pat Morehead News. All correspondence shouid be sent to the address above. Each
Staff Photosrapher reader is entitled to one free copy of each edition at distribution
JD Jamett points. ,~dditional copies are available by calling 583-1248.
It’s that time again When we have to deal with
politics whether or not we want to do so. On
[:cbruary 6th, there.~e city council.primary races
which aren" t particularlyinteresting AND tl~ere are
ol v charter changes which may not be that interestiug
either but which ARE important. The one that
I would urge each of us to vote ~n lavor of is a
ch,’mgc to the charter which would allow an employee
of a business which holds a franchise with
thc city to hold public office. The prohibition dates
from early days of statehood and no longer has a
usc. I tow~\er~ the impact of it remmning could be
to force City Councillor Joe \Villiams off the city
council. Joc" s district is mostly north Tulsa mad vo{~
all might ask why. if you don’t live in that district.
.you should care’? Fi~rst. Joe V,’illian~s has been a
good rcprcsentative for his district and seems to
this observer to be one of the few of our councillors
who has both brains and integrity. Furthermore,
-Joc is sensitive to issues of m,.ti-Gay discrimination
and is thc oulv member of city govermnent to say
he would support a non-discrimination ordinanc~
"that included sexual orientation. Right now, oulv
one friend o~r city council can’t do much but it’~
better than no fri~nds.Let’s help Joe stay in:office.
Also. Rob Hill is ntiufing for School Board Dist.
;6. Rob brings intelligence, compassion mad experi-
~cnce to this race m~d deserves our support. If you’re
~in hi( district, please:vote for him on Feb." 13. If
!youre. not in Iris district mad c,’m spare some cash
:for cmnpm_ou expenses, please help. If yOU can’t
¯sparc the c~ish, c0nsidcr giving some ti,fie.: If yon
:wm,t to help.please contact.tiffs paper for-inf’.
I ~ch 0f ns cam makc a difference, just by voting.
:.Plcasc do. - Tom Neal, publisher
Taking Heart
b\" Pat .\ lorehead
To begin thisyear,my companion and I started
in the hot mb with a,botfle .of champagne we’ve
.carted around since the mid eighties awaiting a
"’special" occasion, Due to his career he is usually
unavailable at the holidays, so this was the first
time in several years that we’ve actually shared the
New Year together. \Ve started with a very good
dimmer at the Bistro of Brookside, though it was a
little noisy and a little too dear from my v~ewpoint.
\Ve dined late and then returned home and settled
into the hot tub. \Ve enjoyed the relaxing comfort
mad then adjourned inside for some more relaxing
activ,ties. All in all it was a nice start to a new year.
I got to sit in on a rehearsal for "The Lion in
\\’inter" being presented by Broken Arrow Community
Playhouse; call 258-0077 for details. I want
bYShblT{, ~ob~rtb ....................
( Warn#}g : Not [or thehumor-imp)aired!)
It h~ long been my contention that ~ough we
may shoe orgmfi~ti~ns, a couple of b~s, and the
stone colors of the rNnbow, the rdNity is that, wNle
gay men ~dlesbi~s ~e of the stone "ilk", they ~e
NOT of the stone planet. For ex~ples:
Lesbians usuNly m~y slightly"before" the first
date. Gay men marry only after e.rtensive interviewing
~nd denial. "
Lesbians have sex inunediately ~ter meeting
the other woman’s mumNs, cNl&en, relatives,
reviewing ~1 her b~ks, and inte~ogatlng her current
and ~1 her exes. G~v men have sex immediately
a~er just about attythhtg. Sometimes before.
though not as much as they used
I.esbians use love to get io sex. With g<v men, the
vtce is versa.
~en lesbians buy a house, they rehab. And
refi~rbish Gay men. ~n the other han~. redecorate.
~sbi~s~easily fix~~ling refrigerator. Gay
men can e~ih’ fill it~om the cheese atzd importe~
mushroont sebtton of the dell
Lesbians ~e more likely to be vegetal. Gay
men will eat almost anything.
It took lesbi~s to rediscover Hush ~ppies. It
took gay men w redesign tltem in Easter egg colors.
Lesbians process. Endlessly. Gay men rationally
debateram~caaons andconsbqueitces. Forslightly
longer.
Lesbi~ ~e politi~ly co~ect to everyone. Gay
men are politically correct to everyone [hey knout.
I_esbians don’t eat tNngs that used to ha~:e faces.
Gay men categorically reject tofit ~ pointless
wa~@aper p~te with calories.
~sbians envv M~tha Stew~t’s Co~ecticut
house. GaY men’channel her.
~sbi~ fix si~ le~s ~emselves, Gay men call
plumbers. Cute ones.
~sbi~s pay intemN pen~ for haph~d eye
contact, btlhe rightpar& circumstances, ga~ men’s
heads have been known to r~’olve a fidl 3~0"
Polifi~ly co~ect or not, lesbi~s look at Play-
~y Mag~ine. Gay men just read the articles.
To a lesbi~, cNntz is your p~tner buying yo~
bir~day present at a y~d s~e. To a g~v man, its a
fabulous ~rnishing opportuni&,
Two lesbi~s ~ght refer to ~ch o~er ~ "my
wife." Two gay men wouldn ’t.
~sbi~s ~ve off-road veNcles ~d~ymaps
that refold~emselves. Gay Men eventually stop at
service station and ~kfor directions. But only if
th~ real~7 have to go.
~sbi~s bring ~e chars, ~e newsletter, NI the
:to recormnend llii~~ ibroduCtion. I was ¢ery ira: .’ "flyers, theminut~s~ and’the- Coffee pot. Gay men
pressed even though I saw it at an early point in the : bring chkckbo~ks.~
rehearsal schedule. But I was particularly taken ¯ Lesbians have potlucks with dishes made from
with.the.the Richard.and Phillip scene. The.Direst .." l.en~ils .or chocolate. Or both. Gay. men have intitorhastakentherelati0nshipbetweenthesecharac-
." mat~ litti~ ~ti~tn~rs)~o~, i~vb fv~th:lio~emadepate. To
ters and..:,~d~; i!t:!.~!~.~~ .that it.is ahomosexual~ : start~ ’ . "
relations~ij’i~)i! i ~i i:::il" ~..i.~i,.... ..... ’.... - z . "~ LesbianS love camp. ~o.do gay men.
. Now, I h~g~;trrlid~ihat:the inclinations of the : Lesbians cook out by tliepond. Gay men cook in,
two feilo~’ii~i~" N~iiard and,:Phillip are, but : then sit out bythe pooL " " "
bet~een them the mana e a ~erv conv~nono Lesbian Cou le
¯ ’" "~Y~ i g .~ " " ~ ." ’ " p s hyphenate their last names.
see Play, page 3 ". Gay men arm wrestle each other to the ground and
¯. use the winner’s name.
Lesbians go to the gym to get fit. Gay men go to
the gym to get theirjeans to fit.
¯ Lesbians think of New Year’s Eve as an oppor-
¯ tunity to get reacquainted with steps 10, 11, and 12.
see Vegan, page 3
Tulsa Clubs & Restaurants
*Concessions, 3340 S. Peoria
*Ground Zero, 311 E. 7th
*Lola’s, 2630 E 15th
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan
*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main
*TNT’s, 2114 S. Memorial
*Time’n’Time Again, 1515 S. Memorial
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd
*Wild Nights, 2405 E. Adnfiral
Wild Fork, Utica Square, 21st & Utica
*Interurban, 717 S. Houston
744-0896
585-5622
749-1563
834-4234
585-3405
660-0856
664-8299
584-1308
582-4340
742-0712
585-3134
Tulsa Businesses, Services, & Professionals
Demtis C. Arnold, Realtor 746-4620
*Associates in Medi"cal & Mental Health, 1560 E. 21 743-1000
KeiitBalch & Associates, Health & Life Insurance 747-9506
*Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71 250-5034
Brookside Jewelry. 4649 So. Peoria 743-5272
Creative Collectirn, 1521 E. 15 592-1521
Cherry St. Psychotherapy Assoc. 15 ! 5 S. Lewis 581-0902, 743-4117
Tim Dmnel. Attorney 352-9504. 800-742-9468
D’Antiques. 1508 E. t~Sth 592-5356
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th 749-3620
*Dusty Roads at the Silver Star, 1565 Sheridan 834-4234
*Elite Books & Videos, 821 S. Sheridan 838-8503
Express Pool s & Spas, 6310 S. Peoria 743-9994
Fidelity Home Health Care, Inc. Coweta 486-1174
Le,’tma~ M Gross, Financial Plmnfing 744-0102
*Sandra J. Hill, *IS, Psychotherap3, 2865 E Skellv 745-1111
*hnaginations, Lincoln Plaza, 15th & Peoria 584-4606
*International Tours; 341-6866
Kerfs Flowers, 1635~ E 15 599-8070
Kelly Kirby, CPA, I:’OB 14011, 74159 747-5466
Loup-Garou, 2747 E.: 15 742-1992
Lean Aim Macomberl, Realtor Associate 671-2010
Massoud’s Jewle~’,:The Farm, 51st & Sheridan 663-4884
*MediaPlay, 9121 E.!71st 250-5158
*Midtown Theater, 3i19 E. 3 584-3112
Mingo \;alley Flowers, 972i3c E. 31 st 663-5934
*Mohawk Music, 6~57 E 51 P1 664-2951
Puppy Pause II, l lt.hl & Mingo 838-7626
Royal Travel, 6927 S~. Canton 496-2410
*Ross Edward Salon~ 1438 S. Boston 584-0337
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square 749-6301
Southwest Viatical, ~1-1-6 S. Harvard, Ste. F-5 747.-3322
*Tomfoolery Gifts d5 Cards, at F,’unily of Faith MCC 583.1248
Fred Welch, LCSW, .Counseling 743-1733
Tulsa Organizations, Churches, & Universities
*Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Ctr. 2627B E. I l 628-0594
B, LG Alliance, Uni~!ersity of Tulsa 583-9780
*Canterbury Minist~’ Center, University of Tulsa 583-9780
*Chapman Student Center, University of Tulsa
*Conunmtity of Hope (United Methodist), i703 E. 2nd 585-1800
Dignity;Integrity (LegbianiGay Catholics & Episcopalians) 298’-4648
*Fannlv of Faith ..X.~CC, 5451-E So. Mingo 622-1441
*Free Spirit Lesbian Center call for location & info: 587-4669
Friend For A Friend,.POB 52344, 74152 747-6827
Friends in Unity (African-Amer. men), POB 8542, 74101 425-4905
Indian Health Care, Save the Nation 584-4983
Interfaith AIDS Mini.stiles 438-2437, 800-284-2437
*MCC of Greater Tulsa, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715
*HIV Resource Consortium, 4154 S: Harvard, Ste. H-1 749-4194
NAMES PROJECT, 21.154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-I 748-3111
P-FLAG, POB 52800 74152 749-4901
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118 74104
R.A.I.N., Re~onal AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195
Rainbow Business Guild, POB 4106, 74159 665-5174
Rainbow Village, POB 50403, 74150-0403 599-8423
*Shanti Hofline 749-7898
TulSaOldahomansforHmnaiaRigh-ts,(TOtlR) POB52729 74152
TOHR Gay HelpLine (Info.) 743-4297
Tool Box Technicians, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Unifgrm/Leathe_r Seekers Assoc. 838-1222
~ Hall, Cafeteria Vestibule, Ground Floor
Beaver Dam Store, 112 mi. N. of Dam on Hwy. 187 501-253-6154
*Jim &.Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main 501-253-7457
DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center S t. 50 1-253-6807
*Emerald Rainbow, 45&1/2 Spring St. 501-253-5445
King’s Hi-Way, 96 Kings Highway, Hwy. 62W 800-231-1442
*MCC.of the Living Spring 501-253-9337
McClung Realtors 501-253-9682
: ,, RockCottage Gardens 501-253-8659 800-624-6646
] Southern Rose Bed & Breakfast, 9 Benton 501-253-2204
¯ Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East 501-253-6001
¯ The Woods, 50 Wall St. 501-253-8281
on how to handle inquiries about the issue.
Saladin worked several more days
until Wallace informed Turner about the
situation. Saladin was then suspended for
30 days, although he claims he had complied
with Wallace’s directive and The
French Hen does not dispute this. During
the time of the suspension, he retrieved
his liquor license from The French Hen so
that he could continue to work at temporary
jobs. Also, during this time, Saladin
attempted to speak with Turner to address
¯ any misunderstanding.
