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              <text>European Union to British&#13;
Army: No More Gay Ban&#13;
STRASBOURG, France (AP) - The European Court of&#13;
HumanRights ruled latein September that Britain’ sban&#13;
on homosexuals in the armed forces is a breach of&#13;
humanrights. The court found in favor ofthreemenand&#13;
a woman who were discharged from the British armed&#13;
forces in line with its absolute ban on homosexual&#13;
personnel after they admitted their sexual orientation.&#13;
The court said the British policyyciolated Article 8 of the&#13;
European Convention on Human Rights which defends&#13;
the right to respect for private and family life.&#13;
"The Court considered the investigations, and in&#13;
particular the interviews Of the applicants, to have been&#13;
exceptionally intrusive," thc European court said in a&#13;
statement. "The investigations conducted into the&#13;
applicants’ sexual orientation together with their&#13;
discharge from the armed forces constituted especially&#13;
grave interferences with their private lives," it said.&#13;
The verdict cannot force a-change of law, but the&#13;
applicants considered it a step towards ending&#13;
discriminationin thearmedforces. Defense Sec. George&#13;
Robertson said other existing cases involving Gays in&#13;
the British armed forces will be put on hold while the&#13;
government studies the implications of:the ruling.&#13;
Gay Demos Organize&#13;
TULSA- Local. Democratic Party activists will hold an&#13;
organizational meeting for a Tulsa chapter of the the&#13;
National Stonewall Democratic Federation on Sunday,&#13;
October 24th, at 4pro at the Tulsa Gay Community&#13;
Services Center (the Pride Center), at 1307 East 38th&#13;
Street, 2nd floor..&#13;
Stonewall Democrats, acaucus within the Democratic&#13;
Party works to secure the rights ofall people, regardless&#13;
’of sexual orientation or gender identity and serves as a&#13;
voicewithin the DemocraticParty for Lesbians andGay&#13;
men. Organizers noted in their press release that the&#13;
Oklahoma,Democratic party is rather conservative with&#13;
regard to civil rights for Gays and Lesbians and seek to&#13;
educate state party leadership about Lesbian and Gay&#13;
issues.&#13;
They list the following specific goals of the National&#13;
Stonewall Democratic Federation as:&#13;
(1) mobilizing voters through a national grassroots&#13;
network of Gay and Lesbian Democratic clubs and&#13;
individuals to advance the fight for Gay and Lesbian&#13;
civil rights;&#13;
(2) improving the record of the Democratic party by&#13;
- pressing it further inthe direction of full recognition of&#13;
the rightsofGay men, Lesbiansand Bisexuals to befree&#13;
from prejudice;&#13;
(3) educating voters on the vast difference that exists&#13;
between the two major parties on our issues, and the&#13;
importance of voting Democxatic as the most effective&#13;
way to achieve our goals;&#13;
(4) fighting the anti-Gay rhetoric of the Republican&#13;
conservative-wing, which has increasingly become the&#13;
instrument of those d~dicated to denying us our rights.&#13;
The organizers are encouraging those who share&#13;
these values to come to the October 24 meeting which&#13;
will feature membersfromthenewlyformedOklahoma&#13;
City Stonewall Democrats chapter. Paul Barby,whoran&#13;
as an openly Gay candidate for US Congress in&#13;
Oklahon~a’s 6th district will speak.&#13;
For more information, telephone Start Simpson at&#13;
582-6557. ~&#13;
:.Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual + Transgendered Tulsane, Our Families + Friends&#13;
¯ Tulsa’s Largest Circulation Community PaperAvailable In More Than 75 City Locations&#13;
i Tulsa Area United. W .y Fun.ds&#13;
Support Anti-Gay D,scr, minat,on&#13;
: TULSA (TFN) - In a recent promotional piece printed and&#13;
¯ inserted in The Tulsa Worm for free, Tulsa Area United Way&#13;
¯&#13;
(TAUW) touted its strong points. TAUWclaims to be thelargest&#13;
¯ non-governmental funder of health and human services.in the&#13;
¯¯ Tulsa area, funding some 231 programs at 68 member agencies.&#13;
TAUW also claims to have a lower than 10% overhead as&#13;
¯ compared to overhead of up to 40% declared acceptable by the&#13;
¯ National Charity Information Bureau.&#13;
¯ Joe Cappy, chairman/CEO and president of Dollar/Thrifty&#13;
Automotive Group, in the Tulsa World insert, claimed, ’q’ulsa&#13;
¯ Area United Way gives each of us a sensible, cost-effective&#13;
¯ approach to helping the people in our community who need it&#13;
¯ most..." ¯&#13;
But there are those who take issuewith some aspects of United&#13;
Way s funding,, partacularly that of the Indian NaUons Council of&#13;
¯ the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). The BSA is one of the earliest&#13;
¯ organizations funded in Tulsa by the predecessors to the current&#13;
: United Way but the Scouting organization has been under fire&#13;
¯ nationally for its anti-Gay policies. The BSA claims the Scout&#13;
¯ pledge to be "morally straight" refers to being heterosexual and&#13;
¯ .therefore bans Gay youth from being Scouts or Gay men from&#13;
¯&#13;
being Scoutmasters on the grounds that to be Gay is intrinsically&#13;
¯ to be "morally non-straight."&#13;
¯ Recently, the BSA lost a legal challenge to thi s anti-Gay policy&#13;
¯ brought under New Jersey state law. Former Eagle scout James Dale won his lawsuit but in response to questions from The Tulsa&#13;
¯ World,aspokespersonfortheTulsa-basedIndianNafionCouncil&#13;
of the BSA r~affirmed the ban in this area.&#13;
¯ And when TAUW kicked off its 75th anmversary campaign,&#13;
¯ running from Sept. 10th to Nov. 1 lth with a goal of raising&#13;
$21,497,725.00, some of these individuals said no to helping&#13;
¯ United Way because of the funding for an organization which&#13;
blatantly discriminates.&#13;
¯ Most ofthe individuals who spoke asked to remain anonymous&#13;
¯ citing fears ofretaliationfromTAUWor risk to their employment&#13;
¯ by public.ly speaking ~bout Lesbian and Gay issues in’h city with&#13;
fewprote~tious again~wolkplace discriminationbasedon sexual&#13;
¯&#13;
orientation.&#13;
¯ One Gay couple, both of whom are public&#13;
¯ employees, had slightly different reactions to the&#13;
issue of funding for the Boy Scouts.-One noted that&#13;
¯ "we’re so used to it, thatwedon’ t think about it"but&#13;
¯ he added that it’s "time when United Way needs to&#13;
start analyzing what they’re doing."&#13;
: However, his parmer noted that the organizations&#13;
¯ his employer was set to help for United Way’s Day&#13;
¯ of Caring were the Boy Scouts and the Salvation&#13;
Army, both organizations which he claims&#13;
¯ discriminate against Gay people. He notified his&#13;
¯ employer that he would not participate in the Day&#13;
¯ ofCaring because of those organization’ s anti-Gay ¯&#13;
policies.&#13;
¯ Another couple, Lesbian, said that it was a"tough&#13;
¯ question." One women, again who requested&#13;
¯ anonymity because of her job (she is a teacher), ¯&#13;
characterized the Boy Scouts’ policy as&#13;
¯ reprehensible but noted too that United Way funds&#13;
¯ the YWCA, an organization which has a non-&#13;
" discrimination policy which includes "sexual&#13;
¯ orientation." Her partner added that TAUW also&#13;
¯ funds Youth Services of Tulsa (YST) which has&#13;
¯ programs that benefit Lesbians and Gay men but ¯&#13;
she also acknowledged that YST hadkept those&#13;
¯ programs "closeted,"i.e. not publicized because of&#13;
¯ fears that UnitedWay fundingmight be withdrawn,&#13;
despite the fact that the failure to publicize the&#13;
¯ program significantly limitedYST’s ability toreach&#13;
¯ those whom the program was intended to help.&#13;
: Tulsa Area United Way’s marketing&#13;
representative, Beth Kuehnert was asked to explain&#13;
¯ TAUW’s continued funding for the BSA and&#13;
¯ initially, in a cordial and civil conversation, Ms.&#13;
Kuehnert said she was not aware of the Boy Scouts’&#13;
position nor see TA UW, p. 12&#13;
¯ Community Center News Eureka Springs Holds&#13;
Community Meeting 111 6. Diversity Celebration&#13;
¯&#13;
TULSA - Organizers of the First Annual Community Center ¯ EUREKA SPRINGS - Fall is around the comer,&#13;
¯ Film Festival to be held on Oct. 7-9, Tulsa’s Gay Commtmity : andintheOzarks,it’salmosttimefor thebi-annual&#13;
¯ Center andits parent organization, TulsaOklahomaus forHuman " Diversity Celebration Weekend in Eureka Springs,&#13;
: Rights (TOHR) will show both Lesbian and Gay films, both : Ark. ! Organizers say this event, scheduled forNov.&#13;
’. feature length and shorts beginningat 5:30 onThurs, and Fri. and " 5-7, will be bigger and better than ever!&#13;
: from 2pm on Sat. and Sun. ¯ Metropolitan Community Church’s Friday night&#13;
¯ In addition, theCenterwillhostTOHR’sfirstComingOutFair " dance and camival will kick off the weekend at the&#13;
: "Discovering Yourself" from noon to 6pro on Sat. Oct. 9th. A " top of the Basin Park Hotel. On Saturday morning,&#13;
." record number of community organizations have committed to " strollthestreetsofEurekaonahistoric(andcolorful)&#13;
¯ particil~ating in the Coming Out Fair. . walking tour, canoe on the White River, or hike in&#13;
¯ GregGatewood,TOHRboardpresident,noted that at the Sept. ." Lake Leatherwood Park. ¯&#13;
.14th commlmity wide meeting held at the Center about 35 " Intheearlyaftemoon,bringthekidstoa"family"&#13;
ihdividuals attended and the representatives decided through a family picnic at Harmon Park, sing like you’re in&#13;
i largely consensus process to convene a commlmity council of the shower at karaoke, or listen to the sounds of&#13;
¯ organizations, churches and businesses. The group also decided : localandvisitmgGay/Lesbianmusiciansatseveral&#13;
toaskTOHRto co-ordinate theproposedbi-monthlymeetings to " different venues around town. And please be sure&#13;
: exchange information and ideas. . to visit all the wonderfully unique shops, and&#13;
¯ Marty Newman, a Human Rights Campaign board member, : support the Diversity Cooperative businesses of&#13;
¯ who along with TOHR co-founder Dennis Neill, called the first " Eureka Springs.&#13;
: meeting this summer, expressed his satisfaction with the Sept. " Then, after a delightful dinner (it’s Eureka&#13;
- ". meeting and the general progress of the process. Newman-noted ¯ Spri.ngs’ Food and Wine Festival this weekend,&#13;
¯ thatTulsaPFLAG chapter co-founder,Nancy McDonaldattended ¯ too),work offthosecaloriesattwofantasticdances.&#13;
¯ the meeting and that Mrs. McDonald recalled that TOHRs by- : AtCenterStage, DJ Jonwillraisetheroofwithhigh&#13;
." laws had at one time had a provision for a community advisory ¯ energy club music. And the Basin Park Hotel&#13;
¯ council. Meeting co-convener Dennis Neill, an attorney, was ¯ Ballroom will come alive with electrifying&#13;
i given the task of drafting a contract to clarify the relationship " performances by "Barnes", a dynamic GLAMA-&#13;
¯ betweenthevariousgroups.Formoreinformationaboutthenext ~ winningsinger/songwriter seeEureka, p. 14&#13;
¯&#13;
community meeting, call the Community Center at 743-4297. ."&#13;
: Also, the CommunityCenter will be the site ofanall-community ¯&#13;
¯ Halloween Costume Ball to be held on Saturday, Ocotober 30th, :&#13;
¯ 8pm at 1307 East 38 Street, 2nd floor. The event will be BYOL "&#13;
¯ but soft drinks and ice will be provided. :&#13;
: Organizers suggest that while this is a costume party, a loud ¯&#13;
¯ shirt and simple mask will-do. Guests should not feel compelled :&#13;
: to spend a lot of money, just to use a little imagination. The :&#13;
: sponsors, Prime Timers of Tulsa, stated that the purpose of the :&#13;
_" party is for all groups connected with the Pride Center to have an&#13;
¯ opportunitytogettoknowonemlother, andhelpbuildcommunity, i&#13;
Tulsa Clubs &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Bamboo Lounge, 7204 E. Pine&#13;
*Boston Willy’s Diner, 1742 S. Boston&#13;
Burger Sisters Restaurant, 1545 S. Sheridan&#13;
*Empire Bar, 1516 S. Peoria&#13;
*Full Moon Cafe, 1525 E. 15th&#13;
*Gold Coast Coffee House, 3509 S. Peoria&#13;
*Jason’s Deli, 15th &amp; Peoria&#13;
*Lola’s, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
*Polo Grill, 2038 Utica Square&#13;
*St. Michael’s Alley Restaurant, 3324-L E. 31st&#13;
832-1269&#13;
592-2143&#13;
835-1207&#13;
599-9512&#13;
583-6666&#13;
749-4511&#13;
599-7777&#13;
749-1563&#13;
744-4280&#13;
745-9998&#13;
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 Sheridan ........ 834-4234&#13;
"*Renegades/Rainbow Room, 1649 S. Main 585-3405&#13;
*TNTrs, 2114 S. Memorial 660-0856&#13;
*Tool, :Box, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308&#13;
Tulsa Businesses, Services, &amp; Professionals&#13;
Advanced Wireless &amp; PCS, Digital CelIular 74%1508&#13;
*Affinity News, 8120 E; 21 610-8510&#13;
*Assoc. in Med. &amp; Mental Health, 2325 S. Harvard 743-1000&#13;
Kent Balch &amp; Associates, Health &amp; Life Insurance 747-9506&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksellers, 8620 E. 71 250-5034&#13;
*Barnes &amp; Noble Booksdlers, 5231 E. 41 665-4580&#13;
Body Piercing by Nicole, 2722 E. 15 712-1122&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 2740 E. 21 712-9955&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 8015 S. Yale 494-2665&#13;
Brookside Jewelry, 4649 S. Peoria 743-5272&#13;
*CD Warehouse, 3807c S. Peoria 746-0313&#13;
Cherry St. Psychotherapy, 1515 S. Lewis 581-13902, 743-4117&#13;
Community Cleaning, Kerby Baker 622-0700&#13;
Tim Daniel, Attorney 352-9504, 800-742-9468&#13;
*Deco to Disco, 3212 E. 15th 749-3620&#13;
*Devena’s Gallery, 13 Brady 587-2611&#13;
Doghouse on Brookside, 3311 S. Peoria 744-5556&#13;
*Elite Books &amp; Videos, 821 S. Sher~llan 838-8503&#13;
*Ross Edward Salon 584-0337, 712-9379&#13;
*Floral Design Studio, 3404 S. Peoria 744-9595&#13;
Four Star Import Automotive, 9906 E. 55th P1 610-0880&#13;
Cathy Furlong, Ph.D., 1980 Utica Sq. Med. Ctr. 628-3709&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Affordable Daycare 808-8026&#13;
*Gloria Jean’s Gourmet Coffee, 1758 E. 21st 742-1460&#13;
Leanne M. Gross, Insurance &amp; financial planning 459-9349&#13;
Mark T. Hamby, Attorney 744-7440&#13;
*Sandra J. Hill, MS, Psychotherapy, 2865 E. Skelly 745-1111&#13;
*International Tours 341-6866&#13;
Jadox Animal Clinic, 2732 E. 15th 712-2750&#13;
*Jared’s Antiques, 1602 E. 15th 582-3018&#13;
David Kauskey,’ Country Club Barbering 747-0236&#13;
The Keepers, Housekeeping &amp; Gardening 582-8460&#13;
*Ken’s Flowers, 1635 E. 15 599-8070&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, 4021 S. Harvard, #210 747-5466&#13;
*Living ArtSpace, 19 E. Brady 585-1234&#13;
*Midtown Theater, 319 E. 3rd 584-3112&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers, 9720c E. 31 663-5934&#13;
*Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 Place 664-2951&#13;
David A. Paddock, CPA, 4308 S. Peoria, Ste. 633 747-7672&#13;
Puppy Pause II, 1060 S. Mingo 838-7626&#13;
*Peace of Mind Bookstore, 1401 E. 15 583-1090&#13;
The Pride Store, 1307 E. 38, 2rid floor 743-4297&#13;
Rainbowz on the River B+B, POB 696, 74101 747-5932&#13;
Richard’s Carpet Cleaning 834-0617&#13;
Teri Schutt, Rex Realtors 834-7921,747-4746&#13;
*Scribner’s Bookstore, 1942 Utica Square 749-6301&#13;
Paul Tay, Car Salesman 260-7829&#13;
*Tickled Pink, 3340 S. Peoria 697-0017&#13;
*Tulsa Book Exchange, 3749 S. Peoria 742-2007&#13;
*Tulsa Comedy Club, 6906 S. Lewis 481-0558&#13;
*Venus Salon, 1247 S. Harvard 835~5563&#13;
Fred Welch, LCSW, Counseling 743-1733&#13;
*WhittierNews Stand, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
Tulsa Agencies, Churches, Schools &amp; Universities&#13;
AIDS Walk Tulsa, POB 4337, 74101 579-9593&#13;
*All Souls Unitarian Church, 2952 S. Peoria 743-2363&#13;
Black &amp; White, Inc. POB 14001, Tulsa 74159 587-7314&#13;
Bless The Lord at All Times Christian Center. 2207 E. 6 583-7815&#13;
