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              <text>TN.a 8 TAR PROUDLY SERVING THE GLBT &amp; ALLIED COMMUNITY&#13;
REE&#13;
Fans&#13;
7204 E. Pine&#13;
CLUB MAJESTIC&#13;
124 N Boston&#13;
CLWMAVERICK&#13;
424 S. Memorial&#13;
SPAS~N-SUCH&#13;
808 N 15th St, B&#13;
TUI.SARA&#13;
ROUGH B.IDERS&#13;
J, www.tolsaroughriders.com&#13;
f' UNDERGUY.COM&#13;
825 E. 3rd&#13;
.: ,.'·" '~ &lt;&#13;
HI•·· .:.&#13;
111111..&#13;
www..so&#13;
............ Po&amp;~n By K~n•tb I!. Cowhide&#13;
Page 3&#13;
NWA'S ONLY GAY OWNED AND STAFFED DANCE CLUB!&#13;
SUNDAY APRIL 3rd 2005&#13;
Miss Gay Arkansas USofA&#13;
•· DQdn{Gpea;af 8:00pm&#13;
Pag~antb~gins at 9:00.pm&#13;
Cover$5: Mem. $8 Gu~t&#13;
Featuring: .&#13;
Miss 'G, W . -:U So.f A&#13;
Layla LaRue&#13;
KARAOKE WEDNESDAYS Sgfid~:April 24th, 2005&#13;
Pl.ASTIC "FHURSOAY·~A.NCE; .. Mi$.~fW Wa:shington Q:lunty&#13;
PART'r' EVERYTHURSDAY! . . •· :. '. ',i ,'' A1nerit:a&#13;
GO GO BOY$ E\'~R,Y F,FUbAY . . . :00pm&#13;
&amp; SA:TURDAY NJGHJ:! a.t 9:00pm&#13;
NWA1S1BE&amp;:F'.DRA:G SHOW· ; ··~-/Guest&#13;
EVERYSUNE&gt;AYNlGHT! .. ·Featuring~ ...&#13;
Special thank&amp; :tr;:alFof yqu who&#13;
mc;tde. my S4th b!r,t,~ey.~ ~ .&#13;
· · Huge'.'success ... · ].ave Kelly .&#13;
0,9. Kamri.o. M,!k?-els&#13;
'04 Makayla Duvoi&#13;
MGWC.Emeritus&#13;
Vicki V~[eptine&#13;
Fr:iday ,Wril 2$tfu·&#13;
S~N~E;ff StiOW FOR&#13;
E:GRANl'l:&#13;
. {jSdfA Classic&#13;
Ft~lp u,s ~n~ aarbie to Dallas for&#13;
. . NEdibn~ts)n Mey! .&#13;
-2am&#13;
. AR 479~571-1300&#13;
net·&#13;
E.01,1.r .. Sta&#13;
Rodeo 2005&#13;
by Greg Steele&#13;
TULSA, OK. With the Fort Worth&#13;
rodeo kicking off the 2005 gay rCldeo&#13;
in March, T~~~. T-Town Jiodeo&#13;
the f.our .~t?-tes region's buckin&#13;
show' .. '"' .. ·. ·on 4£rj1 Sth-&#13;
' Afena. For&#13;
atio ,;t6&#13;
stai:ero0~~~t~{~: ti~e Rock&#13;
with&#13;
. . . fo&#13;
: ·, ~d.sta:Of'g-)1 ,_ h~i~l ?·&#13;
o Wi.':~)pfc:s~;e;d£l~ii,.1:he&#13;
.,,y in&#13;
Oklahoma State&#13;
OGRA is the 3~d largest ga}'iodeo event&#13;
under the· IGR!A :w!iibteila:.·lFor,1schcdule&#13;
f eventssYisif ·:&#13;
.. GltAY"S-&#13;
~:~ff lat&#13;
', ,',' ,&#13;
fellowship with its member ~sociati~s,&#13;
donates thousands of dollars to cha#fy each&#13;
year. The Gay and . of&#13;
the United States&#13;
enriched by the ed&#13;
• through its sanctioning&#13;
· the various events and .&#13;
part of wh.at ~• call Gay Rodeo.&#13;
Your local Rodeq Associatio(! rieeds&#13;
your support, :~e fi:tn: fur'~ sdo'a cause.&#13;
They Do!·.&#13;
Page 5&#13;
Sooner State Rodeo .entertainment. The cast included Rachel&#13;
Ward, Kris Kole, Anita Dickey, Pat La&#13;
Association F d . Morte, Jonathan Brown, Kris Enloe, Un raiser Jamie Summers and Reba Lynn Cole. A&#13;
by Greg Steele dinner and show to benefit SSRA was&#13;
photo's by Chaz&#13;
Rachel Ward lvfiss SSRA 2005&#13;
TULSA, OK_ Royalty was out :in full&#13;
force March 19th around T-Town. A&#13;
benefit to raise funds for SSRA's T-Town&#13;
Rodeo. The event was hosted by Rachel&#13;
Ward Miss SSRA 2005 and held at the&#13;
Bamboo Lounge. The audience was&#13;
delighted with the variety of&#13;
Jamie Summers Miss Iowa 2004&#13;
Kris Enloe Mr. SSRA 2003-2004&#13;
also held at The Supper Club in Tulsa.&#13;
SSRA's T-Town Rodeo kicks off the&#13;
four states rodeo season on April 8th, 9t.h&#13;
and 10th at the Tulsa Expo Square Arena&#13;
4145 E. 21st. This is the 1st rodeo for&#13;
SSRA and their 3rd year of incorporation.&#13;
For tickets and information visit the&#13;
website at ,vvlw.soonerstaterodeo.com.&#13;
Jonathan Brown Mr. SSRA 2005&#13;
Anita Dicky Miss Bamboo 2005&#13;
(by default)&#13;
Page 6&#13;
APRIL 2005&#13;
by Andrew Collins&#13;
"Galveston,&#13;
Texas"&#13;
Although America's Gulf Coast&#13;
doesn't have any major gay beach&#13;
resorts, the Texas barrier island of&#13;
Galveston has steadily become a&#13;
popular option. This scenic haven of&#13;
sandy beaches, opulent Victorian houses, and touristy but engaging seafo?d restaurant~ ~d&#13;
souvenir shops attracts quite a few gays and lesbians from Texas and the Gulf South - it's Just&#13;
50 iniles south of Houston.&#13;
Galveston has a handful of accommodations that market specifically to the gay&#13;
community, as well as a few lively gay bars. and discos. Many of the queer folks yoi,i're apt to&#13;
meet around town either own second homes or rent cottages here. Late spring through early&#13;
fall, the city absolutely swells with visitors,· but no matter the time of year, the gay presence&#13;
tends to be relatively discreet.. You won't see same-sex couples holding hands around town,&#13;
as Galveston remains first and foremost a ,destination for families and retirees, many of&#13;
whom tend toward the conservative side. Nevertheless, with colorful architecture, a small&#13;
but discernible arts scene, and a laid-back. demeanor reminiscent of both Key West and New&#13;
Orleans, this city of 65,000 tends to be ii. little more open-minded and offbeat than any other&#13;
on the Texas Gulf Co11St.&#13;
As you approach Galveston _from metro Houston, the scenety offers li~e inspir~tion:_&#13;
suburban sprawl and strip-mall development give way to the presence of gnm, hulking 011&#13;
refineries. But once you cross G:alveston Bay on I-45, you enter a different world - a narrow&#13;
32-mile-long windswept coastal island. Several historic neighborhoods abound w,i~ stately&#13;
old mansions and cheerful clapboard cottages, and the main drag along the ~hordine, J;eawall&#13;
Boulevard bustles with seafood restaurants, chain hotels, and shops selling postcaicl.~,&#13;
seashells, ;wimsuits, and sungiii.s~cs. . ·· · ·&#13;
If vou're a beach lover, you'll want to hang out around the shorefront neighborhoods,&#13;
but the, city's vibrant and quirky personality reveals itself most strongly a C0Ul'!le, of miles&#13;
north, in the downtown Strand Historic District, which overlooks Galveston. Bay .. '.fhls&#13;
warren of palm-shaded cobblestone lanes verges on quaint, but for 11 few tall builclμigs arid&#13;
the frequent presence of massive cruise ships tied up. in port. Although it's too .fai to walk&#13;
easily between downtown and the gulf, the city's convenient trolley runs regularly between&#13;
them.&#13;
There are numerous attr.i.ctions to keep you busy around Galveston, the most famous&#13;
being the Moody Gardens, a dazzling nature-oriented complex consisting of ~ee h~&#13;
pyramidal buildings housing a vast tropical rain forest, an aquarium, a?~ a s~ence museum.&#13;
Other points of interest include downtown's Ocean Star Offshore Drilling Rig and Museum,&#13;
in which you can explore an actual retired oil rig; the drlllllatic 1894 Gtand OpC?- House,&#13;
which now presents theater and music events; and the 1877 Tall Ship Elissa. . .&#13;
If you start to feel a little peckish, downtown's festive Yaga's Cafe is a Ion~~. filvonte&#13;
for casual Caribbean-inspired &amp;re; it books live reggae, blues, and jazz bands on weekend&#13;
evenings. For extremely tll~ty .Southwestem and Mexic~ fue, including delicious :liri~p&#13;
tacos with mango salsa, head to Playa de Loro. A spacious, elegant restaurant over,ooking&#13;
Galveston Bav, Willie G's serves huge and rich portions of seafood, including lump crab au&#13;
gratin and sn;pper Kathleen (blackened with shrimp, crab, mushrooms, and iemo~ _b~tter).&#13;
Gay-popular Mosquito Cafe, despite its pesty name, might just serv~ the mos_t soprusttcated&#13;
and polished contemporary cuisine in town. This charming space with tall WU1dows exudes&#13;
understated elegance. . .................... continued next page.&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Good bets from the eclectic menu include&#13;
rare yellowfin tuna over rice noodles and&#13;
veggies with a trio of spicy Pan-Asian sauces,&#13;
and farfalle pasta with artichoke hearts,&#13;
calamata olives, pine nuts, and feta cheese.&#13;
Yes, it's a chain, but downtown&#13;
Galveston's Starbucks is a particularly&#13;
appealing spot for a light bite, with a nice-size&#13;
sundeck offering views of cruise ships pulling&#13;
in and out of port, and several plush&#13;
armchairs. Another good place for a snack,&#13;
Java 213 offers plenty of character and&#13;
warmth, with its high ceilings and vintage&#13;
decor.&#13;
Garza's Kon Tiki is the most popular gay&#13;
nightclub downtown. It's in a modern&#13;
building with kitschy, Mardi Gras-inspired&#13;
decor, and it's steps from several great&#13;
restaurants. Garza's, which has been going&#13;
strong since the 1960s, draws a varied crowd.&#13;
Women and men of all ages come to admu:e&#13;
some of the best female impersonators in&#13;
Texas (great drag shows are staged Friday and&#13;
Saturday nights).&#13;
The city's other three gay bars are down&#13;
by·the beach. With a second-floor deck that&#13;
offers superb gulf views and a great location,&#13;
Undercurrent .is the snazziest gay disco&#13;
around, drawing a trendy crowd for dancing&#13;
and cruising. In a. slightly ragtag&#13;
neighborhood on the east side of town, the&#13;
low-keyed Third. Coast Bar overlooks the&#13;
Gulf and has a small deck. outside. Robert's&#13;
Lafitte is another neighborhood bat with an&#13;
easy-going personality.&#13;
Galveston claims a pair of Texas's most&#13;
renowned historic hotels, both of them run&#13;
by the gay-friendly Wyndham hotel chain.&#13;
Anchoring the heart of downtown's Strand&#13;
Historic District, the Tremont House&#13;
captures the old-world dignity and warmth of&#13;
a European boutique hotel. The 119-room&#13;
property lies within steps of countless shops&#13;
and restaurants, and rooms have marble baths&#13;
and fluffy pillow-top bedding. A 10-minute&#13;
drive south, the imposing Hotel Galvez offers&#13;
a more peaceful setting. Even better, this&#13;
regal 1911 grande dame overlooks the Gulf of&#13;
Menco. Although rooms have such modern&#13;
touches as high-speed Internet and cordless&#13;
phones, the period decor thoroughly recalls&#13;
the city's gilded era. You can sip cockwls at&#13;
the pool's swim-up bar or relax to piano&#13;
music over the Sunday champagne brunch.&#13;
It's top-notch, all-around.&#13;
Another mainstream property with a&#13;
strong gay following, the Queen Anne-style&#13;
Mermaid &amp; Dolphin resort sits along a&#13;
. peaceful, tree-lined street a short drive from&#13;
both the gulf and downt9wn. Luxury is the&#13;
buzzword here: the eight· suites have double&#13;
Jacuzzi tubs, plush hand-carved mahogany&#13;
beds, gas fireplaces, CD players, TVs with&#13;
VCRs, and fine artwork and antiques. It&#13;
doesn't get much fancier than this. If, on the&#13;
other hand, you're looking to save a little&#13;
money and simply want a basic but inviting&#13;
motel, consider the prosaic but reasonably&#13;
priced Ramada Galveston, which is right&#13;
across from the beach and near Undercurrent •&#13;
nightclub.&#13;
Galveston has one gay mini-resort that&#13;
captures the romantic tradition of Key West:&#13;
Paradise Guesthouse. Set in a modest but&#13;
historical residential enclave just two short&#13;
blocks from the gulf, this secluded and cozy&#13;
brick compound is situated around a pool and&#13;
fountain, fringed by fragrant and&#13;
meticulously tended gardens and lighted in&#13;
the evening by flickering torches. Common&#13;
amenities include a hot tub, several patios,&#13;
and a common room stocked with snacks and&#13;
soft drinks. The mood is more romantic than&#13;
frisky - it's a perfect retreat for gay and&#13;
lesbian co~r,le.s looking to celebrate a special&#13;
occasion. There are three large suites and two&#13;
smaller but still inviting guest rooms, all with&#13;
refrigerators and TVs with VCRs.&#13;
Finally, if you're planning on visiting with&#13;
a few friends and you want to enjoy the&#13;
convenience and privacy that comes with&#13;
staying in your vety own summer house,&#13;
consider renting one of the six beautiful&#13;
bungalows available through Cottage by the&#13;
Gulf. Just a half block from the gulf and&#13;
convenient to picturesque Stewart Beach,&#13;
these handsomely outfitted houses come in all&#13;
different shapes and sizes, sleeping from 4 to&#13;
10 guests. The smallest, Magnolia House, has&#13;
a wraparound deck; another has a small&#13;
fenced yard that's perfect if you're traveling&#13;
wi~ a dog. All have full kitchens, barbecue&#13;
grills, espresso machines, stereos, cable TV&#13;
with VCRs, and elegant furnishings, and you&#13;
can rent them by the day, week, or month.&#13;
Keep in mind that rates, which in summer&#13;
begin at $125 nightly and $795 weekly, are&#13;
about 20 to 30 percent less from October&#13;
through April, making this a real off-season&#13;
bargain.&#13;
The Little Black Book&#13;
Cottage by the Beach (810 Ave. L, 409-739-&#13;
0194, www.cottagebytbebeach.com).&#13;
...................... continued page 25&#13;
Page 8&#13;
Star's On The Plain&#13;
Heart of America Mens Chorus&#13;
Of Wichita&#13;
WICHITA, KANSAS_HOAMC was&#13;
conceptualized the summer of 2002 and&#13;
created for a Christmas concert in&#13;
December of 2002. A group of 5 guys&#13;
wanted to sing and new that if they were&#13;
going to sing in a mens chorus they were&#13;
going to have to build it themselves.&#13;
They then contacted Howard Webb and&#13;
asked him if he would consider&#13;
conducting the group.&#13;
Webb is&#13;
no stranger&#13;
ro the&#13;
Wichita&#13;
Musical&#13;
community.&#13;
He has&#13;
helped start&#13;
other&#13;
choral and&#13;
musical&#13;
organizations&#13;
like the&#13;
Wichita&#13;
Chamber&#13;
Chorale, a&#13;
group that&#13;
has&#13;
flourished&#13;
in the musical community of Wichita for&#13;
over 25 years, and /the Plymouth Chamber&#13;
Series. He has performed and conducted in&#13;
many area venues. As Artistic Director/&#13;
Conductor of HOAMC his responsibilities&#13;
include planning the concert, training the&#13;
singers and conducting the concert. He is&#13;
happy to tell you that his assistant conducror,&#13;
Mark Walker, and accompanist John Cargile&#13;
work very dose with him in all this work.&#13;
The group has grown from 18 at the&#13;
original concert to a present 50 men&#13;
singing the upcoming concert. We have&#13;
gained our 501c3 non-profit status this&#13;
past year had successful fund drive and&#13;
fund raising events. We have been invited&#13;
to do a run-out concert sing tile national&#13;
anthem for the river festival fireworks&#13;
concert with the symphony, and are&#13;
slowly but surely becoming recognized&#13;
in the Wichita musical communitv as a&#13;
talented and well prepared music~!&#13;
organization.&#13;
The group is diverse in all ways, from&#13;
different religious backgrounds, race,&#13;
careers and sexual orientation. Our&#13;
requirement is that they are prepared to&#13;
have fun and make music; all else is their&#13;
personal business. And have fun we do.&#13;
From reading the music for the first time&#13;
co the learning process, building sets and&#13;
taking the show to the stage for&#13;
performance and the light come on and&#13;
the audience roars as the curtain opens.&#13;
As the curtain opens on "Thats&#13;
Entertainment" vou will be invited to Be&#13;
Our Guest (fro~ Beauty and the Beast)&#13;
and our guest you will be from Hello&#13;
Dolly to Le&#13;
.Miserable&#13;
and from&#13;
Oklahoma&#13;
to Chicago.&#13;
.There is&#13;
great music&#13;
:.for mens&#13;
chorus and&#13;
HOAMC&#13;
Chorus&#13;
;(HOAMC),&#13;
now in their&#13;
third season will be presenting Thats&#13;
Entertainment, April 16'h and 17'h at&#13;
4:00. This concert will be at Mary Jane&#13;
Teall Theater in Century II and will be&#13;
music drawn from Broadway musicals.&#13;
For tickets or more information call Kip&#13;
at 316.264.2266 or www.hoamc.org&#13;
Page 9&#13;
HEART OF AMERICA MEN'S CHORUS PRBSENTS. ..&#13;
.......,....&#13;
BARB SCHOENHOFER&#13;
SHA'\\-"N..;1\UCHAEL 1\-IORSE&#13;
H0AJICt"EIGHT OF HEARTS"'&#13;
• ••• SOUTH HIGHMADRIU-ALS&#13;
A&#13;
VJOWSll)llHl?S&#13;
Saturday Aprll 16 - 4:00 pm AND Sunday .t\pril 17 -4:00 pn1&#13;
Century II -Mary Jane Teall Theatre Wichita, Kansas&#13;
Tickets: $12 adv./ $15 door Call Kip.@ 264-2266&#13;
and llvenlngs Cl Week&#13;
Also Open Holidays&#13;
KENN&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Daffy Lunch and Dinner&#13;
Specials&#13;
OHn 1 tam (ltflY&#13;
Happy hpur 3-6 &amp; 9 .. c1ose&#13;
$t.7J .. t6oz$2.25-.23oz&#13;
Bu.d U1Mlch-Uka Draws&#13;
~,.,,,&#13;
free.&#13;
HolldClt'$ qnd·~ Jv•nlt.&#13;
&amp;elur/id&#13;
Monlhly Mc,v...ln $pedals&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Diamond State Rodeo Association&#13;
is proud .!9 present&#13;
IN E K&#13;
APRIL 22-24 2005&#13;
Uttle Rock, Atkansaa&#13;
For ticket and parttcipation Information&#13;
contact:&#13;
www .dsra.org&#13;
Or Call the Rodeo&#13;
Hotline at: 501-960•7363&#13;
Visit www.eute.&#13;
Spring Diversity Fall Diversity&#13;
Ap_ril 1st, . November 4th, 5th, 6th&#13;
Sprf~ &amp; Fal 2005 Mntsincklde:&#13;
ouldoor diYerslty festlva, vendors. drag show, king&#13;
show. beat cantest, dlrlces, karaoke, country we$m,&#13;
tarot, pride clseotlQ, peintball, fishing, boat rides,&#13;
C8n1)1ng &amp; BSQ's, fanlastic shopping. di;ing,&#13;
live enterlaioment clld ........ nu:h fflOl81&#13;
Page 12&#13;
,', ,, '&#13;
4815 S~ttdi&#13;
0&#13;
Hatvard i~e'.~ Suite 424&#13;
Tulsa, OK 74135-3068&#13;
Phone: (918) 747-5466&#13;
Email: KellyKirbyCPA@sbcglobal.net&#13;
accountmg needs of the&#13;
GI.BT Community since&#13;
1982&#13;
Page 13&#13;
CANADA IS NOT&#13;
THE ANSWER!&#13;
by Greg Razer&#13;
QUESTIONS During these past few&#13;
months following the November 2°d&#13;
election there seems to be nothing but&#13;
questions within the progressive community.&#13;
Some ask, "Should we take our&#13;
mes to the right?" others ask,&#13;
"Sh we take our message to the left?"&#13;
or, "What did religious fundamentalist&#13;
do to gain so much influence and power&#13;
in this nation?" and of course, "Which&#13;
way to Canada?" (The last question&#13;
being the most disturbing to this observer.)&#13;
These are questions that are&#13;
being raised from the halls of the Capitol&#13;
in Washington to the dinner table right&#13;
here in the heart of the Midwest.&#13;
Questions are also being raised in the&#13;
LGBT community. "\Vas ii: too much to&#13;
'go after marriage'?" and "Do we&#13;
wntinue the path that we are on, or push&#13;
foi..n:iore realistic goals given today's&#13;
political climate?" These quesi:ions too&#13;
are being felt right here in our own&#13;
towns and all the way to Washington.&#13;
These are all broad and far-reaching&#13;
questions that must be dealt wii:h and&#13;
dealt with soon. However, perh;ps a&#13;
more basic, fundamental question needs&#13;
to be asked of us all as to how we ensure&#13;
that the debacle of this past November&#13;
never happens again. Did we as a&#13;
community, and I as an individual, really&#13;
do all I could to ensure victorv in&#13;
November? ,&#13;
Think back for a moment to the&#13;
months leading up IO the election. Never&#13;
before have we seen so many&#13;
conversations take place regarding&#13;
national issues. How manv times did yo:,&#13;
sit around a bar with your, friends for ,&#13;
Happy Hour and the marriage issue was&#13;
discussed? How many times did you go&#13;
to dinner with your loved ones and anger&#13;
was expressed concerning the policies of&#13;
President Bush? And now, how manv&#13;
times did those discussions lead to ·&#13;
someone at the bar or table going to&#13;
write a check or volunteer for a campaign&#13;
to make sure the right men and women&#13;
would be in office?&#13;
The Greek philosopher Plato once&#13;
noted, ''The price good men pay for&#13;
indifference to public affairs is to be ruled&#13;
by evil men . .., Ir is in that quote, first&#13;
made thousands of years ago, that we&#13;
find the problem that today's LGBT&#13;
community faces. Our problem is not&#13;
with our issues. We will not find our&#13;
political problems by looking at elected&#13;
officials that we think of as our "friends".&#13;
Nor. will we find the answer by looking&#13;
at those who oppose us. The answer to&#13;
polii:ical problems that face the LGBT&#13;
community are found right here at&#13;
home, within our own community.&#13;
PROVIDING THE RIGHT&#13;
CURRENCY Many want IO see our&#13;
LGBT political organizations begin to&#13;
demand our rights be given to us by our&#13;
elected officials. However, one cannot&#13;
demand anything without the ability to&#13;
back up that demand. When a person is&#13;
elected to public office, he/she usually&#13;
has certain issues that are most dear to&#13;
them. With some legislators, LGBT&#13;
equality is one of their issues and their&#13;
support of our community is unwavering&#13;
and our appreciation .is heartfelt.&#13;
However, we must realize that there are&#13;
even more legislators who are&#13;
supportive, but LGBT equality is rarely&#13;
one of their key issues. Therefore, when&#13;
asking a legislator to support us in our&#13;
efforts, we are essentially asking them to&#13;
spend polii:ical capital on us, and not&#13;
their own pet issues. To convince them&#13;
to do so, we must show the official that.&#13;
not only are we not a liability at electio~&#13;
time, that in fact, we are an asset to&#13;
them. To accomplish this we must&#13;
produce the three forms of currency&#13;
every poiitician wants: Votes, money&#13;
and ~ime. ·&#13;
On Election Day, many of us went&#13;
about our daily business proudly wearing&#13;
our "I Voted" sticker. We a:-e proud of&#13;
that sticker because it shows that we did&#13;
a part in making our ::iation and our state&#13;
a better place to live . .. continued pg35&#13;
This Is Shelter Country.&#13;
Here in our community you will&#13;
find Shelter Agent Greg Tainter.&#13;
We're proud to serve this community&#13;
and our customers. Call today&#13;
and ask about our services.&#13;
Life-Worker's Comp.-Home-Auto-Farm-Business&#13;
Greg W. Tainter, LUTCF&#13;
Office licensed in Missouri,&#13;
Arkansas, Illinois &amp;&#13;
Colorado&#13;
Post Office Box 339&#13;
Eureka, Missouri 63025&#13;
www .shelterinsurance.com&#13;
Tel: (636) 938-5500&#13;
Fax:(636)938-3539&#13;
gtainter@shelterinsurance.com&#13;
Sisters Talk&#13;
Gay Battles with&#13;
Weapons&#13;
VStevens&#13;
Llsa Miller-Jenkins, a lesbian once joined&#13;
by civil union to Janet Miller-Jenlr.-ins, has&#13;
decided to use laws designed. for. heterosexuals&#13;
in order to win a custody dispute with her&#13;
former partner. Lisa and Janet were joined by&#13;
civil union in Vermont, where the couple&#13;
decided to have a child using artificial&#13;
insemination. When the couple split, Llsa, the&#13;
birth mother, left Vermont (the state that&#13;
recognizes homosexual unions) and moved to&#13;
Virgina, where she thought she would be&#13;
ensured full custody of the child she shared&#13;
with Janet because Virgina docs not,reco~e ·&#13;
homosexual unions. Anything to win, rigli.t?&#13;
Luckily for Janet, Vermont does not allqw; ., ·&#13;
that kind of creative manipru9:tio!i, of:theJaw.&#13;
The state of Vermont says' lesbiiin 'co'tiples ..&#13;
joined by civil union who have children using&#13;
artificial insemination should be treated no&#13;
differently than heterosexual couples who&#13;
choose the same procedure or choose to&#13;
adopt. Both women are legal parents of the&#13;
child and Llsa has no more rights to the child&#13;
than Janet does. . .&#13;
What we see here is a lesbhm who enjoys&#13;
those equal rights and freedoms that gay&#13;
unions provide only if she is on the winning&#13;
side of the law. Wnen she's not guannteed a&#13;
win, she simply turns to archaic heterosexist&#13;
laws that srack the odds in her f.i.vor. Millions&#13;
of gays and lesbians in the United States still&#13;
do not have the right to a civil union or a&#13;
marriage: Lisa Miller-Jenkins enjoyed&#13;
that right in Vermont, then moved to&#13;
Virginia to take advantage of&#13;
discrimination gainst gays and lesbians.&#13;
Lisa is cheating. She's cheating just as ·&#13;
badly as George W. did when he used the&#13;
gay ban to win votes at the polls.&#13;
When homosexual couples accept&#13;
those rights and freedoms associated with&#13;
gay unions, we also accept all the ·&#13;
accompanying responsibilities. Children&#13;
are a large responsibility. When we&#13;
decide to share that responsiblity with&#13;
another partner, our own desires tllke a&#13;
backseat. Homosexual couples joined by&#13;
civil union (or marriage in Massachusetts)&#13;
who decide to raise childteri together, .&#13;
then. ultimately sever tn,eir. r~latio°'s¥p,&#13;
will'. &amp;c.e riiany chilleo:gef! in. tJie. c~drts ..&#13;
, ,·,,, ,·,-· , '.,. '';&#13;
.-emo B's •.&#13;
jurisdiction, the · st:lte best equipped to&#13;
help the former couple deal with the&#13;
custody dispute.&#13;
The best thiilg to come out of Ilsa&#13;
Miller-Jenkins' creative maneuvering is&#13;
awareness. Society has become more&#13;
aware of the mess Clinton's Defense of&#13;
Marriage Act has created in child custody&#13;
disputes. I refuse to believe the courts&#13;
will allow these kinds of messy disputes&#13;
to continue for too long.&#13;
Page 15&#13;
Guess that I am just a '\vild and crazy&#13;
guy'' but I just don't see what all this&#13;
crap about same-sex marriages is all&#13;
about. Seems as thou the "religious right"&#13;
is always on somebody's case. First it&#13;
was the blacks and then the Jews and&#13;
then the horrible Russian communists&#13;
and now the homosexuals. They always&#13;
have to have their "flock" hate someone&#13;
so that they can get more money out of&#13;
them. They WANT their "flock" to&#13;
hate! After all isn't this more or less&#13;
what religion is all about? Hating the&#13;
people that don't agree with you? But&#13;
what I would REALLY like to know is&#13;
where are the Jerry Farwell's and all the&#13;
other religious right leaders when it&#13;
comes to Catholic Priests molesting little&#13;
children? For the life of me I cannot&#13;
possibly understand why they have not&#13;
jumped on the bandwagon to degrade the&#13;
Catholic Church for their actions! If&#13;
anyone else would molest children they&#13;
would have their ass thrown in jail so fast&#13;
it would make their head spin but&#13;
because the Catholic Church has so&#13;
much power in the world they get off&#13;
with only a slap on the wrist. It just&#13;
doesn't make any sense to me at all.&#13;
Living here in the midwest can be fun&#13;
but there are still a lot of questions to be&#13;
answered. Lucky for me I live near a&#13;
large city and don't have to get real close&#13;
to all my neighbors.&#13;
Same sex marriages is NOT giving&#13;
special treatment to us, it is mereiy&#13;
giving us the SAME rights as all other&#13;
Americans. I have some older gay&#13;
friends who said that they had wanted to&#13;
serve in the Army and Navy but&#13;
couldn't. They wanted the benefits of&#13;
serving in the Armed Services such as&#13;
hospitalilzation, education and GI&#13;
benefits on getting a house, etc. but they&#13;
were denied. They were not wanting&#13;
speciai treatment. They were mereiy&#13;
· wanting the same treatment as all&#13;
Americans. The State congressmen here&#13;
in Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and&#13;
Arkansas are only playing i:o special&#13;
interest groups and could care less about&#13;
us. This is very sad to say but it is&#13;
plainly the truth. We have made a hell&#13;
of a lot of progress i..11 the past few years&#13;
but it is a VERY uphill battle. I don't&#13;
want much out of life, a nice place to&#13;
live, a nice job, a nice person to love, live&#13;
with and to be able to live my life as I&#13;
want to. I don't want to bother&#13;
anybody and I don't want anybody to&#13;
bother me.&#13;
Even thou there are laws passed for&#13;
Blacks and Jews eventually there will be&#13;
laws passed for Gays however just&#13;
because laws are on the books doesn't&#13;
mean that the average American will&#13;
change their minds about us. They will&#13;
forever be biased and narrow-minded. I&#13;
sure would like to think that some how,&#13;
some way, some day all this would&#13;
change for the better and hopefully it&#13;
will. Until then I will just go day by day&#13;
and enjoy life in my own way.&#13;
Teaching Activism,&#13;
Leadership, and Knowledge&#13;
P.R.I.D.E. invites all college and high&#13;
students, as well as activists and community&#13;
members to TALK's Spring 2005 conference&#13;
at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.&#13;
This conference is a chance for students and&#13;
community members to meet up, share,&#13;
leam, org,.nize, and have fun. The intended&#13;
effect will be a strengthened LGBT&#13;
community and great impact on grassroots&#13;
efforts. Though our last two conferences&#13;
have been Ark.ansas focused, we are inviting&#13;
anyone and everyone from AR, OK, MO,&#13;
and KS this year because of the location of&#13;
Fayetteville in proximity to the four&#13;
state area. More than anything, this is a&#13;
rejuvenating experience for those with&#13;
activism experience and good training for&#13;
those with little. So check out the website&#13;
and convince yourself that it is the only piace&#13;
to be on APRIL 1st anci 2nd. Come&#13;
experience a weekend in Fayetteville-the&#13;
best place to be gay in Arkansasii For more&#13;
information call: 479-575-3880 or visit&#13;
www.uark.edu/-pride&#13;
Page 16&#13;
"AN EVENING OF HOPE"&#13;
WITH PAT KUTTELES FRIDAY,&#13;
APRIL 8th AT PITTSBURG STATE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
Press Release:&#13;
PITTSBURG, KS_ The Pittsburg State&#13;
University Queer Straight Alliance, a&#13;
non-profit organization, Presents "An&#13;
Evening of Hope" with Patricia Kutteles,&#13;
to benefit Servicemembers Legal Defense&#13;
Network. The event will be held Friday,&#13;
April 8 at 6pm on the Campus at&#13;
Pittsburg State University - Pittsburg,&#13;
Kansas (Crimson &amp; Gold Ballroom of&#13;
the Overman Student Center) A black tie&#13;
affair with silent auction and dinner.&#13;
Reservations are required: $25 per person&#13;
or $40/couple (For more information, or&#13;
to RSVP, contact Brandon Plott at&#13;
brandon@psuqsa.org.) Patricia Kutteles&#13;
will be the keynote speaker.&#13;
Patricia Kutteles, whose son Barry&#13;
Winchell was murdered at Fort Campbell&#13;
Kentucky after his fellow soldiers&#13;
assumed he was gay, has worked tirelessly&#13;
with SLDN to battle "Don't Ask,&#13;
Don't Tell" and has spoken at numerous&#13;
events across the country.&#13;
Guests who are coming from out of&#13;
town can contact the Comfort Inn and&#13;
Suites of Pittsburg, Kansas and receive a&#13;
room with either 2 queen size beds or&#13;
one king size bed for $52.00 USD per&#13;
night. The hotel room block is valid for&#13;
the 8,9,10 of April. Contact Comfort Inn&#13;
at (620) 231-8800. FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
OR TO RSVP, contact&#13;
Brandon Plott at brandon@psuqsa.org.&#13;
On Saturday April 9th 2005 beginning&#13;
at 9:30 PM we will be hosting the&#13;
First Annual MrJMs./Miss Kansas Gay&#13;
University Student at 4 Oaks Golf&#13;
Course in Pittsburg, $5 cover Charge&#13;
18+ Applicants Must be enrolled full&#13;
time at any Kansas University&#13;
FREE HIV&#13;
TESTING,NO&#13;
NEEDLES!&#13;
SPIRIT OF CHRIST&#13;
MCC SPONSORS&#13;
2902 E. 20th St., PO Box 4711&#13;
Joplin, Mo 64803&#13;
In conjunction with AIDS Project of the&#13;
Ozarks, MCC Joplin offers free HIV&#13;
testing the last Sunday of each month&#13;
between 5PM and 6PM. For your&#13;
convenience you can aiso call 206-6179 for&#13;
an appointment. We use the Ora-sure&#13;
method which does not require the use of&#13;
needles and we offer complete&#13;
confidentialit-f. You may also request&#13;
Booklets on AIDS for People of Faith&#13;
through the PO Box listed above.&#13;
Spirit of Christ MCC Joplin&#13;
"Serfling A Healthier Community"&#13;
Page 17&#13;
t"&#13;
INMALE&#13;
Page 18&#13;
cori.tihti&#13;
this)1;ap&#13;
pegpl~;s,&#13;
e11;ch.sta'&#13;
checks·&#13;
not allow&#13;
rule .. The issue is YOU Iuv'e.to. i,~: tn~&#13;
watch: dog, you have. to ~pealf U ,_fo' .&#13;
bark andy&#13;
injustice co&#13;
We don't n&#13;
bias, religious indifference or&#13;
spealoi:igTcff :i: gteit stil:te oi" a · great&#13;
nation. We don't.need tllore GLBT bars&#13;
· that mistreat _us or exploit our&#13;
. communitf-.Whai WC ~cd ,are tnore&#13;
groups like•-B.::'G . . ..&#13;
National Gav atf&#13;
and churche; like\tJtli&#13;
Christ,&#13;
Met&#13;
that&#13;
commitments · accept second&#13;
· · class' citizen·&#13;
. '&lt;ve&#13;
th&#13;
. . . . &gt;'that&#13;
· in .t he· su.. b&amp;. :. 6f.D .. r: M.. aitili :I..rithef- !forg , •&#13;
JR and-~dbi as welFas :some 'of our&#13;
· · · , leaders; &amp;ET'i.4-IE, :&#13;
.:: ;:,, if.' ·:., ·i{' ,&#13;
., 'f .. :,J&#13;
. . the Soutlietn Baptist&#13;
Conv;entiori. .. the "J.IJli.~hville&#13;
betlifration~'';;ri •stiie-1~:i · ~tffig~;,;, i~&#13;
which it stated ifs' opposition to-same-sex&#13;
based on C it calico, "the&#13;
designed&#13;
of.one man ·Steven&#13;
Discip~es of&#13;
the N~.riai. Gay&#13;
. v .. i;;..; .. ,.~~us&#13;
esponds with&#13;
".A'.~;:~~;,in tnet£Jt~stian Church&#13;
Page 19&#13;
Steve Urie from pg 18 ·MCC's Troy Perry Wins California&#13;
(Disciples of Christ) .and a former Marriage Lawsuit! Thirty-five Years&#13;
Southern Baptist minister, I am saddened Separate His First Milriage Lawsuit in&#13;
1970 And Court Victory in 2005. "I have&#13;
and disappointed that leaders of the worked and prayed for this dav for 35&#13;
Southern Baptist Convention continue to years. Today~ our prayers wer~&#13;
present their discrimination against answered," says Perry.&#13;
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender At a Monday afternoon press&#13;
Americans in the guise of compassion. conference at the Los Angeles law offices&#13;
While diey conclude that, "marriage is a of riot_ed attorney Gloria Allured, Perry&#13;
lifetitjie union of one man and one said, "I have worked for this day and&#13;
womfu, according to the Bible, and may prayea for. this day for 35 years. Today,&#13;
b · · · · · · · our prayers were answered."&#13;
not cq~defin:ed," these so-called Bihlical · Perry also noted; "Monday's ruling is&#13;
literali~ts ignore the fact that marriage in a significant step but not a final step _&#13;
the l3ible _has been used to justify tO~?:fd ~arriage equality." The Superior&#13;
. , of,coricuhiries·iri. the case' of Couit'of. California will bold a review&#13;
. (Genesi;·l6t3);·~·excuse:f&lt;i/ •.seisi6.ti~9n;~cb.30, and the order&#13;
extrav~t poly~y in the case of King.· enforcing the judge's ruling could be&#13;
Solomon (1 Kings H:1-3) apd as a issued aftpat time, It is also:widely&#13;
desperate, but infedor; 'alternative to 4ta1: state officials will appeal&#13;
burning in lustful celibacy in the case of . . . . . to the California Appeals&#13;
th&#13;
A:.. • Court or_ the. California Supreme Court .&#13;
.. e A'f:'o.stle Paul. (1 Cor•i. .n thians 7: 8). .· •• !'.The ru· ling by Judge Richard Kramer&#13;
. Their sd;iptui2Ligi:iorarice only . • • gives hope t&lt;&gt; .all. of us," said Petry,&#13;
undercuts tlieir.message: The ori.lything noting that the judge is both a Roman&#13;
you'll l~arn ab?ut mai:tfage fron;i .reading Catholic and a Republican&#13;
!:l!~~~~~~ir:t!th&#13;
~I~7d moon~~::a:n:d s~:r;t;~!: giant&#13;
rais~d in the Southern Baptist .church and leap' for mankind. This court victory is a&#13;
their. . . .. :i~-whit keeps small step for the GLBT community and&#13;
th~tn with eacli. · a giant leap for humankind. Let your&#13;
._ 'JJliey,will s b~( not hw;nanity be the example for others.&#13;
:will sti th~ dgai:ettc: .&#13;
. . . t don't. . ,think of setYing S_il!Ve Urie has been an activist for over&#13;
. ope of thetn wine. Their women can thirty years and is the pastor of the local&#13;
· we,~ tr1ake up and they can eat pork but · MCC, Spirit of Christ MCC in Joplin, MO.&#13;
Lo~;1'nows you cari}taccept that two&#13;
men:, or women can love each other.&#13;
They can ac:cept marrying concubines iri&#13;
the Bible or having multiple wives&#13;
because it was to procreate and multij?,le&#13;
the world'.s citizenry out they can't'&#13;
accept I might love my: partner ..&#13;
Apru 1 M.2.&#13;
SPRIN.l&#13;
Diversity w .. kend BOTH .. , ·•,·&#13;
1CQUN&#13;
&amp; Gal coatutt&#13;
VALENTINE'S, Concertsarif oiler Ewra Qlver•lty BEARBI&#13;
CONTEST A BBQ LU#CH&#13;
www.DiversityPride.com&#13;
Page 20 Star Scene&#13;
. me's Wichita,&#13;
Kansas to our distribution area.&#13;
With· a vibrate g1ty community,&#13;
the people are not only goodlooking&#13;
but very friendly. You&#13;
will have a great time in Wichita.&#13;
Include this growing&#13;
city on the confluence of the&#13;
Arkansas and Little Arkansas Rivers in your nex.t travel plans!&#13;
Page 22&#13;
Quotable Quotes&#13;
"This is now the law of the land in&#13;
seven Canadian provinces and one&#13;
Canadian territory. This is a decision&#13;
taken bv our courts based on our&#13;
Charter, of Rights. This is a question of&#13;
equality .... The purpose of the Charter&#13;
of Rights is to protect minorities ...&#13;
against the oppression of the majority.&#13;
... One of the most damaging things, I&#13;
believe, to the Canadian concept of&#13;
equality and respect for each other&#13;
would be in fact if we allow the Charter&#13;
to be attacked."&#13;
Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin&#13;
defending Canada's plans to legalize full&#13;
same-sex marriage nationwide, at a Jan.&#13;
17 press conference in India. Courts&#13;
already have legalized same-sex marriage&#13;
in eight of Canada's 13 provinces and&#13;
territories.&#13;
Diversity Festival&#13;
Eureka ncirs; AR&#13;
EUREKA SPRINGS, AR_ Eureka Pride&#13;
announces there 1st outdoor festival .event&#13;
to be held Saturday April, 2nd from 1 pm&#13;
to ????. The event will feature karaoke and&#13;
dance party, food and beer vendors, mot&#13;
readings, boat rides, archery, paint ball,&#13;
live entertainment and more. At 5pm the&#13;
stage will be set for "Drag Queens in&#13;
Heels" drag show.&#13;
A shuttle service will provide transportation&#13;
to the outdoor festival event for&#13;
those who prefer not to drive. Location is&#13;
about 10 minutes west of Eureka Springs&#13;
on Hwy 187. If your driving to the event,&#13;
just iook for the waving rainbow flags.&#13;
For more information visit:&#13;
www.eurekapride.com&#13;
Page 23&#13;
I Dee&#13;
"bar service" ...... !!!&#13;
What! a wonderful month 1brch was!&#13;
Not too much ·snow, not too cold and&#13;
evecyoO:e seemed to be a lot happier. I found&#13;
the bar scene ro .be much better and nof as&#13;
much bitdiirig around. the pool table. The&#13;
same ·oJa:pfople who always bitch still "always&#13;
bitch" but' that, is tliefr problem.. Why bitch&#13;
for the hell of it? 0nly bitch. about things that&#13;
you really liave control over. One thing that I&#13;
would re'ally:like,to bitch about however is&#13;
Bartenders!·'There·are a lot of great bartenders&#13;
and)rr"bsthi&amp;tlidm· ue very friendly: Bur there are a some of them who are vecy obnoxious!&#13;
If they· don(t,'._like beiog·a bartender, why nor&#13;
lo.ok' fur•aootifa'ijobl ,.-1;,. bartender MBST, be a&#13;
"people'!\pett\dn:~ iBartcnders are NOT:the&#13;
owners :6{ the bar, they are merely employees&#13;
of the. t':li'.: ;l'.like• J:;air stylists or :iuiy other&#13;
~Ef!~=: had. never' .b~eii tt(Tulsa liefbre:. Thi!&#13;
bartende.t didri't'even: say "bi" to biro: · He- just&#13;
loo'ke'a' lifhiln n:nl:lf tJ:le. guy iold;liim wbat he&#13;
wanted tcickirik:, ·He'thin,put thedtink down&#13;
in front of hilii aaH 'ditln!f ~en tell ruin how&#13;
much it was. Tbefr Ther giving him liis change&#13;
the bartender·w.cnt= back over to the guys ·at&#13;
the end of the, bar thiit he was tlllkmg with and&#13;
completely ignored the new customer. · After&#13;
one drink the out. of town businessman left&#13;
the bar arid went to another bar. I happened&#13;
to see him later .in the evening at another bar&#13;
and scirted talking with him. He explained&#13;
how rude the bartender at the fust bar was so&#13;
he left after tlie first' tlrlnlt.' · At the secorid bar&#13;
that he went to he Sllld that the bartender was&#13;
very friendly, asked if he was new in town,&#13;
introduced him to a few of the guys in the bar&#13;
and:railfy IJU!de him feel right at home., He&#13;
stayed at that bar, for several drinks:. He~siud&#13;
that often when, lie· travels around on business&#13;
that most bllrtcllders ·are very rude. •. T couldn't'&#13;
expktln why that y.'liS• Seems to me that&#13;
bartenders shorild be the friendliest people in&#13;
town. When gays go to a n~ town whether&#13;
on business or if they, have just moved there or&#13;
only frequent a bar once in a while, ·the&#13;
bartender should go out of his way to be extra&#13;
'nice to everybody. Sadly to say but when a&#13;
gay person comes from out of town to Tuisa&#13;
or Oklahoma City or Springfield, or Joplin,&#13;
the first place that they go is to the gay bars.&#13;
If they are not friendly there, where will they&#13;
be fnendly? Bar owners are always bitching&#13;
about no business or not enough business. If&#13;
their bartenders were nicer, and friendlier to&#13;
the patrons, then they would stay in the bar&#13;
longer and drink and have fun. Doesn't this&#13;
make sense? But some bar owners and&#13;
bartenders would rather. bitch about no·&#13;
b~sin;ss and no tips and, then wonder whv&#13;
th~y don't :h~i ~ore b~siness. Oc~asion:illy I&#13;
go to .a stpight ,bar arid .the ~attenders are&#13;
always friendly! Why not in a gay bar?&#13;
· But, d1en you walk into other bars&#13;
and the bartender greets you by name,&#13;
asks how your day has been and is real&#13;
upbeat. That is the way it SHOULD be!&#13;
M~.tig it a very pleasant experience for&#13;
everyone should be the goal of all bars&#13;
and bartenders. Luckily for me I look&#13;
over 21 so I am rarely .asked for my ID&#13;
but some bartenders and door people are&#13;
downright rude when they ask to see&#13;
ID's. I knpw that legally they need to&#13;
check everyone but they could at,Ieast be&#13;
nice about it.&#13;
I love the bars in Oklahoma and get&#13;
to Springfield and Joplin sometimes on&#13;
weekends. But sometimes the attitudes&#13;
of the bartenders turn me off so much&#13;
that I just walk out and go to another bar&#13;
whei~ they· are· friendly·; They should&#13;
not !:&gt;ring thei; problems to them at&#13;
work. If they don't. like. their jobs, then&#13;
quit and find another job that suits them&#13;
better. -Why should customers have to&#13;
put up with their bitching and problems.&#13;
One of the worst .thirigs a bartender can&#13;
do· is bad mouth the bar. owiler which&#13;
has happineil several times.&#13;
Luckily for me I usually go to the&#13;
bars with a group of friends and we carry&#13;
on,our own co~crsatian,but when we&#13;
see someone come inCthat we don't know&#13;
we like · to introduce ourselves fo them.&#13;
Whether they aie new:in town, just&#13;
· tri~ved here or iust came out, it is alwavs&#13;
' ru~e fo meet n~w. peopl~. Going out tb&#13;
the bars SHOULD be a fun experience!&#13;
Pa~e24&#13;
lesoiat?prcs; fut Hi . .· · ·.&#13;
years. Slie serv~a for tlii:e'e :f~iis as•&#13;
tli{'co~cliair of ttie Boaret:'Bf ·. ·.&#13;
dir~~tors bfNei York' City's&#13;
Lesbian,. Gay, Bis~xfral; iha&#13;
Tr:liisg6~a~r ·co'rti'μittiii#· Center,·&#13;
whei:~ she founded a . . . ' .&#13;
grp\iodbt~:iking · ·&#13;
called ·«Jo Our&#13;
by ;E'aiita .fy{artinac&#13;
APruFzoos&#13;
Beltway&#13;
ie&#13;
. Our two most prominent national :f,GBT&#13;
organizations· recently• announced changes·&#13;
· that, on the surface, may seem like. business as&#13;
· usual. But;, in fact; tliese shifts could have a big&#13;
impact on the course of o:ur, movement ...&#13;
. First,· die National;G:ay and Le!!bian!Task&#13;
Force created a new Department of Public&#13;
Policy &amp; Governmental,Affairs, whicb:will&#13;
lobby me.mbers of C?»gr~ss,;and government&#13;
agencies for LGBT rigllts ublic: ,; .&#13;
~tatement. ab'out,the. P.CW: • .&#13;
one that,o&#13;
Then;.&#13;
Campaign. die~ odth&#13;
l press attent;oh for th&#13;
announcenienti.of its .&#13;
HRC's neW:~h~ad will&#13;
___ ...;.. _ _.;. __ ..,;_;.;;._..,;..,;_,.. ;.._..,;_.;,,1 b:ian wh&#13;
of EMIEY's List; a: grcnip that help's ·pro-choic&#13;
office; . • : ,. . . . . . .&#13;
What struck:. nic about these two ant\ounce&amp;.inti ..&#13;
inodifkations for the two gtouj:&gt;s,,which - espedf:illy in&#13;
been. at odds poU!=ically and ideologicallv, not to tilt.titi&#13;
NGLTF,.i~Rresenting die more,progressive:wing,of out movement;,~ fot&#13;
many .. Y.e:lrS. 9cc11pif:d a b~.ck. sea.t in' ~l!:.shingtoni,gay pblltic~,,~~rkirlg!:mbre at the&#13;
state anc:l}ocal ky-els OD; aμttgay initiatives · , to Hit€. As&#13;
a result, :we'veJiaa oasically one vision .of IB.~@'11,V .; : .&#13;
ind.it's a yisigij. · ·. · f us hav[f6und,too: centrist. Ind~ed;&lt;thete\was aJ~t. ~f&#13;
talk after .Cneryl .the post at HRC that she was forced,,out for.&#13;
m~kinit,.the. oiganizittfon foo y Democl::atic,.while uoder:,heti ;predecessor.,&#13;
Elizabeth B1rchtthe ,a· more. '.\pragg:,.atic/'., .bipartisancfaqe. . .&#13;
.Now. iitepsito have a m1;1ch-l01;1de.n iY&lt;:&gt;ia~,in Washington. The&#13;
grollp .has . 1.,IDJ!J9bbying • team,thal include~, lUlloi;ig others,•&#13;
El~angr C:lintoJ?. ll&lt;lministration of;iciaj.&lt; and, intdguingly, .&#13;
Am~er t,ac.tiv.ist ~.pq ?as long,p~e~.iavohrcd·in. AI:DS organizing&#13;
an.cl. ga! .. '~ .also ,a (oi:thnght s~eaker on queer sexuality; her essay&#13;
fp~s ~s:,A Queer GttLE&gt;reaming Her0Way Home;.&#13;
pro · over well' with many. Republican - · an:d I:&gt;emocratic -&#13;
!aw ., . ·.• . . . ..&#13;
· At the s~nre time; HR:&lt;£ seems to'b~ ripping a page. from NGL'fF's playbook and&#13;
~ass:ssi!fg the• im~o~cc ,e&gt;floc:tl LGBT organizing, After till, as our • • · · · ·&#13;
oest-tanded orga:ntzattQn, l:£8.(i took most of the biame whcn,11&#13;
ameodri:,;ents . . . . . . ~; bu.ring his first we~k:on the&#13;
So~~esc: ,sa . . · i::f9SS-countty tour. to talk. to.&#13;
le;ade.i:s 1and offiq~~ ''I've. time in the last 10. years,~ "&#13;
~ol.l;Ilo.ntse .has $!Jlted .. Hi~ . list was i:o ''.go out acrotisF.&#13;
10 tt,le cf.fort to lielp wo~n j~ef . _ . ·&#13;
J_::~oin what I've read aodiit hitn~ Soimonese seems to suit .his 11ew. employer to a&#13;
T. He·s someone who pleases Republicans and Democrats alike, ·as C'."'1:ideooed by the&#13;
glowing bipartisan praise he's alffaoy picked up. But also, duritig the 2004 election,&#13;
l ~&#13;
1&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
Page 25&#13;
Lesbian Notions . ...&#13;
he made a difficult, some would say&#13;
"pragmatic" move - EMILY's List funded&#13;
a Democratic pro-choice woman who&#13;
was also in favor of passing the rabidly&#13;
antigay Federal Marriage Amendment.&#13;
While Solmonese argues he was just&#13;
upholding his organization's mission, the&#13;
move raised t.h.e ire of many of us who&#13;
believe political and social movements&#13;
should stick together, not sell each other&#13;
out.&#13;
It will be interesting to see how the&#13;
sometime-rival NGLTF and HRC adjust&#13;
to each other's turf. In quintessential&#13;
NGLTF style, executive director Matt&#13;
Foreman has already put forth his belief&#13;
that there is plenty of room for&#13;
"multiple voices" on Capitol Hill. In&#13;
contrast, Solmonese told The Advocate&#13;
that "we've got to come together and&#13;
make sure .. :we share a common vision."&#13;
You can probably tell that I'm a bigger&#13;
fan of NGLTF than of HRC.&#13;
Personally, I don't think any social&#13;
movement can have a "common vision,"&#13;
unless it's a false one that's only the&#13;
vision of the most vocal and powerful&#13;
among us.&#13;
But actually, I'm optimistic about&#13;
both these changes in our two top&#13;
groups. NGLTF has a lot to offer in the&#13;
realm of federal lobbying, most notably&#13;
a view of the LGBT community as&#13;
bound up with other social-justice&#13;
movements in an effort to bring about&#13;
positive change for many different kinds&#13;
of people. Indeed, the group's penchant&#13;
for coalition-building has always been its&#13;
strong suit.&#13;
And HRC takes into America's&#13;
heartland its reputation for holding the&#13;
middle course - which will appeal to&#13;
straight community and religious leaders&#13;
who don't really understand what this&#13;
"gay rights stuff' is about but who may&#13;
be swayed by the stories of and faces&#13;
individuals. And Solmonese avers that&#13;
"increasing our presence and visibility&#13;
across America will be a top priority of&#13;
my tenure" - a vaiuabie goal to bring to&#13;
the gay-activism table.&#13;
Little Black Book fron page 7&#13;
Galveston Convention and Visitors Bureau&#13;
(409-763-6564 or 888/GAL-ISLE,&#13;
www.galveston.com). Garza's Kon Tiki (315&#13;
23rd St., 409-765-5805). Hotel Galvez (2024&#13;
Seawall Blvd., 409-765-7721 or 800-&#13;
WYNDHAM, www.wyndham.com). Java&#13;
213 (213 23rd St, 409-762-JAVA). Mermaid&#13;
&amp; Dolphfu Resort (1103 33rd St., 409-762-&#13;
1561 or 888-922-1866,&#13;
www.mermaidanddolphin.com). Moody&#13;
Gardens (1 Hope Blvd., 800-582-4673,&#13;
www.moodygardens.com). Mosquito Cafe&#13;
(628 14th St., 409-763-1010). Paradise Guest&#13;
House (2317 Ave. P, 409-762-6677,&#13;
www.galveston.com/paradise). Playa de Loro&#13;
(Pirates Beach Center, off Hwy. 3005, 409-&#13;
737-4600). Ramada Galveston (2300 Seawall&#13;
Blvd., 409-762-1166 or 800-272-6232,&#13;
www.ramada.com). Robert's Lafitte (2501&#13;
Ave. Q, 409-765-9092). Stiarbucks (102 22nd&#13;
St., 409~621-2577). Third Coast Bar (904 Ave.&#13;
M, 409-765-6911). Tremont House (2300 Ship&#13;
Mechanic's Row, 409-763-0300 or 800-&#13;
WYNDHAM, www.wyndham.com).&#13;
Undercurrent (3102 Seawall Blvd., 409-750-&#13;
8571). Willie G's (21st North Street Pier 21,&#13;
409~762-3030). Yaga's Cafe (2314 The Strand,&#13;
409-762-6676).&#13;
Dear uncle Mikey&#13;
Ask Uncle Mikey&#13;
Advice Column!&#13;
APRIL 2005&#13;
Uncle here once more bringing you a&#13;
. different view of all things queer. This week&#13;
· your old uncle has done his best to stay'warm.&#13;
]t is as If this winter is lik.e a queen crowing&#13;
another queen, it just does not want to let go.&#13;
• Uncle was able to manage however, with the&#13;
. help of a couple of hot studs to keep me warm.&#13;
· · ,~ Never underestimate the power of lust kittens.&#13;
This month we find ourselves pondering&#13;
llfes missed chances and the lesson learned in&#13;
hindsight.&#13;
I was in a relationship with my boyfriend for two years. I knew I loved him however&#13;
foun~ mysel_f wanting to e~periment and be somewhat free to enjoy other ~en. My&#13;
b&lt;:&gt;yfriend tne? to make ~gs work,_howevcr, felt that the relationship was ended&#13;
with my straying ways. I s10ce. have become disenchanted with the Twinldes around&#13;
me, and realize~ ·what I had with him. I have tried evetything I know to get him&#13;
bac~ to no avail. Now, I am at a !oss wondering if I have lost the man I was meant&#13;
to be with. What can I do? '&#13;
Missing him&#13;
Dearest Missing,&#13;
Uncle was most touched by your letter. It sounds as if you have learned one of lifes&#13;
most unrealized lessons. It is always what we do not have, which drives our desires.&#13;
Once obtained, we usuajJ.y realize we, already had. what A was. we sought in out&#13;
deepest desires: U nfotgiv;ably, . this. i~ .a l~sson whlcii • bfi~ wi~ it .the ·reality of lost&#13;
chances. It SOll!lds l!t o.fhcl:.li#fhas iiloved'.on; arid. :that yoti should do the&#13;
~ame. Realize your .. ~ arid'.uiiliie, this in die futi:lte: If this lo'9'e was meant to be,&#13;
it shall conic back to you, how#cr, be prepared that this just may not be the case.&#13;
Good luck-Uncle Mikey&#13;
Kittens, it is tb,e prison of our own design. Desires unrealized, as the cake always&#13;
seems sweeter. 1!om the other plate. It is mans folly to want the thing they do not&#13;
have, not rcaliz111g they already have what substance in their own kitchen. Be careful&#13;
of what you wish for; for the wish .itself may not be the truest desire of the dreamer.&#13;
Dear Uncle MiJ[ey::&#13;
I recently met the. acqpaiiit;aacc of a n:ian which is ol&gt;'riously in doubt of his sexualitv.&#13;
He attempts to run from. Jps o..m self.: denying his scxuility; while acting .like a big ,&#13;
old butch. I _am ~&lt;&gt;st ll'tttacte'.l to this man and want to help him except himself I&#13;
attempt to gtve hitn leads which, he either does not except or pick up on. How can I&#13;
help this man come out already?&#13;
Getting real&#13;
Dearest Real,&#13;
F~t off lets get real. Is it. the &amp;&lt;;t that. you want to help him, or yourself to his&#13;
delights? You cannot tjish s6me~n~ into coming out lcittep,. just because .you arc&#13;
h~ving ~ 9.11 in your pants. ~au cotdf seriously burn 'lllly.·· qiances you may have&#13;
with this young one, if you insist on pu!ihing them he(orc ihev are readv to reveal:&#13;
the pos_sibility that they play. for our team. If you re.ally waiit to hdp this souI,&gt;th~&#13;
allow him to come at his own rate .. Support while letting him know he has a· good&#13;
Page27&#13;
friend, which will be excepting of him.&#13;
Patience is a virtue dearest one.&#13;
Smooches Unde-Unde&#13;
Uncle Mikey once attempted to help&#13;
someone come out as well. I guess it was just&#13;
too much for the poor dC2C. He ran like he&#13;
was running through a white sale. It is not&#13;
always easy when someone is attempting to&#13;
come out. There are many variables during&#13;
the coming out process. While, we may see it&#13;
as the obvious choice, it remains a struggle&#13;
for some. 'The best thing another can do, is&#13;
just be supportive through the process.&#13;
Dear Uncle:&#13;
I have a friend who is such a queen, he puts&#13;
most to shame. He is a one man. parade, as his&#13;
is lllways wallcirig around with · buttons,&#13;
stickers, and colon running off of him for the&#13;
world to sec. He makes issues out of&#13;
everything. I get somewhat embarrassed&#13;
when we arc in public, as he openly&#13;
challenges everyone he secs as a threat to his&#13;
pride parade. How can I tell him he needs to&#13;
tone.it down; so that I can be more&#13;
comfortable while in his ·presence? It is not&#13;
that I do not care about issues, I just do not&#13;
sec the need to constantly lead the parade.&#13;
Ashamed&#13;
Dearest Kitten,&#13;
It is not your friend which has the issue, it is&#13;
yourself you need to look to here. It is the&#13;
prideful advocates which live in this manor,&#13;
which make it possible, for the continuing&#13;
education of. society at large, on our issues.&#13;
Maybe you need to hear his voice a little&#13;
more, and realize it is you who has an issues&#13;
.with being your self openly. Do not charge&#13;
your friend with a wrong, when he is simply&#13;
proud of himself and his community. Allow&#13;
bis force to shine in your life.&#13;
Smooches-Uncle&#13;
It is that time again Kittens. So remember "&#13;
you venture out again in that wonderful&#13;
drama of life- It is the one which truly&#13;
excepts themselves which will be aJ:,k to&#13;
except others.&#13;
Smooches Uncle Mikey and Tiddles too.&#13;
Unck Mikey is 11. ~ from Freeuin~ ftlriUr&#13;
A6chul Hinvrun. Michrid has been fliritingfor tm&#13;
~rs. Utiiizing his stlldies, ,nd lffe apmen« w J,e.'p&#13;
othen in his comm,mity, thro,tgb b,111ior ,md so#nd&#13;
""'1itt. K,d,i,eJ ~ his stlldy of psyd,ol.ogy """&#13;
cm,tiw writing, lfS wdl bis extmsifle bwdtgro#nd in&#13;
mtnt11.l be.ihh Direct OtTI! to bring" ,_ st:,le """&#13;
"l'fT04d, to bdping others. ~'s other fllOri!s o,n&#13;
be fliewea at -.f"]linltcontent.com.&#13;
May Day, May Da&#13;
''They don't just want marriage.&#13;
They want to destroy marriage&#13;
and the family, as we know it."&#13;
-----Doctor James Dobson, Focus on the .&#13;
Family&#13;
SOULFORCE LEADS DIRECT&#13;
ACTION TO CONFRONT FOCUS&#13;
ON .THE FAMILY AND JAMES&#13;
DOBSON, SUNDAY, MAY 1, 2005 IN&#13;
COLORADO SPRINGS.&#13;
STIGLER; OK_Soulforce in Oklahoma&#13;
planning to confront the anti-gay&#13;
rhetoric.. of James Dobson and Focus on&#13;
the Family.&#13;
"Out goal is to have enough people in&#13;
Colorado Springs to be able to surround&#13;
Focus. on tlie Family. That would take&#13;
1600 people! Our goal in Oklahoma is&#13;
for 20 ~~ to. go. It. is only a 12 hour&#13;
drive. Pl~se consider going and invite&#13;
your ~ends. There is still plenty of time&#13;
to register for this action. We are also&#13;
asking for donations. to help with the&#13;
travel expense. There arc qtiite a few&#13;
young people going that need&#13;
assistance." :...from Karen W cldin,&#13;
Soulforcc in Oklahoma.&#13;
Tax deductible donations should be&#13;
made out to Soulforce in Oklahoma and&#13;
mailed to:&#13;
Soulforce in Oklahoma&#13;
Rt. 4, Box 3534&#13;
Stigler, OK 74462&#13;
For more information email Karen at&#13;
Karen@soulforceinoldahoma-org or visit&#13;
the Soulforce web site ·&#13;
www.~()ulfo~cc.org ·and/or&#13;
www.DearDrDobson.com and read&#13;
more about the action and then register&#13;
. at www.soulforce.org. If you register online,&#13;
you should notify Karen you are&#13;
going. Karen@soulforceinoklahoma.org&#13;
Page 28&#13;
Deep Inside&#13;
Hollywood&#13;
by:Romeo San&#13;
Vicente&#13;
APRIL 2005&#13;
Someone Filmed His&#13;
Life Tonight_&#13;
Romeo's favorite wardrobe-malfunction&#13;
accomplice, Justin Timberlake, is about&#13;
to get his name over the title for the first&#13;
time in his budding movie career. The&#13;
pop star will play Elton John in a feature&#13;
about the queer music legend's life.&#13;
Handpicked by Sir Reginald himself,&#13;
Timberlake's already stuck his own hand&#13;
in the script - the first draft was&#13;
apparently too light on both tantrums&#13;
and tiaras - and demanded that the film&#13;
not sanitize the wild lifestyle John ied in&#13;
the 1970s and '80s. Timbetlake's played&#13;
John twice in music videos, so he's had&#13;
som~ practice itμpersonating his hero.&#13;
Now it's up. to the dialect coaches. The&#13;
film is expected to start shooting later&#13;
this year for a planned 2006 release. No&#13;
other actors are attached yet, but Romeo&#13;
hears the competition is fierce in the Kiki&#13;
Dee casting sessions.&#13;
Rupert Everett Straightens Up&#13;
Forget the overused lesbian kiss plotline&#13;
as a May sweeps ratings-grabber.&#13;
Toe hot homo move this May is casting&#13;
openly gay actors in straight roles. _Boston&#13;
Legal_, the show that gives _ Will &amp; Grace_&#13;
some stiff competition in the guest-star "get''&#13;
departmem and which has already seen&#13;
Freddie Prinze Jr., Dana Delany, Carl Reiner,&#13;
Shelly Long, Kerry Washington, and Al&#13;
Sharpton pass through its halls of justice this&#13;
season is about to host Rupert Everett. In&#13;
his first stateside network prime.-time drama,&#13;
the queer Brit will appear in at: least three&#13;
May episodes of the lawyer-centric series,&#13;
playing slick civil litigator· Malcoltt;1, Holmes.&#13;
His hetero character will go head \b head in&#13;
court against ex-girlfriend Tara· (_Legal_&#13;
regular Rhona Mitra), so expect oJd.romantic&#13;
complaints to . be re-examined iri ~J'6urt.&#13;
_Suckers_ for Mad~nna .qefying the&#13;
idea that she; mixes with movies: like oH with&#13;
water;, Madonna has two new big-sqreen&#13;
projects on track. In the first .one, _Hello,&#13;
Suckers_ (which she'll co-produce with&#13;
_Aviator_ director Martin ~cor,scse),&#13;
Madonna plays Texas Guin~, .the ~eal-life&#13;
star of silent-movie Westerns .who also ran a&#13;
New York speakeasy whe.re she greeted her&#13;
customers with the title line. Meanwhile, a&#13;
follow-up to _Truth or Dare_ is set to debut&#13;
at the Cannes Film Fe.stival in May. Directed&#13;
by Jonas Ackerlund (.:,Spun_), the st$untit!&#13;
ed documentary follows the singer on&#13;
her 2004 Reinvention Tour and is said to lay&#13;
to rest rumors about Her Madgesty's life, as&#13;
well as explain her devotion to Kuibalah.&#13;
That's good news, because Romeo still can't&#13;
figure it out.&#13;
Jenni Olson's _Joy_San Francisco's Jenni&#13;
Olson is a critic, film archivist (her _Homo&#13;
Promo_ collection of vintage queer movie&#13;
trailers was recently released on DVD), and&#13;
now a feature direcror. Her debut, _The Joy&#13;
of Life_, recently screened at the Sundance&#13;
Film Festival and has just been acquired by&#13;
Frameline for North American distribution.&#13;
_Joy_ joins two tales of the city - one the&#13;
story of a butch lesbian's search for love in&#13;
San Francisco, and the other a history of the&#13;
Golden Gate Bridge as a location for&#13;
countless suicides - in an experimental&#13;
examination on the search for both life's&#13;
meaning and its end. The film will screen at&#13;
the San Francisco International Film Festival&#13;
in May and receive art-house distribution&#13;
iater in the year. Expect it also to stir more&#13;
hometown dialogue over the need for an .&#13;
effective jumping barrier on the Golden Gate.&#13;
_Romeo San Vicente has sampkd lots of San&#13;
Fr,mr:isco 's trt'4ts.&#13;
Costly Discriniliiation&#13;
Since the policy went into effect,&#13;
· approximately 10,000 service members&#13;
have been discharged. Of those who left,&#13;
757 held critical jobs for which the&#13;
Pentagon offers re-enlistment bonuses&#13;
because. of their specialized nature, such&#13;
as data processing technicians and&#13;
translators. Many who were discharged&#13;
• .had in,,t~nCC,:-related jobs. 322 spoke&#13;
. foreign hllguages, including Arabic,&#13;
Farsi; Ko:i~an, .and Mandarin, which the&#13;
Pen~qn: has called critical skills amid&#13;
thica~ "ft6m terrorists.&#13;
"' research has found and&#13;
confirmed is that 'Don't&#13;
· .;Do~i '.Fell' harms military&#13;
. ;:.:~s's1'' tild Aaron Belkin, director of&#13;
· · · Sexual&#13;
the&#13;
ta Barbara.&#13;
, Democratic&#13;
assachusetts,&#13;
study, and is&#13;
. the House&#13;
~!l}!Illttee on.&#13;
· onal Thteats and&#13;
. . . , ced0 t,he ¥ilifary&#13;
Readin;es~ . . . ... i.Act {MREA)&#13;
before the HO\llle of Repre~cntlltive.&#13;
MREA is. a ptc&gt;posal that would end the&#13;
bari on gay aii~ leabiah military ·&#13;
persorinet The: legisllltion has. lllore that1&#13;
forty. Cob.gi:essional co:.,spotlsors,&#13;
It couid be argued that _discrimination itl~luding s~cri_gn the House Armed&#13;
is always costly in any form. The loss of .· · Services Cqi#mittee.&#13;
self-esteem, security, and basic .human . , In respon11e, a group of retired&#13;