On Oct. 15th, Saladin called to arrange
to return to work by the 22rid and was told
that Turner had directed her to replace
Saladin. Up to this time and afterwards,
Turner refused to take his calls. According
to Saladin’s documents, when once he
succeeded in getting Turner on the phone,
Turner stated he had nothing to say and
hung up. During this time, several other
employees left or were terminated and
positions became available, but Saladin
was not offered his position back. He filed
with the Oklahoma Employment Security
Commission (OESC), with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC), and sought legal representation.
In late Nov, Saladin was informed that
he’d been denied uuemployment compensation
because Turner claimed that
Saladin had quit. To the OESC, Wallace
on behalf ofTurner claimed that there trad
been repeated customer complaints about
Saladin’s conduct ,and that Saladin had
been suspended for nffsconduct and insubordination
and that Saladin had volun:
taril y quit and Saladin had threatened to
sue. Wallace and Turner repeated these
allegations at a telephone hearing on Dec.
16th with the OESC.
On Dec. 17th, Turner called Ed Gaudin
at his and Saladin’s home asking questions
about Gaudin’ s health and physician
and allegedly calling Saladin a liar.
Gaudin, who was already seriously ill,
appears to have been so upset by the
conversation that when Saladin came
home, he found Gaudin emotionally devastated
and vomiting.
In Jan. of 1994, after Saladin had obtained
legal representation and the EEOC
found sufficient reason to direct Turner to
respond to Saladin’s complaint, Turner
through his attorneys offered Saladin his
job back without conditions. Saladin’s
attorneys accuse Turner of making the
offer in bad faith in order to limit Turner’s
liability for back wages while obviously
Turner et al claim good faith. However,
Saladin expressed a willingness and desire
to return to work from Oct. 15 at least
until Turner’s call to Gandin in Dec. Turner
did not communicate an offer to restore
Saladin’s job until January after Turner
had retained legal counsel.
Since January of 1994, this case has
seen a flurry of legalese documents as
attorneys from each side cite cases to
bolster their side. A trial date has been set
several times but delayed. It is expected to
go to trial February.
Other Information
Late in 1987. after Gaudin tested positive
for ttIV antibodies, a fact which
Saladin shared with several co-workers at
The French Hen, Turner directed that
Saladin be suspended without pay until
Saladin produced a medical repor~ proving
that Saladin was HIV negative. After
being tested. Saladiu subnffl ted a report to
see ADA. page 8
Photos, JD Jamett, 621-5597
Worship Servide 10:30 am
Sheridan Center, Suite H
21st & Sheridan
599-7688
LY.KIRBYCertified
Public Accountant
Lesbians & Gays face many, special tax situations
whether single or as couples.
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with sensitive & timely information.
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Mangione when they met the 2 young
men at a local bar, had been beaten. S tern’s
condition was not serious however. Police
said Bean and Gauthier told them
they had attacked Mangione and Stern
after one of the men had touched one of
the young men while the 4 were taking a
drive earlier in the evening. The young
men also told officers they belonged to a
group called the German Peace Corps,
which human rights activists say is a California-
based neo-Nazi orgamzation affiliated
with the KKK. Several witnesses
told authorities that the 2 young men had
bragged earlier that they were "going’to
get a fag" that night, and later boasted that
they had "cut up this fag real bad."
Gay men see it as a chance to blow their
horns off..
Lesbians truly believe that communes
work. Gay men really think they can be
RepublicZms.
Lesbians turn everyone within hugging
range into "family.’" Gay men have a
tendency to run around i~i PACs.
It is, ~onsidering everything, amazing
that we still talk to each other. Fortnnately,
we are all smart enongh to have
figure out that what is truly unnaturai on
tiffs looney-tune plauet is marrying outside
your own species. ~ 1996 Shelly
Roberts.
All rights reserved. Shelly Roberts is a
uationally syndicated colun~fist, spe,~er,
and author of Roberts’ Rules of Lesbi,’m
Living (5 96) Spinsters htk
seduction scene xvith a very sensual kiss.
The actors deserve credit, and the theater
deserves credit for not diluting the homosexual
content~ Here is a chance as a
co~u~ty forus to snpport a mmustrcana
effort w~ch represents us without apology
or emb~assment.
I was saddened at the passiug of Mike
Syn~, former Congressm~ lrom l)i strict
Two. I have contributed to and worked on
Mike’s beh~f in ~e pasl. tie was a good
guy, honest ~d decent, a truc public scrv~
t in ~e very best sense. There is no
comping ~e ~u~ities Mike represented
with the likes of a Cobum, or I ~gcnt or
I~ofe. And I ~z not refemng to political
ideolo~es.
So for me ’96 is off to an uneven start.
But I intend to t~e heart from the bad as
well ~ the good. I will t~e heart in tl~
ex~ple of Mike Syn~ ~d not be afrmd
to go out ~d fight the good fight. I will
t~e he~t in these two unkuown local
actors and their associates who ~cn’t
~r~d to tac~e a Bible belt tahoo. Aud
I’m going to t~e he~t in the eighteenth
ye~ of a loving and sh~ug relationship
with my lover compmfion.
~ch gives me a re~ly silly idea. l’d
like to he~ from you, the readers, about
what gives you he~t, and helps you make
your way through the world. Maybe you
have so~e key that someone m our commusty
ueeds io hear or would m~c them
feel less isolated. Send you responses to
the editor or E-mail tbcm ~o
TulsaNews ~2 aol.com, and hc can l’or~vard
them on to me. XXtacn I get a good one 1"11
use it in fl~e cohmm. If yon want thcln to
be anonymous, that’s I’iqac.
News Briefs News Briefs
Recruiting Cops for
’City of Brotherly Love’
PIIILA DELPHIA - The Philadelphia
Police Department has
begun rccniitmg gay ,and lesbian
police officers through public
cmpioynieut notices in the city’s
t~vo gay newspapers The uew
effort is the rcsult of a meeting
Police Commissioner Richard
Ncal held earlier in December
with leaders of the city’s lesbian
and gay community. Police Sgt.
l:rcd Cottou said the dcpartuaenl
made a similar effort m 1989-90
bnt !he department had uo i id’ormarion
on how successfill thai
recruitment program had been.
"l’vc never Imd,’mvonc come up
to me and tell m~ their sexual
pcrsuas~ou." Cotton said. The
dcpm’tmcut doesn’t kccp any data
ou the sexual orientation of offleers,
hc added
Study: The Kids (of
Lesbian Moms) Are OK
CIlICAGO- A prolonged study
of the kids of lesbian morns th,~t
tracked the children’s developmcut
forsome two decades found
that they had no more problems
with sexual orientation or other
dcvclopmcut~d issues than the
kids oflmtcroscxtud parcuts. The
study, which was reported in tl~
American ,lournal of Orthopsychiatrv,
found one noticeable
diffcr0mc between the clfildrcn
of Icsbiau morns mad hcteroscxmd
parcuts:"th~ offspnng in
the lcsbimi f,’unihcs were more
uncouflk~rtablc udkiug with other
pcoplc about their parents than
the kids from the str~fight fanfilic~.
Anether signilic~mt di ffcrence
bctwccu the two groups was tha!
none of the kids from hctcroscxnal
fanfilics reported having
had any homosexual experience
by their mid-20s, wlfilc some
25% of those from lesbian lhmi-
News Briefs News .Briefs
lies said they had had at least one
homosexual relationslfip.
Washington State Anti-
Gay Measure May Fail
SEATTLE - To the relief of
rights activists iu the state, Washmgton
anti-gay activists
concede they probably will not
be able to get cuough siguaturcs
to put two ballot measures before
voters in 1996. Initiative
167 would bar gays and lesbians
from adoptiug clfildrcm mid hlitiative
166 would prohibit antibias
laws based ou sexual orientation
anywhere iu the state. The
head of the Citizens ..\.ltimme of
\Vaslfiugton conceded shortl\
before Chi’istnms that the group
wasn’t going to bc able to get the
uceded signatures because the
orgmfizatiou had attracted oulv
a few huudred members an~J
raised only about $5.000 for its
siguaturc-gathcring cmnpaign.
Cathy Y, lickcls, the head of the
state dmpter of the Eagle Forum.
,also told Seattle reporters
she didn’t think it was very likely
the organization would be abl~
to get thd rcqnircd signatures.
Proposed Bill to Aid
Partners Measures
SAC~\MENTO, C:dif. - C~diforuia
Assemblyman \Vallv
Kuox (D-West Hc{llywo~xt) wil’l
introduce a measure m the stale
legislatnre carl\ m 1996 that
would attthorizt~ the giant CadifonfiaPublic
Emtfloyccs & Rctiremeut
System (CAL-PERS)
to open its hc~dth iusurancc coverage
plans to thc dolncstic partners
of muuicipal mid other govcnuncnt
agcucy employees
the state. Some 80 or so C~dil’orma
cities and rcgiomd bomds
and commissions carry their
employce health ius~rancc
thi’ough CAL-PERS. But CAI,-
PERS regulations govcmiug the
state-operated health mid medi-
News Briefs News Briefs News
cal insurance plata specifically
exclude "conunon law spouses"
and "’life partners" as eli~ble
employee dependents, preventing
the cities, counties and special
districts in the CAL-PERS
prograna from offering partner
benefits to their gay or straight
workers even if they want to.
Lobbying for Educational
Anti-Bias Protections
SAN FRANCISCO -The Lavender
Youth Recreation & Information
Center (LYRIC}
started off the New Year with a
political bang on Jan. 3 with a
caravan of gay, lesbian and bisexual
,voting people tothc state
Capitol in Sacrmnento to lobby
for proposed anti-discriminatio[~
protections. Tim California Educatiou
Code bans discrinfination
in the state’s schools mid educational
services based ona number
of categories, bu! does not
include sexual orientation. The
lesbigay youth groupspent the
first &a.v of the legislature’s new
3ear, Jan. 3, lobbying in support
of a measnre introduced by Assemblywoman
Sheila Kuehl (DSanta
Moifica) that would add
sexual orientation to the state
education code.
So. Dakota Anti-
Marriage Battle Again
PIERRE, S.D. - South Dakota
state Rep. Roger Hunt, whose
1995 le~slation to prohibit samesex
marriages in the state failed,
has announced plans to introduce
the bill again during die
current le~slative session. Hunt’s
1995 bill passed overwhehningly
in the state’s lower house by a
,’54-13 vote, but became stalled
m a cotmnittee in the state Senate
where it died. The proposed
legislation would make any
same-sex marriage’:null and void
from the beginning" in the state,
and is aimed at making any such
marriages that may be legal elsewhere
illegal in Soulh Dakota. It
would, for example, have the
effect of nullifyiug s,’unc-sex
nmrriages if Ha,&aii courts v~d idate
them as many cxpcci to
happeu this year.
Political Attacks Against
Gays Increasing
SAN FRANCISCO A report
isstled here by People for the
American Way. says attacks
alined agaiust the political
progress of gays mid lcsbimas in
this country increased at ~dl levels.
The report, the 3rd of its kiud
the organization,has issued,
¯ .counted at least. 180 anti-gay
actions m 1995, an increase of
46 such attacks over 1994. The
survey counted anti-gay political
iuitiatives, legislative measures,
executive actions by state
governors as well as open at-
. tacks by police mid mid public
. ~!d. mc..dia figures against gay
rights.
High. School Gay Group
Stirs Controversy
SALT LAKE CITY - Utah
school mid legal anthoritics, after
2 moaths, have agrced thcre
is litflc or nothing that can be
-done to preveut a gay- and lcs-
¯biau club being fonncd by a
group of studeuts at Salt Lake
City’s East High School. A small
group of students at the school
asked for pennissiou to start the
club in October, and their request
was passed from the
school’s priuciphl to the city’s
school superintendent, then up
to the state cducatiou office, and
finally on to the Utah attorney
gcueral’s office.
Shortly before Cl~stmas, the
attorney geueral’s office notified
district officials that both
state and federal law prolfibit
barring non-curriculum school
clubs because of content. But
activists with the Gay & 1,csbian
Utali 1)cmocrats say the head of
the state mali-gay Eagle Forum,
GayJe Ruzicka, has already indicated
she would immediately
begin lobbying the state legislatnrc
to keep the club from lbrming.
California’s Hate Crimes:
1/5 Are Anti-Gay
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - In the
firs! of .its kind in California,
state Attorney Geueral l)an
LI.mgrcl!"s office reix)rts tl!at hate
crones m the Golden Stale arc
gcucndi y couccutratcd in ci tics -
:andnearly one-fifth of them were
aimed agaiust gays and lesbians.
During the filaal six mouths of
1994, the survey of local law
enforcculent agencies found
there were 672 bias-based crimes
reported in the state. Of these,
487 (72 percent) were based on
the race or ethnic origins of the
victims, Mille 119 (18 perccut)
wcre bccause the victims were
lcsbkms or gay men - or were
believed to bc by the attackers.