*B/L/G/T Alliance, Univ. of Tulsa Canterbury Ctr. 583-9780&#13;
*Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 616 S. Boston 585-1201&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr., University of Tulsa, 5th PI. &amp; Florence&#13;
*ChurchoftheRestorationUU, 1314N.Greenwood 587-1314&#13;
*CommunityofHopeUnitedMethodist,2545 S.Yale 747-6300&#13;
*Community Unitarian-Universalist Congregation 749-0595&#13;
*CouncilOak Men’s Chorale 748-3888&#13;
*Delaware Playhouse, 1511 S. Delaware 712-1511&#13;
*Democratic Headquarters, 3930 E. 31 742-2457&#13;
Dignity/Integrity of Tulsa- Lesbian &amp; Gay Catholics &amp;&#13;
Episcopalians, POB 701475, 74170-1475 355-3140&#13;
*Fellowship Congreg. Church, 2900 S. Harvard 747-7777&#13;
918.583.1248, fax: 583.4615&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa, OK 74159&#13;
e-mail: TulsaNews@ earthlink, net&#13;
Publisher + Editor:&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers + contributors:&#13;
James Christjohn, Barry Hensley, J.-P. Legrandbouche,&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom, Esther Rothblum, Mary Schepers&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
Issued on or before the 1 st of each month, the entire contents of this&#13;
~blicaatnidonmaaryenportobteecrteedprboyduUcSedcoepityhreirgihntW19h9o8leboyrTin~part without&#13;
written permission from the publisher. Publication of a name or&#13;
photo does not indicate a person’s sexual orientation. Correspondence&#13;
is assumed to be for publication unless ot.herwjse no,ted,,~must&#13;
be signed &amp; becomes the sole property of T~&#13;
Each reader is entitled to 4 copies of each edition at distribution&#13;
lYoints. Additional copies are available by calling 583-1248.&#13;
*Free SpiritWomen’s Center, call for location&amp; info: 587-4669&#13;
Friend For A Friend, POB 52344, 74152 747-6827&#13;
Friends in Unity Social Org., POB 8542, 74101 582-0438&#13;
*HIV ER Center, 4138 Chas. Page Blvd. 583-6611&#13;
*HIV Resource Consortium, 3507 E. Admiral 834-4194&#13;
*Holland Hall School, 5666 E. 81st 481-1111&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education 834-8378&#13;
*House of the Holy Spirit Minstries, 3210e So. Norwood&#13;
Interfaith AIDS Ministries 438-2437, 800-284-2437&#13;
*MCC United, 1623 N. Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
NAMES Project, 3507 E. Admiral P1. 748-3111&#13;
NOW, Nat’l Org. for Women, POB 14068, 74159 365-5658&#13;
OK Spokes Club (bicycling), POB 9165, 74157&#13;
*OSU-Tulsa (formerly UCT, formerly Rogers U. whoever...)&#13;
*Our House, t 114 S. Quaker 584-7960&#13;
PFLAG, POB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
+Planned Parenthood, 1007 S. Peoria 587-7674&#13;
Prime-Timers, P.O. Box 52118, 74152&#13;
*R.A.I.N., Regional AIDS Interfaith Network 749-4195&#13;
Rainbow Business Guild, POB 4106, 74159 665-5174&#13;
*Red Rock Mental Center, 1724 E. 8 584-2325&#13;
O’RYAN, support group for 18-24 LGBT young adults&#13;
O’RYAN, Jr. support group for 14-17 LGBT youth&#13;
St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, 4045 N. Cincinnati 425-7882&#13;
St. Dunstan’s Episcopal, 5635 E. 71st 492-7140&#13;
*St. Jerome’s Parish Church, 205 W. King 582-3088&#13;
*Tulsa Area United Way, 1430S. Boulder 583-7171&#13;
TNAAPP(Native American men), Indian Health Care 582-7225&#13;
Tul sa County Health Department, 4616 E. 15 595-4105&#13;
Confidential HIV Testing - by appt. on Thursdays only&#13;
743-4297&#13;
298-0827&#13;
Tulsa Okla. for Human Rights, c/o The Pride Center&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform/Leather Seekers Assoc.&#13;
*Tulsa City Hall, Ground Floor Vestibule&#13;
*Tulsa Commumty College Campuses&#13;
*Tulsa Gay Community Center, 1307 E. 38, 74105&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity, 3355 S. Jamestown&#13;
BARTLESVILLE&#13;
743-4297&#13;
749-8833&#13;
*Bartlesville Public Library, 600 S. Johnstone 918-337-5353&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY/NORMAN&#13;
*Borders Books &amp;Music, 3209NWExpressway 405-848-2667&#13;
*Borders Books &amp; Music, 300 Norman Center 405-573-4907&#13;
TAHLEQUAH&#13;
*Stonewall League, call for information: 918-456-7900&#13;
*Tahlequah Unitarian-Universalist Church 918-456-7900&#13;
*Green Cotmtry AIDS Coalition, POB 1570 918-453-9360&#13;
NSU School of Optometry, 1001 N. Grand&#13;
HIVtesting every other Tues. 5:30-8:30, call for dates&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS&#13;
*Autumn Breeze Restaurant, Hwy. 23&#13;
*Jim &amp; Brent’s Bistro, 173 S. Main&#13;
DeVito’s Restaurant, 5 Center St.&#13;
*Emerald Rainbow, 45 &amp;l/2 Spring St.&#13;
MCC of the Living Spring&#13;
Geek to Go!, PC Specialist, POB 429&#13;
Old Jailhouse Lodging, 15 Montgomery&#13;
Positive Idea Marketing Plans&#13;
Sparky’s, Hwy. 62 East&#13;
*White Light, 1 Center St.&#13;
FA YETTEVI LLE, ARKANSAS5&#13;
*Edna’s, 9 S. School Ave.&#13;
JOPLIN, MISSOURI&#13;
*Spirit of Christ MCC, 2639 E. 32, Ste. U134&#13;
501-253-7734&#13;
501-253-7457&#13;
501-253-6807&#13;
501-253-5445&#13;
501-253-9337&#13;
501-253-2776&#13;
501-253-5332&#13;
501-624-6646&#13;
501-253-6001&#13;
501-253-4074&#13;
501-442-2845&#13;
417-623-4696&#13;
* is where you can ftndTFN. Notall areGay-ownedbutallare Gay-friendly.&#13;
Holy Union&#13;
Ceremony&#13;
Alan Williams and Gregory Casillas&#13;
celebrated a Holy Union Ceremony on&#13;
Friday, September 24, 1999, in Eureka&#13;
Springs, AR. Presiding over the intimate&#13;
union was Reverend Vivian Juett. The&#13;
commitment ceremony was witnessed by&#13;
Zoe Dearing and Nancy Ermding.&#13;
After traveling to Dallas, TX, San&#13;
Francisco, CA and Nashville, TN to&#13;
celebrate with friends and family, the&#13;
couple will reside for’a short period in&#13;
Tulsa.&#13;
Obiturary&#13;
Dr. W. Malcolm Jacox, a veterinarian&#13;
well known in the community for his&#13;
kindness and gentleness with both his&#13;
animal patients and their caregive~s, died&#13;
Sept. 22. Services were held at Floral&#13;
Haven Memorial Gardens Mausoleum on&#13;
Sept. 25. He will be greatly missed by&#13;
many both in and out of the Gay&#13;
He is survived by his family and his&#13;
longtime companion. Those who wish to&#13;
honor his memory are encouraged to&#13;
support a charity of their choice.&#13;
Condolences may be sent care of Jacox&#13;
Animal Clinic, 2732 East 15th, Tulsa&#13;
74104.&#13;
Mr. Tulsa ¯&#13;
Leather 2000&#13;
The Mr. Tulsa Leather 2000 contest was&#13;
held September 10, 1999, at the Silver&#13;
Star Saloon in Tulsa, Oklahoma.The&#13;
evening included a benefit for Miss Gay&#13;
Mid America, Catia Lee Love. Love will&#13;
participate in the Miss Gay America&#13;
contest.&#13;
Four contestants participated in the&#13;
contest: Jay Fleming, Kelly Kirby, Dayvid&#13;
Montross, and Tony Hall, all of Tulsa&#13;
Oklahoma. Themencompeted in Personal&#13;
Interview, Street Wear, Swimwear/&#13;
Physique, and Full Leather Image events.&#13;
The judging panel consisted of: Ron&#13;
Greenwood, Mike Ryan, Ed Smith, John&#13;
McCuistian, Don Lawrence, all also from&#13;
Tulsa. The tally master was James Murray,&#13;
Mr. Tulsa Leather 1997.&#13;
The winner of the contest was Jay&#13;
Fleming of Tulsa. Jay is a past "Mr Gay.&#13;
Leather Long Beach 1987" and the 20th&#13;
Elected Emperor, Greater California&#13;
Empire. Fleming will compete for the&#13;
Oklahoma Mr. Leather 2000 title on&#13;
October 22-24, 1999.&#13;
Heis an event promoter for such events&#13;
in Tulsa as Mayfest, Gatesway Balloon&#13;
Festival and chairmanof Street Party 2000;&#13;
benefiting Street School and Tulsa at risk&#13;
youth.&#13;
Contestproducer, Ric Poston,MrTulsa&#13;
Leather 1999 and the Oklahoma Mr&#13;
Leather 1999, said of Fleming, "he is an&#13;
outstanding citizen and will be a great&#13;
representative for the Tulsa Leather&#13;
Community." The first runner up was&#13;
Kelly Kirby and the 2nd runner up was&#13;
Dayvid Montross.&#13;
For more information on OML2000,&#13;
check the T.U.L.S.A. website at&#13;
WWW.TULSALEATHER.com&#13;
Editorial: Un!ted Our Way&#13;
by Tom Neal, editor andpublisher&#13;
This year is the 75th anniversary of a program of&#13;
charitable giving in Tulsa which has become known as&#13;
Tulsa Area United Way (TAUW). Tulsa’s United Way&#13;
supports some 231 programs offered by 68 member&#13;
agencies and hopes to raise over $21 million and help&#13;
perhaps 250,000individuals this year. Obviously, all this&#13;
is worthy.&#13;
For example, oneof the I’d suggest that&#13;
agencies which TAUW supports is Tulsa instead of letting&#13;
"C.A.R.E.S., formerly and" TAU~V’ sllee its tare&#13;
moreaccuratelyknown as&#13;
the HIV Resource&#13;
Consortium. Tulsa Area&#13;
UnitedWayalso funds the&#13;
Community Service&#13;
Council that manages the&#13;
Tulsa Community AIDS&#13;
Project, one of the most&#13;
effective funding sources&#13;
for fighting HIV infection&#13;
and for providing care for.&#13;
individuals with HIV&#13;
relatedillnesses. These are&#13;
worthy organizations - as&#13;
are many, many others&#13;
which TAUW funds.&#13;
However, along withthe&#13;
many good organizations&#13;
which TAUW funds is&#13;
another. Thatis the Indian&#13;
Nations Council of the&#13;
Boy Scouts ofAmerica. It&#13;
off the top, glve your&#13;
dolhrs dlreetly to&#13;
Tulsa C.A.R.E.S. or&#13;
other or~an{zatlons in&#13;
our eommunlty...&#13;
groups that really do&#13;
give a damn about&#13;
us. Let’s stop using&#13;
our dollars and those&#13;
of our families and&#13;
friends to support&#13;
United Way’s&#13;
prejudlee and&#13;
eowardlee. Let us be&#13;
unlt,~ our way.&#13;
is the official policy of the Boy Scouts, both locally and&#13;
nationally, to discriminate on the basis of sexual&#13;
orientation. They’ve been rather explicit about this.&#13;
The last time the Indian Nations Council of the Boy&#13;
Scouts of America voiced this policy locally was in&#13;
August when James Dale, a former Scout in New Jersey,&#13;
successfully challenged the BSA’s apartheid policies&#13;
under New Jersey state law and won. A local BSA&#13;
representative however reiterated-its support for BSA&#13;
prejudice.&#13;
Now as a former Boy Scout, I’m hardly hostile to the&#13;
true values of the organization. But I do not believe that&#13;
thephrase, "morally straight," ori_ginating around th_etum&#13;
of the century, ever, ever could be thought to refer to&#13;
heterosexuality, using an interpretation of the word&#13;
"straight" whichnever existed until at leas t some 60 years&#13;
later. However I recognize that it is the prerogative under&#13;
current federal, state and local law, of the BSA to engage&#13;
in invidious discrimination if it chooses to do so. It is&#13;
reprehensible behavior but it is quite legal.&#13;
However, even if this bigoted conduct is legal, there is&#13;
no justification for Tulsa Area United Way to use the&#13;
funds it receives from the community as a whole to&#13;
subsidize the systematic discrimination of the Indian&#13;
Nations Council of the Boy Scouts of America. After all,&#13;
if we were to substitute "no Jews allowed" or "no Blacks&#13;
allowed" lot"no fags allowed," I would hardy have to be&#13;
writing this essay.&#13;
Part of why TAUW still funds this apartheid&#13;
organization is an accident of history. The Boy Scouts&#13;
have been funded for most of TUAW’s existence. Back&#13;
in thoseearly days theBSA was one ofafew organizations&#13;
that did address youth issues. That is no longer so. Andin&#13;
contrast with the BSA, the Girl Scouts, for example, have&#13;
explicitly said that sexual orientation is not relevant to&#13;
participation in their organization and they have a nondiscrimination&#13;
policy.&#13;
Now if Tulsa Area United Way had a comprehensive&#13;
non-discrimination policy, they might have some greater&#13;
degree of credibilityas an organization committed to fair&#13;
treatment of all. But they don’t.&#13;
Infact, Ms. "duck’n’cover" KathleenJ. Coan, president&#13;
and chief professional officer, is so gun-shy of the issue&#13;
she’s managed not to returnphone calls to this newspaper&#13;
for nearly four years -now that’s what I call real&#13;
professional conduct (though in fairness, Ms. Coan did&#13;
take aphone call once whenTFN was calling on deadline&#13;
and her p.r. person was unavailable) But it does call into&#13;
question, Ms. Coan and TAUW’s commitment to all of&#13;
Tulsa’s communities when she seems primarily willing&#13;
to talk to non-minority news orggnizations, for example,&#13;
." The Tulsa World- not frequently known for challenging&#13;
¯ the Tulsapower establishment, often inseparable from it.&#13;
." And what is more troubling about the unexamined&#13;
¯ decision to continue to fund the Indian Nations Council&#13;
¯ of the Boy Scouts of America by TAUW is the lack of ¯&#13;
leadership from TAUW’s board of directors.&#13;
¯ A number of TAUW board members come from&#13;
¯ corporations that claim that they do not discriminate on&#13;
." sexual orientation. Foremost among these are Public&#13;
~ Service Company of Oklahoma, Dollar Thrifty&#13;
¯: Automotive Group, Inc. and Bank of America, and yet,&#13;
somehow, not one of these very highly paid and&#13;
: presumably ratberintelligent men seem to havemade the&#13;
_" connection between their own corporate policies&#13;
¯ emphasizingfairness andTAUW’s supportfor ablatantly ¯&#13;
bigoted program. Or perhaps they’vejust not"counected&#13;
." the dots." Or perhaps, they’re hoping thatnoone will ever&#13;
¯ hold them responsible. ¯&#13;
Regardless, until Tulsa Area United Way see fit to&#13;
: begin to treat Lesbian and Gay Tulsans as equal human&#13;
: beings by adding sexual orientation to its non-&#13;
,. discrimination policies and chooses not to fund&#13;
¯ organizations which discriminate, the best bet is for us to&#13;
¯ not to contribute to Tulsa Area United Way but to take&#13;
." those same dollars and to give them directly to worthy&#13;
¯ organizations.&#13;
¯ I’d suggest that instead of letting TAUW slice its take&#13;
¯ off the top, give your dollars directly to Tulsa C.A.R.E.S.&#13;
¯. or other organizations in our community, like the&#13;
¯ community center, or the Cimarron Alliance or PFLAG,&#13;
¯ groups that really do give a danm about us. Let’s stop&#13;
¯ using Our dollars and those of our families and friends to&#13;
¯ support UnitedWay’s prejudice and cowardice. Let us be&#13;
¯ united our way. ¯&#13;
TulsaFamily News editorandpublisherTomNealhas&#13;
¯ volunteeredonaUnitedWayfundsdistributioncommittee&#13;
¯ on services for semor citizens tn the Tulsa area. ¯&#13;
Unfortunately, hefound thatTulsaArea UnitedWay staff&#13;
went out of their way to censor and suppress questions&#13;
¯ about how well member agencies were serving Lesbian&#13;
¯ and Gay seniors, even when the agencies were willing to ¯&#13;
answer the questions and despite TAUW claims that&#13;
¯ their evaluationprocess is "volunteer driven." Neal also&#13;
¯ has asked to serve on the funds distribution committee&#13;
¯ which looks at the funding for the Boy Scouts Indian ¯&#13;
Nations Council but, for some reason, keeps getting&#13;
¯ reassigned to senior services - imagine that.&#13;
First and foremost, let me put your mind at rest about&#13;
¯ two of our regular columnists, our fabulous Do-It-&#13;
" Yourself-Dyke, Mary Schepers and Tulsa City-County&#13;
¯ Library book reviewer, Barry Hensley. Both columns&#13;
¯ will resume next month.&#13;
¯ An,other upcoming event is the annual World AIDS ¯&#13;
Day Memorial Service. This year’s event will be at&#13;
¯ Mount Zion Baptist Church under the auspices of the&#13;
¯ Rev. Calvin McCutchen, Sr., one of Tulsa’s most ¯&#13;
distinguished religious leaders. The date, as always will&#13;
¯ be Dec. 1st which is a Wednesday but the details of the&#13;
~ march and precise time of the service will be announced.&#13;
¯ It is expected that Council Oak Mens Chorale who had ¯&#13;
their first ever performance at a World AIDS Day&#13;