rights at the hands of bigotry.is · · . niilitary generals -and. admirals today .&#13;
incalculable. For once, however; the announced their support for the !(ct. The&#13;
price of prejudice just might work· in our officers are amorig the. bighcst-'ranking&#13;
favor. yetemns to publicly support repeal of the&#13;
A study released recently by $,e · rnij!tary's gay ban.. ·&#13;
General Accountability Office (&lt;.it'AO), ll. '\ :- '"Our,nationa:l security depends on&#13;
non-partisan congress· · ·'' '' having :the best and brlglitcst Americans&#13;
agency, reported that . Don't . · · · · · .our freedoms;' said Brigadier&#13;
Tell" has cost the us govemmerit nearly . Foote, OQe of the first women to&#13;
$200 million dollars since President achi~e ,that rank. "As . a commander, I&#13;
Clinton institutecl the conticrv~isial know: that 'lesbian; gay and.bisi:iua:i&#13;
policy in 1994. It allowed giys ancf Atnciicans have se~ed ou_r country with&#13;
lesbians to serve in tiie armed forces as honor aod distinction. Our ·armccl. forces&#13;
iong as they abstained from homosexual should be able to recruit eve'.ry qwuified,&#13;
activitv and did not disclose their sciiiai capa.ble American to .protect our&#13;
orien~tion. Revealing their sexual · · homeland, regardless of their sexual&#13;
orientation would result in expulsi,on. odentation. 'Don't ,Ask, Don't Tell' is&#13;
The $200 million cost estin;uuc did.· not , not. oply unnecess!lry and. disctiixtinatory,&#13;
include training and replacement for it is ~so detrimental to our milihuy&#13;
officers or those with J:ugN.y ~P:C~ze9 readiness. The law does not meet the&#13;
skills or the cost of· discharging the gay chmmtiii sense nile' our aiilitaxy. sholild.&#13;
and lesbian officers. abide by;''&#13;
contin#ed page-32&#13;
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.&#13;
oliet Just before the&#13;
Xprswy, bctwccn Lyn11&#13;
Dlrectty behllld La Petite&#13;
he street from Anchor&#13;
PageJ2 . . .. . ..&#13;
H&amp;1rt to]it!ft:rtfrom pg-29&#13;
. The United St:ates continues to be one· of&#13;
the as . . . . . cciuntries to ban&#13;
currept debate · in a similar light; realizing&#13;
: that notlring has been. lost or sacrificed&#13;
by the. majority in extending full rights&#13;
to .the minority."&#13;
gays ·... . .. . . Sini:e ."Qou't .&#13;
4sk; I),&lt;&gt;n't:T.ell'' was implcn:ien~d;&#13;
Grca . .&#13;
thci;.&#13;
.ch&#13;
la .&#13;
19&#13;
gro ..&#13;
people we&#13;
the mill··&#13;
counity, · '&#13;
designate• -~~:,. ';/',, , , ; , , '- 1 ,&#13;
· Of course, there are other costs to&#13;
."Don't Ask, Don't Tell"-,-costs that can't&#13;
· qe tallied ~th a dollar sig,;i.) have a&#13;
ft:i,e!ld in the military. In. fact, he was my&#13;
first botfriend. We'v:e:remained close&#13;
.. . ' ~ when he tbld me&#13;
· .. :plans to enlist; . I• thought he&#13;
··wai #It.')l'as·something,he really&#13;
~~d to do; however, so of course I&#13;
. · supported him. He thoughtit ~ould be&#13;
• . ~~irly:: c,asy hiding his orient:l,tiOn since&#13;
he's very ·masculine. •&#13;
: .:: .. A(~t:, lie .. ~ few problero.s: .He&#13;
lov:cd ·hiil chosen brimch of semce and&#13;
. e~fwea, : moving up. tfr rank.&#13;
Sfowfy, 'h er: tlie :strain of constantly&#13;
·.·liiy,ing to hide #}19 he was be~ to wear&#13;
op)i!rh .. Then. di_s:S..ster struck; ljis&#13;
. ;dlitj.qn~hip of tbiee years ci;uinbled&#13;
. linexpectedly ancl he was left devastated.&#13;
To. make mlU:t:ets WO . . . . . ·. act as&#13;
'.' ~ ·"' ,&#13;
,, ·,· •, ··,:&#13;
fes/14,~w,pjs, .i:ewntj-1Qmahi1jg drti,st:411tbor, 1ll4S&#13;
~ .. ,w Jwt4 on t/,eUSlfflJ S/Jore gf ¥i-ry14nd ,nd&#13;
li'f/l!sd#,-e flliih his husb,md, ]o1h A~ is" Litin&#13;
. ~w,,n nwning "bla&amp;sbe,p. "Hews n.m,:d the&#13;
Nit Wbodtmit of 2002 by th!! StotU':'IN!i Sc~ty,&#13;
· Jil«;if #g He.srts hiiisrm bis ./Jnt book in the Killi,,n&#13;
Kauull m,stery smes. .&#13;
Page 33&#13;
Seo es&#13;
by Jack Fertig&#13;
APRIL 2005&#13;
''listen politely, V~!" ------------·-· Admitting, confusion and ignorlltlce is&#13;
the first step to enlightenment. Mercury&#13;
retrograde is aspecting Mars in Aquarius&#13;
and Uranus in Pisces .. Sudden snafus can&#13;
set off th~ sort of confusion that· can&#13;
lea~ to illumination.&#13;
AIUES (March 21 to April 20): Just when&#13;
all looks good with your · pals, a&#13;
paranoid little bug is asking· who your&#13;
mends really are. Recent sliglits can&#13;
prob~ be chalked up t6 si;nplc&#13;
human failure. The real question is,&#13;
how faithful a friend ~ you?&#13;
TAURUS (April 21 to M,;y.20): Your&#13;
carcet secins ·~ be goc&gt;ing great guns&#13;
now. Still, some douli~ (Taurus? Toi?)&#13;
about your iong-term aims.· are •&#13;
complicating the picture. Much as you&#13;
hate doub~ anything, take this· as an&#13;
opportunity to rethink now and make&#13;
better plans later.&#13;
GμIINI (May 21 to June 21): Your mste&#13;
for -adventure can lead you. into fun and&#13;
games that arc better left private. y OU&#13;
go, horleyl Just be. ca.reful if you ~y&#13;
want priyac:J.- Whether your. reputatic:&gt;n&#13;
~ a lm,oc.k o~ gets a boost piay be&#13;
subjective, but yo_u will be talked aboμtl&#13;
CANCEll 0une 22 to July 22): P.rivatcc&#13;
matters with your part,ner may· not. be&#13;
so private. Sure, you need to t:alk dijngs&#13;
out with a friend, hut be carcfull If you&#13;
want real help keeping or finding a&#13;
relationship, listen in particular to the&#13;
advice you don't want to hear.&#13;
LEO 0uly 23 to August 22); Anything that&#13;
loob, ~s, or smells like an office&#13;
flirtation should be avoided. right ii.ow.&#13;
It will coQlC · back to bite you on· the ass&#13;
- and not in a nice way! An appar1=0.t .&#13;
setback in a telatlon1hip could actaally&#13;
unblock a problem, aiding in a solution&#13;
later.&#13;
VDlGO (A-aguat 23 to Sq,tember 22): Even&#13;
in simple conversations, something's&#13;
sure to be misunderstood, and yet such .&#13;
a snafu could lead to new opportunities&#13;
to improve cooperative efforts at work.&#13;
In more formal negotilitions · or co_ntracts,&#13;
however, disaster waits - and so should&#13;
you! Listen politely, bμt don't follow&#13;
advice you get at. the gym.&#13;
LIBRA (September 23 to October 21):&#13;
Housecleaning reveals hidden&#13;
treasures that in tum provide a new&#13;
creative direction. Anything from&#13;
finger paints to thumbscrews can&#13;
revive old interests and lead to new&#13;
and very interesting levels of&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21):&#13;
Your playful overtures are likely to be&#13;
misinterpreted, causing some trouble,&#13;
but it's noi:hing you can't handle.&#13;
Keeping your fun and games on the&#13;
home court will shed interesting&#13;
insights on your family situation.&#13;
SAGITI'ARIUS (November 22 to&#13;
December 20): We all have domestic&#13;
. squabbles here and there, but yours&#13;
here and now offer more depth of&#13;
possibility. than usual Take all&#13;
argumerits at face value, but listen for&#13;
hidden subtexts, especially about&#13;
money.&#13;
CAPRICORN (December 21 · to Janwry&#13;
19): Cool your jets, guard your current&#13;
tendency to capricious impulse, and&#13;
watch your words carefully.&#13;
Mlsstatemcnts can prove expensive!&#13;
Slow 11,nd careful is your usual mode,&#13;
and ~11 a good time to stick to that.&#13;
S Oanuaty 20. to February 18):&#13;
· an ei;pecially bad&#13;
small) financial&#13;
revetSal can open up some profound&#13;
personal ifisights. Getting angry with&#13;
. ypurself in the process could be&#13;
liberating. if you learn from the anger&#13;
and kt go of it&#13;
PISCES (Febnw:y 19 to MArch 19): Being&#13;
unsμic of voμrsclf can open up a&#13;
prqccss o( self-analysis that· provides&#13;
grca~ enlightenment in the long run.&#13;
Stay close to friends you can trust to&#13;
call yo;o on your b.s. Friendly&#13;
aignmcrits will get you closer to the&#13;
truth.&#13;
JMie Fertig bas been u,or/eing "5 a&#13;
-profos,sumal 4StTOk,gt:r since 1977 and is a&#13;
fo#ndi.ng mimber of tlR: .Association for&#13;
Astro/ogial Net'U10rking:_&#13;
Page 35&#13;
Canada from pg-13&#13;
We're proud because it proclaims to all that&#13;
see us that we did our duty as a citizen of this&#13;
gteat land. You should be proud of voting,&#13;
and never allow anyone to say that your vote&#13;
does not count. We saw that to be false four&#13;
years ago in Florida and are seeing it again&#13;
now in Washington state where, out of the&#13;
2.8 million votes cast, the election for&#13;
Governor came down to only 129 votes.&#13;
And while voting is the most important thing&#13;
you can do in the political process, it is also&#13;
the least that you can do. It is when we as a&#13;
people recognize this point that equality&#13;
issues will begin to move forward.&#13;
We as a community must also understand&#13;
the importance of money in regards to&#13;
campaigns. Consider this: To run for a&#13;
statewide office in Missouri (U.S. Senate,&#13;
Governor, etc), one needs to spend anywhere&#13;
from $8 - $12 million dollars; Even to run for&#13;
State Representative, an office that is&#13;
unfortunately ovedooked all too often, one&#13;
could need as much as $100,000. We must do&#13;
a better job in financially assisting pro-LGBT&#13;
candidates for office, and those candidates&#13;
must know that the money is coming from&#13;
our community. One of the ways of&#13;
accomplishing this is to make your&#13;
contribution to a candidate during a&#13;
fundraiser hosted by an LGBT political&#13;
organization. The candidate can then walk&#13;
out and know exactly how much money he/&#13;
she has received from us. The other is to&#13;
donate your money directly to one of our&#13;
many local political organizations. Many&#13;
area LGBT political organizations a.re set up&#13;
in a fashion that they can receive money and&#13;
spend it directly on behalf of an endorsed&#13;
candidate (ex. PROMO PAC or HRC PAC).&#13;
1bis allows the leaders of these organizations&#13;
to know how much money they spent on the&#13;
candidate and serves as a lobbying tool once&#13;
in office. It also allows the organizations to&#13;
support friendly candidates in rural areas,&#13;
where membership in our org:i.nizationa a.re&#13;
low.&#13;
Lastly, we as a community have to&#13;
become more directly involved in the&#13;
individual campaigns. We must get up from&#13;
the bar ... show up to the dinner party a little&#13;
later ... Tivo £fill &amp; Graa if you have&#13;
to ... whatever it takes, and go volunteer. We&#13;
have to help stuff the envelopes, make the&#13;
phone calls to registered votcn, and yes, we&#13;
must knock on doors in support of our&#13;
candidates. This tends to be the pan of&#13;
campaigning that all people like the least.&#13;
It also happens to be the most effective,&#13;
especially in the close races. Studies show&#13;
that in neighborhoods where candidates and&#13;
volunteers knock on doors, voter turnout&#13;
increases by as. inuch as twelve percent. In&#13;
close elections that is the difference in the&#13;
outcome.&#13;
CONTROLING OUR OWN&#13;
DESTINY What went \v'rong in this past&#13;
election? Why did so many progressive&#13;
candidates and causes get beaten so soundly?&#13;
Those are questions that will be asked for&#13;
many years to come. But we, the LGBT&#13;
community, must look .within ourselves to&#13;
understand what we did right,• and what we&#13;
did wrong. We must come to the&#13;
understanding that if we want our issues to&#13;
advance, we must do what it takes in order to&#13;
have the right people in office to advance that&#13;
cause for us.&#13;
Justified or not, our issues are very&#13;
difficult for many legislators to support. The&#13;
fear of backlash during the election cycle&#13;
prevents our legislative agenda from&#13;
advancing. Therefore, we must begin&#13;
strengthening our campaigning muscles.&#13;
Because our issues are perceived as so&#13;
controversial, voting in similar numbers to&#13;
the rest of the country is not good enough.&#13;
Financial contributions made to campaigns at&#13;
the same level other communities contribute&#13;
just is not good enough. And volunteering&#13;
with similar numbers as everyone else just&#13;
will not be enough. If we truly believe in our&#13;
issues ... if we truly believe in marriage&#13;
equality, in employment protections, in the&#13;
right of an LGBT student to feel safe in&#13;
school, then we have to start doing to things&#13;
necessary to put good legislators in office.&#13;
Until we do, we have no one to blame but&#13;
ourselves.&#13;
The beauty of this situiuion is, we do in&#13;
fact control our own destiny. We have truth&#13;
and history on our side. Our opponents only&#13;
have deception and a few last moments in the&#13;
sun. We know who we are and that we are&#13;
deserving of all the same rights that every&#13;
other proud American enjoys. And with our&#13;
hard work and focus, history shows us that&#13;
we will succeed. The ehallenge is this:&#13;
getting each and every member of our&#13;
community committed to making a&#13;
differ~nce during the next big election. Mark&#13;
your calendars now for November 6, 2006!1&#13;
Page36 Four States Community Directory&#13;
-Bars- Nightclubs-&#13;
Arkansas, Fayetteville (479)&#13;
Studio 716- -716 W. Sycamore- - - - 479-571-130&#13;
Arkansas, Fort Smith (479)&#13;
Kink.cads- 1004 1/2 Gurison Ave- - -479-783-9988&#13;
Club 1022 -1022 Dodson Ave. - - - -479-782-1845&#13;
Arkaasas, Hot Springs (501)&#13;
Club One Eleven- - 111 Garden St- - - - -620-4111&#13;
Our House Lounge - 660 E. Gnind Ave- -624-6868&#13;
Arkansas, Little Rock (501)&#13;
Back Street - - - -1021 Jes11ie Rd- -- - - 501-66+2744&#13;
Di5covery- - - 1021 Jessie Rd- - - - - - 501-666-6900&#13;
The Factory - -412 Louisiana St.- - - - -501-372-3070&#13;
Kaa1a1, Wichita (316)&#13;
]'11 Lounge - • - - - 513 E. Central - - - 316-262-1363&#13;
Our Fanwy- - - - 3201 S. Hillside- - -316-682-5494&#13;
The Comer- -- • - 3210 E. Osie - - - - - 316-682-9781&#13;
The Otherside- -447 N. St Francis- - 316-262-7825&#13;
Shatai - - - • - - - 4000 S. Broadway- 316-522--2028&#13;
Side Street - - -1106 S. Pattie- - -316-267-1l324&#13;
South 40 - - - - 3201 S. H.i&amp;ide - - -316-682-5494&#13;
Trends Bar - - - -1507 S. Pawnee- - - 316-262-4530&#13;
Mls11ouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Ree's-••• 716 S. Main•• - - - - -417-627-9035&#13;
Mhsouri, Kansas City (816)&#13;
Buddies - - • • - 3715 Main St- - - - 816-561-2600&#13;
Belle Stllr'11- - - - 1321 Grand Ave- - - -816-421-1288&#13;
Club NV - - - - 220 Admiral Blvd- - 816-421-NVKC&#13;
DB Warehouse- -- 1915 Main St- -816-471-1575&#13;
Missie B's- - - -805 W. 39th St- - - -- - 816-561-0625&#13;
SidestreetBar- - --413 E. 3rd- - - - 816-531-1775&#13;
Sidelcicks Saloon - - 3707 Main St- - 816- 931-1430&#13;
Ml11ouri, Springfield (417)&#13;
The Edge- -424 Boonville Ave- - - - --417-831-4700&#13;
Liquors &amp; Kickers- -1109 E. Commercial-873-2225&#13;
Martha'• Vineyard- 219 W Olive - -417-864-4572&#13;
Oz Bar• 50.J E. Commercial - - - - . -417-831-9001&#13;
Ronisw: Place- - --821 College- - - - - - -417-86-4-0036&#13;
Rumon • --1109 E. Commercial- - 417-873-2225&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Boom Room- 2807 NW 36th St- - - - - -405-601-7200&#13;
Club Rox- - - -3535 NW 39th Expwy 405.941.2351&#13;
Copa- - • - - - - -2200 NW 39th Expwy- -405-525-0730&#13;
Finish Line - -2200 NW 39th fupwy- - 405-525-0730&#13;
Hi-Lo Oub - - 1221 NW 50th0 ~ - -405-843-1722&#13;
Lido- - • - - - -2200 NW 39th Expwy- 405-525-0730&#13;
Partners-· - -2805 NW 36th St - - - - 405-942-2199&#13;
Sisters- - - - - 2120 NW 39th St - - - - -405-521-9533&#13;
The Roclcies- -3201 N. t.t:ay Ave 405-947-9361&#13;
Topaoga Grill &amp;: Bar- 35351'.'W 39th--405-947-2351&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa (918)&#13;
Bamboo Lounge- 720.J E. Pinc - - •- 918-836-8700&#13;
Club Maverick• • 822 S. Sheridan • 918-835-3301&#13;
End Up Club- - - 424 S. Memorial- 918-836-2480&#13;
Detour- - - - -7944 E. 21st - - - - - - - 918-660-7878&#13;
Club Majestic- - 124 N. Boston - - - 918-584-9494&#13;
Renegades- - - - 1649 S. Main - - - - - - - 918-585-3405&#13;
Play-Mor-Club- - 1737 S. Memorial - 918-838-9792&#13;
Tulsa Eagle- - - -1338 E. 3rd - - ••• 918-592-1188&#13;
TNT's - • • - 2114 S. Memorial- - - - 918-660-0856&#13;
Yellow-Bride-Rd- - -2630 E. 15th- - 918-293-0304&#13;
-Restaurants-&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Gushers Restaunnt-2200 NW 39Exp405-525-0730&#13;
lngrids Kitchen- -3701 N.Youngs- -405-946-8444&#13;
Topanga Grill &amp; Bar- 3535 NW 39th--405-947-2351&#13;
-Lodging-&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Fairfield Inn by Marriott- - - - - 417-624-7800&#13;
Missouri, Ava&#13;
Catus Canyon Campground- - - - -417-683-9199&#13;
Missouri, Lampe&#13;
KOKOMO Campground - - - - - . - - 417-779-5084&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Hollywood.Hotel- 3535 NW 39th Ex-405-947-2351&#13;
Habana Inn - 2200 NW 39th Exp- - -405-528-2221&#13;
-Organizations-:Arkansas,&#13;
Avoca&#13;
Natural State Naturists- - - - - - - - - -479-451-8066&#13;
Arkansas, Eureka Springs&#13;
MCC living Spring- - - - - - - -870-253-9337&#13;
Arkansas, Little Rock (501)&#13;
Diamond State Rodeo Assoc.- www.dsra.org&#13;
Kansas, Pittsburg {620)&#13;
River of Life Church 1709 N Walnut - -1 lAM&#13;
PSU-QSA.- 1701 S. Broadway- - - - 620-231-0938&#13;
Kansas, Wichita (316)&#13;
HOA-Men, Chorus - 316-618-0684&#13;
Missouri.Joplin (417)&#13;
MCC Spirit of Christ-2902 E 20th, - - - - 6pm&#13;
UCCFF--204 N.Jackson-Ave, -10:30A.M&#13;
Aids Pro;ect Ozarks- 5i3 Kentucky- 4; 7-624-5788&#13;
MGRA- - - - - - www.mgra.us&#13;
j&#13;
.I&#13;
l&#13;
Page37&#13;
Missouri, Sprie&amp;fieJd (417)&#13;
R..inbow Christian Ch-837 W. Madison- 866-6206&#13;
lJnitllian Universalist Church - - - - 417-833-272~&#13;
APO- - - - 1901 E. Benne~ suite D- - 417-881-1900&#13;
ShowMe MO Pride - - - - - - - - - - --417-864-4459&#13;
GLO Comm. Ctr- -518 E. Com~erical- -869-3978&#13;
PFLAG-Springficld- - 0 - - - -417-889-1059&#13;
'PROMO SW MO- promoswmo@)hotmail.com&#13;
Oklahoma, Oldah~nia City (405)&#13;
Cathedral of Hope- - 600 ?\IW 13th&amp;- - 232-HOPE&#13;
The Center- - 2135 NW 39th St. -· - 405-524-6000&#13;
NI.A-Tribal Fire • • - - . C :. ww'w .trlhalfireokc.com&#13;
OGRA- - - - - - - - - - - - :·:;v'w.w.£i~~dco.com&#13;
"": ;:..&#13;
Oklahoma; .&#13;
McPride- --.- - cPOBox 15is; OK 74502·&#13;
~~~.,,~~ T~~:(?l.~)._.&#13;
GIBT Comm. Ctr- -5545 E. 41st- - - - 918-743-4297&#13;
,, , • ,~. ·,•,✓~~;,· , -~·•·.;:~r,•,, ~''t' ·••''. ,,,, .. :;,. -:&#13;
H.O.P.E. ~ - - - ""'2545 S. Yale-.~- - - .91.8'83~8378&#13;
M;CC United- -1623 N. Mapl=-_Ood-.-918}8.i~:V15&#13;
SSRA a·· • · · · · .:: • www.soonerstaterodco~~om&#13;
TORR- - - - :::: _ ~:PO:Box 2687,·Tu!sa,'.ok 74101&#13;
Tulsa .C.ARJ:lS{ ::3507 E. ·Admital· Pl0 - 918:8344194&#13;
Tulsa 'ltougi:i ~§ei:s-, -www.t\)}s~e&gt;ug!lrid~I~-co,m&#13;
..... \Bd~iness Services: .&#13;
. . ~h~.~~ Eureb Sprfugs&#13;
Qi;enitYPn~ E~enb~ -~.divenifypride.com&#13;
~de; ..:_ ~ - - .&#13;
Kansas, Wichita&#13;
·TotalM~e-..... Kenn-· - • •·. 31~204-0111&#13;
',,:, ~ .... ;;. .·"&#13;
., .. ,;:,.,/Missouri, Eure~.-&#13;
Shclter Irimmic~- -Greg Tainter- 636-938-5500&#13;
. Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Charles Bul.1: Realtors-Viclci Bronson-- -434-0077&#13;
Office Min~-440 Rangeline Rd- - 417-623-1007&#13;
ken Arrow&#13;
Spas NS - --918-258-7727&#13;
City&#13;
• 405- 840-2106&#13;
- 405-524-5733&#13;
Piece To Reine 39th- -405-528-2223&#13;
Priscilla's- 615 Ej.ffril:Jrl;J .:: . . -405-755-8600&#13;
Oklalioffia,'(μlsa (918)&#13;
Elite Bocikstor~ -81..,S:Sli~~idan- -918-838-8503&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA- 48ii:s Haryard- -918-747-5466&#13;
l.Jn4erguy.com • • -825?,;6~ - - - • - 918-829-0824&#13;
. Priscilla's - - 7925 E. 41n- - - - - -918-627-4884&#13;
Priscilfa!s - •, • 5634;W/~-: f • --918-446-6336&#13;
Priscilla's - - • -11344 E. 11th· -, • •· 918-438-4224&#13;
' ""· &lt;' ~ '' Priscilla's - • • • 2333 E..7ht·: • - • - - 918-499-1661&#13;
' ·t&#13;
Page38&#13;
PABE 40&#13;
Rodeo Kick&#13;
April 7th&#13;
THE STAR APRIL 2005</text>
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              <text>magazine</text>
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                <text>[2005] The Star Magazine, April 1, 2005; Volume 2, Issue 4</text>
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                <text>The Metro Star’s first issue began in August of 2008. Before this issue was Ozarks Pride (2004), The Ozark’s Star (2004), and The Star (2005).&#13;
&#13;
This magazine discusses topics of AIDs, education, politics, local and national civil rights of the LGBT community, and advice for relationships and places to visit. &#13;
&#13;
This collection is PDF searchable. Physical copies are also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.&#13;
</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5542">
                <text>Star Media, Ltd.</text>
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                <text>C.D. Ward&#13;
Greg Steele&#13;
Josh Aterovis&#13;
Michael Dee&#13;
Douglas Glenn&#13;
Steve T. Urie&#13;
Paula Martinac&#13;
Romeo San Vicente&#13;
Andrew Collins&#13;
Michael Hinzman&#13;
Jack Fertig&#13;
Chaz</text>
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                <text>Southwest Missouri&#13;
West Arkansas&#13;
Southeast Kansas&#13;
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                <text>The Metro Star’s first issue began in August of 2008. Before this issue was Ozarks Pride (2004), The Ozark’s Star (2004), and The Star (2005).&#13;
&#13;
This magazine discusses topics of AIDs, education, politics, local and national civil rights of the LGBT community, and advice for relationships and places to visit. &#13;
&#13;
This collection is PDF searchable. Physical copies are also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.&#13;
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https://history.okeq.org/items/show/452&#13;
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The Ozarks Pride Magazine, January 1, 2004; Volume 1, Issue 1&#13;
https://history.okeq.org/items/show/136</text>
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              <text>VOLUME 2, ISSUE 6 JUNE 2005&#13;
FREE&#13;
&#13;
DIVERSITY PRIDE 2005&#13;
Four States Gay Pride&#13;
Celebration Schedule.&#13;
Tulsa Pride Equal Rights No More No Less&#13;
Dates: 6/3 - 6/11 Location: Tulsa, OK For&#13;
more information go to www.tohr.org or&#13;
call GLB'.I' Center 918-743-7297&#13;
Springfield, Show Me MO Pride:&#13;
6/4 - 6/12. Festival at Phelps Grove Park&#13;
June 12, 12noon to 6:30pm.&#13;
Kansas City Pride Dates: 6/3- 6/05&#13;
Location: Kansas City, :MO Liberty&#13;
Memorial Pershing Avenue &amp; Main Street&#13;
June 3rd.&#13;
Oklahoma City Unity in Pride Dates:&#13;
6/24 - 6/26 Location: Oklahoma City, OK&#13;
For more information, go to&#13;
www.okcpride.com.&#13;
Northwest Arkansas Pride Weekend&#13;
Fayetteville Parade starts at the Square&#13;
and will go down Dickson St to the&#13;
Powerhouse. Favetteville 6/25.&#13;
Fort .Smith 6!1"9 - 6/26 Contact&#13;
Kinkeads @ 479-783-9988 for more info&#13;
Wichita Pride O 5 Stand UP,&#13;
Step OUT! Parade and events June .?,5th&#13;
2pm Start Central and· Waco. End St&#13;
Francis and Central. For more info call&#13;
Carol Harrell 316.617.8813&#13;
All festivals aim is to educate the .&#13;
community by invoking, promoting,&#13;
and celebrating Gay/LesbiaI)./Bisexuai/&#13;
Transgender pride.&#13;
Pages&#13;
Mother and HRC Board member&#13;
Judy Shepard,&#13;
'7bere 1$ notmn(/ that ctilt 9ffl" britlg&#13;
Matthew back but $upporfff/g·the$e i$$ues&#13;
is flliMt htJ/pl me ~ through the d.,y..&#13;
.The ,-,,t·n.~ do for h;m and either&#13;
vittfhts. or fr~•'""~ 11~1Jon /$ $#:ar'ld, up . n'ld c:ome tog«her to do&#13;
w/iit~vtr: we tan·to•~ our.,&#13;
CR'm'tlunitiiJS_ 4 me, fail: p/a(» for GLBT&#13;
\.. Amenc:ans .... -Judr Shepard _______________ __,&#13;
It has been over 6 years since our son&#13;
Matthew was brutally murdered in&#13;
Laramie, Wyoming. No matter how&#13;
much time passes, the pain of losing our&#13;
son never seems to diminish. The&#13;
understanding 'tl:;iat he was taken from us&#13;
simply because he was gay only adds to the&#13;
confusion and pain.&#13;
Since bis death, my husband and I&#13;
have devoted our ,lives to promoting&#13;
acceptance and understanding in&#13;
communities, churches, schools,&#13;
workplaces - anywhere we can get&#13;
people to listen, so that we can help end&#13;
discrimination and hate against our gay,&#13;
lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLB1)&#13;
friends and family.&#13;
Soon after Matthew's death, Dennis and I&#13;
started the Matthew Shepard Foundation to&#13;
help raise awareness. We felt that as allies to&#13;
the GLBT community, we had an&#13;
opportunity to make a difference. Although&#13;
many GLBT people enjoy welcoming&#13;
workpiaces and accepting families and&#13;
communities, many still do not.&#13;
-And it is all Americans, regardless of&#13;
sexual orientation or religious beliefs, that&#13;
we need standing with us today to create a&#13;
truly accepting culture based on equality&#13;
for every citiz~n.&#13;
Because hate and discrimination has so&#13;
personally affected my family's life, I know&#13;
how critical HRC's work is to everyday&#13;
pepple. When you join us, know that you'll&#13;
be standing with over 600,000 Americans&#13;
who will not tolerate discrimination of any&#13;
kind in our constitution, in our schools, our&#13;
workplaces, our places of worship, or our&#13;
communities. HRC is not just an&#13;
organization "for" GLBT people. It is an&#13;
organization for all people who believe&#13;
we can create a wodd where acceptance&#13;
and diversity are welcomed and&#13;
nurtured.&#13;
Rep. Sally Kem&#13;
(R-Oklahoma City)&#13;
Calls King and King,&#13;
"obscene".&#13;
Oklahoma City; Oklahoma_ The&#13;
Oklahoma House of Representatives has&#13;
passed a resolution that would ban books&#13;
on gay families from the children's&#13;
sections of public libraries.&#13;
The measure does not have the power of&#13;
law but calls on Oklahoma libraries to&#13;
"confine homosexually themed books&#13;
and other age-inappropriate material to&#13;
areas exclusively for adult access and&#13;
distribution."&#13;
It passed, 81-3 and now will be&#13;
distributed to library boards across the&#13;
state.&#13;
The resolution's sponsor, Rep. Sally Kem&#13;
(R-Oklahoma City) said that the vote shows&#13;
public libraries that they must aware of the&#13;
"values that our state upholds".&#13;
The 32 page book ends with the two&#13;
princes sharing a kiss.&#13;
Tulsa Oklahoma's TOHR, strongly&#13;
encourages the Gay, Lesbian, Bi, Transgender&#13;
(GLB1) and allied community to call Mr.&#13;
Richard Parker, Deputy Director of&#13;
Community Relations at 918-596-7899 ASAP&#13;
and voice your feelings and to contact the&#13;
bill's author, Rep. Sally Kern (R), OKC at&#13;
405-557-7348.&#13;
Thj st.«R'S:oviri·~Michaier ✓&#13;
H.iniril~r,a .. . . "·•· . .MJkey)&#13;
FIRST IS&#13;
RELEASED&#13;
KENT, OHIO. May 2, 2005 - Michael&#13;
Hinzman, current Kent resident, is&#13;
excited to see his lifelong dream become&#13;
reality. Michael's first novel, Dragomir,&#13;
is currently available.. .&#13;
''Dragomir is the story of Richard&#13;
Stonewall who, after the death of his&#13;
aunt, begins to learn the truth about his&#13;
family," said Michael in a recent&#13;
interview. "Richard finds courage and&#13;
support from his three best friends as he&#13;
faces murder, intrigue, and a few&#13;
surprises. I am fascinated with the world&#13;
of magic. With that fascination and my&#13;
desire to tell stories, Dragomir seemed to&#13;
spill onto the pages. It is purely fictional&#13;
and was fun to write," Michael&#13;
continued.&#13;
While exploring the unknown with&#13;
this group of fresh chara&lt;;ters, M,ichael&#13;
Hinzman delivers a wonderfully told&#13;
story that keeps the .reader in suspense&#13;
from page to page. D. ~mit can&#13;
currently. be found on websites selling&#13;
publications including Amazon, Barnes&#13;
and Noble, and Publish America.&#13;
Dragomir's ISBN is 1-4137-5116-4. The&#13;
author's audience is quickly spreading;&#13;
his novel is also being sold' on a United&#13;
Kingdom website. .&#13;
Michael began writing in high school&#13;
and writes when time permits between&#13;
fatherhood and work. He and his&#13;
children~ Mikayla, Michael, and Jacob,&#13;
moved to Kent in 2003. Mich.ael and his&#13;
family have found their home in Kent&#13;
and: .hope to stay here for a long time.&#13;
.About the Author:&#13;
Born ln Okeechobee, Florida, Michael&#13;
grew up in Toledo, Ohio. After living in&#13;
Indiana for 10 years, he returned to&#13;
Ohio. Michael currently is working on&#13;
several writing projects.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Michael Hinzman, Author&#13;
Dragomir - ISBN 1-4137-5116-4&#13;
(330) 678-0221&#13;
micka1obe30@aol.com "," , ,,.,-. \" &lt;&#13;
Press Release&#13;
TULSA, OK_A benefit show will be held&#13;
on Saturday June 4th 10pII1 at the&#13;
Bamboo Lounge. Hosted by Tulsa Diva&#13;
Kriss Kohl and will feature many of&#13;
Tulsa 's best entertainers. Proceeds from&#13;
donations will go to support the Tulsa&#13;
Pride 05 Parade organization. There will&#13;
be no door cover charge.&#13;
.• P•a•ge• 7• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . •• ••&#13;
Oklahoma City GLBTI Pride Celebration&#13;
June24-26&#13;
FEST'\ ''AL t M . Saturday, 3 -10 pm&#13;
VJ 8 emonal Park Sunday, Noon - 5 pm&#13;
Large Children's Play 1'rea, Two Stages of Li~ Entertainment, PRIDE&#13;
IDOL Contest on Saturday, Grw Food, Refreshing Beverages, a Host&#13;
of Pride Items! Learn more about Your community!&#13;
PARADE From Memorial Park to the Strip,&#13;
Festive step off at 5 pm&#13;
www.okcpride.com&#13;
. iversity&#13;
1de Even&#13;
It&#13;
For GLBTs &amp; PFLAGs&#13;
Eureia S ·&#13;
•'&#13;
Valentine's, Spring &amp; Fall&#13;
Dances - Concerts - BEARS!&#13;
Plus other Pride Events!&#13;
&amp;'&#13;
iversity&#13;
de en&#13;
It fll,41",.,,.,.,.t!&#13;
For GLBTs &amp; PPLAGs&#13;
Eu · S ansas&#13;
. . . . ... -~&#13;
V-1entine's, Spring a Fall&#13;
Dances .. Concerts ;..; BEARS!&#13;
Plus other Pride Events!&#13;
,.p;rtfl@[ "pp&#13;
And Watch Out For Nore&#13;
.com&#13;
•• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •&#13;
&#13;
Page 10&#13;
JUNE 2005&#13;
by Andrew Collins&#13;
"Juneau laska"&#13;
If it's outdoor adventure you're&#13;
seeking this summer and you want&#13;
. . a base of operations that's&#13;
spectacularly scenic, relatively progressive, and surprisingly artsy, consider a trip to&#13;
America's most remote state capital, Juneau, Alaska. This bustling city of 30,000,&#13;
sometimes referred to as ''Little San Francisco" because of its hilly streets, fringes&#13;
Gastineau Channel and lies beneath the sheer faces of Mt. Juneau (3,600 feet) and Mt.&#13;
Roberts (3,800 feet). There are no roads in or out of Juneau (all travel here is by boat&#13;
or plane), which is about 600 miles southeast of Anchorage and 900 miles northwest&#13;
of S~attlc. If you're guessing that secluded Juneau isn't exactly a gay mecca, you're&#13;
correct,· but gay visitors will hardly find themselves alone here.&#13;
Although Alaska's one of the most conservative states in the Union, its capital city&#13;
is an educated, outdoorsy place. It's home to the Southeast Alaska Gay &amp; Lesbian&#13;
Alliance, whose website (www.seagli.org) offers plenty of great information for&#13;
visiting "family." Juneau also claims one of the most respected regional theaters in the&#13;
country, the Perseverance Theatre. This first-rate company has produced such&#13;
enlightened fare as _Hedwig and the Angry Inch_ and _Angels in America_; the 2005-&#13;
2006 season will include _Hair_ and _The Laramie Project_. Juneau also has several&#13;
excellent art galleries and a local GLB'I' Pride Chorus that performs at a variety of&#13;
venues.&#13;
Most folks come to Juneau for one primary reason: to enjoy the great outdoors.&#13;
The region lacks the frosty climate for which interior Alaska is known, with average&#13;
temperatures in the 20s and 30s in winter, and in the 60s and 70s in summef. The city&#13;
does experience plenty of rain, averaging as much 100 inches of annual precipitation&#13;
(the worst of it in autumn). The driest and most pleasant months arc April through&#13;
June. Keep in mind, however, that cruise ships dock in Juneau from mid-May&#13;
through mid-September - good news if you're planning sightseeing excursions, as&#13;
many of the touring outfitters in town operate only at this time; and bad news if&#13;
you're put off by the sight of massive 20-story ships looming over downtown and&#13;
unleashlog a torrent of pasty and portly passengers. That being said, if you're a fan of&#13;
cruises, note that the gay-and-lesbian tour operator RSVP is offering an Alaska cruise&#13;
in September 2005, and also that lesbian-oriented Olivia Cruises occasionally offers&#13;
Alaska trips.&#13;
Among Juneau's myriad outdoors activities, visiting a glacier tops the list. The&#13;
simplest way to do this is to drive out to the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center,&#13;
which sits just 10 miles north of downtown and contains some excellent exhibits on&#13;
this hulking glacier, which you can view from a nearby observation area: You can&#13;
hike right on the glacier by booking a helicopter trip through Northstar Trekking. A&#13;
chopper lifts passengers and a guide up to Mendenhall Glacier, first circling over the&#13;
massive Juneau Iceficld (which covers some 1,500 square miles, extending from Juneau&#13;
well into British Columbia), then depositing everybody onto the glacier. Next your&#13;
guide straps crampons (ice spikes) onto your shoes and leads you on a hike over the&#13;
ice, with its eerie blue pools and streams.&#13;
For a truly intensive glacier experience, opt for an all-day hike with Above &amp;&#13;
Beyond Alaska, whose friendly and knowiedgeable guides will lead you up a trail&#13;
..................... continued pg· 12&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Overexposure to&#13;
Dan~rs can lead to vision problems ...&#13;
.. . ·. ¢ ~aay!&#13;
IIAllclll 1111111-,.. TD CL08I&#13;
Cold $eer - Hot Bods - Strong Drinks&#13;
424 S. Memorial, Tulsa• (918) 836-2480&#13;
21 ANO OVER a ONE DRINK MINIMUM a CLOSED TUESDAYaWWW.ENOUPCLUB.COM&#13;
R~ney&#13;
Burgamy&#13;
www.c21goldc:asth;,~c:om&#13;
405.840~2106&#13;
Joe&#13;
Brennan&#13;
Page 12&#13;
Out o/Town from pg-10&#13;
alongside Mendenhall Glacier, and then&#13;
out onto the ice itself. The company also&#13;
offers ice-climbing, rock-climbing, whalewatching&#13;
charters, and water~taxi&#13;
services. There's really no better way to&#13;
understand the glacial process, which&#13;
carved out much of North America&#13;
during the last Ice Age, than to hike&#13;
across one of these huge floes of ice - it's&#13;
an unforgettable experience.&#13;
Another fun opportunity for glacierviewing&#13;
is taking a Wings Airways&#13;
flightsecing trip to Taku Glacier Lodge.&#13;
. You fly by seaplane from downtown&#13;
Juneau's harbor over Taku Glacier and&#13;
land in an inlet beside the rustic 1923&#13;
lodge, where you can enjoy an&#13;
impressive salmon bake and roam the&#13;
trails behind the lodge. It's not&#13;
uncommon to spot a black bear in these&#13;
parts. In fact, wildlife sightings are&#13;
extremely likely around Juneau; keep&#13;
your eyes peeled for moose, bald eagle~,&#13;
blue heron, scoter ducks, mountain&#13;
goats, whales, and marmots to name a&#13;
few of the region's frequently observed&#13;
fauna.&#13;
Hikers will find dozens of great&#13;
treks, · from scrambling up the backside of&#13;
Mt. Roberts (you can also take the_ Mt.&#13;
Roberts Tramway directly up the&#13;
mountainside from downtown, but&#13;
hiking is more fun) to strolling through a&#13;
lush rain forest in North Douglas to&#13;
walking among the ruins of a vast mining&#13;
ghost town in Treadwell. You can hike&#13;
most of the trails easily on your own by&#13;
asking locals for directions, but if you&#13;
want to learn about the flora, fauna, and&#13;
history while you hike, consider a guided&#13;
tour. Gastineau Guiding Company offers&#13;
some of the best day-hiking trips as well&#13;
as delightful kayaking tours around&#13;
pristine Admiralty Island. Finally, you&#13;
can rent your own kayaks or canoes&#13;
from Alaska Boat &amp; Kavak.&#13;
Invariably, if you spe~d more than a&#13;
few days in Juneau, you'll encounter a&#13;
rainy day or two. If the weather is grim,&#13;
pian a visit to the exceptional Alaska&#13;
State Museum, which provides an&#13;
excellent overview of Juneau's&#13;
indigenous Tlingit heritage and culture,&#13;
or a tour of the Alaskan Brewing Co.,&#13;
which turns out some of the tastiest&#13;
brews in the region (and serves free&#13;
samples, of course).&#13;
For a small city, Juneau has plenty of&#13;
excellent restaurants. In the historic&#13;
Fisherman's Wharf building, both Doc&#13;
Water's Pub and the Hangar serve&#13;
outstanding food. Doc Water's is more&#13;
casual, with outdoor seating and such&#13;
tasty treats as halibut ceviche and salmon&#13;
burgers. The Hangar turns out both pub&#13;
fare (excellent halibut tacos) and more&#13;
ce&gt;smopolitan dishes, such as Dungeness&#13;
crab cakes. Head to the airy and&#13;
attractive Twisted Fish for designer&#13;
pizzas and refined but still affordable&#13;
food, from ahi' spina·ch salad to oysters&#13;
on the half shell .&#13;
Across the channel in Douglas, the&#13;
new Island Pub serves creative steaks and&#13;
seafood dishes as well as both savory and&#13;
"dessert" pizzas (among the latter, try the&#13;
apple pie pizza with mascarpone, sliced&#13;
apples, sugar, cinnamon, and walriuts);&#13;
it's right by the Perseverance Theatre.&#13;
Overlooking Auke Bay Marina, not far&#13;
from Mendenhall Glacier and the&#13;
attractive campus of the University of&#13;
Alaska Southeast, locals convene at the&#13;
Hot Bite for creative short-order fare '&#13;
(from Thai peanut chicken sandwiches to&#13;
green-chile cheeseburgers) and the most&#13;
luscious milkshakes around, available in&#13;
16 flavors.&#13;
This is a great town for coffee lovers.&#13;
The funky Silverbow functions as a topnotch&#13;
java house, bakery, bagelry, indiefilm&#13;
theater, and six-room boutique hotel&#13;
(with reasonable rates and upbeat decor,&#13;
to boot). It's right in the center of town&#13;
and draws an eclectic bunch. A couple of&#13;
blocks away, Rainbow Foods is a superb&#13;
gourmet health-food shop that also has a&#13;
small coffee bar. The popular local chain,&#13;
Heritage ·cafe, is another great option for&#13;
coffee, wraps, sweets, and wireless&#13;
Internet. Although Juneau lacks a gay&#13;
bar, the Hangar tends to draw a mixed&#13;
bunch to its lounge area, and you'll also&#13;
sometimes find like-minded souls at the&#13;
bar inside the funky Alaskan Hotel and&#13;
in downtown's Triangle Bar.&#13;
As for choosing a place to stay,&#13;
luneau has few cookie-cutter chain&#13;
;ccom~odations - even the larger&#13;
properties, such as the historic Baranof&#13;
Hotel (which is also home to the elegant&#13;
Gold Room restaurant) and the&#13;
contemporary Goldbelt Hotel, have their&#13;
own quirky personalities, Perhaps the&#13;
gay-friendliest property in town,&#13;
Crondahl's B&amp;B is ........... cont. pg-26&#13;
Page 13&#13;
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Page 18&#13;
Won!'t Somebody&#13;
Think of the&#13;
Children?&#13;
In 1977, the Miami-Dade County&#13;
Commission passed an ordinance making&#13;
it illegal to discriminate on the basis of&#13;
sexual orientation. Anita Bryant, a wellknown&#13;
pop and gospel singer, qui'1kly&#13;
launched a virulently anti-gay campaign&#13;
she called "Save Our Children."&#13;
Purportedly, the point of her group was&#13;
to save children from recruitment by&#13;
homosexuals, employing stereotypes and&#13;
lies in support of her cause. She made&#13;
claims such as "If gays are granted rights,&#13;
next we'll have to give rights to&#13;
prostitutes, and to people who sleep with&#13;
St. Bernards, and to nailbiters," and "The&#13;
recruitment of our children is absolutely&#13;
necessary for the survival and growth of&#13;
homosexuality. Since homosexuals&#13;
cannot reproduce, they must recruit and&#13;
freshen their ranks." She used God and&#13;
religion to stir up a backlash of hatred&#13;
and anti-gay violence. Six months after&#13;
the ordinance was passed, voters&#13;
overturned it by a ·wide margin.&#13;
If all of this sounds eerily familiar,&#13;
that's because it should. Obviously,&#13;
religious conservatives have remembered&#13;
their successes and they're once again&#13;
pulling many of the same tricks. You&#13;
may recall Republican Senator Rick&#13;
Santorum's comments on .a radio&#13;
program when commenting on the&#13;
Lawrence vs. Texas sodomy law case in&#13;
2003 when he claimed, "If the Supreme&#13;
Court says that you have the right to&#13;
consensual [gay] sex within your home,&#13;
then you have the right to bigamy, you&#13;
have the right to polygamy, you have the&#13;
right to incest, you have the right to&#13;
adultery. You have the right to&#13;
anything." He went on to compare&#13;
homosexuality to bestiality as well. It&#13;
almost sounds as if he was channeling&#13;
Mrs. Bryant, doesn't it?&#13;
We are once again living in an era of&#13;
rampant anti-gay sentiment. Browsing&#13;
LGBT news sites is not for the faint of&#13;
heart these days. It seems like every day&#13;
gay rights receive another blow.&#13;
Politicians become bolder and bolder in&#13;
their assaults. Once again, religion and&#13;
"moral values" are being used to&#13;
demonize and attack gays and lesbians.&#13;
And once again, children are often the&#13;
focus.&#13;
On May 10, the Oklahoma House of&#13;
Representatives passed a resolution&#13;
banning books on gay families from the&#13;
children's sections of public libraries.&#13;
The measure does not have the power of&#13;
law but calls on Oklahoma libraries to&#13;
"confine homosexually themed books&#13;
and other age-inappropriate material to&#13;
areas exclusively for adult access and&#13;
distribution." It passed, 81-3.&#13;
The resolution states that a child's&#13;
development "should be at the discretion&#13;
of a child's parents free from interference&#13;
from the distribution of inappropriate&#13;
publicly cataloged materials" and that&#13;
public libraries should not expose&#13;
children to material "that mav be deemed&#13;
harmful and inappropriate." '·&#13;
The furor began when an Oklahoma&#13;
City mother became upset after her child&#13;
brought home King and King, a&#13;
children's fairy tale book about a prince&#13;
who falls in love with another prince.&#13;
King and King is aimed at elementary&#13;
school children and helps teach diversity.&#13;
The book, by Linda De Haan and Stern&#13;
Nijland, tells the story of Prince Bertie&#13;
who searches for love through a bevy of&#13;
eligible princes before falling for Prince&#13;
Lee. The thirty-two page book ends with&#13;
the two princes sharing a kiss. Rep. Sally&#13;
Kern called the book "obscene."&#13;
Libraries across the state have already&#13;
pulled the books from the children's&#13;
sections and, in some cases, created&#13;
entirely new sections specifically for the&#13;
offending materials.&#13;
In Troy, Michigan, a poster in a high&#13;
school classroom has created an uproar&#13;
from concerned parents. The&#13;
inflammatory poster's message? "Gay&#13;
people are everyday people.''&#13;
Page 19&#13;
Heart to Heart_&#13;
Approximately eighty protesters are&#13;
expected at the next school board&#13;
meeting. Ironically, the poster has been&#13;
on display in the classroom for two&#13;
years. So far the school is defending the&#13;
poster, claiming, "We do not allow our&#13;
students to be harassed for any reason. It&#13;
is an issue of tolerance."&#13;
Patricia Raezler, a member of Parents&#13;
Promoting Innocence in Bloomfield&#13;
Hills, which supports Troy parents in&#13;
the poster issue, said the school&#13;
shouldn't be promoting sexuality of any&#13;
kind. "\Ve are promoting innocence,"&#13;
said Raezler, whose children attend&#13;
private school. "Once, these types of&#13;
things were left up to the parents. Then&#13;
there was a push to inform and let&#13;
pupils know about sexuality. It hasn't&#13;
decreased sexually transmitted diseases."&#13;
Somehow, it is completely&#13;
incomprehensible to these people that&#13;
promoting tolerance and understanding&#13;
of gay people has absolutely nothing to&#13;
do with sex. It has everything to do&#13;
with bigotry and discrimination.&#13;
In their rush to paint gays as evil&#13;
sinners, the religious conservatives have&#13;
forgotten one important fact. While&#13;
Anita Bryant's campaign was successful&#13;
in overturning the civil rights ordinance,&#13;
she also succeeded in mobilizing LGBT&#13;
people across the country. Thousands&#13;
marched in the streets of San Francisco,&#13;
New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles,&#13;
and New Orleans. Countless individuals&#13;
came out of the closet, and numerous&#13;
new local organizations sprang up. Most&#13;
famously, the LGBT community&#13;
launched a boycott of Florida orange&#13;
juice, for whom Anita Bryant was&#13;
spokesperson, that gained widespread&#13;
support.&#13;
It's time for us to rise up again. We&#13;
have to fight these mean-spirited and&#13;
immoral attacks. We need to make our&#13;
voices heard. We can start by pointing&#13;
out the absurdity of their arguments.&#13;
Promoting rolerance of an abused&#13;
minority has nothing to do with sex.&#13;
Loveiy and charming books like King&#13;
and King are not obscene, harmful, or&#13;
inappropriate. And two consenting&#13;
adults choosing to express their love for&#13;
one another in a healthy manner has&#13;
absolutely no c;ortelation to ioce9t,&#13;
bigamy, or bestiality.&#13;
. It's time we stop allowing the&#13;
Religious Right to decide what is and&#13;
isn't "moral." Whose standards are we&#13;
using? When did the United States&#13;
become a theocracy? And when did&#13;
Conservative Christianity become the&#13;
State Religion? What if my religious&#13;
beliefs don't hold that homosexuals are&#13;
sinners? What if I believe that spreading&#13;
hate in the name of God is a sin? \X:'hat if&#13;
I believe that denying a minority their&#13;
basic civil rights is an immoral&#13;
abomination?&#13;
It's time we save the children of&#13;
America from the hateful teachings of&#13;
self-righteous bigots. In the immortal&#13;
words of Mrs. Lovejoy, "Won't&#13;
somebody think of the children?"&#13;
Quotable Quotes&#13;
"A straight man knows that if he&#13;
knocks a woman up, he's on the&#13;
hook for child-support payments for&#13;
18 years. [I propose that if you] infect&#13;
someone with HIV out of malice or&#13;
negligence ... the state [should] come&#13;
after vou for half the cost of the meds&#13;
the p~rson you infeci:ed is going to&#13;
need. (The man you infected is 50&#13;
percent responsible for his own&#13;
infection.) Once a few dozen men in&#13;
New York City, San Francisco,&#13;
Toronto, Los Angeles, Chicago,&#13;
Miami, and Vancouver are having&#13;
their wages docked for drug-support&#13;
payments, other gay men will be a&#13;
lot more careful about not spreading&#13;
HIV. Trojan won't be able to make&#13;
condoms fast enough." -&#13;
Syndicated gay columnist Dan&#13;
Savage, Feb. 24.&#13;
1 /STH PAC:iE CLASSIFIED AD&#13;
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Ask Uncle Mi&#13;
Advice Column!&#13;
June 2005&#13;
Hello out there in Queerdom-Kittens. Uncle&#13;
here coming in like a heat wave. Uncle as excited as&#13;
a farm boy; just off the bus in New York, during&#13;
this our !Ilonth of pride. Uncle and Tiddles is ready&#13;
for it after a long cold winter. Uncle suggest that ,&#13;
each and every kitten out there, celebrate till the&#13;
tricks run home.&#13;
Kittens, you know that Uncle is not a gossip;&#13;
however, I must share this dish before we speak&#13;
another word. Uncle does not believe in gossip, and&#13;
idle hearsay, with this being said, Gurrl, you are&#13;
._ ______ ....;.. _ ...;. __ ....1 not going to believe this one; who knew?&#13;
The movie which evervone has heard about&#13;
Alexander, with ~ breath of fresh air, Colin Farrell, is a mu;t see. Well, kittens, 1 had&#13;
to tell you, this man is a walking dream. Not only is he good looking, and a free&#13;
spirit. Uncle heard a rumor that he had a nude scene pulled from another movie,&#13;
because his how do you say, manhood, was just overwhelming. I heard from sources&#13;
however, that he took it like a ma1.1,... simply throwing it over his shoulder and&#13;
walking to wardrobe. That is a class act Kittens.&#13;
Dear Uncle:&#13;
I have known I am gay since I was sixteen. While, I have kept my familv in the dark&#13;
about my lifestyle, since going to collage, I have been feeling guilty, and disconnected&#13;
fr?m them. I would love to tell them about my happiness. However, I fear that they&#13;
will not handle. the news well. Any advice on breaking it to them gently? ·&#13;
College-queen ·&#13;
Dear Queen:.&#13;
W~ll, let's se~. You could send them. a postcard announcing your sexuality and ong?&#13;
11;1g e~u~atlon ~t man academy 101. Kitten, relax uncle is just joking with you.&#13;
First oft kitten, lifestyle refers more to the social and environmerital choices we have&#13;
as individuals. You have to realize that homosexuality is not a choice, it is simply&#13;
who we are born ~o be. You want to make sure that you are accurately informed, so&#13;
that, you can help them accept and educate themselves as well. Realize before you&#13;
tell, that afterwards you must be prepared to deal with the outcome. There is ~o&#13;
rush to tell, though af°J:,er finding your freedom in your own skin, it is the sheer&#13;
delight "'.hich c~use.s -us too want to tell it from the mountain. Knowing your people&#13;
best, dec~de whi:h 1s better. A private moment at home a public meeting, to avoicl&#13;
the emotional display fit for stage and screen. Whichever· you choose, know this&#13;
yo.ung queen. You are looking for acceptance and love, verse approval. You are&#13;
fabulous in who you are no matter what!&#13;
Smooches- Uncle Mih:y&#13;
Dear Uncle:&#13;
~y ~artner and ~ of five ye~rs are rai~ing our chil~en (His biological) together. We&#13;
11~e 1n a _predomm~ntly straight suburban commuruty, and we get along fine. It was&#13;
d!fficul_t m the ?eg10n10g however, :"e have let people know we are. a family unit,&#13;
not going anywnere. I adore the children, and would not give them up for the world.&#13;
l_'he issue~ we_ face are prima_rily about us as a couple. The two leading factors are&#13;
simply this. Time restt~tits form Job, children, and the hectic schedules we deal&#13;
with. Leaving us little to no time with one another. The second is the fact that not&#13;
I 1 ;!&#13;
Page 21&#13;
only do we get judged by the straight&#13;
community, however the gay&#13;
community as well. They act like we are&#13;
not gay enough, if there is such a thing.&#13;
With little to no family support, we have&#13;
found· ourselves clearly on our own. I&#13;
hate feeling this way, as I fill guilt and&#13;
selflessness for wishing we had more us&#13;
time. Is this wrong?&#13;
The suburban Bradies.&#13;
Well hello Mr. Br:ady:&#13;
Kitten-It is not selfish to want to&#13;
celebrate the love on which you quilt&#13;
this family upon. This is natural, and&#13;
appropriate to say the least. It is a&#13;
commendable accomplishment which,&#13;
you have your partner have done. There&#13;
is another point to make here as well.&#13;
There are more families than you realize&#13;
out there, mirrored to your own.&#13;
Dealing with the same issues. Uncles&#13;
suggest that you go through your local&#13;
GLTB community center, in order to&#13;
find others such as yourse,lf. Support is&#13;
invaluable, when dealing with this&#13;
lifestyle. · As far as suffering ignorance,&#13;
refuse. There is ignorance and&#13;
sometimes, from within our own&#13;
borders. Family life has just as much&#13;
value as player life. Enjoy the precious&#13;
gift which fate has bestowed onto you&#13;
both. Remembering to· rejoice and keep&#13;
the love which began that day in the&#13;
park.&#13;
Smooches and good luck~ Uncle Mikey&#13;
Well, I guess that about wraps up this&#13;
session; Uncle is just spent Kittens. Mr.&#13;
Tiddles.is ever so persistently letting me&#13;
know, mommies baby needs some&#13;
attention. Until we meet again kittens&#13;
remember; your life story is up to you. It&#13;
can be a best selling page turner, Or a&#13;
lonesome documentary sitting there&#13;
alone collecting dust-It is up to you!&#13;
Happy Pride everyone! Smooches-Uncle&#13;
Mikey and Tiddles tool&#13;
Unck Miieey is A dMncter from Ind.nee writer&#13;
Mic/'4el Hinznun. MkhMJ !Ms b«n writing/or ten&#13;
ye,,rs. Utilizing his st#dies, •nd life apmma to bdp&#13;
others in bis comm,mity, thro11gb hHmor •nd s~nd&#13;
,uh,ia. MidMd ,ipplid. his stll.dy of ptyd,ology and&#13;
crtativt urriting, .s -1! his extensive IMc/egroNnd in&#13;
mentAl bet,hh Dim:t u" to bring• nev, style •nd&#13;
appnMd, to bdping others. Mkh«J's other woris am&#13;
be 'IMTll1ed at fl'fl1fl1,g11Jlinlecontmt.com.&#13;
AIDS Drug Assistance&#13;
Programs: Americans in&#13;
Crisis&#13;
Washington, D.C._ In order to provide AIDS&#13;
therapies to all Americans who need them, a&#13;
minimum of $303 million in additional&#13;
federal funding is urgently needed for the&#13;
AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) for&#13;
the Fiscal Year 2006. That is the consensus of&#13;
ADAP experts , advocacy organizations and&#13;
patients who participated in a Congressional&#13;
briefing today, urging Congress to act.&#13;
The call to action mirrored a letter sent&#13;
last week to both President Bush and&#13;
Members of Congress, which was signed by&#13;
more than 300 organizations nationwide.&#13;
ADAP, funded under Title II of the Ryan&#13;
White CARE Act, provides access to&#13;
treatment for low-income people living with&#13;
HIV/ AIDS who are uninsured or lack&#13;
adequate prescription coverage. It is the final&#13;
safety net for Americans who have no other&#13;
means of accessing HIV medications and a&#13;
lifeline for approximately 100,000 people&#13;
every month.&#13;
According to a budget projection&#13;
conducted a11nuaHy by the National ADAP&#13;
Working Group, the program requires a&#13;
minimum of $303 million in additional&#13;
federal dollars in order to provide treatment&#13;
for existing clients, as well as the 25,000 to&#13;
45,000 new patients that are expected to seek&#13;
treatment through ADAP before April, 2007.&#13;
The budget projection has been proven to be&#13;
a highly reliable predictor of actual need&#13;
since 1997.&#13;
"Four years of inadequate federal ADAP&#13;
funding have culminated in a genuine ADAP&#13;
crisis which has worsened Cllch year'', stated&#13;
Bill Arnold, Director of the National ADAP&#13;
Working Group. The ADAP emergency i5&#13;
now a year older. We hope that this year&#13;
Congress and the White House will address&#13;
this esca!Ating crisis at the earliest possible&#13;
moment.&#13;
Last year, President Bush authorized an&#13;
emergency allocation of $20 million in an effort the&#13;
help the approximately 1,500 ADAP clients on&#13;
official state ADAP waiting Hats in 10 states.&#13;
However, that funding wu not sufficient for the&#13;
thmuaods of those of people living with HIV/&#13;
AIDS around the country who are not able to&#13;
access life-saving medications to keep them alive.&#13;
Unfortunately, the president is recommending an&#13;
increase of ooly $10 million for FY2006. That is&#13;
not even enough to continue to keep the people&#13;
served by his $20 million initiative on their drugs,&#13;
let alone keep up with the growing demand.&#13;
beeir writiiig for the gay and&#13;
lesbian press for more than 20&#13;
years. she se~ed. for three years&#13;
as the co-chair of the board of&#13;
d~ectors of New York City's&#13;
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and&#13;
Transgender Community&#13;
Center, where she founded a&#13;
groundbreaking reading series&#13;
called «In Our Own Write."&#13;
Lesbian Notions&#13;
by Paula Martinac&#13;
JUNE 2005&#13;
Political&#13;
Science&#13;
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's&#13;
soon-to-be-implemented guidelines about&#13;
anonymous sperm donors present a&#13;
reproductive-rights issue for both gay men&#13;
and lesbians. When a government can't&#13;
directly stop "undesirable" people from&#13;
reproducing, it simply makes it more difficult&#13;
for them - in this case, by instituting a policy&#13;
that is more politically motivated than it is&#13;
rooted in science.&#13;
The FDA's new guidelines - set to take&#13;
effect on May 25 - recommend as "ineligible"&#13;
for sperm donation any man who has had sex&#13;
with another man in the previous five years,&#13;
even if he's in a monogamous relationship or&#13;
routinely practices safer sex. They further&#13;
_______ ....;.. _____ .J· restrict donations from men who have had sex&#13;
· in the previous 12 months with anyone&#13;
"known or suspected to have HIV infection." (Ibe "suspected to" part is particularly&#13;
creepy.) ·&#13;
This policy - which has no basis in the science of HIV - actually got its start six&#13;
years ago, 'durfug the. Clinton administration, at the FDA's spooky-sounding "Human&#13;
Tissue Se_tniriar.,,·At that _tinie, the agency announced its ihterition to make it illegal&#13;
for all ~y Illen to_ be_come ~onymo~s sperm donors because of their supposed&#13;
across~tl:\'.e-board nsk for HIV. Despite the growth of HIV infection in the&#13;
heterosexual population, straight men with multiple sexual partners would have faced&#13;
no similar restriction,&#13;
. ·~ flood of protest eil~ued, primarily from sperm banks, which rightly saw it as&#13;
mvasive regulation of an mdustry that already employed necessary safeguards against&#13;
!'fIV. Indeed, tner~ were on record. C&gt;nly a few cases of HIV transmission through&#13;
mfected donor sp,erm. (And today, there is no recorded increase of such ·&#13;
transmissioh.) 'HaJ&gt;pily; activists were successful at staving off the discriminatory&#13;
change, but under Bush, the FDA began revisiting the idea in earnest.&#13;
Let's fac: it -: ~e Ufderlyirig premise of the FDA guidelines is that gay men should&#13;
not faili,er chil~en; al%bugl:i the agency doesn't conic right out and· say that. It&#13;
co~ve~:uently c,1rctirilven_t~ the charges of antigay discrimination by noting ?1at the&#13;
gw?elines don t have the force of law, and that the agency's official regulations -&#13;
which _do_ carry legal force - never use the words "gay" or "homosexual." Yet, as one&#13;
sperm-bank director aori:utted to gay blogger Michael Petrelis, "A lot of clinics will&#13;
use the guidelines as. an intimidation document and refuse gay donors." ·&#13;
. What's more, .the new .guid~es also have a direct impact on lesbian reproductive&#13;
choice. Many lesbian coup1es pterer gay sperm donors. Indeed, they mav have chosen&#13;
a sperm bank where donors_ agree to have their identity revealed at soni~ point in the&#13;
future - usually when the child comes of age and want that donor to be "familv"· in&#13;
more ways than one. ,&#13;
_ If yo:1 think that I'm sounding a false alarm, that our government doesn't get&#13;
mvolved m _who can and can't reproduce, think again. In fact, the U.S. government&#13;
has o~en tned to prevent or discourage certain people from having children -&#13;
e~pec~~ poor women, women of color, and people with mcntai or physicai&#13;
d1sabtl1ttes.&#13;
1&#13;
l&#13;
l&#13;
Page 23&#13;
It has accomplished this through&#13;
sterilization programs disguised as&#13;
"contraception" - perhaps most&#13;
heinously, in a campaign of the 1970s&#13;
that succeeded in sterilizing a fourth of&#13;
:all Native American women living on&#13;
government reservations. Individual&#13;
abuses are still being documented,&#13;
especially in cities with high immigrant&#13;
and people-of-color populations.&#13;
The other significant means by which&#13;
the government restricts the reproductive&#13;
rights of specific people is through&#13;
punitive, economic policies that make it&#13;
impossible for them to raise th~ own&#13;
childrc:n. For example, the 1996 "welfare&#13;
reform" bill instituted a "family cap" that&#13;
limits paynients to women if they&#13;
becomc:/pregnant while accepting&#13;
governp:ient' assistance.&#13;
UndersiAnd that, at the same time,&#13;
our goycmment tries to make it more&#13;
difficult for white,· middle-class women&#13;
to _opt out_ of motherhood, by&#13;
· . away at their right to choose.&#13;
. . abortion is still technically&#13;
legal in the United· States, fewer and&#13;
fewer m2dical schools now teach the&#13;
proc::edurc:, ar1d tl1e numbc;r of doctors&#13;
perfowiog: abortions .has therefore been&#13;
drastically reduced since the historic&#13;
_Roe v. Wade_ decision of 1973.&#13;
Of course, the new FDA guidelines&#13;
for sperm donors may seem benign&#13;
compared to egregious examples from the&#13;
women's reproductive-rights movement.&#13;
But the lesbian and gay community&#13;
shouldn't fool itself into complacency.&#13;
The guidelines are ultimately all about&#13;
who is and isn't "fit'' to parent - who is,&#13;
in effect, "mommy material," a phrase I&#13;
coined a few years back. Now the FDA&#13;
is poised to include gay men - based on&#13;
their sexual _identity_, not on the&#13;
realities of their sexual _behavior_ -&#13;
under the rubric of those who aren't&#13;
"daddy material."&#13;
® B 1g&#13;
NYC's Wisstock Festival. to Celibrate&#13;
20th Anniversary on ffugust 27&#13;
The iegendary dfllg festival which refuses to&#13;
"curl up and dye" will once again rock it's&#13;
original SO's location in the East Village's&#13;
· Tompkins Square Park on Saturday, August&#13;
27th 2005, from 5:00-7:00 pm. For the last 2&#13;
years, the wiggy festival has been organized&#13;
in association with FEVA, the Federation of&#13;
East Village Artists, which adds Wigstock to&#13;
it's annual HOWL Festival line-up. HOWL's&#13;
goal is to revitalize the East Village and&#13;
commemorate its promine.o.ce as a cultural&#13;
hotbed.&#13;
Last year, over 6,000 turned out in the&#13;