Some 6-1- iucidents (orjust m~dcr
10 pcrccut) WCl’C based on the
victims" religion. The largest
number of reported Irate crimes,
243 of them, were logged in the
[x)s Augclcs metropolitan area.
The San Frmmisco Bay Area
checked in with next largcst couceutratiou,
129 bias-based crimes
iu the four-county ,area.
Transsexual Identity
Bill Proposed in Britain
LON1)ON - Among the
backbcuch bills being offered in
Bri rain’s Ilousc of Connnoiis as
private members" legislation is a
mcasure that wouldmake it easier
for traussexuals in the UK to
establish a legal idemity in keeping
with their new gender after a
sex-change operation. MP Alex
Carlilc has proposed a Gcudcr
Identity Bill which would allow
Miracleglass Neil Ray
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News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News Briefs News
transsexualstherighttobegiven . dard of the district’s commu- suit. Ashby, whohasrepresented totheSupremeCourt"ifhemust, sexcouplcstocnroll. Roscnl~aum
a substitute birth certificate reflecting
their reassigned gender
after the operation is completed.
Some 8,000 people in Britain
have undergone a complete sex
change but are not allowed the
legal rights of their new sex.
such as getting married, adopting
and enjoying employment
rights.
Gay Credit Card Can’t
Use ’Rainbow’ Name
TRENTON, N.J:- A federal
court in NewJersey has enjoined
promoters of a gay-oriented
credit card from using the nanm
"Rainbow." U.S District Judge
Mary Little Parell barred the
Rainbow Card Fom~datiou from
using that trade name on the
credit card it was pro~noting in
the New York-New Jersey area
in a suit filed by the Rainbow
Foundation Inc., a Middletown,
N.J., charity that offers medical
assistance and other services to
children in the state. The Rainbow
Card had contracted with
Martina Navratilova to act as
spokeswomanfor the Visacredit
.card that wouldhave used part of
~ts card charges to benefit gay,
AIDS & breast cancer agencies.
Gay Teacher Allowed to
Stay in Michigan School
BYRON CENTER, Mich. -
Gerry Crane, a 3 l-year-old high
school music teacher who told
students he was gay alter they
asked about anew wedding band
he was wearing, will be ,allowed
to keep tfis teaching post. The
school board in the town, about
16 miles from Grand Rapids,
said however that it wonld keep
Crane under scrutiny because of
his sexual orientauon. In a forreal
statement, the trustees said.
"The school board firmly believes
that homosexuality violates
the doufinant moral stan-
¯
nity. Individuals who espouse
¯ homosexuality do not constitute
¯ proper role models as teachers
¯
for students in this district."
¯ Crane had told his students he
¯ was gay after he and his companion
had gotten married dur-
¯ ing acommitmentceremouy and
.exchanged wedding bands, causing
some of his students to ask
about the wedding ring.
School Board Condemns
.... Homosexuality
¯
NEW HAVEN, Ind.- Homo-
- sexual activity is inconsistent
¯ with community values and
should be discouragedin the East
¯ Allen County (Iudiana) schools,
¯ according to a resolution adopted
by the local school board. Ac-
¯
cording to school, district officials,
the resolution only reflects
the board’s opinion and isn’~ a
¯ policy statement. But the
¯
resolution’s laaaguag.e, someedu-
¯ caters say, certainly sounds like
¯ an official school policy. The ¯
resolution, wlfich was introduced
¯ in response to a statement earlier
[ tiffs year by the National Educa¯
tion Association endorsing
teacher training aronnd gay and
¯ l~’sbian student issues and rec-
¯ ognizing a national gay mad les¯
bian lfistory mouth, says in part: "’Homosexuality is contrary to
the laws of nat;are, it’s xno~:ally
¯ unacceptable to our conununity
mad we should leach our chil-
¯
dren as such." ¯ UK Member of Parliment
¯ Loses ’Gay’ Libel Case ¯
LONDON’ - Tory MP David
¯
Ashby wept as he f~aced the pros-
" pect offinanci,-d ruinaftcr losing
¯ a prolongcd libel actiou ag,’uust
Londou’s Sunday Times wlfich
." had reported that he is homo-
¯ scxnal. Thc jury deliberated 5
¯ hours belbrc rc[unfing its ver- ¯
dict in favor of the Tlmes in the
Northwest Leicestershire since
1983 in the ruling conservative
~ party, now faces the prospect of
~ : having to pay all legal costs that
are estimated at about $800,000.
Ashby; 55, had sued the Times
: overanarticlein the paperwhich
said he had shared a bed with a
¯ man during a holiday in Gee in
." 1993, that he had misled his wife
¯ and constituents abouthis sexual
¯ orientation, and that he had lied
:..about. h.awn,g a relat~oaship with
a32-year-old Irish physician, Dr.
Ciar~i Kilduff. The ~iewspaper
admitted during the libel trial
that its report had contained at
least one factual error, but mainrained
the accuracy of its article,
wlfich it maintained was justified
to lfiglflight what it cousiders
Ashby’s hypocrisy in advocating
heterosexual f~nilv values
while leading what the’papcr
called a "double life." Both
Ashby’s wife and his sister testified
against the Tory MP duriug
the 4-week trial. It is likely that
Ashby may face bm"akruptc’y and
the loss of his seat in the House
of Conunons as a result.
Gay Marine to
Fight Discharge
DAVENPORT. Iowa - Corporal
Kevin Blaesing says he will
fight efforts by the .MarZiue Corps
to discharge him because hc is
gay. Blaesing, who has bccn
umned "’Marine of the Month"
mad"M,-mne of the Qtuarter.’" was
denied pernfission to reeniist iu
1993 because of remarks he lind
made about homosexuality to a
USMC psychologist. Bu! earl\
in 1995 hejoined a Marine Corp’s
Reserve umt in South Carolina
without auy difficulties m~d later
spoke at a gay pride even! there.
Now thc Mariucs have bcgun
discharge proceedings against
lmn mad Blaeslug says he will
fight the discharge "~1 the way
Two Lutheran
Churches Expelled.
SAN FRANCISCO-St. Francis
Lutheran Church and the First
United Lutheran Church here
officially became ex-members
of the 5.3-million member Evangelical
Lutheran Church of
America at the end of 1995 for
ordaining 2 lesbians and a gay
man as ministers in defiance of
the national church’s prohibi-
’tiofis. The 2 churches were suspended
by the ELCA in 1990
and given until the end of 1995
to rescind the ordinations of the
Revs. Ruth Frost, Phyllis Zillhart
and JeffJohnson, or be officially
expelled from the national church
group.
A spokesperson forSt. Francis
Lutheran Church said not one
member of the congregation had
left since the controversy started
more than 5 .,,’ears ago. But ironi-
c¯ally one St. Francis Lutheran
member who attended his last
service at the church (at least
officially) on Sunday, Dec. 31,
was Bishop Robert Mattheis, the
presiding bishop of EIX2A’s Sierra
Pacific Synod of some 220
con~egations in Northern Califontia
and Nevada. A long-time
member of St. Francis, Bishop
Mattheis now must officially
leave the church’s con~egatio~:
Calififornia City OKs
Partners Registry
PALO ALTO, Calif. - OutNow,
the San Jose, Calif., gay newspaper,
reports that Pale Alto’s city
council has approved by a 6-]
vote a domestic partners registration.
The re~stranon carries
no direct benefits and requires a
fee to the city clerk’s office. The
only vote agmnst the proposM
crone from Dick Rosenbamn.
who objected that the partuers"
registry ,also allowed oppositesaid
he believed the partncrs"
registranon should be .just for
gays and lesbians.
Marriage Commission
Issues Final Report
IIONOI.UIJ.~- A llawali statc
comnfissiou has approved its finN
report of rccoum~cudations
on a 5-2 vote. calling on the
legislature to a~cpt the rcalil v
of Sallle-SeX lnarriag
courts. Few acnvists believe the
legislature will t;~c the advice
of the commissiou,appointcd b~
Gov. Bcnjmnin Cayctano, b~t
the report’s rccounncndations
add flu ther fuel to the legM bat
~ound the case. The legislature
l~t ye~ adopted a law prohibitlng
stone-sex m~agc, although
=t rcm~us unclc~ whether thai
law itself~m bc considered coustitut~
omd.
Chairman Thomas (;ill,
former mcmbcr of Cougrcss and
out-tune lieut, govcruor, said
the state had f~lcd to prove
~c in courl and had relied
the legislature to block tauntsex
m~agcs. "q’hc opposluOU
~ft.come up with a compelling
state lntcFcsI other th~ul I ~x’i~cus
18," he said, rcfcmug to an Old
Tcsumacnt vcrsc that says. ""l’hou
shalt not lic with mankind as
with womankind ""
Sparks Fly in O.S.
Senate Race in Or~on
SAI+EM, Ore. - Rcspondiug to
ch~gcs that hc is an "+extremist"+
for supporting the dUn-go3
agenda of the Oregon Citizen’s
Alliancc, Rclmbli~m t.S 5cuate
candidate Gordou Snfi th told
reporters at a news CollfcjCll~’c
that he is opposed to ga3 and
lcsbimt ttu~agcs "’bccausc +vc
should dcfcud a mamagc license"
mid thai hmdlortts who
should uot bc rcquircd t(> by law.
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Sunday ServiEye Drug Implant Method
Wins FDA Panel Approval
S ILVER SPRING, Md. - A Food & Drug
Administration advisory panel has urged
approval of an eye implant for some AIDS
pauents that it says would be twice as
good as current treatments in fighting off
possible blindness by delivering medic
ation direcdy to the eye. Cytomegalovims
(CMV) retinitis hits up to 40% of all
people with AIDS and the Chiron Corp.
"Vitrasert’" implant would deliver the
medicine ganciclovir in time-released
doses directly in the eye after being \mplanted,
making it much more effective.
the FD A advisory panel said. The full
FDA must now decide whether to accept
the panel’s recommendation or not.
USC to House AIDS Archives
LOS ANGELES - The University of
Southern California will become one of
the first sites in the country with an archive
documenting the earl) years of the battle
against AIDS. Los Angeles city officials
are granting the university a total of
$50,000 for the project alor~g with thousands
of original works com~ected with
the earliest veers of the epidemic. The
AIDS archi~:e will be housed in~,the university
library’s special collections and
will include "city documents, materials
from local actiViSt groups, and papers
from Drs. Michael Gottlieb and Joel
Weismal who published the first cases of
what later came to be known as AIDS.
30% of India’s Blood Infected
NEW DELHI - According to a stud)’ by
India’s National AIDS Control Organization,
nearly 30% of the blood provided by
the country’s blood banks is tainted with
infectious diseases, including HIV, malaria,
hepatitis and others. The government
agency responsible for the national
effort to fight the epidemic in India said
tinrdiable screening procedures risk exposing
patients receiving blood and blood
products to one or the other illnesses. The
Indian Red Cross Society said that part of
the problem stems from chronic shortages
of blood in the country with the result that
commercial blood banks often rely on
poorer professional donors 9iho sui~pl~ement
their incomes by giving blood. Such
paid donors, the society says, are often in
higher-risk groups for various infectious
diseases. The National AIDS Control
Organization now estimates that in less
than 5 years some 5 million Indians will
be infected with HI\" with 1 million fullblown
cases of AIDS in the country.
KS Linked Virus Found
in Semen of HIV+ Gay Men
LONDON" - According to a report in the
British medical journal Lancet, researchers
with the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control have found a virus strongly associated
with Kaposi’s sarcoma in the semen
of large numbers of gay men ~vith
HI\’, but not in many HIV-positive heterosexual
men. The scientists said that
64% of the infected gay men also had the
Kaposi’s Sarcoma Associated Herpesvirus
(KSHV) in semen samples: of the
non-gay men examined, less than 24%
were infected with KSHV. The research-
" ers said their findings explain why a disproportionate
number of gay men may
contract the cancer ,and suggests that
KSHV may be sexually transmitted~ The
CDC scientists say further research is
called for to try to detemfine if KSHV is
latent and then triggered by an HIV infection.
Milder Strain of Virus Inhibits
HIV NEWYORK-According to a report
in the Journal of Molecular Medicine;
researchers at the Mount Sinai Medical
Centerhave identified aless vinflent strain
of HIV that appears to slow down reproduction
of the more connnon and damaging
s train of the virus. The researchers
speculated that the weaker HIV-2 may
interfere with the more virulent HIV-I
straila at-the molecular le~el, blocking the
virus’ ability to reproducel While the finding
could l]old promise in fighting off
HIV-1 in infected individuals, scientists
warned that there is still little’known about
the detailed interaction between the 2
strains.