¯ Memorial Service will again lend their talents. The event&#13;
. is being co-ordinated by Diane Zike, former executive&#13;
¯ directorof Interfaith AIDS Ministries andBeverlyDenton ¯&#13;
Galbreith. For more information, call 438-2437. - TN&#13;
An nouncements Policy&#13;
Tulsa Family News will provide space for holy union&#13;
¯ ceremony, mamage ceremony, birth, adoption and death&#13;
" announcements on a space available basis. Photos are&#13;
~ wdcome, though we cannot promise placement or return&#13;
¯ them, so please send copies to TFN, POB 4140, Tulsa&#13;
¯ 74159.&#13;
¯ Letters Policy ¯&#13;
Tulsa Family News¯ welcomes letters on issues which&#13;
¯ we’ve covered or on issues you think need to be considered.&#13;
You may request that your name be withheld but&#13;
¯ letters must be signed &amp;h.ave phone numbers, or be hand&#13;
~- delivered. 200 word letters are preferred. Letters to other&#13;
~ publications will be printed as is appropriate.&#13;
Drug-resistant Strains&#13;
of AIDS Virus Rising&#13;
CHICAGO (AP) - Highly drug-resistant strains of the&#13;
AIDS virus are on the rise, showingupin as many as 4.5%&#13;
ofnewlyinfectedpatients in twonew studies. "Resistance&#13;
is slowly increasing," said Dr. Roger J. Pomerantz, an&#13;
expert not involved with either study, "If you were&#13;
looking at this five years ago, you would see zero."&#13;
The studies - published in the Journal of the American&#13;
Medical Association (JAMA) - involve mostly Gay&#13;
white men. Resistance, however, may be more prevalent&#13;
in other groups, such as drug users and their sex partners,&#13;
researchers-said.&#13;
About 40,000 new HIV infections occur yearly in the&#13;
United States. In recent years, powerful drug cocktails&#13;
have subdued the virus to undetectable levels in many&#13;
patients. But studies have found the virus persists or&#13;
comes roaring back in 10% to 50%.&#13;
The complicated drug regimen has proved difficult to&#13;
adhere to, and many patients who missed doses or quit&#13;
taking theirmedicines developed drug-resistantinfections&#13;
that are now being passed’along to others.&#13;
"I wasn’t that surprised. This is what happens in&#13;
infectious disease," said Pomerantz, director of the Center&#13;
for Human Virology at Jefferson Medical College in&#13;
Philadelphia.&#13;
HIV is still so new that scientists disagree even about&#13;
how to define resistance. And since both studies used&#13;
laboratory tests, no one really knows how the definitions&#13;
will translate into patient care. Giving high doses of a&#13;
drug may be enough to overwhelm a virus’ resistance,&#13;
Pomerantz said.&#13;
In one study, researchers at the University ofCalifornia&#13;
at San Diego defined resistance as a 10-fold increase in&#13;
HIV’s ability to withstand a drug when compared with a&#13;
laboratory strain. That study, led by Dr. Susan J. Little.&#13;
tested 141 patients - in San Diego, Los Angeles, Dallas,&#13;
Denver and Boston- and found that three (2%) had HIV&#13;
with at least 10-fold greater resistance to one or more&#13;
drugs. An additional 36 patients (26%) had HIV that was&#13;
2.5 to 10 times more resistant.&#13;
In the other study, researchers at Rockefeller University&#13;
in New York defined resistance as a threefold increase in&#13;
HIV’s ability to withstand a drug. That study, led by Dr.&#13;
Daniel Boden of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research&#13;
Center, tested 80 subjects in New York and Los Angeles.&#13;
Of 67 in whom resistance could be tested, three (4.5%)&#13;
had HIV that was highly resistant- fivefold resistant- to&#13;
multiple drugs. The subjects were among 18 (26.8%)&#13;
with HIV that was at least threefold resistant to at least&#13;
one drug.&#13;
Testing every newly infected patientfor drugresistance&#13;
would be impractical because the tests cost several&#13;
thousand dollars and are difficult to interpret, Pomerantz&#13;
said. But if a patient takes a drug cocktail faithfully and&#13;
it isn’t working, testing should be considered to see how&#13;
the combination of medicines might be reformulated, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Don’t Go to Sleep Yet&#13;
For a while, it seemed that there mightbe a light at the end&#13;
of the tuunel of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. And for many&#13;
¯ things are better than they used to be: to become HIV&#13;
¯ positive is not immediatdy to know that your death was&#13;
likely six months away like it was in the 80s.&#13;
But the news report above from The Associated Press&#13;
¯ should slam home the message that we cannot be&#13;
¯ complacent; we must continue to educate ourselves and&#13;
¯ our children about protecting themselves against HIV&#13;
¯ infection, through all appropriate means: safer sex with&#13;
¯ its reduced risk, no sex, i.e. abstinence where appropriate&#13;
¯ and through the strengthening of longterm relationships ¯&#13;
through their legal recognition not only for heterosexuals&#13;
¯ but for Gay men and Lesbians.&#13;
¯ The best way to deal with AIDS is to prevent further&#13;
¯ infections but also to insist on adequate funding for ¯&#13;
proper care for those who are already infected and more&#13;
¯ funding for more successful treatments for AIDS.&#13;
¯ Please, please be safe, hdp those still in need and&#13;
¯ remember those whom we have lost. -Tom Neal&#13;
Accused Killer of Gay&#13;
Soldier To Stand Trial&#13;
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (AP) - An Army private&#13;
charged with premeditated murder in the. beating&#13;
death ofafellow FortCampbell soldierwill stand trial&#13;
at a general court-martial, the Army said Sept. 24th.&#13;
Thecharge against Pvt. CalvinN. Gloverwas referred&#13;
to court-martial by Maj. Gen. Robert T. Clark, Fort&#13;
Campbell’ s commanding gelleral. Clark reviewed an&#13;
iiiv~tigative hearing he~’d in August for Glovet and&#13;
rexx:ived recommendations from the investigating&#13;
officer, brigade commander and staffjudge advocate.&#13;
The hearing was similar to a civilian grand jury&#13;
investigation. Glover, of Sulphur, Okla.,is charged in&#13;
the death of Pfc. Ban-y L. ,Winchell, of Kansas City,&#13;
Me. No date has been set for G10ver’s courtmartial,&#13;
which will be open to the public. The courtmartial&#13;
is scheduled to be at Fort Campbell.&#13;
According to Army investigators, the 21-year-old&#13;
Winchellwas beaten with abaseball batinhis barracks&#13;
on July 5 and died the following day at Vanderbilt&#13;
University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. Gay&#13;
civil-rights advocates say anti-Gay sentiment m,ay&#13;
have been behind, or at least contributed to, me&#13;
ldlling. Winehell was perceived as Gay by some&#13;
soldiers in his mlit and friends contend he was&#13;
beginning to explore his homosexuality when he&#13;
Another investigative hearing was held several&#13;
weeks ago for Spec. Justin R. Fisher, who is accused&#13;
of being an accomplice in Winchell’s death. Fisher,&#13;
of Lincoln, Neb., is accused of .encouraging Glover in&#13;
the attack and lying to Army ii~qestigators about his&#13;
iiavolvement. No decision has been made yet on&#13;
whether Fisher’s case should proceed to a courtmartial,&#13;
an Army official added. Both Glover and&#13;
Fisher are being held at Fort Knox.&#13;
Gay Priest Resigns&#13;
NEWARK,N.J. (Ap)-AGaypriestwhoseordination&#13;
divided the Episcopal church has left theparish where&#13;
he ministered for six years, blaming the controversy&#13;
that surroundedhim. Rev. Barry Stopfel said the furor&#13;
strained his relationship withhis partner, andpreached&#13;
his last sermon at St. George’ s Church in Maplewood&#13;
at the end of September. "My ministry has not been a&#13;
typical one," Stopfel toldThe Star-Ledger ofNewark,&#13;
N.J. in a story published recently. "It has been deeply&#13;
gratifying but very stressful, and ithas taken its toll on&#13;
me and our marriage."&#13;
When Stopfel was ordained as a deacon in 1990,&#13;
conservative Episcopal bishops filed heresy charges&#13;
against Newark Bishop Walter Righter. Righter’s&#13;
trial was averted, but a church court in 1996 ruled that&#13;
church doctrine does not explicitly bar the ordination&#13;
of practicing homosexuals. The division, however,&#13;
remained between the church’s conservative and&#13;
liberal factions. Stopfel, 51, andhis partner aremoving&#13;
to a 25-acre farm in an Amish area of Pennsylvania,&#13;
where he said he will write a book.&#13;
Methodist Minister&#13;
Faces 2nd Church Trial&#13;
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -The Rev. Jimmy Creech, who&#13;
faces another church trial for performing a Gay union&#13;
ceremony, said the churchlaw against suchceremonies&#13;
amounts to institutional bigotry againstGayChristians.&#13;
Reached at his Raleigh, N.C., home, Creech said he&#13;
was disappointed but not surprised with.a church&#13;
committee’s deci~i0n ordering him to stand trial.&#13;
Nebraska United Methodist Church Bishop Joel&#13;
Martinezannouncedthfit theformerNebraskaminister&#13;
will stand trial for Officiating a Chapel Hill, N.C.&#13;
ceremony fortwo meninApril.AMarch 1998 church&#13;
trial cleared Creech of violating church law for a&#13;
similar 1997 ceremony involving two women. At&#13;
least two complaints were filed as aresult of the April&#13;
ceremony. Atissuein Creech’s 1998 trial was whether&#13;
thechurch’s ban on same-sex unionswas a pastoral&#13;
guideline or church law. The church has since&#13;
established the ban is church law.&#13;
Creech said the trial will be "a detriment to the&#13;
church." "It’s a waste of time and money. The trial is&#13;
an actofviolence againstLesbians, Gays andbisexual&#13;
people," Creech said. While Creech said he admits he&#13;
violated the churchlaw byperforming the Chapel Hill&#13;
ceremony, the immorality of this law makes him&#13;
innocent of violating the order.and discipline of his&#13;
denomination, ofwhichheis accused. "I think thelaw&#13;
itself is a violation of the highest ethical standards of&#13;
the United Methodist Church," Creech said. Creech&#13;
said thechurch’ s positiononGayunions is comparable&#13;
to racism. "How can such an encumbered church&#13;
witness to the grace bf God?" he asked.&#13;
Martinez’s assistant, Rev. Mel Luetchens, said&#13;
Martinez will .appoint another bishop as presiding&#13;
authority for the case. A jury of 13 ministers will&#13;
[ecide Creech"s fate. Ministers will lead the defense&#13;
and theprosecution.Thetrial likely will beinNebraska&#13;
in the next couple of months,-Luetchens said. If&#13;
convicted Creech faces a wide range of possible&#13;
)unishments, including dismissal from the United&#13;
Methodist clergy.&#13;
Creech is on voluntary leave of absence after.&#13;
Martinezdeclined toreappointhim pastorofOmah.a’s&#13;
First United Methodist Church after the earher&#13;
controversy. He remains part of the Nebraska&#13;
conference and is answerable to Martinez.&#13;
Vermont JudgeJudged&#13;
By His Wife’s Vote&#13;
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - A group opposed to&#13;
same-sex marriage; "Take it to the People," says a&#13;
VermontSupremeCourtjusticemightnotbeimpartial&#13;
as he reviews a pending case.&#13;
"Take it to the People" says the wife ofJusticeJohn&#13;
Dooley voted in June as a member of the Governor’s&#13;
Commission on Women to give an award to the three&#13;
same-sex couples who are challengxn.g Vermont&#13;
marriage law. Sandra Dooley’s vote raises questions&#13;
about whether the justice is impartial in the case now&#13;
before the Vermont Supreme Court, said Ruth&#13;
Charlesworth of Burlington, a member of the antimarriage&#13;
group. "I think it is outrageous that the wife&#13;
of the Supreme Courtjusdce should come out (with a&#13;
public stand) when this issue isn’t yet decided,"&#13;
Charlesworth said. ’‘This isn’t fair to the citizens of&#13;
Vermont."&#13;
Thecourtis considering alawsuit seeking to overtmal&#13;
the state’s refusal to issue marriage licenses to samesex&#13;
couples. Despite its concerns, ’’Take it to the&#13;
People" hasn’tformally requested thatJustice Dooley&#13;
disqualify himself from the case.&#13;
Judith Sutphen, executive director ofthe Governor’ s&#13;
Commission on Women, said Sandra Dooley has&#13;
been on the commission for 15 years. Theorganization&#13;
has supported allowing same-sex couples to marry&#13;
since. 1996 - before the lawsuit brought by two Gay&#13;
men and four Lesbian women was appealed_ to the&#13;
Supreme Court, Sutphen said.&#13;
Commissioners have the right to take independent&#13;
votes on issues, Sutphen said. "A wife has a right to&#13;
vote as she chooses, as does a husband," she said.&#13;
"The votes of one spouse don’t necessarily reflect the&#13;
. judgment or opinion of the other spouse."&#13;
"Take it to the People" argues that rules of judicial&#13;
¯ conduct sayjudges should disqualify themselves when&#13;
their spouses have interests that could be substantially&#13;
: affected by the proceeding. The lawyers at the office&#13;
." of the attorney general who are defending the state’s&#13;
mamage lawweren’t available to comment.&#13;
-" Beth Robinson, an attorney representing the three&#13;
: couples in the Supreme Court appeal, said she felt&#13;
confident the deliberations would be fair. "We have&#13;
: no reason to question Jusdce Dooley’s ability to&#13;
~ impartially judge this case on its legal merits,"&#13;
: Robinson said. "Justice Dooley and his wife are two&#13;
¯ different people with two different jobs to do."&#13;
¯ Judge Dismisses Same-&#13;
Sex Marriage Lawsuit&#13;
¯&#13;
ANCHORAGE (AP) - A judge has dismissed a&#13;
lawsuit filedby twoAnchoragemenwho claimed that&#13;
: the state’s marriage laws discriminated against them.&#13;
¯ Judge Peter Michalski took the action late in&#13;
¯ September, nearly a year after Alaska voters&#13;
¯ overwhelmingly passed a constitutional amendment&#13;
¯ limiting marriage to a union of one man and one&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA, PC&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
a professional corporation&#13;
747-5466&#13;
402i S.Ha~vard, sifite 2.10~-T~llsa 74135&#13;
MCC-United&#13;
forme.rly Family of Faith &amp; Greater Tulsa MCC&#13;
.Joined as one body of believers.&#13;
Come celebrate with us.&#13;
Sunday Services, 11 am&#13;
1623 North Maplewood, 838-1715&#13;
HOUSE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT&#13;
Sun. Worship, 10:45 am, Sunday School, 9:30 am&#13;
Wed. Bible Study, 7 pm&#13;
3210b S. Norwood, Info: 224-4754, Chris or Sharon&#13;
Sandra Hill M.s.&#13;
Licensed Professional &amp; National Certified&#13;
Counselor, Certified Hypnotherapist&#13;
Psychotherapy &amp; Clinical Consultation&#13;
After Hours Appointments Available&#13;
2865 E. Skelly Drive, Suite 215,745-1111&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Congregation&#13;
at Community ofHope&#13;
2545 South Yale, Sundays at llam, 749-0595&#13;
A Welcoming Congregation&#13;
Mingo Valley Flowers&#13;
9413 E. 31st St., Tulsa 74145&#13;
918-663 -5934, fax: 663-5834, 800-~, A. d -5934&#13;
Family Owned &amp; Operated&#13;
Trinna L. W. Burrows, LSW; ACSW&#13;
Child, Family, Individual &amp; Couple Psychotherapy&#13;
(918) 743-9559&#13;
2121 South Columbia, Suite 420&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74114-3518&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity&#13;
Loving, Inclusive Christian Spirituality&#13;
Sunda~, Worship Services&#13;
9:15 and 11:00 a.m.&#13;
www.openmindopenheart.org/Tulsa/Unity&#13;
3355 S. Jamestown Avenue&#13;
(918) 749-8833&#13;
Rev. Steve Colladay, Minister&#13;
Hpine of the Daily Word&#13;
OKLAHOMA COMMUNICATIONS&#13;
Local- Long Distance&#13;
Cellular- Paging&#13;
747-1508&#13;
Free Car Adaptor &amp;&#13;
Leather Case with New Cell Phone&#13;
The Pride Store&#13;
1307 E. 38th, 2nd floor&#13;