pouring :min to see such acts as Boy George,&#13;
RuPaul, Lypsinka, Drag King Murray Hill,&#13;
Comedy Centtal's Graham Norton and&#13;
Holly Woodlawn, the Warhol superstar&#13;
whose life inspired Lou Reed's "Walk on the&#13;
Wtld Side." So far, Wigstock 2005 has&#13;
confirmed transexual superstar/David&#13;
Lachapelle muse Amanda Lepore, dancing&#13;
fool and former Miss Continent21 Candis&#13;
Cayne, comedilln/actor Mike Albo, the&#13;
super-sized t21.ents of Sweetie, Billboard&#13;
chart-topping &lt;W1ce divo Kevin A viance and&#13;
Flotilla Barge, whose evil SruJones'&#13;
impersonation in a recent PETA ad made&#13;
nationwide headlines!&#13;
Of course, they'll _all be curated and&#13;
emceed by Wigstock founder Lady Bunny&#13;
who notes "20 yearsi I'm 26 now so I must&#13;
have starting organizing the festival when I&#13;
was 6 years old!" (And she's bee.o. using that&#13;
line since 1992Q Expect a frel!k show with&#13;
raunchy putp0r, scintillating song and dance&#13;
numbers and a vibe of which the New York&#13;
Tt1nes has said "the ban.a was dynamite."&#13;
The audience is encouraged to dress up as&#13;
well, providing a perfect audience for the&#13;
queens' zany antics. Plus, it's a throwback to&#13;
the East Village's glory days when the area&#13;
was much grittier, and freaks couid sci!!&#13;
afford to live in Manhattan.&#13;
1 p C 25&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
JUNIE 24 • 26 OKLAHOMA G:l"A', DK&#13;
Talent Night&#13;
Drink S Is&#13;
H1111p&#13;
brinkS Is&#13;
Poo1·toumments&#13;
Karaoke&#13;
Best·in· Town I&#13;
9toClose&#13;
...c..e..P....a.. ... .&#13;
page-26&#13;
Out o/Town from pg-12&#13;
on a quiet downtown street and offers&#13;
two simple rooms, with rates from $70&#13;
to $80. Owners Jay and Judy Crondahl&#13;
give plenty back to the community - if&#13;
you stay at their B&amp;B for three or more&#13;
consecutive nights and book with them&#13;
directly, you can make an equivalent&#13;
contribution to one of three local&#13;
nonprofit organizations (including&#13;
PFLAG) in lieu of one night's payment.&#13;
Juneau's most luxurious&#13;
accommodations are invariably found in&#13;
B&amp;Bs and smaller inns. The romantic&#13;
Pearson's Pond sits close to Mendenhall&#13;
G:ader and offers cushy rooms, many&#13;
with fireplaces and hot tubs. Alaska's&#13;
Capital Inn sits right in the heart of the&#13;
restaurant and retail action, offering&#13;
seven attractively furnished rooms with&#13;
whirlpool tubs and fireplaces, and an&#13;
excellent full breakfast. If it's a&#13;
magnificent view you're after, book a&#13;
room at the gay-friendly Aurora View&#13;
Inn, a majestic contemporary house high&#13;
o!1 a bluff in Douglas, with unparalleled ·&#13;
vistas of downtown and the mountains&#13;
beyond. Just beware that gazing out over&#13;
this charmed capital of America's 49th&#13;
state may render you unable to return&#13;
home.&#13;
The Little Black Book&#13;
Above &amp; Beyond Alaska (907-364-2333,&#13;
www.beyondak.com). Alaska Boat and&#13;
Kayak (907-789-6886,&#13;
www.juneaukayak.com). Alaskan Hotel&#13;
(Franklin St., 907~586-1000,&#13;
www.alaskanhotel-juneau.com). Alaska's&#13;
Capital Inn (113 W. 5th St., 907 -586-6507&#13;
or 888-588-6507,&#13;
www.alaskascapitalinn.com). Aurora&#13;
View Inn (2917 Jackson Rd., 907-586-&#13;
3036 or 888-580-8439,&#13;
www.auroraview.com). Crondahl's B&amp;B&#13;
(626 5th St., 907-586:14§4,. .&#13;
www.juneaucrondahls.com). Doc&#13;
Water's Pub (Fisherman's Wharf, 907-&#13;
586-3627). Gastineau Guiding (907-586-&#13;
8231, www.stepintoalaska.com).&#13;
Goldbelt Hotel (51 ~n Dr., 907-586-&#13;
6900 or 888-478-6909,&#13;
www.goldbelttours.com). The Hangar&#13;
(Fisherman's Wharf, 907-586-5018).&#13;
Heritage Cafe (174 S. Franklin St. 907-&#13;
586-1087). The Hot Bite (Aukc B~y&#13;
Marina, 907-790-2483). Island Pub (1102&#13;
2nd St., Douglas, 907-364-1595). Juneau&#13;
Convention and Visitors Bureau (907-&#13;
586-1737, www.travcljuncau.com).&#13;
Northstar Trekking (907-790-4530,&#13;
www.glacicrtrek1cing.com). Pearson's&#13;
Pond (4541 Sawa Circle, 907-789-3772 or&#13;
888-658-6328, www.pearsonspond.com).&#13;
Perseverance Theatre (914 3rd St.,&#13;
Douglas, 907-463-TIXS,&#13;
www.pcrscveranccthcatre.org). The&#13;
Silvcrbow (120 2nd St., 907-586-4146 or&#13;
800-586-4146, www.silvcrbowinn.com).&#13;
Twisted Fish (550 S. Franklin St., 907-&#13;
463-5033). Westmark Baranof Hotel (127&#13;
N. Franklin St., 907-586-2660 or 800-544-&#13;
0~70, www.westmarkhotels.com). Wings&#13;
Airways/Taku Glacier Lodge trips (907-&#13;
586-6275 or 907-789-0790,&#13;
www.wingsairways.com).&#13;
Press Release&#13;
WICHITA, KS _"June is PRIDE month&#13;
- Come one, come all to help Wichita,&#13;
KS celebrate the diversity of the prairie.&#13;
Scheduled for June 26, 2005 is a 2:00 p.m.&#13;
PRipE parade, followed by a speaker,&#13;
music entertainment, prized, and fun for&#13;
all. Parade registration is still possible&#13;
with discount entry fees valid until a&#13;
May 22nd postmark. Full price entries&#13;
will be accepted until June 22nd. Parade&#13;
walkers (friends, families, and pets) are&#13;
welcome at no cost. Dress in vour&#13;
PRIDE best and come participate.&#13;
Vendors interested in setting up during&#13;
or after the parade arc invited to contact&#13;
Prairie Pride Productions, 316-617-8813.&#13;
V cndor fees arc being waived this year in&#13;
exchange for donations from each vendor&#13;
to assure success of a PRIDE celebration&#13;
in future years. Call the number above&#13;
for parade rcgistr2tion forms, vendor&#13;
forms, t-shirt pre-order information, and&#13;
any questions you may have."&#13;
Page 27&#13;
Seo es&#13;
by Jack Fertig&#13;
JUNE 2005&#13;
"1bink it through, Libra!"&#13;
Saturn quincunx Pluto is continuing to&#13;
force you through difficult selfexamination&#13;
and hard choices. Mars in&#13;
Pisces is triggering them both, offering&#13;
spiritual insight and a push to work. But&#13;
think ahead and sort things out carefully&#13;
before taking action.&#13;
ARIES (March 20 April 19): There&#13;
seems to be precious little going right&#13;
these days, so you may as well take a&#13;
meditative retreat and charge your&#13;
batteries. Just working on those insights&#13;
is quite enough for you to handle now.&#13;
TAURUS (April 20 - May 20): Imagine&#13;
vou're on one of those TV survivor&#13;
;hows with all your friends. List them on&#13;
paper, and scratch them away one at a&#13;
time, each time thinking about why&#13;
you're making that choice. What does&#13;
this process tell you about your&#13;
friendships?&#13;
GEMINI (May 21 June 20): Your&#13;
career right now is feeling about as stable&#13;
as a surfboard at sea. To avoid wiping&#13;
out, consider the balance of values and&#13;
associations your goals are built on, and&#13;
remember that the values have to be&#13;
stronger.&#13;
CANCER (June 21 - July 22): You're&#13;
hungry for adventure now, but that's a&#13;
temptation to disaster. Dig into your safe&#13;
little nest and get your thrills&#13;
intellectually or artistically instead. A&#13;
good philosophical read or a sci-fi epic&#13;
will take you where you need to go.&#13;
LEO (July 23 August 22): A mad,&#13;
passionate, erotic getaway will raise&#13;
problems and be more trouble than it's&#13;
worth, but the problems it brings to&#13;
surface are exactly those you need to deal&#13;
with. You can handle it. Make sure your&#13;
partner is ready!&#13;
VIRGO ~August 23 September 22):&#13;
Social opportunities can stir up problems&#13;
at home. Try to involve your partner -&#13;
or, if you're single, a good friend - in&#13;
helping you reconcile the two. A friend&#13;
can also help you with relationship&#13;
problems.&#13;
LIBRA (September 23 - October 22): You&#13;
need to think your actions through, but be&#13;
careful not to dit.'1er. Too little or too much&#13;
thinking can lead to accidents. Guidance&#13;
from your boss or from any authority, even&#13;
parents, will help you stay focused.&#13;
SCORPIO (October 23 - November 21):&#13;
Money problems have been a dug for a&#13;
while. There's no easy fix, and impulse&#13;
spending is not therapy - _au contra.ire_!&#13;
Adventure is helpful. Any version of&#13;
diversion or perversion provides both relief&#13;
and perspective on your problems.&#13;
SAGITTARIUS (November 22 December&#13;
20): Although you're extra sexy these days,&#13;
you have some questions about personal and&#13;
sexual integrity. Are they compromised by&#13;
easy sex or obsolete habits? What do you&#13;
need to work on to make sex more&#13;
satisfying?&#13;
CAPRICORN (December 21 January 19):&#13;
Relationships are often a source - or core of&#13;
anxiety. The old-fashioned approach&#13;
talking honestly abour your fears and&#13;
worries is best. Don't worry about&#13;
focusing your thoughts and words. That will&#13;
develop during the discussion.&#13;
AQUARIUS 0anuary 20 February 18):&#13;
What you want to achieve at work is now&#13;
less important than how you go about it.&#13;
Focus on the process and stay on the track&#13;
you set earlier. Challenges from colleagues&#13;
can offer opportunities to improve, but just&#13;
stay on that track!&#13;
PISCES (February 19 - March 19): Your&#13;
energy is very high now, but easily&#13;
scattered. Your goals may seem impossible,&#13;
and your boss oppressive. Weather It&#13;
through by focusing your energy into tasks&#13;
that offer a chance to exercise some small&#13;
sense o: playful creativity.&#13;
Jack Fertig has been working as a professionai&#13;
astrologer since 1977 and is a founding member&#13;
of the Association for Astrological Networ.king.&#13;
He can be reached for consultations at 415-864-&#13;
8302, rhrough his website at&#13;
hctp:l lwww.starjack.com&#13;
Page 28 Four States Community Directory&#13;
-Bars- NightclubsArkansas,&#13;
Fayetteville (479)&#13;
Studio 7Hi- -716 W. Syc:1morc- - - - 479-571-130&#13;
Arkansas, Fort Smith (479)&#13;
Kinkeads- 1004 1/2 Garmon Ave- - -479-783-9988&#13;
Club 10~ - -1022 Dodson .Ave.. - -479-782-1845&#13;
ArkHsu, Hot Sprba1s (501)&#13;
Club One Eleven- - · 111 Garden St- - • -620-4111&#13;
Our Houae Lounge - 6tiO E. Grand .Ave- -624-6868&#13;
Arkamas, Little Rock (501)&#13;
Back Stteet - - -1021 Jessie Rd- - - - - 501-664-27#&#13;
Discovery- - - -1021 JCS$ie Rd- ••• - - - 501-666-6900&#13;
The Factory - -412 Louisi- St- - - -501-372-3070&#13;
.Ka■1a1, Wlcltlta (316)&#13;
J's Lounge·· - - 513 E. Central - - 316-262-1363&#13;
Our Fantaay- • • - • 3201 S. Hillside- - -316-682-5494&#13;
· The Comer-•· - • 3210 E. Osie - - - - - 316-683-9781&#13;
The Otbenide- • --447 N. St Francis-• 316-262-7825&#13;
Shaw - • - - - - - • 4000 S. Broadway- - 316-522-2028&#13;
Sidestreet Mens Bar -1106 S. Pattie- - -316-267-0324&#13;
South 40 - - • - - 3201 S. Hillside - - • - -316-682-5494&#13;
Trend, Bar-• - -1507 S. Pawnee- - - - - 316-262~4530&#13;
Miaoelri, lopft■ (417)&#13;
Ree'•·· - · 716 S. Main· - - - -· -417-627-9035&#13;
Mlae■ri, Kaua, City (81')&#13;
Buddies - - - - - - · 3715 Main St- - - - 816-561-2600&#13;
Belle Sw's- - - · 1321 Grand Ave- -816-421-1288&#13;
Club NV - - - - 220 Admiral Blvd- - 816-421-NVKC&#13;
DB Warehouse- 1915 Main St- - - -816-471-1575&#13;
Millliic B's-• - -805 W. 39th St- - - - - - 816-561-0625&#13;
Sidestrcct Bar- · -413 E. 3rd- - - - - - 816-531-1775&#13;
Sidekicks Saloon - - 3707 Main St- . 816- 931-1430&#13;
,Mlae■ri, Spria&amp;fleld (417)&#13;
The Edge- -424 Boon'rille Ave-•• - • --417-831-4700&#13;
Uquon &amp; Kicl:eu- -1109 E. Commcrcial-873-2225&#13;
Martha's Vioeya.rd-21, W Olive -417-864-4572&#13;
Oz Bar-5().4 E. Commercial••• - • -417-831-9001&#13;
Ronism: Place- - --821 College- - - •• - -417-864--0036&#13;
llumon • -110, E. Commercial-. - -417-873-2225&#13;
Oklaltoma, O~ltema City (415)&#13;
Boom Room- 2807 NW 36th St- - - - - -405-601-7200&#13;
Cl■b Jlox. - - -3535 NW 39th Espwy - .fOS-947-2351&#13;
Cope- · · - · - · -2200 NW 39th Expwy- -40S-525-0730&#13;
fllnillh Uoc • ~2200 ~ 39th Expwy- - 40!&gt;-525-0730&#13;
Hi-Lo Club - - 1221 NW SOth- - - ...OS-84}-1722&#13;
Udo- - · - · · · -2200 NW 39th &amp;pwy- 405-525--0730&#13;
Partnas- · · · -280S NW 36th St - - - - - 40S-942-2199&#13;
Sisteu- - - - - · 2120 NW 39th St - - - - - ..fOS-521-9533&#13;
'The Jloddcs- • -3201 N. May .Ave - - - - 40!&gt;-947-9361&#13;
Topaap GrDI 8t Ba-- 3S35 NW 39th--405-947-2351&#13;
Oklahoma, T■lsa (918)&#13;
Bamboo Lounge- 7204 E. Pine•••· 918-836-8700&#13;
Club Maverick-· 822 S. Sheridan• - 918-835-3301&#13;
End Up Club- - 424 S. Memorial- - 918-836-2480&#13;
The Detour-·· -7944 E. 21st••• - - - 918-270-2428&#13;
Club Majestic- - 124 N. Boston - - - - 918-584-9494&#13;
Renegades- - · • 1649 S. Main - • - - - - - 918-585-3405&#13;
Play-Mor-Club- - 1737 S. Memorial - - 918-838-9792&#13;
Tulsa Eagle- - - - -1338 E. 3rd - - - - - - - 918-592-1188&#13;
TNT'~····· 2114 S. Memorial-• - • - 918-660-0856&#13;
Yd!ow-Brick-Rd- - -2630 E. 15th- - - - 918-293-0304&#13;
-Restaurants-&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (465)&#13;
Gushers Restaumnt-2200 NW 39Exp405-525-0730&#13;
Ingrids Kitchen- -3701 N. Youngs- - -405-946-8444&#13;
Topanga Grill tic Bar- 3535 NW 39th--405-947-2351&#13;
-Lodging-&#13;
Mlnoari, leplia (-417)&#13;
Fairfield Inn by Marriott- - - - - 417-624-7800&#13;
Mlnoari, Ava&#13;
Catus Canyon Campground- - - - - 417-683-9199&#13;
Mlaoerl, Lampe&#13;
KOKOMO Campground - - - - - -.. 417-779-5084&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
HollywoodHotel- 3535 NW 39th Ex-405-947-2351&#13;
Habana Inn - 2200 NW 39th Exp- -405-528-2221&#13;
-OrganizationsArkansu,&#13;
Avoca&#13;
Natural State Naturists- - - • - - • - - -479-451-8066&#13;
Arkaaus, Eureka Springs&#13;
MCC Living Spring- - - - - - - - - - -870-253-9337&#13;
Arkansas, Little Rock (501)&#13;
Arkansans for Human Rights-www.arhr.org&#13;
Diamond State Rodeo Assoc.- - - - -ww:w.dua.org&#13;
Stonewall Democratic Club--www.sdcar.org&#13;
Kansas, Pittsburg (620)&#13;
River of Life Church• 1709 N Walnut - -11.AM&#13;
PSU-QS.A.- • 1701 S. Broadway- - - - 620-231-0938&#13;
Kansas, Wichita (316)&#13;
HOA-Mem Chorus - - - - - - - - - - - 316-618-0684&#13;
That Gay Group, W.S.U. - - - - - - - - 316-978-7010&#13;
Kansu Gay Rodeo As,oc- - - - - - - - - www.ltgra.us&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
MCC Spirit of Christ-2902 E 20th, •••• 6pm&#13;
UCCFP--204 N. Jaclaion Ave, - - - - - -10:30.AM&#13;
Aids Project 02:arl:1- 513 Kentucky- 417-624-5788&#13;
Missouri Gay Rodeo Assoc - - - - - www.mgra.us&#13;
Page 29&#13;
Missouri, Springfield (417)&#13;
· Rainbow Christian Ch-837 W. Madison- 866-6206&#13;
Unitarian Universalist Church - - - 417-833-2723&#13;
APO- - - . 1901 E. Bennett, suite D- 417-881-1900&#13;
ShowMe MO Pride - - - - - - . - - - - --417-864-4459&#13;
GLO Comm. Ctr- -518 E. Commerical- -869-3978&#13;
PFLAG-Springfield- - - - . . - -417-889-1059&#13;
PROMO SW MO- promoswmo@hotmail.com&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Cathedral of Hope- - 600 NW 13th St- 232-HOPE&#13;
The Center- - 2135 NW 39th St. - - 405-524-6000&#13;
NLA-Tribal Fire - - - - - www.tribalfir~okc.com&#13;
OGRA- - - - - - - - - - - • · - www.okgayrodeo.com&#13;
Oklahoma, McAlester&#13;
McPride- - -POBox 1515, McAlester, OK 74502&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa (918)&#13;
GLBT Comm. Ctr- -5545 E. 41st- • • - 918-743-4297&#13;
H.O.P.E. - - - - 2545 S. Yale- - - - 918-834-8378&#13;
MCC United- -1623 N. Maplewood- -918-838-1715&#13;
SSRA - - - - - • - • - - - www.soonerstaterodco.com&#13;
TOHR- .. - - PO Box 2687, Tulsa, OK 74101&#13;
Tulsa CARES- -3507 E. Admiral Pl- - 918-834~4194&#13;
Tulsa Rough Riders- -v.-ww.tulsaroughriders.com&#13;
-Business Services....;.&#13;
Arkansas, Eureka Springs&#13;
Diversity Pride Events - - www.diversitypride.com&#13;
Eurek:aPride- - - - - - - - - - - - www.eurekapride.com.&#13;
Kansas, Wichita&#13;
Total Massage- - - - - - Kenn- - - -.. - 316-204-0111&#13;
Missouri, Eureka&#13;
Shelter Insurance- -Greg Tainter- 636-938-5500&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Charles Burt Realtors-Vicki Bronson-- -434-0077&#13;
Office Max- -440 Rangeline Rd- - - 417-623-1007&#13;
Missouri, Springfield ( 417)&#13;
Priscilla's• - • • 1918 S. Gienstone • -417-881-8444&#13;
Oklahoma, Broken Arrow&#13;
Spas N Such- 808 N. 15th· - • --918-258-7727&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City&#13;
Century21 - -4301 NW 63rd #100 - 405- 840-2106&#13;
Jungle Reds - 2200 NW Expwy- 405-524-5733&#13;
Piece To Remember-2131 NW 39th- -405-528-2223&#13;
Priscilla's: 615 E. Memorial - - - - - 405-755-8600&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa (918}&#13;
Elite Bookstore --814 S. Sheridan- - 918-838-8503&#13;
- Glenpool Flowers- 437 E. 141st- GP- 918-291-3275&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA- 4815 S Harvard- - 918-747-5466&#13;
Unclerguy.com • • -15 E. Brady- - -918-829-0824&#13;
Priscilla's - - . - 7925 E. 41st - - - - - -918-627-4884&#13;
Priscilla's - - • • 5634 W. Skelly - • • --918-446-6336&#13;
Priscilla's - - - -11344 E. 11th - - • - - 918-438-4224&#13;
Priscilla's - - - - 2333 E. 71st- • - - • - 918-499-1661&#13;
&#13;
PAGE 32 THE STAR JUNE 2005</text>
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                <text>[2005] The Star Magazine, June 1, 2005; Volume 2, Issue 6</text>
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                <text>The Metro Star’s first issue began in August of 2008. Before this issue was Ozarks Pride (2004), The Ozark’s Star (2004), and The Star (2005).&#13;
&#13;
This magazine discusses topics of AIDs, education, politics, local and national civil rights of the LGBT community, and advice for relationships and places to visit. &#13;
&#13;
This collection is PDF searchable. Physical copies are also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.&#13;
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                    <text>Oklahomans for Equality
Oral History Interview
with
Sue Welch and Marcy Smith
Interview Conducted by Toby Jenkins
Date: Jan 16, 2026
Transcribed By: Dennis Neill using Reduct.Video, February 28,
2026
Restrictions: Interviewee requested: N/A
Oklahomans for Equality
History Project
621 E. 4th Street
Tulsa, OK. 74120
918.743.4297
historyproject@okeq.org

1

�About Sue Welch and Marcy Smith

Summary
In this engaging conversation, Marcy Smith and Sue Welch share their
personal journeys, highlighting their experiences growing up in Oklahoma and
navigating their identities as members of the LGBTQ+ community. Marcy
recounts her childhood in Tulsa, her education at Oklahoma Christian College,
and her early awareness of her sexual orientation. She reflects on the
challenges faced by LGBTQ+ individuals in a conservative environment,
including the need for stealth and the importance of finding community. Sue,
on the other hand, shares her upbringing in Ponca City, her academic journey
at OSU, and the pivotal moment when she realized her feelings for her best
friend. Both women discuss their relationships, the evolution of their
identities, and the significance of community support in their lives.
As they delve deeper into their experiences, Marcy and Sue recount their
involvement with Oklahomans for Human Rights and the development of the
Dennis R. Neill Equality Center. They reflect on the challenges of coming out to
their families, the societal pressures they faced, and the importance of creating
a safe space for LGBTQ+ individuals in Tulsa. Their stories are filled with
humor, resilience, and a sense of belonging, showcasing the power of love and
community in overcoming adversity. In this episode, Marcy Smith and Sue
Welch share their inspiring journey of establishing a community center for the

2

�LGBTQ+ community in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They recount the grassroots efforts
that began in the late 1980s, during the AIDS crisis, when they faced
skepticism and pushback from within their own community. Despite the
challenges, they successfully organized fundraising events, such as house
parties and the Wild Hearts Ball, to raise awareness and funds. Their
determination led to significant milestones, including securing a $10,000
grant from a New York foundation and eventually purchasing a permanent
space for their community center, which became a hub for support,
celebration, and activism.
The conversation highlights the importance of physical spaces for community
gathering, especially in a time when virtual connections are prevalent. Marcy
and Sue emphasize the need for ongoing support and engagement within the
community, particularly in light of recent political challenges. They reflect on
the center's role in pivotal moments for LGBTQ+ rights, including the
legalization of same-sex marriage and the repeal of discriminatory laws. Their
message is clear: maintaining a physical home for the community is essential
for fostering connection, support, and resilience against adversity.
Keywords
LGBTQ+, Tulsa, Oklahomans for Human Rights, coming out, community
support, Dennis R. Neill Equality Center, personal stories, Marcy Smith, Sue
Welch, LGBTQ+ history, LGBTQ+ community, Tulsa, fundraising, community
center, activism, AIDS crisis, grassroots efforts, Wild Hearts Ball, same-sex
marriage, community support
Takeaways








"I knew pretty early probably 10 or 11 years of age."
"You just find your people and can do things."
"It was kind of a cover, right?"
"I felt like I was living in the 1950s."
"It was a pivotal thing to see that."
"I think they were upset that they were having to deal with it."
"My family has always been very progressive, very liberal."

3

� "We moved into a duplex that I had previously moved into."
 "We developed a campaign for a permanent visible presence."
 "It was fantastic because I think we had such a large group." It was a
very grassroots campaign, one person at a time.
 We had to prove ourselves first before getting large donations.
 We wanted to bring disparate groups together behind the same cause.
 The community bought into this; it was a beautiful thing.
 We had to create a physical space for gathering and support.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Background
01:16 Marcy's Childhood and Education
12:10 Sue's Upbringing and Early Relationships
24:00 Finding Community in Tulsa
38:55 Coming Out to Family and Friends
46:58 Involvement with Oklahomans for Human Rights
48:21 Grassroots Beginnings: Building Support
52:28 Creating Community Events for Fundraising
01:00:10 Challenges and Triumphs in Fundraising
01:08:50 Finding a Permanent Home for the Center
01:18:31 The Grand Opening and Community Impact
01:25:42 Reflections on Community and Future Challenges

______________________________________________________________________

4

�Sue Welch and Marcy Smith Oral History Interview Jan 16, 2026
Toby Jenkins: Today's date is Friday, January the 16th, 2026, at the Dennis R. Neill
Equality Center in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma. And we have Marcy Smith and Sue
Welch. For our archival purposes, would you please give us your name, your age as
today's date.
Marcy Smith: Me, Marcy Smith, 62, gonna be 63 this year.
Sue Welch: Sue Welch, 64.
Toby Jenkins: Joining me in the interview today is the founder of Oklahomans for
Equality, Dennis R. Neill, and Amanda Thompson, who is the archivist at the Dennis R.
Neill Equality Center, which houses the Nancy and Joe MacDonald Rainbow Library
[where this interview is being conducted]. Marcy, tell us a little bit about your childhood
and your family. When were you born?
Marcy Smith: October 10th, 1963, right here in Tulsa.
Toby Jenkins: What hospital?
Marcy Smith: Well, I thought I was born in St. John, but recently, I found out I was born
in Hillcrest.
Toby Jenkins: And so your family was from Tulsa?
Marcy Smith: Yes, my mom's family eventually was from Tulsa, but they had spent
some time in Texas for quite some time. And then my dad was a sales rep for Skelly Oil
Company and moved around a lot. I was born in Tulsa, and then 11 months later, my
sister Karen was born in Joplin. And then 18 months after that, my sister Cindy was
born in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Then we hung out in Arkansas for a little bit and then
came back to Tulsa, so yeah.
Toby Jenkins: Did you go to school?
Marcy Smith: Went to- yes, went to elementary school, where the center now is for- at
11th and Utica, went to Jefferson Elementary School, which does not exist anymore,
because of the center now, so.
Toby Jenkins: The center for those with physical challenged?
Marcy Smith: Yes, yes, not Oklahomans for Equality Center.

5

�Marcy Smith: So went to school there, and then we moved way out south in 1971 to
Jenks, which was- Woodland Hills Mall didn't even exist. That 71st and Memorial, it was
a gravel road still.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, and it was called Jenks USA.
Marcy Smith: That's right, it was Jenks USA, and it was way the heck out there. So we
moved out to Jenks and then finished school at Jenks High School, and thenToby Jenkins: And what year did you graduate?
Marcy Smith: Graduated 1982.
Toby Jenkins: 1982.
Marcy Smith: Then went toToby Jenkins: How many were in your graduating class at Jenks?
Marcy Smith: I think there were 482 people, something like that, yeah. And then went
to Oklahoma Christian College for a couple of years.
Toby Jenkins: Which is locatedMarcy Smith: In Edmond, Oklahoma.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Marcy Smith: Still is.
Toby Jenkins: And it's a disciple’s college?
Marcy Smith: It's Church of Christ.
Toby Jenkins: Church of Christ, okay. And that's where you went for your
undergraduate degree?
Marcy Smith: Couple years there, and the reason I went was that my best friend from
high school was Church of Christ, and I didn't have a- it's like, "Okay, I'll go there, that's
fine." And ran into probably one of the largest groups of gays and lesbians on the
planet. It's kind of a joke. Anyway, although it was not a veryToby Jenkins: At the Christian University?
Marcy Smith: At the Christian College.
Toby Jenkins: Right.

6

�Marcy Smith: Lots of gays and lesbians, lots of people trying to escape their parents in
the small town. So it was kind of a- I guess it was what you would call a beard, right? It
was a cover. So they're like, "Oh yeah, we're gonna go to a Christian's college and fix
ourselves." But that was not happening there. So anyway. Although when they caught
someone, it was pretty brutal how they dealt with getting rid of students at the college
when they found out they were gay or lesbian, so.
Toby Jenkins: So you went thereMarcy Smith: I was there for a couple years, and my best friend was in love with a guy
back in Tulsa. She just couldn't finish- she had to come back to Tulsa. So there really
wasn't anything for me to stay there for, so I came back to Tulsa and finished my degree
at the University of Tulsa.Graduated in 1986 with an MIS degree, which was one of the
very first computer science and business majors at the University of Tulsa. We were the
second class, and I think there were only about seven of us.
Toby Jenkins: And that would have been what year?
Marcy Smith: That was 1986.
Toby Jenkins: Okay, and how big was the computer in those days?
Marcy Smith: Well, soToby Jenkins: It wasn't on- it couldn't be on your desk yet, could it? I think- yeah.
Marcy Smith: Well, no, no, yeah. No, but it was heading that way. It was heading that
way. So, no, they were pretty big, pretty big computers. But I pushed it as long as I
possibly could, so that I didn't have to use punch cards to do my programming. And
thankfully, I got out of that, so. But computers as we would know them are desktops. I
think that was around 1991-1992, or something like that, when that became kinda
mainstream.
Toby Jenkins: And did you go work for a company, or were youMarcy Smith: Fresh out of college, I ended up- I had two job offers. One was to be a
tape hanger for American Airlines in their computer room. The other was to be a
programmer analyst for Tulsa County. My dad thought I made a really horrible mistake
by not working for American Airlines on the third shift hanging tapes, which was like an
aerobic exercise job at the time.
You can imagine their processing center and imagine their processing center today. But
yeah, he thought I was silly for- 'cause I would've gotten fine benefits and stuff like that,
so. But I never looked back on that. It's not what I wanted to do, so.

7

�Toby Jenkins: And how long were you with Tulsa County?
Marcy Smith: About 18 years.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Toby Jenkins: And so are you gonna be able to draw your Tulsa County pension?
Marcy Smith: As a matter of fact, in November of 2025, I got my first retirement check.
Marcy Smith: So yeah, I'm happy about that.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. They didn't pay us much, but we've got pension.
Marcy Smith: No. But yeah, the benefits are really good. Yeah, but when I left Tulsa
County in 2004, that rule of '80, I thought, there's just no way I'm gonna reach that,
right? So that was 22 years ago. But as it got closer and closer, I was really happy
about it, so we'll have some fun on that.
Toby Jenkins: So you encountered other lesbian and gay students. Is that when you
begin to realizeMarcy Smith: No, no. I knew pretty early, probably 10 or 11 years of age.
Marcy Smith: And then, just because of the climate, dated- in quotes, dated guys in
high school and got asked in high school because there was some stuff going on with
the girls' basketball team, which I was on the basketball team. There were several
lesbians on the basketball team. And so there got to be a kind of an uproar at some
point.
People were being questioned. And so my parents sat me down and I just lied straight
to their face, 'cause I didn't wanna be in the middle of it. So thankfully, got out of that
without a whole lot of issues, so. But it was a- Jenks back then, it was a pretty rural
school. A lot of bubba's running around, a lot of individuals threatening people and some
violence and vandalism of cars and stuff like that going on, so. So I didn't wanna call
attention to it.
Toby Jenkins: At college, even at your Christian college, I mean, did you hang out with
those individuals and y'all just kind of were stealth atMarcy Smith: Well, yeah, you know how we are. We find our people, right? And so you
hang out with your people. And so yeah, it was just a matter of just figuring out what you
can and cannot do. But I will say- yeah, Oklahoma Christian College was smaller than
my high school.When we went there, and I felt like I was living in the 1950s. When we
got on campus, the girls dorms were locked at night, the guys were not. The guys could

8

�do whatever they wanted at night after hours on the weekend, stuff like that. I knew I
wasn't gonna be long for that. It was just like, well, I'm just going here because my
friend was here. And once that started happening, I just felt like I was caged in and sobut it was kind of odd environment. It kinda felt like you were in a bubble, this Christian
bubble, and everything was wonderful and fine and all of that. Who knows what the
administrators thought, but that wasn't what was going on behind the scenes with the
students and stuff, so you just find your people and can do things.
I ended up getting a job at a really nice restaurant there in Edmond called Joe Kelly's
and it was a steakhouse, and people would have their high school events there and
graduation and stuff like that. But I was the first- it was called a barback, so you're a
bartender's assistant. Here I am going to a Christian college and I'm working at a bar,
and when I would come home at night after doing my shift at the restaurant, I was
literally covered in alcohol and smoke, 'cause you could smoke back then, right?
At 02:00-03:00 in the morning, I had to wake up the resident assistants, this woman
who took care of us at the dorm, had to wake her up at 02:00 AM in the morning,
coming in just covered in alcohol. So anyway, that was kinda funny, people would do
that.
Toby Jenkins: Did you start socializing with this group of students who were in hiding,
or did that happen when you got to TU? I mean, when did you create a clique of friends,
whoMarcy Smith: When I left Oklahoma Christian College which was in Edmond, obviously,
and came home to Tulsa, I really didn't stay in touch with most of them. They were from
all over Oklahoma and all over the country, actually. So when I came back to Tulsa, I
came back to Tulsa because I had a relationship with a woman at the time. We ended
up moving in together and I finished out my degree at University of Tulsa at that point,
and then just kinda started hanging out with everybody here in Tulsa, so really kinda
through the softball chain of- I mean, just kinda how it was.
Toby Jenkins: Lesbian day, or?
Marcy Smith: Yeah, yeah, that's right, softball stuff. And then, the bars at the time and
line dancing and all that kinda stuff. So you're going out to the bars andToby Jenkins: Do you remember what bars you went to?
Marcy Smith: Oh. Well, I can't remember the name of the bar that was on Memorial
there at 15th Street.
Toby Jenkins: TNT's?

9

�Marcy Smith: No. Well, it wasn't- no, it was prior to TNT's and where people were
playing- you know the name of the bar?
Sue Welch: The Club.
Marcy Smith: The Club, it's called The Club. So anyway, you had to knock and they
open up the window and let you in, and all that kinda stuff.
Toby Jenkins: And that was at 15th at Memorial?
Marcy Smith: 15th, right, yeah, yeah, 15th Street, dead-ended, right into Memorial. And
then, The Club was there and it was like a little house, actually. It wasn't very big. But
they had an outdoor space, so volleyball and have fires and stuff like that. You can hang
out outside The Club.
Sue Welch: Jodie and Mary owned it.
Marcy Smith: Yeah. So thenToby Jenkins: And it was a girls club?
Marcy Smith: Yeah. And then you had the star, Silver Star, right? So that was 15th and
Sheridan, and then TNT's. And then, theMarcy Smith: Off of Yale, what was it? 34th and Yale. There's also a club called the
Crash Landing at the time [Crash Landing was at 5th and S. Lewis], that was a pretty
coolToby Jenkins: So is Zippers closed by this time?
Marcy Smith: No, Zippers- was it always called Zippers? I don't know if it was always
called Zippers or not, but that was another place that we would go to, so.
Toby Jenkins: So softball.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: And these are clubs.
Marcy Smith: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: Did you know anything about Oklahomans for Human Rights or pride,
or?
Marcy Smith: I guess it was probably real early 90s when I got involved with OHR,
TOHR. That was kinda the transition time, I think, when it was moving from those
names and stuff over. Specifically, I believe it was when we were over on Peoria, I think.
10

�Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Marcy Smith: So that's kinda the first access in trying to assist and volunteer and stuff
like that, so.
Toby Jenkins: Let's put Sue on the hot seat.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: And see how similar her story is or how different it is. Before we do that,
I wanna ask you, tell me about meeting Sue.
Marcy Smith: It was a New Year's Eve party at a friend's house. Lots of people there, I
don't know, probably 30 or 40 women, maybe more than that. And this will date us- so it
was all about Trivial Pursuit. So we're playing Trivial Pursuit, it's pretty competitive. She
walked in with her then-partner, and I was around a coffee table or something like that,
knee-deep in the Trivial Pursuit. And I just looked up and she walked in with her thenpartner. And it was- I don't know how- maybe I said something to someone like, "Who's
that?" They were like, "Sue Welch and Darlene." So anyway, that's how we met, but
there was something at that just initial glance. And so anyway, I'll let her tell the rest, but
it was just a party.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. Beautiful. Sue, where were you born and where are you from?
Sue Welch: I was born in Ponca City, Oklahoma on April 30th, 1961. Dennis was born
there too, it's our hometown, both of us.
Marcy Smith: It's in the water.
Sue Welch: Yeah. A nice, sweet little, small town, a great town to be born and raised in.
Not a great town to stay, but a great town to be born and raised in. Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: Were you born in the hospital there?
Sue Welch: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: And what was the name of that hospital?
Sue Welch: Ponca City Hospital.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. And tell us about your family.
Sue Welch: My family, my mother's Cherokee and my dad is English. And they had a
great love affair and were married till they passed and were wonderful parents. But my
dad is a third-generation brick mason. Hiss grandfather, before statehood, had a brick
yard in Ponca City. And he built the first brick home. So from my great-grandfather to my
11

�grandfather to my father and his brothers, it was a third-generation brick mason
company, Welch Masonry Construction.
Toby Jenkins: So they've been there for a while. Are there still- if you were to go to
Ponca City today, are there still buildings that they built?
Sue Welch: Oh, dozens and dozens, yes. Buildings and homes, yes. Yeah, you could
have a Welch Masonry tour of Ponca City.
Toby Jenkins: So did you go to school in Ponca City?
Sue Welch: Yes, I went to Ponca City High School. And it was- we actually had a very
large graduating class. It was 415 people for our graduating class. And I thought it wasToby Jenkins: So you all probably played Jenks in sports.
Sue Welch: I wasn't really into sports. I don't know that. Could be. But I studied a lot.
Sue Welch: Well, it may have been a little too far away.
Toby Jenkins: Oh, okay.
Sue Welch: Maybe at state and regionals, but not on a conference level.
Sue Welch: I wouldn't have known. I went to the football games just for fun. So don't
ask me any of those stats.
Marcy Smith: Too popular.
Sue Welch: I was the prom queen. So there's that.
Toby Jenkins: Says so much.
Sue Welch: But not the football queen, so.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. So what year did you graduate?
Sue Welch: I graduated in 1979.
Toby Jenkins: And did you go to school after that?
Sue Welch: Yes, after that, I went to OSU. And in 1983, got my degree in natural
sciences, my bachelor's degree in natural sciences. Loved OSU. That was great. That
was where my best friend and I started having deeper feelings about each other, so…in
high school and throughout a large- oh, the first half of college, my boyfriend from high
school, the wrestling star, we became engaged. So in high school- in college, we were
going to be married right after college.
12

�My best friend and I started becoming very, very close, and I just kept thinking, "Oh my
God, I can't graduate and leave my friend. This would be horrible." And we just kept
getting deeper and deeper feelings, and I thought, "What is going on here?"
Sue Welch: And so I talked to my mom about it, and I said, "I think I'm going crazy or
something." She said, well, honey, I can't believe that any love is wrong. And I never
looked back. So I left my fiancé.
Toby Jenkins: And that would've been- you would've been ... Marcy Smith: She called off the wedding. Yeah.
Sue Welch: Yeah.
Sue Welch: The dress was all done. The invitations were ... - yeah. It was on the way.
Marcy Smith: The colors were picked, all the stuff.
Toby Jenkins: The runaway bride.
Marcy Smith: Yes.
Sue Welch: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. How old would you've been?
Sue Welch: So that would have been, let's see, right when I graduated, right at 1983.
So 21, 22.
Toby Jenkins: So you had this discussion with your mother. I'm just guessing there
probably weren't a bunch of lesbians in Ponca City to help mentor you.
Sue Welch: There may have been, but I did not know them.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Sue Welch: I didn't know anyone in the community. I didn'tToby Jenkins: It's 'cause you weren't going to softball camp.
Sue Welch: That's right. My gaydar was not tuned at the time, so yeah.
Toby Jenkins: You went to OSU. What was that experience like for you now that you
had ended that relationship and probably were figuring out?
Sue Welch: We moved into a house together, and we had a few friends, both of us. We
were each other's first experience, and so neither of us knew of any community per se,

13

�but we did find a few friends, half a dozen, 10 friends that we hung out with a little bit.
Then we broke up, and someone introduced me to a woman in Tulsa. And when I left
OSU and came to Tulsa to establish my practice here, there was a huge community. So
many people. I was just like, "Wow, this is amazing." So much so that my partner was a
teacher, and my sister, when she would visit, she said, "Well, are all teachers lesbians?"
So such a great, huge community. So that was fantastic to experience.
Marcy Smith: Well, and you have gay guy friends to this day from OSU.
Sue Welch: Well, not from a- well, they were gone at the same time. Yeah, but we didn't
hang out a lot. We found each other kind of after. In Tulsa. And I was like, "I knew you
in OSU." So we kind of, all of us were in hiding there once I did come out of OSU.
Toby Jenkins: So you didn't really connect to the LGBTQ community at OSU. It was
when you came to Tulsa.
Sue Welch: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: And when you say there was a huge community, what did that look like?
Sue Welch: Oh my gosh.
Toby Jenkins: Were there just house parties, or people went to eat together, or?
Sue Welch: House parties, going to the bars, dancing, potlucks, softball. My partner
was a well-respected softball umpire, so lots of softball. Of course she was. And so
yeah, just a lot of socializing. A lot of socializing.
Toby Jenkins: Did either of you ladies ever interact with the flag football team, the girls'
flag football team?
Sue Welch: No.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. Well, that's who helped me come out. I always say I was raised by
wolves, because the girls' flag football team. So it was a huge community, and you were
in a relationship.
Sue Welch: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: And what was your career at this time?
Sue Welch: I was licensed by the medical board as an electrologist.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Sue Welch: And I did that for 22 years in Broken Arrow and in Tulsa.

14

�Toby Jenkins: And you were in a relationship. Do you remember kinda what the
environment was like for you in Tulsa, what it was like to go to gay clubs and, as you
said, find so many people?
Sue Welch: It was fantastic. Because I think we had so many- such a large group, I
didn't recognize feeling a lot of threat. I knew some of our male counterparts were
threatened. But we just didn't go to places that allowed us to be threatened. We didn't
go out unless we were in big numbers. We only went to certain places. The Club was
very private, very protected. So that's kind of what that was like.
Toby Jenkins: And what was that like? You hit the parking lot, and the minute you walk
through the doorSue Welch: Yeah, it's freedom. Yeah, freedom.
Toby Jenkins: You could hold hands. Like, cheers, hey.
Sue Welch: Absolutely.
Toby Jenkins: You could hold hands? Yeah.
Sue Welch: Yeah, freedom, absolutely.
Sue Welch: But not out at work, not out to any clients, not out to friends who were not
LGBT.
Toby Jenkins: So I'm gonna ask you both this question, but tell me about the first time
you saw Marcy.
Sue Welch: So it was a party, and my partner and I walked in, and there were people
playing at a table. And Marcy has these beautiful brown piercing eyes, and so I noticed
her naturally. And it was probably another year after, and it was a New Year's party, and
it struck midnight. And I'm a pretty private person, private physically. I'm very
demonstrative, but kissing on the lips was really a personal thing for me. And it struck
midnight, and Marcy just planted a kiss right on my lips. And I was like, "Wow."
Marcy Smith: She wasn't the only person that I kissed.
Sue Welch: Well, no.
Marcy Smith: I mean, it was New Year's Eve. Everybody ... .
Sue Welch: Marcy wasn't as protective of her lips as I was. So but yes, I was like, "Oh,
my God." That was sparky. So yeah. And then our partners, the four of us became close
friends, and you know the story. So we could not- we were inseparable. And we all four

15

�worked on our partnerships. We knew there were some feelings. But we were
inseparable and just in so much pain not being able to see each other that the
partnership split. AndToby Jenkins: For you all to be together?
Marcy Smith: Yep.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. That would've been what year?
Marcy Smith: '92.
Toby Jenkins: '92?
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Sue Welch: In the 1900s.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah.
Sue Welch: In the 1900s, we got together.
Toby Jenkins: So I asked both of you, and you said you found community here. You
found that because you got on the Internet, right? And you looked up where the gay
bars were.
Marcy Smith: Oh right, because the Internet existed. No, the Internet didn't quite exist
yet. Well, I guess 1992-ish is about the time it started taking off. Those were chat
rooms.
Toby Jenkins: Do you remember any public officials or movie stars or rockstars, who
were out in open who you could look at and see, oh, this is how you- this is what it is?
Sue Welch: Eventually, Lilly Tomlin came out. Eventually, through the horrible AIDS
crisis, we saw stars, Rock Hudson die, whether they'd come out prior or not. But no,
there were no authority figures, people that you could look up to, to have any kind of
guidance that way.
Toby Jenkins: Social media non-existent.
Sue Welch No. The Gay Yellow Pages, literally a book that you would look in to find
places.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. Couldn't text people messages.

16

�Marcy Smith: Nope, nope.
Sue Welch: No.
Toby Jenkins: Couldn't send them pictures.
Marcy Smith: No.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. So we've talked about you meeting each other. Could you just
real quickly emphasize to us and our viewers, what it was like when you had the
discussion with your families to say, I'm a lesbian, I have a partner. Or can you kind of
tell about those experiences, if you had those experiences with your parents.
Marcy Smith: My family is kinda the 'don't ask, don't tell' family. Don't mess with my
stuff. I'm not gonna mess with your stuff. We're not gonna have a lot of drama. So all
this time, I was just kinda living my life, but wasn't really putting it in my parents' face, so
to speak.
Obviously, I wasn't bringing any guys home. And then Sue and I had been together for a
little bit. But so what happened was, well, same-sex marriage didn't exist. So there was
a company, a travel company called Olivia Travel Company. They were also a record
company at the time that was promoting lesbian artists. And so it's an all-women's
cruise, which is really neat. So Sue and I were gonna do that. And on these cruises,
because you could not get legally married, they would haveSue Welch: Union ceremonies.
Marcy Smith: Unions, yeah.
Toby Jenkins: Commitment ceremony.
March Smith: A commitment ceremony. So that's how my family found out, because we
sent out announcements to my family that Sue and I were going to have a commitment
ceremony in Mexico, and that's how my family found out. It was kind of ripply, quite
frankly. And it was kinda like, I guess, how people can be like, how could you not know
that Sue and I were a couple, but sometimes straight people don't really see things.
So it was a little bit rough. We timed it pretty quickly before we went to the- so we could
hurry up and get out of town and get on the cruise and let my family deal with it. So
that's kinda how my family found out, which was literal announcement.
Toby Jenkins: So you said it was rough. I mean, were they upset, or were they
questioning you, or just mad that you hadn't told them before?

17

�Marcy Smith: Yeah, yeah. I think they- I don't know, 'cause I didn't really sit down and
talk with them quite honestly. It was like, just y'all deal with it.
Sue Welch: I think they were upset that they were having to deal with it.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Sue Welch: They were being forced to deal with it.
Marcy Smith: Yes. Yeah, and this was something that they probably had pushed down
for decades, obviously. It's like, "Oh my gosh, now they have to come to terms with it." I
think my parents probably thought, in some form or fashion, that they had failed, and all
those things that you hear. But ultimately, my mom embraced us and kinda became the
mom down here at the center. So mom spent at least 10 years, I think, or more
volunteering down at the center and baking brownies for people and things like that. So
she committed to that once, I think, she came to terms with it. And so that was really
neat.
Sue Welch: She was great.
Toby Jenkins: Sue, what about you, your family? I know you'd had the conversation
with your mother.
Sue Welch: Well, my family found out about our commitment ceremony in the same
way, with the announcements. But all through Marcy had been my third relationship.
And all through…they knew about my relationships, accepted my partners, and were
very loving and accepting. Accepted them as family, they came to family reunions. So
when we sent out the announcements, I got calls, "That sounds nice, honey. Well, good
for you."
Ohe worst one, or the most uncomfortable one, I guess, was from one of my sisters,
and she just called and said, "Well, I just wanna call and tell you I got your
announcement about your thing. And just wanna tell you I got it." That was about the
most outside effect. But my family has just always been- I've been so fortunate, the way
they've accepted me. Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: Do you think your family's had issues with religion and sexuality? Were
those any kinda struggles or politics? I mean, they were super conservative politically.
Did they seem to show concern about how this was gonna make them look in their
business or around, don't tell your grandmother. I mean, was there any kind of those?
Marcy Smith: I think, from my father's perspective, that he was concerned about his
reputation and his business reputation and the country club stuff and all of that. I
remember in particular, he wanted a trip to Paris and through his company and he's like,
18

�"I don't wanna go to Paris. And I said, "Well, I'd like to go to Paris. I'll go on that trip."
And it was an oil company trip thing and- so before it got too far down the line, he made
it very clear to me that I was not to take my partner with me to on this trip.
And so it was like, "You can take your mom." And so I said, "Okay, I'm gonna go to the
city of love and take my mom." I mean, I love my mom, but. So anyway, so that was
made very, very clear, that I was supposed to basically behave, in front of his peers and
cronies and stuff like that for that trip, so.
Toby Jenkins: Were you able to bring girlfriends home to your parents’ houses, your
mom or dad's house for gatherings?
Marcy Smith: So I mean, like Sue said, it's not like I was this dating feen. We had twoone, I had one, but I had a high school relationship but that was not, quite frankly, ever
gonna go anywhere, but anyway. So two basic relationships before I got with Sue. Sue
and I have been together for 34 years now, so it wasn't like there were this a bunch of
women that I was bringing home.
Toby Jenkins: Okay, what about you, Sue? Did the family feel any- I mean, were you
able to take…
Sue Welch: Oh yeah, yeah, from the get-go. My first relationship, second relationship,
Marcy, they were all included in holidays, gatherings, accepted by my family and my
sister that has lived in Oklahoma for- not currently, but for most of her life. Yeah, they
were just part of the family and my partner.
Marcy Smith: And I would agree with that. I don't want it to sound like my family was
wanted me to not bring. ..I mean, they were- whoever I brought home, part of the family.
My mom was one of seven children, so everybody was welcome.
Toby Jenkins: No political pushback, no religious pushback?
Marcy Smith No, because we are the 'don't ask, don't tell' family. So we didn't really
bring that stuff up at all.
Toby Jenkins: What about you, Sue?
Sue Welch: No, no, my family's always been very progressive, very liberal, although we
were raised in a fairly strict Lutheran Church, my family's never been that linear. Their
Christianity really is what would Jesus do and love everyone.
Toby Jenkins: Fortunate. Do you both feel fortunate that you were born into the
families you were born into?
Marcy Smith: Yes
19

�Sue Welch: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: 'Cause we're about to change gears just a little bit here, because surely,
as you were hanging out at what places identified as the community, you were
encountering people who did not have those experiences, could not take partners
home, hadn't spoke to their families. I know that was something you probably were
saying. So you're together…You're building your life together. I mean, did you move into
an apartment together? Was there a U-Haul involved? We've always heard- I meanSue Welch: We moved into a duplex that I had previously moved into and we- then
Marcy, moved in. Then we purchased the duplex and then we purchased a home in
Midtown.
Marcy Smith: Well, no, we purchased a second duplex. So we had two duplexes.
Sue Welch: And then we purchased a home in Midtown, which we were renovating
while we still lived in the first duplex. And when we moved to Midtown, it's kind of when
we started finding more out about the gay pride parades and the center on Peoria and
going to the center on Peoria, and seeing a little gift shop. And just- but for me, all the
kids, the young kids that were there, and thinking, "Gosh, had I known about that
sooner, I may have come out sooner, I don't know." but it was just- it was a pivotal thing
to see that.
Toby Jenkins: And of course, were you- at this time Marcy, you were still working for
Tulsa County. Did they know?
Marcy Smith I did not come out to- I mean literally say this to my peers, but I didn't hide
my relationship with Sue and whenever we had- if we were doing chili cook-offs or
whatever we were doing forToby Jenkins: Holiday parties.
Marcy Smith: - fundraisers or things like that, it was just assumed that Sue would be
there. So- but no, I didn't literally say to my boss, "This is who Sue is."
Toby Jenkins: So you don't feel like you've experienced discrimination, justMarcy Smith: I don't know if I did or not, I just head down, get my career going and all
that kinda stuff. So I don't know.
Toby Jenkins: Just out of curiosity, would you have had a desk and would on your
desk, would there have been a picture of your partner, and would you've had somebody
ask you, like a new employee might say, "Are you married, do you have husband, do
you have kids?" I mean-

20

�Marcy Smith: I- to be honest, I cannot remember if I had a picture of SueSue Welch: You weren't out that much.
Marcy Smith: No, no. No, I did not push that. No.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. Okay. Sue, you had your medical profession. And what about with
your clients? I mean, were youSue Welch: No, not out all.
Toby Jenkins: You guarded that very carefully.
Sue Welch: I may have had two clients that I was out to, but that's it.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. So you've moved to Brookside, the Rainbow Ribbon, as it's
called. And the center, as you call it, was just down the street. And what did that center
look like?
Sue Welch: It was small. It was small. It wasn't well appointed. I mean it was fantastic
'cause it served a great purpose, but just in comparison to where we're sitting now, it
was small and not greatly appointed. It was hidden.
Toby Jenkins: Wasn't accessible.
Sue Welch: You had to go in a small door, climb some stairs. There wasn't signage, so
that's kinda what I remember. The store was very, very small, maybe just one cabinet,
some jewelry or something, as I recall.
Toby Jenkins: And you would go to pride?
Sue Welch: Yes, at that time, at least for a couple or few times, the pride parade went
down Peoria, which was fantastic. So we started doing that and then we would go to
pride every year beyond that.
Toby Jenkins: Okay. When did- I mean, did you volunteer or did you just support it?
Sue Welch: We mostly just supported at that time. And there were starting to be visible
churches that were supportive, and there was one on Peoria also, and so we'd usually
stand at that location.
Toby Jenkins: That would've been All Souls ... ?
Sue Welch: No, further south... .
Toby Jenkins: Southwest Presbyterian, or?

21

�Sue Welch: Probably that Presbyterian one, yeah.
Marcy Smith: It wasn't Southminster. It's not there anymore. It's right there where the
green space is across from Charleston's.
Sue Welch: Mm-hmm.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, the United Methodist Church.
Marcy Smith: Yes, it was the United Methodist Church.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, I know. I forget the name of that, but. Okay, so you'd watch the
parade.
Sue Welch: And we'd join in at the end of the parade. At that time it was small enough,
you could just walk with it.
Toby Jenkins: Now did you ever attend the events like before the parade, where we
had to walk down the sidewalks?
Sue Welch: I don't know that we knew about those events.
Toby Jenkins: Prior to that? Okay. And so the center was the headquarters of Tulsa
Oklahoma for Human Rights, right? Correct? That y'all had already branded by that?
Okay.
Dennis Neill: Since '85.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. And, so you were there. I know that somewhere along the line,
you got into the cause, got drafted, recruited, or fell into it accidentally. The desire for us
to have a more permanent home because we weren't at- the center was not at that
location very long, was it?
Sue Welch: No.
Toby Jenkins: And then it moved.
Marcy Smith: And that happened at least three times within a fairly five to six year
period of time. Because somehow or another, we got a lease signed but eventually the
landlords weren't really happy about the clientele. Not that it was rowdy or outrageous
or anything like that. So then we moved to, or TOHR moved to the space at 21st and
Memorial by TNTs, the bar there.
Toby Jenkins: Above TNT's.

22

�Marcy Smith: Above TNT's. And not a very, in my opinion, positive space because the
smoke was seeping through the cinder block. It got to the point, I couldn't spend much
time there because of how- it just was not a positive space. And that's kinda where the
rumblings of the capital campaign happened. But yeah, we got recruited at a party by
Nancy McDonald. We didn't know why we got invited to this party.
Sue Welch: It was actually more surreptitious than that. We started having more
friends, and so we got invited to this party. She was there but she told someone after
that party, "You need to call those girls and get them involved." So we got a call and
were asked to get on this group to help develop and work on a capital campaign for a
permanent equality center.
Toby Jenkins: Okay.
Sue Welch: Found out later, Nancy was the impetus for that.
Toby Jenkins: And so, you got asked to serve on that?
Toby Jenkins: And what were those early days like?
Sue Welch: So we did have, before moving from Peoria, we did have a couple, the very
first meetings there. And Marcy and I are really organized and conducting meetings,
let's get something done. So I think we exhibit our leadership pretty quickly.
And a lot of people don't want to be in charge. So I became the capital chair at the time.
And we developed a campaign, the United Way always has a name of their campaign,
so we thought we need a name for this. And so we developed the Pyramid Project.
And this was a beautiful little book telling everyone about it and how it would be such a
wonderful thing to have our own center, where we wouldn't have to move, a permanent
visible presence. And so we just went from there and from each place we would move,
we would have more meetings.
We did, thanks to Dennis and Nancy as I recall, we had a training from the Gale
Foundation that was a weekend long. And we brought in a lot of people to that and
helped develop our focus a lot more about what amount we'd be raising, how we would
do that. They had some really great booklets about fundraising. And again at the time,
there were no foundations in Oklahoma, much less Tulsa, who would support us until
later. So it was a very grassroots campaign. It was one person at a time, one gay
person in Tulsa at a time getting them on board, having them donate funds.
And then we got- I remember sending out a really sappy tear-jerky letter to a foundation
in New York City, who I had heard reading through these manuals with Nancy, gave

23

�money to gay causes. And they gave us our first check from a foundation, a $10,000
check from a foundation.
And after that, a friend called me from the George Kaiser Foundation and said, "George
was looking at the newspaper on his desk about you all and the money you're raising,
and he'd like to talk with you about this and see if he could get involved." And I was like,
"Okay."
Dominoes, so the dominoes started. The Schusterman Foundation. But we had- before
any of this large money that way, we focused on house parties, individual people, really
telling them how this could happen, would happen, and it would be amazing. We had
our main donors. And Dennis helped with that group and really helped us get going. So
it was a house party at a time.
Marcy Smith: Then again, we're still in the midst of the AIDS crisis at this time. I mean,
it's still kind of going on in the late 80s and early 90s as well. And when this kicked off, I
will tell you, we got some pushback from the gay guys in the community that here are
two women, two- that they didn't even know. Like, we're on the D list. They don't even
know who we are. Stepping up to do this. And also, at the time, there had been at least
one other nonprofit organization who had a capital campaign and the funds were
misused. And so of course, the thought was like, "Well, this is gonna go the same way,
even though it had nothing to do with it."