High HIV Levels Infect Newborns
WASHINGTON’, D.C. - According to a
study published in the Proceedings ofthe
NationalAcademy ofSciences,New York
State health department researchers report
that fairly high levels of HIV in the
blood ofwomen who are pregnant is requi
red before the virus can be passed along to
their newborns. The scientists found that
women with levels of HIV in their bloodstreams
at about 50,000 viruses per milliliter
of blood had a 75% or ~eater likelihood
of passing the vii’us onto their infants.
At lower leVds, the chances of the
womentransmitting the virus to their newborns
was significantly lower, the researchers
said. The scientists said the finding
helps explain why some HIV-positive
women~ve birth to infected infants, while
other infected mothers do not.
AIDS Drug 3TC Also Appears
Effective Against Hepatitis B
BOSTON - Two preliminary tests of a
newly approved AIDS drug, 3TC (also
kamwn as lamivudine or Epivir), published
in the New England Journal of
Medicine indicate the medicine also seems,
to suppress HBV, the hepatitis B virus, in
chronic eases. One study, led by Dr. Jules
Dienstag of Massachusetts General Hospital,
found that after a 12-week course of
3TC, about 20% of chronically infected
hepatitis B patients showed no traces of
the HBV. Interferon is the only currently
approved medication to combat chronic
h.epatitis B and has been shown to effective
in about a third of those given the
drug. But interferon must be taken for a
fairly long period ot time and has a nmnber
of very unpleasan t side effects, which
is not apparently the ease with 3TC. Further
studies will now be undertaken to
determine long-term effects of the drug in
combating hepatitis B, possibly in combination
with other drugs.
Status of AIDS Patient Given
Baboon Marrow Transplant
SAN FRANCISCO-JeffGetty, the AIDS
patient who was given baboon bone marrow
in December in an effort to rebuildhis
failing immune system, experienced some
side effects as a result of the chemotherapy
and radiation treatanent he underwent
in conjunction with the marrow transplant.
But Getty’s physician, Dr. Steven
Deeks, said the reactions where fairly
minor and not a result of the bone marrow
injections. Getty’s physicians had said
the bone marrow transplant might either
bolster the man’s rapidly failing immune
see Health Briefs, page 8
Free & Anonymous
Finger Stick Method
By & for, but not exclusive
to the Lesbian, Gay, & Bisexual Communities.
Monday & Thursday evenings:
7-8:30 pm for testing, 7-9 pm for results¯
Daytime testing, Mon-Thurs by appointment.
TOHR Tulsa Oklahomans
for-Human Rights
742-2927
4158 South Harvard, Suite E-2
2 doors east of the HIV Resource Consortium
Look for our banner on testing nights.
SCOTT
ROBISON’S
PRESCRIPTIONS
Serving Tulsan’s
Since 194 7
Major credit cards
In-store charges or
Direct insurance billing
for your convenience!
3 locations to serve you:
Hillcrest
Physician’s Building
1.145 So. Utica
743-2351
Utica Square Area
1560 East 21st, Ste. 104
743-2351
The Plaza
8146-D South Lewis.
299-1790
A
QUALITY
OF LIFE
ALTERNATIVE
WHAT IS VIATICATION?
Viatication is the process through which a person
living with an terminal illness can receive a cash payment
from the face value of their insurance policy.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR A
VIATICAL SETTLEMENT?
Generally, to be eligible for.~,.viatical settlement you
must have a documentable terminal illness, and life
insurance coverage in either an individual term, whole
life, or a group policy.
HOW MUCH IS MY
POLICY WORTH?
The value of.your life insurance policy xn a viatical
settlement is determined by the specifics of your policy
and yore" unique medical situation. Not every policy is
suitable for viatication, but settlement offers typically
range from 60% to 90% of a policy’s face value, depending
on the specifics of your policy and medical history.
HOW, DOES A SETTLEMENT
WORK?
With your written permission, we gather medical and
insurance records with which to determine your policy’s
value. Then, a settlenmt offer is presented to you. You
may always decline the offer with no obligation whatsoever.
Should you accept the offer, payment is made
directly to you. You pay nothing else on your policy, and
you owe us nothing.
IS VIATICATING MY
POLICY THE RIGHT
CHOICE FOR ME?
Many factors influence ~vhether viaticating 3our life
insurance is the best financial alternative available for
you. Southwest Viatical can discuss all of the factors with
you and 3"our family in person, in detail and can recommend
an experienced Certified Financial Planner to assi st
you in planning the best outcome from your unique
financial s~tuation.
HOW IS SOUTHWEST
VIATICAL DIFFERENT?
Today, many compames offer viatical settlements,
doing business only by" bulk advertising and 1-800 numbers.
They transfer your insurance and medical records
by mail, and do business from another state.
At Southwest Viatical, we believe you shonld be assured
of complete confidentiality aud the best possible
service by working with us in person, face-to-face. \Ve
are involved on a community level, and are responsible
directly to our local community.
By" working with \ou in person, but at the stone time
having access to nanomvide financial resources, we arc
able to deliver the best value on your policy available
toda\. And because of our established resources, wc can
deliver a settlement in less than a third the time other
companies take by mail, typically in fewer than 30 da\s.
We’ll do what it takes
to find the best solution for you.
Southwest v:" aitlca.
Home Office
Dallas, Texas
800-559-4790
Kelly Kirby
Oklahoma Representative
POB 14011
Tulsa, OK 74159-1011
918-747-3320
continuedfrom page 6
system, or "kill him. A similar procedure
with an AIDS patient at the University of
Pittsbnrgh in 1993 failed, but doctors flare
refined the procedure as a result and are
using a specially processed part of the
baboon bone marrow to improve Gettv’s
: HIV at Chinese Universities
¯" BEIJING - Newspapers in China have
~ reported that during "’spot checks" at urn-
¯ versities, Chinese health officials fotmd
~ 10 HIV infected students at 2 colleges in
: the capital city. Health officials in the
¯ country say getting AIDS information
and e&~cat~on programs to the cotmtrv’s
: schools is "extremely urgent" and esti--
." mate that morethan 60% of those infected
¯ with HIV in the country are under the age
." of 29 years.
AZT Helps Cut Risks in
chances. Accidental Needle Jabs
"t’~o r~ ph~ ¯ .,,, - ¯ .......C.-based ....."s~o~,s Comrmttee :. \.V¯¢SHIN- GTO-N,-,C...ooperatingwith Britfor
Responsible Med]cifie,’lio~ .ever, has tsh and Frenc"h othoa" ls , the l_ -S - C~enters"
filed a formal complaint with the federal for Disease Control and Prevention re~.
g0venunent over the experimental bone
marrow procedure. The public interest
group charged that such cross-species
marrow injections endanger the public
health by risking the spread of dangerous
baboon infections. Susan Getty of
\Vatcrford, Conn., the mother 61"the ailing
man who was with him at the hospital
during the procednre, said people with
advanced AIDS have little to lose ~n undergoing
such medi"cal gambles. %\emttst
take greater risks." she said. "It is time to
stop tiffs horrible, horrible disease."
AIDS Awareness in France
I~OSTON-- According to the U.S. journal
Nature, a snrvcv of what they think about
l llVand ..\ID~ suggests th~ Frei~:h ,are
continuing to adjtrst their sexual behaviors
because of the ~pidemic. The report
says that condoms arc increasiugly used,
particuhtrlv anion,, those who are single
mid under ihe age ~f’30: more people are
having fewer casual sexual parmers: ,’rod
the nnmbcr of peat)It who regularly get
tested for I IIV fiffccfion continues to ~ow.
ports that atimited study of 31 health care
workers accidentally jabbed with hypodermic
needles at work had much lower
risk of HIV infection if given AZT. The
CDC reports indicated the health care
workers" risk of refection was nearly 80%
lower from taking the drag shortly after
the needle-stick accident than workers
who were not given AZT.
U.S. Blood Supply Even Safer
BOSTON" - According to a govenunent
stud) published in the New EnglandJourhal
of)ledicme, only an infinitesimally
small mnount of blo~d do~mted tbr transfusions
in the U.S. is infected with HIP.
The L.S. Centers for Disease Control &
Prevention study estimated that no more
th,’m 27 pints out of the total 12 nffllion
pints donated each year are tainted. Because
blood usedin transfusions is pooled
from several donors, bowever, health officials
said the chances of receiving con-
Uumnated blood are between 1 in 83.000
m~d 1 in 122.000. To reduce these odds
even further, the Food & Drng Adnmlis-
FI_~ELITY.Hq/V~E HE-aLTH C~-RE; INC.
Tulsa Office
486-1174
800-999-3442
We provide comprehensive home health services
24 hourslday, seven days/week.
The range ofservices include:
Skilled nursing services (RN’s, LPN"s)
Home health .aides, Physical Therapy
Speech Therapy, Occupational Therapy
Medical Social Services, In-home psychiatric care
Noli~eme(gency transportation, Private duty nursing
~ ~’~:::’~nd Companion sitter services.
This list is not all inclusive.
Please contact our offices with specific treatment issues.
tration had ordered blood banks in this
country to begin additional HIV testing
that it ~stimates will reduce the number of
tainted donations to no more than 17 per
year. Some public health care workers
~luestion whether the added $65 nffllion in
)early testing expenses is justified by
eliminatingjust 10 units of infected blood
per )ear.
AIDS Mortality Among Prisoners
CHICAGO - Writing in the American
Journal of Public Health, Adansi
Amankwaa with the Florida prisons department
says that a review of mortality
data from 1987-92 in the state’s prisons
indicates that AIDS was the main cause of
imnate deaths during the~ 5’ year period~
accounting for more thau 50% ofall prison
deaths in 1992. It indicated that deaths
from the disease were increasing compared
with other causes in prisons.
Turner ,and was permitted to return to
work. In a statement given to the EEOC in
Aug. 1995, Ttmier testified that he was
unsure if he would serve a customerwhom
he kiiew to have AIDS. According to
court docmnents,"he [Turner] is unaware
about the trausnfission possibilities of the
HIV virtts through casual contact in a
food establishment and states that for all
he kiiows it c,’m be mmsnfftted though
perspiration falling into food. He testifies
that he is very "concerned" about this
possibility mid’that he would try to favorably
resPond: to customer prejudice regarding
AIDS. tte states thai the subject
of AIDS mid HIV is disgusting mid objectionable
mid indicative of bad hygiene.
see ADA. page I1
Kellie J. Watts
Attorney at law
Protect You & Your Partner
Wills, Livin.g Wills, Estate Planning,
Powers of attorney
493-1959. Tulsa office. Please (’all for
appointlnent. Reasonable Rates
¯ The Tulsa Philharmonic
: presents
¯: COREY CEROVSEK
¯¯
The 23-year old violinist
: will amaze you with his
: technique and musicality.
¯" Featuring
¯ Faganini: Violin Concerto No. 1 in D Major
¯ Hindemit~:"Symphonic Metamorphoses
¯ on Themes by Carl Maria Von Weber"
¯ /3rafims: Symphony No, 4 in E Minor ¯
¯ Sa~. Jan. 27
¯¯ 8 p.m. Tulsa PAC-. " :-~ ~ ~ T U t S A PHILHARMONIC ¯.’ C^LL 747- PHIL, FOg’ TICKETS
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
¯
Cherry Street Psychotherapy
Associates
1 51 5 ~outh Lewis
Are you looking for a relaxed, amicable,
private atmosphere for therapy?
Our office provides a level of confidentiafity
and comfort that enhances the therapeutic process.
For further information call 743-4117
Leah Hunt, MSW Judy Seymour-Taylor, CADC
Della Blackburn, CADC Richard Reeder, MS
Serving a Diverse Community
B ACK WHITE INC. COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAYS
Agape’ Christian
Fellowship
Worship Service, 10:30 am
Sheridan Center, Suite H
21st & Sheridan, 599-7688
Bless the Lord At All
Times Christian Center
Sunday Schoo!, 9:45 am
Worship Service, 11 am
2627b East 1 lth 583-7815
Community of Hope
(United Methodist)
Worship Service, 6 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
Family of Faith
Metro. Comm. Church
Adult Sunday School, 9:15
Worship Service, 11 am
5451-E South Mingo.
Info: 622-1441
Metro. Comm. Church
of Greater Tulsa
Worship Service, 10:45ran
1623 N. Maplewood
Info: 838-1715
Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay
Alliance - Univ. of Tulsa
6:30 pm at CanterbmT
5th & Evanston, 583-9780
MONDAYS
H]V Testing
TOHR Clinic
¯ Free & anonymous testing
using fingerstick method.