in Tulsa’s Gay Community Services Center&#13;
743-GAYS (743-4297)&#13;
6-9 pm, Sunday - Friday&#13;
12-9pm, Saturday, all sales benefit the Center&#13;
KEVIN BURLESO N&#13;
Keller Williams Realty&#13;
712-2252&#13;
Burleson@kw.com&#13;
2651 East 21st Street, Ste. 100, Tulsa 74114&#13;
An Independent Member Broker&#13;
Housekeeping &amp;&#13;
Gardening Service&#13;
Contact Patti on: (918) 582 8460&#13;
POB 3150, Tulsa, OK; 74101&#13;
OPENARMS,OPENMINDS,OPENHEARTS&#13;
Saint Aidan&#13;
4045 N. Cincinnati. 425-7882&#13;
Saint John&#13;
4200 S. Atlanta Place. 742-7381&#13;
Saint Dunstan&#13;
5635 East 71st, 492-7140&#13;
Trinity&#13;
501 S. Cincinnati. 582-4128&#13;
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You&#13;
Jay Brause and Gene Dugan had claimed in their&#13;
lawsuit that it was discriminatory to not allow samesex&#13;
couples the same health insurance and other&#13;
benefits that married and unmarried heterosexual&#13;
couples enjoy. It was their lawsuit that spurred the&#13;
pbtition drive that put the same-sex marriage&#13;
amendment before voters last November.&#13;
Bob Wagstaff, the lawyer representing the two&#13;
men, says the case will be appealed to the state&#13;
Supreme Court. Wagstaff says his clients’ lawsuit is&#13;
at its heart an equal-rights case, not a Gay marriage&#13;
Town Considering&#13;
Partners Registry&#13;
ASHLAND, Ore: (AP) - Same-sex couples can’t get&#13;
married in Oregon, but in this town, they may soon be&#13;
able to get registered. The City Council is likely to&#13;
consider settingupsucharegistry for domesticpartners&#13;
at its upcoming meeting Oct. 5. City Attorney Patti&#13;
Nolte said he is unaware of a similar registry in&#13;
Oregon.&#13;
The registry would allow domestic partners - two&#13;
unmarried people age 18 or older who live togetherto&#13;
document that relationship. Gay couples cannot&#13;
marry under Oregon law, which recognizes marriage&#13;
as the union of a manand a woman.&#13;
"I believe it is appropriate that AglJland, as a caring&#13;
community, should lead the way," said Neil Sechan,&#13;
speaking for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and&#13;
Transgender Political Caucus of Southern Oregon.&#13;
The local chapter of Parents, Family and Friends of&#13;
Lesbians and Gays are also backing the proposed&#13;
registry.&#13;
Mayor Cathy Shaw said she believes a registry&#13;
would have limited effect on unmarried couples,&#13;
whether heterosexual or same-sex. "I would be&#13;
incredibly proud to be mayor of a community that&#13;
provides this service," she said recendy. "I am a great&#13;
believer in the institution of marriage... I understand&#13;
why this community is asking us to do this -.how&#13;
importantit.is to be able to celebrate in an official way&#13;
your commitment to another person.’"&#13;
Rosemary Dunn Dalton, also speaking for the&#13;
caucus, said a registry would let unmarried couples&#13;
establishrelationships for purposes ofvisitation rights&#13;
in hospitals and other institutions. She said a registry&#13;
would provide proof of partnership for businesses&#13;
offering benefits to domestic partners.&#13;
The Oregon Court ofAppeals decided last year that&#13;
if local governments offer benefits to domestic&#13;
partners, they cannot deny benefits to same-sex&#13;
couples because of the constitutional guarantee of&#13;
equal protection. The court did not nile on Oregon’s&#13;
legal definition of marriage. Ashland is among the&#13;
local governments that have extended benefits to&#13;
same-sex couples to comply with the ruling.&#13;
A proposed ballot measure, to write the definition&#13;
of marriage into the state constitution and bar benefits&#13;
to unmarried couples, died in the 1999 Legislature.&#13;
Albuquerque To Vote&#13;
On Discrimination Ban&#13;
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) - Lillian Mueller says she&#13;
Gays in Albuquerque have lost their jobs and been&#13;
denied housing because of their sexual orientation.&#13;
Mueller, the mother of a Gay son and president of the&#13;
local chapter of Parents, Families and Friends of&#13;
Lesbians and Gays, has formed a new group called&#13;
TheCampaignforHumanRights. The group’s purpose&#13;
is to mobilize support for a proposed amendment to&#13;
the Albuquerque city charter that would add sexual&#13;
orientation and mental disability to the antidiscrimination&#13;
section.&#13;
The issue will be on the Oct. 5 municipal election&#13;
ballot. The charter now bans discrimination based on&#13;
race, religion, sex and national origin. "It’s not a&#13;
question of special rights," she said. "It’s a question&#13;
of equal rights.’"&#13;
Butthe Christian Coalition ofNew Mexico strongly&#13;
opposes the charter amendment because it believes&#13;
"the Gay lifestyle" is wrong. Mark Burton, Christian&#13;
Coalition executive director, said his group will alert&#13;
people in voters guides that go to about 300 churches.&#13;
"It’s not a behavior that we want to have a&#13;
nondiscrimination policy for," he said. "It’s a health&#13;
haTard. It spreads AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases,&#13;
so there’s no reason to endorse a behavior that’s&#13;
dangerous and hazardous."&#13;
Albuquerque added a human rights section to its&#13;
charter in the early 1970s. The state Legislature in&#13;
March rejected a bill that would have outlawed&#13;
discrimination based on sexual orientation. It was the&#13;
"third time such a measure was killedin the House. The&#13;
bill would have expanded the state’s Human Rights&#13;
Act to cover sexual orientation, malting it il!egal’to&#13;
discriminate on that basis in matters of empld’yment,&#13;
housing, credit, public-accommodations and’union&#13;
membership.&#13;
Eleven states and more than 170 local governments&#13;
include sexual orientation in their nondiscrimination&#13;
statutes, supporters Of the bill say. The cify of&#13;
Albuquerque bars Such discrimination against its&#13;
employees and when providing public services.&#13;
Alleged Killers of Gay&#13;
Men Must Stand Trial&#13;
REDDING, Calif. (AP) - Two brothers accused of&#13;
murdering a Gay couplemust stand trial and may face&#13;
the deathpenalty ifconvicted, ShastaCounty Superior&#13;
Court Judge James Ruggiero has ruled.&#13;
Benjamin M. Williams, 31, and James T. Williams,&#13;
29, will each be tried on two counts of murder and&#13;
related charges. The brothers are accused of killing&#13;
Gary Matson, 50, and Winfield Scott Mowder, 40, in&#13;
July. They are also suspects in June arson fires that&#13;
caused more than $1 million in damage to three&#13;
Sacramento-area synagogues. Matson and Mowder&#13;
were found shot to death in their bed July 1 in rural&#13;
Happy Valley, about 165 miles north of Sacramento.&#13;
The Williams brothers, being held without bail,&#13;
have pleaded innocent to first-degreemurder and four&#13;
robbery, burglary and auto theft charges. The judge&#13;
ruled that prosecutors can seek the death penalty, a&#13;
decision that hasn’t been made.&#13;
Prep School Attacker&#13;
Free Until Trial&#13;
GREENFIELD, Mass. (AP) - A Tennessee youth&#13;
accused of using a knife to cut anti-Gay slur into the&#13;
back of a fellow prep school student can continue&#13;
college classes while awaiting trial, a judge said.&#13;
Matthew Rogers, 20, of Franklin, Tenn., pleaded to&#13;
charges of assault with a dangerous weapon.&#13;
Franklin Superior Court Judge Lawrence Wemick&#13;
continued bail at $10,000 cash or $50,000 bond on&#13;
condition Rogers live with his parents or at the&#13;
University of Mississippi where he is taking classes.&#13;
Before his arrest, Rogers had held an appointment to&#13;
the U.S. Naval Academy.&#13;
Rogers and another student at the Northfield Mount&#13;
Hermon School, Jonathan Shapiro, 18, of Keene,&#13;
N.H., were initially charged in Greenfield District&#13;
Court following the May 27 incident. The two are&#13;
accused of slashing the word "HOMO" in shallow&#13;
cuts on the back of a 17-year-old student during a&#13;
dispute over music. Authorities said no one actually&#13;
believed the victim was Gay. The argument arose&#13;
over the rock band Queen and the characterization of&#13;
its music as "Gay."&#13;
Promoters of Community&#13;
Center To Respond&#13;
ELK CITY, Idaho (AP) - Promoters of a community&#13;
education and performing~center expect to respond&#13;
to charges by critics of the ~roposed c~nter who fear&#13;
it could be used by homosexuals and become a place&#13;
where teen-age girls get abortions. Plans to build the&#13;
center have created division in the town of about 400&#13;
in remote Idaho County. Objections to the center&#13;
range from locating it on school property to the fear&#13;
homosexuals will use it to stage performances and&#13;
teen-age girls getting abortions there. Critics have&#13;
said since the center would be on public land there&#13;
could not be restrictions placed on who uses it.&#13;
New AIDS Drug&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A medicine&#13;
developed in North Carolina that blocks&#13;
the AIDS virus from getting inside cells is&#13;
showing promise among patients whofail&#13;
to respond to standard AIDS drugs. The&#13;
medicine, code-named T-20, is still in&#13;
early-stage testing, but researchers said it&#13;
could offer a reprieve for those who have&#13;
run out of options.&#13;
"It looks quite good," said Dr. Michael&#13;
Saag of the University of Alabama. "We&#13;
are looking at something with a.totally&#13;
different method of. action. It is an&#13;
important, potent new option."&#13;
T~20 was discovered at Duke&#13;
University. It is being developed by&#13;
Hoffmatm-La Roche Inc. and Trimeris&#13;
Inc., a small biotech company in Durham,&#13;
N.C.&#13;
Thedrug is the furthest along of a new&#13;
class of AIDS medicines called fusion&#13;
inhibitors. They work by thwarting the&#13;
virus’s ability to fuse with blood cells and&#13;
insert their genetic material into them.&#13;
However, the treatment has one large&#13;
drawback compared with other AIDS&#13;
drugs: Instead of being a pill, it must be&#13;
injected twice daily. Nev~rtbeless, Saag&#13;
said patients in advanced stages of AIDS&#13;
are willing to give themselves shots, and&#13;
they seem to tolerate the drug well.&#13;
The results were reported by Dr. Jay&#13;
Lalezari of Quest Clinical Research in&#13;
SanFrancisco atameeting ofthe.,Aga,erican&#13;
Society for Microbiology.&#13;
Other AIDS drugs work principally by&#13;
thwarting the virus’s ability to stitch its&#13;
genetic material into cells it has invaded&#13;
orbyblocking its ability to dispersemature&#13;
copies of itself.&#13;
Doctors gave T-20 to 55 people who&#13;
had high levels of the AIDS virus despite&#13;
trying many different combinations of&#13;
AIDS medicines. While these standard&#13;
drugs have proved to be life savers for&#13;
many with AIDS, they do not work for all&#13;
patients.&#13;
Doctors administered T-20 in&#13;
combinationwith other drugs, eventhough&#13;
the patients’ HIV was resistant to the&#13;
older medicines. After four months of&#13;
treatment, virus levels fell significantly in&#13;
33 of the volunteers. In 20 of them, the&#13;
virus fell to levels too low to bemeasured.&#13;
Saag cautioned that the treatment is&#13;
unlikely to work forever. But he said&#13;
doctors hope it will dday rebound of the&#13;
virus for perhaps-a year.&#13;
T-20 is part of the protein thatmakes up&#13;
the AIDS virus’ outer coat. Ordinarily it&#13;
comes into play with another peptide- T-&#13;
21 - as the AIDS vinm grabs onto blood&#13;
cells andprepares to enter them. Scientists&#13;
found that flooding the body with extra&#13;
copies of T-20 gums up this attachment&#13;
process,&#13;
Another AIDS study released at the&#13;
meeting found that treatment very early in&#13;
the course of an AIDS infection does not&#13;
wipe out the virus entirely, as some had&#13;
hoped.&#13;
Dr. Martin Markowitz of the Aaron&#13;
Diamond AIDS Research Center in New&#13;
York City reported on four patients who&#13;
started treatment within seyen to 90 days&#13;
of catching HIV. All signs of their virus&#13;
disappeared, andthey chose to stop therapy&#13;
after three years:&#13;
Thevirus reappeared within two to three&#13;
weeks, One patient went back on&#13;
treatment, but the three others stayed off.&#13;
After shooting up, their virus levds fell&#13;
again to low butdetectable levds.&#13;
Researchers said the results raise the&#13;
possibility that in such situations, the&#13;
¯ body’s immune system may be able to&#13;
¯&#13;
k~p I-HV in check without completely&#13;
eliminating it. Are You Gay or Bisexual?&#13;
: Satcher Looks at Are You Native American?&#13;
:¯ Kids’ Health , . ,&#13;
Tulsa s Two-Sp,r,ted ,nd,an Mens&#13;
: ROBINSVILLE, Miss. (AP) - U.S. ¯ SurgeonGeneralDavidSatcherhasissued Support Group is here for you!&#13;
¯ a warning about the health of America’s&#13;
¯ children. Satcher, speaking to a health ¯ Evening support group meetings&#13;
: association recently in Tunica County,&#13;
¯&#13;
said children are growing fatter, lazier,&#13;
¯ Relationship workshops&#13;
¯ more sexually active and increasingly ¯ Short trips, outings and retreats&#13;
¯ addicted to toxic substances. ¯ Free HIV testing&#13;
¯ Satcher, former president of Meharry&#13;
¯ Medical College in Nashville, .Tenn.,&#13;
-spoke tO 400 public health care workers&#13;
¯ and advocates at the annual meeting of the&#13;
¯ Mississippi Public Health Association.&#13;
¯ Regarding the disparity in health care,&#13;
¯ Satcher said that in the last 10 years&#13;
minorities, women and children have&#13;
: fallen behind in many areas.&#13;
¯ Satcher said progress has been made in&#13;
¯ dealing with infectious diseases and there&#13;
¯ has been a decrease in the number of ¯&#13;
cancer cases, injury-related deaths and&#13;
¯&#13;
adult smokers. However, the munber of&#13;
: teen-age smokers has risen_rapidly, Satcher&#13;
¯ said.&#13;
Obesity has become a virtual epidemic&#13;
¯ among both adults and children, Satcher&#13;
said. The current generation of children&#13;
¯ and teen-agers is the most inactive the&#13;
¯&#13;
country has ever had.&#13;
One of the results of that inactivity has&#13;
¯ been an increase in Type 2 diabetes in&#13;
¯ children. In the past, physicians were told&#13;
never to look for Type 2 in individuals&#13;
¯ - under40 years old, Satcher said. Now, the&#13;
disease is occurring in children under the&#13;
age of 10. Emphasis must be placed on&#13;
physical activity and on diet, Satcher said.&#13;
The American diet consists mainiy offats&#13;
and sugars, he said. In one year, the average&#13;
American will consume 156 pounds of&#13;
added sugar.&#13;
Weneedto promotehealthy lifestyles,&#13;
Satcher said. "We need to promote&#13;
physical activities. We need to promote&#13;
nutrition and avoidance of toxins like&#13;
tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs. We&#13;
need to promote responsible sexual&#13;
behavior."&#13;
40% of college students and 30% of&#13;
high school students are binge dri.nking,&#13;
Satcher said. That has contributed to an&#13;
increase m automobile accidents and&#13;
irresponsible ~exual behavior.&#13;
"Weneed to talkmorewith ourchildren&#13;
aboutwhatit means tobesexually active,"&#13;
Satcher said. "When we don’ t teach sex in&#13;
¯ the schools, at home and in the churches,&#13;
¯ but they do teach it out on the streets or ¯&#13;
after school when there are no adults&#13;
¯ around, our children aren’t going to&#13;
¯ become responsible, sexual adults."&#13;
¯ His warning was directed not just to&#13;
teen-agers, but to all people. Every day,&#13;
16,000 peoplebecomeinfected with HIV,&#13;
¯ the virus that causes AIDS. In the years&#13;
: since the disease’s discovery, HIV has&#13;
¯ infected 50 million people and resultedin&#13;
14 million AIDS-related deaths.&#13;
¯ "In my opinion AIDS is the worst&#13;