It was really difficult to convince, I guess you'd call them the movers and shakers at the
time, in the gay community. And then, of course, trying to pull the lesbian community
into it was tough. But kind of being told to our face and also hearing what was being
said behind our back gave us-Fuel…some fuel to kinda set this up. And we had to do it
differently, like Sue said, because we weren't in L.A, we weren't in New York, we're
literally- Ford Foundation would cut a check. We didn't have that here. And so, the way
we had to do it here was totally opposite. Usually, you got these big donations at the
beginning that kick-started you. And here we had to prove ourselves first.
Toby Jenkins: Public dollars. Oh, the public dollars in those places.
Marcy Smith: And- yeah, there's not gonna be anything from the state. Nothing was
going to happen like that here. But because of that, I think it really built this incredible
foundation and support for the purpose of it. And again, it was about building this home,
a permanent visible presence here.
Toby Jenkins: Sue, talk a little bit about how y'all used social events to create buy-in
and raise money at the same time.

24

�Sue Welch: I think there were disparate clubs around town and kind of cliquish groups
around town. But we wanted to really bring everybody together. So we had- and in
years past, there was a large party called the Black and White Party that was hosted by
gay guys in Tulsa, which was a really nicely well-attended party. But it was just a party.
So we wanted to bring this disparate group of people together behind the same cause.
And there had not been a citywide gay party, LGBT party in decades. And so, we
developed what we called the Wild Hearts Ball. And the first one we had was at the,
then Brady Mansion. And there were so many people there. And this was the first big
thing that had happened in Tulsa in a long time. And so we would show a big party, nice
music, nice food. We'd show a video about this and ask for donations. And it was just so
compelling for people to see so many people there joining in and know that we could all
do this together.
Toby Jenkins: And everybody could be invited to it.
Marcy Smith: Exactly.
Sue Welch: Oh yeah.
Toby Jenkins: It wasn't an exclusive party.
Sue Welch: Exactly, it was not exclusive.
Toby Jenkins: It wasn't a girl party, a boy party.
Sue Welch: No. Exactly. Yeah, it was the entire community. And that was really super
because of our- we would send out a quarterly newsletter.
Marcy Smith: This was postal mail about ... .
Sue Welch: Postal mail. This is in sizeToby Jenkins: This one's an email.
Sue Welch: This is in size 11 point font. See all these names? These are $10 donors to
$10,000 donors. The entire community bought into this. It was a beautiful thing.
Toby Jenkins: And it was all very smooth and unified, wasn't it?
Seu Welch: Yes, yes. Everyone got along.
Marcy Smith: Well, no. When we look at itSue Welch: Well, behind the scenes, we had to fight to get where we were, but
everyone was just really pushing in the same direction. It was great that way.

25

�Marcy Smith: And again, it's tough to get- I'm sorry, lesbians onboard, 'cause they like
to do their sports, they like to do the softball and all that kinda stuff and go to the bars.
And so kinda pulling them out was a little difficult. So we did- so we- so it was like how
many different ways can we slice this pie and serve it up to people to get people
involved? So then we came up with the concept of the Women's Tea Dance. And also
supporting women owned businesses and also provide nonprofit organizations the
ability toSue Welch: Showcase.
Marcy Smith: - Showcase their businesses to women. So imagine that, okay? So you
got an all-women Women's Tea Dance, right? We are contacting, I don't know how
many places we contacted and got no after no after no after no. No, we are not going to
rent to you for a bunch of lesbians. I don't know what they thought it was gonna be.
Some, I don't know, orgy or something like that. So we got turned down how many times
and then we finally approached Frances.
Sue Welch: So the last place I went to was the Greenwood Cultural Center. And I've
been everywhere. Physically, meeting face-to-face with people. And so I met with
Frances, told her who we were, what we were doing, that it was for ... campaign.
Marcy Smith: She's director.
Sue Welch: Frances Jordan, the Executive Director of the Greenwood Cultural Center.
Marcy Smith: She, by the way, is still the Executive Director of the Greenwood today.
Sue Welch: So I gave all my spiel and she said, "Well, Sue." And I expected a no.
"Well, Sue, here at the Greenwood Cultural Center, we do not discriminate. So we'd be
happy to have you." I was like, "Yay!" So at that first one and subsequent ones, we had
300- more than 300 lesbians from all across the city. And that was fantastic. Huge
gatherings.
Toby Jenkins: Now to pull in women, you also did the calendar girls.
Marcy Smith: So yeah, there was a movie. I don't even know when the movie was, in
the mid 90s or something. It was based on a true story. The calendar girls, which was
an older group of women in Great Britain, who were trying to raise money for a wing to
be added on to their very small hospital. So they came up with this idea to basically
have a nudie calendar.
Sue Welch: A boudoir calendar.

26

�Marcy Smith: A boudoir calendar. So we did the same thing, but what we did was- and
I was really proud of these women that did this, 'cause we were partially
Sue Welch: We were surprised by the women who said yes.
Marcy Smith: Yeah, I mean, there were some pretty revealing photographs in this
calendar. So what- so we didn't know if anybody was gonna- we didn't think anybody
would buy the calendar. So we had them get sponsors. So they had to recruit as many
people as possible to donate a minimum of like $250 or $500 or something like that to
sponsor their month. That's how we raised. I mean, we were just happy to raise $5,000
at a time. $5,000 here, $5,000 there, to start building toward this million dollar, which
was a monumental amount of money. When it was determined that that's what we were
gonna need to do this, I mean, the community's likeSue Welch: Can't do it.
Marcy Smith: "There's no way. You will never do that. Never do that."
Sue Welch: The end point was $1.3 million.
Toby Jenkins: And so there were naysayers, and there were people who were divisive,
and there were people who may have been difficult. You had that, right?
Sue Welch: Yeah, but not for long.
Marcy Smith: And once the momentum started, itToby Jenkins: So I think I remember garden parties, the garden tour.
Sue Welch: We did, we had a home and garden tour.
Marcy Smith: Yeah, we did.
Sue Welch: We really tried to model things that- the firemen did a calendar for United
Way, so-and-so did a home and garden tour for whatever. So we try to model things that
would make sense. That people would kind of already know how that worked and go,
"Oh my gosh, so the gay community is doing that, great, let's get on to that."
Toby Jenkins: What about the LGBT film festival? Was that alsoMarcy Smith: OUT OK.
Sue Welch: So OUT OK, that was really progressive for the time. That was the first
LGBT out film festival. Phillip Oh and Mark Bonney were in charge of that. They brought
films from everywhere, amazing films, and all the proceeds went to the capital
campaign.
27

�Marcy Smith: Yeah, talk about being ahead of its time.
Sue Welch: Yeah.
Marcy Smith: Now there's like gay film festival all the time.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah. So it was a long lengthy process of raising the money, but you
were also creating community and building a unified vision. Very impressed that you
were able to do that. But at the same time, you still had to be take care in the
community. So there was community centers, yet during this time. We still had
community centers and you wanna talk about some of the locations andMarcy Smith: Well, I think where we were, we were at 21st and Memorial, and I think
that was a very difficult landlord. It ended up being a very difficult landlord situation. But
for me personally, I was glad we got the heck out of Dodge out of that location. I think it
was an oppressive location, just because of the color of it and the smell of the smoke. I
mean, it just was not- it didn't feel healthy.
Toby Jenkins: And it wasn't accessible there.
Sue Welch: No.
Marcy Smith: It wasn't welcoming.
Toby Jenkins: You had to steps to go up.
Sue Welch: No. Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: And then, got up there and the meeting room was downstairs, the
bathrooms were downstairs, but we were- it was our center, and we were proud of it.
Sue Welch: Yeah.
Marcy Smith: Oh yeah. So the next location was the shopping center at 41st off of
Yale, right across from Ricardo's Mexican restaurant, which is still there. And so that
was, I would say, the best place we had been. And I'm gonna guess it was maybe 3,600
square feet, maybe.
Sue Welch: Sounds about right. Yeah, maybe- 3,500.
Marcy Smith: - 3,500, So it's give or take, right? And pretty much an open space, so
not a lot of segregated space, where people could have private meetings or whatever
they might've been doing and so but same kinda thing. We were there for a while, and
then the landlord got a little weirded out and stuff. We were just trying to bide our time to
get this going, so that we could own our own home instead of being kicked out

28

�eventually. And I say that- they just didn't wanna renew the lease. Or they just decided,
given us notice and whatever, so.
Toby Jenkins: What were some of the services that were being offered at the center?
Sue Welch: Well, I'm glad you're bringing that up, Toby, because behind the scenes,
while all this was going, certainly, Dennis and other people and the volunteers- Dennis
was getting the Gill foundation to set up computer labs and all ofToby Jenkins: The Bohnett Foundation
Sue Welch: Yes, the Bohnett. And all the services continuing, grief groups and game
nights andToby Jenkins: HIV testing.
Sue Welch: Yes, and counseling and all those things were still going on.
Toby Jenkins: I can remember, just wanna throw this out there and get your thoughts
on it. I can remember at that Center, at in the Highland Park Shopping Center,
volunteering on a night where it was first time I'd ever been interacting. We had a
transgender support group. So do you remember- we've talked about lesbian and gay
men. Do you remember being an intentional outreach to transgender persons, or?
Sue Welch: Not as far as with fundraising, because I don't think at that time we had a
large group for the fundraising aspect. But certainly in the service, we established town
halls finding out what people wanted, what we needed, so that we could provide that in
this new place that was gonna be our permanent home. So absolutely in the services.
Toby Jenkins: So you assess the community? Did y'all have surveys, or?
Sue Welch: We did, at each Pride picnic, we had surveys. We had a large gathering at
the library and we handed out surveys and collected information about what they want
in the center, specifically as far as even rooms, art gallery, that sort of thing, kitchen,
services they might want, locations they might want.
Toby Jenkins: And so y'all were being paid to do all of this and you had a full-time
position, right?
Marcy Smith: No.
Sue Welch: We had full-time positions at our jobs.
Marcy Smith: : So every fundraising event for the Pyramid Project started off with a
budget-

29

�Sue Welch: Zero.
Marcy Smith: - which was zero. That was what we started with. You're gonna donate
this, you're gonna donate your time, you're gonna donate the goods, all that kinda thing.
So our goal was that a lot of capital campaigns had budgets that as much as 25-30%
would go to administrative overhead of what was being raised.
Toby Jenkins: Paid to development workers.
Marcy Smith: So our goal was to have 95% of the funds that we raised, go directly to
the capital. So that meant 5% to do all this. And I think, ultimately, we ended up being
aboutSue Welch: I think about seven.
Marcy Smith: - 7-8% or something rather than 5%. So we were right around 92% of all
the funds that were raised, stayed right there in the community foundation. That was the
other thing. It was a big milestone, was going to Tulsa Community Foundation because
it was about credibility. And so we needed to have our money at a place where it was
managed for a place of credibility. So that was a huge milestone when we were able to
have those funds placed at the Tulsa Community Foundation which they are still at
today. So that was a big deal. That added some ... .
Sue Welch: Yeah, through Dennis and Nancy, they introduced us to people there and
got all that set up safe and safeguarded. So then, donors would feel even more
comfortable.
Toby Jenkins: So about how many years was the fundraising part of it?
Marcy Smith: Six.
Sue Welch: 6-7.
Marcy Smith: Yeah, six, 2007 when we did it.
Toby Jenkins: Did people grow fatigued from that? I mean, did theyMarcy Smith: Oh yeah. I mean, it didn't take too many years that when Sue and I would
show up at a party, people were turning away. I mean, they knew we were gonna be
pressing the flesh and, hi, how you doing? We haven't seen a donation from you in a
while. But I mean, it just kinda got to be a joke. We were like, "Are we gonna get invited
to anything this year?"

30

�Toby Jenkins: So I'm gonna take you back. This is your life. It's January 1st, 2000, the
night after the Y2K fear. What were y'all doing on January 1st, 2000? Do you
remember?
Marcy Smith: Well, I can tell you what I was doing. I was head of the Y2K project at
Tulsa County. So I spent that New Year's Eve in the computer room doing one of these.
And it was a five-year project that I led. And I had the same budget from my boss which
was, you're not gonna spend any money on this project. We weren't able to do that
because of software costs, but it was a very small budget. So that's where I was. So I
was in a computer room in Tulsa, Oklahoma that night. And it went perfectly, by the way.
Sue Welch: Are you remembering a house party?
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, on New Year's Day.
Sue Welch: On New Year's Day.
Marcy Smith: Oh, New Year's Day? Okay.
Marcy Smith: New Year's Day, we had a house party at our house.
Marcy Smith: Yeah, and invited several people. And I think we'd seen you peripherally,
but this was your first time to reallyToby Jenkins: Be pulled into the project.
Sue Welch: Yeah, yeah. To be ... .
Toby Jenkins: My point isSue Welch: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: - I can remember getting invited to that on New Year's Day after we had
all survived. And that was my first time to hear about it. The project to raise money for
our permanent center. Now, I was very familiar with the center.
Sue Welch: Sure.
Toby Jenkins: But it was the first time I'd ever been included in that. And I had no
money, but I was able to make just a little bitty tiny gift. But you made me feel like my
little tiny gift was as important as the people who were writing the big checks.
Sue Welch: It was.

31

�Toby Jenkins: So you spent five or six years raising this money and keeping the
community focused on the prize. When did we buy the building? And do you wanna talk
a little bit about the effort to finally purchase property?
Sue Welch: So as we were getting, we set a goal that we would have a certain amount
of money raised before we would even look at property. And we were reviewing a dozen
or more properties over and over, as we got to that point. And Dennis called and said,
"Hey, have you looked at this place at 4th and Kenosha?" And we're like, "Okay, we'll go
look at that one." And so we called up the realtor who was listed there and I said, "Okay,
great. I'm gonna have to talk to another realtor and tell him who we are and what we're
looking for." And so went to his office and on his wall was a big picture of John F.
Kennedy. I was like, "I think I'm okay."
And so I met Max Tankersley and told him about who we were and he said, "Okay,
great. I'd love to show you this". So we walked in and at the time, it had been a
communications company, so there were wires literally everywhere. It was just full of
communications things. But it was so solid because it used to be an oil company's
building, where they built explosives to dig oil wells before they had the bits. So the
walls are about 12 inches thick. It is just so solid. So walking through, it's really solid, it's
not dirty, it's not dank, it's bright…Lots of windows, lots of space. We're thinking, "Oh my
gosh, there's so much space here. But from these surveys, we could do this, we could
do that, we could do all the things that the people are wanting." And so I think we
probably called Dennis first and said, "Dennis, this is a really neat place."
And we had a key group of donors who just kept donating, were donating substantially.
And so, we rented two trolley cars. We had a nice little reception at a house in
Terwilliger Heights. And we said, "We're gonna take you all to a place we want you to
see that we believe this is gonna be our center." And so we got 'em all fed and liquored
up and got 'em on the trolleys. And so we came in and several of them were likebecause it wasn't rough compared to the things we've been looking at, but it wasn't
fancy by any means.
Marcy Smith: And grey.
Sue Welch: And it was downtown, which was one of the locations people wanted, but
not everyone. And so I think several of them went, "Oh, wow, this is really great, great
vision." And some of 'em went, "Ugh, this is what you're picking? It was a little effort in
getting people on board with that. So we created- we got together a group of designers
and if you want to haveToby Jenkins: Gay designers.

32

�Sue Welch: Gay designers. And if you want to have fun, get a group of gay designers
together and tell them, we're not paying them anything and everything they develop
needs to come in free, all the accessories, all the furniture.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, but they have to raise the money to furnish the room.
Sue Welch: And so that was fun. Kirk Holt, I appointed him as the chair, 'cause he's
great at getting all those people together. So we developed these vision boards for each
of the rooms and we had more people come and more people look, and that really
helped with donations. This was, of course, after we bought the building, and that
helped also engage people for volunteerism, if they couldn't give or if they wanted to do
more, to physically work at the building in renovations. I served as the general
contractor for the renovations and we had a ... .
Marcy Smith: And she got paid zero.
Sue Welch: And we had literally hundreds of volunteers working thousands of hours.
The things we had to hire, have electricians, licensed plumbers, that sort of thing. We
certainly did that. But I mean, so many people learned how to sheet rock, insulate
things, tear down walls. Some of my happiest memories are remembering these guys
and looking at you Dennis, doing that work, that heavy, hard work.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: So the building was purchased, let's talk about that morning after years
of fundraising and this was the- you're trying to keep everybody rowing in the right
direction. Tell us about that morning, when you invited the community to come and look
at it and we raised the first rainbow flag.
Sue Welch: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: From our flagpole and we had ... Marcy Smith: Talking about the Field of Dreams?
Sue Welch: Nope.
Marcy Smith: Oh, okay.
Toby Jenkins: No, I'm talking about the morning we ... Marcy Smith: Oh, the grand opening.
Toby Jenkins: Well, it wasn’t the grand opening, it was the morning that we ... Sue Welch: That was our first flag.
33

�Toby Jenkins: The building was ours, and we raised the flag for the first time.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: You had a bagpiper on the roof.
Sue Welch: Yeah, yep, had a bagpiper on the roof, we had Rick Hollingsworth give us
a blessing.
Toby Jenkins: Probably, a thousand people showed up.
Sue Welch: The first time so many people had even been in the building. And I
remember it was so loud downstairs in the main hall. I was looking around, I'm not a
loud speaker and I thought, "I've gotta find somebody, I've gotta get up on these stairs, I
gotta find somebody to get the attention of this crowd. And I saw Rebecca Ungerman
out there and I said, "Rebecca." And so I got Rebecca up on the stairs and everyone
was milling about, crammed in there and just excited. And so she got the crowd's
attention and we just had a little, here's your new home people, let's complete this
project.
Toby Jenkins: Yep, first timeSue Welch: Yep.
Toby Jenkins: - this was ours, it belonged to us.
Sue Welch: Yeah, people were so excited.
Toby Jenkins: Wasn't leased, wasn't rented, no landlord could take our mortgage away.
Sue Welch: Exactly.
Toby Jenkins: And we were able to raise our rainbow flag.
Sue Welch: Yep, show who we were, know that we'd have signage on the building that
it couldn't be taken away because that was a problem with so many of the places,
moving so often caused breaks in services, not being able to identify our building, our
storefront, where we were leasing, caused difficulty in people's access. And so now, we
had a place we could put signage, have our flag, we had a corner in downtown Tulsa, in
the heart of Oklahoma.
Marcy Smith: And as most neighborhoods go after the gays move in, this area of Tulsa
and downtown has exploded with development, exploded.
Toby Jenkins: And here you have it, we can verify documentation that the gay folks
revitalized downtown Tulsa you now at this point.
34

�Marcy Smith: Absolutely.
Marcy Smith: This Pearl District, you have- absolutely right.
Sue Welch: Absolutely.
Toby Jenkins: 'Cause it was the truth.
Sue Welch: Absolutely.
Toby Jenkins: Because it was just, mostly downtown was abandoned buildings that
were boarded up.
Sue Welch: Yep.
Toby Jenkins: Nobody lived down here. There weren't any stores or you didn't have
people walking their pets, so.
Sue Welch: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: But it's what we could afford and we got it. Tell us about that year we
spent working on it, but at the same time, we were operating the centerSue Welch: Sure.
Toby Jenkins: - with all of its servicesSue Welch: Sure.
Toby Jenkins: - at its old location.
Sue Welch: Marcy had a good job that allowed me to spend a lot of time during that
time away from my practice. And so every Saturday and Sunday, we would have
volunteers. One of my cohorts would help check 'em in and we give assignments. Some
people would just be sweeping, some people would be putting up walls.
Toby Jenkins: Or ladders. On ladders.
Sue Welch: Yeah. Oh, on ladders, painting, cleaning, taking up tile from the floor. You
name it. Tiling new bathroom floors, from A to Z. So volunteers full out Saturdays,
Sundays, weekend after weekend after weekend to get this accomplished on a
shoestring, but properly and still involving people. That was as much part of it as
anything. It's one thing to pay for everything to get done and come on in. We created
this beautiful jewel box for you. But it's another thing to have people go, I created this. I
helped open these doors. I painted this door. That was huge.

35

�Toby Jenkins: So tell us about the grand opening, and the Field of Dreams, dinners,
andSue Welch: So the Field of Dreams, we did have requirements because we were
changing the use from what it was previously to a public space. So we had to create
more accessible ramps, elevators, doorways, things like that, and all that added up to
quite some expense. So our first official event here was called the Field of Dreams. If
we build it, they will come. And so we had volunteers in softball uniforms, and we had
teams thatToby Jenkins: Cute gay boys.
Marcy Smith: Yeah.
Marcy Smith: We had team captains.
Sue Welch: Not girls in softball uniforms.
Marcy Smith: We had team captains, so it was baseball teams and it was a
competition.
Sue Welch: So they were bidding against each other. There was nothing they were
gonna win. There were no prizes. There were no auction items. This was full-out cash.
They were playing against each other, and we raised all the money, over $130,000
cash, that night without any auction items to do all of the ADA requirements.
Marcy Smith: And it was adopting rooms. So these were concept drawings of what the
various spaces were gonna be. So if you were a kitchen person, or you were interested
in the library, or the art gallery, the theater. That was really great to have those concept
drawings, so that people could visualize what this incredible space was gonna look like,
based on the town halls, and what they said they wanted in the space. So we were able
to give 'em pretty much everything they asked for.
The other thing I remember, too, is the size of the building, okay? So we were at 3,500
square feet. This facility is 18,000 square feet. We got so much pushback from, are you
kidding me? You're never gonna be able to fill that space.
Sue Welch: We don't need that.
Marcy Smith: .. We don't need that space. And here we are, nearly 20 years later, and
in my opinion, we could add on a few places, but.
Toby Jenkins: So any details about the grand opening? I'm trying to remember.
Sue Welch: I remember, we did balloons, 'cause at that time-

36

�Marcy Smith: We did an non-environmental thing.
Sue Welch: - we were not that environmentally conscious. I'm sorry, I apologize.
Marcy Smith: We released balloons.
Sue Welch: But we did have a bagpiper on the roof, which was really cool. Everyone
was just so thrilled, and walking through the place. It was just giddy, giddying us, it was
wonderful.
Marcy Smith: Smudging, blessing the building. People laying hands on the building.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah.
Marcy Smith: Good energy.
Sue Welch: It was.
Toby Jenkins: ... American blessings.
Marcy Smith: Yes, yes.
Sue Welch: It was good energy.
Toby Jenkins: And then we moved in.
Sue Welch: Yes.
Toby Jenkins: And the programs began.
Sue Welch: And the programs began. And yes, if you build it, they will come. It's
absolutely true.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah.
Sue Welch: Given the proper leadership, and we had such great leadership then, and
people pushing for great programs.
Toby Jenkins: And so prior to this, we would have these huge meetings or events. We
would have to rent space, or we would have to cram into whatever place we had. I can
remember many, many things that we would use in those other spaces. Or when the
sodomy laws were struck down, we didn't have a big enough space, so we had to use a
restaurant on Cherry Street. But then this building finally had enough space that if we
could mobilize and fight for our communitySue Welch: Yeah.

37

�Toby Jenkins: - Celebrate, remember those. I mean, it became a place where people
did their funerals, their commitment ceremonies, and where we met for meetings to fight
for our rights.
Sue Welch: Yeah. Yeah, we could celebrate and mobilize and honor each other in our
own home.
Toby Jenkins: Do you remember some of the major events that this building was here
to witness and testify to?
Marcy Smith: Well, legalized same-sex marriage for number one. But also it becoming
a hub for pride. So that we could centralize pride activities, which was really pretty cool
to be able to do that. Otherwise, we were renting, leasing space to try to do pride
events. We're not without negative things happening, and one of the things that wasn't
publicized at the time that we did it but we did it for safety was, we put bulletproof glass
in this building because we felt that at some point, unfortunately, that may be needed.
And so we had a drive-by shooting in this building and thankfully, the bulletproof glass
did its job. So never more thankful to have that particular decision to save people ... –
[Bullet-resistant glass was not initially installed. It was added in 2017 after a drive-by
shooting from a pellet gun made 13 holes in the front windows and front door. Wes
Smith, an OkEq member, challenged the community to send in $13 each to replace the
glass. The challenge went viral, people across the country and world sent in money. In
total, more than $33,000 was committed which allowed OkEq to replace all downstairs
windows and the front door with bullet-resistant glass.]
Toby Jenkins: So do you remember when the sodomy laws were struck down, we
celebrated at a restaurant, but the next major event was when gays were allowed to be
in the military ... . And do you remember the events around that?
Sue Welch: So yes, we were able to celebrate that in a fantastic way and we actually
created the veterans lobby here, top second floor, off the elevator. And then another
pivotal time ... Toby Jenkins: And we ... - just a minute. We invited military recruiters to come to this
... .
Sue Welch: That's right, that's right.
Toby Jenkins: And they came all the way from where, the Pentagon.
Sue Welch: Fantastic, yes. That's right ... .

38

�Toby Jenkins: And we became the very first place in the United States where gay
people served, signed up to join the military. We were the face of that on the front page
of 1900 newspapers the next day in the heartland, in the middle of the country.
Sue Welch We were also because of Mary and Sharon and Gay and Sue and were
able to celebrate the pivotal gay marriage right here, in the center, with those ladies
here in Tulsa. So yeah, so many pivotal things here.
Toby Jenkins: Remember when the White House came to visit, when we got behind
the Affordable Care Act cause we knew we needed to sign people up so that
Obamacare, and they sent a representative here 'cause we had signed up 147 people
in one day.
Sue Welch: It's fantastic. It's fantastic, yeah.
Toby Jenkins: So Sue, you called it the field of dreams. Why did you call it the field of
dreams?
Sue Welch: Because if we build it, they will come.
Toby Jenkins: And did they come?
Sue Welch: They did, and actually even more, in more numbers than I dreamed. I
mean the programming and Toby, I know you're greatly responsible for a lot of that
programming that started happening. And the people upon people, upon people who
came and had fun or had a service or were recognized and seen or just got to be able
to be with their family, their LGBTQ+ family, just people fill this place the whole entire
time, all the time.
I know I would get update calls from you saying how many people had come and what
pivotal help had been given to certain people that day. Just incredible.
Marcy Smith: Well, saving lives.
Sue Welch: Absolutely, saving lives.
Marcy Smith: People who were at the end of their rope. I mean, just needing a place to
come where they can literally walk in the door.
Sue Welch: ... you're safe.
Marcy Smith: Yes, this is a safe place.
Sue Welch: A safe affirming place.

39

�Toby Jenkins: So you spent a lot of work for the community to make this happen, and
on behalf of the community, the LGBTQ+ community, I wanna say thank you so much
for that. Any regrets about it?
Sue Welch: None.
Marcy Smith: None.
Sue Welch: None. And I have to say there were so many hundreds of people behind
us who really made it happen, who made it a success. We were just able to drive some
of it.
Toby Jenkins: So this is a- in 2026 and you ladies are moving into your middle age
years.
Marcy Smith: Thank you for that.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah.
Toby Jenkins: There were some difficult times, 'cause just because we had the building
doesn't mean- I mean, we've had some vandalism, we've had physical threats, we've
had some deaths, some heartaches, and we've had some other challenges too. You just
didn't hang up your hats and say, we're done helping the community or being involved.
What have you had to do in the last few years?
Sue Welch: So things were rocking along really great for a while. We got some
breathing time and just having fun with friends and things. But there were some
individuals, boards, leaderships, that didn't go through what all of us went through. They
didn't go through the turmoil and the trial and the difficulties that all of us went through.
They're a younger generation, they grew up being able to be married, they grew up with
less offense to them, they grew up being able to put their partner's picture on their office
desk. Just so different from us.
When some younger leadership, I think I'll just categorize it that way, came in, I don't
think it was- they had less ownership. So, COVID came and that changed everything for
everybody. But generationally, I think we're significantly different in that. We like to
gather physically together and COVID made that really difficult. So coming out of that,
changes started happening. We noticed we weren't getting notices about things
happening at the center, even post-COVID. It seemed there was less going on. People
weren't gathering at the center. We didn't reactivate those activities and events and
things for people to physically gather. As the world did, we all became a little more
siloed. So I think we lost a lot of interest, funding, relativity during that time.

40

�In February of 2024, we got a notice saying that the organization needed to raise
$100,000 to keep the doors open. We were in shock. And so we met up with some
people and said, "What's going on here? What's happening?" And so Marcy and I,
thanks to some people, we were asked to be on the gala committee that year. We were
generously given the leeway to co-chair the gala. And fortunately, we kinda did our
thing. We've done a lot of galas. Well, by the gala committee, we were generously
offered to co-chair the gala. We had leadership difficulty. I was coming in, again, as old
lesbians going, "What do you know?" I mean, that was an old time. You can't do
anything for us.
And we had a hard time not going ... listen to whippersnappers. This is how it was. So
ultimately, that gala was the highest grossing and highest net gala in OkEq’s history.
And we were able to really build up our coffers again, and keep us open and keep the
center going and alive.
Marcy Smith: In 90 days.
Sue Welch: Yeah, in a very short time.
Marcy Smith: There was no one chairing this. It was not gonna happen.
Sue Welch: Yeah, there was not gonna be a gala. We even had foundations tell us,
"You should not be having a gala right now." And we said, "For two reasons. We have to
have a gala. We must have a gala. One, of course, for the fundraising. And, we know
we can do this. Two, for the community. Because our community has scattered to the
winds. And we need to bring them back together."
Toby Jenkins: So we talked about the pandemic, and we talked about the financial
challenges the organizations have, and we've talked about generational differences,
and- but we also have political issues that are impacting our community. It's 2026, so
as your sign-off message, I've asked you to think about this. Do you have a challenge,
or a message, or a final words that you'd like to give to people who might see this, and
either feel the motivation to get involved, or maybe even have an explanation of how
important it is? Do you have any final words for our viewers?
Sue Welch: You go first.
Marcy Smith: I would say that don't discount having a place, a physical place.
I have an IT background and we're in a virtual world at this point, but there is so much in
life, especially in a human experience, virtual stuff cannot give you and provide you that
connection that you have to have by just being in the same space with people who
support you, and that you can provide fine services.

41

�The whole point of this Center was for it to be a resource center for people. We didn't
think that we were gonna be all things to all people, but we wanted to have a hub, a
place where the organization could also work with other organizations to provide
services to people, and to have a gathering place for us, and we're seeing this. We are
seeing this in the world now. We are seeing psychological studies coming out about
how this isolationism, and being at home, and this whole virtual reality, if you will, it's
not. It's not real.
What is real is being with people, engaging with people, celebrating with people, having
really hard times with people. It's a human experience. It cannot be replaced with
technology. That's my background, and I know that. And so it's about having a home
and a place to come back to. And supporting an organization that's going to help our
community be a better place.
Not just the LGBTQ+ community, but other members in this community we call home,
we call Tulsa, reaching out to other organizations to help in that effort, because it's a
tough time, and funding is getting ripped out from non-profits. They are literally facing
their demise. National public Radio… all of these things that we held to be, assumed
that it was always gonna be here, always thought we would have public funding for the
arts, really. Always thought we would have freedom of speech, thought we would have
freedom of the press.
The press is what is gonna hold our elected officials accountable, in addition to us. So
we are at a really, really tough time, and it has been set on fire because of technology.
Because we are not gathering together. Because we're holed up in our respective
places, and we've got to come together again. We've got to support each other again in
a physical way, in addition to a technological way. And having a home that is a place
where we can gather, where we can rally, where we can figure out strategies to do this,
is really important because if the decision is ever made to lose this space, then we
become invisible again.
They, whoever they are succeeded. They don't have a place to call home anymore.
They don't have a place to gather anymore. They don't have a place to rally. They don't
have a place to celebrate our artists. They don't have a place for our performers to
come. They don't have a place to have counseling. Transgendered individuals don't
have a place to have health care. We don't have a- we're burning books, and we're
banning books. We don't have a library anymore to celebrate that aspect.
All of these things are here for anyone who wants to come in and celebrate LGBTQIA+
individuals as a community, but as a community, as an accepting and affirming
community that we call home. And that's Tulsa. It's so much more than a physical
building, and that's where I would say, generationally moving forward, I hope that you all

42

�can understand how important the space is to maintain. Can we change the space?
Absolutely. Can we change up the different things that are here? Absolutely. That's what
a home's all about. It evolves and it changes as we need it to change. But I am hopeful
and lay this on the table for folks coming behind us, please keep it. Please figure out
how to keep it. Make it your own, make it evolve and change as our needs change. But
allowing it to go away, I think, will be a grave mistake for our community.
And I'm not saying that it is. I'm not saying that it is. But I think there are individuals out
there that feel that we don't need a space to call our own, where we can celebrate each
other, a physical space. And home is a really big word, encompasses a lot of things.
Sue Welch: I really couldn't say any better than that, but just to say that, when you lose
something that so many people have identified with, you lose your identity. When you
don't communicate to every group, not just the current generation, but every group,
about what's here for them. When you don't have physical group meetings, people
physically gathering in large groups, that sounds scary to some people now, just
because of COVID, but we have to have face-to-face large groups to support each
other.
The harder it gets politically, financially, the more we need to physically gather and we
have our home to do it in. So let's not lose that, let's not take it for granted, let's use it.
Toby Jenkins: This is perfect. So while you're the CP's ambassadors, called them the
Iron Lady, Madam Prime Minister, was my nicknames for them. What are you presently
doing? I mean what do you- your careers and the work that you do now?
Sue Welch: Well, we are entrepreneurial. We own a business together called
OsteoStrong, which is a wellness center that focuses on increasing your bone density,
your muscular strength and your ligament and tendon strength. That's healthy for
everybody. We have over 300 members. We're loving it and we do have some of our
community members who are also OsteoStrong members and we do love that. We
garden, we travel, we've loved that forever. I serve as a trustee again on the Board of
Trustees for Oklahomans For Equality.
Toby Jenkins: In your medical practice there, you're focusing a lot on issues with the
emerging, growing older adult population, so that you're still serving a community, every
aspect of it.
Sue Welch: Sure, sure.
Toby Jenkins: Anything else for us and our founder. Do you have any other things or
archivist any things, before we bring our interview to a close?

43

�Sue Welch: I just wanna say thank you to all of you for all the work you're doing and
have done, because we could not have done anything, any of this without you.
Amanda Thompson: Yeah, no, it's great. And thank you guys for sharing this. And as
the one youngster in the room, I wholeheartedly agree with everything you're saying and
the stuff you talk about is really important. I'm personally very lucky and very happy to
be a part of furthering those connections and helping people just get the word out, how
important these things are.
Sue Welch: Thank you, Amanda.
Marcy Smith: We have to pay it forward.
Amanda Thompson: Yeah.
Marcy Smith: We do.
Toby Jenkins: Yeah, thank you so much. You have been listening toMarcy Smith: Marcy Smith.
Sue Welch: Sue Welch.
Toby Jenkins: - here at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center on January the 16th, 2026.
Addendum:
Sue Welch requested the following be added to the transcript.
"My Dad, Lloyd Welch was a 3rd generation brick mason and builder. He helped with
the initial renovation when we bought the building for the Dennis R Neill Equality
Center. He taught volunteers and various friends many skills that we needed during
that time to get the building ready. He taught and worked with Stan Smalts, Dale Tune
and Marty Steinmetz, replacing and hanging exterior doors; David Hoot patching interior
plaster walls; Norm Kopp tuck pointing worn brick exterior wall joints of the building, as
well as many other tasks with other volunteers. He had a great time with the guys and
they with him. They all really appreciated learning from him. Some of them even took
the skills they learned from our volunteer efforts into their own lives later as well. My
Mom, Joan Welch provided moral encouragement and cheerleading support during that
time filled with physical work. We would all break for lunch in the garage, now the Lynn
Riggs Theatre. Nancy McDonald, everyone's Mom, brought cookies for snacks every
weekend for the volunteer crew. It was a fantastic time of camaraderie, hard work and
joy!"

44

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              <text>MONTHLY MAGAZINE&#13;
INSIDE TIDS MONTH&#13;
Book Review "American Evita"&#13;
It's Time to RODEO&#13;
Out on Vacation "Saugatuck"&#13;
Male Dancer's of the 4 States&#13;
"Q TV Network"&#13;
FREE&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8&#13;
"A STAR IS BORN"&#13;
The Ozarks Pride Magazine name change to&#13;
"The Ozarks Star" is now official. We felt&#13;
Ozarks Pride conflicted with gay pride&#13;
organization's magazine and the name change&#13;
more reflects a regional ne.vs publication&#13;
although our distribution base goes beyond&#13;
the Ozark Mountain region, S\x/ Missouri,&#13;
\'vestern Arkansas, SE Kansas and Eastern&#13;
Oklahoma is our main base of operations with&#13;
an estimated 15,000 potential readership.&#13;
With the name and the masthead design&#13;
change done, many more improvements and&#13;
features are in the grand plan for The Ozarks&#13;
Star. Our goal is to continue to be a --.-iable&#13;
source of information to the GLBT community.&#13;
To be your voice in a community that in&#13;
the past has had very little representation or&#13;
acknowledgment from the straight community.&#13;
\X'e are an educated, talented, successful and&#13;
absolutely fantastic people who contributes to&#13;
our community economically, spiritually and&#13;
physically each and everyday. The recently&#13;
organized "Gay Pride" e\·ents in Springfield,&#13;
Fayetteville, Fort Smith and hopefully next&#13;
year Joplin, shows we are here, we are out of&#13;
the closet and we are not going away.&#13;
Since our first publication in December 2003&#13;
there have been three other GLBT publications&#13;
start up in this region and we \vclcome&#13;
them and congratulate the editor's and&#13;
publishers for their courage. There is a lot of&#13;
hard work, learning and frustration with&#13;
beginning a new \·enture such as a Gay/&#13;
Lesbian news publication. We support their&#13;
efforts and applaud their tenacity.&#13;
C.D. Ward /Editor&#13;
{&#13;
I&#13;
The Ozarks Star&#13;
ON CONS~ITUTIONAL&#13;
DISCRIMINATION&#13;
The Ozarkd Star Page 5 August 1, 2004&#13;
WHOW!&#13;
DO YOU&#13;
FEEL THE&#13;
I did my part ... did you? As the debate&#13;
concerning the Federal Marriage&#13;
Amendment started to heat up in the&#13;
U.S. Senate we were ask to get involved&#13;
on the side of social justice to fight this&#13;
very discriminate bill. As The Rev. Dr.&#13;
Troy Perry Founder and Moderator of&#13;
the ·unive~;al Fellowship of Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches is quoted,&#13;
"They presented their amendment as&#13;
a high-minded attempt to protect&#13;
'traditional' marriage, when in reality&#13;
it was a cynical attempt to influence&#13;
future elections and win power ... a&#13;
sad reminder of the hostility and&#13;
political oppression still faced by&#13;
LGBT people"&#13;
I \Yrote Senator Kit Bond and Senator&#13;
Jim Talent, Missouri with my concern&#13;
about this Senate Bill and what it stood&#13;
for. As a person of faith, a parent, a&#13;
constituent and yes a Gay person I&#13;
encouraged both to oppose this bill.&#13;
Some say an act of radical optimism&#13;
considering that our own Missouri&#13;
Senator Jim Talent co-sponsored the bill.&#13;
Senator Kit Bond didn't even bother to&#13;
respond to my email and Senator Jim&#13;
Talent planted his feet and defended his&#13;
stand. After receiving his seething and&#13;
radical right response, a copy of his&#13;
response was sent to every church&#13;
belonging to the UFMCC denomination&#13;
and gay organization that could be&#13;
reached with encouragement for all&#13;
others in our community, family, friends,&#13;
GLBT and straight to right him as well.&#13;
We have won this round but things will heat&#13;
·up as the U.S. House of Representatives&#13;
takes up the debate next. Let us enjoy this&#13;
win but be ever vigil that it is not over.&#13;
After all, we pay more taxes with less&#13;
representation then our straight friends that&#13;
are married.&#13;
Even as it was defeated Republican&#13;
Senators and analyst \Vere stating that it is&#13;
the only way to protect the integrity of&#13;
marriage. Let's think on that one for a split&#13;
second. I have every respect for the&#13;
institution of marriage ... my parents have&#13;
been married for over 50 years however I&#13;
don't see the integrity of marriage being&#13;
bolstered by the current divorce rate or by&#13;
the straight males that abuse our gay&#13;
brothers for their own release and then run&#13;
home to their wives. They don't need to use&#13;
us as their scapegoats fo; the failure of&#13;
marriage in this country today.&#13;
I included Senator Jim Talent's reply letter&#13;
so you can see for yourself that he has no&#13;
intention to represent all of the&#13;
constituents that elected him. Let's us&#13;
remember him when he runs for reelection!&#13;
I for one will not even vote for&#13;
him as the lesser of evils but ,vill remind&#13;
you again of his "caring for you."&#13;
Dear The Rev. Urie:&#13;
Thank you for contacting me regarding your&#13;
thoughts about same-sex marriages. I appreciate&#13;
the time you have taken to share your views&#13;
with me, and I welcome the opportunity to&#13;
respond.&#13;
I believe in the traditional definition of&#13;
marriage as the union of a man and a woman&#13;
and believe our legal institutions should reflect&#13;
that understanding. The issue has serious&#13;
implications for our families and our society and&#13;
I believe that action sooner, rather than later,&#13;
will be necessary and most effective.&#13;
Certainly people have the freedom to&#13;
live as they choose and to attempt to&#13;
influence the direction of our culture. But&#13;
just as certainly, the courts should not force&#13;
Continued, see Senator's reply page-25&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8 Page 6&#13;
MEN'S UNDERWEA~ STOBE . . . OPEN!&#13;
825 E 311n ST. DOWNTOWN TULSA. CALL: 877-7-.BOXERS fOR INFO!&#13;
UNDERWEAR FOR EVERY MAN. OFFERINO THE .&#13;
BO SOFTWEAR + JOCKO + WC LA ROCHE + MUNDIJ&#13;
'"'Traveling in the gay friendly world''&#13;
by Donald Pile and Ray Williams&#13;
gaytravelers@aol.com&#13;
Saugatuck/Douglas,&#13;
Michigan&#13;
Tired of the hot, muggy and rainy&#13;
weather? Then head up North to&#13;
Saugatuck/Doulgas, Michigan. Located on&#13;
the Lake Michigan side of the State it is nestled right on the coast. It is a little over a&#13;
two hour drive from Chicago. Saugatuck and Douglas are actually two separate villages&#13;
divided only by a waterway. Both villages are extremely gay-friendly Besides having a&#13;
huge all-gay resort, The DUNES, www.dunesresort.com, there are also several gay Bed&#13;
and Breakfasts and a fabulous CAMPIT campgrounds located just 10 minutes away.&#13;
They have camping facilities for tents, RV'ers plus a Bed and Breakfast and you can&#13;
even rent a log cabin for your stay. Michael, a hot gay man and Sally, an equally hot&#13;
lesbian own the campground. It is extremely well tended. Plenty of wooded areas for&#13;
camping, bonfires, hiking and for just enjoying the out of doors. This is the finest&#13;
campground we have ever seen and what makes it extra special is that it is all gay! Their&#13;
web site is: www.saugatuckweekends.com Try this for a wonderful alternative to what&#13;
you usually do when traveling. They have a great community room/ shelter house&#13;
adjacent to their swimming pool. :ivlichael and Sally are extremely hospitable to all their&#13;
guests. They have guests that keep coming back year after year in addition to several&#13;
who come EVERY weekend.&#13;
At the Dunes Resort you will find plenty of action whether at the pool or at one of&#13;
their 4 bars. They have a Cabaret ·which features strippers, drag queens and lots of&#13;
other talented performers. On weekends all the bars are packed solid and they are&#13;
famous for their Sunday afternoon and evening Tea Dances.&#13;
But there is much more about the Saugatuck/Dunes area than just gay&#13;
accommodations and bars.Dozens of the shops are gay mvned and what are not gay&#13;
owned are very gay-friendly. Some of our favorties was the BACK ALLEY PIZZA&#13;
JOINT where they make some of the best Pizza that we have ever tasted. Judy, the&#13;
owner is extremely friendly. You can either dine in, take out or have it delivered to your&#13;
room. The GLENN RESTAURANT ir1 Glenn, about 8 miles South is a delightful old&#13;
cafe that has been there for years and years. Nothing fancy but the food is wonderful.&#13;
Also in Glenn be sure and check out the YELLOW DOG },NTIQUE SHOP. If you&#13;
get thirsty for coffee, the ONLY place in the area is the UNCOMMON GROUNDS in&#13;
downtown Saugatuck. It is a Java and Juice Cafe. The owner, Stephen is extremely&#13;
personable and the coffee is great. They always have a line of customers.&#13;
Continued page 22 ...... .&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8 Page 8&#13;
"They were terrified of her"&#13;
Compiled by:&#13;
Star writer Greg Steele&#13;
An Eva Paron in American! Most of us&#13;
have seen the movie "Evita", the Faye&#13;
Dunway version and the Maddona&#13;
musical version, and admired Paron's rise&#13;
to power. The glamour and the passion&#13;
that was Eva, does suggest similar traits&#13;
of Hillary Clinton, now that it has been&#13;
written.&#13;
Has Senator Clinton's rise to power put&#13;
her in the position of number one&#13;
candidate for the first women to become&#13;
President of the United States? It certainly&#13;
is a possibility. "There are many&#13;
striking similarities to Eva Peron and&#13;
Hillary'' Andersen claims. "Here we have&#13;
two very strong-willed women who&#13;
engineered their husbands' rise to the&#13;
presidencr Then they used their power as&#13;
first lady----some would say abused their&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
power as first lady - and in the&#13;
process became two of the most loved, .).&#13;
hated, revered, feared women in the&#13;
world. Sex, money, power, betrayal,&#13;
tragedy, charges of corruption, all these&#13;
things really characterized the lives of&#13;
both Evitas."&#13;
"When you look at Hillary, you realize&#13;
that she is in fact not only the most&#13;
powerful Democratic woman in the&#13;
country, she is the most recognizable&#13;
Democrat in the country. And she&#13;
really is the first woman' with a serious&#13;
chance of being elected president."&#13;
Andersen was quoted.&#13;
Anderson believes Clinton has a more&#13;
than a good chance of going back to&#13;
the White House, but this time as the&#13;
head honcho.&#13;
Author Clu:fstopher Andersen says&#13;
Hillary Clinton influenced many of her&#13;
husband Bill's decisions. The Book&#13;
American Evita: Hillary Clinton's&#13;
Path to Power is now in bookstores&#13;
across the country.&#13;
Volume l Issue 8 Page 10&#13;
MAIN ST. J □ PLIN, M □&#13;
MON: Request Dance Party w /Tercy.&#13;
TUES: queer as folks 4th Season -&#13;
Tuesdar, w /Tercy @9pm&#13;
WED: Dancing with DJ Lil'Ken&#13;
THUR: Brandon Bravado &amp; The&#13;
Justice Janelle Moore Show.&#13;
Karaoke with DJ Robbie&#13;
FRI: The Robbie Walker Showcase&#13;
and DJ Lll'Ken&#13;
SAT: Dance Party with DJ Lil'Ken&#13;
OPEN MON-SAT FROM4PM TO1:3OAM.&#13;
HAPPY HOUR 4-7PM EACH DAY WITH AUS~IM.,&#13;
Advertisement .,&#13;
cactus Canyon Campground&#13;
And Resort&#13;
For Men In The Ozarks&#13;
The L.ar9e$t Men's C.amp9round in the U'51\&#13;
Full RV Hookup's, Tent Sites, Cabins, Lodge Rooms,&#13;
Hot Tub/sauna, Pool, Cafe, Theme Weekends,&#13;
Convenience Store, Clothing Optional.&#13;
Call 417-683-9199 or visit our website&#13;
It's Rodeo Time!&#13;
Press Release MGRA&#13;
Shawnee, KS July 20, 2004&#13;
The Missouri Gay Rodeo Association&#13;
(1vfGRA) is proud to announce its twelfth&#13;
annual Show-Me State Rodeo this Labor Day&#13;
Weekend, September 3-5, at the&#13;
WyandotteCounty Fairgrounds, 1405 N. 98'\&#13;
Kansas City, Kansas.&#13;
MGRA is one of 24 gay rodeo associations&#13;
across the United States and Canada that&#13;
make up the International Gay Rodeo&#13;
Association (IGRA). There are 13 events in&#13;
the Show-Me State Rodeo, including rough&#13;
stock, speed, roping, and camp events. One&#13;
of the few differences between gay rodeos&#13;
and other rodeos is that men and women&#13;
compete with and against each other for&#13;
buckles, ribbons, and cash prizes.&#13;
With the support of its Grand Sponsor Bud&#13;
Light, MGRA is able to produce a first-class&#13;
rodeo and give all profits from the event to&#13;
its chosen charities: Hope Care Center&#13;
(Kansas City), Southwest Boulevard Health&#13;
Clinic (Kansas City), and the AIDS Project&#13;
of the Ozarks (Southwest Missouri). Other&#13;
international sponsors include American&#13;
Airlines, Instinct Magazine, and Bacardi&#13;
Silver. On board as a full sponsor this year&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
is Sidekicks Saloon in Kansas City.&#13;
Established in 1986 as a non-profit&#13;
organization, MGRA has given hundreds of&#13;
thousands of dollars to AIDS-related&#13;
charities across l\fissouri. \vith chapters in&#13;
Kansas City and Joplin, MGRA has a broad&#13;
membership base filled with volunteers who&#13;
make each years rodeo a success.&#13;
\velcoming contestants and rodeo fans from&#13;
across the country, MGR,'\ draws some of&#13;
the finest competitors in the gay rodeo&#13;
circuit. It is not uncommon to see a top&#13;
barrel racer also compete in the wild drag&#13;
race. The wild drag race is one of three camp&#13;
events that always entertain the rodeo&#13;
spectators.&#13;
Besides the rodeo events, there is a great deal&#13;
of entertainment at the rodeo grounds all&#13;
weekend. International and Association Royalty&#13;
all join forces to entertain in the evenings. Also&#13;
appearing will be Cheer, Dorothy, Cheer! ... a&#13;
group of high camp and high energy&#13;
cheerleaders from 1'v1inneapolis.&#13;
Tickets for the rodeo will be available at the&#13;
gate for $12 per day. All evening events, dances,&#13;
and parties are free to the public, and will be&#13;
held at the Wyandotte County Fairgrounds. The&#13;
Awards Ceremony will be held on Sunday,&#13;
September 5, at 8:30 p.m. at the Fairgrounds.&#13;
For more information about the Show-Me State&#13;
Rodeo, visit their website: '£'l\v:w;mgra,us.&#13;
An Ozarks Star Community Service&#13;
FREE HIV TESTING, NO NEEDLES !&#13;
SPIRIT OF CHRIST&#13;
MCC SPONSORS&#13;
2902 E. 20th St., PO Box 4711, Joplin, Mo 64803&#13;
In conjunction with AIDS Project of the Ozarks,&#13;
MCC Joplin offers free HIV testing the bst Sunday&#13;
of co.ch month between 5PM and 6PM. For your&#13;
com·cnience you can also call 206-6179 for an&#13;
appointment. W'e use the On-sure method which&#13;
docs not require the use of needles and we offer&#13;
complete confidentiality. You may aiso regucst&#13;
Booklets on i\JDS for People of Faith through the&#13;
PO Box iisted above.&#13;
Volwne l Issue 8 Page 12&#13;
Open Mon-Fri 4pm to&#13;
New NE Oklahoma-Leather Club!&#13;
Preis Release:&#13;
Tulsa,OK&#13;
The TULSA ROUGH RIDERS - a leather club&#13;
for all of Northeast Oklahoma, and for ALL&#13;
sisters and brothers in Leather is having its&#13;
organizational meeting on Saturday, August&#13;
14th. Please contact chancetulsa@gay.com for&#13;
site/ time details, or visit: www.geocities.com/&#13;
weldertulsa/Leather_In_Tulsa.html for&#13;
additional information about the club.&#13;
Quotable Quotes&#13;
"My first great love was a woman. It was in high&#13;
school, and I w:i.s at the tender age of 18. At that&#13;
:i.ge, of course, our feelings are very raw and&#13;
intense. I fell head over heels, helplessly in love&#13;
with a teacher of mine .... She did not want to&#13;
have anything to do with me."&#13;
"Queer :i.s Folk" actress Thea Gill (Lindsay) to&#13;
Chicago's Windy City Times, May 12.&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
Cathe Letts is&#13;
always available&#13;
to help you with&#13;
your real estate&#13;
- transactions!&#13;
Whether ypu att · or&#13;
seDing property 1 can you!!&#13;
Serving .Jopli11, Webb City, Carl&#13;
Junction &amp; C.arthage in Mi!i!iOurL&#13;
Call Today For HELP!&#13;
41 'f-48S-5lSU or 649-7076&#13;
Cathe Letut ABRt GR.I&#13;
RE/MAX New Direction&#13;
www.cathrletts.com&#13;
SSOURIVO&#13;
AUGUST3&#13;
1022 Dodson Avenue Fort Smith, Arkansas 72901 (479) 782-1845&#13;
THE LARGEST ALTERNATIVE DANCE CLUB IN FORT SMITH&#13;
OPEN FRIDAYS, SATURDAYS, AND SUNDAYS&#13;
PRIVATE CLUB, MUST BE 21 TO ENTER&#13;
OPEN 8PM UNTIL 5AM&#13;
Saturday, August 7, 2004&#13;
The Biggest Dance Party in Fort Smith&#13;
COME DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF DJ LYTEHOUSE!&#13;
Sunday, August 8, 2004 Drag Show Barbie Grant Ayshia&#13;
Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, and Debit Cards accepted&#13;
Their beautiful, handsome, hunky,&#13;
sexy and here to entertain you.&#13;
p &amp; grind they s&#13;
y want your S bills.&#13;
ud, sigh and pull o&#13;
et, and go back we&#13;
after week and love it!&#13;
The Ozarks Star Centerfold-A August 1, 2004&#13;
December 16, 1928 ;._ June 23, 2004&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8 Centerfold&#13;
Direct from Hollywood Squares&#13;
For 2 shows only:&#13;
~&#13;
T opanga Bar and Grill-9:30pm&#13;
~&#13;
Club Rox-9:30pm&#13;
With special appearances by:&#13;
Sistagirl and Not So Holy Nun&#13;
$10 in advance/$13 at the door&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
•• lnl1A l }}&#13;
For more information call or email:&#13;
405-947-2351 / info@hollywoodhotelokc.com&#13;
Ozarks Star Centerfold August 1, 2004&#13;
c Night Special-$55&#13;
I Night-$35&#13;
Tax Included&#13;
www.hollywoodhotelokc.com&#13;
Saturday Sept 4th&#13;
Girls Nite Out&#13;
Starring&#13;
the ONE and ONLY&#13;
GINGER LAMAR&#13;
With Special Guests&#13;
Showtime 11:00pm&#13;
Sunday Sept 5th&#13;
Barbeque by the Pool&#13;
Catered by&#13;
HEAD COUNTRY BBQ&#13;
Party starts at&#13;
7:00pm and ends ?&#13;
Volume l Issu!'l 8 Centerfold-D&#13;
Volume I Issue 8 Page 16 August 1, 2004&#13;
Town dbits&#13;
by Randy Vineyard&#13;
Introducing "T-Town Tidbits" by Star writer Randy&#13;
. Vineyard, An Ozarks Star exclusive. Randy lives in Tulsa and&#13;
will be covering the Star Scene in and around the T-Town area.&#13;
Randy has lived in Tulsa since the age of two and wouldn't&#13;
consider living anywhere else and loves the Tulsa GLBT scene.&#13;
So stay tuned for some exciting Tidbits from T-Town. Randy is&#13;
also The Ozarks Star advertising contact for Tulsa.&#13;
I want to help those of you who are not from Tulsa understand a little bit of what we do&#13;
here, along with where to ·go. Before I fill you in on the clubs and what they offer, I'd like to&#13;
put the career of one of Tulsa's most loved entertainers in a nut shell for you.&#13;
I was working at Club Renegades in downtown Tulsa, in the late 80's. The club had never&#13;
done shows of any kind, I talked the owner into letting us try it out to see if it would fly. We&#13;
slid the pool table against the wall put a piece of plywood on it and made steps out of empty&#13;
bottle beer cases and duct tape. This was our stage, tiny but suitable. The young man I&#13;
worked with the most was Ron - 'Mr Zeigfield' we called him. He was a very colorful and&#13;
amazingly talented person. Around that same time the Tulsa Community was in need of&#13;
financial help for persons living with HIV/ AJDS. Ron came up with the a benefit for this&#13;
purpose. Many of the local' entertainers came forth to help and donate their time and energy&#13;
to the cause. One of those people was Paul Sbuyler, a regular club patron, he decided it&#13;
would be fun and a way to give something back to his community.&#13;
This is a short storv about 'HELGA'.&#13;
Paul first created Belg; at a benefit performance in the early 90's at the club Renegades. In an&#13;
effort to raise help money, be donned a dress, the name 'HELGA', and proceeded to create&#13;
who is now THE most recognizable personality for fund-raising in the state of Oklahoma.&#13;
Paul and the host of entertainers from across Tulsa crawled up those beer crates and&#13;
performed for standing room only audiences each month. This evenfwas so successful that it&#13;
became THE RED RJBBON REVUE'. Through the years Ron pasted from us to a better&#13;
place, but still has. dire~tor status in qur hearts. Paul went on to tum the fund-raiser into&#13;
. . . . . 'HELGA'.S RED RIBBON&#13;
REVUE'. She has hosted&#13;
the first Saturday of every&#13;
month now for 10+ years,&#13;
. that comes to 150&#13;
consecutive shows.&#13;
After many successfui years&#13;
with the Renegades team, it was&#13;
time for Helga to find another&#13;
home for her benefit. At the&#13;
;equest of a dear friend, Kris&#13;
Kohl continued .. page21&#13;
The Ozarks Star Page 17&#13;
Q Television Network.&#13;
Delivers; Sample&#13;
Broadcast&#13;
Viewers Embrace the Nation's&#13;
Premiere 24/7 Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Television Network&#13;
Press Release:&#13;
NEW ORLEANS, May 18, 2004&#13;
Q Television Network announced today&#13;