¯ No appointment required.
: Walk in testing: 7-8:30 pm
Results hours: 7-9 pm
Info: 742-2927
TUESDAYS
HIV+ Support Group
HIV Resource Consortium
1:30 pm
4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-I
Info: Wanda @ 749-4194
Shanti-Tulsa, Inc.
HIV/AIDS Support Group
WEDNESDAYS
Authority OfThe Believer
Bible Study, 7 pm
MCC of Greater Tulsa
1623 N. Maplewood
lnfo: 838-1715
Bless The Lord At All
Times Christian Center
THURSDAYS
16-Step Empowerment
Group For Women
Community of Hope
1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800
Co-Dependency
Support Group
7:30, Family of Faith MCC
i_Jambda Bo~vling League
Shdridan LaSnes
8:45 pm
3121 S. Sheridan
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
2nd Monday of month,
6:30 pin
4154 S. Harvard
Info: 749-4901
OTHER GROUPS
Tool Box Technicians,
Leather org., hffo cio The
Tool Box: 584-1308
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform:
& Leather Seekers Assoc. "
Info: 838-1222 "
The Banned, OK Gay Band
Practice weekly in OKC ¯
Info: 838-2121
,"HIViAI’DS Support Group
: 7 pm, call for location:
:
749:7898
¯ Community of Hope
: Grief Group, 6 pm
: 1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
¯ :.: ~,, ~ ~ . ~o. ....
¯ ~, Womens Grmef-~roup
siaonsored by
Community of Hope
6pm, Butler/Stumpff
Funeral Home
2103 E. 3rd St.
Info: 585-1800
.........& ..... Prayer&Bible Study 5451rES. Mingo, 622-1441
.....,Friends &.Family :: 7~:.30 pm 2627-B East 1 lth " " ~
Call 583-7815 for info. HIV Testing
Family Of Faith MCC
Praise & Prayer 6:30 pm
Choir Practice 7:30 pm
5451-E South Mingo.
Call 622-1441 for info.
¯
¯ ’Community of Hope
(United Methodist)
¯ Service for Peace, 6:30 pm
¯ Bible Stud,,,’, 7 pm
1703 E. 2nd, 585-1800
TNAAPP
¯ Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project
¯ Support group
¯ for Gay & Bi Native
¯ American Men, 6 pm
at Conununitv of Hope
¯ 1703 E. 2nd
¯ 582-7225 or 584-4983
TOHR Clinic
Walk in testing: 7 - 8:30 pm
Results hours: 7 - 9 pm
Info: 742-2927
Prayer Time
MCC - Greater Tulsa, 7 pm
1623 N. Maplewood
Info: 838= 1715
Tulsa Family Chorale
Wee"kly practice, 9:30 pm
Lola’s 2630 E. 15th
PFLAG Family AIDS
Support Group
1st & 3rd Thursdays
41 54 S. Harvard, 749-’4901
Alternatives
Weekly socials, 7 pm
See below for schedule.
Info: 646-5503
SATURDAYS
St. Jerome’s Ecumenical
Catholic Church
,Mass, 6 pm
Garden (Thapcl
3841 S. Peoria
Info: Father Rick
at 742-7122
Narcotics Anonymous
Meets weekly at 11 pm
Confidential ~upport for
recovering addicts.
Co~unmnity of I lope
1703 E. 2nd. lnfo: 585- I
NAMES Project
AIDS Memorial Quilt
Sewing Bees
3rd Sat of each month
hffo: 748-3111
OTHER GROUPS
Gay & Lesbian Sttulent
Association
TJC Southeast Canq)us,
Info: 631-7632
SWAN-Single Women’s
Activity Network
Call 832-2121
TOHR Helpline
Daily 8= 10 pm
For info. ~r to vohmtcer:
743-GAYS
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18
Community ofHope Orientation
2 pro, 1703 E. 2nd
Info: 585-1800
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21
Faith & Struggle Dialogue Group
Community of Hope United Methodist
4:30 pm, 1703 E. 2nd (ongoing group)
Info: 585-1800
THURSDAY, JANUARY 25,
Community ofHope Orientation
6:30 pm, 1703 E. 2nd
Info: 585-1800
SUNDAY, JANUARY 28
Faith & Struggle Dialogue Grm~
Community of Hope United Methodist
4:30 pm, 1703 E. 2nd (ongoing ~oup)
Info: 585-1-800
SUNDAY, JANUARY 28
,Miss Gay Oklahoma USofA, 9 pm
Concess|ons, 33rd& Peoria
Pageant ..
Info: 744-0896 or 838-3701
TUESDAY, JANUARY ,30.
Rainbow Business Gui/d, 7 pm
Uno Pizzeria,.61st & Memorial
Dinner Meeting
Info: 665-5174
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31
Tulsa Women’s Supper Club, 6:30 pin
Full Moon Care, 1525 East 15th
Info: 584-2978
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1
Alternatives. Informational meeting
for reactivated social orgamzauon for
men and women, also, video of
comedian Suzmme Westenhoefer, 7pm
Holiday Inn Express, 51st & Harvard,
Info: 646-5503
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6
TMsa Oklahomansfor Human Rights
Local Police Officers Speak Out, 7 pm
Alan Chapman Activity Center
University of Tulsa ,
5th St. west of Harvard, Info: 743-4297
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY-8
Alternatives, Bowling at Riverlanes, 7pm
8711S. Lewis .. ~
Info: 646-5503
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11
Community ofHope Orientation
2 p!n, 1703 E. 2nd
hffo::585~ 1800
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15
.Alt~r.natives, Movie Night; 7pm
Fox 4 Cinema, 51st & Harvard
Info: 646-5503
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16
Fandly ofFaith MCC
Reclaim & Recovery Workshop:
Forgiveness, 9 am - 3 pm
5451-E S. Mingo, hffo: 622-1441
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY22
Alternatives, Dinner, 7pro
Golden Corral, 71st & Mingo
hlfo: 646-5503
Out & About With JD!
More sequins, but that’s not all that this
month’s featured establishinent has to
offer. Lola’s is "’truly a fanfilv bar" says
Bill (Lola) McCall of this wonderful pla~e
Brian & tJttt ofLola’s
thht ~ves a lot to the community. One
example they’ve supported Mr. Oklahoma
Leather~ Mr. Tulsa Leather and 1st alternate
to Mr, Oil Capital. Also, Lola’s pro:
rides ahome forTULSA FAMILY CHOIL~
LE, which is opento any Gay, Lesbian
¯ or Gay-.friendly persons and m~ets Thurs.
at 9:30:~
Bill & Brian are the owners of this cozy
establishinent that represents a little bit of
Valentine’s Day. Bill & Brian have been
to,,tethet for 15 (!) vear~ which they plan
to celebrate with a ~umiversarv showand
party .on FebruaD’ 16th. Tffey ,opened
Lola’s 2years ago. "’At Lola’s you can
find whatever liking may be: entertain:
ment, games (pool & darts), good friends
or jnst a good time."
Oh by the way, the following are happenin~
s at Lola’s for the coming month:
Feb. 16th, Bill & Brians’s Anniversary
show & party; Feb. 20th, Birthday celebration
for Desdny Ray, Miss Upper
Cherry Street, and Feb. 24th, 1st Annual
see JD, page 11
0 748-5374
L Spring Art Classes
Start February 17
Family Workshops
YPoreusncgheoroalrt ~
~Adult
Studios
Action Studios
Spring Break Studios March 25-29
not, however, mandate procreative possibility
as a requirement for heterosexual
marriage certificates, a move that would
seem consistant with his stated rationale.
Knight goes on to forecast economic
doom and collapse if California "’were
forced" to recognize the relationships of
same-gender couples,including taking on
the same responsibilities for each other
thathetero-couples expect. However, economic
forecasts for Hawaii project that
same-sex marriages could add $4 billion.
to Hawaii’ s revenues over the next 5 years.
Some observers think that Knight" s bill,
if enacted, will likely cost California taxpayers
millions in legal fees as gay and
lesbian citizens challenge the. law. Current
law recognizes all mamages performed
throughout the United States. The
bill would prohibit recogmtion of legal
marriages of same-sex couples, regardless
of where they are performed.
sexual activities, the citizen suggested
that he mad the officer go to a private
location for consensual sex. After the citizen
made the offer, he was arrested for
solicitation under ma OKC ordinance.
The ACLU defense of the citizen rests
on two concerns. First is the 1 st Amendment
(free speech) issue. The OKC ordinance
appears to make it illegal to make
any offer of consenstml sex in OKC. ACLU
spokesperson, Michael Canffield noted
that this would make offers betweeu heterosexuals,
say in a drinking establishmeut,
illegal al~o but he/also noted that the
OKC police do not appear to be assigning
undercover cops to heterosexual bars.
The other basis for challenging the arrest
is a 1986 decision by the Criminal
Court that ruled that the Oklahoma "sodomy"
law which makes oral or anal sex a
felony crime was unconstitutional. The
decision held that a constitutional right to
privacy prevented the state or cities from
forbidding private, consensual sex acts
between adults. The law makes no distinction
between heterosexual or homosexual
oral or anal sex.
However, the ’86 case involved heterosexuals
and the court specified that it was
not addressing whether homosexual citizens
enjoyed the same right to privacy as
heterosexual ones. If homosexual citizens
have the same right to privacy and the
solicited activities are not themselves illegal,
then the OKC ordinance can hardly
be constitutional. This is, if it" s not illegal
to have sex, then it can hardly be illegal to
talk about it.
In a 3-1 decision, the Court of Criminal
Appeals chose not to address whether the
state can constitutio~mlly prohibit same
gender sex but said this case was only
about public solicitations mad rtfled that
OKC could prohibit such solicitations.
The appeal, according to Hendricksen,
who is ACLU-OK president, will ask the
US Supreme Court to compel the OK
Court of Criminal Appeals to decide if the
right to privacy that ~t established for
heterosexual citizens ~s also available for
homosextml citizens. "’The court [appeals]
ducked this issue and we are going to see
if we can force them to m~swer tiffs question.’"
To help the ACI.U-OK fight tiffs case.
donations may be made to 600 NW 23rd
St. OKC 731(36.
be the actions of a neighborhood adolescent
but that the theft of their family’s
peace of mind is no little thing. The
Harrison Kirbys are considering their options
to protect themselves and their children
from futher harm. Kirby did add that
they have been comforted by expression
of support from friends around the US
with whom they correspond via e-mail.
statements by Radical Right leaders, such
as CBN’s Pat Robertson and Sen. Jesse
Helms. Since the threat of lawsuits by
CBN, no television station in any of the
target cities of Washington, Tulsa, Houston
or Atlanta will air the commercials.
Mitzi Henderson, president of PFLa,G’s
board of directors, stated that PFLAG is
conunitted to "’get our message on the air
and compel CBN to stop its harassment
and censorship attempts".
Locally, the Tulsa chapter of PFLAG is
presenting a free film series at All Soul’s
U~titarian Church at 7pm, Jan. 23 & 30,
mad Feb. 6 & 13. The films, Straight From
The Heart. On Being Gay, Queer Son, and
Always .\.lb~ Kid, feature Lesbians and Gay
men and parents of Lesbians and Gay men
dealing with issues from fanfilies to religion
to AIDS. PFLAG Tulsa also is continuing
a campaign for a siguature advertisement
to run in The Tulsa World. The
ad "calls for Tulsans to stand against
tred, hate speech mad violence" against
individtmls based on their sexual orientation
mad "’to recoguize the strong link
between hate speech, teen suicide and
violent physical attacks..." Tulsa Family
News reported correctly last month that
The Tulsa Worm is on record as having a
policy banning the use of the words, Gay
or Lesbian in advertising. However, contrary
to our report, The World has not
changed its policy to allow an exception.
According to Bill Hinkle, PFLAG Tulsa
co-chair, PFLAG cannot even spell out its
name but may be forced to use a circumlocution
like, "Parents and Friends of Persons
of Differing Sexual Orientation.’"
The ad will likely, run later in January.
dren they were trying to place.
Rep. Benson stated to TFN that he was
motivated by the NEA’s resolution to
reaffirm what he views as Oklahoma’s
"traditional. family values". He said the
reason for a resolution instead of a bill
was that since a resolution lacks the power
of law, the legislators could express their
feelings without infringing any constitutional
rights which such a law would
probably do. Benson claims that he does
not want to condeum Lesbians and Gay
men for their "choice of lifestyle" & that
he expected to get wide support
OKC’s Oklahoma Gay & Lesbian Political
Caucus has begun a postcard campaign
directed at Rep. Benson. In Tulsa,
according to one source, PFLAG’s Nancy
McDonald is putting together a group of
parents mad Tulsa area legislators to meet
with Benson. Other activists have begun
to ph’m a Family Day at the Capitol, a
state-wide lobb3:ing day by Lesbian, Gay
and Bi activists, clergy mad business
people. For i~ffo, call Green Country Pride
at 838-2121 or 583-1248.