: epidemic since the plague of the 14th&#13;
: century or maybe the influenza epidemic&#13;
," of 1918," Satcher said. "AIDS is&#13;
: increasingly a disease o,,f people of color,&#13;
¯ women and the young.&#13;
: African Americans account for almost&#13;
: 50% of new cases; Hispanics, 20%; and&#13;
¯ women, 25%. Not enough is being done&#13;
¯&#13;
to prevent the disease, Satcher said, even&#13;
though people know how to stop the&#13;
¯ spread.&#13;
For information call Tulsa Native American AIDS Prevention Project&#13;
at 582-7225 Ext. 208 or 218&#13;
Dial-Up Accounts&#13;
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AIDS Czar at&#13;
Detroit AIDS Walk&#13;
DETROIT (AP) - Federal AIDS czar&#13;
SandyThurmanandMayorDennis Archer&#13;
led thousands of walkers in a fund-raising&#13;
event for programs that help treat people&#13;
infected with the deadly disease. The&#13;
Detroit event was one of 12 statewide&#13;
sponsored by AIDS Walk Michigan.&#13;
"Walk on walkers!" Thurman shouted&#13;
to cheering participants at Hart Haza,&#13;
where the3.1-milewalkbeganandca_rex!..&#13;
Many held helium balloons and signs&#13;
with messages such as "AIDS has many&#13;
faces."&#13;
Despite the cheery atmosphere and&#13;
warm sunshine,Thurman broughta chilly&#13;
message about the disease, which she said&#13;
will have infected 100 million people&#13;
worldwide by 2005. "We’re at the&#13;
beginning of an epidemic, not the end of&#13;
an epidemic, with no vaccine, no cure,"&#13;
she told reporters before the walk began.&#13;
"It’s not going to be over next week. It’s&#13;
not going to be over in 10 years. It’s&#13;
probably not going to be over in my&#13;
lifetime.’"&#13;
A sign of hope is the success of anti-&#13;
AIDS drugs that are keeping thousands of&#13;
people infected with the HIV virus free&#13;
from symptoms. ButinmanyThirdWorld&#13;
natxon~, including much of AIDSdecimated&#13;
Africa, the medicines remain&#13;
unaffordable and the publichealth system&#13;
inadequate, she said.&#13;
This is the second year of a coordinated&#13;
AIDS WalkMichigan. Lastyear, 10 walks&#13;
statewide raised $2~0,000,&#13;
This year, walks also tookplace Sunday&#13;
inAnnArbor, BerrienCounty, Flint,Grand&#13;
Rapids, Holland-Saugatuck, Kalamazoo,&#13;
Lansing, Muskegon, Port Huron,&#13;
Saginaw-Midland-Bay City and Traverse&#13;
City.&#13;
But organizers sdid/he ~)etro’it event&#13;
was particularly important because of the&#13;
high rate of AIDS in the city. With about&#13;
10% of the state’s population, Detroit has&#13;
nearly half of the reported AIDS cases,&#13;
they said.&#13;
"It’s the No. 1 killer of young African-&#13;
American males and the No. 2 killer of&#13;
young black females," said Detroit&#13;
Episcopal Bishop R. Stewart Wood Jr. as&#13;
he set out on the walk.&#13;
Wood’s diocese, which has 35,000&#13;
members from Lansing to the Ohio line,&#13;
has not been immune from the effects of&#13;
AIDS.&#13;
"Every one of our congregations has&#13;
been touched by AIDS - members or&#13;
loved-ones who have the disease. We’ve&#13;
lost two of our clergy to AIDS," he said.&#13;
Teresa and Bill Snell came in from&#13;
Wayne County’s Redford Township to&#13;
walk in this year’s walk, taking turns&#13;
pushing 15-month-olddaughter Courtney&#13;
in a three-wheeled jogger’s stroller.&#13;
They raised a total of $49, most in&#13;
pledges of $2 to $3, for their part in the&#13;
walk. The 20 walkers from Mrs. Shell’s&#13;
agency, the Detroit Hispanic Development&#13;
Corp., raised $1,500 for. the fight, against&#13;
AIDS. "It affects so many people and&#13;
families around you," she said. "I don’t&#13;
know anyone who has died,.of AIDS, but&#13;
I do know that it is something that affects&#13;
all kinds of people," her husband said.&#13;
"It’s something that’s got to be stopped."&#13;
Award Given to&#13;
African Groups&#13;
NEW YORK (AP) - The world’s largest&#13;
humanitarian prize - $1 million - was&#13;
awarded to an organization whose&#13;
accomplishments include bringing health&#13;
care to the Maasai and Turkana, two of&#13;
Africa’s nomadic tribes.&#13;
The Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian&#13;
Prize, awarded to the African Medical&#13;
and Research Foundation, will give the&#13;
organization funds it needs for additional&#13;
work in AIDS and malaria prevention. It&#13;
will also helppay to trainmore health care&#13;
workers.&#13;
’q’his million will go along way and it&#13;
will allow us tokeepmanyprojects afloat,"&#13;
saidJohn R. Batten, director ofthe Nairobi,&#13;
Kenya-based AMREF, who accepted the&#13;
prize at a ceremony in New York on&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Startedin 1957as aprogram thathelped&#13;
needy Africans get specialized medical&#13;
care- particularly reconstructive surgery&#13;
- AMREF now provides health care&#13;
services to 21 African countries. Programs&#13;
are run from offices in Kenya, Tanzania,&#13;
Uganda and South Africa. This year’s&#13;
budget was $19 million.&#13;
Over the years, AMREF built a twoway&#13;
radio network that boosted hospital&#13;
communications in East Africa,&#13;
spearheaded the use ofinsecticide-treated&#13;
mosquito nets to reduce childhoodmalaria&#13;
deaths and performed more than 40,000&#13;
operations.&#13;
It also has trained thousands of health&#13;
care workers and specialists and brought&#13;
services to the most remote corners of&#13;
Africa, including to tribes that roam the&#13;
continent.&#13;
What sets AMREF apart from most&#13;
international non-governmental organizations&#13;
is that more than 95% of its&#13;
employees are Africans.&#13;
’q’he approach we use in tackling all of&#13;
theseproblems is community-based," said&#13;
Peter Muchiri Ngatia, director for&#13;
AMREF’s Uganda office. "Some&#13;
prdl~lems "in A~r~ca, such as AIDS and&#13;
HIV, areaggravatedby cultural practices."&#13;
Much of the prize, which will be spent&#13;
over three years, will be directed at two of&#13;
Africa’s biggest killers - AIDS and&#13;
malaria.&#13;
"AMREF’s success in building an&#13;
African-led and African-run health care&#13;
system that is accessible to all provides a&#13;
strong model for aid agencies around the&#13;
world," said Barron Hilton, chairman of&#13;
Hilton Hotels Corp. and a board member&#13;
of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.&#13;
AMREF was selected out of 225&#13;
nominations made by members of the&#13;
international community, including&#13;
diplomats, foundation leaders and&#13;
academics.&#13;
Once nominations are made, the Hilton&#13;
foundation researches the organization&#13;
and performs On-site visits. After that,&#13;
selections go to an independent&#13;
international jury.&#13;
Last year, Medecins Sans Frontieres,&#13;
or Doctors Without Borders - the largest&#13;
independent international medical aid&#13;
organization - won the prize.&#13;
¯ Feds Pushingf0r&#13;
: Name"Reporting&#13;
¯ FRANKFORT, Ky~ (AP):-, The General&#13;
¯&#13;
Assembly could be asked to require&#13;
: doctors treating people infected with the&#13;
: virus that causes AIDS to report them by&#13;
¯ name. It is the only way to ensure that&#13;
: federal money for AIDS treatment and&#13;
" program keeps flowing, a task force’s&#13;
~ reasoning goes.&#13;
: "The practicality is this," Dr. Anna&#13;
¯ Huang, see Health, p. 11&#13;
byJames Christjohn, entertainmentQueen&#13;
By the time you read this, the film will&#13;
be gone (thanks toWoodlandHills Cinema&#13;
for bringing it to us!), but as it will be a&#13;
great stocking stuffer - no catty remarks,&#13;
please - I will review it for your reading&#13;
pleasure anyway. And since I’ve never&#13;
worried about timeliness&#13;
before, why start now?&#13;
"Get Real" was a&#13;
wonderful film about a 16&#13;
year old Gay boy in&#13;
England, and the process&#13;
of "coming out" - he runs&#13;
into an older boy at his&#13;
school, and they find&#13;
themselves in "love", or&#13;
what seems to be love.&#13;
Only one problem: The&#13;
older boy is ashamed of&#13;
his Gayness, and wants&#13;
everything kept "hushhush."&#13;
Needless to say, many&#13;
poignant moments ensue,&#13;
all of which rang true for&#13;
me and the other person&#13;
viewing the film with me.&#13;
Much was true to life,&#13;
although much of it was kind of "what if&#13;
I had come out at 16 instead of 21"&#13;
speculation for me. I was a late bloomer,&#13;
what can I say? Speaks a lot for "the&#13;
environment.&#13;
At any rate, I found the film absorbing&#13;
and realistic, in many aspects. As my&#13;
friendpointed out, "Yes, but there were so&#13;
many’cinematicmoments.’ "Myresponse&#13;
was, "yes -and ? - life is made of&#13;
’cinematic moments.’ Sometimes we’re&#13;
lucky enough to havelots of them." I&#13;
pointed out several ’cinematic moments’&#13;
that we shared that he’d forgotten, and he&#13;
conceded the point.&#13;
He also took umbrage with the ending,&#13;
whichwas realistic. (Warning: Don’tread&#13;
beyond this point to the next paragraph if&#13;
you haven’t seen it and don’t want it&#13;
spoiled)&#13;
He wanted a more romantic ending&#13;
¯ (ironic, given his criticism only moments&#13;
before of the "cinematic moments"). The&#13;
¯¯ boys split, our hero deciding against a&#13;
futurebased on deceptionand hiding with&#13;
: one so.uncomfortable with himself.&#13;
¯ To me, that was a happy ending - he&#13;
: was strong enough to standup for whathe&#13;
believed, both in a public&#13;
And of course, no&#13;
column written by&#13;
yours truly would&#13;
be complete&#13;
without a&#13;
mention of&#13;
"You Know Who."&#13;
And if you&#13;
don’t know, then&#13;
you’ve not been&#13;
reading this&#13;
seetion regularly,&#13;
now have you?&#13;
and personal sense, and&#13;
wasn’t willing to "settle"&#13;
for less.&#13;
Yes, the sappy ending&#13;
myfriendproposedwould&#13;
have been ok, and his&#13;
rationalewas that so many&#13;
mowes with Gay&#13;
characters end up with&#13;
depressing endings that&#13;
he’d have liked to have&#13;
seen an alternate ending&#13;
where both come out and&#13;
live happily ever after.&#13;
Yeah, maybe it. would&#13;
have been nice, but I&#13;
applaud the author and&#13;
producer’s strength to&#13;
stick with this ending.&#13;
And to me, it was a&#13;
happy ending of sorts. All&#13;
¯ depends on perspective, I suppose. At any&#13;
¯ rate, The activg was top-notch, the ¯&#13;
characters were real, and it is definitely a&#13;
¯ film destined to be at the top of my DVD&#13;
¯ wish list."&#13;
: "Beauty and the Beast" ended its run on&#13;
¯ aninterestingnot.e.Abeautifulproduction,&#13;
¯ albeit with sometechnieal difficulties (the.&#13;
: first week’s shows were in reality&#13;
: "previews", in which technical errors are&#13;
: more or less expected and worked out)&#13;
¯ such as bad timing on the lighting,&#13;
¯ °&#13;
reveahngcharacter’ s "di° sappearances"to&#13;
¯ beactors running inand out oflights when&#13;
¯ it should bedark, beasts transforming into&#13;
: princes and getting stuck in mid-&#13;
’ transformation by malfunctioning&#13;
¯ "magic" ("this spell canceled due to&#13;
¯ technical difficulties") and mysterious&#13;
¯ illnesses taking out cast members.&#13;
". see Beast, p. 14&#13;
by the Helmerich Foundation&#13;
October 16, 22 &amp; 24&#13;
Tulsa Perf:oming Arts&#13;
Act Now!&#13;
587-4811&#13;
596-7111&#13;
for tickets.&#13;
OKLAHOMA&#13;
T 0 H R&#13;
by John Curran&#13;
ATLANTIC CITY - The flowers and&#13;
dime-store crown were real. Nearly&#13;
everything else was fake, from the&#13;
eyelashes to thecleavage tothetip-synched&#13;
songs.&#13;
WelcometoAtlantic City’ s otherbeauty&#13;
pageant, the one for men dressed in drag.&#13;
Seven blocks and a world away from the&#13;
stage where Miss America 2000 was&#13;
crowned, the Miss’d America Pageant&#13;
lampooned its famous older sister with a&#13;
raucous, gender-bending spoof funny&#13;
enough to bust a girdle.&#13;
Held annually on the night after Miss&#13;
America’s crowning, Miss’d America&#13;
provides a sarcastic antidote to the applepie&#13;
sincerity of the real pageant. The&#13;
swimsuit competition? A display of&#13;
chunky thighs and muscular arms. The&#13;
musical production numbers? Over-thetop&#13;
atrocious. The evening wear contest?&#13;
Outright hysterical.&#13;
The only serious thing Sunday was the&#13;
cause: Theeventraisedmorethan $15,000&#13;
for support programs run by the South&#13;
Jersey AIDS Alliance. "It’s the wildest&#13;
show this side of the Boardwalk," said&#13;
Bill Mattel, the alliance’s former chief&#13;
executive.&#13;
Wild, indeed. There was Miss Sallotta&#13;
¯ Tea, who squeezed 240 pounds into a&#13;
: sequined black cocktail dress and opera-&#13;
" length black gloves. Down the runway&#13;
¯ wentMissTea, pushing acartloadedwith ¯&#13;
goodies and warbling a versionofthe title&#13;
: song from the musical "Cabaret." "Life is&#13;
¯ abigb,uf,fet, myfriend. Socometothebig&#13;
buffet, sang Miss Tea.&#13;
¯&#13;
Then there was Miss Tenee, a 6-foot-3&#13;
: inch, 205-pounder, who began a talent&#13;
¯ segment in a purple Afro wig and brown ¯&#13;
velour dress. That soon disappeared,&#13;
: revealing a silk chemise. Miss Tenee won&#13;
: the crown, was given a dozen roses and&#13;
¯ headeddown the bulb-adornedrunway as&#13;
¯&#13;
the crowd sang a reworked version of&#13;
". "There She Is," the Miss Americastandard.&#13;
¯ The capacity 600-person crowd was a ¯&#13;
mix of Gay and straight, casino workers&#13;
and local politicians, Miss America&#13;
¯ Pageant hairstylists and female&#13;
¯ impersonators. ,&#13;
Not that there wasn t some authenticity&#13;
¯&#13;
to the proceedings. Miss America 1998&#13;
: Kate Shindle, who spent her reign&#13;
¯ promoting AIDS advocacy and needle&#13;
: exchanges, sang "My Man" during the&#13;
: show. "As far as I’m concerned, what’s&#13;
: any pageant without a former Miss&#13;
¯ Whatever singing StreisandT’ she said.&#13;
M&#13;
E TI"VAL&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
7, 8, 99&#13;
9 9 9&#13;
Professional&#13;
Business&#13;
"You don’t&#13;
have to know&#13;
ballet to&#13;
love ballet.&#13;
You just have&#13;
to try it."&#13;
AR11Sl1[:&#13;
:Mixed Repertory includes two Oklahoma premieres&#13;
Exposition&#13;
~SUNDAYS&#13;
Bless the Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 11 am, 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
Community of Hope (Welcoming), Service - 6pm, 2545 S. Yale, 585-1800&#13;
Community Unitarian Universalist Congregation&#13;
Service - 1 lain, 2545 S. Yale, 749-0595 (Welcoming)&#13;
Church of the Restoration Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Service - 1 lain, 1314 No. Greenwood, 587-1314&#13;
Metropolitan Community Church United&#13;
Service, l lain, 1623 North Maplewood, Info: 838-1715&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc.&#13;
Sunday School - 9:45am, Service - 10:45am, 3210b So. Norwood&#13;
Parish Church of St. Jerome (Evangelical Anglican Church in America)&#13;
Mass - 1 lain, 205 W. King (east of N. Denver), Info: 582-3088&#13;
Unity Church of Christianity&#13;
Services: 9:15 &amp; 11:00 am, 3355 S. Jamestown, 749-8833&#13;
University of Tulsa Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay/Transgendered Alliance&#13;
6:30 pm, Meets at the Canterbury Ctr., 5th &amp; Evanston, 583-9780&#13;
~ MONDAYS&#13;
Mixed Volleyball, Helmerich Park, 71st &amp; Riverside, 6pm, call Shawn at 243-5190.&#13;
HIV Testing Clinic, Free &amp; anonymous testing. No appointment required.&#13;
Walk in testing: 7-8:30pm, 834-TEST (8378) 3501 E. Admiral (east of Harvard)&#13;
HIV Rap Sessions at Bless the Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
7:30pro, 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
PFLAG, Parents, Families &amp; Friends of Lesbians &amp; Gays&#13;
2rid Mon/each mo. 6:30pro, Fellowship Congregational Church, 2900 S. Harvard&#13;
Women/Children &amp; AIDS Committee, call for meeting date, noon, 585-5551&#13;
Council Oak Men’s Chorale, rehearsals - call for times, info: 748-3888.&#13;