the successful completion of its five-hour&#13;
test broadcast on Saturday, May 15th.&#13;
The sample broadcast signal was available&#13;
throughout all of North America,&#13;
beginning at 10:00 a.m. PST. In addition,&#13;
Cox Cable in New Orleans and Comcast&#13;
in Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia and Everett,&#13;
Washington, offered the broadcast to their&#13;
viewers.&#13;
Viewers were presented highlights from&#13;
the network, which included a first look at&#13;
"I Will, I Do, We Did," an original&#13;
documentary about gay marriage. The&#13;
sample broadcast also ran several sneak&#13;
previews of motion pictures, as well as&#13;
specials and documentaries.&#13;
"The public has finally gotten a chance to&#13;
see firsthand the unique programming Q&#13;
Television Network will deliver for our&#13;
third quarter launch," notes President of&#13;
Programming and Acquisitions Steven&#13;
Grunberg. "We encourage everyone to call&#13;
their cable network or digital satellite&#13;
provider and request Q Television&#13;
Network." Company Overview&#13;
This television network was organized to&#13;
create and develop a network devoted to&#13;
providing television programming for the&#13;
gay and lesbian community. While the&#13;
company expects much of its subscriber&#13;
base t0 be comprised of members of the&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
gay and lesbian population, management&#13;
also believes that quality programming&#13;
about the gay and lesbian experience,&#13;
designed to entertain, educate and&#13;
inform, will attract many other segments&#13;
of the viewing public. The company's&#13;
programming will be available on a&#13;
subscription basis to those desiring its&#13;
programming. The network will&#13;
broadcast 24 hours per day, 7 days per&#13;
week. Providing distribution via satellite&#13;
ensures availability of the network&#13;
across the United States, including&#13;
Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.&#13;
Safe Harbor Statement.&#13;
For more information on the Q&#13;
Television Network&#13;
~&#13;
, call the toll-free hotline:&#13;
(888) 594-77 66, or the corporate&#13;
headquarters: (760) 323-4455. SOURCE:&#13;
Q Television Network&#13;
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Ozarks Star&#13;
Creator: Paula Martinac has&#13;
been writing for the gay and lesbian&#13;
press for more than 20 years. She&#13;
served for three years as the cochair&#13;
of the board of directors of&#13;
New York City's Lesbian, Gay,&#13;
Bisexual, and Transgender&#13;
Center, where she&#13;
founded a groundbreaking reading&#13;
series called "In Our Own \X!rite."&#13;
You'd think there'd be nothing left to say about outing,&#13;
some 15 years of debate about it in our&#13;
community. But sure enough, outing has once again&#13;
reared its controversial head. And to be honest, the&#13;
political tactic that once looked bold has gone awry.&#13;
The latest outing spree began in response to attempts by&#13;
radical right-wingers in Congress, fueled by the support&#13;
of our "compassionate" president, to pass the heinous&#13;
Federal l\ll~trnage Amendment (FMA). Gay activists John&#13;
Aravosis and :Michael Rogers launched a no-holdsbarred&#13;
crusade to out high-level, closeted staffers of&#13;
rabidly antigay congressmembers. Aravosis defended his&#13;
much-publicized actions in the_ Washington Blade_,&#13;
stating that "such staffers are, at best, enemy&#13;
combatants; and, at worst, war criminals."&#13;
that a gay activist would use the of Bush's so-called "war on terrorism" to justify a&#13;
of action on behalf of our community. One of the major forces behind the FTvfA, the odious&#13;
Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, used eerie rhetoric to bolster the supposed need for the&#13;
efforts to "defend" heterosexual mani:age "the ultimate homeland&#13;
who held "outing" (thoug&#13;
" osure of their m&#13;
old \Vitch hunts like the&#13;
blur. Decades ago, it was&#13;
over the heads of average gay people,&#13;
their jobs or their families or even their freedom.&#13;
ruined many innocent gay people's lives.&#13;
fonvard to the present, and as a tool of the gay mm·ement is very different, with gay&#13;
and activists cA1-,v,,,u,.,. public who work the gay movement while "'""Aw,nn&#13;
1w,,t,.rt1nn of the closet. Sometimes the effort pays off: Jim Kolbe went public&#13;
ho:mo,seirnal1ty when he faced with the likelihood of being outed by several gay&#13;
b!J,:at:1011:s because he had voted for the notorious Defense of ,na,a,,,14-. Act in 1996. Kolbe then felt&#13;
to vote his conscience, crn~Nwi'",ncY more pro-gay !CC)c;lO!CllJU'H than he did before his&#13;
Volume l Issue 8 Page 20 August 1, 2004&#13;
Deep Inside&#13;
Hollywood&#13;
by:Romeo San Vicente&#13;
August 2004&#13;
Been missingJodie lately? Of course, you have.&#13;
We all have. But she's had kids to raise and,&#13;
presumably, other things to do besides jumping&#13;
into every movie that comes along. (fhat's&#13;
Charlize Theron's job, anyway.) A while back&#13;
Romeo reported on Foster's small role in the&#13;
upcoming French film _A Very Long&#13;
Engagement_, but now she's back in a big leading&#13;
role in a big Hollywood film. _Flight Plan_, which&#13;
also marks Hollywood's return to scary airplane&#13;
mo,ies, will star Foster as a woman whose&#13;
daughter mysteriously disappears during a flight.&#13;
To complicate matters, no one remembers seeing&#13;
the child on the plane in the first place. Earlier&#13;
casting news placed Sean Penn in the role of a&#13;
helpful fellow passenger, but now it seems that&#13;
_Boys Don't Cry_ star Peter Sarsgaard will move&#13;
from the indies to the majors with this co-starring&#13;
project.&#13;
Stone's New, Improved Ice Pick&#13;
It's happening. It's not happening. And now it's&#13;
happening again. That would be _Basic Instinct&#13;
2_, the beleaguered, long-:rwaited sequel to the&#13;
smash 1992 Paul Verhoeven film about a&#13;
murderous, ice-pick-wielding lesbian. Sharon&#13;
Stone is finaliy ready to reprise her role as Killer&#13;
Katherine now that director D;,.vid Cronenberg&#13;
(_The Fly_) and acto: Rupert Everett have come&#13;
and gone, and the multi-million doliar lawsuit&#13;
Stone brought against the film's producers has&#13;
been settled. With ali that behind them, the&#13;
project can finally move forward. Don't expect&#13;
Michael Douglas on board this time around&#13;
Romeo assumes it has something to do with&#13;
that spare pick Katherine had under the bed -&#13;
but do expect a reprise of the first film's flashes&#13;
of nudity.&#13;
Bailey and Barbato Give _ Deep&#13;
Throat&#13;
One of the most culturally significant and&#13;
successful films of all time, 1972's _Deep&#13;
Throat_, is now the subject of a what else?&#13;
sexually graphic documentary feature. _Inside&#13;
Deep Throat_ , directed by _Party Monster_'s&#13;
Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato and produced&#13;
by _A Beautiful Mind_'s Brian Grazer, will&#13;
explore how a little porn film with a provocative&#13;
title ended up being a big, big touchstone of&#13;
'70s cinema. Universal Pictures is releasing the&#13;
doc, which features interviews with playboys of&#13;
the era like Jack Nicholson, Norman Mailer,&#13;
\varren Beatty, and Hugh Hefner, as well as gay&#13;
cultural icons John \i:laters and Gore Vidal.&#13;
Romeo hopes that some of that era's feminists&#13;
get to weigh in as well. After all, without Linda&#13;
Lovelace's parlor trick, there'd ha,-e been no&#13;
movie. Look for the unrated film to hit theaters&#13;
in 2005.&#13;
He's _Desperate_&#13;
Marc Cherry is probably no one you know, but&#13;
his new TV series might become one you can't&#13;
stop talking about. _Desperate Housewives_,&#13;
debuting on ABC's fall schedule, begins ,vith a&#13;
suicide in an otherwise perfect suburban&#13;
neighborhood, and then proceeds to ,valk the&#13;
line between _Knots Landing_-style nighttime&#13;
soap and dark, mysterious comedy as the&#13;
housewife who took her own life provides&#13;
commentary from beyond the grave. Cherry, the&#13;
show's gay creator and executive producer, has&#13;
an over-the-top hit on his hands, provided an&#13;
audience shows up to enjoy actresses like Teri&#13;
Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Marcia Cross, and&#13;
Nicolette Sheridan (speaking of _Knots&#13;
Landing_j do that Stepford 2.0 thing.&#13;
Romeo San V:cente has never been, ;,.nd will&#13;
never be, desperate.&#13;
The Ozarks Star&#13;
PEOPLE HAVE BE&#13;
ASKING M&#13;
A.GAY&#13;
THE st&#13;
OF THE B&#13;
HOMOPH&#13;
THE O.S.&#13;
T-Townfrom page -16&#13;
&amp;UT THE. WAY&#13;
1 SEE IT.&#13;
BEING GAY IS&#13;
ONLY A PAR:T&#13;
OF WHO 1AM.&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
and the crew at the PlayMor, her show found a new loving home. \'(/ith tl1e change in venue and&#13;
location came a name change too. HELGA'S RED RIBBON REVUE became what is fondly known as&#13;
HELGA'S HEART 2 HEART. Although the Red Ribbon Revue does continue at Renegades to this&#13;
day, doing great things for the community, currently directed by Miss Tabitha Taylor, a fantastic&#13;
oerformer herself. HELGA'S HEART 2 HEART still has the distinction of having the same hostess&#13;
~ith the longest running consecutive performance record, raising countless dollars for local charities.&#13;
Along the way Helga is still assisted by Johnnie Cronin, a extremely talented young man who&#13;
stepped up to help fill the shoes of 'Mr Ziegfield', and Kris Kohl, who has been there since the very&#13;
beginning of Red Ribbon Revue. Lately Kris has been on hiatus, after lea,-ing the staff at the PlayMor,&#13;
she has been pursuing her performance career and her life. She returns from time to time to perform&#13;
and share in the joy of being part of the great shows at the PlayMor.&#13;
Striving to grow the entertainment side of 'DR.AG,' Paul began drawing on more theatrical aspects&#13;
and costuming to amplify the persona of Helga. After meeting his life partner, Tim, Paul transformed&#13;
Helga beyond an individual persona, he formed HELGA:S HORRIBBLES. He established her own&#13;
corner of cyberspace at _ · · which has become THE drag 'megasite',&#13;
consisting of not only Helga's and her travels and numerous wonderful awards and shows, but also&#13;
secrions devoted to other Tulsa performers. Perusing the ,veb page you can see the fun side of Helga,&#13;
Heart 2 Heart, the fabulous shows at the PlayMor along with the show stopping productions the group&#13;
has created through the years. These in~lude: CABARET, ROCKY HORIBBLE(a yearly tradition),&#13;
UTILE SHOP OF HORRORS&lt; and the annual 1WISTED TV. TWISTED TV is coming up again&#13;
this summer on AUGUST 6th, 7th, and 8th at the PlayMor.&#13;
As long as there is The PlayMor, Helga, and the circle of friends that are all willing to work so hard&#13;
for the community, and the constant need for fund-raising, there will be HELGA and HELGA'S&#13;
HEART 2 HEART. My hat is off to HELGA and her life partner TIM for making Tulsa a better p!ace&#13;
through their efforts and wonderful talents . .,., ......................................... .&#13;
You may contact Randy at: randy@ozarksstar.com Have a great month in T-Town.&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8 Page 22 August 1, 2004&#13;
Gay Tt-avelers from pagt! 7&#13;
BENTLEY'S Antiques and Fine Art is a&#13;
great place to start your day for shopping&#13;
for that special purchase to bring back&#13;
home. The shop is loaded with fine quality&#13;
antiques and art work including posters.&#13;
HOOPDEE SCOOTEE which just&#13;
celebrated it's 21st year under the same&#13;
ownership is a Fabulous place to find that&#13;
special gift to bring back home. Neil, the&#13;
owner is the perfect owner for such a&#13;
business. Selling lots of interesting&#13;
collectibles, I Love Lucy items, pink&#13;
flamingos, etc. You KNOW your in gay&#13;
heaven when you enter the shop.&#13;
MADISONS in downtown Saugatuck has&#13;
lots of unique gifts, a gourmet pantry and&#13;
lots of home decor items. The owners Tera&#13;
and Lynn have just refurbished part of the&#13;
shop and extended it to included more&#13;
items. They are super businesswomen.&#13;
Rob and Steve own severai businesses in&#13;
Douglas including the PINES Motor Lodge,&#13;
circa Antiques, Glitter &amp; Garden Shop and&#13;
Groovy! Groovy! Retro Gift Shop.&#13;
For fun entertainment be sure and check&#13;
out the MASON STREET WAREHOUSE.&#13;
Tom and Kurt give outstanding Broadway&#13;
perfonnances during the summer. Last&#13;
summer they performed, "I Love you,&#13;
your're perfect now change", "Dirty&#13;
Blonde" and "Our Sinatra". Dirty Blonde&#13;
which is a take off on Mae West was&#13;
showing when we were there and they did&#13;
an outstanding job. The audience loved it.&#13;
The Pump House Gym of course is a&#13;
favorite with the body builders.&#13;
There are so many gay owned businesses&#13;
in the area that one forgets to visit the&#13;
"breeders" who own some of the shops also.&#13;
Karen who manages the ArnericINN Lodge&#13;
and Suites is fabulous even if she was born&#13;
straight and Gene and Dee at the Olde&#13;
House Antiques are delightful people too.&#13;
The Fenn Valley Winery just down the&#13;
road gives wine tours daily. Don't forget&#13;
when traveling that straight people can be&#13;
fun and exciting also.&#13;
When in Saugatuck/Douglas don't&#13;
foroet to check out the Oval Beach area "' which is full of gays during the day.&#13;
There is a special area for nudists. Just&#13;
ask around. Need to unwind? Then go to&#13;
the Running Rivers Kayak Rentals. They&#13;
offer one to 8 hour trips offering&#13;
wilderness and wetlands.&#13;
The Saugatuck/Douglas villages are a&#13;
place where you can be yourself, walking&#13;
hand in hand to all the shops and&#13;
restaurants. Straights and gays get along&#13;
beautifully here. Such a tranquil, serene&#13;
way of life. For more information about&#13;
Saugatuck/Doulgas go to either:&#13;
W\Vw.dunesresort.com or&#13;
www.saugatuck.com. Have fun traveling&#13;
and always meet new people. And&#13;
always remember,&#13;
"Live, love, laugh ......... "&#13;
Donald Pile and Ray Williams&#13;
gayb]lvelers@ao 1. com&#13;
The Ozarks Star Page 23&#13;
'Marriage Protection Act'&#13;
Passes House,&#13;
Task Force&#13;
Calls Vote 'Disgusting'&#13;
-Statement from Matt Foreman, National Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Task Force Executive Director:&#13;
July 22, 2004&#13;
"This is a sad dav for all Americans, not&#13;
just because the U.S. House of&#13;
Representatives passed a bill that seeks to&#13;
deprive gay and lesbian Americans access&#13;
to federal courts to challenge the ugly&#13;
Defense of Marriage Act. It is particularly&#13;
sad because 233 members of Congress&#13;
ignored their oath to protect and defend&#13;
the Constitution of the United States by&#13;
voting in favor of a measure that is ..&#13;
blatantly unconstitutional. On the pos1t1ve&#13;
side, 194 Members of Congress rejected&#13;
this mean-spirited, divisive, disgusting and&#13;
clearlv unlawful bill. And, it is now clear&#13;
that , as in the U.S. Senate - the "Federal&#13;
Marriage Amendment" is far short of the&#13;
two-thirds majority (290 votes) it ,vould&#13;
need to pass."&#13;
BACKGROUND: The Marriage&#13;
Protection Act (MPA) seeks to strip power&#13;
from all federal courts - including the U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court - from hearing cases&#13;
challenging the Defense of&#13;
Marriage Act (DOI\fA). Most&#13;
legal scholars agree this act is&#13;
unconstitutional for several&#13;
reasons.&#13;
This "court stripping" would&#13;
interfere with the a primary&#13;
purpose of the federal courts, to&#13;
interpret and decide on questions&#13;
of federal law, such as DOMA.&#13;
The act would interfere with our&#13;
system of checks and balances&#13;
which is put in place to&#13;
co~mteract instances in which&#13;
orre branch of the government&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
oversteps its bounds. This act would severely&#13;
impede the independence of the court system,&#13;
undermining the role of the federal courts and&#13;
Supreme Court.&#13;
\'Vhile the Constitution gives authority to Congress&#13;
to establish lower federal courts and their&#13;
jurisdictions (e.g., the Circuit Courts of Appeal,&#13;
Bankruptcy Courts, etc.), Congress has never&#13;
passed a law deprhing the federal courts of&#13;
jurisdiction to hear cases involving constitutional&#13;
matters. l'Jl sides agree that the challenges to the&#13;
Defense of Marriage Act will be based on&#13;
Constitutional issues, including its Full Faith and&#13;
Credit and Equal Protection clauses.&#13;
Martha's Vine.1ard&#13;
19 W. Olive, Springfield, MO&#13;
417-864-4572&#13;
Southwest Missouri's Hottest&#13;
Entertainment Complex. Now&#13;
Celebrating 10 Years of Quality&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
www.marthascomplex.com&#13;
Volume l Issue 8&#13;
co&#13;
y Jack Fertig August 2004&#13;
tay real, Virgo!"&#13;
Page 24&#13;
es&#13;
This month, an opposition bet\veen the Sun and&#13;
Neptune opens up creative visionary inspiration&#13;
but triple-check all logic, facts, and ~1ath. '&#13;
Sensitivity runs high, but with tendencies to be&#13;
selfish and co-dependent. Stick with ,varm,&#13;
fuzzy, and creative; and be honest - at least with&#13;
yourself - about ulterior motives!&#13;
ARIES (tvfarch 21 to April 20): Your creative&#13;
juices are running high; input from friends will be&#13;
confusing at first, but can prove very helpful. Team&#13;
,vork isn't usually your forte, but this is a good time&#13;
to work on your rapport with groups.&#13;
TAURUS (April 21 to May 20): Nebulous work&#13;
demands may scare you back to safe, predictable&#13;
domesticity. Better to use your domestic security&#13;
as an inspiration to clear up the confusion at&#13;
work. Give up on turf battles now to win the war&#13;
later.&#13;
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Philosophical&#13;
poetry (Milton? Blake?) or magical-realist prose&#13;
holds special fascination nov., In any arguments,&#13;
your heart is strong, but not your logic. Here's a&#13;
good challenge: see how well you can do without&#13;
logic for a few days! ·&#13;
CANCER Gune 22 to July 22): Resist temptation&#13;
to get clever with money. It just won't work! To give&#13;
in on some impulse-spending (probably something&#13;
nasty and lurid), set aside some fun bucks for your&#13;
secret passion.&#13;
LEO Guly 23 to August 22): The indulgence of a&#13;
birthday glow only goes so far. Those who get lost&#13;
in your radiance can resent being overshadowed.&#13;
Be appreciative and generous (usually you're much&#13;
better at that!), but - here's the catch don't overdo&#13;
it.&#13;
VIRGO (August 23 to September 22): You could&#13;
now worry yourself 5ick or meditate yourself into&#13;
serene health. Real problems tempt vou to worrv&#13;
but remember your problem-solving skills and ·'&#13;
focus on solutions. Stay real, solve the deal, then&#13;
bask and heal!&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
LIBRA (September 23 to October 21): Your&#13;
teamwork instincts are especially sharp now; Go&#13;
out on a creative limb with a playful approach.&#13;
It works both ways, of course: listening to&#13;
others will hone your creativity.&#13;
SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21):&#13;
\'vork demands are complicating your home&#13;
life, but you're probably making the hardest&#13;
demands yourself. Discuss the problems&#13;
with your housemate. S /he will likely agree&#13;
that you're doing too much and ,vill be glad&#13;
to help.&#13;
SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to&#13;
December 20): Your love of a good&#13;
argument is stronger than usual, but your&#13;
sense of logic is weakened by emotion.&#13;
Argue from your heart, but don't try to pass&#13;
emotion off as anything else.&#13;
CAPRICORN (December 21 to January&#13;
19): You're especially sexy, but susceptible to&#13;
expensive flattery. Think first about what&#13;
you really value in your sexuality. Avoid&#13;
important financial decisions and be careful&#13;
not to let sticky fingers into your home.&#13;
AQUARIUS Ganuary 20 to February 18):&#13;
You're unusually vague about relationships&#13;
now. Let your partner (even if it's just a date,&#13;
a trick, or your pet Chihuahua) make the&#13;
decisions for the present. You're such a&#13;
control queen that giving it up for a few days&#13;
makes a great exer_cise!&#13;
PISCES (February 19 to March 19): Health&#13;
problems seem worse than thev reallv are&#13;
but check them out. Work is fu.ntic, but ~an&#13;
be resolved by cleaning up and organizing.&#13;
And meditate! You really need that now.&#13;
Jack Fertig has been working as a&#13;
professional astrologer since 1977 and is a&#13;
founding member of the Association for&#13;
Astrological Networking. He can be reached&#13;
for consultations at 415-864-8302, through&#13;
his website at http://www.starfack.com&#13;
Volume l Issue 8 Page 25&#13;
Senator's reply from page-5&#13;
on the American people changes in their&#13;
cultural institutions.&#13;
The time has come for a&#13;
Constitutional amendment to protect&#13;
traditional marriage and the right of the&#13;
people to decide the direction of their&#13;
culture for themselves. That's why I am a&#13;
cosponsor of SJR 30, the Federal&#13;
Marriage Amendment introduced by&#13;
Senator Allard that defines marriage as&#13;
the union of a man and a woman.&#13;
I was a cosponsor of the Defense of&#13;
Marriage Act in 1996 (DOIVfA), which&#13;
established a federal definition of&#13;
"marriage" as only a legal union between&#13;
one man and one woman as husband and&#13;
wife; and "spouse" as only a person of&#13;
the opposite sex who is a husband or&#13;
wife. Additionally, it ensured that no state&#13;
is obligated to accept another state's nontraditional&#13;
marriages (or civil unions) bv&#13;
operation of the constitution's full faitl;&#13;
and credit clause. It passed the House&#13;
342-67 and then in the Senate 85-14&#13;
including the "yes" votes of 61 curr~nt&#13;
senators. Thirty-seven states, including&#13;
:'vfissouri, have passed constitutional&#13;
amendments or statutes commonlv&#13;
known as "state DOJ\:1As" that fu;ther&#13;
protect traditional, heterosexual&#13;
marriage.&#13;
The first political right of people is the right&#13;
to govern themselves. Taking away this right&#13;
saps the legitimacy and vitality of any&#13;
democracy. One of the reasons America is so&#13;
divided is iliat over the years courts have&#13;
denied Americans the right to work out&#13;
cultural divisions in the forums where healthv&#13;
debate is possible-in the state legislatures or, ·&#13;
on national issues, in the Congress. We can&#13;
protect our cultural institutions and our right&#13;
to govern ourselves by amending the&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
Again, thank you for contacting me. If I&#13;
can be of further assistance, please don't&#13;
hesitate to call or v.-rite.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Senator Jim Taiem&#13;
August 1, 2004&#13;
Lesbian Notions from page-19&#13;
Granted, it's hard for the majority of us to&#13;
understand someone like the head of the Hawaii&#13;
Log Cabin Republicans, Jeffrey Bingham Mead,&#13;
who told a reporter that, in his chapter, "1\ll of us,&#13;
including me, believe that marriage is between one&#13;
man and one woman." The likelihood that many&#13;
gay people will vote for Bush this year boggles my&#13;
mind. In a similar vein, it's hard to understand how&#13;
Clarence Thomas could rule against affirmative&#13;
action, or how women could be ardent anti-choice&#13;
activists, working to eliminate their own&#13;
reproductive freedom.&#13;
Still, it seems that bullying gay people on the other&#13;
side of ilie political fence to agree with the rest of&#13;
us and to take up the activism we want them to&#13;
do is pretty naive. That's really what this new&#13;
round of outing amounts to: if you don't see&#13;
things our way, we'll hunt you down, hound you,&#13;
and tell everyone that you're gay. (But, oh yeah,&#13;
being gay is good.)&#13;
It's no coincidence that Aravosis is the activist&#13;
who gave us t\vo other similarly rigid campaigns:&#13;
StopDrLaura.com, an attempt to prevent the radio&#13;
doctor's TV show from airing because she might&#13;
use it to spout her antigay views; and&#13;
DearMary.corn, an outpouring of messages to&#13;
Mary Cheney trying to coerce her to use her sixfigure&#13;
job in the Bush-Cheney campaign to wield&#13;
influence with her powerful pop and his boss on&#13;
the issue of marriage equality. (Personally, I'm&#13;
skeptical that all those "Dear Mary" postcards&#13;
have made her lose sleep - especially if she takes&#13;
after her conscience-free Dad. I've read that there's&#13;
a new verb corning into popular usage: "to&#13;
Cheney" means to go from one cushy job to the&#13;
next ilirough personal contacts.)&#13;
I'm not suggesting that it's impossible for people&#13;
to change their political opinions; Republicans and&#13;
Democrats alike alter their political thinking all the&#13;
time. In particular, there are ample instances of&#13;
gay people who worked for homo-vicious rightwingers&#13;
and later decided it was against their&#13;
conscience to do so. But I am pretty certain the&#13;
process comes about through personal reflection&#13;
and political soul-searching, and not bec2use&#13;
they're badgered into it.&#13;
Volumn 1 Issue 8&#13;
Place you:r classified ad here for only&#13;
$6.00 for the first 15 words, and only 25&#13;
cents for each additional word ........ .&#13;
GooiLookingguy&#13;
gm;youμeasure,&#13;
')00~&#13;
Call Hector @&#13;
816-305-3988&#13;
In &amp; Out Calls&#13;
The Ozarks Star On-Line. Checkout&#13;
our website for Daily breaking GLBT&#13;
news. www.ozarksstar.com&#13;
Need A House Mate: Advertise here&#13;
for only $6.00 first 15 words, 25 cents for&#13;
each additional word.&#13;
Weekend Get-A-Way: Want to escape&#13;
for the weekend? Meet some new people?&#13;
Try Faces Guesthouse, Joplin, MO. Private&#13;
bath w/queen bed start at $75.00 night,&#13;
breakfast included. Resv. required. ( 417)&#13;
621-9915&#13;
Advertising Representative's&#13;
Part Time: For Kansas City,&#13;
Springfield, Tulsa, Oklahoma City,&#13;
Arkansas, Kansas and Joplin.&#13;
Commission based compensation. \\'lork&#13;
in the LGBTS business community.&#13;
Mail qualifications to: Ozarks Star&#13;
2401 E. 32nd St., Suite 10-243&#13;
Joplin, MO 64804.&#13;
Business Opportunity: Ever&#13;
dreamed of owning your own B&amp;B?&#13;
Beautiful 4 bed 4 bath 3200sqft fully&#13;
furnished in Joplin, MO For Sale. Call&#13;
Vicki Bronson at Charles Burt Realtors&#13;
417-4 34-0077&#13;
1010 E. 20th&#13;
Joplin MO64804&#13;
800-782-7822&#13;
The Ozarks Star Page 27 August 1, 2004&#13;
Four States Community Directory&#13;
-Bars- Nightclubs- -Organizations-&#13;
Arkansas, Fayetteville (479)&#13;
Ron's Place- 523 W. Poplar- - - - - 479-442-3052&#13;
Studio 716- -716 W Sycamore- 479-571-1300&#13;
Arkansas, Fort Smith (479)&#13;
Burnzee's- -2301 Towson Ave #C- --479-494-7300&#13;
J(inkeads- -10041/2 Garrison Aw- - - - -479-783-9988&#13;
Club 1022 • -1022 Dodson Aw. - - - -479-782-1845&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Ree's-··· 716 S. Main - - - - - --417-627-9035&#13;
Missouri, Kansas City (816)&#13;
Bell Star's - - 1321 Grand A,·e- - - -816-421-1288&#13;
Missie B's- - - -805 W. 39th St- - - -816-561-0625&#13;
Sidestrcet Bar - - - -413 E. 3rd- - 816-531-1775&#13;
Sidekicks Saloon - - 3707 Main St- 816- 931-1430&#13;
Missouri, Springfield ( 417)&#13;
The Edge- -424 Boom·ille A,·e- --417-831-4700&#13;
Martha's Vineyard- 219 W Olive- - -417-864-4572&#13;
Oz Bar - 504 E. Commercial - - - - - -417-831-9001&#13;
Ronisuz Place- - --821 College- - - -417-864-0036&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Hi-Lo Club - - 1221 NW SOth- - -405-843-1722&#13;
Finish Line -2200 NW 39th Expwy- 405-525-0730&#13;
Club Rox- -3535 NW 39th Expwy -405-947-2351&#13;
Top:mga Grill &amp; Bar-3535 NW 39th -405-947-2351&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa (918)&#13;
Bamboo Lounge- 7204 E. Pine• - --918-836-8700&#13;
Club Maverick-• 822 S. Sheridan• 918-835-3301&#13;
Heads &amp; Tails- - 7944 E. 21st - - - - - - 918-660-7878&#13;
Club Majestic- 124 N. Boston - -918-584-9494&#13;
New 1\ge Renegades- -1649 S. Maio - -918-585-3405&#13;
Play-Mor-Club- - 1737 S. Memorial - -918-838-9792&#13;
Silver Star Saloon- -1565 S. Sheridan -918-834-4234&#13;
TNT's- 2114 S. Memorial- - -918-660-0856&#13;
Tool Box- 1338 E. 3rd- - 918-584-1308&#13;
Yellow Brick Road- - 2630 E. 15th - - -918-293-0304&#13;
-LodgingMissouri,&#13;
Joplin (417)&#13;
Faces Guesthouse B&amp;B -417-621-9915&#13;
Fairfield Inn by Marriott- - - - -417-624-7800&#13;
Missouri, Ava&#13;
Catus Canyon Campground 417-683-919')&#13;
Missouri, Lampe&#13;
KOKOMO Campground- - - - 417-779-5084&#13;
Arkansas, Eureka Springs&#13;
MCC Living Spring- - - - - - - - - - - -870-253-9337&#13;
Kansas, Pittsburg (620)&#13;
River of Life 1709 N Walnut - - - - - - 11AM&#13;
PSU-QS/\ .... 1701 S. Broadway ... 620-231-0938&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
MCC Spirit of Christ-2902 E 20th, - - - • -7PM&#13;
UCCFF--204 N. Jackson A,·e, - 10:301\i\f&#13;
Aids Project Ozarks- 513 Kentucky- - 417-624-5788&#13;
Missouri, Springfield (417)&#13;
Rainbow Christian Ch-837 W. Madison-417-866-6206&#13;
Unitarian Universalist Church - - - - - 417-833-2723&#13;
APO- - - - - 1901 E. Bennett, suite D- 417-881-1900&#13;
ShowMe MO Pride - - - - - - 417-864-4459&#13;
GLO Community Ctr- 518 E. Commerical-869-3978&#13;
PFLAG-Springficld- - - - - - - -417-889-1059&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa (918)&#13;
MCC United- -1623 N. Maplewood- -918-838-1715&#13;
-Business ServicesKansas,&#13;
Pittsburg&#13;
Mystic Creations- - - - - - - - - (620)231-6790&#13;
Missouri, Joplin (417)&#13;
Penny Smart,Hair Salon -509 Maio- 417-623-3500&#13;
Massage By Rachael- - - - - - - - - - - - 417-438-3664&#13;
Body Swim Massage Therapy- - - - 417-825-5800&#13;
Charles Burt Realtors-Vicki Bronson-417-434-0077&#13;
RE/MAX - - -Cathe Letts- - - 417-483-5313&#13;
Office Max- -440 Rangeline Rd- - - -417-623-1007&#13;
The Lions Den - - - -Austin Letts - - 417-623-876_7&#13;
Joan Szymanski- Beauty Consultant- 417-673-1181&#13;
Night Things Boutique-719 MainSt- 417-659-9913&#13;
Missouri, Springfield (417)&#13;
Priscilla's·· - -1918 S. Glenstorn• • 417-881-8444&#13;
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City&#13;
Century21 · -4301 NW 63rd #100 - - 405-840-2106&#13;
Hollywood Hotel- 3535 NW 39th Ex-405-947-2351&#13;
Priscilla's- 615 E. Memorial 405-755-8600&#13;
Oklahoma, Tulsa&#13;
Kelly Kirby,CPA-4815 S Han-ard -918-,47-5466&#13;
Underguy.com - - -825 E. 3rd - - - -877-7-BOXERS&#13;
Priscilla's - - 7925 E. 4ht 918-627-4884&#13;
Priscilia's - - - - 5634 \v. Skdly - - - - - 918-446-6336&#13;
Priscilla's - - - -11344 E. 11th - - - - -- -918-438-4224&#13;
Priscilla's - - - - 2333 E. 71st- - - - - -- -918-499-1661&#13;
Volume 1 Issue 8 Page28 August 1, 2004&#13;
-!lllern.eit V e nightclub&#13;
716 W. Sycamore St., Fayetteville, AR. (479) 571-1300 www.smdio716.net&#13;
Arkansas LeatherSIR/Leatherboy&#13;
2005&#13;
September 12t1,&#13;
Doors open at 8pm&#13;
Open to residents of&#13;
Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas&#13;
Visit www.studio716.net&#13;
to download application&#13;
Or come in and vist us!&#13;
Member $3 Guest $5&#13;
Daily Spccws &amp;: Events - Drag Shows Every Sunday-Mcmbcn Frc,c.. Guest $5</text>
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&#13;
This magazine discusses topics of AIDs, education, politics, local and national civil rights of the LGBT community, and advice for relationships and places to visit. &#13;
&#13;
This collection is PDF searchable. Physical copies are also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission.&#13;
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                <text>C.D. Ward&#13;
T.J. Kelly&#13;
Greg Steele&#13;
Randy Vineyard&#13;
Steve T. Urie&#13;
Donald Pile&#13;
Ray Williams</text>
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Western Arkansas&#13;
Eastern Oklahoma&#13;
Southeast Kansas&#13;
The United States of America (50 states)</text>
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&#13;
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                    <text>MASS AGE SYSTEM
.... ’
eauty
The Science of Timeless

�Follies Revue, Inc. DistribUtes Funds,#om~,=ge o~z
presentedevent posters to spons~s, who included Miller Brands of Oklahoma and TCI
Cablevision of Tulsa and recognized continued support from the Bravo Network, Joan
and Bob Hunt, USAA Credit Card, the Williams Co.s Fonn_d~_!ion and the Zink
FouDdatioo. Special thankg Went to. the Follies Cabaret cast,.Tulsa~ Ballet Theatre.and
VOCalist Pam .Van Dyke. The Co-4~hai~$ of this. year’s .production, "An Evening-of
Cabaret" were Dr. Eddie and Caroline Abbott-and:Dr. James and Jorja Johnson. The
event involved over- 100 volunteers and nearly 700 patrons participated.
A~ist Kelly Vandiver created a painting of Lisa Tiger for 1993 poster. It and t!~1992
poster are available.at Frame of Mine in Brookside.-The artist for the 1994 poster will
be nationally known Native American artist, Dana Tiger.
The annual theatrical production was establisheU to raise landsfor local agencies
providing direct services~o Persons Living with AIDS or HIV, and for AIDS education
for the community.
~
~

Mission Statement of Lesbians &amp; Gays for DC Statehood
We, the lesbian, bisexual and gay community, demand statehood for the District of
Columbia becanse we are honest, tax-paying and patriotic citizens and as such.are being
denied the very i~alienable freed~ns, privileges and. hnman rights that our fellow
Americans t_a_k_e for granted. Among those freedoms and privileges denied to us is a fullyrecognized and empowered voting representative in the United States Congress- the
equivalent of taxation without representation.
_We seek to educate, organiTe, mobilize and represent the lesbigay community in the
straggle forequal h|nnan rights in the qnestfor statehood. We further seek to ed.ucate
the,tatehood movement and the general public about the b,man rights straggles of the
lesbigay community.
As citizens of New Columbia we .would not be Subjects of an unrepresentative,
tmsympathetic, and dictatorial government, but citizens of an accountable, representative and loyal government.Why should the lesbigay community care about statehood7
Domestic Partnership, Non-discrimlnation poficy in employmenL pubfic services,
housing and assistance, Adoption, Marriage, Health Care, Sodomy Reform, Censorship.
Three voting members of Congress to vote for yonon issues concerning:
-the military ban on gay, lesbian and bisexual persons

-the Fedend Lesbigay Ci~ Rights bin
-national health care reform
-National Commi~ion on Gay a~d Lesbian Youth
¯Why statehood?
Of 155 nations in the world with elected national legislatures, the US stands alone in
denying residents ofits capital representation. The average tax bill of each DC resident
exceeded that of the residents of46 states, taxation wi thont representation. The District’ s
population exceeds thai of 3 states- Alaska, Wyoming and Vermont. More DC residents
have died in wars protecting America’s:freedom than 20 states.

70 Protest for DC
State - 24 Arrested

THE PARACHUTE
OKLAHOMA

Hovem~19, 1993- Washington, DC
Over 70. people marched from the
Mayor’s Office to Capitol Hill in the last
p.La)m~ed publicdemonstration bef.ore the
vote on HR51, Delegate Eleanor H01mes
Norton’s (D-DC) bill to create the slate of
New Columbia, this weekend.
The Lesbigay community was represented with over 50 rainbow~pride flags
being prominently displayed by gay, lesbian and bisexual people as well as their
supporters. Barbara Helmick, co-~halr of
the Lesbigay Action Task Force addressed
the crowd, "We’re here to educate the
people in the movement, in New Colum:
bia, the Congress and the nafiofi on issues
of hmn~n fights, democracy a~d participative government." George Neighbors,
Jr., another of the co-ch~irS said, "We ~
here today as part of your movement. We
are here to unite, not divide. Let’ s continue
to w~ together down the. long mad to

PublishedEditor-in-Chief
Chuck Breckefidge
Assistant Publisher
Wayne D.
Oklahoma Editors/Writers
Chuck Breckenridge
Tom Neal
Writers
Cookie At’buckle
Advertising
Chuck Breckenridge
Tom Neal

Graphic Design
Tom Neal
316-536-6519
Issued on the 1st of each month, the entire
contem of this publication are p~etected by
US opyright 1993 by the Parachute and may
not be ~elxoduced eithex in whole o~ in part

At the steps of the Longworth House
Building, 24 people were arrested in pro-

without written pezmission hom the pubSshe~.

. test to lack of representation. Of the 24,
three were with the Task Force: Tony
Smnmers of the DC Coalition of Black
Lesbians, Bisexunls and Gays, Karen
Annagost, former president of the DC
Gertrude Stein Club, and co-chalr of the
Lesbigay Action Task Force, George
Neighbors, Jr. They were held for over 5
hours and released with an arraignment
date of December 1, 1993. A trial is
expected February 22,- 1993 with over

~ientation.
(~a~a~p~ada~ i~ a~amn~d m be f~

Publication o~ a name ~ photo in no way
indicates ~ reflects that pe~on’s sexual

The Para~ho~ldahoma i~ a n~w.~ and ~wnt~

~ stateh~ arrests putting the government on ~. ~e related mat’l, left.

Certified Public Accountant
9933 East 16th, Suite 104
Tulsa 741~
91~93~, OKC ~5-942-1~2

1635. E. 15TH ST.
TULSA, OK 74120
599-8070

¯ . Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian &amp; Gay l
Communities with Pride
Look for our Rainbow Flag

Estate Planning
Adoptions
Personal Injury

IIIIIIllllllllllllll:lllll.~_

Criminal Law

.Bankruptcy
.

Perms-Cuts

"

Color - Nailsl

.

,.

. Workers Compensat, on

I

Beauty One

,.

1. 800 742-9468 or 91.8-352-9504
128 East.Broadway, Drumnght, Oklahoma
Weekend and evening appointments are available~

.,
I Shawn Bayliss

Know Your
THE PARACHUTE

December 1993, OK-2

1 Full Service Stylist

3200 S. Riverside in:

Place One Apartments I

�,

... the NEW place to
iparty in Tulsa~

"

THURSDAYS&amp; S

SATURDAYS

21 to enter

Alley Enfrancc fo 3 3-!. O S. Peoria

::!ii::ii i i !!i!!

-

�MTV
MTV’s hip documentary series Real
World II tracks the lives of several young
adults living together in Los Angeles.The
format is a combination of cinema verite
intercut with talking head commentary.In
the September 10 episode, a new roommate, Beth Stolarczyk, arrives on the
scene. Wearing an ’Tin not gay but my
.girlfriend is" t-shirt, Beth is defmitely an
out lesbian. Reactions from others in the
household demonstrated their own
prejudices and curiousities; providing a
clear comparison to the intelligent and
upfront Beth.
The October’7 episode featured the
roommates playing a get-to-know-yon
game where each answered questions
about themselves.Beth Was eloquent in
pointing out that questions to her were
about her sexnallty only and that was only

a part of who she was. This was a very
positive presentation(
Your commentsto MTV about

"

hands. They begin to dance; a little two
step of sorts.A moment or two later they
separate and walk off into the sunset. An
on-screen message then reads, "Would
you rather they killed each. other?" Very.
we!l done, with beautiful production values. And, most importantly, very positive
gay representation. ¯

Can CAN
Never at aloss to distort, lmisrepresent
and outfight lie to raise more money off
the imzges of gays and lesbians, CAN, the
Christian Aetion Network- abeterosexual
supremacist group - has been sending

"clips of pornographic films~ to politicians in Washington, D~C, including
President Clin_ton. A 15 minute video,
which CAN mlgrepresents as having the
"stamp of approval".of the,National Endowment of theArts (NEA), is composed
of excerpts from fllm.~ shown at the 1991
PimburghIntern~_aonalGay and. Lesbian
Film Festival. The CAN excerpts depic.t+

inclusion ofgaysand l~biansin the
world~ cen. be directed_ to: Office of :the

Broadway+ New York !~,

..

est, VA 24551.

.founder of New York’s Gay Men’s Health
Crisis and ACT UP, is interviewed by
¯
David
Nimmons in Playboy Magazine’s
FromJane Alexander upon being sworn
September
issue. Blunt as ever, Kramer
in as the new Chair of the NEA; "If I can
compares
the
Reagan and Bush inaction
accomplish any~h ing as chairman, it would
"
on
AIDS
t9
I-lifter’s
acts against the Jews;
be to release the imagination and creative
wonders
whether
Clinton
may be one of
spirit that I feel is alive in all people of all
our
worst
Presidents;
targets
the Center
ages in this ’vast and wonderful county of
for
Disease
Control
and
the
National
Inours,"
¯
stitutes of Health as wasteful and deWright Veering Right? structive and criticizes ACT UP for its
NBC President Robert Wright has
bureaucracy problems.
named Roger Aries, media advisor to
And he wants more from the gay comformer Presidents Nixon,:Reagan and
munity, e~lling it "meek, recalcitrant and
Bush and the executive producer of"The
useless in the battle against A1DS. "When
Rush Limbangh Show," as the president
Nimmons says, "We know more about
of CNBC, the cable ~k ishow and busiH1V than we have ever 0mown)," Kramer
uess uews uetwork. SaidWright, ,(Roger
responds, "Bo!!~hiL..If we knew so much
Aries is a) one of a kind in the television
we’d have a cure by now+"Kramer de,
business. He represents a unique ombi- ~ scribes a "Manhattan Project" as the way
nation of promoter, entrepreneur and,
to an AIDS cure and says t_b+t_ letters to
above all, a highly talented television
congress, the President and newspapers is
producer." Ailes will also lake charge of
"
"
wex
AmericaTalking, aNBC cable channel
Whether thig lenethv.interview br~__Ir$.

Quotable Quote...

.In ~ .America of Ib,.. ’90s..:.those ap,.: :

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l~m,~ons.are sometimes: ontentiom’

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Pla be

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lesbi~

~es credit for not onlY

miutinm this in~iew but for atlowinx
.present conuections~to the right wing.
Share
¯ your concerns w~th" Mr,- Wright
by writing: Robert ,Wright, president,
NBC, 30 Rockefeller P~; New York¯
10021; CNBC,, 3000 W~ Alameda Av,
enue~ Burl~nk~ CA 91523.

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918-749-2033, FAX 749-5992

�GLAAD Media
News
Briefs
by Al Kielwasser
San Francisco Bay Area Chapter
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance
Against Defamation

Fresh Prince, Stale Phobia
A feature story in the Fail ’93 issue of
Tell, a new teen magazine, profiles actor/
rapper Will Smith Coest known for his title
role in the NBC sitcom The Fresh Prince
of Bel Air). Feature writer Karen
Catchpole describes Smith’s "commitment to growing as an actor," explaining
that hejust hired his first acting coach and
"is taking his best shot at becoming a bone
fide movie star" by playing the lead in the
upcoming fdm version of Six Degrees of
Separation.
However, the "actor" shows few signs
of growth when it comes to homophobia..
Smith’s character in Six Degrees of Separation is gay. When he accepted the role,
Smith knew that the script called for an
on-screen kiss with another man. However, when the time came to shoot the
scene, Smith refused. "I just couldn’t do
it," Smith said. "I mean, I’m an actor. I
can sit there with a greasy smile on my
face and act like I kissed a man. But it’s
different when you actually, physicaily,
kiss a man. It wouldn’t have been acting.
It would have been real. I have kissed
girls on-screen. I could work that out.
The difference is how people perceive it.
If I’d kissed a guy and then went home,

they’d be like, ’Yo, man. Why’d you do
that?’ And I’d be like, ’You know, Man.
I’m an actor. I was acting.’ Andthey’dbe
like :Yo, man. You kissed a dude.
Something’s wrong with you, man.’ I just
didn’t want to hear that."
Let’s just ignore (for now) why Smith
is so worried that if he "actuaily, physically, kissed a man," he would not have
been acting but that "it would have been
real." Perhaps be’s just suffering from the
common hetero-anxiety that straight men
can become gay men just by touching or
kissing another guy in "that way." Perhaps not. In any case, Smith’s attitude
demonswates a remarkable lack of semi,
tivity. For Smith, apparently, acting is not
a means for expanding awareness but
reinforcing ignorance.
Write to Will Smith, Fresh Prince of
Bel Air c/o NBC TV, 3000 West Alameda
Ave., Burbank, CA 91505.

Other Mothers
The CBS School break Special, broadcast on the afternoon of October 15, depicted the travails of a high school freshman who weathers homophobic ostracism when his peers discover that he has
two lesbian mothers. Other Mothers, directed by Lee Shallof and produced by
Joseph Stem, depicts a happy home life
for teenager Will Jergenson (William
Russ),hisbiologicalmotherLinda(Joanna
Cassidy) and his "other mother" Paula
(Meredith Baxter).
In a "Read More About It" postscript to
the program, actress Meredith Baxter says:

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THE PARACHUTE

December 1993, OK-6

"To learn more about the changing roles
in our parenting society, the Library of
Congress recommends these books: Diversity in American Families, by Maxine
Baca Zinn and D. Stanley Eitzen, and
Rethinking the Family, edited by Barrie
Thome and Marilyn Yaiom.
Advertisers on this aff’n’ming program
were: Multigrain Cheerios (General
Mills), Jell-O Actifed Sinus medicine,

Cortisone-10, Campbelrs-soup, Sears,
Alrwick, Purina Cat Chow, Yuban Coffee,
Aquafresh toothpaste, Efidac 24,
Fleishmann’s Egg Beaters, Lever 2000
soap, Mrs. Dash spices, JC Penny, 1-800DENTIST (a registered service mark of
Applied Anagmmics, Inc.), Post Raisin
Bran, Muggies diapers, M&amp;M’s, V-8
juice, Prego spaghetti sauce, Preparation
H, Hershey’s Hugs, and Rolaids.
Comments should be sent to Jeff
Sagansky, President, CBS Entertainment,
7800 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA
90213.

To Boldly Go Where
No Queer
Has Gone. Before
Shortly before Gene Roddenberry’s
death, he met with members of The USS
Lambda, a lesbian and gay Star Trek fan
club in Los Angeles. At this meeting,
Roddenberry stated that, since there was
virtually no racism in his 24th century TV
world, he doubted that there would, be
any homophobia either. He agreed to

include openly (and umnistakenly) gay
and lesbian main characters on Star Trek:
The Next Generation as well as other Trek
spin-offs. After Roddenberry’s death, his
succes~rs promised to follow his wishes
and develop lesbian, gay and bisexual
characters.
Star Trek: The Next Generation is now
in its f’mai season and we have yet to see
any openly queer figures on the show.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine has begun its
second season; though there are representatives of widely diverse cultures--from
shape shifters to Ferengi--there seems to
be no room. for lesbian or gay characters
on the Bajoran space station. Isn’t it about
time that Star Trek really went where no
one has gone before?
Write Rick Berman and Mic.h~_el Piller,
Executive Producers, Star Trek TNG &amp;
DS9, Paramount Domestic Television,
5555 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA
90038.

�OC SO0
FRIDAY-SATURDAY 10PM TILL 2AM
SUNDAY 9PM TILL~ 2AM (SHOWS AT 10 &amp; 12)

PRO:UD.TO. BE GAY OWNED AND OPERATED

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Delivery A vai/able

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M-F 9-6, Sat.’9-7, Sun. 12-5

TULSA. OK

234--9007
The Parachute Page 8-B

�is skyrocketing. Unlike the West
welcome all people regardless of
Coast, ~Tblsa Organizations have fortheir HIV status,-age, ra~e, religious
gotten that the main goal is TO
" beliefs, forsexual .exwession. BE=WORK TOGETHER TO EDUCATE
ING AWARE ’focuses. on positive
YOUTH AND PROVIDE SERVICES ~
thinking and living with HIV....not
¯
AND SUPPORTFORA~0NE IN~ f~om it.
¯
FECTED. WII~H AIDS~.HIV./ ~ "
~ For meeting .times and location
"
if there are .two ortwo hundred.
please call ProjectReach Out at
different services or Support groups
(918) 298-4622 or (918) 451-0219.
everyone should .work together to
We look fonNard to headng from you.
bring this disease under control! I
am embarrassedand appalled by the
amou~nt of infighting, backstabbing
and the directors of these organizaFUNDRAISERHUGE
tions thinking Tulsa ..is their.own..
:=~"~sUCCESS i. "
They know wing they are and-this iS
A
fund
raiser, ’~ The Bonep0inter Sis-.
my message: Get. :over =your seif
ters
&amp;
FriendS,
Safari S~ Good"; h~ld
righteousness and supl:xxt anyone
.October 29that the Bunkhouse wasa
and everyone who is making an efgreat success raising over five hundred
-fort t6 heipand support Tuls~ns With
dollars for. R.A.I.N.~and the ,Winds
HIV-AIDS. Shame, shame, shame.
House.i Also over eleven boxes of food
Get with the program!
,
was collected atthe door for the Light.~
houseM.C.C, food pantw.
P.S. It is important that this be
A large.crowd showed up for the benpdnted because I am a client of these
efit, despiti~ the.snow and cold weather
¯ Organizations. Being HW-ARC, Istili
and enjoyed a fun evening of camp,drag
findthe time and energy to give to
and Coma[ade~y._ Manylof the perform~ everyone no matter who they.are or
ers were new t0the scene having never
what their problem is. There are
. appeared On any stage.. The eveningenough people ~t~ givep~perser-.
¯ :.also included a costume conte~t and
. vices, and anyone~should~be wel, " . raffle ofsome wonderfuldonated items~
come to join the fight against AIDS!
If we don’t.join together we will all be

: Facelift.Massage Arrives" in

QUEER’ CONSORTIUM

Oklahoma
until recently, Belavi was available
only in well known facial message
salons in Hollywood and Bevedy
Hills. All McGraw, U~dsay Wagner,
Jodie Foster, Robert Wagner, Barbara Streisand, and many others
have sought this rejuventing therapy
for their stressed and aging skin.
Belavi Facelift Massage Therapy is
now available for the first time in
Oklahoma. This hands-on approach
often stpes, all of wich contribute to
yothful, healther skin. The process
uses soothingly warm towi_s through.
out the ten steps.
Stephen Scott, Oklahomas only Certiffed Belavi Specialist welcome you
to try the system fo~ yourself, orgive
a Figt Certifmated to someone you
love for a more youthful, radiant appearance. Fo.r addisional information including a fee video otto schedule an appointment call (405) 5258689 in Metro Oklahoma or (800)
546-8689 Nationwide.

ANNOUNCES SECOND
ART EXHIBITION
The Queer Consortium, a collective of
Oklahoma queer a~sts, announces its
second art exhibit titled, "Queers Unbound: Celebrating Our Culture." The
exhibition will be held at the Tdangle Association, 2136 N.W. 39th Street in Oklahoma City.
In observance of AIDS Awareness
Day, the show will begin on December
with all art draped in black. An opening
reception for the show is scheduled for
December 11 at 8 p.m., andthe art will
be unveiled at thattime. The exhibition is
scheduled to run through January 28,
1994.
The Show will include the work of Shar
Johnson, Diana Faulkner, TommyThomas, Keith Porter, Clif Trowbridge, all of
Oklahoma City; Diane Duffer Gerald
David, Ken Carlyle, all of Norman; Larry
Harriman of Tulsa; and :Joe Rackley of
Stillwater.
The artists’ work includes photography, oil paintings, drawing, performance
art, and sculpture. The work will be on
display at the Triangle Association seven
days a week, from noon to~10 p.m. Ad-mission is free of charge.
"The Queer Consortium wishes to
continue its mission of _celebrating the diverse cultures represented in Oklahoma’s
lesbian, gay, and bisexual communities,"
said Dale Smithson Triangle Association
Director and event coordinator. "This kind
of event brings together people from
. Oklahoma’s various queer commun~es,
and draws attention to the talent these
communities have to offer."
The Queer Consortium recently
achieved overwhelming success with its
first exhibition, "Queerly R’s Art."
For more information, call Dale
at 405-843-8378:

Deadline
for Januarysubmissions
and advertisemenl
.December 16th

Impress yourpartner.

Use a condom.
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian InformationSource."

¯

The Parachute Page 9-B

Occupation: Agitator
:,

,

"

/

Age: ~unknowable
Hobbies: T-shirt collecting

�CHRISTMAS CONCERT
Preparations are underway
for the fourth annual OKC
METRO-MENS CHORUS Christmas concert, "Ring, Christmas
Bells"_under the direction of Mr.
Franklin Roberts. The concert
will be held Saturday, December
4th, 1993 beginning at 8:07 P.M.
at the First Unitarian Church, 600
N.W. 13, Oklahoma City; Okla,
homa.
This yeads-concert will feature
many old favorites as well as
some songs that many may not
be famlhar with. Two songs
scheduled for performance were
written by local composer Mark
Houston. Tl~e Chorus feels
ored that Markis giving them the
opportunity to perform these special Christmas songs. Mark is
also preparing a commissioned
piece for the OKC METROMENS CHORUS, which the Chorus hopes to perform at their
Spring concerf in 1994. This
commission is made possible by
a grant awarded to the OKC
METRO-MENS CHORUS by the
G.A.L.A. Chorus Association
and the fine grant writing skills of
th# Chorus’ Accompanist,
Stephanie Johnson.
Also appearing at this yeads
Christmas concert will be The
Metropolitans, a five member

group from within the chorus who
perform at local benefits and services. TheMetropolitans are also
making themselves available to
perform at Christmas functions
for a small donation. If you are
interested, in having the Metropolitans perform for Christmas or
any other function, please contact Terry Knapp at 405-6771646.
The chorus is once again.offedng ad space in their Christmas
program. Something new in the
program this year is the offedng
of a patPon page for those individual~" wishing to support the
Chorus, but do not feel the need
fora formal ad. No addressesor
phone numbers will be included
on the patron page, only individuals’ names, (either real names,
nick names-or stage .names-).
Those interested in placing an ad
or their name on the patron page
please contact Ralph Shafer at
405-737-6576 or David Coffey at
405-521-1378.
To .purchase tickets for you
and your guests please see any
chorus member or contact Terry
Knapp at 405-677-1646.
The Chorus has enjoyed success at their previous Christmas
concerts and hope to fill the
house once again this year.

~ur~

3007 THE PASEO

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK

(405)’525-CAFE
TRACY TULLIS,
Busin~s/Vtanas~r
AFI-ER HOUIL~ PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
LOCATED IN HISTORIC PASEO
FAMILY OWNED &amp; OPERATED

�FINANCIAL PLANNING
FOR THESERIOUS~

OTHER RECORDS AND IN-FORMATION ;
-’,~ . ....¯

................. iLL"
By:-Cookie Arbuckle
including
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMiNtS~
ties you had on the job. -If you
TRATION (SSA). DISABIEITY
have a resume handy, or ,have
PROGRAMS
"
kept records of where yoU.have~
SSA maintains two different
worked, that will help.
disability~ programs -, Social SeORIGINAL DOCUMENTATION
curity Dis~ibility insurance(SSDI)
SSA will need ORIGINAL
and Supl~lementai Secudty In*
DOCUMENTATION. Originals.of
come (SSi) disability, Both.proyour birth certificate (~o, your
-grams
provide a-,-monthly
income
..........
~-hosp=tal
b=rth .announcement will
........
........
=~
mr people w~tn,glu~s (or anyse- , .not ~1o norwill ohotocooies~ ~nd
. .v.ere d.isa.b.ili~a.~d .o.v~.£.6,~;~:i:b.ut:": ~.i.~h-~e ~-riginal~. ~0~-ali itS; -(ar~ii~
tne rules-that effect, eligioil!W for ii membe~s If vou worked
--: - - -’
- t~
them are different.
year;
SSDI is an insurance program
2 form or if
that employers; and employees
year’s tax return. pay for with their federal income
If you are. filing-for SSI, they
tax or FICA. Eligibilityisbased
wilineed to ask you information
on_ work history: and the.a~ount ~ about your incomeand bank
of your benef’~ is. based on earncounts.
ings.
:&lt; ~
~
DECISION MAKING
" SSI benefits .are paid to..... ~ourappfiGation is-handled by
pe°plewh°hav-e.~in.¢°me~and ~:~ ~odiff~el,re~[Offices. The"physilimitedresoumes.:MEDiCALRE-.~ cai part (meaning literally all
QUIREMENTS ARETHE SAME
medical records and anything
FOR BOTH PROGRAMS. AND
about your physical condition) will
DISABILITY IS~ ~DECIDED B;Y --be sent to the State’s Disability
THE SAME PROCESS,
Determination Service or Unit,
Some helpful hintstorem~3-~ ~, The "oaoer work" Dart or the fi.be~i Keep a dngb~d..~~ ~~,.~-. ~na171ce~ ;re handt~c~ at another
In !t you..may recor~l specmc ~ ~-"-=~ffiCe: USually, paperwork atthat
¯
events, with
....~w~ll,
~, ~..,.~,,~ ~ -~~
level
stay, unless the re are
...,, correct~names;~ad;
,,=
dresses and phonenumbers for
diffi~=l~i~x ~h~n th~ f’m=ancial oart
your physicians Keep tra~ck~.o ,~ ~ ........ ent" ~;~ e " "
dates of ,#is|tS arid~, hosp.tal" ad~ ~, ~ b~ ~iled at ~nv time
dresses With
" of ws~ ~and " -for further information by either
- " dates
the types of treatment~received,
of the offices,~ Theymay schedMake a list of all the medications
ule for an exam or mail, other
you :have been-,onfor at least a
: f0rm,~f~r youto fill out.
year. ~ Mark, the ones you ~have.....
TO BE CONTINUED IN JANUbeen using forthepast 3 months, ~_ ARY ISSUE

7117 E. Reno
Midwest City, OK 73110

(405) 737-5353,1-800-880-1053 ° FAX 405-737-5666

your home away Irom I-,Omel.

The Habana. lnn
1 80: GuEsT Rooms ¯
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Cable TV

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�TEARS OF LAUGHTER

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WORKING FOR A

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Poly/cotton blend, Ash color.
Size~. S,M,L,XL,XXL, XXXL

Witha

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OKC’s Finest Cloggers

Hosted by Kitty Litter
FREE PARTY FAVORS &amp; MORE!

Reservations available.- Cover Charge

The Parachute Page 12-B

�Parachute Welcomes all
39th Street bars as
Distribution Points
The Parachute is proud to announce
these new distribution points in Okla~
homa City. The Parachute is now
available at all bars on the stdp: We
wish to thank the owners and manegers for their supporLand acceptance.

Support the

Organization
that
Supports

YourFreedom

~ACLU
l’h¢ American- Civil: Libcrtio~ Unio~
Protest Your Rights of Fr~ Sl~ch,

ACLU of Oklahoma
Human Rights P_roject
News

The Parachute Goes to:
Wichita, Kansas
Topeka, Kansas
Wellington, Kansas
Junction City, Kansas
Manhattan, Kansas
Salina, Kansas
Emporia, Kansas
Great Bend ,~ Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
Kansas City, Kansas Drumdght, Oklahoma
Oswego, Kansas
Compton, Arkansas
Chicago, III.
Souix Falls, South Dakota
Minneapolis, Minn.
Tulsa, Oklahoma
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W~st Hollywood, Cal.
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By: Michael Canfield
The fledgling coalition-known as the
Oklahoma Human Rights Project is actively proceeding in accomplishing one of
its in,ally stated primary goals, repeal of
Oklahoma’s archaic and unequally enforced crime against nature (sodomy) law.
The legal record already contains case,
Post .v. the State of Oklahoma in which
current sodomy law was ruled inapplicable io heterosexual citizens. This is
contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment
of the U.S. Cons~tution which guarantees
all Americans, among other things, equal
protection of the laws. ACLU of Olda.homa, in conjunction with the mission of
the Oklahoma Human Rights Project,
seeks to nullify the inequity of the sodomy law through litigation.~
In order for this stated goal to be accomplshed, plaintiffs are needed to make
a legal challenge. The Project is looking
for someone who has been accused of
municipal offenses such as offering-to.
engage in lewd acts; as tong as the
charges do not involve minors or prostitutiot~, and the defendantis without legal
representation. Alternately, the ACLU
would also like to assemble a group of
indMduals which would include both Gay
men and Lesbians who wish to challenge
the state statute.
Becoming a pl~aintilf in this type ofcase ¯
would, of course, involve a great amount
of publicity, those people with the convic,
tions and the. courage step fOrward ira:
mediately. If-youor anyone you know
wishes to volunteer asa plaintiff, contact
the ACLU of Oklahoma at 14i 1 .Class~n,
Suite 318, Oklahoma~ City, OK 73106.

-Thank
You
for your

Isupport of
The

IParachute
in
1-993

"Throughout theAIDS epidemic,
lesbians have worked Side-by,side with
gay. men to stop. this disease. We’re
worked so hard that sometimes we
haven’t taken care Of ourselves. It’s
time we looked at our own risks.
Say it...

"Lesbians Get HIV. "
A Service of the Oasis Resource Center. To volunteer call 405-525-2437.
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source."

. Joy Manes
/
Occupation: Student
Age: 20
Member: Yo.~ Gay and L~h.

�I a s s

i f i e d s

To.Place a. Classified
Parachute DiScontinues

Ad:
Send:

Personals section.
NOTICE
~-~.
~~
Our Third Year! Get the areas longest running contacts publication
for gays, lesbians, &amp;.bisexuals. No
charge to place an and and no forwarding fee to respond. For free
info. senge age statement TO: Personally Speaking; P.O. Box 16782,
Wichita, Kansas 67213-0782
31 6-269
4208

Holy Trinity
.EcumeniCal

~_~yCatholic Church
Sunday Mass 10:30AM.
Wednesday Mass 7:00pm
.2328 N. MacArthur, OKC
For. information (405)755-8351

HELP WANTED

FOR SALE
For sale in Eureka Springs, Martha
&amp; Joyce are selling the Purple Iris
Inn, with an excellent alerady build
in "Family " Clientelle. Country
s~tting,
turn-key
alton. Contact: Dinny Bullard
of Double "D "Realty, Berryvill,e
Ark. at 1-800-748-9772

D.J., send demo taPe to :
Electric Circus, Attn: David
Bridgeman, 311 E. 7nth,
Tulsa, Ok. 74120

As of Decemberist, the Parachute will
no longer carry the personals section of
the Paper. We appreciate your response
to the personals, however as-the paper
has grown we find that we need room for
expansion.. There are several other gay/
lesbian publications who carry personals and we.will be glad to helpyou contact them if you do not have their address. You may simply call the office of
the Parachute at 316-651-0500.
If you have placed a personal ad with
us, you will be recieving a refund check
in the mail soon. We will continue to
forward any mail that comes in addressed to a personals box. Thank you
for your support of the Parachute, and
we look forward to serving you more in
the future.

Pianist Wanted; Charasmatic
church looking for piano,
player, must be able to play
by ear. Pay is little, but reward is great.6316-651-0603

Name
Address
City.
zip
State
Phone #
Typeor print your ad, 25 words
or less, send with this coup.o.n
and $6.00 to:
The Parachute
P.O. Box 11347
Wichita, Kansas 67202
Ad will run only for number of
insertions paid for.

January Special
CLASSIFIEDS
$3.00 each, 25 words or less,
must be received by December

FOR RENT

,,17th.

Roommates serving Wichita for 5
years, Lanlords can reg ister without any advance fee. Tenants may
register; as little as $15.00 t529
W. Douglas 262-8444
Wanted: Locations where gays
may Share housing in Wichita area:
Call or stip by Roommates 1529 W.
Douglas,262~444 .... ~,:..’~

Pets

.

..

To give awa£_in Wichita: 3
monthold Rotwiller (mostly),
male pup, likes kids, and
other pets. call 316-65_t .0603.

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSiNESS IN THE PARACHUTE
FOR AS LOW AS 29.00 PER
MONTH FOR A DISLPAY AD,
CALL 1-316-651-0500 ~

Selling or giving away
somthing ? advertise it in the

GeneraI Gay&amp; Lesbian Discussion Groups
Mondays, 6:30 at Red Rock- New Group starting Thursdays, 6:30 at Red Rock

Couples of MixedHIV Status
Contact Jim .Carter .for :details.

YGLA, Young Gay&amp; Lesbian Alliance
Di~i~SSi.~n:~Group, Tuesdays, 6:30 at Oasis
Activi~r~i~p,.SundayS; 8pm at Oasis

....... .-,

: ..... . .

ReferralAs~is~ance"
Jiin 8~-Betsywiil provide free referral assistance forindividuals
seeking counseling or substance usetreatment.
Some support groups will require screening ofparticipants to insure group compatibility.

Red Rock HIV Counseling Services
Individual Counseling for HIV positive persons and their loved ones and HIV Prevention Etlucation.