Timothy W. Daniel
Attorney at Law
Know Your Rights!
Estate Planning,
Adoptions,
Personal Injury,
Criminal :Law, Bankruptcy
& Workers Compensation
1-800-742-9468 or.918-352-9504
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma
Weekend and evening appointments are available.
Speakers &performers include comedian Suzanne
Westenhoefer, Col. Grethe Cammermeyer & her
partner, Diane Divelbass, & Candace Gingrich
April 7 - 14, Olivia’s Womens’ Cruises
Call 341.6866
International Tours
for more information.
Need a gift idea? Gift certificates are
availablefor air travel, cruises
& many other travel needs. IGTA member.
People don’t plan
to fail, they fail to plan.
Leanne Gross
Retirement planning
Life, health & income insurance,
& investment placing.
744-0102
Mention this ad to receive
free initial consultation.
by Phil Boler-Schmidt
Winter is a special time in
Eureka Springs. With the falling
of the Autumn leaves comes a
respite from the thundering
hoardes, and locals get a chance
to renew old acquamtmlces, catch
up on family time, and spend
time with cherished friends.
Each December, we have the
Women’s Party. 1995 saw the
25th annual event, and it was
quite a sight to behold. My own
estimate was about 500 women
in attendance. Each brings some
type of finger food and a drink to
share. There is music and dancing,
talk and Sharing. A grand
time is had by all. This year was
no exception. And, as usual, a
few of the guys showed up, respectfully
of course, and sang
Christmas carols to the assembled
masses at the ballroom
high atop the Basin Park Hotel.
Now that Christmas ~s over,
the really big events are potluck
dinners. It is the Ozark way of
getting to "know people, fo~: the
first time, or to renew old friendships.
Us queer folk do the
potlucks in style. This is mv2nd
Winter in Eureka, and I’m looking
for~vard with anticipation to
the Season of the Potlucks. This
is the time to get to lmow those
people you have always ~vanted
to know but were too bits5 working
to spend any time with.
As man5 of you already kimw.
Eureka Springs is a wedding
haven. And, it is also a wonderful
spot for holy unions. Everything
imaginable is possible,
from an extravaganza to a small
ceremony just for the two of
you. And what better time than
this Winter? Resources are available
for holy unions at 253-2401.
Events upcoming in Eureka
this Winter include Jacob Adler,
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
at the University of Arkansas
giving a talk at MCC of the
Living Spring oftjanuary, 21 st at
4 PM The trpi~ will be Jewish
Influence on Jesus’ Teachings.
Joya Pope will be in town on
February 3rd, also speaking at
MCC of the Living Spring at 7
PM. Joya Pope is author of The
WorMAccording to Michael and
Upcoming Changes: Prophecy
and Pragmatism for the Late
Nineties. Admission is S 12.50 at
the door, and she also has private
channeling sessions available.
Winter is the time we sit back
and take stock, read all the good
books we didn’t have time to get
to during the rush of tourists,
begin a new study program, and
¯ get read~ for theseason wlfich is
-~’" only a c~uple of months away.
For those of you who are Eureka
locals, you know exactly
~vhat I ,’un talking about. Those
of you who ,are from out of to~vn
will just riced to visit in order to
see why wc call this place Paradise.
For more information about
Eureka Springs available on the
World Wide Web, point your
browsers to:
http: www.pimps.com~
eureka.html. See you in Eureka!
ADA cont’dfromp. 8
He compares AIDS and HIV to
leprosy....He states that hi s attitude
regarding HIV and AIDS
has remained unchanged s~nce
1987 when he suspended the
plaintiff [Saladin] because he
suspected he was HIV positive.
In the same manner that he directed
plaintiff not to discuss-the
AIDS and HIV status of ¯
plaintiff’s partner in casual conversation
with customers he
states that he would consider
asking a white waitress to not
discuss or disclosed (sic) that
fact that her spouse was black in
casual conversation."
Steve Norick, one of Paul
Saladin’s attorneys, claims the
Americans with 13isabilities Act
was violated in at least two major
ways. The ADA provide relief
from discrimination based
on acttmlly being handicapped
but also to those who may not be
handicapped but who are perceived
as being handicapped.
And it also provides protection
to those ~vho are associated with
those wh6 are handicapped.
Thus far the court has seen
sufficient merit in Saladiu et al’s
case not to accept the efforts of
Tumer’s attornevs to dismiss the
case though the court has not
seen fit to render judgment to
Saladin yet either. Now it will be
up tojudge &jury to findjustice.
JD cont’dfromp. 9
Miss Rivercity America Pageant.
If you missed Concessions celebration
of their first anmversary,
you should just hang your
headin shame! Kirk &Terry and
their staffand patrons had a great
time and look forward to a grca~
year two. Also the) say, don’t
miss Miss Gay Oklalloma t "Sofa
co/fling on Jan. 28th and even
more to come in March - mark
your calendars.
I hope that tiffs month and ucxt
you find, or cherish more. that
someone who brings you joy!
BEAVER DAM STORE
Fishing Headquarters for N.W. Arkansas
Fly Tying * Fly Fishing * Equipment & Classes
Open Year ~Round
TROUTS - ~R - US
Located 1/2 mile N. of Beaver Dam on Hwy 187
Eureka Springs, AR * 501-253-6154
Grocerles * Gas * Ice * Beer * Licenses * Lodging
COTTAGE
Your lnnReepe~.
Lamont Richie
and
Steve Roberson
A Bed dt Breal~asl Inn
Individual Cottages - Jacuzzi for Two
Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632
501/253-8659
O000000000000000000.O.
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A Friendly Place to Stay-.
KING’S HI-WAY
INN
96 Kings Highway, Hwy. 62 W
Eureka Springs, AR 72632
(501) 253-7311
1-800-231-1442
Jerry A. Wilson. owner
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MCC of the
Living Spring
,..a community of friends...
Rev. Kermie Wohlenhaus
Pastor
We welcome you to attend!
Services held
Sunday evenings at 6 PSI
17 Elk Street
(at the Unitarian Church)
Eureka Springs, AR 72632
501-253-9337
<MCCltmg Itealty, Inc. O]
"The Land SpedaEsts"
501’253-9682 (days)
OR 501-253-8969 (evenings)
Offerings include: Bed & Breakfast
in~; Victorian Homes, Hotels/Motels,
Coi~mercial Properties/Businesses,
Quiet Country Estates,-& much more.
McClung Realty, Inr; has catered to the
diverse G/L/B/TG community in Eureka
Springsfor over 20 years. Call or write
for a listing brochure. Or better yet, stop
in, and we’ll show you around.
We specialize in creative fin,ancing.
EUREKA SPRINGS
"Jim & Brent have opened the ultimate intimate local
eatery. A special, eclectic dining experience..."
Stop by our house for a taste of local flavor. Dine outside on
the patio & porch or in our three beautiful dining rooms.
Fine food at an affordable price.
Green & Yellow Night
FAMILY NIGHT
Private Dinner Party, lstThurs, of EachJVIonth
@m - Midnight, Dine, Drink ~ Relax Among Friends
Featuring Jim & Gwendolyn’s Select Dinner Entrees
& Brent’s Superb Desserts
"With Family’ In Mind"
Gay-owned, Operated & Rainbow Proud
20% of all proceeds will go to the support of family causes
by Barry Hensley, Tulsa City-County Library
For information regarding HIV/AIDS topics, our Library is an excellent resource.
There are books, videos, audio cassettes, government documents and periodical articles
full of updated information. Many branch libraries have books and other materials,
although the Central Library, at 4th and Denver in downtown Tulsa, has more detailed
information. Here are some of the items available through Central Library departments:
BUSINESS ANDTECHNOLOGY, 4th floor, phone: 596-7988 (Dewey area 616.9792)
AIDS and HIV in Perspective (by Barry Schoub)
Immune Power: The Comprehensive Healing Pro~am for HIV (b.v Jolm Kaiser)
Dictionary of AIDS Related Terminology (by Jeffrey Huber)
Rethinking AIDS (by Robert Root-Bernstein)
Everything You Need to Know When a Parent Has AIDS (by Barbara Drainlin)
AIDS and the Law of Workplace Discrimination (by Jeffrey Mello) (34417301)
READERS SERVICES, 2nd floor, phone: 596-7966 (Dewey area 362.1969)
People, Sex, HIV and AIDS (by Pierre Andre)
Everything You Need to Know About Being HIV Positive (by Amy Shire)
I’ll Not Go Quietly (by Mary Fisher)
We Are All Living With AIDS (by Earl Pike)
Women’s HIV Sourcebook (by Patricia Klosser)
Search for an AIDS Vaccine (by Christine Grady) (174.2 G)
Recovering From the Loss of a Loved One to AIDS (by K. Dounelly) (155.937)
Diary of a Lost Boy (by Harry Kondoleon) (fiction)
Labour of Love (by Doug Wilson) (fiction)
Such Times (by Christopher Coe) (fiction)
Promise of Rest (by Reynolds Price) (fiction)
CHILDREN’S, 2nd floor, phone: 596-7971
Magic Johnson (by Martin Schwabacher)
AIDS: How it \Vorks in the.~odv (by Lorna Greenberg)
Daddy and Me (by Jeanne M6ut~)uss’amy-Ashe)
David ttas AIDS (by Doris Sanford)
Know About AIDS (by Margaret Hyde)
MEDIA CENTER, 1 st floor, phone: 596-7933
Living Proof: HIV and the Pursuit of Happiness (video)
Heart of the Matter (video, HIV+ women)
HI\" Test: Who Should Take It? What Does it Show? (video)
AIDS: \Xqay We Won’t Look (audio cassette)
Let’s Talk: C. Everett Koop (audio cassette)
AIDS Quilt Songbook (compact disc)
There are also various Government Documents available in both the Reference
Department and the Business and Technology Department. Please call the Central
Library at 596-7977 or any branch library for more information.
Sunday Services 11:00 am ¯ Wednesday Services 6:30 pm, 7:30 pm
Choir Practice ¯ Thurs. 7:30 pm Codependency Support Group
I
To do justice, love mercy & to walk hurnbly with "our God... Micah 6:8
5451-E South Mingo Tulsa, OK 74146 . (918) 622-1441
Open Arms
Open Minds
Open Hearts
Saint Aidan’s
4045 No. Cincinnati. 425-7882
Saint John’s
4200 So. Atlanta PI.. 742-7381
Trinity
501 SO. Cincinnali. 582-4128
The Episcopal Church
Welcomes You
trial here before being returned to Oregon.
Acremant, 27, was taken to flae San
Joaquin County Jail for extradition to
Oregon ou murder charges in die brntal
slayings of Rox,’ume Ellis and Michelle
Abdill. Stockton police say they were
tipped off by an anonymou~ -caller early
on the monli]~g ofDec. 13, who gave them
the license number of a rented van
Acremant was driving. Alter several hours
of patrolling area motels, police say they
located the van at a Motel 6 and discovered
that Acremant had registered the
night before tmder his own name. According
to a Stockton police spokesperson,
Acremant was not armed when he
was arrested, and he surrendered to authorities
without incident.
Ellis mid Abdill, who operated a property
management business together and
were domestic partners, were-last seen on
Dec. 4. Their bodies, bound, gagged and
blindfolded, were discovered three days
later in the back of their parked pickup
truck. According to Medford authorities,
die two women had each been shot twice
in the head in what some have described
as an "executton-style slaying."
Police are continuing to refuse to talk
abom the details of the case but did say
they had no evidence that Acremant knew
that the two women were lesbians. Although
Acremant’ s father said his son had
told him he had killed the two women in
a robbery, police say that money, wallets,
jewelry and other valuables belonging to
them had not been taken.
See related story., this page.
STOCKTON, Calif. - The Natioual Gay
& Lesbian Task Force has asked the U.S.
Justice Department to examine the killing
of Roxmme Ellis and Michelle Abdill,
lesbian activists in Medford, Ore., because
of statements made by Robert
Acremant, who is facing charges in the
case. The Task Force formally asked Attorney
General Janet Reno in a letter to
investigate whether the killings were hate
crimes because of a variety of statements
Acremant has made to television, radio
and newspaper reporters duringjail interviews.