I~"TUESDAYS&#13;
AIDS Coalition of Tulsa, call for next meeting date. 1430 S. Boulder, 585-5551&#13;
Live And Let Live, Commuuity of Hope United Methodist, 7:30pm, 2545 S. Yale&#13;
Multicultural AIDS Coalition, call for next meeting date.&#13;
Urban League, 240 East Apache, 584-0001&#13;
PrimeTimers, mens group, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th&#13;
Coming Out Support Group (TOHR/HOPE)&#13;
Tuesdays, 6 pro, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th, info: 743-4297&#13;
I~ WEDNESDAYS&#13;
Bless The Lord At All Times Christian Center&#13;
Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:30 pm 2207 E. 6th, 583-7815&#13;
House of the Holy Spirit Ministries, Inc. Service - 7pm,’3210b So. Norwood&#13;
Tulsa Native American Mens Support Group, more information, call 582-7225&#13;
TCC Gay &amp; Lesbian Association of Students (GLAS), Call for info: 595-7632.&#13;
Lambda A-A, 7 pm, 1307 E. 38th, 2nd ft.&#13;
~THURSDAYS&#13;
HOPE, HIV Outreach, Prevention, Education&#13;
Anonymous HIV Testing, Testing: 7 - 8:30pm 834-8378, 3507 E. Admiral&#13;
Oklahoma Rainbow Young Adult Network (O’RYAN)&#13;
Support/social group for 18-24’s, call Red Rock Mental Health at 584-2325&#13;
Substance Abuse Support Group for persons with HIV/AIDS, Info: 834-4194&#13;
I~" FRIDAYS&#13;
SafeHaven, Young Adults Social Group, I st Fri/eachmo. 8pro, Pride Ctr., 1307 E. 38th&#13;
~" SATURDAYS&#13;
Narcotics Anonymous, 11 pm, Commmlity of Hope, 1703 E. 2nd, Info: 585-1800&#13;
Lambda A-A, 6 pm, Pride Center, 1307 E. 38th, 2nd t, ~i~ _&#13;
I~’ OTHER GROUPS ......&#13;
T.U.L.S.A. Tulsa Uniform &amp; Leather Seekers Association, info:298-0827&#13;
Gal-A-Vanting, Women~ Social &amp; Cultural Group&#13;
Call for info: Kathy at 322-6322, or Barb at 459-6825.&#13;
OK Spoke Club, Gay &amp; Lesbian Bike Organization. Long rides &amp; short ddes from&#13;
Zeigler Park. Long &amp; short rides from Tulsa Gay Commtmity Center. Write for info:&#13;
PUB 9165. Tulsa, OK 74157&#13;
Ifyour organization is not listed, please let us know. Call 583-1248 orfax 583-4615.&#13;
by George Bria&#13;
POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (AP) - Gardening&#13;
~njoys suchaserenereputation thatgetting&#13;
njure~ at it seems almost laughable: Yet&#13;
anoverzealous greenthumbcanalsomean&#13;
a sore elbow.&#13;
Thecasualtyhsts are. swelled, ofcourse,&#13;
by the power eqmpment&#13;
ix~juries oaten stiffered through&#13;
¯ in’attention or failure to wear&#13;
,:protective gear~ But.whatwe’re&#13;
talking about here is soreness,&#13;
strains and sprains.&#13;
A common ailment is&#13;
tendonitis. You can get tennis&#13;
elbow just pulling weeds, the&#13;
repetitive squeezing motion&#13;
inciting inflzmmation.&#13;
Back muscle spasm is&#13;
another trauma that threatens&#13;
the wheelbarrow lifter or the&#13;
person who bends abruptly or&#13;
improperly to perform some&#13;
taskinflowerbed or vegetable&#13;
patch. Sometimes it just&#13;
happens without an easily&#13;
pinpointed cause.&#13;
Having suffered both these&#13;
: abdominal muscles," Pearlman says. "In&#13;
¯ essence, thesemuscles act as"guy wires,"&#13;
¯ to keep your baekmhne. She prescn&#13;
a series of abdominal strengthening&#13;
: exercises and also exercises to condition&#13;
¯ other muscles related to the back.&#13;
: If, in spite of all this, back spasm&#13;
suddenly strikes, Pearlman&#13;
says stop your garden work&#13;
immediately, head for the&#13;
house and lie down on an ice&#13;
pack for 20 minutes. That’s&#13;
just a beginner. Then do some&#13;
exercises and maybe take a&#13;
pain reliever. Repeat the&#13;
sequence four or five tames&#13;
during the first day. In two or&#13;
three days you should be&#13;
better, she says, and if not,&#13;
think of going to a doctor.&#13;
Pearlman prescribes a&#13;
variety of push-ups and&#13;
weight-lifting exercises to&#13;
-strengthen arms. One. way to&#13;
strengthen hands, she says, is&#13;
repetitive squeezing of a&#13;
semisoft rubber ball.. Aside&#13;
from strengthening exercises,&#13;
"Lets get&#13;
down to earth&#13;
and be real;’&#13;
Pearlman says,&#13;
"gardening is&#13;
an active,&#13;
contact "sport."&#13;
"When is the&#13;
last time you&#13;
sat still in your&#13;
garden?"&#13;
- Barbara&#13;
Pearlman&#13;
ailments from my gardening, I can testify :&#13;
they’re just as painful as if you got them "&#13;
on the tennis court, as I did, or from some °&#13;
other sport or at work. To add to potential&#13;
miseries, a bad elbow you got in tennis&#13;
might heal only to flare up again in the&#13;
garden. Tendonitis can hit the shoulder,&#13;
too,andoften does. There are conditioning&#13;
exercises youcan do, andprobably should&#13;
do, to prevent injuries, but in my&#13;
experience inflanu~tory ailments like&#13;
tendonitis sometimes seem to happen&#13;
willy-nilly.&#13;
One day you’re fine after w.eedigg an,d.&#13;
anotherday you develop pain tlaat doesn t&#13;
go away. The same thing happens to a&#13;
pitcher or a hard-serving teums player&#13;
despite conditioning. Proven therapies,&#13;
involving drugs, exercises or even surgery,&#13;
exist to heal such injuries but preventing&#13;
them from happening in the first place is&#13;
something else.&#13;
Nevertheless, suggestions exist, and a&#13;
good book has just come out aimed at&#13;
conditioning youto minimize the chances&#13;
of getting hurt while gardening.&#13;
"Gardener"s Fitness" by Barbara&#13;
Pearlman (Taylor Publishing Co., $12.95,&#13;
paperback), a Manhattan fitness expert&#13;
and a gardener, prescribes exercises,&#13;
proper posture and attire and relaxation&#13;
teclmiques. The 151-page book contains&#13;
easy-to-follow instructions and helpful&#13;
illustrations.&#13;
"Lets get down to earth and be real,"&#13;
Pearlman says, "gardening is an active,&#13;
contact "sport." "When is the last time&#13;
you sat still in your garden?" she asks, "If&#13;
you’re not hauling heavy rocks, you’re&#13;
pushing a wheelbarrow, toting tools,&#13;
dragging the hose, or whacking weeds.&#13;
You’re in perpetual motion, unless of&#13;
course your idea of gardening is planting&#13;
:apot of~etunias orp~msies onyourpaso?’&#13;
Pearlman identifies tlie body parts mat&#13;
workhardestinthe garden as arms,: ,,l~ees,&#13;
hands "and, abov,~ all, your back,. Back&#13;
pain,"shesays,~s the gardener sbugaboo.&#13;
Unless your back is made of steel (in&#13;
which case, youprobably can’.t g.etinto ,al,1&#13;
the contorted positions gardemng cans&#13;
for) at some point during the season, your&#13;
back is bound to protest."&#13;
’The very best defense against back&#13;
painis agoodoffense, whichmeans strong&#13;
knee fitness involves proper squatting in&#13;
the garden, Pearlman says. This means&#13;
keeping your heels flat, otherwise far&#13;
: much pressure is placed on your knees."&#13;
: "Knowing how to bend over andhow to&#13;
¯¯ lift an object (or yourself) the correctway&#13;
is crucial to gardening," Pearlman says.&#13;
: ’The chance of straining your back is far&#13;
: greater if youneglect tobendyourknees."&#13;
¯ When carrying things, she says, "you ¯&#13;
should use the strongest and largestjoints&#13;
and muscles (those in your arms) for the&#13;
." job to avoid direct pressure on your&#13;
¯ smallestjointsandweakestmuscles (those&#13;
: in your hands and fingers.)"&#13;
¯ "There is a right way and a wrong way&#13;
¯&#13;
to move when you garden and malting th,e,&#13;
¯ right moves makes good garden sense,’&#13;
". Pearlman says. "It’s as simple as that."&#13;
::&#13;
:DonationsRejected&#13;
¯ JOHANNESBURG, South Mrica (AP)-&#13;
¯ A provincial blood donor service has&#13;
¯ started turning away black blood donors&#13;
¯ between 18 and 35 years because of the&#13;
: high risk of infection from AIDS and&#13;
¯ other diseases, E-TV reported in&#13;
: September.&#13;
¯ Eric Saunderson, head of the Natal&#13;
BloodTransfusion Service, confirmedthat&#13;
the agency is importing blood from&#13;
Hollandand theWestern Cape, a province&#13;
with a lower rate of HIV infections.&#13;
¯ "Ourresponsibility is to thepatient, and&#13;
¯ it’s the right of every patient to have the ¯&#13;
safest blood possible," Saund~rson said&#13;
¯ in the television interview.&#13;
¯ Ronald Louw, a spokesman from the ¯&#13;
Gay and Lesbian Coalition, denounced&#13;
the practice of apartheidblood collection.&#13;
¯ ’q’his is discrimination," he said.&#13;
¯ About 8% 0f all South Africans are ¯&#13;
HIV positive,~a rate that reaches up to&#13;
¯&#13;
25% in some communities in KwaZulu-&#13;
¯ Natal, where the Natal service is located,&#13;
¯ and elsewhere in the country. But a racial&#13;
: breakdown of the infection rate was not&#13;
¯ known.&#13;
Black Blood&#13;
The MoreThings&#13;
Average&#13;
New Car Price&#13;
1985 $ 9,011&#13;
1998 $20,000&#13;
Minimum Wage&#13;
1985 $3.35&#13;
1998 $5.15&#13;
Postage Stamp&#13;
1985 22¢&#13;
1998 32~&#13;
The More Things Average Price of&#13;
Electrici~ Per Stay The Same. Residential kWh&#13;
1985 6.,$¢&#13;
Alot has changed since 1985. Prices for many 1998 5.7¢&#13;
consumer goods have more than doubled. But one&#13;
thing has stayed the same. Our rates. They’ve remained virtually&#13;
unchanged for almost fifteen years. Top value for&#13;
P~9 your energytdollar. The most reliable service&#13;
possible. And better choices than&#13;
Public Service Company of Oklahoma ever before. You can count on it.&#13;
A Central and South West Comoany&#13;
Give&#13;
The Gift of Pride&#13;
In Honor of~,&#13;
Or&#13;
In Memory of...&#13;
Someone Special to You.&#13;
For a small gift of $25.00, you can donate a beautiful Christmas poinsettia&#13;
to a local AIDS hospice. Your gifts will adorn the stage at&#13;
"A Council Oak Christmas," November 19-20.&#13;
Call Today for COMC Carolers at Your Holiday Party!&#13;
To Order: Call COMC at (918) 748-3888&#13;
Timothy .W. Daniel&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
An Attorney who will fight for&#13;
justice &amp; equality for&#13;
Gays &amp;.Lesbians&#13;
Domestic Partnership Planning,&#13;
Personal Injury,&#13;
Criminal Law &amp; Bankruptcy&#13;
1-800-742-9468 or 918-352-9504&#13;
128 East Broadway, Drumright, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointments are available.&#13;
Holland Hall&#13;
SCHOO’L&#13;
PRIMARY SCHOOL TOUR (aGE 3- GRADE 3)&#13;
ALL CAMPUS OPEN HOUSE&#13;
To reserve your place; please call the&#13;
Admission Office at 481-1111, extension 251.&#13;
5666 E 8 Ist Street ~ Between Yale &amp; Sheridan ~ Tulsa&#13;
www.hollandhall.org&#13;
Holland Hall admits qualified students without regard to race, sex, reugton, national or ethmc ortgm, or p~.’sical disabiliF.&#13;
by Anthony Breznican&#13;
Associated Press Writer&#13;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The aggressive&#13;
roles of men in sports, movies and&#13;
television can cause boys to equate&#13;
violence with masculinity,&#13;
according to a report released&#13;
today byachildren’s advocacy&#13;
group.&#13;
A survey of 1,200 boys,&#13;
ranging from 10- to 17-yearsold,&#13;
revealed their favorite&#13;
entertainment often depicts&#13;
brutality as a heroic way to&#13;
solve~problems, said Harvard&#13;
psychologistWilliam Pollack,&#13;
who helped analyze the study&#13;
for ChildrenNow. "It’s gender&#13;
straight-jacketing," Pollack&#13;
said. ’q~hese boys believe that&#13;
in order to be a real man- like&#13;
the ones in the media - they&#13;
have to be violent and&#13;
aggressive."About74%ofthe&#13;
characters and sports figures&#13;
viewed by the participants&#13;
committed brutal or defiant&#13;
acts or demonstrated antisocial&#13;
behavior such as&#13;
ridiculing or lying, Pollack&#13;
said.&#13;
The study was released at the start ofthe&#13;
group’ s anntml conferencein Los Angeles.&#13;
Children Now, an independent advocacy&#13;
group for children in Oakland, plans to&#13;
use the findings to call on entertainment&#13;
executives to promote a more&#13;
compassionate image of men, said Lois&#13;
Salisbury, president of the organization.&#13;
According to Ms. Salisbury, the&#13;
kickboxing crimefighter on "Walker,&#13;
Texas Ranger" on CBS and the&#13;
sensationalized crashes and arrests on&#13;
Fox’s "World’s Wildest Police Videos"&#13;
were among the worst for reinforcing&#13;
negative stereotypes ofauthoritativemen.&#13;
"Theyjust glorify heavy-handed tactics,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
She also speculated that professional&#13;
wrestling’s blend of scantily dad women&#13;
a University ofLouisville assistantmedical&#13;
professor, said: without federal money,&#13;
only people with insurance will have&#13;
access to the relatively few doctors with&#13;
experience in AIDS treatment.&#13;
"I think we’re at a point the legislation&#13;
needs tobe considered,"Huangsaidduring&#13;
a public hearing by the legislature’s Task&#13;
"It’s gender&#13;
straightjacketing,"&#13;
Pollack said.&#13;
"These boys&#13;
believe that in&#13;
order to be a&#13;
real man - llke&#13;
the ones in the&#13;
media - they&#13;
have to be&#13;
violent and&#13;
aggressive."&#13;
- William&#13;
Pollack&#13;
: and muscle-bound fighters could cause&#13;
¯ relationship problems for adolescent boys&#13;
"_ who might imitate the behaviors they see&#13;
¯ acted out by the wrestlers when trying to&#13;
: woo women. ’The image is that men are&#13;
meant to be defined by anger&#13;
and violence and power and&#13;
sex," Ms. Salisbury said.&#13;
’There is very little roomfor a&#13;
range of behaviors such as&#13;
compassion and&#13;
compromise."&#13;
She points to ABC’s ’¢Fhe&#13;
Drew Carey Show" as an&#13;
example ofaprogram that has&#13;
very little violence and draws&#13;
itshumorfrom the crew-cutted&#13;
comedian’s portrayal of&#13;
schlepping throughamundane&#13;
job. "He’s stuck in ajob that’s&#13;
going nowhere and the whole&#13;
basis (of the show) is that he is&#13;
¯ . . a loser," Ms. Salisbury&#13;
said. "That tells boys that the&#13;
only place to be is at the top.&#13;
Otherwise, you’re to be&#13;
laughed at."&#13;
Michael J. Gerson, a&#13;
psychologist and lecturer at&#13;
Loyola Marymount&#13;
University, criticized Children Now for&#13;
¯¯ drawing what he characterized as an&#13;
elementary conclusion about the effects&#13;
¯ of media violence on young people.&#13;
¯ "Researchers canunderestimate the ability&#13;
of children to make distinctions between&#13;
¯ fantasy andreality,"Gerson said.’~A child&#13;
¯ may s~oot his fingers like a gun, but he&#13;
doesn t have to develop a killer mentality&#13;
¯ or wish to be destructive." i-iowever,&#13;
¯ Gerson saidChildren Now was correct in ¯&#13;
proposing that the blending of sex and&#13;
¯&#13;
violence can confuse adolescents who&#13;
¯ should instead associate gentleness with&#13;
¯ intimacy. "I do object to movies where the&#13;
¯ girl and the guy get into the back seat of&#13;
¯&#13;
the car and a Miler pops out and cuts them&#13;
¯ in half with a chain saw," Gerson said.&#13;
¯ "That can cause problems."&#13;
Force on HIV/AIDS Prevention, Services "&#13;
and Financing. "&#13;
Thirty-three states require people !&#13;
infected with HIV, the human ¯&#13;
immundeficiency virus, to be reported by "&#13;
name. The federal government is :&#13;
pressuring all other states, including ¯&#13;
Kentucky, to follow suit. Those that balk ¯&#13;
could lose federal funding for AIDS, the "&#13;
task force says in a report. ."&#13;
The recommendation brought a fierce ¯&#13;
response aboutprivacy-evenamong task "&#13;
force members - at the public hearing. "I "&#13;
call it blackmail," said Barry .Norris, a ,"&#13;
task force member from Louisville. But, ¯&#13;
Norris asked, what choice does Kentucky "&#13;
have. Do we just not take themoney9... °&#13;
¯ Do we make a principled stand?" Jeff ."&#13;
Vessels, executive director of the ¯&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union in "&#13;
Kentucky, said states should challenge&#13;
the federal agencies. "It’s a terrible thing&#13;