THE PARACHUTE

December 1993,

The Parachute Page 14-B

�Sunday, ~hurgday
1 or 2 persons (holidays ~duded)

OPen Wednesday-Sunday 9pro ,2am

Dinner

Video

Friday-Saturday
After Hours Breakfast
Til 3:30am

th8

Monday-Saturday
5pro,- 2am

THE
Open daily 12noon-2am

shLine
The finest in C&amp;W music and dancing

Monday- Friday
12n - 2am

Saturday - Sunday
lOam - 2am

Sunday
3pm - 2am

�</text>
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              <text>The&#13;
MASSAGE SY....S’TEM&#13;
Science of Timeless eauty&#13;
Follies Revue, Inc. DistribUtes Funds,#om~,=ge o~z&#13;
presentedevent posters to spons~s, who included Miller Brands ofOklahoma andTCI&#13;
Cablevision ofTulsa and recognized continued support from the Bravo Network, Joan&#13;
and Bob Hunt, USAA Credit Card, the Williams Co.s Fonn_d~_!ion and the Zink&#13;
FouDdatioo. Special thankg Went to. the Follies Cabaret cast,.Tulsa~ Ballet Theatre.and&#13;
VOCalist Pam .Van Dyke. The Co-4~hai~$ of this. year’s .production, "An Evening-of&#13;
Cabaret" were Dr. Eddie and Caroline Abbott-and:Dr. James and Jorja Johnson. The&#13;
event involved over- 100 volunteers and nearly 700 patrons participated.&#13;
A~istKelly Vandiver created apainting ofLisa Tiger for 1993 poster. It and t!~1992&#13;
poster are available.at Frame ofMine in Brookside.-The artist for the 1994 poster will&#13;
be nationally known Native American artist, Dana Tiger.&#13;
The annual theatrical production was establisheU to raise landsfor local agencies&#13;
providing direct services~o Persons Living with AIDS or HIV, and forAIDS education&#13;
for the community. ~ ~&#13;
Mission Statement of Lesbians &amp; Gays for DC Statehood&#13;
We, the lesbian, bisexual and gay community, demand statehood for the District of&#13;
Columbiabecanse weare honest, tax-paying andpatriotic citizens andas such.are being&#13;
denied the very i~alienable freed~ns, privileges and. hnman rights that our fellow&#13;
Americanst_a_k_eforgranted. Amongthosefreedomsandprivileges deniedtous isafullyrecognized&#13;
and empowered voting representative in the United StatesCongress- the&#13;
equivalent of taxation without representation.&#13;
_We seek to educate, organiTe, mobilize and represent the lesbigay community in the&#13;
straggle forequal h|nnan rights in the qnestfor statehood. We further seek to ed.ucate&#13;
the,tatehood movement and the general public about the b,man rights straggles of the&#13;
lesbigay community.&#13;
As citizens of New Columbia we .would not be Subjects of an unrepresentative,&#13;
tmsympathetic, and dictatorial government, but citizens of an accountable, representative&#13;
and loyal government.Why should the lesbigay community care aboutstatehood7&#13;
Domestic Partnership, Non-discrimlnation poficy in employmenL pubfic services,&#13;
housing andassistance, Adoption, Marriage, Health Care, Sodomy Reform, Censorship.&#13;
Three voting members of Congress to vote for yonon issues concerning:&#13;
-the military ban on gay, lesbian and bisexual persons&#13;
-the Fedend Lesbigay Ci~ Rights bin&#13;
-national health care reform&#13;
-National Commi~ion on Gay a~d Lesbian Youth&#13;
¯Why statehood?&#13;
Of 155 nations in the world with elected national legislatures, theUS stands alone in&#13;
denying residents ofits capital representation. The average tax billofeachDCresident&#13;
exceededthatoftheresidentsof46states, taxationwithontrepresentation.TheDistrict’s&#13;
population exceeds thaiof3 states- Alaska, Wyoming and Vermont. MoreDCresidents&#13;
have died in wars protecting America’s:freedom than 20 states.&#13;
Estate Planning&#13;
Adoptions&#13;
Personal Injury&#13;
Criminal Law "&#13;
.Bankruptcy .&#13;
. . Workers Compensat,on&#13;
1. 800 742-9468 or 91.8-352-9504&#13;
128 East.Broadway, Drumnght, Oklahoma&#13;
Weekend and evening appointments are available~&#13;
Know Your&#13;
THE PARACHUTE December 1993, OK-2&#13;
70 Protest for DC&#13;
State - 24 Arrested&#13;
Hovem~19, 1993- Washington, DC&#13;
Over 70. people marched from the&#13;
Mayor’s Office to Capitol Hill in the last&#13;
p.La)m~ed publicdemonstration bef.ore the&#13;
vote on HR51, Delegate Eleanor H01mes&#13;
Norton’s (D-DC) bill to create the slate of&#13;
New Columbia, this weekend.&#13;
The Lesbigay community was represented&#13;
with over 50 rainbow~pride flags&#13;
being prominently displayed by gay, lesbian&#13;
and bisexual people as well as their&#13;
supporters. Barbara Helmick, co-~halr of&#13;
theLesbigay ActionTaskForceaddressed&#13;
the crowd, "We’re here to educate the&#13;
people in the movement, in New Colum:&#13;
bia, the Congress and the nafiofi on issues&#13;
of hmn~n fights, democracy a~d participative&#13;
government." George Neighbors,&#13;
Jr., another of the co-ch~irS said, "We~&#13;
here today as part ofyourmovement. We&#13;
areheretounite, notdivide. Let’scontinue&#13;
to w~ together down the. long mad to&#13;
At the steps of the Longworth House&#13;
Building, 24 people were arrested in pro-&#13;
. test to lack of representation. Of the 24,&#13;
three were with the Task Force: Tony&#13;
Smnmers of the DC Coalition of Black&#13;
Lesbians, Bisexunls and Gays, Karen&#13;
Annagost, former president of the DC&#13;
Gertrude Stein Club, and co-chalr of the&#13;
Lesbigay Action Task Force, George&#13;
Neighbors, Jr. They were held for over 5&#13;
hours and released with an arraignment&#13;
date of December 1, 1993. A trial is&#13;
expected February 22,-1993 with over&#13;
THE PARACHUTE&#13;
OKLAHOMA&#13;
PublishedEditor-in-Chief&#13;
Chuck Breckefidge&#13;
Assistant Publisher&#13;
Wayne D.&#13;
Oklahoma Editors/Writers&#13;
Chuck Breckenridge&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers&#13;
Cookie At’buckle&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Chuck Breckenridge&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Graphic Design&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
316-536-6519&#13;
Issued on the 1st of each month, the entire&#13;
contem of this publication are p~etected by&#13;
US opyright 1993 by the Parachute and may&#13;
not be ~elxoduced eithex in whole o~ in part&#13;
without written pezmission hom the pubSshe~.&#13;
Publication o~ a name ~photo in no way&#13;
indicates ~reflects that pe~on’s sexual&#13;
~ientation.&#13;
(~a~a~p~ada~ i~ a~amn~dmbe f~&#13;
The Para~ho~ldahoma i~ a n~w.~ and ~wnt~&#13;
~stateh~ arrests putting the government&#13;
on ~. ~e related mat’l, left.&#13;
Certified Public Accountant&#13;
9933 East 16th, Suite 104&#13;
Tulsa 741~ -&#13;
91~93~, OKC ~5-942-1~2&#13;
1635. E. 15TH ST.&#13;
TULSA, OK 74120&#13;
599-8070&#13;
¯. Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian &amp; Gay l&#13;
Communities with Pride&#13;
Look for our Rainbow Flag&#13;
IIIIIIllllllllllllll:lllll.~_&#13;
Perms-Cuts Color - Nailsl&#13;
I&#13;
,. Beauty One ,.&#13;
.,&#13;
I Shawn Bayliss 3200 S. Riverside in:&#13;
1 Full Service Stylist Place One Apartments I&#13;
, ... the NEW place to&#13;
iparty in Tulsa~ "&#13;
THURSDAYS&amp; S&#13;
SATURDAYS&#13;
Alley Enfrancc fo&#13;
21 to enter ::!ii::iiiiiii!!i!! -&#13;
3 3-!.O S. Peoria&#13;
MTV&#13;
MTV’s hip documentary series Real&#13;
World II tracks the lives of several young&#13;
adults living together in LosAngeles.The&#13;
format is a combination of cinema verite&#13;
intercut with talkingheadcommentary.In&#13;
the September 10 episode, a new roommate,&#13;
Beth Stolarczyk, arrives on the&#13;
scene. Wearing an ’Tin not gay but my&#13;
.girlfriend is" t-shirt, Beth is defmitely an&#13;
out lesbian. Reactions from others in the&#13;
household demonstrated their own&#13;
prejudices and curiousities; providing a&#13;
clear comparison to the intelligent and&#13;
upfront Beth.&#13;
The October’7 episode featured the&#13;
roommates playing a get-to-know-yon&#13;
game where each answered questions&#13;
about themselves.Beth Was eloquent in&#13;
pointing out that questions to her were&#13;
abouthersexnallty onlyandthatwasonly&#13;
a part of who she was. This was a very&#13;
positive presentation(&#13;
Your commentsto MTV about "&#13;
inclusion ofgaysandl~biansin the&#13;
world~ cen. be directed_ to: Office of :the&#13;
Broadway+ New York !~, ..&#13;
MTV.,. Cowboys.&#13;
14m.~ offand m=,k. you ttilvrrv,s "pree&#13;
Your Mind" seriesf6r!their positive, im~&#13;
lesbi~&#13;
community~One ~parficul~ service&#13;
aunoucement dep’mts two ,~0" gun,&#13;
figh~ donning~ .tl~..typical attire (~g;;&#13;
hats~ts, dasters,e~!)~e~ho~sun&#13;
(a la.,rligh&#13;
hands. They begin to dance; a little two&#13;
step of sorts.A moment or two later they&#13;
separate and walk off into the sunset. An&#13;
on-screen message then reads, "Would&#13;
you rather they killed each. other?" Very.&#13;
we!l done, with beautiful production values.&#13;
And, most importantly, very positive&#13;
gay representation. ¯&#13;
Can CAN&#13;
Never at aloss to distort,lmisrepresent&#13;
and outfight lie to raise more money off&#13;
the imzges ofgaysandlesbians,CAN, the&#13;
Christian AetionNetwork- abeterosexual&#13;
supremacist group - has been sending&#13;
"clips of pornographic films~ to politicians&#13;
in Washington, D~C, including&#13;
President Clin_ton. A 15 minute video,&#13;
which CAN mlgrepresents as having the&#13;
est, VA 24551.&#13;
Quotable Quote...&#13;
FromJaneAlexanderuponbeing sworn&#13;
in as the new Chair of the NEA; "If I can&#13;
accomplishany~hingaschairman, itwould&#13;
be to release the imagination and creative&#13;
spirit that I feel is alive in all people ofall&#13;
ages in this ’vast and wonderful county of&#13;
ours," ¯&#13;
Wright Veering Right? -&#13;
NBC President Robert Wright has&#13;
named Roger Aries, media advisor to&#13;
former Presidents Nixon,:Reagan and&#13;
Bush and the executive producer of"The&#13;
Rush Limbangh Show," as the president&#13;
of CNBC, the cable ~k ishow and busi-&#13;
"stamp of approval".of the,National En- uessuewsuetwork. SaidWright, ,(Roger&#13;
dowmentoftheArts (NEA), is composed Aries is a) one of a kind in the television&#13;
of excerpts from fllm.~ shown at the 1991 business. He represents a unique ombi-&#13;
PimburghIntern~_aonalGay and. Lesbian nation of promoter, entrepreneur and,&#13;
Film Festival. The CAN excerpts depic.t+ above all, a highly talented television&#13;
.founder ofNew York’s Gay Men’s Health&#13;
Crisis and ACT UP, is interviewed by&#13;
¯ David Nimmons in Playboy Magazine’s&#13;
September issue. Blunt as ever, Kramer&#13;
compares the Reagan and Bush inaction&#13;
" on AIDS t9 I-lifter’s acts against the Jews;&#13;
wonders whether Clinton may be one of&#13;
our worst Presidents; targets the Center&#13;
for Disease Control and the National Institutes&#13;
of Health as wasteful and destructive&#13;
and criticizes ACT UP for its&#13;
bureaucracy problems.&#13;
And he wants more from the gay community,&#13;
e~lling it "meek, recalcitrant and&#13;
useless in the battle againstA1DS. "When&#13;
Nimmons says, "We know more about&#13;
H1Vthanwehaveever 0mown)," Kramer&#13;
responds, "Bo!!~hiL..Ifweknew somuch&#13;
we’d have a cure by now+"Kramer de,&#13;
~ scribes a "Manhattan Project" as the way&#13;
to an AIDS cure and says t_b+t_ letters to&#13;
congress, the Presidentandnewspapers is&#13;
producer." Ailes will also lake charge of wex " "&#13;
AmericaTalking, aNBCcable channel Whether thig lenethv.interview br~__Ir$.&#13;
.In ~.America of Ib,.. ’90s..:.those ap,.: : the dynamics between Kramer. and pointed tO~apee,antmediaposmonsneed l~m,~ons.are sometimes:ontentiom’&#13;
to reflect an ability to understand the Pla be ~es credit for not onlY&#13;
miutinm this in~iew but for atlowinx&#13;
.present conuections~to the right wing. : Hisd :-~iionofWhatitwaslike~-&#13;
Sha¯ re your concerns w~th"M,r- Wright out,he is HIV-poSitive may be the mint&#13;
by writing: Robert ,Wright, president, meaningful cbnfrontation withthereality&#13;
NBC, 30 Rockefeller P~; New York¯ of HIV Playboy readers have everhad,,&#13;
10021; CNBC,, 3000 W~ Alameda Av, To encourage more in-depth coverage&#13;
enue~ Burl~nk~ CA 91523. ofsuch&#13;
HAq’EIS NOTA FAMILYVALUE"&#13;
lOc, gold on black&#13;
gay (g~)a.dj. f~k, j0Y0U~,fme,&#13;
brilliant, merry,’lighthe~rted&#13;
Want to stay that way...?&#13;
Fight back- COME 0UT!&#13;
10d, black on pink&#13;
lOe, black ~n fuschia&#13;
Think&#13;
lOf,blackon white&#13;
&amp;LOVETHINGS "&#13;
&amp;USETHING.S&#13;
10g: black on grey&#13;
MAI)E&#13;
IN&#13;
HEAl&#13;
white;-pink.~ red on black&#13;
What do&#13;
~¯ II&#13;
Hght ~mk- COME&#13;
T-$14.95, Sweats19.95&#13;
Visa or MasterCard#&#13;
Name as on Card&#13;
Exp. Date Daytime phone: (&#13;
: DeScritition~ .- Price each Total Mail to:&#13;
Merchandise’1~otal&#13;
Shipping &amp; Handling&#13;
Grand Total&#13;
City, ST &amp; ZIP&#13;
~hitroine&#13;
Up to $25.00, add $3.50&#13;
$25.01 to 50.00, add $4.50&#13;
OK Residents, please add&#13;
7.5%/Sales Tax&#13;
Out of the Closet, Inc.&#13;
Suite 199, 1611 So. Utica&#13;
Tulsa, OK 74104&#13;
918-749-2033, FAX 749-5992&#13;
GLAAD Media&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
by Al Kielwasser&#13;
San Francisco Bay Area Chapter&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance&#13;
Against Defamation&#13;
Fresh Prince, Stale Phobia&#13;
A feature story in the Fail ’93 issue of&#13;
Tell, a new teen magazine, profiles actor/&#13;
rapperWill Smith Coestknown forhis title&#13;
role in the NBC sitcom The Fresh Prince&#13;
of Bel Air). Feature writer Karen&#13;
Catchpole describes Smith’s "commitment&#13;
to growing as an actor," explaining&#13;
thathejust hiredhis first acting coach and&#13;
"istaking his bestshot atbecoming abone&#13;
fidemovie star" by playing the lead in the&#13;
upcoming fdm version of Six Degrees of&#13;
Separation.&#13;
However, the "actor" shows few signs&#13;
of growth when it comes to homophobia..&#13;
Smith’s character in Six Degrees ofSeparation&#13;
is gay. When he accepted the role,&#13;
Smith knew that the script called for an&#13;
on-screen kiss with another man. However,&#13;
when the time came to shoot the&#13;
scene, Smith refused. "I just couldn’t do&#13;
it," Smith said. "I mean, I’m an actor. I&#13;
can sit there with a greasy smile on my&#13;
face and act like I kissed a man. But it’s&#13;
different when you actually, physicaily,&#13;
kiss a man. It wouldn’t have been acting.&#13;
It would have been real. I have kissed&#13;
girls on-screen. I could work that out.&#13;
The difference is how people perceive it.&#13;
If I’d kissed a guy and then went home,&#13;
they’d be like, ’Yo, man. Why’d you do&#13;
that?’ And I’d be like, ’You know, Man.&#13;
I’m an actor. I was acting.’ Andthey’dbe&#13;
like :Yo, man. You kissed a dude.&#13;
Something’s wrong with you, man.’ Ijust&#13;
didn’t want to hear that."&#13;
Let’s just ignore (for now) why Smith&#13;
is so worried that if he "actuaily, physically,&#13;
kissed a man," he would not have&#13;
been acting but that "it would have been&#13;
real." Perhaps be’sjust suffering from the&#13;
common hetero-anxiety that straightmen&#13;
can become gay men just by touching or&#13;
kissing another guy in "that way." Perhaps&#13;
not. In any case, Smith’s attitude&#13;
demonswates a remarkable lack of semi,&#13;
tivity. For Smith, apparently, acting is not&#13;
a means for expanding awareness but&#13;
reinforcing ignorance.&#13;
Write to Will Smith, Fresh Prince of&#13;
Bel Airc/oNBCTV, 3000WestAlameda&#13;
Ave., Burbank, CA 91505.&#13;
Other Mothers&#13;
The CBS School break Special, broadcast&#13;
on the afternoon of October 15, depicted&#13;
the travails of a high school freshman&#13;
who weathers homophobic ostracism&#13;
when his peers discover that he has&#13;
two lesbian mothers. Other Mothers, directed&#13;
by Lee Shallof and produced by&#13;
Joseph Stem, depicts a happy home life&#13;
for teenager Will Jergenson (William&#13;
Russ),hisbiologicalmotherLinda(Joanna&#13;
Cassidy) and his "other mother" Paula&#13;
(Meredith Baxter).&#13;
In a "ReadMore AboutIt" postscript to&#13;
theprogram, actressMeredith Baxter says:&#13;
Fine Jewelry, as well as Jewelry &amp; Watch Repair&#13;
4649 South Peoria, Tulsa, Corner o_f48th &amp; Peoria&#13;
918-743-5272, 9:30 - 5:00 Monday-Friday&#13;
9:30 - 5:00 Saturdays, Nov. 20 - December 24th&#13;
Shop Where You are Appreciated!&#13;
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Adult Merchandise Gag Gifts-&#13;
Novelties + T-Shirts + Cards&#13;
1519 East 15th Street, Tulsa 584-7486&#13;
10-6 Monday-Saturday, Closed Sunday&#13;
VisalMC accepted. Under New Management.&#13;
Open House, Dec. 4, 12-6&#13;
Register for $25 Gift Certificate Drawing&#13;
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THE PARACHUTE December 1993, OK-6&#13;
"To learn more about the changing roles&#13;
in our parenting society, the Library of&#13;
Congress recommends these books: Diversity&#13;
in American Families, by Maxine&#13;
Baca Zinn and D. Stanley Eitzen, and&#13;
Rethinking the Family, edited by Barrie&#13;
Thome and Marilyn Yaiom.&#13;
Advertisers on this aff’n’ming program&#13;
were: Multigrain Cheerios (General&#13;
Mills), Jell-O Actifed Sinus medicine,&#13;
Cortisone-10, Campbelrs-soup, Sears,&#13;
Alrwick, PurinaCatChow,YubanCoffee,&#13;
Aquafresh toothpaste, Efidac 24,&#13;
Fleishmann’s Egg Beaters, Lever 2000&#13;
soap, Mrs. Dash spices, JC Penny, 1-800-&#13;
DENTIST (a registered service mark of&#13;
Applied Anagmmics, Inc.), Post Raisin&#13;
Bran, Muggies diapers, M&amp;M’s, V-8&#13;
juice, Prego spaghetti sauce, Preparation&#13;
H, Hershey’s Hugs, and Rolaids.&#13;
Comments should be sent to Jeff&#13;
Sagansky, President, CBS Entertainment,&#13;
7800 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA&#13;
90213.&#13;
To Boldly Go Where&#13;
No Queer&#13;
Has Gone. Before&#13;
Shortly before Gene Roddenberry’s&#13;
death, he met with members of The USS&#13;
Lambda, a lesbian and gay Star Trek fan&#13;
club in Los Angeles. At this meeting,&#13;
Roddenberry stated that, since there was&#13;
virtuallynoracism in his 24th centuryTV&#13;
world, he doubted that there would, be&#13;
any homophobia either. He agreed to&#13;
include openly (and umnistakenly) gay&#13;
and lesbian main characters on Star Trek:&#13;
TheNextGeneration as well as other Trek&#13;
spin-offs. After Roddenberry’s death, his&#13;
succes~rs promised to follow his wishes&#13;
and develop lesbian, gay and bisexual&#13;
characters.&#13;
Star Trek: The Next Generation is now&#13;
in its f’mai season and we have yet to see&#13;
any openly queer figures on the show.&#13;
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine has begun its&#13;
second season; though there are representatives&#13;
of widely diverse cultures--from&#13;
shape shifters to Ferengi--there seems to&#13;
be no room. for lesbian or gay characters&#13;
on the Bajoran space station. Isn’t it about&#13;
time that Star Trek really went where no&#13;
one has gone before?&#13;
Write Rick Berman andMic.h~_el Piller,&#13;
Executive Producers, Star Trek TNG &amp;&#13;
DS9, Paramount Domestic Television,&#13;
5555 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA&#13;
90038.&#13;
OC SO0&#13;
FRIDAY-SATURDAY 10PM TILL 2AM&#13;
SUNDAY 9PM TILL~ 2AM (SHOWS AT 10 &amp; 12)&#13;
PRO:UD.TO. BE GAY OWNED AND OPERATED&#13;
Fresh Bouquets&#13;
Blooming Plants&#13;
Green Plants-&#13;
&amp; More&#13;
Delivery A vai/able&#13;
3115 South Harvard, 742-1234&#13;
M-F 9-6, Sat.’9-7, Sun. 12-5&#13;
TULSA. OK&#13;
234--9007&#13;
The Parachute Page 8-B&#13;
is skyrocketing. Unlike the West welcome all people regardless of&#13;
Coast, ~Tblsa Organizations have for- theirHIV status,-age, ra~e, religious&#13;
gotten that the main goal is TO " beliefs, forsexual .exwession. BE=-&#13;
WORK TOGETHER TO EDUCATE ING AWARE ’focuses. on positive&#13;
YOUTH AND PROVIDE SERVICES ~ thinking and living with HIV....not&#13;
AND SUPPORTFORA~0NE IN- ~f~om it. ¯&#13;
¯&#13;
FECTED. WII~H AIDS~.HIV./ ~ " ~ For meeting .times and location&#13;
if there are .two ortwo hundred. "&#13;
different services or Support groups&#13;
everyone should .work together to&#13;
bring this disease under control! I&#13;
am embarrassedand appalled by the&#13;
amou~nt of infighting, backstabbing&#13;
and the directors of these organizations&#13;
thinking Tulsa ..is their.own..&#13;
They know wing they are and-this iS&#13;
my message: Get. :over =your seif&#13;
righteousness and supl:xxt anyone&#13;
and everyone who is making an ef-&#13;
-fort t6 heipand support Tuls~ns With&#13;
HIV-AIDS. Shame, shame, shame.&#13;
Get with the program! ,&#13;
P.S. It is important that this be&#13;
pdnted because I am a client ofthese&#13;
¯ Organizations. Being HW-ARC, Istili&#13;
findthe time and energy to give to&#13;
~ everyone no matter who they.are or&#13;
please call ProjectReach Out at&#13;
(918) 298-4622 or (918) 451-0219.&#13;
We look fonNard to headng from you.&#13;
FUNDRAISERHUGE&#13;
:=~"~sUCCESS i. "&#13;
A fund raiser, ’~ The Bonep0inter Sis-.&#13;
ters &amp; FriendS, Safari S~ Good"; h~ld&#13;
.October 29that the Bunkhouse wasa&#13;
great success raising over five hundred&#13;
dollars for. R.A.I.N.~and the ,Winds&#13;
House.i Also over eleven boxes of food&#13;
was collected atthe door for the Light.~&#13;
houseM.C.C, food pantw.&#13;
A large.crowd showed up for the benefit,&#13;
despiti~ the.snow and cold weather&#13;
and enjoyed a fun evening of camp,drag&#13;
and Coma[ade~y._ Manylof the performers&#13;
were new t0the scene having never&#13;
: Facelift.Massage Arrives" in&#13;
Oklahoma&#13;
until recently, Belavi was available&#13;
only in well known facial message&#13;
salons in Hollywood and Bevedy&#13;
Hills. All McGraw, U~dsay Wagner,&#13;
Jodie Foster, Robert Wagner, Barbara&#13;
Streisand, and many others&#13;
have sought this rejuventing therapy&#13;
for their stressed and aging skin.&#13;
Belavi Facelift Massage Therapy is&#13;
now available for the first time in&#13;
Oklahoma. This hands-on approach&#13;
often stpes, all of wich contribute to&#13;
yothful, healther skin. The process&#13;
uses soothingly warm towi_s through.&#13;
out the ten steps.&#13;
Stephen Scott, Oklahomas only Certiffed&#13;
Belavi Specialist welcome you&#13;
to try the system fo~ yourself, orgive&#13;
a Figt Certifmated to someone you&#13;
love for a more youthful, radiant appearance.&#13;
Fo.r addisional information&#13;
including a fee video otto schedule&#13;
an appointment call (405) 525-&#13;
8689 in Metro Oklahoma or (800)&#13;
546-8689 Nationwide.&#13;
Deadline&#13;
for Januarysubmissions&#13;
and advertisemenl&#13;
.December 16th&#13;
what their problem is. There are . appeared On any stage.. The eveningenough&#13;
people ~t~ givep~perser-. ¯ :.also included a costume conte~t and&#13;
. vices, and anyone~should~be wel, " . raffle ofsome wonderfuldonated items~&#13;
come to join the fight against AIDS!&#13;
Ifwe don’t.join togetherwe will all be&#13;
Impress yourpartner.&#13;
Use a condom.&#13;
QUEER’ CONSORTIUM&#13;
ANNOUNCES SECOND&#13;
ART EXHIBITION&#13;
The Queer Consortium, a collective of&#13;
Oklahoma queer a~sts, announces its&#13;
second art exhibit titled, "Queers Unbound:&#13;
Celebrating Our Culture." The&#13;
exhibition will be held at the Tdangle Association,&#13;
2136 N.W. 39th Street in Oklahoma&#13;
City.&#13;
In observance of AIDS Awareness&#13;
Day, the show will begin on December&#13;
with all art draped in black. An opening&#13;
reception for the show is scheduled for&#13;
December 11 at 8 p.m., andthe art will&#13;
be unveiled at thattime. The exhibition is&#13;
scheduled to run through January 28,&#13;
1994.&#13;
The Show will include the work ofShar&#13;
Johnson, Diana Faulkner, TommyThomas,&#13;
Keith Porter, Clif Trowbridge, all of&#13;
Oklahoma City; Diane Duffer Gerald&#13;
David, Ken Carlyle, all of Norman; Larry&#13;
Harriman of Tulsa; and :Joe Rackley of&#13;
Stillwater.&#13;
The artists’ work includes photography,&#13;
oil paintings, drawing, performance&#13;
art, and sculpture. The work will be on&#13;
display at the Triangle Association seven&#13;
days a week, from noon to~10 p.m. Ad--&#13;
mission is free of charge.&#13;
"The Queer Consortium wishes to&#13;
continue its mission of _celebrating the diverse&#13;
cultures represented in Oklahoma’s&#13;
lesbian, gay, and bisexual communities,"&#13;
said Dale Smithson Triangle Association&#13;
Director and event coordinator. "This kind&#13;
of event brings together people from&#13;
. Oklahoma’s various queer commun~es,&#13;
and draws attention to the talent these&#13;
communities have to offer."&#13;
The Queer Consortium recently&#13;
achieved overwhelming success with its&#13;
first exhibition, "Queerly R’s Art."&#13;
For more information, call Dale&#13;
at 405-843-8378:&#13;
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian InformationSource." Occupation: Agitator&#13;
¯ :, , " / Age: ~unknowable&#13;
Hobbies: T-shirt collecting&#13;
The Parachute Page 9-B&#13;
CHRISTMAS CONCERT&#13;
Preparations are underway&#13;
for the fourth annual OKC&#13;
METRO-MENS CHORUS Christmas&#13;
concert, "Ring, Christmas&#13;
Bells"_under the direction of Mr.&#13;
Franklin Roberts. The concert&#13;
will be held Saturday, December&#13;
4th, 1993 beginning at 8:07 P.M.&#13;
at the First Unitarian Church, 600&#13;
N.W. 13, Oklahoma City; Okla,&#13;
homa.&#13;
This yeads-concert will feature&#13;
many old favorites as well as&#13;
some songs that many may not&#13;
be famlhar with. Two songs&#13;
scheduled for performance were&#13;
written by local composer Mark&#13;
Houston. Tl~e Chorus feels&#13;
ored that Markis giving them the&#13;
opportunity to perform these special&#13;
Christmas songs. Mark is&#13;
also preparing a commissioned&#13;
piece for the OKC METROMENS&#13;
CHORUS, which the Chorus&#13;
hopes to perform at their&#13;
Spring concerf in 1994. This&#13;
commission is made possible by&#13;
a grant awarded to the OKC&#13;
METRO-MENS CHORUS by the&#13;
G.A.L.A. Chorus Association&#13;
and the fine grant writing skills of&#13;
th# Chorus’ Accompanist,&#13;
Stephanie Johnson.&#13;
Also appearing at this yeads&#13;
Christmas concert will be The&#13;
Metropolitans, a five member&#13;
group from within the chorus who&#13;
perform at local benefits and services.&#13;
TheMetropolitans are also&#13;
making themselves available to&#13;
perform at Christmas functions&#13;
for a small donation. If you are&#13;
interested, in having the Metropolitans&#13;
perform for Christmas or&#13;
any other function, please contact&#13;
Terry Knapp at 405-677-&#13;
1646.&#13;
The chorus is once again.offedng&#13;
ad space in their Christmas&#13;
program. Something new in the&#13;
program this year is the offedng&#13;
of a patPon page for those individual~"&#13;
wishing to support the&#13;
Chorus, but do not feel the need&#13;
fora formal ad. No addressesor&#13;
phone numbers will be included&#13;
on the patron page, only individuals’&#13;
names, (either real names,&#13;
nick names-or stage .names-).&#13;
Those interested in placing an ad&#13;
or their name on the patron page&#13;
please contact Ralph Shafer at&#13;
405-737-6576 or David Coffey at&#13;
405-521-1378.&#13;
To .purchase tickets for you&#13;
and your guests please see any&#13;
chorus member or contact Terry&#13;
Knapp at 405-677-1646.&#13;
The Chorus has enjoyed success&#13;
at their previous Christmas&#13;
concerts and hope to fill the&#13;
house once again this year.&#13;
~ur~&#13;
3007 THE PASEO&#13;
OKLAHOMA CITY, OK&#13;
(405)’525-CAFE&#13;
TRACYTULLIS,&#13;
Busin~s/Vtanas~r&#13;
AFI-ER HOUIL~ PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE&#13;
LOCATED IN HISTORIC PASEO FAMILY OWNED &amp; OPERATED&#13;
FINANCIAL PLANNING OTHER RECORDS AND INFOR&#13;
THESERIOUS~ -FORMATION ; -’,~ . ....¯&#13;
................. iLL"&#13;
By:-Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMiNtS~&#13;
including&#13;
ties you had on the job. -If you&#13;
TRATION (SSA). DISABIEITY have a resume handy, or ,have&#13;
PROGRAMS " kept records of where yoU.have~&#13;
SSA maintains two different worked, that will help.&#13;
disability~ programs -, Social Security&#13;
Dis~ibility insurance(SSDI)&#13;
ORIGINAL DOCUMENTATION&#13;
and Supl~lementai Secudty In*&#13;
SSA will need ORIGINAL&#13;
DOCUMENTATION. Originals.of&#13;
come (SSi) disability, Both.pro- your birth certificate (~o, your&#13;
-.gr.am.s.p.ro.v.ide.a-,-m.o.n.t.h.ly..in.c=o~me ~.-hos.p=t.al b=.rth..an.nou.nce.me.nt w.ill&#13;
mr people w~tn,glu~s (or anyse- , .not ~1o norwill ohotocooies~ ~nd&#13;
. .v.ere d.isa.b.ili~a.~d .o.v~.£.6,~;~:i:b.ut:": ~.i.~h-~e ~-riginal~. ~0~-ali itS; -(ar~ii~&#13;
tne rules-that effect, eligioil!W for ii membe~s If vou worked&#13;
them are different. - t~ --: - - -’&#13;
year;&#13;
SSDI is an insurance program 2 form or if&#13;
that employers; and employees year’s tax return. -&#13;
pay for with their federal income If you are. filing-for SSI, they&#13;
tax or FICA. Eligibilityisbased wilineed to ask you information&#13;
on_ work history: and the.a~ount ~ about your incomeand bank&#13;
of your benef’~ is. based on earn- counts.&#13;
ings. :&lt; ~ ~ DECISION MAKING&#13;
" SSI benefits .are paid to..... ~ourappfiGation is-handled by&#13;
plime°itpelderwehs°ohuamve-es..~:MinE.¢D°imCAe~LRanEd-.~~:~ ~odiff~el,re~[Offices. The"physi- cai part (meaning literally all&#13;
QUIREMENTS ARETHE SAME medical records and anything&#13;
FOR BOTH PROGRAMS.AND about your physical condition) will&#13;
DISABILITY IS~ ~DECIDED B;Y --be sent to the State’s Disability&#13;
THE SAME PROCESS, Determination Service or Unit,&#13;
Some helpful hintstorem~3-~ ~, The "oaoer work" Dart or the fi-&#13;
.be~i Keep a dngb~d..~~ ~~,.~-. ~na171ce~ ;re handt~c~ at another&#13;
In !t you..may recor~l specmc ~ ~-"-=~ffiCe: USually, paperwork atthat&#13;
events, wit..h.,, c,,=orrect~nam~, ~e.s.,.;~~,,a~d~; -~~ le.v.e.l.~w~¯ ll, stay, unless there are&#13;
dresses and phonenumbers for diffi~=l~i~x ~h~n th~ f’m=ancial oart&#13;
your physicians Keep tra~ck~.o ,~ ~........ent" ~;~ e - " "&#13;
dates of ,#is|tS arid~, hosp.tal" ad- ~ ~,~b~ ~iled at~nv time&#13;
dresses Wit- h "dates" of ws~~and " -for further information by either&#13;
the types of treatment~received, of the offices,~ Theymay sched-&#13;
Make a list of all the medications ule for an exam or mail, other&#13;
you :have been-,onfor at least a : f0rm,~f~r youto fill out.&#13;
year. ~ Mark, the ones you ~have..... TO BE CONTINUED IN JANUbeen&#13;
using forthepast 3 months, ~_ ARY ISSUE&#13;
7117 E. Reno&#13;
Midwest City, OK 73110&#13;
(405) 737-5353,1-800-880-1053 ° FAX 405-737-5666&#13;
your home away Irom I-,Omel. .....&#13;
The Habana. lnn&#13;
1 80: GuEsT Rooms ¯&#13;
¯ Poolside Rooms.&#13;
Suites&#13;
Cable TV&#13;
TEARS OF LAUGHTER&#13;
TEARS OF SORRO~r&#13;
WORKING FOR A&#13;
~R TOMORROW&#13;
"Team"T-SHIRT $15.00&#13;
Poly/cotton blend, Ash color.&#13;
Size~. S,M,L,XL,XXL, XXXL&#13;
Witha&#13;
BU(~KBO~RD&#13;
Friday, December 31st.&#13;
9: rn&#13;
Sid Spencer,&#13;
Sonja Martinez, Deb Roberts &amp;&#13;
OKC’s Finest Cloggers&#13;
With&#13;
Hosted by Kitty Litter&#13;
FREE PARTY FAVORS &amp; MORE!&#13;
Reservations available.- Cover Charge&#13;
The Parachute Page 12-B&#13;
Parachute Welcomes all&#13;
39th Street bars as&#13;
Distribution Points&#13;
The Parachute is proud to announce&#13;
these new distribution points in Okla~&#13;
homa City. The Parachute is now&#13;
available at all bars on the stdp: We&#13;
wish to thank the owners and manegers&#13;
for their supporLand acceptance.&#13;
Support the&#13;
Organization&#13;
that&#13;
Supports&#13;
Your-&#13;
Freedom&#13;
~ACLU&#13;
l’h¢ American- Civil: Libcrtio~ Unio~&#13;
Protest Your Rights of Fr~ Sl~ch,&#13;
ThF Amm-ican Ci~I" Liberties Unio~&#13;
ff¢lps Guarant~ you..Equality and" Du~&#13;
Process.&#13;
The Parachute Goes to:&#13;
Wichita, Kansas&#13;
Topeka, Kansas&#13;
Wellington, Kansas&#13;
Junction City, Kansas&#13;
Manhattan, Kansas&#13;
Salina, Kansas&#13;
Emporia, Kansas&#13;
Great Bend ,~ Kansas&#13;
Lawrence, Kansas&#13;
Kansas City, Kansas -&#13;
Drumdght, Oklahoma&#13;
Oswego, Kansas&#13;
Compton, Arkansas&#13;
Chicago, III.&#13;
Souix Falls, South Dakota&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma&#13;
OKC, Oklahoma&#13;
W~st Hollywood, Cal.&#13;
Coffeyville, Kansas&#13;
Enid, Oklahoma&#13;
-.~.. La~wton, Oklahoma&#13;
Stitlwater, Oklahoma&#13;
Ponca City, Oklahoma&#13;
Norman, Oklahoma&#13;
Pauls ¯Valley, Oklahoma&#13;
El Reno, Oklahoma&#13;
Fayetteville, Arkansas&#13;
Eureka~Spdngs, Arkansas&#13;
-Hot Springs, Arkansas&#13;
LittleRock, Arkansas&#13;
S~dngfield,~.&#13;
-Cincinatti;Ohio&#13;
Dallas, TeXas&#13;
" H~uston, Texas&#13;
ACLU of Oklahoma&#13;
Human Rights P_roject&#13;
News&#13;
By: Michael Canfield&#13;
The fledgling coalition-known as the&#13;
Oklahoma Human Rights Project is actively&#13;
proceeding in accomplishing one of&#13;
its in,ally stated primary goals,repeal of&#13;
Oklahoma’s archaic and unequally enforced&#13;
crime against nature (sodomy) law.&#13;
The legal record already contains case,&#13;
Post .v. the State of Oklahoma in which&#13;
current sodomy law was ruled inapplicable&#13;
io heterosexual citizens. This is&#13;
contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment&#13;
ofthe U.S. Cons~tution which guarantees&#13;
all Americans, among other things, equal&#13;
protection of the laws. ACLU of Olda-&#13;
.homa, in conjunction with the mission of&#13;
the Oklahoma Human Rights Project,&#13;
seeks to nullify the inequity of the sodomy&#13;
law through litigation.~&#13;
In order for this stated goal to be accomplshed,&#13;
plaintiffs are needed to make&#13;
a legal challenge. The Project is looking&#13;
for someone who has been accused of&#13;
municipal offenses such as offering-to.&#13;
engage in lewd acts; as tong as the&#13;
charges do not involve minors or prostitutiot~,&#13;
and the defendantis without legal&#13;
representation. Alternately, the ACLU&#13;
would also like to assemble a group of&#13;
indMduals which would include both Gay&#13;
men andLesbianswho wish to challenge&#13;
the state statute.&#13;
Becoming a pl~aintilf in this type ofcase ¯&#13;
would, of course, involve a great amount&#13;
of publicity, those people with the convic,&#13;
tions and the. courage step fOrward ira:&#13;
mediately. If-youor anyone you know&#13;
wishes to volunteerasa plaintiff, contact&#13;
the ACLU of Oklahoma at 14i 1 .Class~n,&#13;
Suite 318, Oklahoma~ City, OK 73106.&#13;
-Thank&#13;
You&#13;
for your&#13;
Isupport of&#13;
The&#13;
IParachute&#13;
in&#13;
1-993&#13;
"Throughout theAIDS epidemic,&#13;
lesbians have worked Side-by,side with&#13;
gay. men to stop. this disease. We’re&#13;
worked so hard that sometimes we&#13;
haven’t taken care Of ourselves. It’s&#13;
time we looked at our own risks.&#13;
Say it...&#13;
"Lesbians Get HIV. "&#13;
A Service of the Oasis Resource Center. To volunteer call 405-525-2437.&#13;
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source." . Joy Manes&#13;
/ Occupation: Student&#13;
Age: 20&#13;
Member: Yo.~ Gay and L~h.&#13;
I a s s&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Our Third Year! Get the areas longest&#13;
running contacts publication&#13;
for gays, lesbians, &amp;.bisexuals. No&#13;
charge to place an and and no forwarding&#13;
fee to respond. For free&#13;
info. senge age statement TO: Personally&#13;
Speaking; P.O. Box 16782,&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67213-0782&#13;
31 6-269 4208&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
For sale in Eureka Springs, Martha&#13;
&amp; Joyce are selling the Purple Iris&#13;
Inn, with an excellent alerady build&#13;
in "Family " Clientelle. Country&#13;
s~tting, turn-key&#13;
alton. Contact: Dinny Bullard&#13;
of Double "D "Realty, Berryvill,e&#13;
Ark. at 1-800-748-9772&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
Roommates serving Wichita for 5&#13;
years, Lanlords can reg ister without&#13;
any advance fee. Tenants may&#13;
register; as little as $15.00 t529&#13;
W. Douglas 262-8444&#13;
Wanted: Locations where gays&#13;
may Share housing in Wichita area:&#13;
Call or stip by Roommates 1529 W.&#13;
Douglas,262~444 .... ~,:..’~&#13;
i f i e d s&#13;
~-~~. ~ .EHcoulymTerniinCitayl&#13;
~_~yCatholic Church&#13;
Sunday Mass 10:30AM.&#13;
Wednesday Mass 7:00pm&#13;
.2328 N. MacArthur, OKC&#13;
For. information (405)755-8351&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
D.J., send demo taPe to :&#13;
Electric Circus, Attn: David&#13;
Bridgeman, 311 E. 7nth,&#13;
Tulsa, Ok. 74120&#13;
Pianist Wanted; Charasmatic&#13;
church looking for piano,&#13;
player, must be able to play&#13;
by ear. Pay is little, but reward&#13;
is great.6316-651-0603&#13;
Pets ....&#13;
To give awa£_in Wichita: 3&#13;
monthold Rotwiller (mostly),&#13;
male pup, likes kids, and&#13;
other pets. call 316-65_t .0603.&#13;
Selling or giving away&#13;
somthing ? advertise it in the&#13;
Parachute DiScontinues&#13;
Personals section.&#13;
As of Decemberist, the Parachute will&#13;
no longer carry the personals section of&#13;
the Paper. We appreciate your response&#13;
to the personals, however as-the paper&#13;
has grown we find that we need room for&#13;
expansion.. There are several other gay/&#13;
lesbian publications who carry personals&#13;
and we.will be glad to helpyou contact&#13;
them if you do not have their address.&#13;
You may simply call the office of&#13;
the Parachute at 316-651-0500.&#13;
If you have placed a personal ad with&#13;
us, you will be recieving a refund check&#13;
in the mail soon. We will continue to&#13;
forward any mail that comes in addressed&#13;
to a personals box. Thank you&#13;
for your support of the Parachute, and&#13;
we look forward to serving you more in&#13;
the future.&#13;
To.Place a. Classified&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
City.&#13;
State&#13;
Phone #&#13;
Ad:&#13;
Send:&#13;
zip&#13;
Typeor print your ad, 25 words&#13;
or less, send with this coup.o.n&#13;
and $6.00 to:&#13;
The Parachute&#13;
P.O. Box 11347&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67202&#13;
Ad will run only for number of&#13;
insertions paid for.&#13;
January Special&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
$3.00 each, 25 words or less,&#13;
must be received by December&#13;
,,17th. .&#13;
ADVERTISE YOUR BUSi-&#13;
NESS IN THE PARACHUTE&#13;
FOR AS LOW AS 29.00 PER&#13;
MONTH FOR A DISLPAY AD,&#13;
CALL 1-316-651-0500 ~&#13;
GeneraI Gay&amp; Lesbian Discussion Groups&#13;
Mondays, 6:30 at Red Rock- New Group starting Thursdays, 6:30 at Red Rock&#13;
Couples of MixedHIV Status&#13;
Contact Jim .Carter .for :details.&#13;
YGLA, Young Gay&amp; Lesbian Alliance&#13;
Di~i~SSi.~n:~Group, Tuesdays, 6:30 at Oasis&#13;
Activi~r~i~p,.SundayS; 8pm at Oasis ....... .-, : ..... . .&#13;
ReferralAs~is~ance"&#13;
Jiin 8~-Betsywiil provide free referral assistance forindividuals&#13;
seeking counseling or substance usetreatment.&#13;
Some support groups will require screening ofparticipants to insure group compatibility.&#13;
Red Rock HIV Counseling Services&#13;
Individual Counseling for HIV positive persons and their loved ones and HIV Prevention Etlucation.&#13;
THE PARACHUTE December 1993, The Parachute Page 14-B&#13;
Sunday, ~hurgday&#13;
1 or 2 persons (holidays ~duded) OPen Wednesday-Sunday 9pro ,2am&#13;
Open daily 12noon-2am&#13;
shLine&#13;
Thefinest in C&amp;Wmusic and dancing&#13;
Dinner&#13;
Friday-Saturday th8&#13;
After Hours Breakfast&#13;
Til 3:30am&#13;
THE&#13;
Video&#13;
Monday-Saturday Sunday&#13;
5pro,- 2am 3pm - 2am&#13;
Monday- Friday&#13;
12n - 2am&#13;
Saturday - Sunday&#13;
lOam - 2am</text>
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute of Oklahoma, December 1993; Volume 1, Issue ?</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the publication that is accessible through the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center starts in 1993 and ends December 1993. &#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>Wayne D.&#13;
Chuck Breckenridge&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle</text>
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                    <text>By Tom Neal, Tulsa Para~hute reporter
~ US House of R~presentatives S .....
B~ey Frank in s
Oklahoma Congre
Bill Brewstet,
....
In an Octd~r 3 Story by 3im ~ye~s, ~ulsa world
tnhofe; Ist~k and B~ewster indica(~ tha~ th~
Lesbians for their staffs.
Glenn English)i
sexual orientation inhirin
related smries) i Only
would hire b~(d ~ly On abiilty ~ pe~fo~ th’e
the Oktaho~a Cdngressmen came td his attention througli i
weekt) n~w~pg~r s(rving Cdngr(s~:
On Oct. i9
Hou~ fl~ta ondemn these Okl~oma~

harassment
. In response to McCurdy’s comment
about not flaunting his heterosexuali![,
the ParaChute called MeCUrdy ~
Norman and WaShingt0n offices to
confirm that the Congressman keeps
pictures of his wife and children in the
offices and regularly wears a wedding
~
ring.
The Parachute asked the Congressman if the photos of his children (the
product of a heterosexual liason) and
the daily Wearing of a ring (symbolizing
a ca~n~l~eiationshi p) did~tconStitute
a flaunting ot" h~s sexuahty. Mr.

t Bray (formerly Media
an indiVidual s sexualorientation in any
0~hisemployin,~nt capacities (private 0)
governmdn~): ,~ifa~rson appliedfor a
~sition ~ith ~ign ~nhis cl~st, sayin~
i m Gay,! IprobaN) would not hire him.
The i:’ar~chute ~ked the Senator if a
person were hiredwiih whom there was a
general concurranee on political views
and Who was a good worker; could that
person be open aboU[their sexual orienta~i0ngFore:£~
i.
p e~coUidthat perso~bri nz
the~rlongumepartner roan office event?

see McCurdy on OK-2

us. And I will
the next few

3ers of Congress and military leaders
~ther anti-Gay propaganda
is portraying
as possible, probably in

seem

~ folks they’re going to
g together across the state.

see Nickles on OK-2

ght on OK-4

TRET F
in concert

November 1993, OK-1

THE PARACHUTE

�Out of The Closet

and Onto The Phone

Frank, Continued from OK-1 " "
orientation. Mr. Frank noted specifically
that he would not recommend affirmative
action as a remedy for discrimination
againstLesbians,Gay men andBisexuals,
nor was he calling for "special rights."
Mr. Frank slated; "People have said,
’After all, there is no problem. People are
not discriminated against in hiring in this
country based on their sexual orientation.
So why press for legislation?’....if that
(anti-Gay discrimination) happens here
in the House of Representatives, it is .obvious that it happens elsewhere_in societyo"

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bill will go to the lesl~ian, gay or HIV-related organization you

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On Oct. 21, Speaker of the House Of
Representatiq,,es, Tom Foley issued a
statement to clarify remarks made in a
press conference earlier that day. Mr. Foley
said,. "....I emphatically restate my opposition to any employment bias based on
criteria such as race, color, creed, gender
or sexual orientation (emphasis added),
He added that he agreed with Barney
Frank that Congress should examine how
to apply such stan.dards to itself to the
"greatest degree_possible."

McCu rdy, continuedfrom OK-1

McCurdy.responded, "I respectfully
disagree that the wearing Of a wedding
ring and the display of family
photos....constitute p.arading one,s
sexuality."

THE .PARACHUTE
OKLAHOMA
Publisher/Editor4n-Chief
Chuck Breckeridge
Assistant Publisher
Wayne D.
Oklahoma Editors
Chuck Breckenridge
Tom Neal
Writers
Chuck Breekenridge
Tom Neal
Cookie Arbuckle
Mary Arbuclde
Stephen Scott
Babby
Leslie Thomas
Catherine Boyle
Kevyn Jacobs
Michael Camfield
Scott C~y
Advertising
Chuck Breckenridge
Leslie Thomas
Tom Neal

800-536-6519
918-832-0233
POB 4140, Tulsa 74159

P~,ac~t~ a~l m~y not I~ z~-Ix~,d ©ith~ in whol© ~ ~ p~

Nickles,

continued from OK-1
Mr. Niekles’responded, "It would depend
on how aggressive the individual was
about pushing that lifestyle."
The Parachute inquired further, "What
about putting a photo of a spouse on a
desk?" Sen. Nickles~ said, ’Tve already
answered the question." He refused any
- further comment.

| occasionally politically Correct; and t0 bring you all the news that’s’ not always fit
| tO print but we know you wanted to know..
First and foremost, Miss Thang wants toknow whyshe didn’t see more of you
1. at the.fabulous TOHR auction on National Coming Out Day? There was lots &amp; 10ts
1 Of incredible food, drinks, a view for miles and lovely, lovely people, and it all was
~ free except for the auction items that went.for a s~teal.
a
. MissThang especially wants to mention the cute volunteer bar’boys from the
| TONR clinic, all the stylish Lesbians and-particularly, the stellar jazz &amp; blues
| vocali.zations by .Pr~"tess Riley and Artie S.. You missed a good party and Miss
| Thang just_can’t believe you really hadsomething better to do on a Monday!

i

Who was that Nasty Buckeroo?

Miss Thang was so disappointed to hear this story (and
|
| you ,watch it., hear). Seems there was a fellow at one of our favorite.watering holes
| - may be he’d just had one too many but he got just a little too enthusiatic in saving
I a table. It’s said he was altogether too hatefulto several of our sisters.
Honey, we’ve got way too many folks attacking us from the outside to attack
1 each other, ok? So you just be nice to our sisters and you know what, they’ll be nice
I to you too. Next time just sayplease and thank you, and leave the hatefulness ~o me!

Fresh Bouquets
Blooming Plants
Green Plants
&amp; More
Defivery, A vailable

3115 South Harvard, 742-1234
M-F 9-6, Sat. 9-7, Sun. 12-5

THE PARACHUTE

November 1993, OK-2

�Grand
Opening
People are like animals at .~..

See the boys take itoff and the
girls dress up every week-end
at Tuls.a’s original dance .club

4812 Eo

(918) 745-9~93
Open Wed.-Sun.

Male Dancers
Fe_Lmale Im~personators
Gay Operated
Trisexual Oriented
Never a Cover

Levi-° Leather ¯ Lace
November 1993, OK-3

THE PARACHUT~

�Fight, continued from OK-1
as a response to anti-Gay laws proposed
in the Oklahoma legislature last winter.
Those proposals werekept in committe~
then but it is rumored that they defmite!y
will emerge when the legislature meets
next.)
Parachute: is there anything else you’d
like to add?
RC:when we were discussing the recent
statements by US Congressmen from
Oklahoma who said that they would not
hire Lesbians &amp; Gay men, Suzanne Pharr
suggested that we ought to respond by
flooding these guy’s offices with job ap:
plications from us!
Also because the conference was under-attended, it didn’t break even. Any
donations would be welcome.
Parachute: information about the shoWing of The Gay Agenda and other propaganda videos will be available at Tomfoolery! at the Silver" Star, 832-0233.
Donatio_ns madp~ be made toSimply Equal,
and sent to Robert, clo TOHR, 4154 S.
Harvdrd, Ste. H,l ] Tulsa, 74105.

Queer. Pen "Pals
Ever wonder what Gay &amp; Lesbian life
is like in the countries behind the old Iron
Curtain? Whatdo they talk.about? What
do they read? NOW that the-Wall is dow~
are the closets next?
The Pen Pal Project Of the International
Gay and,Lesbian Human Rights Commission can link you with soem great women
’&amp; men from most countries in Eastern/
Central Europe and the former,Sovietl
Union. If you wanttocorrespond with a
Siberianpfinceor a Bulgarian bulldagger,

senda stamped, self-addressed envelope"
to:
IGLHRC Pen Pal Project ,
..
- - 5

Tulsa News
TOHR

Feast for Friends

Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights
will hold its monthly general meeting at
7:30 on Tuesday, November 2 in the
Gathering Room of the HIV Resource
Center at 4154 So. Harvard, ’Ste. H-1.
Drive to the back of the office complex
and look for the lower level entrance on
the south building....,
The agenda, includes el’~’tion of new
officers, a report on the Fight the Right
conference and a feature presentation by
Alan Nitray of Oklahoma City on Lesbian
&amp; Gay Mental Health issues.
.For .more i~formation, call TOHR’s
Helpline, 743-GAYS,

It was also reported at October’s TOHR
meeting that Feast for Friends, a series of
individual dinners to raise funds for THE
NAMES PROJECT raised about $6,000.

Prime Timers
’Prime TimetsiS ~ organization new to
Tulsa for Gay and Bisexual men over 40.
Prime Timers is primarily: a. soqial and
support organization, focusing on cultural and reereationai activities, such as
pot-lU~k dinners, bike rides, the opera and
discossion groups. ~Member.s may bring
their partners who are under 40 if the
partner is at least 21 years old.
For more information, write:
Prime Timers
POB 521.18
Tulsa 74105

Tulsa World Watch
Several prominent Tulsa Lesbian/Gay ,
civil rights activists met with theEd~(orial.
staff0fTulsa’s only daily, theTulsa World.
Nancy McDonald, a board member of
Tulsa’s Parents, Families &amp; Friends of
Lesbians &amp; Gays, and the nadonal board.
of,P-FLAG, Kelly Kirby, president of
Ttflsa 01dah0mans for Hum an Rights with
several others met with Alex Adwon, Ken
Neal, Judy Randle and other TulsaWorld
write~in a "g,et:acquain_ted"m~¢ting. "
Accrrding tO-Mrs. MeD0nald, the
Editoi’ial Board does not.grant such interviews frequently but the writers showed
an openess and willingness to begin a
dialogue about.Lesbian &amp; Gay equal rights"
issues. The hCtivists were told that if they
could just meet indiyidually with every
Oklahoman,Lesbians andGay m~n would
have no opposition related Mrs.
McDonald. The activists also lef~ information packages about Lesbian/Gay issues
with the writers.

Tulsa University
.Comes Out

Tulsa AIDS Walk
’It was ’reported at October’s TOHR
meeting that Tulsa’s first AIDSiHIV
fundraising walk was suocessful. Over 50

people Walked and:approximately $3,000
.was ~ tO ._.be sh.ar_~ ~y.a!A..T_ulsa I-!!V
that are

In honor of National Coming Out Day,
October 11, the Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay
Alliance (formerly STIR) of the University of Tulsa held a reading-of poetry by
Queer poe~ on Sunday, October 10. On
M..onda~, several niembers_~.held a public

the Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay Alliance."
About25 people attended and asked questions about topics ranging from self-hatred,
dealing with parents &amp; friends, the status
of bisexuals, and being out on campus.
BLGA meetings are open to TU students and students from other local campus,es. The,meetings are.held at the Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay- AllianceCanterbury
Ministry Center at 5th &amp;Evanston on
Sundays at 6pro. For more info. call: 5839780

Tulsa Man
Reports Assault
A Gay man leaving a Tulsa ’bar has
reported being assaulted nearby where he
had parked his car~ "Mr. Doe" related to
the Parachute that he left the establishment
just before 2 am and noticed 2 men in the
parking lot talking. When he got in his car,
they had managed to get in the back seat:
They beat him on the baCk and shoulders.
with a climb. "Mr. Doe". said he managed to
getthe club away from one man and strike
back. He reports that his assailants then
fled.
"Mr.Doe". wentto Hillcrest for treatment
and also relates that he was questioned
eourteous.ly by a Tulsa police office~:.

NAMES PROJECT
For those interested in making a panel
for the AIDS Memorial Quilt, there will
bea sewingbee on Sat. Nov. 20 at 1:30 pm
inthe Gathering Room Of the HIV Re:
sburce Center,4154 S. Harvard, Ste..H- 1,
gr0und flooTrearentranc~.Eor moreinfo.
Cali~ 748-31i1:

Kelly-H
Certified PuNic Accountant
9933 East 16th, Suite 104
Tulsa 74128918-6630399, OKC 405-942-1062

1565 South Sheridan, Tulsa
918-834-4234
The Silver Star Saloon Proudly Presents

Dena Kaye
Saturday, November 28
8:30 pro, $3Full time masseur available.
Please call for an appointment.

Free Two Step Lessons&amp; $ 3 Beer Bust
Every Wednesday

Trash Disco &amp; $ 3Beer Bust
Every Thursday
Free Line Dance Lessons &amp; $ 3 Beer Bust
Every Sunday

:
¯¯

Please bring this ad in for a 50 % discount
off one one-hour massage. (exp. 12/3/93)
4944 So. 83rd East Avenue, Ste.D, 918.665-1155

Make Plans to join the Silver Star for our
New Year’s Eve Blowout! Watch. for Details!
THE PARACHUTE

November 1993, OK-4

One block easton 51st from Memorial. Visa/MasterCard accepted.

Monday - Saturday, 9am- 8pro, Sunday, 1-6pm.

�SOUTHWEST
STUDENT
GROUP TO SPONSOR TRIP
TO NGLTF CONFERENCE,

Creating Change
DALLAS - The Coalition of Lesbian/
GayiBi Student Groups, Inc. announced
they will.be sponsoring a trip to "creating
Change", the 6th annual conference on
gay/lesbian/bisexual cohcerns and politi=
cal Organizing hosted by the National Gay
and Lesbian Task~Force (NGLTF).
This year’s conference will be held in
Durham, North Carolina fromNovember
11. through 14. "Creating Change" is
considered the preeminent national forum
for lesbian/gay/bisexual activists and organizers to share skills and dialog about
our politicaI .mo.veinent .arid discuss
strategies for the year ahead. Lastyear’s
conference in Los, Angeles .drew.o~,er
12.00 grassroots activist~and allies from
across the natiom

"The Coalition is, once
again, glad to,be able to

offer a 10w,cost alter.
native for-queer studems and,youth :inl the

Southwestito: :pa fici,

pate directly in the natiOnal 6ivil rigtits .
movement,,, - -.

GA’

LESBIAt

E A(~

~E~MA~I:ON

sponsored similar trips to this ~eur’s naFighting for fair, accurate &amp; Inclusive re,presentation of lesbian and gay lives!
tional gay and lesbian civil rights march
Mr. Don Coo, President
READING: OUR RIGHT
in Washington D:C., as well as the"CreHiram Walker and Sons, Inc.
OutMagazine tells us thatTheReader’s
ating Change" conferences in 1991-and
P.O. Box 33006
Catalog; a regular adver- tiser, in the
1992.
Detroit,’M148232-3006
"We know that-after attending these
magazine, is receiving hate mail and has
events these future leaders become inlost 50 subscribers for: including lesbian
Naya Water, a longtime supporter of
and gay titles in the book lists. Catalogs
vigorated, and,return some this. energy
the community (and of GLAAD/NY).has
and information toassist the in struggle at
like this are. an important source of books,
signed on as the first major sponsor of
particularly for gay men and lesbians who
the state, local and collegiate-level.Y~ Mr.
cannot get tea welhstocked book- store;
Gay GameslV, in the largest sponsorship
Dorsey and CLGBSG Congress Secredeal everffor a single lesbian and gay
or whosebookstores won.~t carry lesbiun~
tary Jeff McCanley will also present at
event. Stu Levitan from Naya has also
this year’s conference on youth organiz2
andTgay material.
- gone out ofhis way personally to support
ing and race/classjgender issues;.
The Reader’s Catalog ShoUld be com. corporate involvement in our community.
mended-for standing their groun~UI~etters
The Coalition "Freedom Bus" will_deA very.warm thanks to:
.part from Dallas at noon on Thursday;
of support should be addressed to:
Ms. Stephanie Smith "
S tu Levitan
November 11 and return back toDallas on
... Vice President/General Manager
The Reader’ s Catalog
Moflday,Nov. 15 ~t threep.m. The f~of
250 West 57th Street
N0ra-Beverages USA
$100includes rtund-trip transportation,
ahd hotel lodging .at the.arena .- R~leigh
New York, NY 10019
, "
. ~ .
6 High Ridge Park,’B!dg.
¯ Thecatalog eanbe ordered freeofcharge . .... _ Stamford,. CT 06905
Durham, thesite of the conference. O~gaby calling 800-733.~BOOK.(say yousaw . :
¯
= " ..............
#=ers suggest participants .should .also
budget $60 for.food during~e m.’p. T~e_ abe ad:in Out Magazine), ~t’s .make,up .: --: GLAAD_/~_....
trip is 0peii_to°~all gay/l~sbian/bise~U~l .... for those50 lost Subscribers!" i: ...... u 15OWest 26th.St., Ste; 503
students and youth. Seam are limited.
New York,. NY10001
:
. :
Participants fees must be received.by the
SPONSORSHIP NEWS:
212-807-1700. ~
’
,
.....
.HIRAM WALKER &amp; NAYACoalition by Saturday, November6th:
Concert byLegendary Lesbian
The increased interestin the lesbianland
TheCLGBSG is-Dallas, Texas based
Singer/Songwriters to Benefit
non-profit (50i.c3)educationa~’organiza- " gay market in c6rporate America has led
Herland Legal Defense Fund
to an increase notonly in. advertising in .
tion-founded.in 1989 to serve gay/lesbian
and:bisexual-students and youth in the
Cris. William.s0n and Trot Fure, both
the lesbian and gay press, but in sponsorwell know for their roles in shaping the
SOuthwest.- O~eiprograms include a
ship ofcommunity events as well. Two
women’s m uSic mo~’ement are performing
regional conference, a three2day leadercompanies in particular are to be comm .the Ciqic Cehter Little Theatrdin
mended for their continuedsponsorship
ship skills retreat, a scholarship program,
¯
Oklahoma Ciiy on ThurSday, No~,ember
communications network and. quarterly
support:
18 at 8 pro.
Hiram
Walker,
whose
brands
include
student meetings in.the service, area.
The Herland Legal Defense FUnd ~gi~ts
For more infoi~nation,on the Creating
Fris Vodka, Beefeater Gin, Courvoisier
tO help defray the legal cost~ fOr"~bian
Cognac,Cutty Sark Scotch~ MidoriMelon
Changetripandother~LGBSGprograms,
or for information on hd-W.to Sponsor a
Liqueur~ and 0there(has supported over a
&amp; Gay parents~ Seeking to protect the_’n~
pa~efiting fights in~ilie oklahoma ~OurtS..
dozen community :organizations, _includ~ student’s participation, contact the Coaing the Nam~s.P~oject, Astraea(HRCF,
Currently :support is~ ’l~i.ng given to-:~
lition at PO Box 190712, Dallas, Texas,
l_~sbian~iitther ~ee~.ng to,retain custOdy
The Center, and LifeBoat. Write~to thank=
75219 or. call (2!4)521~53~Z ~xt. 808:
of her children.

�GLAAD Media
News Briefs
by AI Kielwasser
Ga~ &amp; Lesbian Alliance Against
Defamation/San FranciscoBay Area

Homophobla Illustrated
Recently, Sports Illustrated(SI) rejected
an advertisement from the Adidas,eomparty that featured a photo of the all-male
Canadian soccer team, wearing nothing
but Adidas Shoes. The players were not
fully nude, though. Their .hands, soccer
balls andtrophies were strategically
placed. ,
Since when has SI tlad any qualms
about running photos of semi-nude indi,
viduals? .After all, this is the same magazine that earns its keep through annual
sales of the "swimsuit issue," which features semi-nude women in various
Obviously, Sis decision to reject the
Adidas ad was based on nothing but sexism, homophobia’s constant companion.
SI has sent a message that it’s okay to
sprawl semi-nude photos_in their magazine as long-as thephotos are of women
only.
Forillustrating sexism, homophobiaand
hypocrisy, direct criticism to Mark
Mulvoy, Editor, Sports Illustrated, and
Roger Jackson, Public Relations Director, Time, Inc., Tim e and Life Building,
Rockefeller Ce~nter, New York, NY
10020.
Spin Examines Hate Music
In the August issue of the music magazine Spin, :Farad Chideya examines the
use of homophobic lyrics in hip-hop, rap
and dance hall reggae music.

Chideya concludes that the blatantly
homoph0bic lyrics of Such performers as
Ice Cube, Big Daddy Kane, and Chubb
Rock are an attempt to deny the existence
of homosexuality within the/African
American community.
The author also takes.note of pro÷gay/
lesbian rappers, including female rapper
Yo Yo and the rap duo Disposable Heroes
of Hiphoprisy, whose sing(e "Language
of Violence" railed.against gay bashing.
To effectively counteract musical hate
speech, Chideya argues that more performers need to come back with their own
response, using rap as the format.
Send compliments to Bob Guccione,
.Jr., Editor, Spin, 6. West 18th Street,
New York, NY 10011.
Bad Vibe
The October issue of Vibe magazine
includes a scurrilou~ bit of journalistic
phlegm. In "No Apologies~ No Regrets,"
author Joan Morgan profiles Jamaican
singer Buju Banton and seeks to legitimize the reggae singer’s homophobia on
cultural grounds.. Benton’Ssong "Boom
Bye Bye" openly advocates murdering
gay men. Tobe more specific, Baton calls
upon listeners to shoot gays thrrugh the
head.
In her unbalanced discussion of Banton
and his gay-bashing hit, Morgan manages
to dredge up endless stereotypes about
Jamaican gay men--that they are child
molesters, rapists, classist leaches, and
even that their sexual activities lead to
incest, decapitation and death. Not one
gay Jamaican.was quoted in ,esponse to
such-hateful absurdities.
The basicpremise of Morgan’s article is.
that homophobia is an essential and integral part of Black culture.. Of course, her
definition of Black culture excludes lesbi-

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THE PARACHUTE

November 1993, OK-6

ans, ga~.men and transgendered persons.
of African, Afro-American, Afro-Caribbean, and Afro-Latin descent.
In an open letter to Vibe magazine,
numerous lesbian, gay and transgendered
activists of African descent roundly denounce the conclusion "that. those who
shun music or musicians who espouse
homophobia do so out of racism or cul: tural insensitivity" and furthermore, they
point out, "the decision of Vibe’s Editor~
In-Chief Jonathan Van Meter to publish
so biased and defamatory a piece clearly
illustrates that not all powerful, gay white
men value or respect 0~r lives."
In defending Buju Banton, Joan Mor-"
gan joins in his hate-filled campaign and
has allied herself with those who promote
hatred rather than understanding~ Criticism should be directed to Jonathan Van
Meter, Vibe, 205 Lexington Ave., 3rd
Floor, New York, NY 10016.

The Media Access Project:
Playing Fair
Legislation to reinstate the "Fairness
Doctrine" is now pending in Congress.
Before it was disbande.d in the midst of
deregulation hysteria, the Fairness Doetrine required broadcasters to provide balanced coverage of "controversial" issues
of public importance. Conservative radio
talk show hosts’ and other media hate
mongers (i.e,; Rush Limbaugh and clones)
are spearheading an effort to defeat this
legislation.
The Media Acc.ess Project is encouraging the lesbian, gay and bisexual communities to support the Fairness Doctrine
bills in the House of Representatives and
Senate (H.R. 1985 and S. 333). The Media
Access Project asks you to contact your
Senators and Representatives in support of these bills (U.S. Senate, Wash-

ingtOn, DC 20510, tel. 202-224-3121;
U.S. House ofRepresentatives, Washington, DC 20515, tel. 202-225-3121).
For more information, call Gigi Sohn
at the Media Access Project, 202-2324300.

November’s In The Life
"School’s Outh Lesbian &amp; Gay Youth"-will examine the Challenges faced by
young queers. The program provides an
overview of emerging educational pro.grams, high school.homophobia, lesbian/
gay teachers, and more.
The November episode alsointroduces
a new "Fact File" feature. Among the
statistics that will be revealed: Half of all
lesbian and gay youth surveyed report
that their parents rejected them because of
their sexual orientation. Fortyrfive percent of gays and 20 percent of lesbians
~xpedence verbal harassment in high
school, and 28 percent are routinely forced
to drop out because of homophobic harassment.
In The Life is not fundedby the Public
Broadcasting System. but is produced
through a national membership network.
For further information (and a copy of
the In The Life program guide) call
800-627-ONTV.

�THE HUMAN RIGHTS
~

an~form; includingodiscrimination.
based on sexual orientation,~o-er~ emphasized t0ihe ~oun

d-nt M~rk 14An-ric k~mndelivereda

~,. ~ " :~-:’. ,. -.. -;
:*.~_=-*e~a~
¯
wnichincmdeaexnoningmeas/~PilJ/~
~ ¯
,
cil ~. the bklahoma C. H~man, ~ ~f~::o~r:~’~ ~:~~
On Tuesday, October 5, the
Rights Commission-~aff mereorder to challenge Oklaho~as
Oklahoma City Council, led by
bers and volunt~ unanimously
archaic sodomy laws. The conMayor Ron Nodck, destroyed all
suppoSedpassage of the prosensus of the coalition was .ah
e~husia~ic~llingne~ to I~ig~e
chances for local protection of -posedadd~ions to the Munici~l
,
-a~i~the S~y la~and s~vbasic human righ~ and civil liber.
Code. .
ties~ In .a 6~3 vote, the Council
The ~e~can Civil Li~ies ~ e[al~people Vblunteered to be~ruck from theiragenda therfinal
Union o~ Oklahoma "expressed~-L pl~in~tiff~: ~l,~addition, it was.
h~fing ~ proposed amendmen-- p~blic ~isappoin--e~:~ ina~ ~- ". ~greedth~.th~Okllh~ma Human
tion onpa~ 0fme Six~Council~:: Righ~Project sh6u[d:;foeus on
to A~icles II, III and IV of ChapMr
m~ ~o m~to~e :~ -~eg~st0pm~ent the~"age ~
25 ~ the Oklahoma CiW Mu~icipal c~e. Due to the p~sum~x.~
the. Oklahoma C.. H~ma~=Rig ~. :..; -~~::i~[~£~:~
e~ed by Right Wing Religious’Sx-: Commis~on tO ~o~ a~Deiyand ~ , of la~"~fi~, o~ina~ces s~h as
tremists, the Council refralne.
’~e~ivelyin com~ffigg~discdmi-,
theone;Whichlh~Oklahoma"CiW
from passing the ordinance be-~ ,na~o~ practices~bY~employers, -~.-,.CounCil ~uSed to~pa.:’~
cause s~xual o~enMtion was in-~ landi0rdsaadpubiiC.~cc6mm0da-~’ ~ ACLU ~’Oklahomwishesto
cluded as a prote~ed’ cat~go~: " tions In addi:UOn;ACLUIOKc~m*~ retain-tithe Oklahoma ~C~.comHowever, failure to"paSs ~he
mended c0un~il me~bersMark’ " mhniw a~i~-pmsenMti0n of
amendments leaves no recourse " Schwa~,LWHla Joh~so~ and : THE:~OSPiCE."-Thisplay~ill ~
pmsenied on ~O~tobe~23 and 29
for individuals Who experience :, ~ Jackie Cam~ for~ei~ ou~geous
at theWilI,Rogers Center~ 4322 N.
discrimination on the ~basls of........ s~nce in"s~n~:~ ~sic~h~m~n
~t~rn~
time
.... ~.: CUmin
;;L~ ~ " ..