In one interview, Acremant said he had
asked the women if they were lesbians
and said they had told him they were. "It
kind of made me sick to my stomach that
she was someone’s grandma," Acremant
was quoted as saying in an interview
published in the Oregonian shortly after
his arrest. He also said in that interview
that the fact that they were lesbians "made
it easier" to kill them.
In a letter to Reno, NGLTF Executive
Directory Melinda Paras said, gays and
lesbians around the country were "’very
much upset and disturb0xl by these murders"
and that statements by Acremant
"have heightened the alarm and concern"
that the killings were, in fact, hate crimes.
PICK YOUR CAR...
... PICK YOUR. PAYMENT!
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Mitsubishi Eclipse RS
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¯ All factory eouioment Including Air.
¯ MSRP $16.976 0-down. 41 p~iyment~ of $272 99 Lint pavment $~4~, WAC This
is not ~ lease 15 ¢xnts li mile penalty after 12,000 miles i yr~
Mitsubishi- Galant
s237 Monthly*
Includes: Air conditioning, power door locks and windows, cruise control,
Am/Fro cassette, automatic and much more.
"MSRP $18.069. Sale Pdce 117.191.41 payments at $237 a month, 12,000 miles a yr. Iree, 15’ a mile penalty thereafter
or walk away. Last payment $8588. 1.75%APR. W.A.C.
by Jean-Pierre
St. Valentine’s Day is soon to be upon
us, and everyone is once again faced with
the dilemmaof selecting that special place
for a romantic dinner. Here are the three
best restaurants in Tulsa, as well as the
three most overrated. Each of the establishments
reviewed this month considers
itself to offer "fine dining," or what you
might call a"white tablecloth" restaurant.
Elegant. Dressy. Be forewarned, though,
that all of these places fall into the category
of "very expensive."
Heading up the list is Montrachet, in the
Consortium at 3509 South Peoria. This
restaurant was formerly on our list of
places to avoid, unless you liked schizophrenic
Santa Fe French cuisine courtesy
of the previous chef/owner. But, last summer,
it was taken over by new ownership,
management, and chefs from the resorts
in Scottsdale, Arizona, and has successfully
regained its place on Jean-Pierre’s
social list. With the demise lastyear of
both Karmichael’ s and the Fifteenth Street
Grill (-gotta pay those taxes!), Montrachet
is currently Tnlsa’s best restaurant.
The Montrachet style is still basically
French In concept, but displays a,.fresh
American note to the Continental style:
Beef tenderloin, rack of lamb, poussin,
fresh salmon, and other gourmet specialties
are mainstays ofthe Montrachetmenu,
which changes seasonally. But the highlight
of the meal with be the lovely montage
of flavors from experiencing all of
the courses, not just the entree.
The onion soup at this place is absolutely
the best one can get in Oklahoma. A
rich beefy and winey stock bathes tender,
caramelized onions, and is a delicious and
warming treat. Frizzled onions top the
soup as a garnish, which you may want to
request be left in the kitchen.
For a special appetizer, try the seared
foie gras. It’s presented medium rare,
stacked between layers of puff pastry, and
grilled apples. The salad of mixed greens
with Stilton cheese, walnuts, & poached
pears is excellent.
Desserts change regularly,
and all are exquisite.
None are the typical
ice cream and hea~y.,
sticky sauce on abrownie;
....all. drowned in icanned
¯ whipped topping, that one
¯ usually finds in Tulsa.
¯ Many are truly works of art, and the tastes
¯ can be heavenly. Montrachet also has a
¯ full bar and an excellent wine list. They
¯ also offer a number of interesting cordials
¯ and liqueurs. - ,
; Expect.seryice~ to .be.very well trained
¯
and efficient. All of the waiters are very
¯ knowledgeable about the evening’s menu
¯ and the preparations of the foods, and will
¯ be happy to recommend,.the evening’s
¯ best dishes.
Bodean Seafood Restaurant has been
¯ the place to go for fresh-off-the-plane-
" daily, seafood in Tulsa for years. Located
¯ in a nondescript strip shopping center at
¯ 3323 East 51st, just east of Harvard,
¯ Bodean is filling the shoes of the late
." Louisianne,Tulsa’slegendary downtown
¯ r.estaurant. You can also buy lovely fresh
¯¯ seafood to prepare at home at Bodean’s
adjacent seafood market.
If you like New England style clam
¯ chowder, you willlove the soupat Bodean,
: probably the best Marc-Pierre has had
: outside of the East Coast. Rich and thick,
it contains big pieces of fresh dams. Limit
¯ yourself to a cup though; the bowl is big
~ enough for a meal by itself.
Check the chalkboards to see whatcame
in on the plane that day. Mussels, cockles,
: and oysters from Newfoundland and New
: Zealand are regularly on the appeuzer
¯ lists, and fishes from across the world will
: become scrumptious entrees.
The fish entrees are al-
St. Valentine’s Day is
soon to be upon
us...Here are th~ three
_. b~st restaurants in
Tulsa, as well as the
three most overrated.
ways creatively prepared
and presented, though
sometimes the creativity
can be a bit excessive.
~re recently experienced
a mahi mahi presented
with mango chumey and
a blackened monkfish
served with crawfish jambalaya. Never
mind, though, since any fish can be prepared
to order, and Jean-Pierre often orders
the wonderfully fresh seafood simply
grilled with alittle lemon butter on the
side. Expect your fish to be cooked to an
expert level of doneness, not undercooked
and not dried out, but just right.
Vvqaile most of the waiters provide the
professional service you would expect
from a quality restaurant, not all of the
staff is properly trained. You may want to
request a special waiter, once you find one
you like.
Our third choice amongst the three best
Tulsa restaurants is actually a private club
in downtownTulsa. The Summit, atop the
Bank IV Center, serves both luncheon
and dinner to Tulsa’s business and socialite
community. It might be worth your
while to get out those gold-digging shoes
and wrangle an invitation to share dinner
with aclub member. A qnick review of the
club roster reveals several ’Tanfily’" members,
so this is not an impossible task.
Honorable mention has to go to the food at
the Southern Hills Golf & Country Club,
but finagling an invitation here is much
more challenging.
The Summit features expertly traineo
staff with charming & sexy European
accents. And, this being "The Club" of
Tulsa’s elite, the staff will do everything
possible to cater to the diners" every whim
and pleasure. Of course, such service and
top quality food does not come without its
cost, but the saving grace is that the Summit
doesn’t make you pay at the endof the
meal your host just signs h check!
This is Tulsa, so beef is heavily featured
on the menu. Steaks are excellent, always
prime beef, and will be prepared exactly
to vour specifications. They also do a
lovely Dover sole. Wildgame is frequently
available. But one of the most memorable
entrees here is the fork tender, melt-inyour-
mouth, lamb tenderloin. The only
thing to avoid is the lasagna, which is
bland & insipid, a big disappointment
~ven the management’s Italian origins.
Desserts are ~ bit more mundane, but
fresh fruit with real whipped crean~ is
always available, and the signature dessert
of the club is a chocolate crunch cakc.
a very rich mousse m a pastry shell.
If you are watching your pennies, be
careful with your choices of wines ,and
liquors. The "Summit stocks all of the
ultra-premium liquors and has wines costing
100’s (note the plural) of dollars per
botde.
And now for the list of Tulsa’s three
most overrated "’fine" restaurants, at which
see Dining, page 14
1996 Miss Gay Oklahoma USofA Pageant
Sunday, January 28, 9 pm, with special guests
Maya Douglas
Miss Gay USofA 1995
Chelsea Pearl
Miss Gay USofA
At-Large 1996
Cherry Monroe
Miss Gay Oklahoma USofA
Jean-Pierre refuses to eat when he is picking
up the tab, and which Jean-Pierre will
discourage friends from visiting as well.
All of these restaurants suffer from overinflated
prices, inconsistent food quality,
and mediocre servtce (judged by a standard
of what one might expect given the
expense).
Number Three: Bravo Ristorante. Suffeting
through the attempts of the wait
stuff to sing arias and show tunes does not
make up for their inept service or the
mediocrity of the food. R.I.P. Montague" s,
the fine dining room when the Adam’s
Mark used to be the Westin.
Number Two: Atlantic Sea Grill. In
probably the most expensive restaurant in
Tulsa, the expectation that the food will
be cooked to a quality level consistent
with the prices is unrequited. Perhaps one
would be better off to walk a few doors
down to the cheaper and infinitely less
stuffy T.G.I. Friday’s.
NumberOne: Warren DuckClub. Aside
from being in the tone)- Doubletree Warren
Place, how this establishment manages
to be touted as one of the finer
establishments in Tulsa is totally bevond
this reviewer. On several oceasirns, ~ean-
Pierre has been served tough and overcooked
duck with dreadfully sweet fruit
sauce to mask the (lack of) "flavor of the
bird. But most disappointing is thee dessert
bar reminiscent of Harvest Buffet. Save
your money.
Well, dear readers, this is the list of
Tulsa’s besl and worst. Now, you can
decide where you want to take your special
friend on’Febrtmry 14. Any hidden
messages there’? Just be sure to call ahead
for reservations, Bon appetit!
by James Christjohn
Hello again! Time for another rousing
round of reviews! I have received complaints
from some members of the community
for using the "snap" system of
rating stuff. They claim to have patented
it. Go figure; some people are legends in
their own minds. At any rate, if anyone
out there in readerland feels they have a
more amusing rating system, please submit
it to Tulsa Family News Rating System
contest,POB 4140,TulsaOK, 74159.
I’m not sure what the prizewill be yet, but
I’ll come up with something. I am also
asking for the women in our readership to
Submit ideas of what they’d like to see
reviewed. I don’t want anyone left out.
On with the reviews, comments, and
whatever other stuff I feel might be amusing.
If you remember your first crush on
another member of the same sex, or have
forgotten, I can highly recommend "’Tom
& Huck". It is an excellent adaptation of
"Tom Sawyer", with excellent performances
by the entire cast. And the
homoerotic subtext clearly evident inTom
and Huck’s relationship ~s almost underlined
in one of several scenes where Tom
and Huck are struggling to communicate
their feelings towards one another and
you just want to yell "Go ahead! Say it!
Tell him’I love you!’"Actually,it’s pretty
much true to it’s time - I can see Huck
living in town, madTom marries Beckx’ as
a cover, and continues his relationship
with Tom. This is definitely a good
Valentine" s day flick, very romantic in its
way, and the action keeps you on the edge
of the seat. Fortunately, I restrained myself
from the yelling bit, for which mv
mece was grateful (I must credit her f~r
SALOON
Friday, January 19 th
Blacklight Party
Every Wednesday Night
Drag Rodeo Roundup
hosted by
Courtney Farrell
and featuring Keliah LaMonte
Coming Sunday, March 17
USofA
Preliminary to Miss USofA
834-4234, 1565 S. Sheridan W-Sun. 7-2am
this issue’s reviews, during the holiday
trip to see fmrtily, she dragged me to all
these movies I wouldn’t have ever seen
otherwise, and was pleasantly surprised
at how good they were. I dedicate this
month’s column to her. Otherwise, I’d
just be babbling on about anything I could
think of and making up reviews of fictional
films and stuff.)
Another winner is "Jumanji", and it
takes you on a doozy of a rollercoaster
ride. It’s a fun film, and Robin Williams is
always a delight, especially in this flick
about ama~cal board game set in a deadly
jungle that sucks you in until someone
else plays the game to it’s finish and sets
you free. The scenes of the jungle and its
animals taking over an entire town is
amazing. The plot was a bit uneven, but I
found it amusing enough overall to make
up for that.
Inmusical terms, Boy George’s"Cheapness
and Beaut)"" deserves more of a
listen than it’s been getting. I am not
partial to BG or Culture Club, but I was
curious enough to give this disc a spin,
and found it surprisingly effective. It covers
every style from country to heavy
metal (mad I HATE heavy metal, but I
rather liked it here. Skip the first track, but
listen to the rest. He holds no punches, mad
does not shy away from telling it like i~ is
- no bet love songs here! There is one song
on there about AIDS that nearly hadme in
tears. The lyrics are well-written if not
well-spelled and the music is fairly well
done. (For me, the first test of a songs is
the lyrics. Are they intelligent? Do they
have meaning? If they don’t, forget it.)
Another "new" discovery, October
Project, has a new CD, "Falling Farther
In", and it is beautiful. The lyrics are
amazingly intelligent, and the music fuses
a bit of rock, pop,jazz and Celtic soul. Try
it, you’ll like it. The lead singer has a
lovely deep alto voice that is like chocolate
to listen to. If you don’t like chocolate,
insert the dream food of your choice.
(Like I said, I don’t want to leave anyone
out.) This is a CD to add to your collection,
no matter what.