that we have to sacrifice so much privacy&#13;
in the name of money," Vessels said.&#13;
An AIDS patient said the stigma of the&#13;
disease would drive many people&#13;
underground. "For the fear of reporting&#13;
their names, they simply will not go get&#13;
tested," Michael Seidler of Louisville&#13;
testified.&#13;
Thestate keepsrecords ofAIDS patients&#13;
by name, but not of people infected with&#13;
ttIV..For that reason, the state’ s reports of&#13;
HIV infection are considered suspect by&#13;
federal record keepers at the Centers for&#13;
Disease Control. Mollie’Adkins, of the&#13;
Kentucky Department for Public Health,&#13;
said name reporting is the most reliable&#13;
way yet found to ensure cases are not&#13;
duplicated and statistics are not inflated.&#13;
Names would he maintained, in a state&#13;
database, not passed along to the CDC.&#13;
The task force also says the legislature&#13;
should restrict access to the information&#13;
and enact stiff penalties for breaches.&#13;
Seidler, the AIDS patient, said that was&#13;
wishful thinking. Computer hackers got&#13;
into Florida’s HIV-test database, he said.&#13;
"Ifyoucan guarantee somethinglike that’ s&#13;
not going to happen..." Seidler said, "by&#13;
all means go outand get tested yourselves."&#13;
by Esther Rothblum, Ph.D.&#13;
Do Lesbians drink more alcohol than&#13;
heterosexual women? In the not-toodistant&#13;
past, the Lesbian bar&#13;
was one of the only places " ~ome d the&#13;
where Lesbians could go to&#13;
early studies&#13;
meet other women. On the&#13;
otherhand,many Lesbianbars su~,rested that&#13;
h~iVe Closed down, indicating&#13;
Pdr.einrhkainpgs lt~hsast aLndeshbaivaensot-haerer- upd-toLoensblei~atnhlsrdplaces&#13;
to socialize,&#13;
To find out more about&#13;
Lesbians and alcohol-use, I&#13;
interviewedDr. TondaHughe~&#13;
in the Department of Nursing&#13;
at the University of Illinois at&#13;
Chicago. ,Some of the early&#13;
studies suggested that up .to&#13;
one third of Lesbians were&#13;
serious alcohol abusers," she&#13;
said, "but often these&#13;
researchers collected their data&#13;
from Lesbians in bars. So itis&#13;
not surprising that this method&#13;
found a large number of&#13;
Lesbians who were heavy&#13;
drinkers. I think that that is&#13;
why we have the bdief that&#13;
Lesbians are atriskfor alcohol&#13;
abuse."&#13;
Nevertheless, Dr. Hughes&#13;
believes that Lesbians drank&#13;
more than heterosexual&#13;
women in the 1960s and 70s.&#13;
"Lower rates of drinking&#13;
among Lesbians now is partly&#13;
due to changes in drinking in&#13;
the whole population, to more&#13;
health consciousness, and to&#13;
the AIDS crisis, which has&#13;
alertedus to the risks ofalcohol&#13;
and drug use," she said. She&#13;
also felt that Lesbians used to&#13;
drink more during the coming&#13;
out process, in order to deal&#13;
with social anxiety and stigma&#13;
involved in meeting other women and&#13;
coming to terms with being a Lesbian.&#13;
In a study conducted in Chicago, New&#13;
York City, and Minneapolis/St. Paul in&#13;
the mid-1980s with more than Lesbians,&#13;
Lesbians overall were no more likely to&#13;
reportalcohol-relatedproblems than we.re °&#13;
heterosexual women. Only Lesbians in&#13;
the 50-60 year old age range reported ¯&#13;
more alcohol problems than did their "&#13;
heterosexualcounterparts. Dr. Hughes has ¯&#13;
conductedaseries of studies withLesbians "&#13;
and heterosextml women that focus on °&#13;
various mental health factors, including ¯&#13;
alcohol use and abuse.&#13;
Her results indicate that Lesbians these "&#13;
days are no more likely to drink heavily "&#13;
than are heterosexual women. In fact,--&#13;
Lesbians were more likely to report ¯&#13;
abstaining from alcohol altogether for the "&#13;
past year than were heterosexual women.."&#13;
Most of the Lesbian and-heterosexual ¯&#13;
womeninher sample drank alcohol at low "&#13;
levels. White Lesbians, however, drank "&#13;
morethandid AfricanAmericanor Latina ¯&#13;
Lesbians.&#13;
"Interestingly, there are more Lesbians ."&#13;
who report that they are in recovery, "&#13;
though" she added. Only 2% of."&#13;
heterosexual womenhadbeenin treatment&#13;
for alcohol or in 12-step programs,&#13;
compared with 17% of Lesbians--a large "&#13;
difference. This may be the result of prior ¯&#13;
heavy drinking among Lesbians. Or it "&#13;
may be thht Lesbians are more aware of "&#13;
were serious&#13;
alcohol&#13;
abusers~~&#13;
she said, ’but&#13;
often these&#13;
researchers&#13;
co||ected tbelr&#13;
data [rom&#13;
Lesblans ;n&#13;
bars. So it’s&#13;
not surprlslng&#13;
that this&#13;
method [ound&#13;
o[ Lesbians&#13;
who were&#13;
heavy drinkers.&#13;
I think that&#13;
that is why we&#13;
bare the belld&#13;
that Lesbians&#13;
are at r~sk [or&#13;
alcohol abuse.’"&#13;
~ substanceuse issues than areheterosexual&#13;
¯ women. Oneofthe questionsinthesurvey&#13;
is "Have you ever wondered if you had a&#13;
drinking problem," and 47%&#13;
of Lesbians answered "yes" to&#13;
this item compared with only&#13;
14% of the heterosexual&#13;
women. This finding again&#13;
hints at heavy alcohol use in&#13;
thepastonthepartofLesbians.&#13;
Finally, there was a trend for&#13;
older Lesbians to report more&#13;
drinking, and these are the&#13;
Lesbians who were adults&#13;
during earlier times when&#13;
drinking was more part of the&#13;
Lesbian commurtities.&#13;
Dr. Hughes is interested in&#13;
exploring patterns of drinking&#13;
across various age groups of&#13;
Lesbians. Specifically, she is&#13;
interested in whether older&#13;
Lesbian~ who were adults&#13;
during earlier times when&#13;
drinking was more part of the&#13;
Lesbian cotumunities are&#13;
continuing to drink heavily.&#13;
She is also interested in the&#13;
question of how Lesbians and&#13;
their partners moderate each&#13;
others drinking, because&#13;
research on heterosexuals&#13;
shows that partners’ drinking&#13;
is a major factor in how much&#13;
people drink. We still know&#13;
very little about all Ihe factors&#13;
that increase or decrease&#13;
Lesbians’ risk for alcohol&#13;
abuse or alcohol-related&#13;
problems.&#13;
Esther Rothblum is Professor&#13;
of Psychology at the&#13;
University of Vermont and&#13;
Editor of the Journal of&#13;
Lesbian Studies. She can be&#13;
reached at Dewey Hall, Univ.&#13;
of Vermont, Burlington, VT,&#13;
¯ emaih esther.rothblum@uvm.edu.&#13;
of The Tulsa Worldnews story about the&#13;
New Jersey ruling. Ms. Kue.lmertpromised&#13;
to check into the issue and to telephone&#13;
back the next day.&#13;
TAUWenjoys significant supportfrom&#13;
some of Tulsa’s most well known&#13;
corporations. Debbie Graham ofQuikTrip&#13;
Corporation said that her organization&#13;
had supported UnitedWayformany years&#13;
because it helps a vast variety of agencies&#13;
but-that QuikTrip doesn’t get involved in&#13;
"the politics of individual agencies."&#13;
And while Ms. Graham could not&#13;
confirm that Quik Trip has a nondiscrimination&#13;
policy which explicitly&#13;
includes "sexual orientation," she noted&#13;
that it is their practice not to discriminate.&#13;
Quik Trip had provided promotion of&#13;
the United Way campaign in the form of&#13;
a printed solicitation for support on Quik&#13;
Trip paper bags.&#13;
Emily Gill of Dollar Car Rental did&#13;
confirm that her company and its parent&#13;
group, Dollar/Thrifty Automotive Group&#13;
(DTAG) which Mr. Cappy chairs, does&#13;
have an explicitnon-discrimination policy&#13;
butMs. Gill wasunable to address whether&#13;
any one atDTAG saw any conflictbetween&#13;
their internal non-discrimination policy&#13;
and see TA UW, p. 13&#13;
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Walk-in Clinics&#13;
Tuesday Testing, 5 -8 pm&#13;
Pride Center, 1307 East 38th&#13;
Wednesday Tdsting, 5-8 pm&#13;
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Daytime appointments available.&#13;
Call for more information:&#13;
918-584-2325&#13;
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Voice Mail: 918-697-9282&#13;
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Want to get involved?&#13;
Need to get&#13;
tested for HIV?&#13;
Need a&#13;
Coming Out Support&#13;
Group?&#13;
Call&#13;
743-GAYS (4297)&#13;
Tulsa Gay&#13;
Community&#13;
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1307 E. 38th&#13;
at Peoria, 2nd floor&#13;
Country Club&#13;
Barbering&#13;
Custom Styling ¯&#13;
for Men &amp; Women&#13;
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3310 E. 51st, 747-0236&#13;
Tues.-Fri., 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5pm&#13;
¯ IGTA member&#13;
Call 341. 6866&#13;
International&#13;
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Outreach Program Thurs. Nights&#13;
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Call for meeting times and place:&#13;
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by Lamont Lindstrom, Phdg.&#13;
Last snmmer I wentto afriend’ s fiftieth&#13;
birthday p~arty.,] I think actually it was at&#13;
least his tbir or even fourth fiftieth&#13;
birthday. He is de_t,_e~_.ined.n_o,t to get any&#13;
older. Freezingone s agent50ts somewhat&#13;
more mature than those of us who fixate&#13;
on 30, or even 25. Another birthday boy I&#13;
know is at 28 and holding. Andmy friend&#13;
Steve- who is 33 and gorgeous - always&#13;
shaves five or six years off his age on&#13;
those tempting messages he leaves on&#13;
telephone dating, lines.&#13;
Welcome to America.&#13;
Growing up around here is&#13;
good. But growing old can be&#13;
a problem. We all know about&#13;
the bittersweetness of&#13;
birthdays. Next time you are&#13;
in a card store, have a look at&#13;
those nasty if cruelly funny.&#13;
cards that we are encourag&#13;
to giveanyoneunlueky enough&#13;
to have turned 40. Women&#13;
complain that the onusof age&#13;
falls most heavily on them.&#13;
Men, as they wrinkle, gray;&#13;
and sag, at least might bope.~o&#13;
grow to be distinguished.&#13;
Women, on the other hand,&#13;
age into grannies and crones.&#13;
My sly friends who have&#13;
recycled or lost a few of their&#13;
blrdadays, however, don~t&#13;
seem to be waiting eagerly for&#13;
distinguished, silver-haired&#13;
maturity. They, too~ would&#13;
rather stay young and juicy.&#13;
Theexplosion of men’s hair dye, plastic&#13;
surgery, and youthful herbal supplement&#13;
commercials flashing daily on my&#13;
television screen suggest an increasingly&#13;
desperate age-panic among all of us, no&#13;
matter our gender.&#13;
When I was 24, I lived on Tanna, an&#13;
isolated South Pacific island. Everyone&#13;
there is related to everyone. Newcomers&#13;
- quickly receive "fictive kin" identities in&#13;
order better to fit into village life. Soon&#13;
after I arrived, all the kids began calling&#13;
me kaha - "grandpa." I was taken aback&#13;
by this. Why, back then, I had hardly any&#13;
gray hair after all! OnTanna, though, as in&#13;
most places on earth, ageis pr_estigio.us..&#13;
Those kids were doing me abig favor wttla&#13;
that grandpa thing. Myislandfriend Nariu,&#13;
who was hardly older than me, within a&#13;
few years had started referring to himself&#13;
(and me) as "’we old men." Nariu was&#13;
ambitious and since old men ran his&#13;
society, he was determined to become a&#13;
senior citizen as soon as he could.&#13;
American fears of aging clearly have&#13;
much to do with how years connect up&#13;
with power and prestige. I sometimes ask&#13;
my university students when they think&#13;
adulthood begins. When do you truly&#13;
become an adult? They tend to place this&#13;
somewherein the20s-afew years bey.ond&#13;
their own age. Most Americans associate&#13;
adulthood with economic independence:&#13;
having one’s own job, paying 0n.e’s.o.wn&#13;
bills. We see some 35-year-old still hvlng&#13;
with mother as sadly still a little juvenile.&#13;
I also askmy youthful students for their,&#13;
defimtmns of nnddle-aged and old.&#13;
Answers here are more variable. (Some&#13;
startmiddleage-at30.) Generally, though,&#13;
true oldness connects with retirement.&#13;
Once we leave the workplace for good,&#13;
we lose salary, power, prestige, and any&#13;
final fleeting claims to youth. People&#13;
throughoutmost of the world can’t wait to&#13;
get old. The older they are, the more&#13;
¯ authority and influence they have within&#13;
their fzmilies and societies. Here, if you&#13;
: want to be president at age 69, like Ronald&#13;
¯ Reagan you’d better pour on that black&#13;
¯ hair dye.&#13;
. Gay menmay bemore panickedby age&#13;
: than most Americans. We have all heard&#13;
: bitter complaints about our agi_sm ~ a~,d&#13;
lookism- and such gripes are often samy&#13;
: justifiedbypersonal experience. (Lesbian&#13;
¯¯ society is,l~___ha,p_s kinder to it_s wrin.kl,ed&#13;
sisters ) It s fun to read the age limitalmns&#13;
in classified personal ads.&#13;
"Gay men may Most of the lovelorn are ISO&#13;
sweet-youngthings. Notmany&#13;
be more want to date those of well-.&#13;
panicked by&#13;
age than most&#13;
Americans.&#13;
We have all&#13;
heard bitter&#13;
complaints&#13;
a~out our&#13;
agism -- and&#13;
lookism - and&#13;
such gripes are&#13;
often sadly&#13;
justified by&#13;
personal&#13;
experience."&#13;
aged .and mature vintage.&#13;
Many ads have upper age cutoffs&#13;
- commonly 30 or 35 or,&#13;
morerarely, 40. Some seekers&#13;
are willing to date over a&#13;
decade’s span-five years&#13;
younger to five years older&#13;
than themselves. Many 40-&#13;
somethings speei-ficaldl’y&#13;
request none but the 20-&#13;
something... Good luck...&#13;
More gray hair on the way for&#13;
you, I think.&#13;
Or there is the daddy niche:&#13;
Sugardaddies,leatherdaddies,&#13;
bears and cubs. A few&#13;
yonngish personal advertisers&#13;
won’ t touch anyone&#13;
underneath 45 or 50. They&#13;
want~eir daddy. At.leastthere&#13;
remarns, here m .agist&#13;
American, one specialized&#13;
market opporUmity for mental, ,facial,,and&#13;
financial maturity. So you can atways ouy&#13;
a youth if you can’t have youth yourself&#13;
Then there are the age-blind. They "go&#13;
bv~t_he s,n_i_r_i t. "Thev_o_romisetodateanyone&#13;
18 to 88, or so they say. I logged onto a 61-&#13;
vear-old’s personal page on the Internet.&#13;
"Ageis only a state of mind,"it said. Yeah&#13;
right. Are you from Tanna or America?&#13;
Check out your mirror. But I’m taking&#13;
notes. Those birthdays keep rolling. And&#13;
next year the cake might set off the smoke&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom. Ph.D. teaches&#13;
anthropology at ~he University of Tulsa?&#13;
the discriminatory policies of the BSA&#13;
and United Way’s failure to pledge not to&#13;
discriminate. Ms. Gill promised aresponse&#13;
after consulting with others in her&#13;
organizationbutfailed to respondby press&#13;
time.&#13;
Likewise, Jean Johnson, Bank of&#13;
America’s southwestern press&#13;
spokesperson, pointed out that the bank,&#13;
with its origins in San Francisco, has&#13;
some of themostprogressive policies, not&#13;
only pledging not to discriminate but also&#13;
¯ prowiding domestic partner benefits to&#13;
¯ their employees. She added that Bank of&#13;
] America is one of United Way’s largest&#13;
~ supporters on a national level. Roger&#13;
¯ Whaley ofBank of America serves on the&#13;
~ board of directors of TAUW.&#13;
: The Tulsa Area United Way campaign&#13;
¯&#13;
enjoys further promotional sup.port fr,.om&#13;
Tulsa area television stations. Accoromg&#13;
’. to the staffperson at KOTV, Channel 6,&#13;
: the stations which represent the major&#13;
~ networks and Fox all agree to do public&#13;
¯ service announcements.&#13;
" Pat Baldwin of KTUL, Cbannel 8 who&#13;
¯ is a member see TAUW, p. 14&#13;
The regular Belle’s father was&#13;
hospitalized during the run, and at the last&#13;
matinee, folks in the audience neverknew&#13;
of the backstage drama going on. The&#13;
Beast became ill at the end of the first act&#13;