~. Will. be at
:
~; color,
"
. . ~ ’~" .~
; ong~
:~’n , " ....
- .....
race, creea,
national
~ahts
"
8:00 RM~. on bothevenings~ The
=
¯
ethnicity, gender or disability s~On Thumday; Septem~r 30,
productioo~addresses anti,gay
tus.
¯
~
,-- ~ - ACLU of Oklahoma,in;solidad~pmjudi~sa~d~expioresthe posiSdl" Rogers, the cu~nt. Chair"
with more than an dbzen other~:~ ti~e:a~itudes,~o[~chara~ers living
of the Oklahoma ~ity Human
OklahomaOroupr~, formed"the ~ with-AiDS~ Te~:pe~ofthe proRigh~ Commission: presented a
Oklahoma HumaO,.Righ~ P~oject. c~d~will go t0the ~IDS Suppo~.
broadband a~ay offac~ and m~. ¯ .Among~ theoth~ ~0maniz~ions.
Program,, TiCkets ~ay ,be .purtistics which dem0nstrated ~that ~- m res~hted at the meetin were
. chased at Jungle Red,Lobo,-the
similar ordinances, have. ~ee.0~:~ ~,~’the-National Organization of
T~angle AssoCiation and the HI"
"
....
.....
"~
~’i
~
~~
Women,Simply
Equal
t
the
Okla-:
Lo Club ~ot by calHng
passed m local commumtms
across the nation. -He .alse cited
homa Gay and Lesbian:Political ~ Oklahoma ,at (40S) 524-8511 and
number and a
numerous co~o~te~amples of Caucus and
There will also
ia
iited ¯ number of.tickets
which include sexual qdentation) -. meetin
hts
among Fortune 600 companies.
of performance.
Also noted ~
of m

Sup~. the

’

~i~tion
that

-i~O~

F~om

-

Amc~n
Rcligi~.
Amc~n

ciVil Liberties Union
of Free Speech, Press
Civil. ~ibertics Unio.
.you Equality and Du~

~n Suppo~ ~ ACLU by Bccomin

to: ACLU,- 132 West
New York, NY 10036

43rd

lOd, b]ackon pink

10c~ gold on black

lob, blue/green

10a, red &amp; black on grey

.,

gay (g~) adj. ~k, joyous, free,
brilliant, merryili~htheart~

Want to stay that way...?

Fight back- COME OUT!

VISUALIZE.
HATE IS. NOT A FAMILY VALUE"

"I

10g, black on grey

lOf, black on white

10e, black on fuschia

DON’TUSEPEOPLE
&amp;LOVETHINGS

&amp;~Think

t mgh.t,,

10x, white, pink&amp; red on black

MAI)E -’
IN
HEAVEN

&amp;USETHINGS
T-$14.95, Sweat-S19.95

City, ST &amp; ZIP

Visa or MasteK?~rd#
¯ Name as on Card
Exp~ Date
Daytime phone: (

.

Merchandise Total
Shipping &amp; Handling
Grand Total

"

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)

" "

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-

¯

-

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~hitmine
.
Up to $25.00, add.S3.50
$25~01 tO 50.00, add $4.50
OK Residents, please add
7.5% Sales Tax

. ’

Out of the ~l~t, Inc.

suite 199,16H So. utica
Tulsa, OK 74104
918-749-2033, FAX 749-5992

Novembei: 1993,OKL7

THE PARACHUTE.
/

�manag

like to THANK the
Lesbian
for your conti
PROUD TO BB~

THE PARACHU3"E

November 1993, OK-8

O

DAMD OPERATED

�~ssGay
OK~HO~A
. . .......
............................
..

Fo tu

1000 Survey

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.... ...............
........
National Gay and ~sblan

n~t ~o ~mem~r in ~u~u

The
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Task

,
~
pa.rtlclpants,
have.........nondlsclosure]
.
......Demands
pohcy
that
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~nd to
orientation
Three;additional
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in~,
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ao not ..... ~iscriminnrion
....~.-.....
~
~0n:
Oklahoma Ci~y~ OK (EGCM)lu the
. ~ake of ~’eports from three Oklahoma
of

the U.S; House of
;that they would not

gay people f()r their staffs,
ind is
all members of

who o~poses

::panics :include issues :related :to:
their
Sextlal
Orientation
F@~÷~ N~$ @a~ ~A~; ha Oh~ .....
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a~ og go~rs~ $~ ~rr~t Ni~
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~ay
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discrimifiatioi~ against lesbian and gay
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Istook and
’ lesbian and gay
discrimination against
people on Capitol Hill out of the
.
, ..... ,
.
closet; saysum~v~cree~ey, execut~ve
director of the Human Rights
Campaign Fun~d. "We are surveying
every member of the Houge and
~sking them to inform
their stars that discrimination on the
basis ~f ~al orientatiOn Will no/be
offices," . .
.....
Oklahoma membe{S of CongreSs
October :3.

T,P.4 S H
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�the abi!ity.of neutrophiis to engulf ¯
and destroy b~cterla:~ .These ~.ef~
fects
start’ within lessthan 30
minutes after ingestion and last for
overfive hours: Typically, there is
at least a 50% reduction in neutroph,s activity two hours alter ingestion. Since neutrophils consti,
tute 60 - 70% of your total circula~ting white blood cells, impairment
of their activity can sedouslysuppress your immune system~ Ingsstion of 75 grams of glucose has
also been shown to depress lymphocyte activity. In contrast the
¯ ingestion of 110 grams of complex
carbohydrates results in no supDamaging The Immune System pressive effect on immunefunc,._
Stress is one of thegreatest damtion..
agesof your immune, system. ~.
SO, ho~i much sugar does the
Many research studies have now .....
average ~ American Consume? A
clearly demonstrated that stress
su.rpdsing t50 grams of .sucrose ,~
induces-illness is a real phenomvery day, notincluding other sim- :
enon and stress contributes to
ply sugarslikelhosein fruit÷juiceomay-diseases. However, it is not
andhoney. ~ It seems likely-~that.
stre~;~;"per"say that-causes the
mostAmericanshave chronically
problem;.: but:rather howea~ch ins
depressedimmune systems.
~ ~.
divi dual. reacts to the -.stress.
Obesity isalso-associat~d ~ith
Stress.causes several changes ino
the b~dy~ the most important for.~ dectdas~d i~mu~e~fiihctior~~¥ C~o~.
your.im~nune system being in-. leste#orand lipid levels ’are Usu-~
ally elevated in obese indi~i~ls~
creased ~secretions of adrenal
Increased blood levels off:holes;
gland hormones.~ The~e horterol~free~fatty
acidS, rtriglycerides, mones ~inhibit white: blood cells
and
bile
acidsinhibit
various iraand cause the thymus gland to
mune
functionsinduding
theabi!~...
shrink,. This leads, to a significant
ity of lymphocytes .to proliferate
reduction of immune funct.ions,
and p~)duce antibodies, and the_
leaving you susceptible tp infecability. Of neutrophils to migrate to
tions,.cancer,~ and other illnesses..
The.level of immune suppression : area,~ of infections and engulf.and
destroy infectious organisms,
is usually proportional to the level
Alcohol increases susceptibility to.
of stress
experimentalinfection inanimals.
Sugar consumption also ssdousiy inhibits immune function. .-.and alcoholics, are .known to be
The_ingestion of just-100 grams: .... mo~e...~usc~e~p,ti~!y to p_n~u...monia.
other inrecuons. ~tuoles 01
nlucose , fruc " " anu
/three
ouncest¯ of~,~
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: ~’
.’~i
¯
human neutrophds
nutritiously
(table
sugar),
or..
rose, Sucrose
¯ - even honey significantly reduces
normal people, . Next.time: Damaging the¯ Immune System~.

The Splendor_Of Truth?.

¯ Postcards fromParadise

By: Father Marry Martin
~Holy Trinity E~C.C., OKC
~-~
Pope John Paul !! has released
his latest encyclical, "Veritatis
Splendor,,. the ,Splendor-of.
Truth." it re-enforces traditional
Roman Catholic"morality .with a
vengeance with no dissent permitt~d from any quarter of the Church.
It teachesmasturbation iSa sin;
-birth control is ~asin, homosexuality is intri,sically evil; no abortions for any reason; and remarried: heterosexuals must live as
brothel and ~is~er~amoiigsome if
it’s deClarations of "truth,’.
Haven,t you had enough .yet?
Why would any gay. or !esbia~,
Rom~n~Catholic COntinue to re~
main. in a homophobic church
where they are.so condemned and
unwelcomed?
¯ .:
.

General Gay &amp; Lesbian, Discussion Groups

. presentCds Williamson and Tret
Fure in concert Nov. 18 at the Civic
Center Little-Theater in OKC. Tickets for the perferance which benefits the Herland
Legal Defense
o
Fund, are .$2.S, a.n.d $~6 in ~d.vance.
Any remammgtlcksts will be
at the dOord. Advance tickets are
available .at Herland Resources,
2312 N.W. 39th, OKC,
Tick.~s ~have been in great demand since going on sale on Sept.
18: The c6nert hal/seats 390 and
.we eXpecttosell all of the tickets
before the-night of the concert,
says organizer WandaChapman.
: Crisand .Tret have just released
their first~ddo album, ~ "Postcards
From Paradies", alter collaborat~
ing in .performance setting and on
each other’s: !~cordi~gs¯ for-the
past twelve y~irs.
The:Hedand ~Legal Defense
Fund provides assistance with-le~
gal fees for lesbians appealing
child custody~:cou~t decisions.’~
More information about the Legal
Defense Fund"ro the concert is
available by ~ailing Herland.at
(40S)521~sse6

f~iLindinO ofth~e Ecumenical.Catholic Church Wasbur opposition tO
.traditional Roman Catholic morblity, espe(~!aily concerning lesbi:
ans, gay men,,and bisexuals. We
¯ are a churchfo£~oday,- ~ith realistic moral.valuss ~cti~ thelove
of Christ for all people. We wel:
come you into the Ecumenical
Catholic Church!

Herland Sister’Resources will

_

.

.Mondays, 6:30 at Red Rock - New Group starting Thursdays,6:30 at Red Rock

Couples of Mixed HIV Status
Contact Jim Carter for details.

YGLA, Young Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance
Discussion Group, Tuesdays, 6:30 at Oasis
Activity Group, Sundays, 8pm at Oasis

Referral Assistance
Jim&amp; Betsy will provide free referral assistance for individuals
seeking counseling or substance use treatment.
Some support groups will require screening ofpartic.ipants ’ to insure group Compatibility.

Red Rock HIV Counseling Services
Individual Counseling for HIVpositivepersons: andtheir~!oved ones and HIV Prevention Education.

THE PARACHUTE

November 1993, OK-10

�HEALING -by: Cookie Arbuckle, Director of. Other ,Optoins. Inc.
Gays have madea substantial
impact on the personal lives and
social.communities it has touched
through the nation, throughout the
world,~th~roughout all history,
throughout time. The premier per-~

Day Without Art" when presented
in New York by Visual Artists’.Caucus 2 Years ago..(they also brought
you the "RedRibbon") It has.become a symbol for many and i,S
now a continuous "celebrations"
on AIDS. Day throughout the Wodd.~
We were not able.to bringthat kind
0f~thinking(o Oklahoma that year,
.but perhaps this year. WichIta,

formance of classical .movie was
viewed, by the public in November
of 1940 at Radio City Music Hall in
New York City.i.: I am: sure. it "
Changed the lives’of millions of
Kansas, another~tate of seve#e
- ~ people. It did mine.. "
"
conservatism, weare working on
Reading overthe histo.r~ofthat
, .Did you all like peter Pan, Alice
film amazed me..one third of all
the music was ~vdtten ~by a Gay
in W0ndedandwhen yougrew up,
man. Of the hundreds of artists
The writers were Gaff. The most
working forfouryearsonthefilm,
famous artist~s of all was. Peter
-IlichTchaikovsky
,The Nut~racker
we fi~,,m~l at least half were "de.
ferent! -or openly gay..
. Suite, Cinderella,._SWan Lake~
Their boss- a man who surSleeping. Beauty. And then there
rounded himself with the m~’~t~l;
was Shakespeare (who was
ented artists available- sex-pref~
degreed-tO hai~e bisexual tenden~rence did not enter the picture,~
cies.)
The children and adults came
’1 know-we can not all be
Tchaikovsky, but we all have :been
away With: a mentor to live,with
influenced,:,impacted, inspired;
daily, musicthat filled, them full of
pictures, a way to view the wodd
motivated, iml~iled, Persuaded
from a different place, HOPEI
andempowered ~by Gays. itis not
These ch ildren hungered for-more
|ust artist. I have worked with
and become the first generation of
people form all walks of .life. The
DISNEY venerates. How many
rainbow has affected all of us
other pole are being impacted by
whetherwe acknowledge it or not.
Gays in this way. Who can say,
I did an inservice workshop for
who will admit.
infusion therapy group and a phyDo you know what film name it
~ sician .was present I knew to be
~was? ,;FANTASIA! ~,

2800 N.W, 39th.

what the Gay.problem was.
We finally .decided thatGays
had the same things to worry
about that everyone else had, fear
of Ionel|~eSs;~"~hd~nment, rejection and of coUrse on top of.that

Equal Opportunity to Heterosexual Students Through Teaching and Counseling". Food for
thought. Healing takes place
though ownership and responsibility.. I will try that on a hetero-

One of the nurses told me to
take being. Gay and the answer
could easily involve us all.
We
did and it read as follows: Empowerment occurs when the frustration. of a single individual creates
a breakthrough to a differentlevel
of involvement and that parson
takes ownership of and responsibility for.whatever is the problem.
Leann~ onebf our educators
offered me a paged training handbook for educators titled "Affording Equal Opportunity to Gay and
Lesbian Students Through Teachin

collaboration; They have become
the ’~teachers" in :.this field. Whyl
Because early on. the gay.population took responsibility, So
healing, has occurred. The culture Gay is growing, is expanding ,-is healing - themselves, and
the rest of the world.

Su pport those:
who support you
Patronize those who
¯ ,advertis~

405-943-0843

OKC.

9n,th:Anniverssary CelebratiOn
Friday-November 26th &amp; Saturday N0vember-27th
~.
Oklahoma Leather Fantasy

Friday 27th
Open House Meet &amp; Greet Leather Dignitaries from across the-USA and Live Entertainment

Saturday,28th

-

Let’s g~tOthe races.
1st Race 12noon Remington ParkSth floor Suite
All you can,meat &amp; drink
$60 per person
includes valet parking and Tip Sheets

Reservations .Only. call
..... ::~:: 405-943-0843

Saturday, Nov. :

Annual Turnabout Show
at.The:Bunkhouse.

thank you for
9
November 1993, OK-11

THE PARACHUTE

�,. 919 N. x.’ir~qi~it,, OKC ¯ (405) 272-985~

ATTENTION ALL MEN!
*REMEMBER THE OUT RIGGER?
THE BEST TIMES ARE BACK
*SNEAKERS is making a’changeYOU WIN!I~ We are turning it overto you!

-GRAND OPENING:NOVEMBER 6TH

AWA R E N E S S

SHOW FEATURING DOMINIQUE NICOLE FRIENDS
Show Starts at10:45,No Cover
*Open 5 days aweek, Wed thru Sat. 4pm,
...
Sunday 2pro
*OUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST IN TOWN*.
BOTTLE.BEER-St,50 PITCHERS-S3,00 WELL$2.00 CALL~- $3,00SCHNAPPS $1.00
’ - *Looking for* Male-Dancbrs and a bartender
*Dart seasonsign up
K.A.’s
-OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
. ~ ..-.~ i. -i~, ~.,~ 4:30--TILL WHENEVER
. HAPPY HOUR MONDAY - FRIDAY 6-8

FRIENDS :WHO CARE GARAGE SALE

LOOSE UP TO THRITY POUNDS
IN THIRTY DAYS
FOR THIRTY DOLLARS
CALL 405-495-6732
LORETTA
ASK ABOUT OTHER PROGRAMS

~t the workl know, you are...

Printed on the highest quality 100%
heavy cotton Tees rind .Tanks.
Available in black, gray and white.
Baseball caps (with sLitch logo) also
available in black &amp; white only.
Shirts: $15.00
Caps: $12.00
(addS3.00/~rs &amp; h.)
Mai/ chec~or money order to:

Meant To Be Fit

"The t:~jinnincj c~ chan~e is ~he commitment to do so-.

Logo is two-tone pink and black, with white or
black ~ype depend/nO on color T-sh#t or cap.

THE PARACHUTE

Meant To Be Fit
1001 N.W. 18th St.
Oklahoma City, OK 73106-641-6
(credit card orders calL"-1-800-546-8689-Visa, MasterCard, Discover,. American
-Express accepted:)
..

November 1993, OK-12

SUNDAY NOVEMBER 7TH
OAK EXECUTIVE BUILDING PARKING LO1
5915 NW 23RD - WEST OF MACARTHUR
¯ 10AM TO 6PM
FOR MORE INFORMATIN OR TO GIVE A DONATION
ITEM CALL 728-3222

�HABANA INN COMPLEX’
Your home away from Home!

]80GuestReo
..... - .....
~ms Poolside Rooms

two Pools ,Suites Cable T.V.
Featuring

" Gushers:i.Restaurant

Current,classic and progressive dance ~music.

-.Beer-bust.&amp;:Shows.,-~.Wednesday~ &amp;, Sunday,

West end; Habana Inn complex
Pool and :Darts

ComingEvents
November 5th=Miss Finishline Pageant at

....Gushers

-

Nov. 7th- Temployees Turnabout show to
benefit Triangl.e Assoc.
Nov. 6th &amp; 7th- Paula Hand’s Dance-Workshop 9am=5pm
¯ " 2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY

(405) 524:JRED

- -- 0~I~i(~MA :ClT’g, OK 73112
(405) 524-5733

Grds, Magazines, Leather, ]~:shirt,Gi[-ts

Nov. 19th- Mr. OKC Leather Contest at
Gusher’s
FRIDAY’s Beginning Nov.26th: The
Jacqulyn DeVaroe Show
Saturday Nov. 27th- OKC Classic Bowlers

Benefit Sh0.w Featuring Glitz &amp; Glitter

from Dallas

2200.NW 39th Expy,.Okl.ahoma City, OK 7311.2.
¯ .Ca|Ifor Rates:.&amp; Information
405-528-2221 ::
" ns only eali! 1-800-988-~2221
American-Express/-VisaiMastercard Accepted

�Wichita, Kansas (316)

Tulsa, Oklahoma (918)

Oklahoma City (405)

Oklahoma City. (405)

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Buddies Country, 4000 s. Broadway
529-4953
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
SouthForty,3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
R &amp; R’Brass Rail, 282~8 E. 31st 684-9009
T-Room, 1507 E. Pawnee
262-9327
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hiliside
681-2746
Lessens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market
263 -2777
The Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln
683-8.088
Service &amp; Retail-Businesses
Visions &amp; Dreams, 3414 Maple
942-6333
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway
263-3007
Queen Anne’s Lace
733-4075
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 700N. Market
267-6522
Roommates
, 262-8444
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry 269.4411
Land of Awes Info. Ser. POB 16782 67216
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st
832-1816
Plato’s, 1306 E. Harry St.
269-9036
T.B.’s, 1516 S. Oliver.
688-5343
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. Olive688-5343
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 3721 S. Broadway
Adult Entertainm’tCtr 7805 W. Kellpgg
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 2809 N. Broadway
Adult Entree’ South, 8025 S. Broadway
Circle Cinema, 2570 S. Seneca

¯ Bars &amp; Restaurants
¯Electric Circus, 606 S.Elgin 587-8677
-*Laffrs, 311 E.-7th
583-5233
¯ Phoenix, 6328 S. Peoria
743-7062
¯ Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S. Sheridan
834-4234
585-3405
¯ Renegade, 1649 S. Main
¯ Time n’ Time Again, 1515 S. Memorial

Bars &amp; Restaurants-Angles, 2117 NW 39th
524-3431
Bunkhouse, 2800 NW 39th
943-0843
Coyote Club, 2120 NW 39th 521-9533
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill
2200 NW 39 Ex.pwy
525-0730
Hi Lo Club 1221 NW 50th
834-.1722
KA’s;.2024.NW llth
525-3991
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th
947-5384
The Park, 2125 NW 39th
528-4690
ThePorthole,3630NW 39th 949-9837
Sneakers, 919 N.Virginia " - 272-9833
Tramps, 2201 NW 39th
528-9080
WreckRoom,2127NW 39th 525-7610
The Kitchen,2124 NW 39th 528-5133
La" Roca Mexican Restaurants
SW 4th/Walker, 409 W. Reno &amp;
.7550 N. May
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
-Banana Products
341-8965
Exec. Travel, 2113 NW 36th 521-9100
Habana Inn, 2200 NW 39th
528-2221
Herland, 2312 NW 39th
521-9696
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733
Lobe’s, 2131 NW 39th
528-5!56
Deb Roberts, Entertainer
843-5624
Second Chance Credit
752-2209
.Stephen¯Scott, Masseur
525-8689
Shirley. Hunter, M;Ed/counsel0r
848-5429
Larry Prater,.MD, Psychiatry 232-5453

Organizations

Organizations
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty. Health DepL
1900 E. 9th
268-8441
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 1942-1786
The Lesbian Celebration
683-7561
P-FLAG, POB 686, 67201-0686 687 -4666
Gay Information Line
269-0913
Acceptance iC’roj. POB. 868, 67201
687-4666
Religious Organ3ozatlons..,. -~-"-:~’:?~ :~.
wiCl~itaPraise ~ Worship Ctr.65i-6903:"
First Unitarian Chttt~h
684-3481
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633

Junc~tlon City, Kansas (913)
After Dark Video, 1206 Grant
Revolutions, 902 W. 7th
238-6374
Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Support Grbup
223-6125

Lawrence, Kansas (913)
DouglasCounty AIDS Project 843-0040
Lesbigay Services, 410 KS Union
Box 13, Kansas Univ. 66045
864-3091
Freedom Coalition, POB 1991

66044

Manhattan, Kansas (913)
AIDS Project
843-0040
Flint Hills Alliance
Gay &amp;Lesbian Info.Line 587-0016
MCC-Manhattan
271-8431
Bisexual &amp; Gay &amp; Lesbian Society
SAS Box 63, Kansas St.. Univ. 66506

Topeka, Kansas (913)
Bars &amp; Clubs
Classics, 124 S.W 8th 357-1960
Expressions, 110 SE 8" 233-3622
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas
Some Like It Hot 4732 S; Topeka Ave.

Organizations
Topeka AIDS Project
232-3100
Ga’y/Les. Task Force, POB 3829, 66604
357-8727
234-6699
223-6558
234-8562

Mayors Task Force
Gay Rap Line
HIV Affected Group
Religious Organizations
MCC-Topeka, POB 4776, 66604
Affirmation (Methodist)

THEPARACHUTE

232-6196
235-6101

660-0856
¯ TNT’s 2114 S. Memorial
664-8299
¯ Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd
584-1308
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
¯ Tomfoolery, 1565 S. Sheridan
832-0233
Kelly Kirby, CPA
663-9399
¯ Elite Gbods, 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503
¯ Whittier Bkstore, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767
aDreamland, 8807E. Admiral 834-1051
¯ Indian Terr. Coffee Co. 16.13 E, 15th
.587-1633
¯ Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 P1 664-2951
¯ Tulsa Central Library, 400 Civic Ctr.
596-7977
¯.Chapman Student Cir. TU, 631-0000
Organizations
ACT-UP, POB .532
74101
Names Proj..POB 3181, 74101 748-3111
P-FLAG,POB 52800,74152 749.4901
¯ TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
743-4297
¯ GayLine Info.
" -. ’ Shanti Hodine
749-7898
.*STIR, Tulsa U. student org. 583-9780
OldahomaAIDS Hotline 800-535-2437
Religious.Organizations
"
¯ Family of Faith MCC, 500 W. ’A’ Jenks
"298-4622
Afftrm~iiiori (Meth:~) ~B,. 14301, ;::741-59
.481-1528
*MCC-Tulsa, l~.23Map!eycood 838-1715.
Dignity/Integrity
*Canterbury Ministry Ctr.

Religious Organizations

ACLU, 1411Classen, Ste318 524-8511
Herland Sis. Res. 2313 NW 39 521-9696
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277
OASIS Resourcg Ctr. 2135 NW 39
525-2437
OK GayPol. CaucusPOB 61186 73146
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc.
943-0843
OKC Metro Mens’ Chorus
424-1753
Pride Network
340-3575
RAIN
232-4372
ACT-UP/Queer Nation
447-4209
Womens’ Resource Ctr.
364-9424
AIDS Mastery
525-3636
A1-Anon (Gay)
947-3834
Alcoholics Anonymous
525-2437
OK AIDS Hotline
800-535-2437
Other Options
728-3222
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39~h
843-8378

Norman, Oklahoma (405)
Simply Equal/Norman, POB 5684, 73030
OU Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Alliance
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 731319
325-4452

Lawton, Oklahoma (405)
HIV/AIDS Support 248-5890/351-2820
SW AIDSNetw0rk, POB 3924, 73505
Great Plains MCC, :1416 W.-Gore
357-7899

New Beginnings MCC 3136 N. Portland
942,6313
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 360-0414
Friends Meeting.
- 632:7574
Gay Christian Ecum. Council 52~;5635
Light House MCC, 2522. N. Shartel

Phillips U. Gay/Lesbian Gm~p 242-0628

524-4687
unitarian Church, 600NW 13 232-9224..
H01y Trinity ECC, 2328 N.

Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544_
OSU Gay/Lesbian/BiseX Comm. Assoc.
Student Union 040, Box 601, 74078
744-5252

Enid, Oklahoma (405)
Stillwater, Oklahoma (405)

’

~. . 7". ; :-&amp;~,~;~2.:~;@.2

Bars &amp; Restaurarlts
Center Street, 10.renter St. 253-8071
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St, 253~8361
Ermilio’s, 26 White St~~ .~’ .. 253-8806
ChurcheS
.
"
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337
Bed &amp; Breakfast
ArborGlen,7LemaSt. 800-515-GLEN
Rock Cottage, 10EneniaSt.
253-8659
Dixie Cottage; 2 Prospect
253,7533
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800
Purple Iris Inn, RR 6
253-8748
Pond Mountain, RL 1
2.53-5877
MapleLeaf Inn, 6 Kingshgwy 253-6876
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Satori Arts, .81 Spring St
253-9820
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St.~ 253-6600
Corcelli Studio, 159.Spring St.. 253-7399
Ft. Smith, Arkansas (501)
court Garden 305 Garrison 783-9822
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Garrison 783-9347

Fayetteville, Arkansas (501)
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052
Wash. Cty. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS
Gay/Lesbian Act’n Delegatiofis 521.4509
MCC of the Ozarks
Parents-FLAG

443-4278
756-8444

Hot Springs, Arkansas
Our House Lounge/Rest. 235 Broadway
624-6868

Salina, Kansas (316)
~ternative Lifestyles, POB 2532, 67402
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas
POB 153, Falun, KS 67442

Emporia, Kansas (316)
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance for Resources &amp;
Education, Box 65, ESU
66801

November 1993, OK-14

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Backstreet, 1021JessieRd.Q 666-6900
Micheal’s, 60i Center.
376-8301
Discovery III, 1021 JessieRd. : 66~.4784
Silver Dollar, 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886
Organizations
HPWA, POB 4379, 72204;
666-6900
AIDS Support Group
374-’3605
RAIN-Arkansas
375-5908
The House
374-3758
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605
Womens Project
372-5113
Parents-FLAG
821-4865
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
TwistedEntermmt, 7201 Asher 568-4262
Shields-Marley Studios; 117 S. Victory
Travel by Philip
Litde Rock Conn.ections

372-6148
227-7690
227-7690

Springfield, Missouri (41.7
Club 1105, 1105 E. Commercial
831-9043
Down Beat, 219 W. Olive 846-4572
Bolivar News, 4030 B~ilivar 833-3354 .

FINAI.I.¥ ]_£)NG DISTANCE

CAH rNG FOR

(;all ar~yvchere in the worl,
from your home-just like you I
calling card to use away if’err
now. Customer servic~ and
are available 24 hours a

service

:. We ~rovide a
likc~ou have
hav’e now.

WE MUST AEkM1T~ TI-]ERE IS A ~.o
OFFICIAL LONG DISTANCE
IHE 1993/AAR~I OH WESHI$1~OH

Joplin, Missouri (417)
Parmers Western Lounge, 720 S, Main
78145453
Partners Dance Lounge~ 722 S. Main
623-9313

MAKE THE SWITCH TODAY

1-800-596-0556

�.

_.

Hel~ Wanted

GWM, .mid 20’s seeks same or
Wichita
GWF- I travel KS. and"N~ .younger.- for safe fun. Bottoms
Oklahoma On business. ~,Looking a.plu.s, but-versatile, send :photo

Catholic, Church !

PERSONALS - CONT.

PERSONALS-CONT.

send dcmo.tape to: Ele~’l~ic,
Circus, A~tn: David Bridg,eman~,

for

friends.: :for and phone. Box:142
dinn~’ ~or-:movies. :i .have a
~ ...... " .......

311 E. 7nth, Tulsa, OK. 74120

Gay-.-. female

partner-0f ?ight years~Box .136 -Set.your own,hours! IfY0U live ~ ..- ~
.........
i in: Topeka,, or Mis:s0uri~ you
~_~t Bend, Ks.
can sell advertisement:in the .
GWF mid 30’s. Professional
Parachute Call today:
NOTICE
’
- seeks
same
.for
stable
316-651"05001!~800"536"6519_
.relationship, .no drugs, social
d~nker only.
I enjoy-sports,
Our _Third Year! Get the areas
WANTED:
C&amp;W
music,
sharing
quiet times
PIANIST.
longest
running
-contacts
looking
for.
.and
hh~g:~,.Box:l23
publication for gays, lesbians, &amp; " Charismatic-:church

.
AR,KANSAS
Bi WM, 44~ handsome, healthy,
&amp;. inteHegent, Seeks a smooth
feminine sissy GM/TV~FS in
NW.. Ark. for fun, friendship,
monogamy. I smoke. Box 142
N.W. Ark-Married GWM, 40
yo,
good-looking,
healthy,

"
’
seeking Married BiWM for
bisexuals. No charge to"pla~ an piano player, must:be able to
ad a~d:no forwarding fce to play by ear. -Pay little, but
GWF, 30,s(~0fession~ See.ks monogamous
intimate
"~
’ age reward great.. 316-651-0603.
respond. For -frec mfO.
send
same. for starbleii~latiOnship. NO: .friendship., You. must be 35-45,
..... s, soci~ ’~-;~~: ’~ ~i :~:~ttractive’-:~ healthy; intelligent,
’statement
to
Personally
FOR RENT
Speaking; P.O.-", box. 16782;
" en’o
": ~- " uiet ~sitive, and
.. ~J y : sports, .~ sh~,.:.:~q
. disereet - Box 144
: .
Roommates servmg Wichita ..-timcS, and ha~gfun:~.:P~se../..i_
Wichitaks:67213-0782;
for : 5 years, Landlords _can
316-2694208 -Fa~
.
,.sendpietore:Box 143:i’:i. :
i.~:. :: . ~--~.., ’Anywhere USA

register without, any advmw,e

.’-

~

. ~:~:: ’ "

.-:¥oU*~

maSculine

and

N.E;Kan~-:
/:;:’" stndght-aeting, but. canYt find
Free personal ads, Worldwid~ fee~ Tenants.my register:aslittle
as-$15.00~
1529
W....
GM-4~,-seeking.GWM
f~
mate.:
guys iike yourself?. Same with
ncwslett~,chenp or free to.
.46-68; ,,slim¯ . buil~-~:ii,~;....~y -m~! i/good loo~ing,, good build,
HIV+, AIDSindividuals, Diccct Douglas 262-8~.~.~.,
SASE-to:
OWO]~,, #110, 116 Tustin,
Anaheimi~CA~ 92807

a-plu , bottom .: e|ocate .t0:late. 30’s,’

:..... ¯

or discreet ads.

Wanted: Locations.where gays
warmer,,state, start.
. : RV..park,.. Box i41.¯
my sbare housing in Wichita, -. apple.~c~ E~t;s~dphot0; " " /
aren~
-~:.C..all or stop :iby- p:iione Box146 i. " ~ " :"

"~

information.

.

PERSON~S
~:

GVv-M looking, for mate 47,
look and act younger, honest,
ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES
romantic, non.~moker, loyal,
Amazingly
ac~wate, Slim build looking for same
computerized compility _.report 25-47. Let’s get together. ,Box
for friends &amp; Lovers
only 127.
$25.00 or 6 mo.’s pcrson~!
NewtoHutehinsonarec,~GWM,i‘~
Horoscope $29.95
43, ..5~!0, 185 ,nearly’ deaf but
Call today 1-800-460-STAR .
.~..SCcking.G~ or Bi Male
FOR SALE
for :~- fri’endship,
possibly

" s e xs, Wom ’s bar, in irelaaonshipi sb ,
OKC, 2024 N.W.- l.lth, speak to
Jauice
or
Michcle
at
.405-272-9833

discreet, ¢~g.-Box 145
Bi

W~M..:.::,:.33,..5’ 10,

1951bs,

For Sale in Eureka springs, Brown::~,: blue eyes, very
Martha &amp; ~Joyccs arc ..selling The
Purple Iris Inn,
with
an
excellent
.aready built
in

straight

acting- and

di~:

Wants
friends i"~th-:
lifestyle. Box 147

same

"Family" clientelle.
Country
. Wichita
wooded
setting,
turn-key
operation,
contact:
_ Dinny GWM, 25 HIV+ seeks GWM
Bnllard of Double "D"Realty,
at
Ar.
BctryviHe,
1-800-748-9772

21-35
for_ friendship
and
possible relationship. Serious
replies only~ Send photo,phong..~
Penpals welcome. Box 122

.

OHah~m City,OK.... :

.::!

in ^us n. Xx.

"
"

Address.

Have.lhome~ need mate, c0untr~

_

living, greater eke, GWMs0, City

State

Zip

s/p hair, smoker, trim ori~nal
equipment, top, levi’s~camping Typeor print y~-ur ad, 25 words
canning, gardening. Seeks long or less.. Send with this coupon
t~m partner. Box 117
and $6.00 to: The Parachute,
Classifieds P.O. Box 11347
Gay male .seeking, male couples Wichita, Ks. 67202.
for fun, mid20’s. Send Photo’s Your responses will be mailed
Box 109.
. "
to you when they are received.
GWM - 44 Professional very
TO.RESPOND TO A
.ha.h-y, li~ smooth man~ 18-30 to
PERSONAL
travel and be my sugar boy, this 1 ~ Write your response, please il
summer and beyond.
Please in an envelope, and seal the
send photo :,and phone,
OKC envelope. Be sure to .include a
. area please. Box 125
way for the advertiser to .get in
contact,with you.
¯ - .
GWM 26, travel U.S. would like 2. :.,On the scaled envelope, write
to meet ’GWM 20-30 for fun the advertisers box number in
when in your area; 5’8 1201bs, lower corner and affix postage.
looking for similar. Box 150
3. Place the sealed envelope an~
$2.00 insids a 2nd envelope:
seal and address to - The

DEADLINE FOR
DECEMBER
ISSUE

Parachute
P.O.
11347,Wichita, KS. 67202

Box

Ad will Run only for the numi~r of
insertions paid for, unless renewed. You
must b~ ¯18 years of agg or older to use t~s

/

November 1993, OK-15

THE PARACHUTE

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              <text>By Tom Neal, Tulsa Para~hute reporter&#13;
~ US House of R~presentatives S .....&#13;
B~ey Frank in s&#13;
Oklahoma Congre&#13;
Bill Brewstet, ....&#13;
In an Octd~r 3 Story by 3im ~ye~s, ~ulsa world&#13;
tnhofe; Ist~k and B~ewster indica(~ tha~ th~&#13;
Lesbians for their staffs.&#13;
Glenn English)i&#13;
sexual orientation inhirin&#13;
related smries)i Only&#13;
would hire b~(d ~ly On abiilty ~ pe~fo~ th’e&#13;
the Oktaho~a Cdngressmen came td his attention througli i&#13;
weekt) n~w~pg~r s(rving Cdngr(s~:&#13;
On Oct. i9&#13;
Hou~fl~ta ondemn theseOkl~oma~&#13;
harassment&#13;
. In response to McCurdy’s comment&#13;
aboutnot flaunting his heterosexuali![,&#13;
the ParaChute called MeCUrdy ~ an indiVidual s sexualorientation in any&#13;
Norman and WaShingt0n offices to 0~hisemployin,~nt capacities (private 0)&#13;
confirm that the Congressman keeps governmdn~): ,~ifa~rson appliedfor a&#13;
pictures of his wife and children in the ~sition ~ith ~ign ~nhis cl~st, sayin~&#13;
offices and regularly wears a wedding i m Gay,! IprobaN) would not hire him.&#13;
ring. ~ The i:’ar~chute ~ked the Senator if a&#13;
The Parachute asked the Congress- person were hiredwiih whom there was a&#13;
man if the photos of his children (the general concurranee on political views&#13;
product of a heterosexual liason) and and Who was a good worker; could that&#13;
the daily Wearing ofa ring (symbolizing person be open aboU[their sexual orientaa&#13;
ca~n~l~eiationship) did~tconStitute ~i0nigFore.:£~p e~coUidthatperso~brinz&#13;
a flaunting ot" h~s sexuahty. Mr. the~rlongumepartner roan office event?&#13;
see McCurdy on OK-2 see Nickles on OK-2&#13;
us. And I will&#13;
the next few&#13;
t Bray (formerly Media&#13;
3ers ofCongress and military leaders&#13;
~ther anti-Gay propaganda&#13;
is portraying&#13;
as possible, probably in&#13;
seem&#13;
~ folks they’re going to&#13;
g together across the state.&#13;
ght on OK-4&#13;
TRET F&#13;
in concert&#13;
November 1993, OK-1 THE PARACHUTE&#13;
Out of The Closet&#13;
and Onto The Phone&#13;
ComratmltySpirlt -&#13;
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| occasionally politically Correct; and t0 bring you all the news that’s’ not always fit&#13;
| tO print but we know you wanted to know..&#13;
First and foremost, Miss Thang wants toknow whyshe didn’t see more of you&#13;
1. at the.fabulous TOHR auction on National Coming Out Day? There was lots &amp; 10ts&#13;
1 Of incredible food, drinks, a view for miles and lovely, lovely people, and it all was&#13;
~ free except for the auction items that went.for a s~teal.&#13;
a . MissThang especially wants to mention the cute volunteer bar’boys from the&#13;
| TONR clinic, all the stylish Lesbians and-particularly, the stellar jazz &amp; blues&#13;
| vocali.zations by .Pr~"tess Riley and Artie S.. You missed a good party and Miss&#13;
| Thang just_can’t believe you really hadsomething better to do on a Monday!&#13;
i Who was that Nasty Buckeroo?&#13;
| Miss Thang was so disappointed to hear this story (and&#13;
| you ,watch it., hear). Seems there was a fellow at one of our favorite.watering holes&#13;
| - may be he’d just had one too many but he gotjust a little too enthusiatic in saving&#13;
I a table. It’s said he was altogether too hatefulto several of our sisters.&#13;
Honey, we’ve got way too many folks attacking us from the outside to attack&#13;
1 each other, ok? So you just be nice to our sisters and you know what, they’ll be nice&#13;
I to you too. Next timejust sayplease and thank you, and leave the hatefulness ~o me!&#13;
Frank, Continuedfrom OK-1 " "&#13;
orientation. Mr. Frank noted specifically&#13;
that he would notrecommend affirmative&#13;
action as a remedy for discrimination&#13;
againstLesbians,Gay menandBisexuals,&#13;
nor was he calling for "special rights."&#13;
Mr. Frank slated; "People have said,&#13;
’After all, there is no problem. People are&#13;
not discriminated against in hiring in this&#13;
country based on their sexual orientation.&#13;
So why press for legislation?’....if that&#13;
(anti-Gay discrimination) happens here&#13;
in the House of Representatives, it is .obvious&#13;
that it happens elsewhere_in societyo"&#13;
On Oct. 21, Speaker of the House Of&#13;
Representatiq,,es, Tom Foley issued a&#13;
statement to clarify remarks made in a&#13;
press conferenceearlier that day. Mr. Foley&#13;
said,. "....I emphatically restate my opposition&#13;
to any employment bias based on&#13;
criteria such as race, color, creed, gender&#13;
or sexual orientation (emphasis added),&#13;
He added that he agreed with Barney&#13;
Frank that Congress should examine how&#13;
to apply such stan.dards to itself to the&#13;
"greatest degree_possible."&#13;
McCurdy, continuedfrom OK-1&#13;
McCurdy.responded, "I respectfully&#13;
disagree that the wearing Of a wedding&#13;
ring and the display of family&#13;
photos....constitute p.arading one,s&#13;
sexuality."&#13;
Nickles, continuedfrom OK-1&#13;
Mr. Niekles’responded, "It would depend&#13;
on how aggressive the individual was&#13;
about pushing that lifestyle."&#13;
The Parachute inquired further, "What&#13;
about putting a photo of a spouse on a&#13;
desk?" Sen. Nickles~ said, ’Tve already&#13;
answered the question." He refused any&#13;
- further comment.&#13;
THE .PARACHUTE&#13;
OKLAHOMA&#13;
Publisher/Editor4n-Chief&#13;
Chuck Breckeridge&#13;
Assistant Publisher&#13;
Wayne D.&#13;
Oklahoma Editors&#13;
Chuck Breckenridge&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Writers&#13;
Chuck Breekenridge&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Mary Arbuclde&#13;
Stephen Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Leslie Thomas&#13;
Catherine Boyle&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Michael Camfield&#13;
Scott C~y&#13;
Advertising&#13;
Chuck Breckenridge&#13;
Leslie Thomas&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Fresh Bouquets&#13;
Blooming Plants&#13;
Green Plants&#13;
&amp; More&#13;
Defivery,Available&#13;
3115 South Harvard, 742-1234&#13;
M-F 9-6, Sat. 9-7, Sun. 12-5&#13;
800-536-6519&#13;
918-832-0233&#13;
POB 4140, Tulsa 74159&#13;
P~,ac~t~ a~l m~y not I~ z~-Ix~,d ©ith~ in whol© ~ ~ p~&#13;
THE PARACHUTE November 1993, OK-2&#13;
Grand&#13;
Opening&#13;
People are like animals at .~..&#13;
See the boys take itoff and the&#13;
girls dress up every week-end&#13;
at Tuls.a’s original dance .club&#13;
4812 Eo&#13;
(918) 745-9~93&#13;
Open Wed.-Sun.&#13;
Male Dancers&#13;
Fe_Lmale Im~personators&#13;
Gay Operated&#13;
Trisexual Oriented&#13;
Never a Cover&#13;
Levi-° Leather ¯ Lace&#13;
November 1993, OK-3 THE PARACHUT~&#13;
Fight, continuedfrom OK-1&#13;
as a response to anti-Gay laws proposed&#13;
in the Oklahoma legislature last winter.&#13;
Those proposals werekept in committe~&#13;
then but it is rumored that they defmite!y&#13;
will emerge when the legislature meets&#13;
next.)&#13;
Parachute: is there anything else you’d&#13;
like to add?&#13;
RC:when we were discussing the recent&#13;
statements by US Congressmen from&#13;
Oklahoma who said that they would not&#13;
hire Lesbians &amp; Gay men, Suzanne Pharr&#13;
suggested that we ought to respond by&#13;
flooding these guy’s offices with job ap:&#13;
plications from us!&#13;
Also because the conference was under-&#13;
attended, it didn’t break even. Any&#13;
donations would be welcome.&#13;
Parachute: information about the shoWing&#13;
ofThe Gay Agenda and other propaganda&#13;
videos will be available at Tomfoolery!&#13;
at the Silver" Star, 832-0233.&#13;
Donatio_nsmadp~ bemade toSimplyEqual,&#13;
and sent to Robert, clo TOHR, 4154 S.&#13;
Harvdrd, Ste. H,l ] Tulsa, 74105.&#13;
Queer. Pen "Pals&#13;
Ever wonder what Gay &amp; Lesbian life&#13;
is like in the countries behind the old Iron&#13;
Curtain? Whatdo they talk.about? What&#13;
do they read? NOW that the-Wall is dow~&#13;
are the closets next?&#13;
The Pen Pal Project Of the International&#13;
Gayand,Lesbian HumanRightsCommission&#13;
can link you with soem great women&#13;
’&amp; men from most countries in Eastern/&#13;
Central Europe and the former,Sovietl&#13;
Union. If you wanttocorrespond with a&#13;
Siberianpfinceora Bulgarian bulldagger,&#13;
Tulsa News&#13;
TOHR&#13;
Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights&#13;
will hold its monthly general meeting at&#13;
7:30 on Tuesday, November 2 in the&#13;
Gathering Room of the HIV Resource&#13;
Center at 4154 So. Harvard, ’Ste. H-1.&#13;
Drive to the back of the office complex&#13;
and look for the lower level entrance on&#13;
the south building....,&#13;
The agenda, includes el’~’tion of new&#13;
officers, a report on the Fight the Right&#13;
conference and a feature presentation by&#13;
Alan Nitray ofOklahoma City on Lesbian&#13;
&amp; Gay Mental Health issues.&#13;
.For .more i~formation, call TOHR’s&#13;
Helpline, 743-GAYS,&#13;
Prime Timers&#13;
’Prime TimetsiS~organization new to&#13;
Tulsa for Gay and Bisexual men over 40.&#13;
Prime Timers is primarily: a. soqial and&#13;
support organization, focusing on cultural&#13;
and reereationai activities, such as&#13;
pot-lU~k dinners, bikerides, theopera and&#13;
discossion groups. ~Member.s may bring&#13;
their partners who are under 40 if the&#13;
partner is at least 21 years old.&#13;
For more information, write:&#13;
Prime Timers&#13;
POB 521.18&#13;
Tulsa 74105&#13;
Tulsa AIDS Walk&#13;
’It was ’reported at October’s TOHR&#13;
meeting that Tulsa’s first AIDSiHIV&#13;
fundraisingwalkwas suocessful. Over 50&#13;
Feast for Friends&#13;
It was also reported at October’sTOHR&#13;
meeting that Feast for Friends, a series of&#13;
individual dinners to raise funds for THE&#13;
NAMES PROJECTraised about $6,000.&#13;
Tulsa World Watch&#13;
Several prominent Tulsa Lesbian/Gay ,&#13;
civil rights activists met with theEd~(orial.&#13;
staff0fTulsa’s only daily, theTulsa World.&#13;
Nancy McDonald, a board member of&#13;
Tulsa’s Parents, Families &amp; Friends of&#13;
Lesbians &amp; Gays, and the nadonal board.&#13;
of,P-FLAG, Kelly Kirby, president of&#13;
Ttflsa01dah0mans forHumanRights with&#13;
several others met with Alex Adwon, Ken&#13;
Neal, Judy Randle and other TulsaWorld&#13;
write~in a "g,et:acquain_ted"m~¢ting. "&#13;
Accrrding tO-Mrs. MeD0nald, the&#13;
Editoi’ial Board does not.grant such interviews&#13;
frequently butthe writers showed&#13;
an openess and willingness to begin a&#13;
dialogueabout.Lesbian&amp;Gayequal rights"&#13;
issues. The hCtivists were told that if they&#13;
could just meet indiyidually with every&#13;
Oklahoman,Lesbians andGay m~n would&#13;
have no opposition related Mrs.&#13;
McDonald. The activists also lef~ information&#13;
packagesaboutLesbian/Gayissues&#13;
with the writers.&#13;
Tulsa University&#13;
.Comes Out&#13;
In honor ofNational Coming Out Day,&#13;
October 11, the Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay&#13;
Alliance (formerly STIR) of the Univerthe&#13;
Bisexual/Lesbian/Gay Alliance."&#13;
About25 people attended and asked questionsabouttopicsranging&#13;
from self-hatred,&#13;
dealing with parents &amp; friends, the status&#13;
of bisexuals, and being out on campus.&#13;
BLGA meetings are open to TU students&#13;
and students from other local campus,&#13;
es. The,meetings are.held at the Bisexual/&#13;
Lesbian/Gay- AllianceCanterbury&#13;
Ministry Center at 5th &amp;Evanston on&#13;
Sundays at 6pro. For more info. call: 583-&#13;
9780&#13;
Tulsa Man&#13;
Reports Assault&#13;
A Gay man leaving a Tulsa ’bar has&#13;
reported being assaulted nearby where he&#13;
had parked his car~ "Mr. Doe" related to&#13;
theParachute thatheleft theestablishment&#13;
just before 2 am and noticed 2 men in the&#13;
parking lot talking. When he got in his car,&#13;
they had managed to get in the back seat:&#13;
They beat him on the baCk and shoulders.&#13;
with a climb. "Mr. Doe". said he managed to&#13;
getthe club away from oneman andstrike&#13;
back. He reports that his assailants then&#13;
fled.&#13;
"Mr.Doe". wenttoHillcrest fortreatment&#13;
and also relates that he was questioned&#13;
eourteous.ly by a Tulsa police office~:.&#13;
NAMES PROJECT&#13;
For those interested in making a panel&#13;
for the AIDS Memorial Quilt, there will&#13;
bea sewingbee on Sat. Nov. 20 at 1:30pm&#13;
inthe Gathering Room Of the HIV Re:&#13;
senda stamped, self-addressed envelope" people Walked and:approximately $3,000&#13;
to: IGLHRC Pen Pal Project , .was~tO ._.be sh.ar_~ ~y.a!A..T_ulsa I-!!V&#13;
.. - - 5 that are&#13;
1565 South Sheridan, Tulsa&#13;
918-834-4234&#13;
The Silver Star Saloon Proudly Presents&#13;
Dena Kaye&#13;
Saturday, November 28&#13;
8:30 pro, $3-&#13;
Free Two Step Lessons&amp; $ 3 Beer Bust&#13;
Every Wednesday&#13;
Trash Disco &amp; $ 3Beer Bust&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Free Line Dance Lessons &amp; $ 3 Beer Bust&#13;
Every Sunday&#13;
Make Plans to join the Silver Star for our&#13;
New Year’s Eve Blowout! Watch. for Details!&#13;
THE PARACHUTE November 1993, OK-4&#13;
9933 East 16th, Suite 104&#13;
Tulsa 74128-&#13;
918-6630399, OKC 405-942-1062&#13;
Full time masseur available.&#13;
Please call for an appointment.&#13;
: Please bring this ad in for a 50% discount&#13;
¯¯ off one one-hour massage. (exp. 12/3/93)&#13;
4944 So. 83rd East Avenue, Ste.D, 918.665-1155&#13;
One block easton 51st from Memorial. Visa/MasterCard accepted.&#13;
Monday - Saturday, 9am- 8pro, Sunday, 1-6pm.&#13;
Kelly-H&#13;
Certified PuNic Accountant&#13;
sity of Tulsa held a reading-of poetry by sburce Center,4154 S. Harvard, Ste..H- 1,&#13;
Queer poe~ on Sunday, October 10. On gr0und flooTrearentranc~.Eor moreinfo.&#13;
M..onda~, several niembers_~.held a public Cali~ 748-31i1:&#13;
SOUTHWEST STUDENT&#13;
GROUP TO SPONSOR TRIP&#13;
TO NGLTF CONFERENCE,&#13;
Creating Change&#13;
DALLAS - The Coalition of Lesbian/&#13;
GayiBi Student Groups, Inc. announced&#13;
they will.be sponsoring a trip to "creating&#13;
Change", the 6th annual conference on&#13;
gay/lesbian/bisexual cohcerns and politi=&#13;
cal Organizing hosted by theNational Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Task~Force (NGLTF).&#13;
This year’s conference will be held in&#13;
Durham, North Carolina fromNovember&#13;
11. through 14. "Creating Change" is&#13;
considered thepreeminentnational forum&#13;
for lesbian/gay/bisexual activists and organizers&#13;
to share skills and dialog about&#13;
our politicaI .mo.veinent .arid discuss&#13;
strategies for the year ahead. Lastyear’s&#13;
conference in Los, Angeles .drew.o~,er&#13;
12.00 grassroots activist~and allies from&#13;
across the natiom&#13;
"The Coalition is, once&#13;
again, glad to,be able to&#13;
offer a 10w,cost alter.&#13;
native for-queer studems&#13;
and,youth :inl the&#13;
Southwestito: :pa fici,&#13;
pate directly in the natiOnal&#13;
6ivil rigtits .&#13;
movement,,, - -.&#13;
sponsored similar trips to this ~eur’s national&#13;
gay and lesbian civil rights march&#13;
in Washington D:C., as well as the"Creating&#13;
Change" conferences in 1991-and&#13;
1992.&#13;
"We know that-after attending these&#13;
events these future leaders become invigorated,&#13;
and,return some this. energy&#13;
and information toassist the in struggle at&#13;
the state, local and collegiate-level.Y~ Mr.&#13;
Dorsey and CLGBSG Congress Secretary&#13;
Jeff McCanley will also present at&#13;
this year’s conference on youth organiz2&#13;
ing and race/classjgender issues;.&#13;
The Coalition "Freedom Bus" will_de-&#13;
.part from Dallas at noon on Thursday;&#13;
November 11 andreturnback toDallas on&#13;
Moflday,Nov. 15 ~t threep.m. The f~of&#13;
$100includes rtund-trip transportation,&#13;
ahd hotel lodging .at the.arena .- R~leigh&#13;
Durham, thesiteoftheconference. O~ga-&#13;
#=ers suggest participants .should .also&#13;
GA’ LESBIAt E A(~ ~E~MA~I:ON&#13;
Fighting for fair, accurate &amp; Inclusive re,presentation of lesbian and gay lives!&#13;
READING: OUR RIGHT&#13;
OutMagazine tells us thatTheReader’s&#13;
Catalog; a regular adver- tiser, in the&#13;
magazine, is receiving hate mail and has&#13;
lost 50 subscribers for: including lesbian&#13;
and gay titles in the book lists. Catalogs&#13;
like this are. an important source ofbooks,&#13;
particularly for gay menand lesbians who&#13;
cannot get tea welhstocked book- store;&#13;
or whosebookstores won.~t carry lesbiun~&#13;
andTgay material.&#13;
The Reader’s Catalog ShoUld be commended-&#13;
for standing their groun~UI~etters&#13;
of support should be addressed to:&#13;
Ms. Stephanie Smith "&#13;
Mr. Don Coo, President&#13;
Hiram Walker and Sons, Inc.&#13;
P.O. Box 33006&#13;
Detroit,’M148232-3006&#13;
Naya Water, a longtime supporter of&#13;
the community (and ofGLAAD/NY).has&#13;
signed on as the first major sponsor of&#13;
Gay GameslV, in the largest sponsorship&#13;
deal everffor a single lesbian and gay&#13;
event. Stu Levitan from Naya has also&#13;
- gone out ofhis way personally to support&#13;
. corporate involvement in ourcommunity.&#13;
A very.warm thanks to:&#13;
Stu Levitan&#13;
The Reader’s Catalog ...VicePresident/General Manager&#13;
250 West 57th Street N0ra-Beverages USA&#13;
New York, NY 10019 , " . ~ . 6 High Ridge Park,’B!dg.&#13;
¯ Thecatalogeanbeorderedfreeofcharge . .... _ Stamford,.CT 06905&#13;
by calling 800-733.~BOOK.(say yousaw . : ¯ = " ..............&#13;
budget $60 for.food during~e m.’p. T~e_ abe ad:in Out Magazine), ~t’s .make,up .: --: GLAAD_/~_....&#13;
trip is 0peii_to°~all gay/l~sbian/bise~U~l.... for those50 lost Subscribers!- " i: ......u 15OWest 26th.St., Ste; 503&#13;
students and youth. Seam are limited. : . : New York,. NY10001&#13;
Participants fees must be received.by the SPONSORSHIP NEWS: 212-807-1700. ~&#13;
Coalition by Saturday, November6th: .HIRAM WALKER &amp; NAYA- ’ , .....&#13;
TheCLGBSG is-Dallas, Texas based&#13;
non-profit (50i.c3)educationa~’organiza- "&#13;
tion-founded.in 1989 to serve gay/lesbian&#13;
and:bisexual-students and youth in the&#13;
SOuthwest.- O~eiprograms include a&#13;
regional conference, a three2day leadership&#13;
skills retreat, a scholarship program,&#13;
communications network and. quarterly&#13;
student meetings in.the service, area.&#13;
For more infoi~nation,on the Creating&#13;
Changetripandother~LGBSGprograms,&#13;
or for information on hd-W.to Sponsor a&#13;
~ student’s participation, contact the Coalition&#13;
atPO Box 190712, Dallas, Texas,&#13;
75219 or. call (2!4)521~53~Z ~xt. 808:&#13;
The increased interestin the lesbianland&#13;
gay market in c6rporate America has led&#13;
to an increase notonly in. advertising in .&#13;
the lesbian and gay press, but in sponsorship&#13;
ofcommunity events as well. Two&#13;
companies in particular are to be commended&#13;
for their continuedsponsorship&#13;
support:&#13;
Hiram Walker, whose brands include&#13;
Fris Vodka, Beefeater Gin, Courvoisier&#13;
Cognac,CuttySarkScotch~ MidoriMelon&#13;
Liqueur~ and 0there(has supported over a&#13;
dozen community :organizations,_including&#13;
the Nam~s.P~oject, Astraea(HRCF,&#13;
The Center, and LifeBoat. Write~to thank=&#13;
Concert byLegendary Lesbian&#13;
Singer/Songwriters to Benefit&#13;
Herland Legal Defense Fund&#13;
Cris. William.s0n and Trot Fure, both&#13;
well know for their roles in shaping the&#13;
women’smuSicmo~’ementareperforming&#13;
m .the Ciqic Cehter Little Theatrdin&#13;
¯ Oklahoma Ciiy on ThurSday, No~,ember&#13;
18 at 8 pro.&#13;
TheHerland Legal DefenseFUnd~gi~ts&#13;
tO help defray the legal cost~ fOr"~bian&#13;
&amp; Gay parents~ Seeking to protect the_’n~&#13;
pa~efiting fights in~ilie oklahoma ~OurtS..&#13;
Currently :support is~ ’l~i.ng given to-:~&#13;
l_~sbian~iitther ~ee~.ng to,retain custOdy&#13;
of her children.&#13;
GLAAD Media&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
by AI Kielwasser&#13;
Ga~ &amp; Lesbian Alliance Against&#13;
Defamation/San FranciscoBay Area&#13;
Homophobla Illustrated&#13;
Recently, Sports Illustrated(SI) rejected&#13;
an advertisement from the Adidas,eomparty&#13;
that featured a photo of the all-male&#13;
Canadian soccer team, wearing nothing&#13;
but Adidas Shoes. The players were not&#13;
fully nude, though. Their .hands, soccer&#13;
balls andtrophies were strategically&#13;
placed. ,&#13;
Since when has SI tlad any qualms&#13;
about running photos of semi-nude indi,&#13;
viduals? .After all, this is the same magazine&#13;
that earns its keep through annual&#13;
sales of the "swimsuit issue," which features&#13;
semi-nude women in various&#13;
Obviously, Sis decision to reject the&#13;
Adidas ad was based on nothing but sexism,&#13;
homophobia’s constant companion.&#13;
SI has sent a message that it’s okay to&#13;
sprawl semi-nude photos_in their magazine&#13;
as long-as thephotos are of women&#13;
only.&#13;
Forillustrating sexism, homophobiaand&#13;
hypocrisy, direct criticism to Mark&#13;
Mulvoy, Editor, Sports Illustrated, and&#13;
Roger Jackson, Public Relations Director,&#13;
Time,Inc.,Time and Life Building,&#13;
Rockefeller Ce~nter, New York, NY&#13;
10020.&#13;
Spin Examines Hate Music&#13;
In the August issue of the music magazine&#13;
Spin, :Farad Chideya examines the&#13;
use of homophobic lyrics in hip-hop, rap&#13;
and dance hall reggae music.&#13;
Chideya concludes that the blatantly&#13;
homoph0bic lyrics of Such performers as&#13;
Ice Cube, Big Daddy Kane, and Chubb&#13;
Rock are an attempt to deny the existence&#13;
of homosexuality within the/African&#13;
American community.&#13;
The author also takes.note of pro÷gay/&#13;
lesbian rappers, including female rapper&#13;
Yo Yo and the rap duo Disposable Heroes&#13;
ans, ga~.men and transgendered persons.&#13;
of African, Afro-American, Afro-Caribbean,&#13;
and Afro-Latin descent.&#13;
In an open letter to Vibe magazine,&#13;
numerous lesbian, gay and transgendered&#13;
activists of African descent roundly denounce&#13;
the conclusion "that. those who&#13;
shun music or musicians who espouse&#13;
homophobia do so out of racism or culof&#13;
Hiphoprisy, whose sing(e "Language : tural insensitivity" and furthermore, they&#13;
of Violence" railed.against gay bashing.&#13;
To effectively counteract musical hate&#13;
speech, Chideya argues that more performers&#13;
need to come back with theirown&#13;
response, using rap as the format.&#13;
Send compliments to Bob Guccione,&#13;
.Jr., Editor, Spin, 6. West 18th Street,&#13;
New York,NY 10011.&#13;
Bad Vibe&#13;
The October issue of Vibe magazine&#13;
includes a scurrilou~ bit of journalistic&#13;
phlegm. In "No Apologies~ No Regrets,"&#13;
author Joan Morgan profiles Jamaican&#13;
singer Buju Banton and seeks to legitimize&#13;
the reggae singer’s homophobia on&#13;
cultural grounds.. Benton’Ssong "Boom&#13;
Bye Bye" openly advocates murdering&#13;
gay men. Tobemorespecific, Baton calls&#13;
upon listeners to shoot gays thrrugh the&#13;
head.&#13;
In herunbalanced discussion ofBanton&#13;
and hisgay-bashing hit, Morgan manages&#13;
to dredge up endless stereotypes about&#13;
Jamaican gay men--that they are child&#13;
molesters, rapists, classist leaches, and&#13;
even that their sexual activities lead to&#13;
incest, decapitation and death. Not one&#13;
gay Jamaican.was quoted in ,esponse to&#13;
such-hateful absurdities.&#13;
Thebasicpremise ofMorgan’s article is.&#13;
that homophobia is an essential and integral&#13;
part of Black culture.. Of course, her&#13;
definition ofBlack culture excludes lesbipoint&#13;
out, "the decision of Vibe’s Editor~&#13;
In-Chief Jonathan Van Meter to publish&#13;
so biased and defamatory a piece clearly&#13;
illustrates that not all powerful, gay white&#13;
men value or respect 0~r lives."&#13;
In defending Buju Banton, Joan Mor-"&#13;
gan joins in his hate-filled campaign and&#13;
has allied herself with those whopromote&#13;
hatred rather than understanding~ Criticism&#13;
should be directed toJonathan Van&#13;
Meter, Vibe, 205 Lexington Ave., 3rd&#13;
Floor, New York, NY 10016.&#13;
The Media Access Project:&#13;
Playing Fair&#13;
Legislation to reinstate the "Fairness&#13;
Doctrine" is now pending in Congress.&#13;
Before it was disbande.d in the midst of&#13;
deregulation hysteria, the Fairness Doetrinerequiredbroadcasters&#13;
to providebalanced&#13;
coverage of "controversial" issues&#13;
of public importance. Conservative radio&#13;
talk show hosts’ and other media hate&#13;
mongers (i.e,; RushLimbaugh and clones)&#13;
are spearheading an effort to defeat this&#13;
legislation.&#13;
The Media Acc.ess Project is encouraging&#13;
the lesbian, gay and bisexual communities&#13;
to support the Fairness Doctrine&#13;
bills in the House of Representatives and&#13;
Senate (H.R. 1985 and S. 333). TheMedia&#13;
Access Projectasks you to contact your&#13;
Senators and Representatives in support&#13;
of these bills (U.S. Senate, Wash-&#13;
TOO&#13;
Fine Jewelry, as well as Jewelry &amp; Watch Repair&#13;
4649 South Peoria, T.ulsa, ornerof48th &amp; Peoria&#13;
918-743-5272, 9:30 - 5:00 Monday-Friday&#13;
9:30 - 5:00 Saturdays, Nov. 20 - December 24th&#13;
flhop Where You are Appreciated!&#13;
1635 E. 15TH ST.&#13;
TULSA, OK.74120&#13;
599-8070&#13;
Serving Tulsa’s Lesbian &amp; Gay,&#13;
Communities with Pride&#13;
Look for our Rainbow Flag&#13;
! P-HUNSTUPH&#13;
: Adult Merchandise + Gag Gifts&#13;
Novelties + T-Shirts + Cards&#13;
1519 East 15th Street, Tulsa 584-7486&#13;
10-8 Monday-Saturday, Closed Sunday&#13;
VisaiMC accepted. Under New Management.&#13;
Come see Our New Adult Room!&#13;
immm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmWnmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
THE PARACHUTE November 1993, OK-6&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
¯&#13;
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¯&#13;
¯&#13;
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¯&#13;
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ingtOn, DC 20510, tel. 202-224-3121;&#13;
U.S. House ofRepresentatives, Washington,&#13;
DC 20515, tel. 202-225-3121).&#13;
For more information, call Gigi Sohn&#13;
at the Media Access Project, 202-232-&#13;
4300.&#13;
November’s In The Life&#13;
"School’s Outh Lesbian &amp;GayYouth"-&#13;
-will examine the Challenges faced by&#13;
young queers. The program provides an&#13;