And, if we’re all lucky, I’ll be able to
review "’Phantom of the Opera" for the
next issue. I know a lot of folks out there
are dusting off their opera capes and lnasks
for this one!
Don’t forget our Jan. 28th
2nd Annual Super Bowl Party
Free Draw Beer from kickoff to finish,
Chili dogs, baked beans & potato salad, $5 cover
Big Screen TV
How To Do It
First 30 words are S10. Each
additional word is 25 cents.
You may bring additional
attention to your ad with:
Bold Headline - S 1
Ad in capital letters -S1
Ad in bold capital letters - $2
Ad in box - $2
Ad reversed - $3
Tear sheet mailed - S2
Blind Post Office Box - $5
Please type or print your ad.
Count the number of words.
(A word for our purposes is a
group ofletters or numbers separated
by a space.)
Send your ad &
payment to POB
4140, Tulsa, OK
74159 with your
name, complete
address, day &
eve. numbers
(for our records
only).
Ads will run ~n
the next issue
after they are
received.
TFN reserves
the right to edit
or refuse any
ad. No refunds.
Lesbian Book Club
Now Fonning. Meeting
monthy to discuss
works by women authors.
For information,
call 298-5208.
HIV+ Singles Magazine
Safe & confidential. Free
copy, 36 word personal ad,
voice mail, and mail forwarding!
Local and nationwide!
All lifestyles. Gay,
HIV+ owned & operated.
Intropoz+, 564 Mission St.
Box 415, SF, CA 94105,
800-820-2948
TALKING PERSONALS! HUNDREDS OF GUYS TO CHOO~ CALL NOW!
Call The 900 number to respond to ads, bi’owse unlisted ads, or retrieve messages. Only $1.99 per minute: 18+. C/S: 415-281-3183
Tulsa MATURE AND FUN: GWM,
varied interests, late 40’s, seeks others
for fun and more. Please leave ~:
message. ~31509
Oklahoma TOP ME OFF: GBM, 28,
5’6", 144,
GHM/GBM preferred,
drug/disease/alcohol free, far fun and
more. Piease ~eave a message. ~28009
Oklahoma NAtiVE: I’m a Native
American Indian. I’m a big guy with a
big heart. I’m 25 y/o and I’m Ikg4 a
companion and a friend. I’m a virgin.
are you the one? red heads a+ ~4701
Manfard GOOD OLE" BOY: GWM,
135, 5’5", blonde hair, hazel eyes, 35;
varied interests, seek GWM’s, 18-40,
for friendship and more. Please leave a
message. ~25103
Oklahoma COWBOY COUNTRY:
GWM, 5’8", brown hair and eyes, 21,
seeks other males, good looking and
well built cowboys preferred, for
friendship and more. Please leave a
message. =23376
Ponca City NOT INTO BAR SCENE:
GWM, 27,155, 5’8", hazel eyes,
brown hair~ seeks others far friendship
and passible relationship;Please leave
a message. ~’17465
Oklahoma SON WANTS DAD: GWM,
31, 5’11", 180, brown hair, green
eyes, HIV:, seeks a HIV- Daddy far a
serious relationship. Relocation is most
definite if Daddy wants. Please leave a
message. ~15358
Oklahoma BOUND AND GAGGED:
GWM, Leather submissive seeks a very
aggressive Leather aggressive, far
serious encounters. No holds barred
preferred. Please leave a message.
~2827
Oklahoma BIG BOY: GWM, 5’6", 250,
brown hair, blue eyes, seeks others far "
friendship and more. Please leave a
message. ~11041
Tulsa PLAIN, SIMPLE, HONEST: GWM,
28, 165, hard worker, out doors man
and active, seeks other GWM’s for
friendship and passibly more. Please
leave a message. ~14249
Tulsa LET’S LEARN TOGETHER: GWM,
inexperienced, 30, 6’, 150, brown
hair, green eyes, professional,
smoke/alcohol free, seeks
inexperienced GWM’s, 18-25 far
special encounters. Please leave a
message. Must bediscrete and drug
free. =14856
Tulsa LET’S LEARN TOGETHER: GWM,
25, 5’10", 175, brown hair, masculine
and discrete, good looking, non
smoker, athletic, seeks other
inexperienced males, 21-30, for
friendship and possibly more. Please
leave a message. ~14178
Oklahoma LET’S TEACH EACH
OTHER: Bi Curious WM, 27, 6’, ! 95,
tanned, seeks other males, 18-30, bi
curious preferred, for learning
experiences. Please leav~ a message.
=17153
Oklahoma BRAND NEW: GWM, 27,
150 5’8", brown hair, hbzel eyes, will
try anything once, varied interests,
seeks other guys for frie~’dship and
much more. Please lea~e~ a message.
~ 17465
Oklahon~B-LOOKING FOR
SERIOUS FUN: GWiV~ Oklahoma
State University student, T0’s, 5’9",.
150", good body, varie~ interests,
seeks others far fun and ~ore. I am
very discrete. ~16686 :
Tulsa LOOKING FOR I~XPERIENCE:
Bi Curious Married WM~ very
attractive, good body, 6-.q’, 180,
blonde hair, blue eyes, sbeks other
white males far first time,experience.
Please leave a messege.iNo need to be
discrete. ~t6302
TUlsa TULSA "1~/’O STEP: GWM, 26,
5’7", 145, good looking!and in shape,
seeks others, 18-27, far friendship and
fun. Please leave a message. ~17238
Oklahoma COCKED AND LOADED:
GWM, 22, 6’2", 185, brown hair,
green eyes, seeks GWM~s, 35-45,
average build and weight far friendship
and possibly more. Please leave a
message. =13357
Oklahoma RIGHT ON THE
MONEY: GWM, 31, 5’6", seeks,
GWM’s, 25-50, into getting acquainted
instead of fantasizing abbut our looks.
We’re not all Greek God’s or are we
built like horses. Some of us are just
average. Call me. =12799
Oklahoma BI BI BLUES.~ BiCurious
M, 27, 175, 6, aliract~ve, seeks
0their attractive males, 2Q-30, who are
patii~nt and understanding. Must be
drug/disease free. Please leave a
me,sage =13020 :
Oklahoma FUN IN TH~ CORRAL:
GWM, 31, brown hair, hazel eyes,
’stache, 5’6", 165, seeks~
companionship of matur~ GWM, 23-
40, who are aggressive, masculine and
gentfe. Furry cowboys alplus. Call me!
~13859
Tulsa LOADED: 27, 6’, 180 iso
men 1~8~30 far some fun, give
me a.call- ~9298
OK City DADDY’S HOME:
WM, 41,6’ 180 blk brn, iso
slim musc 18-41 for fun and
friendship- leave a message-
=9318
Grove WANNA PUNK WITH
ME?: new to area. not into
bars, Dave, 20 6’ 185
brn/red/hzt, goatee, eyebrow
earring, love volleyball, good music,
good food great conversation,
meditate, spiritual, give me a ca11-
~9385
Tulsa AMERICAN PRIDE: 5’9, 140,
trim physique, hairy chest, sincere and
honest person, like this in a person,
give me a call- =9464
Oklahoma City GOOD TIMES ARE
WAITING: I’m 27 y/o, 5’11, 2151b~,
athletic bbild~ I’m Ikg4 someone to
share good times with. I like dancing,
I’m alight drinker and a non smoker.":
~1663
Oklahoma City PRIME TIME: I’m a 38
y/oWMI"V. I’m a total "PC and I’m
Ikg4 men,who would like to spend same
time with me. I’m clean, drug and
disease free. e9808
Oklahoma City READY OR NOT: I’m
20 y/o, 5’6, 2! 51bs; WM. rm Ikg4 a
relationship minded man 18-30’s With a
medium to slim build. I like singing,
bowling, golf, movies and cuddling. If y.ou
are interested, please call me. e47265
Tulsa DEEP CHOCOLATE: GBM,
5’7", well built, looking far GLM/GWM
for hot fun in the sun. Satisfaction
guarank:~l. Leave me a message and.
le~.s get together soon. =10596
Oklahoma BOYS WILL BE BOYS:
GWM, 6’, brown hair, blue eyes, very
versatile, seeks new friends in the area
for fun and friendship with relationship~
~ssibilities. Let’s get together and
celebrate life. e6571
Oklahoma City SHOOT THE
BREEZE: GWM, 22, brown hair/eyes,
5’6", see~ fun and relationship
oriented GWM’s under 30.
¯ Smoker/Ught Drinker OK. Must be
disease/drug free ~11041
Tulsa GAY OR BI: AI, 32, very masc
prof’l, GBM isa Gay or bi male, masc,
race not Impt, into sparts, outdoors, if u
like Iv a message thanks! ~ 7580
Tulsa LET’S PLAY: professional, 42
WM, isa other ~Gay or bi male, 30s-
40s, in the area, let’s play! ~ 7392
Tulsa SOMEONE TO LOVE: I’m 21
BM, kinda looking far someone to love,
tired of being by myself, love to sing,
read, like to go to the movies, have fun,
love all types of music, if this interests
you give me a call- ~ 7435
Tulsa SHARE SOME TIME: Dan,
BIWM, mid 40s iso BIWM 30-40, ht/wt
prop, very discreet, expect same, like
share some time, if you are interested,
give me a call, I’ll return all callse
7822
Tulsa NEW’ TO AREA~ Mike, new to
the area, 35, BIWM, bind/blue, work
out alot, phys fit, Ikg for a sir to BI BM
35-65 to have a g0od:time with, go out
with give me a call- = -7842
Eastem AR CUDDLE BY THE FIRE:
Jack, GWM, 37, It. bin/bin, mustache,
very masc, sir appearing/acting, iso
friends poss. rel in the area, like all
music, dining, theater, Sitting by a
fireplace, outdoors, animals, you name
it- give me a call- ~ 7873
Oklahoma City JASON, 24, 5’10,
170, Ikg to meet Other hot guys, around
my age, if you’d like- ~7885
Malvem FANTASY FUN: Jack, 33
WM, Ikg far guys into fantasies, give
me a call let’s get together. = 8031
Oklahoma City BI OR BI
CURIOUS? 36, in the city the first wk
of the month, looking far bi or bi
curious, gdlkg, 6’1,175, 33w, give
me a call- ~ 8514
Walton MARRIED OR BI: Rodney,
married WM 25 5’5, 150, altr, Ikg for
25-35 married or bi male, far
friendship pass rel, inexperienced and
want sameane to learn with honesty
and discretion req’d- ~ 8671
Ok City gl CURIOUS WM 42,
slender build, at,r, isa a bi or gay male,
18-25 - for pass rel, write me! photo a
plus, race not impt- e 8747
FOR YOUR FREE AD CALL 1-800-546-6366. THE SYSTEM WILL DO THE REST!
Oklahoma City LET’S
LEARN TOGETHER:
Extremely Bi Curious WF,
new.to this life, 22, tall and
full figured, seeks same for
learning experiences.
Please leave a message
~27073
Oklahoma City
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED: GWF, 31,
seeks other females for fun,
romance and more. Please
leave a message. =27256
Tulsa HEY GIRLS: athletic
attr. SWF early 30’s 5’4
1101bs brn/bm Ikg4 open
minded women for discreet hot
fun. call me! ~45795
Dallas/Ft. Worth LEZ
TALK: my name is Lisa,
I’m Ikg4 someone to have
great phone fun with. I love
talking on the phone. Im 42
~’/o and I hope you call
me. ~45492
Dallas SPECIAL FRIENDS:
I’m a single woman with no
kids Ikg4 a special’female
friend to love and care for. call
me. ~1614
Arkadelphia, AR STAR
GAZER: my name is Angela,
I[m a 21 y/o student interested
in trying new things, star
gazing and more. I would like
to meet a nice woman for fun
and friendship, call me!
e46392
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Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
newspaper
periodical
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
[1996] Tulsa Family News, January 15-February 14, 1996; Volume 3, Issue 2
Subject
The topic of the resource
Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.
Description
An account of the resource
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).
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level.
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Tulsa Family News
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Tom Neal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
January 15-February 14, 1996
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
James Christjohn
Phyl Boler-Schmit
Barry Hensley
Pat Morehead
LD Jamett
Rights
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Tom Neal/Tulsa Family News
Format
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Image
PDF
Online text
Language
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English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
newspaper
periodical
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Tulsa---Oklahoma
Oklahoma---Tulsa
United States Oklahoma Tulsa
United Stated of America (50 states)
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
https://history.okeq.org/items/show/506
Relation
A related resource
Tulsa Family News, December 15, 1995-January 14, 1996; Volume 3, Issue 1
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
https://history.okeq.org/collections/show/24
adoption
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