(where he flings himself across a balcony&#13;
In despair of ever being loved, and the&#13;
curtain falls). When the backstage crew&#13;
revolved the set to help him down, they&#13;
found the actor playing the Beast hanging&#13;
over the balcony - passed out cold. They&#13;
revived him, and he decided to go on with&#13;
the show:&#13;
However, you could never tell from the&#13;
audience that anything was wrong. After&#13;
the performance, he was whisked to the&#13;
hospital as soon as the curtain fell. It&#13;
appears he may have been suffering from&#13;
a bleeding ulcer.&#13;
The understudy went on that evening,&#13;
and I hear he did well, despite misgivings&#13;
on the part of some of the crew and other&#13;
castmembers-not tomentionhehimself!&#13;
I was sorry to see the troupe leave - they&#13;
were such nice folk.&#13;
October events at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center (596-7111 for tix) include Tulsa&#13;
Ballet’ s "AnnaKarenina", Oct 1-3; Sabella&#13;
Oct 2; The Celtic Series with Natalie&#13;
McMaster, Oct 8-9; Tulsa Opera’s&#13;
"Carmen, Oct 16-24; ATC’s Titanic&#13;
mystery, "Scotland Road", Ok 22-30;&#13;
and The Phil’s pops concert, "Sound and&#13;
Sorcery" Oct 29-30.&#13;
I look forward to the arrival of Petula&#13;
Clark as Norma Desmond in "Sunset&#13;
Boulevard." However, I still think Carol&#13;
Bumett should tour with the show; that&#13;
would bea .fresh interpretation in many&#13;
respects. The reviews I’ve read and heard&#13;
from friends thus far have reassured me&#13;
we are in for an excellent show. The&#13;
magicin themaking will arriveNovember&#13;
23 -28.&#13;
And of course, no column written by&#13;
yours truly would be complete without a&#13;
mention of"YouKnow Who."Andifyou&#13;
don’tknow, then you’ve not been reading&#13;
this section regularly, now have you?&#13;
Shame on you!&#13;
The ever-ethereal Stevie Nicks made a&#13;
stumling appearance on the top-rated&#13;
Sheryl Crow and Friends concert on the&#13;
,Fox network, and it was interesting to&#13;
note that she garneredthemostenthusiastic&#13;
audience response of the eminently&#13;
talented bunch.&#13;
"Gold Dust Woman" never sounded&#13;
better, and according to the rumor mill,&#13;
her new CD’s in the can, awaiting release.&#13;
Sheryl Crow produced theCDin between&#13;
tours. Also, Lesbian Icon, Melissa&#13;
Etheridge, if you follow the Tulsa World&#13;
columns, is rumored to be scheduling a&#13;
Tulsa appearance. We’ll be awaiting word&#13;
on that situation.&#13;
And "heart-and-other-body-partsthrob"&#13;
Ricky Martin will be in Dallas&#13;
November 4th. Ay cammba!&#13;
of the board of directors of Tulsa Area&#13;
UnitedWay, failed to respond to the voice&#13;
mail asking him to call.&#13;
In contrast, Bud Brown, new general&#13;
manager ofKOTV, Channel 6, noted he’d&#13;
only been in Tulsa for 3 weeks, and had&#13;
not seen the Tulsa World article in which&#13;
the Boy Scouts reaffirmed their anti-Gay&#13;
stance but he noted that his corporation,&#13;
The Belo Corporation which owns the&#13;
Dallas Morning News, WFAA in Dallas&#13;
and a number of other television_ stations,&#13;
: is "very clear...very firm" on their&#13;
¯ corporatenon-discriminationpolicy which&#13;
¯&#13;
includes "sexual orientation."&#13;
: Greg Gatewood, president of Tulsa&#13;
¯ Oklahomans for Human Rights (TOHR),&#13;
¯&#13;
was one .Gay person willing to have his&#13;
: name used though he emphasized that he&#13;
¯ was speaking as an individual not for&#13;
¯&#13;
TOHR. Gatewood saidhefeltUnitedWay&#13;
: did a lot of good, funding for example,&#13;
¯ TulsaC.A.R.E.S.andotherorganizations,&#13;
¯&#13;
and that he’d given to United Way in the&#13;
: past. However, he added that he did not&#13;
¯¯ agreewith theBoy Scouts’ policy and that&#13;
he’d like to see United Way open a&#13;
: discussionwith theGay community about&#13;
¯ the Boy Scouts, trying to f’md common&#13;
¯ ground. He added thathe’dlike to include ¯&#13;
the Boy Scouts in that dialogue also.&#13;
¯&#13;
He suggested that instead of asking&#13;
¯ Tulsa Area United Way to stop funding&#13;
¯ the Boy Scouts that TAUW should be&#13;
: asked to fund an organization which&#13;
: provides services to Tulsa’s Lesbian and&#13;
: .Gay communities. Gatewood emphati-&#13;
¯ tally agreed thatTAUW shouldamendits&#13;
: ownnon-discrimination policy to include&#13;
¯ "sexual orientation."&#13;
: A prominent member of Tulsa’s Gay&#13;
¯ community, Vernon Jones, partner of the&#13;
¯&#13;
late Phil Wiley and civil rights and HIV/&#13;
¯ AIDS issues activist, recalled that Tulsa&#13;
¯ Area United Way also has a history of&#13;
: racial discrimination. He remembers&#13;
¯&#13;
newspaper articles from his youth&#13;
¯ reporting on how TAUW refused to fund&#13;
¯ agencies which served Tulsa’s Black&#13;
¯ commtmity. Jones,likeothers appreciated&#13;
¯&#13;
TAUW’s support for HIV/AIDS services&#13;
¯ " but thought United Way should not fund.&#13;
the BSA.&#13;
Beth Kuehnert, Tulsa Area United&#13;
Way’s marketing representative, did not&#13;
call back as she promised. When asked&#13;
about this by telephone, she accused Tulsa&#13;
Family News of calling and harassing&#13;
United Way supporters, naming one in&#13;
particular. Ms. Kuehnert was informed&#13;
that a news story required speaking with&#13;
more than just her and that all contacts&#13;
with United Way supporters had been&#13;
through their designated press&#13;
representatives and clearly identified as&#13;
news inquiries and had been quite cordial.&#13;
And despite earlier promises to try to&#13;
answer questions about United Way’s&#13;
decision to fund .the Boy Scouts, Ms.&#13;
Kuehnert now stated that "I’m not going&#13;
to ask this question in the middle of the&#13;
campaign.., the decision [to fund the Boy&#13;
Scouts] was made in the spring [last&#13;
spring]."&#13;
When TulsaFamilyNews contacted the&#13;
UnitedWay corporate supporter who had&#13;
allegedly been the subject of TFN&#13;
harassment,TFN was told that they’d said&#13;
nothing of the sort but only that they’d&#13;
called Tulsa Area United Way president&#13;
¯&#13;
and chief professional officer, Kathleen&#13;
¯ Coon, to say that the issue of funding the&#13;
: Boy Scouts had been raised.&#13;
¯ This corporate spokesperson&#13;
¯&#13;
characterized the conversation with TFN&#13;
¯ as very civil and cordial.&#13;
At press dine, Tulsa Family News had&#13;
¯ made either three or four phone calls over&#13;
: at least a four year period to Tulsa Area&#13;
~ United Way president Kathleen Coan&#13;
¯ requesting the courtesy of a return phone&#13;
¯ call.&#13;
¯ To date, Ms. Coon, despite an apparent&#13;
¯ ready accessibility to The Tulsa World&#13;
¯ and other non-minority news orgam-&#13;
." zations, has refused to return any calls.&#13;
¯ For a related editorial, please see&#13;
; United Our Way, p. 3.&#13;
A way&#13;
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Tulsa Locations:&#13;
2001 S. GarneR, 437-2~.~.~.&#13;
3733 S. Memorial, 6600344&#13;
1216 S. Harvard, 587-1778&#13;
Sapulpa Location:&#13;
109 N. Mission, 227-2322&#13;
They’re ready and waiting...all you have&#13;
to do is pick up the phone!&#13;
©Origin. 18+. Additional features from 55¢/min.’-Cal1800-440-8050.&#13;
(and former lead singer of "lnae Nylons),&#13;
whose sound is an eclectic hybrid of&#13;
electronicpop witharock ’n’ roll swagger,&#13;
and the fabulous "Doris Daze", an allwomen’s&#13;
pop/rock band that is currently&#13;
making a big splash in Dallas. (Check out&#13;
these websites, www.mp3.com/dorisdaze&#13;
and www.loudboybarnes.com, to get a&#13;
taste of their music.)&#13;
And it’s not over yet! Don’t dare miss&#13;
the dance and drag show on Sunday&#13;
afternoon at Center Stage. Besides the&#13;
always exciting, always surprising&#13;
performances of Domonique Daniels,&#13;
.Carla Renee, Miss Helga, Tara T’Neil,&#13;
and Tabitha Taylor of Tulsa, Okla., and&#13;
our ever-popular DJ, Jon Caswell,&#13;
"Barnes" will make a guest appearance!&#13;
So call your friends, select your&#13;
wardrobe, and make your lodging&#13;
reservations now!! You won’t want to&#13;
miss this weekend!!! Call The Emerald&#13;
Rainbow at (501) 253-5445 or visit&#13;
www.shimaka.com!eureka/diversity to get&#13;
a full schedule of activities.&#13;
DIVERSITY CELEBRATION&#13;
SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES&#13;
" bRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5&#13;
2:30 pm - 5:00 pin"Family" musicians&#13;
perform at Mud St. Espresso Cafe on&#13;
Main St.&#13;
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm More entertainment&#13;
at the Kaffeehaus Aroma in Basin Park&#13;
Hotel.&#13;
8:00 pm - 12:30 am M.CC. of the&#13;
Living Spring hosts Carnival Under the&#13;
Rainbow - Dance and Game Night. Game&#13;
booths- will raise funds for local projects&#13;
and organizations while Jon Caswell spins&#13;
an eclectic mix of dance music. A great&#13;
way to kick off the weekend! Basin Park&#13;
Hotel Ballroom. Cover: $4.50 per person,&#13;
$7.50 per couple. Must be 21.&#13;
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6&#13;
10:00 am - Noon Catch the end of the&#13;
fall colors canoeing down the beautiful&#13;
White River. Call the Dam Store at (501)&#13;
253-6154 for details. $22!canoe.&#13;
10:30 am - Noon Enjoy a "colorful"&#13;
historic walking tour wi~ Bill. Meet at&#13;
Sweet Springs on upper Spring St. next to&#13;
Rogue’s Manor. No charge.&#13;
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Bring the kids to a&#13;
"family" family picnic at Harmon Park.&#13;
Food and games. Call Samuel Strickland&#13;
for details (501) 253-7837. Children of all&#13;
ages welcome. No charge.&#13;
Be sure to check out the unique shops&#13;
andrestaurants listed in the Eureka Springs&#13;
Diversity Cooperative. Let them know&#13;
you’re here for Diversity Weekend!&#13;
1:00 pm - 4:00 pro, Did you bring your&#13;
singing voice? Give Karaoke a whirl with&#13;
Lita at the Hole in. the Wall off Center St.&#13;
No cover.&#13;
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Give your feet a&#13;
break, and listen to some great musicians&#13;
at Mud St. Espresso Cafe and Kaffeehaus&#13;
Aroma. Tips appreciated.&#13;
9:00 pro- 1:00 am Party, party, party!!&#13;
Dance, dance, dance!! Come on out to&#13;
Center Stage, and dance like you mean it&#13;
to Jon’ s high energy club tunes;ORShake&#13;
your booties at the Basin Park Hotel&#13;
Ballroom to the live performances of&#13;
dynamic GLAMA-winning L.A. Singer/&#13;
songwriter Barnes, and the fantastic pop/&#13;
rock Dallas-based women’s band Doris&#13;
Daze. (Both will have their CDs available&#13;
for sale.) Must be 21! Cover charges:&#13;
Center Stage only - $5 per person. Basin&#13;
Park only - $10 per person. Both venues -&#13;
$13 per person. What a nightt !&#13;
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7&#13;
2:00 pm - 6:00pmYou can’t leave yet!!&#13;
Meet us again at Center Stage for our tea&#13;
dance and drag show. Those girls from&#13;
Tulsa, those talented, and always&#13;
fantabulous entertainers, Domonique&#13;
Daniels, Carla Renee, Miss Helga, Tara&#13;
T’Neil and Tabitha Taylor will knock&#13;
your socks off with their dazzling&#13;
performances, while Jon graces us with&#13;
his DJ magic once again. AND, to add to&#13;
the excitement, Barnes will be there to&#13;
sharehis terrificvoice andpowerful music&#13;
in a Special guest set. Must be 21! Cover:&#13;
$5 per person.&#13;
7:00 Inn M.C.C. of the Living Spring&#13;
Service at 17 Elk St. Call (501) 253-9337&#13;
for information. All are welcome!&#13;
OTHER HAPPENINGS&#13;
* Friday night from 10 p.m. ’til close,&#13;
Clary and K.J. will havelive entertainment&#13;
and dancing at Center Stage.&#13;
* If you’re feeling adventurous (and a&#13;
little brave), you may want to check out&#13;
the Ghost Tours at the Crescent Hotel.&#13;
They start at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, and last for&#13;
approximately anhour andfifteenminutes.&#13;
Discounted price of $8 per person to&#13;
anyone wearing a purple"Eureka Springs&#13;
Celebrating Diversity" button (available&#13;
for half a buck at The Emerald Rainbow).&#13;
Call (501) 253-8030 or 2428 for details.&#13;
* In keeping with both themes this&#13;
weekend, Judy at Pond Mountain Lodge,&#13;
is hosting a "family" wine tasting, with&#13;
hors d’oeuvres, from 5 to 7 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday. Admission is a favorite boftle&#13;
of wine from your state or $10 per person.&#13;
Pond Mountain is on Hwy 23S about two&#13;
miles from its intersection in town with&#13;
Hwy 62. Call (800) 583-8043 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
* After the dances on Friday and&#13;
Saturday nights, Basin Block Cafe (across&#13;
from Basin Park Hotel) will be open for&#13;
breakfast from midnight ’til 3 a.m.&#13;
* This weekend is also Eureka Springs’&#13;
Food and Wine Festival, and many of the&#13;
town’s fine restaurants are offering special&#13;
menus, from light fare to exquisite multicourse&#13;
dinners. If you’re interested, call&#13;
theChamberofCommerceformoredetails&#13;
at (501) 253-8737.&#13;
Be sure to stop byThe EmeraldRainbow&#13;
to pick up your Diversity Cooperative&#13;
booklet and discount coupons from some&#13;
of the Coop’s businesses!&#13;
And please join us at our next Eureka&#13;
Springs Diversity Celebration Weekend&#13;
on April 7, 8 &amp;9, 2000 ! ! ! Keep an eye on&#13;
www.shimaka.com/eureka~diversity for&#13;
details.&#13;
The Eureka Springs Diversity&#13;
Celebrationweekendis producedby Linda&#13;
Williams and M.C. Delahanty and&#13;
sponsored by The Emerald Rainbow and&#13;
the businesses of The Eureka Springs&#13;
Diversity Cooperative,&#13;
Classifieds - how to work them:&#13;
First 30 words are 5;10. Each additional word is&#13;
25 cents. Options for your ad:&#13;
Bold headline - $1, all capital letters -&#13;
$1, all bold &amp; capital letters - $2, ad in&#13;
box - $2, Ad reversed - $3, tear sheet&#13;
mailed - $2 Blind P.O. Box - $5&#13;
Please type or print your ad. Count the words -&#13;
word is a group of letters or numbers separated by&#13;
a space. TFNreserves the right to edit or refuse any&#13;
ad. No refunds. Send ad&amp; payment to POB 4140,&#13;
Tulsa, OK 74159 with your name, address, telephone.&#13;
Ads will run in the next issue after receipt.&#13;
For Good Home&#13;
Friendly, honest, &amp; very experienced&#13;
42 year youngrealtor seeks sincere&amp;motivated&#13;
buyers &amp;sellers. Into MLS. You won’t be&#13;
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equi~ to k~ow fi)r just ak)ut ~xything -- home&#13;
impmve.men~, bill co~lidation, college ~ition,&#13;
or bwi~ acar. &amp;d ~k h~ ~eat mt~t ~d&#13;
m~t home equiwI~let you d~uct ~e intermt&#13;
~myour ~x~.*&#13;
Applying iseasier than ever. You can come into&#13;
any of our 24 conOenient’lhlsa area :locations,&#13;
including 9.Albertsons-locations open 7 days a&#13;
week. You can a’lso call our 24-hour ExpressDank&#13;
at 5884~10 to apply any timg .... we’re never&#13;
closed.&#13;
And now you can apply online at&#13;
www.bankofokl":~oma.com. It’s ease/and fast.&#13;
*.~l~his offer a~ail~l~ on&#13;
k~~@i~~will&#13;
ApplyAt&#13;
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Or Call Us&#13;
24 Hours A Day&#13;
At 588-6010&#13;
Or Apply Online At</text>
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                <text>[1999] Tulsa Family News, October 1999; Volume 6, Issue 10</text>
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                <text>Tulsa Family News was a monthly newspaper; No. 1 issued December 1993-January 1994. The final issue available was published in September 0f 2001 (Volume 8, Issue 9). &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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Barry Hensley&#13;
J.P. Legrandbouche&#13;
Lamont Lindstrom&#13;
Esther Rothblum&#13;
Mary Schepers</text>
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