overview of emerging educational pro-&#13;
.grams, high school.homophobia, lesbian/&#13;
gay teachers, and more.&#13;
The November episode alsointroduces&#13;
a new "Fact File" feature. Among the&#13;
statistics that will be revealed: Half of all&#13;
lesbian and gay youth surveyed report&#13;
that theirparents rejectedthem because of&#13;
their sexual orientation. Fortyrfive percent&#13;
of gays and 20 percent of lesbians&#13;
~xpedence verbal harassment in high&#13;
school, and28 percentare routinely forced&#13;
to drop out because of homophobic harassment.&#13;
In The Life is not fundedby the Public&#13;
Broadcasting System. but is produced&#13;
through a national membership network.&#13;
For further information (and a copy of&#13;
the In The Life program guide) call&#13;
800-627-ONTV.&#13;
includingodiscrimination.&#13;
d-nt M~rk 14An-rick~mndelivereda&#13;
THE HUMAN RIGHTS an~form;&#13;
:*.~_=-*e~a~ ~ based on sexual orientation,- ~,. ~ " :~-:’. ,. -.. -;&#13;
/~PilJ/~&#13;
¯&#13;
~o-er~ emphasized t0ihe ~oun&#13;
wnichincmdeaexnoningmeas-&#13;
, ~ ¯ cil ~.the bklahoma C. H~man, ~ ~f~::o~r:~’~~:~~ ., ’ Sup~. the&#13;
On Tuesday, October 5, the Rights Commission-~aff mere- order to challenge Oklaho~as&#13;
Oklahoma City Council, led by bers and volunt~ unanimously archaic sodomy laws. The con- ~i~tion&#13;
Mayor Ron Nodck, destroyed all suppoSedpassage of the pro- sensus of the coalition was .ah that&#13;
chances for local protection of -posedadd~ions to the Munici~l e~husia~ic~llingne~ to I~ig~e&#13;
basic human righ~ and civil liber. Code. . , -a~i~theS~yla~and s~vties~&#13;
In .a 6~3 vote, the Council The ~e~can Civil Li~ies ~ e[al~people Vblunteered to be- ~O~&#13;
~ruck from theiragenda therfinal Union o~ Oklahoma "expressed~-L pl~in~tiff~: ~l,~addition, it was.&#13;
h~fing ~proposed amendmen-- p~blic ~isappoin--e~:~ ina~ ~- ". ~greedth~.th~Okllh~ma Human&#13;
F~om&#13;
to A~icles II, III and IV of ChapMr tion onpa~ 0fme Six~Council~:: Righ~Project sh6u[d:;foeus on&#13;
25 ~ the Oklahoma CiW Mu~ici- m~~om~to~e:~ -~eg~st0pm~ent the~"age ~&#13;
pal c~e. Due to the p~sum~x.~ the. Oklahoma C.. H~ma~=Rig~. :..; -~~::i~[~£~:~&#13;
e~ed by Right Wing Religious’Sx-: Commis~on tO ~o~a~Deiyand ~ , of la~"~fi~, o~ina~ces s~h as&#13;
tremists, the Council refralne. ’~e~ivelyin com~ffigg~discdmi-, theone;Whichlh~Oklahoma"CiW -&#13;
from passing the ordinance be-~ ,na~o~ practices~bY~employers, -~.-,.CounCil ~uSed to~pa.:’~&#13;
cause s~xual o~enMtion was in-~ landi0rdsaadpubiiC.~cc6mm0da-~’ ~ ACLU ~’Oklahomwishesto&#13;
cluded as a prote~ed’ cat~go~: " tions In addi:UOn;ACLUIOKc~m*~ retain-tithe Oklahoma ~C~.com-&#13;
However, failure to"paSs ~he mended c0un~il me~bersMark’ " mhniw a~i~-pmsenMti0n of&#13;
amendments leaves no recourse " Schwa~,LWHla Joh~so~ and : THE:~OSPiCE."-Thisplay~ill ~&#13;
for individuals Who experience :, ~ Jackie Cam~ for~ei~ou~geous pmsenied on ~O~tobe~23 and 29&#13;
discrimination on the ~basls of........s~nce in"s~n~:~ ~sic~h~m~n&#13;
at theWilI,Rogers Center~ 4322 N.&#13;
~; " - ; :~’n "....- ..... ~ ’~" ~ : ~t~rn~ : CUmin time Will. be at Amc~n&#13;
race, creea, color, national ong~ , ~ahts " . . . .... ~. ;;L~ ~ " .. ~.&#13;
= ¯ 8:00 RM~. on bothevenings~ The&#13;
ethnicity, gender or disability s~- On Thumday; Septem~r 30, productioo~addresses anti,gay Rcligi~.&#13;
tus. ¯ ~ ,-- ~ - ACLU of Oklahoma,in;solidad~- pmjudi~sa~d~expioresthe posi- Amc~n&#13;
Sdl" Rogers, the cu~nt. Chair" with more than an dbzen other~:~ ti~e:a~itudes,~o[~chara~ers living&#13;
of the Oklahoma ~ity Human OklahomaOroupr~, formed"the ~ with-AiDS~ Te~:pe~ofthe pro-&#13;
Righ~ Commission: presented a Oklahoma HumaO,.Righ~ P~oject. c~d~will go t0the ~IDS Suppo~.&#13;
broadband a~ay offac~ and m~. ¯ .Among~ theoth~ ~0maniz~ions. Program,, TiCkets ~ay ,be .purtistics&#13;
which dem0nstrated ~that ~- m res~hted at the meetin were . chased at Jungle Red,Lobo,-the&#13;
~n Suppo~ ~ ACLU by Bccomin&#13;
similar ordinances, have. ~ee.0~:~ ~,~’the-National Organization of T~angle AssoCiation and the HIpassed&#13;
"m l"ocal .c.o.m.mu...m.. "~t~m’i ~s~- ~ Women,Simply Equal t the Okla-: Lo Club ~ot by calHng&#13;
across the nation. -He .alse cited homa Gay and Lesbian:Political ~&#13;
numerous co~o~te~amples of Caucus and&#13;
ia&#13;
which include sexual qdentation) -. meetin&#13;
among Fortune 600 companies.&#13;
Also noted ~&#13;
of m&#13;
Oklahoma ,at (40S) 524-8511 and&#13;
number and a&#13;
There will also&#13;
iited ¯ number of.tickets&#13;
hts&#13;
of performance.&#13;
ciVil Liberties Union&#13;
of Free Speech, Press&#13;
Civil. ~ibertics Unio.&#13;
.you Equality and Du~&#13;
to: ACLU,- 132 West 43rd&#13;
New York, NY 10036&#13;
-i-&#13;
10a, red &amp; black on grey&#13;
HATE IS. NOT A FAMILY VALUE"&#13;
lob, blue/green&#13;
VISUALIZE.&#13;
10c~ gold on black&#13;
gay (g~) adj. ~k, joyous,free,&#13;
brilliant, merryili~htheart~&#13;
Want to stay that way...?&#13;
Fight back- COME OUT!&#13;
lOd, b]ackon pink&#13;
10e, blackon fuschia&#13;
"I &amp;~Think&#13;
t mgh.t,,&#13;
lOf, black on white&#13;
DON’TUSEPEOPLE&#13;
&amp;LOVETHINGS&#13;
&amp;USETHINGS&#13;
10g, black on grey&#13;
MAI)E -’&#13;
IN&#13;
HEAVEN&#13;
10x, white, pink&amp; red on black&#13;
T-$14.95, Sweat-S19.95&#13;
Visa or MasteK?~rd# . "&#13;
¯ Name as on Card - "&#13;
Exp~ Date Daytime phone: ( ) " " - ’ "&#13;
Merchandise Total&#13;
Shipping &amp; Handling&#13;
Grand Total&#13;
City, ST &amp; ZIP&#13;
~hitmine .&#13;
Up to $25.00, add.S3.50&#13;
$25~01 tO 50.00, add $4.50&#13;
_ OK Residents, please add&#13;
7.5% Sales Tax&#13;
Out of the ~l~t, Inc.&#13;
suite 199,16H So. utica&#13;
Tulsa, OK 74104&#13;
918-749-2033, FAX 749-5992&#13;
¯ - . ’ Novembei: 1993,OKL7 THE PARACHUTE.&#13;
/&#13;
manag&#13;
like to THANK the&#13;
Lesbian&#13;
for your conti&#13;
PROUD TO BB~ O DAMD OPERATED&#13;
THE PARACHU3"E November 1993, OK-8&#13;
.... .....~.s.sG.a..y...O...K...~..H...O...~..A...... Fo tu 1000 Survey pa.r.tlclpants, have........n. ondlscl.osu.re]....~ ,&#13;
~=~;~i ~4D~"~&#13;
pohcy that ~ncludes .... sexual Demands ~nd to&#13;
.... ~-~ ..... ~ orientation Three;additional ~ , , .. _&#13;
.N...~v..e.m...b.e..r..~..0.~. ~3’ w-~ ....~.h.o. ~ ...C..u.~rf...i..n....0,~ CA ....(.E..G. CM) T:h...e.... ~ ~ " ~ao not: ..... ~iscriminn~.r..i.o~n.-...i.n. ~~,.~~.&#13;
n~t ~o ~mem~r in ~u~u National Gay and ~sblan Task ~0n: ~&#13;
Oklahoma Ci~y~ OK (EGCM)lu the&#13;
. ~ake of ~’eports from three Oklahoma&#13;
of the U.S; House of&#13;
;that they would not&#13;
gay people f()r their staffs,&#13;
ind is&#13;
all members of&#13;
who o~poses&#13;
::panics :include issues :related :to: discrimifiatioi~ against lesbian and gay&#13;
F@~÷~ N~$ @a~ ~A~; ha Oh~ ..... Sextlal Orientation their ?, ,,&#13;
,&#13;
[ralnmg, progams: : ;&#13;
he re. ~ ~r~a~~ par, : ,&#13;
a~ og go~rs~ $~ ~rr~t Ni~ effect a cg~?ra~e: ~pQrt. ticipations C6mpani~S Congress~an Jim Inhofe, Ernest&#13;
and, while ate a ....... tew ........... i ..... f ......... ’ ~ay . employee organ zed g oups O Istook and Bdl Brewster have brought&#13;
companies w~th high marks, the the~e 31% ~o [z~ " ’&#13;
~r. Th~s Yea~ ~gean~ N~C, w$ ’ ~ ~ ~";"&#13;
, .... gn" y / discrimination against lesbian and gay&#13;
~ th~&#13;
o~ the fortune ~uuu are lesbian [ ; bl~xpa! i employee people on Capitol Hill out of the&#13;
L~ ; ........ that iewer than . ,..... , .&#13;
¯e 98&#13;
~r ~mar og Oklahoma ~y. NGLTF closet; saysum~v~cree~ey, execut~ve&#13;
Along with th~ cr~wni th~ win’ rec director of the Human Rights&#13;
~rw$ pro~ess -&#13;
for Why&#13;
bisexual. Campaign Fun~d. "We are surveying&#13;
% Of every member of the Houge and&#13;
~sking them to inform&#13;
w~th&#13;
, their stars that discrimination on the&#13;
~, basis ~f ~al orientatiOn Will no/be&#13;
offices," .... .....&#13;
Oklahoma membe{S of CongreSs&#13;
in an&#13;
October :3.&#13;
communify o new&#13;
dance c/u/z) offernofive&#13;
T,P.4 S H L) / S&#13;
$ 1 LONGNECKS&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
NIGH T&#13;
]&#13;
5 H O ~l/ N / G H T&#13;
S0mefhing Special ~very Sunday!&#13;
s3 BEE£ BUST FROM 9- ] 2&#13;
$1_50 ioofers and Weekly Drink Specials&#13;
EVERY&#13;
Alley entrance to 3340&#13;
Doors open of C~&#13;
(t:o~rnerty STROKES)&#13;
2 1 ~o enter&#13;
91 8-F44-©89@&#13;
Damaging The Immune System -&#13;
Stress is one of thegreatest damagesof&#13;
your immune, system. ~.&#13;
Many research studies have now.....&#13;
clearly demonstrated that stress&#13;
induces-illness is a real phenomenon&#13;
and stress contributes to&#13;
may-diseases. However, it is not&#13;
stre~;~;"per"say that-causes the&#13;
problem;.: but:rather howea~ch ins&#13;
divi dual. reacts to the -.stress.&#13;
Stress.causes several changes ino&#13;
the b~dy~ the most important for.~&#13;
your.im~nune system being in-.&#13;
creased ~secretions of adrenal&#13;
gland hormones.~ The~e hormones&#13;
~inhibit white: blood cells&#13;
and cause the thymus gland to&#13;
shrink,. This leads, to a significant&#13;
reduction of immune funct.ions,&#13;
leaving you susceptible tp infections,.&#13;
cancer,~ and other illnesses..&#13;
The.level of immune suppression :&#13;
is usually proportional to the level&#13;
of stress&#13;
Sugar consumption also ssdthe&#13;
abi!ity.of neutrophiis to engulf ¯&#13;
and destroy b~cterla:~ .These ~.ef~&#13;
fects start’ within lessthan 30&#13;
minutes after ingestion and last for&#13;
overfive hours: Typically, there is&#13;
atleast a 50% reduction in neutroph,&#13;
s activity two hours alter ingestion.&#13;
Since neutrophils consti,&#13;
tute 60 - 70% of your total circula~ting&#13;
white blood cells, impairment&#13;
of their activity can sedouslysuppress&#13;
your immune system~ Ingsstion&#13;
of 75 grams of glucose has&#13;
also been shown to depress lymphocyte&#13;
activity. In contrast the&#13;
¯ingestion of 110 grams of complex&#13;
carbohydrates results in no suppressive&#13;
effect on immunefunc,._&#13;
tion..&#13;
SO, ho~i much sugar does the&#13;
average ~ American Consume? A&#13;
su.rpdsing t50 grams of .sucrose ,~&#13;
very day, notincluding other sim- :&#13;
ply sugarslikelhosein fruit÷juiceoandhoney.&#13;
~ It seems likely-~that.&#13;
mostAmericanshave chronically&#13;
depressedimmune systems. ~ ~.&#13;
Obesity isalso-associat~d ~ith&#13;
dectdas~d i~mu~e~fiihctior~~¥ C~o~.&#13;
leste#orand lipid levels ’are Usu-~&#13;
ally elevated in obese indi~i~ls~&#13;
Increased blood levels off:holes;&#13;
terol~free~fatty acidS, rtriglycerides, -&#13;
and bile acidsinhibit various iramune&#13;
functionsinduding theabi!~...&#13;
ity of lymphocytes .to proliferate&#13;
and p~)duce antibodies, and the_&#13;
ability. Ofneutrophils to migrate to&#13;
area,~ of infections andengulf.and&#13;
destroy infectious organisms,&#13;
Alcohol increases susceptibility to.&#13;
experimentalinfection inanimals.&#13;
ousiy inhibits immune function. .-.and alcoholics, are .known to be&#13;
The_ingestion of just-100 grams:.... mo~e...~usc~e~p,ti~!y to p_n~u...monia.&#13;
/three ouncest of nlucose fruc anu other inrecuons. ~tuoles 01&#13;
¯ ¯ ~,~ , " " " i ’ .’~- : ~- rose, Sucrose (table sugar), or.- human neutro. phds nutritiously&#13;
¯ - even honey significantly reduces normal people, . Next.time: Damaging&#13;
the¯ Immune System~.&#13;
The Splendor_Of Truth?. ¯ PostcardsfromParadise&#13;
By: Father Marry Martin Herland Sister’Resources will&#13;
~Holy Trinity E~C.C., OKC ~-~ . presentCds Williamson and Tret&#13;
Pope John Paul !! has released Fure in concert Nov. 18 at the Civic&#13;
his latest encyclical, "Veritatis Center Little-Theater in OKC. Tick-&#13;
Splendor,,. the ,Splendor-of. ets for the perferance which ben-&#13;
Truth." it re-enforces traditional efits the Herland Legal Defense&#13;
o&#13;
Roman Catholic"morality .with a Fund, are .$2.S, a.n.d $~6 in ~d.vance.&#13;
vengeance with no dissent permit- Any remammgtlcksts will be&#13;
t~d from any quarter ofthe Church. at the dOord. Advance tickets are&#13;
It teachesmasturbation iSa sin;&#13;
-birth control is ~asin, homosexuality&#13;
is intri,sically evil; no abortions&#13;
for any reason; and remarried:&#13;
heterosexuals must live as&#13;
brothel and ~is~er~amoiigsome if&#13;
it’s deClarations of "truth,’.&#13;
Haven,t you had enough .yet?&#13;
Why would any gay. or !esbia~,&#13;
Rom~n~Catholic COntinue to re~&#13;
main. in a homophobic church&#13;
where they are.so condemned and&#13;
unwelcomed? ¯ . : .&#13;
f~iLindinO ofth~e Ecumenical.Catholic&#13;
Church Wasbur opposition tO&#13;
.traditional Roman Catholic morblity,&#13;
espe(~!aily concerning lesbi:&#13;
ans, gay men,,and bisexuals. We&#13;
¯ are a churchfo£~oday,- ~ith realistic&#13;
moral.valuss ~cti~ thelove&#13;
of Christ for all people. We wel:&#13;
come you into the Ecumenical&#13;
Catholic Church! _&#13;
available .at Herland Resources,&#13;
2312 N.W. 39th, OKC,&#13;
Tick.~s ~have been in great demand&#13;
since going on sale on Sept.&#13;
18: The c6nert hal/seats 390 and&#13;
.we eXpecttosell all of the tickets&#13;
before the-night of the concert,&#13;
says organizer WandaChapman.&#13;
: Crisand .Tret have just released&#13;
their first~ddo album, ~ "Postcards&#13;
From Paradies", alter collaborat~&#13;
ing in .performance setting and on&#13;
each other’s: !~cordi~gs¯ for-the&#13;
past twelve y~irs.&#13;
The:Hedand ~Legal Defense&#13;
Fund provides assistance with-le~&#13;
gal fees for lesbians appealing&#13;
child custody~:cou~t decisions.’~&#13;
More information about the Legal&#13;
Defense Fund"ro the concert is&#13;
available by ~ailing Herland.at&#13;
(40S)521~sse6&#13;
General Gay &amp; Lesbian, Discussion Groups .&#13;
.Mondays, 6:30 at Red Rock - New Group starting Thursdays,6:30 at Red Rock&#13;
Couples of Mixed HIV Status&#13;
Contact Jim Carter for details.&#13;
YGLA, Young Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance&#13;
Discussion Group, Tuesdays, 6:30 at Oasis&#13;
Activity Group, Sundays, 8pm at Oasis&#13;
Referral Assistance&#13;
Jim&amp; Betsy will provide free referral assistance for individuals&#13;
seeking counseling or substance use treatment.&#13;
Some support groups will requirescreening ofpartic.ipants ’to insure group Compatibility.&#13;
Red Rock HIV Counseling Services&#13;
Individual Counseling for HIVpositivepersons: andtheir~!oved ones and HIV Prevention Education.&#13;
THE PARACHUTE November 1993, OK-10&#13;
HEALING -by: Cookie Arbuckle, Director of. Other ,Optoins. Inc.&#13;
Gays have madea substantial&#13;
impact on the personal lives and&#13;
social.communities it has touched&#13;
through the nation, throughout the&#13;
world,~th~roughout all history,&#13;
throughout time. The premier per-~&#13;
Day Without Art" when presented&#13;
in NewYork by Visual Artists’.Caucus&#13;
2 Years ago..(they also brought&#13;
you the "RedRibbon") It has.become&#13;
a symbol for many and i,S&#13;
now a continuous "celebrations"&#13;
formance of classical .movie was on AIDS. Day throughoutthe Wodd.~&#13;
viewed, by the public in November Wewere not able.to bringthat kind&#13;
of 1940 at Radio City Music Hall in 0f~thinking(o Oklahoma that year,&#13;
New York City.i.: I am: sure. it " .but perhaps this year. WichIta,&#13;
Changed the lives’of millions of Kansas, another~tate of seve#e&#13;
- ~ people. It did mine.. " " conservatism, weare working on&#13;
Reading overthe histo.r~ofthat&#13;
film amazed me..one third of all , .Did you all like peter Pan, Alice&#13;
the music was ~vdtten ~by a Gay in W0ndedandwhen yougrew up,&#13;
man. Of the hundreds of artists The writers were Gaff. The most&#13;
working forfouryearsonthefilm, famous artist~s of all was. Peter&#13;
we fi~,,m~l at least half were "de. -IlichTchaikovsky ,The Nut~racker&#13;
ferent! -or openly gay.. . Suite, Cinderella,._SWan Lake~&#13;
Their boss- a man who surrounded&#13;
himself with the m~’~t~l;&#13;
ented artists available- sex-pref~&#13;
~rence did not enter the picture,~&#13;
The children and adults came&#13;
away With: a mentor to live,with&#13;
daily, musicthat filled, them full of&#13;
pictures, a way to view the wodd&#13;
from a different place, HOPEI&#13;
These ch ildren hungered for-more&#13;
and become the first generation of&#13;
DISNEY venerates. How many&#13;
other pole are being impacted by&#13;
Gays in this way. Who can say,&#13;
who will admit.&#13;
Do you know what film name it&#13;
~was? ,;FANTASIA! ~,&#13;
Sleeping. Beauty. And then there&#13;
was Shakespeare (who was&#13;
degreed-tO hai~e bisexual tendencies.)&#13;
’1 know-we can not all be&#13;
Tchaikovsky, but we all have :been&#13;
influenced,:,impacted, inspired;&#13;
motivated, iml~iled, Persuaded&#13;
andempowered ~by Gays. itis not&#13;
|ust artist. I have worked with&#13;
people form all walks of .life. The&#13;
rainbow has affected all of us&#13;
whetherwe acknowledge it or not.&#13;
I did an inservice workshop for&#13;
infusion therapy group and a phy-&#13;
~ sician .was present I knew to be&#13;
what the Gay.problem was.&#13;
We finally .decided thatGays&#13;
had the same things to worry&#13;
about that everyone else had, fear&#13;
of Ionel|~eSs;~"~hd~nment, rejection&#13;
and of coUrse on top of.that&#13;
Equal Opportunity to Heterosexual&#13;
Students Through Teaching&#13;
and Counseling". Food for&#13;
thought. Healing takes place&#13;
though ownership and responsibility..&#13;
I will try that on a hetero-&#13;
One of the nurses told me to&#13;
take being. Gay and the answer&#13;
could easily involve us all. We&#13;
did and it read as follows: Empowerment&#13;
occurs when the frustration.&#13;
of a single individual creates&#13;
a breakthrough to a differentlevel&#13;
of involvement and that parson&#13;
takes ownership of and responsibility&#13;
for.whatever is the problem.&#13;
Leann~ onebf our educators&#13;
offered me a paged training handbook&#13;
for educators titled "Affording&#13;
Equal Opportunity to Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Students Through Teachin&#13;
collaboration; They have become&#13;
the ’~teachers" in :.this field. Whyl&#13;
Because early on. the gay.population&#13;
took responsibility, So&#13;
healing, has occurred. The culture&#13;
Gay is growing, is expanding&#13;
,-is healing - themselves, and&#13;
the rest of the world.&#13;
Support those:&#13;
who support you&#13;
Patronize those who&#13;
¯ ,advertis~&#13;
2800 N.W, 39th. OKC. 405-943-0843&#13;
9n,th:Anniverssary CelebratiOn&#13;
Friday-November 26th &amp; Saturday N0vember-27th&#13;
~. Oklahoma Leather Fantasy&#13;
Friday 27th&#13;
Open House Meet &amp; Greet Leather Dignitaries from across the-USA and Live Entertainment&#13;
Saturday, Nov. :&#13;
Saturday,28th -&#13;
Let’s g~tOthe races.&#13;
1st Race 12noon Remington ParkSth floor Suite&#13;
All you can,meat &amp; drink $60 per person&#13;
includes valet parking and Tip Sheets&#13;
Reservations .Only. call&#13;
.....::~:: 405-943-0843&#13;
9&#13;
Annual Turnabout Show&#13;
at.The:Bunkhouse.&#13;
thank you for&#13;
November 1993, OK-11 THE PARACHUTE&#13;
AWA R E N E S S&#13;
LOOSE UP TO THRITY POUNDS&#13;
IN THIRTY DAYS&#13;
FOR THIRTY DOLLARS&#13;
CALL 405-495-6732&#13;
LORETTA&#13;
ASK ABOUT OTHER PROGRAMS&#13;
,. 919 N. x.’ir~qi~it,, OKC ¯ (405) 272-985~&#13;
ATTENTION ALL MEN!&#13;
*REMEMBER THE OUT RIGGER?&#13;
THE BEST TIMES ARE BACK&#13;
*SNEAKERS is making a’change-&#13;
YOU WIN!I~ We are turning it overto you!&#13;
-GRAND OPENING:NOVEMBER6TH&#13;
SHOW FEATURING DOMINIQUE NICOLE FRIENDS&#13;
Show Starts at10:45,No Cover&#13;
*Open 5 days aweek, Wed thru Sat. 4pm,&#13;
... Sunday 2pro&#13;
*OURPRICESARE THELOWESTIN TOWN*.&#13;
BOTTLE.BEER-St,50 PITCHERS-S3,00 WELL-&#13;
$2.00 CALL~- $3,00SCHNAPPS $1.00&#13;
’ - *Looking for* Male-Dancbrs and a bartender&#13;
*Dart seasonsign up&#13;
K.A.’s&#13;
-OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
.~ ..-.~ i. -i~, ~.,~4:30--TILL WHENEVER&#13;
. HAPPY HOUR MONDAY - FRIDAY 6-8&#13;
FRIENDS :WHO CARE GARAGE SALE&#13;
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 7TH&#13;
OAK EXECUTIVE BUILDING PARKING LO1&#13;
5915 NW 23RD - WEST OF MACARTHUR&#13;
¯ 10AM TO 6PM&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATIN OR TO GIVE A DONATION&#13;
ITEM CALL 728-3222&#13;
~t the workl know, you are...&#13;
Meant To Be Fit&#13;
"The t:~jinnincj c~ chan~e is ~he commitment to doso-.&#13;
Logo is two-tone pink and black, with white or&#13;
black ~ype depend/nO on color T-sh#t or cap.&#13;
Printed on the highest quality 100%&#13;
heavy cotton Tees rind .Tanks.&#13;
Available in black, gray and white.&#13;
Baseball caps (with sLitch logo) also&#13;
available in black &amp; white only.&#13;
Shirts: $15.00&#13;
Caps: $12.00&#13;
(addS3.00/~rs &amp; h.)&#13;
Mai/ chec~or money order to:&#13;
Meant To Be Fit&#13;
1001 N.W. 18th St. -&#13;
Oklahoma City, OK 73106-641-6&#13;
(credit card orders calL"-1-800-546-8689--&#13;
Visa, MasterCard, Discover,. American&#13;
-Express accepted:) ..&#13;
THE PARACHUTE November 1993, OK-12&#13;
HABANA INN COMPLEX’&#13;
Your home away from Home!&#13;
]8..0... G- ..u...estReo~ms Poolside Rooms&#13;
two Pools ,Suites Cable T.V.&#13;
Featuring&#13;
" Gushers:i.Restaurant&#13;
Current,classic and progressive dance ~music.&#13;
-.Beer-bust.&amp;:Shows.,-~.Wednesday~ &amp;,Sunday, West end; Habana Inn complex&#13;
Pool and :Darts&#13;
¯ " 2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY - -- 0~I~i(~MA :ClT’g, OK 73112&#13;
(405) 524:JRED (405) 524-5733&#13;
Grds, Magazines, Leather, ]~:shirt,Gi[-ts&#13;
ComingEvents&#13;
November 5th=Miss Finishline Pageant at&#13;
....Gushers -&#13;
Nov. 7th- Temployees Turnabout show to&#13;
benefit Triangl.e Assoc.&#13;
Nov. 6th &amp; 7th- Paula Hand’s Dance-Workshop&#13;
9am=5pm&#13;
Nov. 19th- Mr. OKC Leather Contest at&#13;
Gusher’s&#13;
FRIDAY’s Beginning Nov.26th: The&#13;
Jacqulyn DeVaroe Show&#13;
Saturday Nov. 27th- OKC Classic Bowlers&#13;
Benefit Sh0.w Featuring Glitz &amp; Glitter&#13;
from Dallas&#13;
2200.NW 39th Expy,.Okl.ahoma City, OK&#13;
¯ .Ca|Ifor Rates:.&amp; Information&#13;
7311.2.&#13;
405-528-2221 :: " ns only eali! 1-800-988-~2221&#13;
American-Express/-VisaiMastercard Accepted&#13;
Wichita, Kansas (316)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Buddies Country, 4000 s. Broadway&#13;
529-4953&#13;
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
SouthForty,3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
R &amp;R’Brass Rail, 282~8 E. 31st 684-9009&#13;
T-Room, 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327&#13;
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hiliside&#13;
681-2746&#13;
Lessens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market&#13;
263-2777&#13;
The Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln&#13;
683-8.088&#13;
Service &amp; Retail-Businesses&#13;
Visions &amp; Dreams, 3414 Maple&#13;
942-6333&#13;
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway&#13;
263-3007&#13;
Queen Anne’s Lace 733-4075&#13;
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 700N. Market&#13;
267-6522&#13;
Roommates , 262-8444&#13;
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry 269.4411&#13;
Land ofAwesInfo. Ser.POB 16782 67216&#13;
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st 832-1816&#13;
Plato’s, 1306 E. Harry St. 269-9036&#13;
T.B.’s, 1516 S. Oliver. 688-5343&#13;
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. Olive688-5343&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 3721 S. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entertainm’tCtr 7805 W. Kellpgg&#13;
AdultEntertainm’t Ctr2809 N. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entree’ South, 8025 S. Broadway&#13;
Circle Cinema, 2570 S. Seneca&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty. Health DepL&#13;
1900 E. 9th 268-8441&#13;
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 1942-1786&#13;
The Lesbian Celebration 683-7561&#13;
P-FLAG,POB 686,67201-0686 687-4666&#13;
Gay Information Line 269-0913&#13;
Acceptance iC’roj. POB. 868, 67201&#13;
687-4666&#13;
Religious Organ3ozatlons..,. -~-"-:~’:?~ :~.&#13;
wiCl~itaPraise ~ Worship Ctr.65i-6903:"&#13;
First Unitarian Chttt~h 684-3481&#13;
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633&#13;
Junc~tlon City, Kansas (913)&#13;
After Dark Video, 1206 Grant&#13;
Revolutions, 902 W. 7th 238-6374&#13;
Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Support Grbup&#13;
223-6125&#13;
Lawrence, Kansas (913)&#13;
DouglasCounty AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Lesbigay Services, 410 KS Union&#13;
Box 13, Kansas Univ. 66045&#13;
864-3091&#13;
Freedom Coalition, POB 1991 66044&#13;
Manhattan, Kansas (913)&#13;
AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Flint Hills Alliance&#13;
Gay &amp;Lesbian Info.Line 587-0016&#13;
MCC-Manhattan 271-8431&#13;
Bisexual &amp; Gay &amp; Lesbian Society&#13;
SAS Box 63, Kansas St.. Univ. 66506&#13;
Topeka, Kansas (913)&#13;
Bars &amp; Clubs&#13;
Classics, 124 S.W 8th 357-1960&#13;
Expressions, 110 SE 8" 233-3622&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas&#13;
Some Like It Hot 4732 S; Topeka Ave.&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100&#13;
Ga’y/Les. Task Force, POB 3829, 66604&#13;
357-8727&#13;
Mayors Task Force 234-6699&#13;
Gay Rap Line 223-6558&#13;
HIV Affected Group 234-8562&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
MCC-Topeka, POB 4776, 66604&#13;
232-6196&#13;
Affirmation (Methodist) 235-6101&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma (918)&#13;
¯Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
¯Electric Circus, 606 S.Elgin 587-8677&#13;
-*Laffrs, 311 E.-7th 583-5233&#13;
¯Phoenix, 6328 S. Peoria 743-7062&#13;
¯Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S. Sheridan&#13;
834-4234&#13;
¯Renegade, 1649 S. Main 585-3405&#13;
¯Time n’ Time Again, 1515 S. Memorial&#13;
660-0856&#13;
¯TNT’s 2114 S. Memorial 664-8299&#13;
¯Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
¯Tomfoolery, 1565 S. Sheridan&#13;
832-0233&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA 663-9399&#13;
¯Elite Gbods, 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
¯Whittier Bkstore, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
aDreamland, 8807E. Admiral 834-1051&#13;
¯Indian Terr. Coffee Co. 16.13 E, 15th&#13;
.587-1633&#13;
¯Mohawk Music, 6157 E 51 P1 664-2951&#13;
¯Tulsa Central Library, 400 Civic Ctr.&#13;
596-7977&#13;
¯.Chapman Student Cir. TU, 631-0000&#13;
Organizations&#13;
ACT-UP, POB .532 74101&#13;
Names Proj..POB 3181, 74101 748-3111&#13;
P-FLAG,POB 52800,74152 749.4901&#13;
¯TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1&#13;
¯ GayLine Info. 743-4297&#13;
" -. ’ Shanti Hodine 749-7898&#13;
.*STIR, Tulsa U. student org. 583-9780&#13;
OldahomaAIDS Hotline 800-535-2437&#13;
Religious.Organizations "&#13;
¯Family ofFaith MCC, 500 W. ’A’ Jenks&#13;
"298-4622&#13;
Afftrm~iiiori (Meth:~) ~B,. 14301, ;::741-59&#13;
.481-1528&#13;
Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants--&#13;
Angles, 2117 NW 39th 524-3431&#13;
Bunkhouse, 2800 NW 39th 943-0843&#13;
Coyote Club, 2120 NW 39th 521-9533&#13;
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
2200 NW 39 Ex.pwy 525-0730&#13;
Hi Lo Club 1221 NW 50th 834-.1722&#13;
KA’s;.2024.NW llth 525-3991&#13;
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384&#13;
The Park, 2125 NW 39th 528-4690&#13;
ThePorthole,3630NW 39th 949-9837&#13;
Sneakers, 919 N.Virginia " - 272-9833&#13;
Tramps, 2201 NW 39th 528-9080&#13;
WreckRoom,2127NW 39th 525-7610&#13;
The Kitchen,2124 NW 39th 528-5133&#13;
La" Roca Mexican Restaurants&#13;
SW4th/Walker, 409 W. Reno &amp;&#13;
.7550 N. May&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
-Banana Products 341-8965&#13;
Exec. Travel, 2113NW36th 521-9100&#13;
Habana Inn, 2200NW39th 528-2221&#13;
Herland, 2312 NW 39th 521-9696&#13;
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733&#13;
Lobe’s, 2131 NW 39th 528-5!56&#13;
Deb Roberts, Entertainer 843-5624&#13;
Second Chance Credit 752-2209&#13;
.Stephen¯Scott, Masseur 525-8689&#13;
Shirley. Hunter, M;Ed/counsel0r&#13;
- 848-5429&#13;
Larry Prater,.MD, Psychiatry 232-5453&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
New Beginnings MCC 3136 N. Portland&#13;
942,6313&#13;
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 360-0414&#13;
Friends Meeting. - 632:7574&#13;
Gay Christian Ecum. Council 52~;5635&#13;
Light House MCC, 2522. N. Shartel&#13;
*MCC-Tulsa, l~.23Map!eycood 838-1715.&#13;
Dignity/Integrity&#13;
*Canterbury Ministry Ctr.&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurarlts&#13;
Center Street, 10.renter St. 253-8071&#13;
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St, 253~8361&#13;
Ermilio’s, 26 White St~~ .~’ .. 253-8806&#13;
ChurcheS . "&#13;
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337&#13;
Bed &amp; Breakfast&#13;
ArborGlen,7LemaSt. 800-515-GLEN&#13;
Rock Cottage, 10EneniaSt. 253-8659&#13;
Dixie Cottage; 2 Prospect 253,7533&#13;
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800&#13;
Purple Iris Inn, RR 6 253-8748&#13;
Pond Mountain, RL 1 2.53-5877&#13;
MapleLeafInn, 6 Kingshgwy 253-6876&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Satori Arts, .81 Spring St 253-9820&#13;
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St.~ 253-6600&#13;
Corcelli Studio, 159.Spring St.. 253-7399&#13;
Ft. Smith, Arkansas (501)&#13;
court Garden 305 Garrison 783-9822&#13;
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Garrison 783-9347&#13;
Fayetteville, Arkansas (501)&#13;
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052&#13;
Wash. Cty. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS&#13;
Gay/Lesbian Act’n Delegatiofis 521.4509&#13;
MCC of the Ozarks 443-4278&#13;
Parents-FLAG 756-8444&#13;
Hot Springs, Arkansas&#13;
Our House Lounge/Rest. 235 Broadway&#13;
624-6868&#13;
Salina, Kansas (316)&#13;
~ternative Lifestyles, POB 2532, 67402&#13;
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas&#13;
POB 153, Falun, KS 67442&#13;
Emporia, Kansas (316)&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance forResources &amp;&#13;
Education, Box 65, ESU 66801&#13;
524-4687&#13;
unitarian Church, 600NW 13 232-9224..&#13;
H01y Trinity ECC, 2328 N.&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Backstreet, 1021JessieRd.Q 666-6900&#13;
Micheal’s, 60i Center. 376-8301&#13;
Discovery III, 1021 JessieRd. : 66~.4784&#13;
Silver Dollar, 2710 AsherAve. 663-9886&#13;
Organizations&#13;
HPWA, POB 4379, 72204; 666-6900&#13;
AIDS Support Group 374-’3605&#13;
RAIN-Arkansas 375-5908&#13;
The House 374-3758&#13;
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605&#13;
Womens Project 372-5113&#13;
Parents-FLAG 821-4865&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
TwistedEntermmt, 7201 Asher 568-4262&#13;
Shields-Marley Studios; 117 S. Victory&#13;
372-6148&#13;
Travel by Philip 227-7690&#13;
LitdeRock Conn.ections 227-7690&#13;
Springfield, Missouri (41.7&#13;
Club 1105, 1105 E. Commercial&#13;
831-9043&#13;
Down Beat, 219 W. Olive 846-4572&#13;
Bolivar News, 4030 B~ilivar 833-3354 .&#13;
Joplin, Missouri (417)&#13;
Parmers Western Lounge, 720 S, Main&#13;
78145453&#13;
Partners Dance Lounge~ 722 S. Main&#13;
623-9313&#13;
Oklahoma City. (405)&#13;
Organizations&#13;
ACLU, 1411Classen, Ste318 524-8511&#13;
Herland Sis. Res. 2313 NW 39 521-9696&#13;
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277&#13;
OASIS Resourcg Ctr. 2135 NW 39&#13;
525-2437&#13;
OK GayPol. CaucusPOB 61186 73146&#13;
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc. 943-0843&#13;
OKC Metro Mens’ Chorus 424-1753&#13;
Pride Network 340-3575&#13;
RAIN 232-4372&#13;
ACT-UP/Queer Nation 447-4209&#13;
Womens’ Resource Ctr. 364-9424&#13;
AIDS Mastery 525-3636&#13;
A1-Anon (Gay) 947-3834&#13;
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437&#13;
OK AIDS Hotline 800-535-2437&#13;
Other Options 728-3222&#13;
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39~h&#13;
843-8378&#13;
Norman, Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Simply Equal/Norman, POB 5684, 73030&#13;
OU Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Alliance&#13;
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 731319&#13;
325-4452&#13;
Lawton, Oklahoma (405)&#13;
HIV/AIDS Support 248-5890/351-2820&#13;
SW AIDSNetw0rk, POB 3924, 73505&#13;
Great Plains MCC, :1416 W.-Gore&#13;
357-7899&#13;
Enid, Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Phillips U. Gay/Lesbian Gm~p 242-0628&#13;
Stillwater, Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544_&#13;
OSU Gay/Lesbian/BiseX Comm. Assoc.&#13;
Student Union 040, Box 601, 74078&#13;
744-5252 ’&#13;
~. . 7". ; :-&amp;~,~;~2.:~;@.2&#13;
FINAI.I.¥ ]_£)NG DISTANCE&#13;
CAH rNG FOR&#13;
(;all ar~yvchere in the worl,&#13;
from your home-just like you I&#13;
calling card to use away if’err&#13;
now. Customer servic~ and&#13;
are available 24 hours a&#13;
service&#13;
:. We ~rovide a&#13;
likc~ou have&#13;
hav’e now.&#13;
WEMUSTAEkM1T~ TI-]ERE ISA~.o&#13;
OFFICIAL LONG DISTANCE&#13;
IHE 1993/AAR~I OH WESHI$1~OH&#13;
MAKE THE SWITCH TODAY&#13;
1-800-596-0556&#13;
THEPARACHUTE November 1993, OK-14&#13;
Catholic, Church !&#13;
NOTICE ’&#13;
Hel~ Wanted _. . PERSONALS-CONT.&#13;
- Wichita&#13;
GWF- I travel KS. and"N~&#13;
send dcmo.tape to: Ele~’l~ic, Oklahoma Onbusiness. ~,Looking&#13;
Our _Third Year! Get the areas&#13;
longest running -contacts&#13;
publication for gays, lesbians, &amp; "&#13;
bisexuals. No charge to"pla~ an&#13;
ad a~d:no forwarding fce to play by ear. -Pay little, but&#13;
respond. For -frec m"~ fO. sen’ d age reward great.. 316-651-0603.&#13;
’statement to - Personally&#13;
Speaking; P.O.-", box. 16782;&#13;
Wichitaks:67213-0782;&#13;
316-2694208 -Fa~ .&#13;
Free personal ads, Worldwid~&#13;
ncwslett~,chenp or free to.&#13;
HIV+, AIDSindividuals, Diccct&#13;
or discreet ads. SASE-to:&#13;
OWO]~,, #110, 116 Tustin,&#13;
Anaheimi~CA~ 92807&#13;
information.&#13;
Circus, A~tn: David Bridg,eman~,&#13;
311 E. 7nth, Tulsa, OK. 74120&#13;
partner-0f?ightyears~Box .136 -&#13;
-Set.your own,hours! IfY0U live ~ ..- ~ .........&#13;
i in: Topeka,, or Mis:s0uri~ you ~_~t Bend,Ks.&#13;
can sell advertisement:in the . GWF mid 30’s. Professional&#13;
Parachute Call today: - seeks same .for stable&#13;
316-651"05001!~800"536"6519_ .relationship, .no drugs, social&#13;
d~nker only. I enjoy-sports,&#13;
PIANIST. WANTED: C&amp;W music, sharing quiet times N.W. Ark-Married GWM, 40&#13;
Charismatic-:church looking for. .and hh~g:~,.Box:l23 yo, good-looking, healthy,&#13;
piano player, must:be able to " ’ seeking Married BiWM for&#13;
GWF, 30,s(~0fession~ See.ks monogamous intimate&#13;
same. for starbleii~latiOnship. NO: .friendship., You. must be 35-45,&#13;
..... s, soci~ ’~-;~~:’~ ~i :~:~ttractive’-:~ healthy; intelligent,&#13;
ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES&#13;
Amazingly ac~wate,&#13;
computerized compility _.report 25-47. Let’s get together. ,Box&#13;
for friends &amp; Lovers only 127.&#13;
$25.00 or 6 mo.’s pcrson~!&#13;
NewtoHutehinsonarec,~GWM,i‘~&#13;
Horoscope $29.95 43, ..5~!0, 185 ,nearly’ deaf but&#13;
Call today 1-800-460-STAR . .~..SCcking.G~ or Bi Male&#13;
FOR SALE for :~- fri’endship, possibly " s e xs, Wom ’s bar, in irelaaonshipi sb ,&#13;
OKC, 2024 N.W.- l.lth, speak to&#13;
Jauice or Michcle at&#13;
.405-272-9833&#13;
For Sale in Eureka springs,&#13;
Martha &amp; ~Joyccs arc ..selling The&#13;
Purple Iris Inn, with an&#13;
excellent .aready built in&#13;
"Family" clientelle. Country&#13;
wooded setting, turn-key&#13;
operation, contact: _ Dinny&#13;
PERSONALS - CONT.&#13;
GWM, .mid 20’s seeks same or&#13;
.younger.- for safe fun. Bottoms&#13;
a.plu.s, but-versatile, send :photo&#13;
for Gay-.-. female friends.: :for and phone. Box:142&#13;
dinn~’ ~or-:movies. :i .have a ~...... " .......&#13;
. AR,KANSAS&#13;
Bi WM, 44~ handsome, healthy,&#13;
&amp;. inteHegent, Seeks a smooth&#13;
feminine sissy GM/TV~FS in&#13;
NW.. Ark. for fun, friendship,&#13;
monogamy. I smoke. Box 142&#13;
FOR RENT " en’o : rts, ~ sh ": ~- " uiet ~sitive, and disereet Box 144 : . .. ~J y spo . ~,.:.:~q . -&#13;
Roommates servmg Wichita ..-timcS, and ha~gfun:~.:P~se../..i_&#13;
for : 5 years, Landlords _can ,.sendpietore:Box 143:i’:i. : i.~:. :: - . ~--~.., ’Anywhere USA&#13;
register without, any advmw,e .’- ~ . ~:~:: ’ " .-:¥oU*~ maSculine and&#13;
fee~ Tenants.my register:as- N.E;Kan~-: /:;:’" stndght-aeting, but. canYt find&#13;
little as-$15.00~ 1529 W.... GM-4~,-seeking.GWM f~ mate.: guys iike yourself?. Same with&#13;
Douglas 262-8~.~.~., .46-68; ,,slim¯ . buil~-~:ii,~;....~y -m~! i/good loo~ing,, good build,&#13;
:..... ¯ a-plu , bottom .: e|ocate .t0:late. 30’s,’ in ^us n. Xx.&#13;
Wanted: Locations.where gays warmer,,state, star.t. : RV..park,.. Box i41.¯&#13;
my sbare housing in Wichita, -. apple.~c~ E~t;s~dphot0; " " / "&#13;
aren~ -~:.C..all or stop :iby- p:iione Box146 i. " ~ - " :" "&#13;
" ~ . . OHah~m City,OK.... : .::! Address.&#13;
PERSON~S Have.lhome~ need mate, c0untr~ _&#13;
~: living, greater eke, GWMs0, City State Zip&#13;
GVv-M looking, for mate 47, s/p hair, smoker, trim ori~nal&#13;
look and act younger, honest, equipment, top, levi’s~camping Typeor print y~-ur ad, 25 words&#13;
romantic, non.~moker, loyal, canning, gardening. Seeks long or less.. Send with this coupon&#13;
Slim build looking for same t~m partner. Box 117 and $6.00 to: The Parachute,&#13;
Classifieds P.O. Box 11347&#13;
discreet, ¢~g.-Box 145&#13;
Bi W~M..:.::,:.33,..5’ 10, 1951bs,&#13;
Brown::~,: blue eyes, very&#13;
straight acting- and di~:&#13;
Wants friends i"~th-: same&#13;
lifestyle. Box 147&#13;
. Wichita&#13;
GWM, 25 HIV+ seeks GWM&#13;
Bnllard of Double "D"Realty, 21-35 for_ friendship and&#13;
BctryviHe, Ar. at possible relationship. Serious&#13;
1-800-748-9772 replies only~ Send photo,phong..~&#13;
Penpals welcome. Box 122&#13;
Gay male .seeking, male couples Wichita, Ks. 67202.&#13;
for fun, mid20’s. Send Photo’s Your responses will be mailed&#13;
Box 109. . " to you when they are received.&#13;
GWM - 44 Professional very TO.RESPOND TO A&#13;
.ha.h-y, li~ smooth man~ 18-30 to PERSONAL&#13;
travel and be my sugar boy, this 1 ~ Write your response, please il&#13;
summer and beyond. Please in an envelope, and seal the&#13;
send photo :,and phone, OKC envelope. Be sure to .include a&#13;
. area please. Box 125 way for the advertiser to .get in&#13;
¯ - . contact,with you.&#13;
GWM 26, travel U.S. would like 2. :.,On the scaled envelope, write&#13;
to meet ’GWM 20-30 for fun the advertisers box number in&#13;
when in your area; 5’8 1201bs, lower corner and affix postage.&#13;
looking for similar. Box 150 3. Place the sealed envelope an~&#13;
$2.00 insids a 2nd envelope:&#13;
seal and address to - The&#13;
DEADLINE FOR Parachute P.O. Box&#13;
11347,Wichita, KS. 67202&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
Ad will Run only for the numi~r of&#13;
ISSUE insertions paid for, unless renewed. You&#13;
must b~ ¯18 years of agg or older to use t~s&#13;
/&#13;
November 1993, OK-15 THE PARACHUTE&#13;
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma is a monthly newspaper; the publications available begin August 1993 through December 1993.&#13;
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Tom Neal&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Mary Arbuckle&#13;
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Babby&#13;
Leslie Thomas&#13;
Catherine Boyle&#13;
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                    <text>Serving the Gay &amp; Lesbian Community in Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri
P.O. Box 11347 [,Vichita, Kansas 67202

~,’bl: I,

0

,.r Activities Include:
:hill Cookoff

,++i Rodeo
speed events for horses

T ON

de Events
+all Games
Games
Shoes
State Games

Miss. OGRA ~ Review Show 9:00 p.m.
For more i++formatio++ call 405-943-0843
after 1:00 p.m.

�Wichita, Kansas (316)

Wichita, Kansas (316)

Eureka Spr’gs, Arkansas

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Buddies Country, 4000 s. Broadwav
529-4953
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
South Forty, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
R &amp; R Brass Rail, 2828 E. 31st 684-9009
T-Room, 1507 E. Pawnee
262-9327
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hillside
681-2746
Lassens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market
263-2777
Th.e Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln
683 -8088
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Visions-&amp; Dreams, 3414 Maple

Churches
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Ctr. 651-6903
First Unitarian Church
684-3481
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Center Street, 10 Center St. 253-8071
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-8361
Ermillio’s, 26 White St. (501) 253-8806
Churches
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337
Bed &amp; Breakfast
Rock Cottage, 10 Enenia St.
253-8659
Dixie Cottage, 2 Prospect
253-7533
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800
Purple Iris Inn, RR 6
253-8748
Pond Mountain, Rt. 1
253-5877
Maple Leaf Inn, 6 Kingshgwy 253-6876
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Satori Arts, 81 Spring St.
253-9820
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St. 253-6600
Corcelli Studio, 159 Spring’St. 253-7399

942-6333
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway
263 -3007
Queen Anne’s Lace
733 -4075
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 7(~0 N. Market
267-6522
Roommates
262-8444
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry 269-441.1
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st
832-1816
Plato’s, 1306 E. Harry St.
269-9036
T.B.’s, 1516 S. Oliver
688-5343
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. O1ive688-5343
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr3721 S. Broadway
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 7805 W..Kellogg
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 2809 N. Broadway
Adult Entree’ South, 8025 S. Broadway
Circle Cinema, 2570 S. Seneca
Organizations
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty. Health Dept.
1900 E. 9th
268-8441
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786
The Lesbian Celebration
683-7561
P-FLAG
687-4666
Gay Information Line
269-0913

Junction City, Kansas
Aftei Dark Video, 1206 Grant
Lawrence, Kansas (913)
Ek)uglas County AIDS Project 843-0040
G~ty &amp; Lesbian Ser. of Kansas

864-3091

Manahattan, Kan/as (913)
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040

Topeka~ Kansas (913)
Bars &amp; Clubs
Classics, 124 SW 8th 357-1960
Expressions, 110 SE 8 233-3622
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas
Some Like It Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.
Organizations,
Topeka AIDS Project
232-3100
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727
Mayors Task Force
234-6699
Gay Rap Line
223-6558
’
Manhattan Outreach
271-8431
HIV Affected Group
234-8562Churches
MCC of Topeka
Z32-6196
United Methodist Affirmation 235-6101

Emporia, Kansas
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance
Box.65, ESU, 1200 Commercial, 66801

Little Rock, Arkansas
Bars &amp; RestaurantsBackstreet, 1021 Jessie Rd. Q
666-6900
Micheal’s, 601 Center
376-8301
Discovery III, 1021 Jessie Rd.
664-4784
Silver Dollar, 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886
Organizations
HPWA, POB 4379, 72204, 666-6900
AIDS Support Group
374-3605
RAIN-Arkansas
375-5908
The House
374-3758
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605
Womens ~oject
372-5113
Service &amp; R~ail Busin~es
Twis~ ~tennmt, 7201 Asher ~-4262
Shields:Marley Studios, 117 S. Victou
Travel by Philip

227-7690

Salina, Kansas
Alternatives Lifestyles, POB 2532, 67402
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas
POB 153, Falun, KS.67442

Hot Springs, Arkansas,
Our House ~unge/Rest. _35 Broadway
6 2 4 - 6 8 6 8

Tulsa, Oklahoma (918)

Oklahoma City (405)

Ft. Smith, Arkansas

Springfield, Missouri (417)

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Laff’.s " Underground. 31 l

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Angles, 2117 NW 39th
524-3431
943-0843
Bunkhouse, 2800 NW 39th
Coyote Club, 2120 NW 39th 521-9533
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill
2200 NW 39 Expwy
525-0730
834-1722
Hi Ix) Club 1221 NW 50th
525-3991
KA’s, 2024 NW 1 lth
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th
947-5384
528-4690
The Park, 2125 NW 391h
949-9’837
The Porthole. 3630 NW 39th
Sneakers, 919 N. Virginia
272-9833
Tramps, 2201 NW 39th
528-9080
Wreck Room, 2127 NW 39th
525-7610
The Kitchen, 2124 NW 39th 528-5133
La Rocca Mexican Restaurants
SW 4th/Walker, 409 W.’Reno &amp;
7550 N. May

Court Garden 305 Garrison 783-9822
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Garrison 783-9347

Club

E. 7th
583-5233

Tops (across from Laffs)
587 -8677
4812, 4812 E. 33rd
742-5262
Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S. Sheridan
834-4234

Taj Mahal, 2630 E. 15th
742-8274
Time n’ Time Again, 1515 S. Memorial
660-0856
TNT’s 2114 S, Memorial 664-8299
584-13 08
Tool Box. 1338 E. 3rd

Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Tomfoolery at the Silver Star
1565 S. Sheridan
832-0233
.Kelly Kirby, CPA
663-9399
Elite Goods, 814 S. Sheridan
838-8503
Whittier Bkstore, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767
834-1051
Dreamland, 8807 E. Admiral
Organizations
ACT-UP; POB 532, 74101
Names Project, POB 3181, 74101
¯
748-3111
P-FLAG POB 52800, 74152
749-4901
TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1
Gay Lin~ Info. 743-4297
Shanti Hotline 749-7898
STIR (Tulsa Univ. student ors,) 583-9780
Oklahoma AIDS Hotline 800-535-2437
Churches
Family of Faith MCC, 500 W. ’A"
Jenks
298-4622
742-8213
Affirmation (Methodist)
MCC of Tulsa, 1623 Maplewood
838~1715
Dignity/Integrity
298-4648

Enid, Oklahoma
Phillips Univ. Gay &amp; Lesbian Group
242-0628

Service &amp; Retail BusinessesBanana Products
341-8965
521-9100
Exec. Travel, 2113 NW 36th
528-2221
Habana Inn, 2200 NW 39th
521-9696
Herland, 2312 NW 39th
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733
528-5156
Lobo’s, 2131 NW 39th
843-5624
Deb Roberts, Entertainer
Second Chance Credit
752-2209
Stephen Scott, Masseur
525-8689
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/counselor
848-5429
Larry Prater, MD, Psychiat~’ 232-5453
Religious Organizations
New Beginnings MCC 3136 N. Portland
942-63 13
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 360-0414
Friends Meeting
632-7574
Gay Christian Ecum. Council 528-5635
Light House MCC, 2522 N. Shartel
524-4687
Unitarian Church, 600 NW 13 232-9224

Fayetteville, Arkansas
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052
Wash. Cry. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS
Gay/Lesbian Act’n, Delegations 521-4509
MCC of the Ozarks
443-4278

Oklahoma City (405)
Organizations
ACLU, 1411 Classen, Ste 318 524-8511
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277
OASIS Resource Ctr. 2135 NW 39
525-2437
OK Gay Pol. Caucus POB 61186 73146
943-0843
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc.
OKC Metro Mens’ Chorus 424-1753
340-3575
Pride Network
RAIN
232-4372
447-4209
ACT-UP/Queer Nation
OU Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Alliance
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 73019
Womens’ Resource Ctr.
364-9424
AIDS Mastery
525-3636
947-3834
A1-Anon (Gay)
" 525-2437
Alcoholics Anonymous
800-535-2437
OK AIDS Hotline
Other Options
728-3222
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39th
843 -8378

1105,

1105 E.

Commercial
831 ~9043
Down Beat, 219 W. Olive 846-4572
Bolivar News, 4030 Boli.var 833-3354

Joplin, Missouri (417)
Billy Jack’s, 720 S. Main 781-6453
CG’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S, Main
781-9313

Lawton, Oklahoma (4o5)
HIV/AIDS Support ~48-5890/351-_8_0
SW AIDS Network, POB 3924, 73505
Great Plains MCC, 1416 W. Gore
357-7899

Stillwater, Oklahoma (405)
Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544
OSU Gay/Lesbian/Bisex Comm. Assoc.
Student Union 040, Box 601, 74078
Helpline (MWTh. 8-10pm) 744-5252

Subcription "
6 months = $12.00

1 year = $18.00
Name _
Address

City
State

Zip.
$

Enclosed

Subscriptions will be mailed
out by the 5th of each month,
in a sealed vnvdop¢.
Send to:
Th~ Parachute
P.O. Box 11347
Wichita, Kansas 67202
The Parachute

Page 2

’

�WICHITA LESBIAN
MOTHERS GROUP
When Visions &amp; Dreams opened its’
doors last month as a meeting place
for the Wichita Lesbian Mothers
Group their little shop soon proved
an inadequate space. At the first
gathering of the group there were
twenty one women who have, or are
considering having ~children. Another
space has been located the W.L.M.G
will now meet at the Y.W.C.A
located at 420 E. English. That is the
Cassado McKay building on the
coruer of Topeka and English. The
meetings are held on the 4th
Saturday of each month at 7 p.m.
The purpose of this group is to
create a support network for Morns
and their children. It is open to all
Lesbians with children (regardless of
custody status), any Lesbians who
are considering becoming parents,
and to Lesbians who haven’t de~ided
about parenting but enjoy spending
time with families.
The mothers group-will always
include the children. There will be
an activities dir~tor on hand to
provide the kids lots of fun things to
do (child care is on a donation
basis). This gives the children an
opportunity to play with others who
come
from the
same
family
structure. It’s very for them tosee
they are not the only one with two
morns, or if they have a single morn,,
that they are not the only child with
a morn who dates Women!
The W.L.M.G. provide’s a relaxed
atmosphere ".where women . van

can discuss both trials and joys of the
parenting experience, dealing with
ex’s (of either gender), legal issues,
step-parenting, alternative conception
options, daycare, dealing with the
sehool system ETC. You are invited
to bring your topics of interest, and
your areas of expertice to the next
meeting. For more info. contact
Rence at 316-942-6360.

EQUALITY KANSAS
NEEDS NEWSPAPER
CLIPPINGS
In order to follow what is going on
in relation to lesbian and gay people
in all parts of Kansas, EQUALITY
KANSAS is initiating a statewide

’press wateh’ program.
Equality
Kansas
is
indivicb~als from all parts of Kansas,
ESPECIALLY
RURAL
AND

WESTERN

KANSAS,

to

start

clipping anything from your local
paper that relates to lesbian and gay
issues, and sending them to Equality
Kansas.
These clippings can be news articles,
features,
editorials,
editorial
cartoons, and letters to-the editor.
They can be about Equality Kansas,
the attempts by Darlene Cornfield &amp;
Co. to pass anti-gay initiatives in the
Kansas House, Fred Phelps, or even
a local reaction to events on the
national level. Any clippings relating
to lesbian and gay concerns from

FROSTBITE
75 CENTS ALL MONTH LONG

AHClippings must be attributablb:

Visions &amp; Dreams

AN OPEN MINDED BOOKSTORE
3143 W. Maple, Wichita, Ks: 67213
316-942-6333
LOCATED IN MAPLE VILLA

Gift Items, Music, Cards.
Books and More

SPECIALIZING IN GAY &amp;
LESB IAN ITEMS
MASSAGE AND AROMA THERAPY SUPPLIES
FEMINIST ISSUES, METAPHYSICAL,SELF HELP AND RECOVERY PUBLICATIONS
ALSO AVAILABLE

Rose~:~
country setting with
hoc tub, fireplace, VCR.
You.~ay visit wid~ fat~..pets
or-stcoll along the cceek.:
Double with private bath
/ ~40

~~&amp;’~
Call 316~3-4~75
Hosts - JacMd &amp; Bob Collison
2617 Queen Anne’s Lace
Rose Hill,

The Parachute Page 3

;
,.
.,
|

�AIDS PREVENTION
CAMPAIGN TO BREAK
NATIONALLY IN JAN ’94
Nashville, TN -- Country singer
Mark Chesnutt and songwriter
Mary-Chapin Carpenter announce
the beginning of an ambitious public
service announcement program to
prevent the spread of HIV and AIDS
in the ’93 Country Music AIDS
Awareness Campaign Nashville.~
The artists are serving as Co-Chairs
of the industry initiative which has
received the official endorsements of
the Country Music Assuciation and
the
American
Advertising
Federation. The campaign features
messages by 35 country music stars
- including Garth Brooks, Wynonna
and Willie Nelson - and will break
nationally on radio, television and
print in Jan. ’94
The campaign is the initiative of
MCA recording artist Mark Chesnutt
in response to published reports that
AIDS is fastest
growing in the
South. "I don’t know lots of people
outside urban areas who think that
AIDS is strictly a big city problem
or one that doesn’t concern them.
But it’s affecting rural areas all over
the country andthese are places that
country music
can
speak to
directly."
Added Chesnutt’s fellow Co-Chair,
Columbia
artist
Mary-Chapin
Carpenter,
"We’re
hoping
the
campaign will help make it more
ac~ptable for people to use
condoms regularly for parents to talk
to their children openly about AIDS
- how you get it and how you don’t and for’learnln£ about HI3/ from

local.AIDS agencies."
The campaign is
organized by a
coalition of country music industry.
professionals led by Bill Johnson,
Design Director of Sony Music.
Stated Jotnison, "This is
the first
national effort by the country music
industry for AIDS education and is
one of unprecedented frankness and
directness.
We’re
utilizing
the
strategy that the-most effective
through the support of leaders and
transitters who then set the pace for
the acceptance of behavior."
OrganiF~rs are garnering the support

of the entire industry in an effort to
saturate every country music media
outlet with education and prevention
messages.
The
total
audience
outlets
is
potential for
these
estimated at 50 million.
Plans call for capitalizing on country
music’s burgeonin£ popularity by
also aiming for exposure to a broad
national consumer market as well.
The campaign will be distributed to
all
television
networks,
cable
networks and eable systems as well
as consumer print publications. The
American Advertising Federation is
also workin~ to mobiliTe its network
of
advertising
federations
to
distribute the c~unpaign on a local
level to television network aff’fliates,
radio stations and print outlets in 250
major markets across the U.S.
"Country Music AIDS A@areness

campaign is produced and directed
by Audio Productions; the print
campaign is art directed by Rollow
Welch; and scoring is by 615
productions.
Campaign logistieal and distribution
support is provided by an impressive
group
of industry committees
headed by respected community
professional. Walt Wilson of MCA

Nashville is Marketing Chair; Mary

Hyde of Warner Bros. Records is

M~ C~ir; J=k ~.~ier of Sony
Music is Radio Chair; Tony Conway
of B.~y I~ AU.~tions is Asency
Chair; and Ted Hacker &amp; Anita
Hogin of International Artist

Management

are

~e

~pe

C~,~st

7038 Lincoln
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OUTIHG
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The
: rca~0nlhgbehi~l this stand is that ff

............. we all’were-out; our employers would
At this point, almost everyone had
suddenly discover tlmt there were too
heard of the term "outing," a shorter
many of us to fire. If we became
way of describing bringing someone
focused--agreeing that We were tired
out of the closet, whether they’re
of allowing others to. walk all over
xeady or not. There are three major
us, that there are millions of us in the
schools of thought concerning this
U.S. alone, and that we know it, we
issue.
would have the power to prevent the
The Tirst is that no one, under any
discrimination we now face. If we
circumstances, has the right to bring
were all out, it would become
anyone out of the closet against their
indisputable that every family has a
will. The argttm generally used with
lesbian in it, every organization a gaythis contention is that coming out is
man.
a process, one in which there are
The problem with thi.~ approach is
many steps, and each oft:these steps
that angry gays and lesbians who
.is important to go ~tltrough for the
have been unwillingly outed do not
growth of .the lesbian or gay. man
happy campers make. It is naive to
involved.
suppose that those we would out
In order for this argument to stand,
would somehow miraculously see the
on of tW.o: possible, implied truths
error of :their ways.and embrace their
must exist. One is that every gay
lesl~ian and btotbers and Sisters. It is
man and lesbian will eventually
very likelythat~we would make many
come out of the closet of they are : " enemies, enemies we do not need.
just given the space and time to do
The third school of thought partially
"it. History, of course, proves this
agrees with both the first and second
belief untrue.
group. For the most part, they see
The second ".m that there are more
that it is. imperative to live and let
compelli~ reasons to. stay .in the
live. Understandin~ the difficulties
closet than come-out. Let’s think
that come with being lesbian and gay,
about that a bit. If no one knows
they share with the f’~st group the
we’re queer, we won’t be mugged or
belief that we should allow others
killed or harassed, righ~ If someone
who are lesbian and gay to deal with
finds out, then we’re in trouble. We
it as best they are best able.
might lose our family, our job,
However, they side with the second
maybe even our children. That’s
group in believing that the largest
rather string incentive to stay in the
problem facing us right now is our
closet.
oppression by those who will not
This brings us to the second
leave us _alone to live as we see fit.
philosophical stand on outing: Those
The third group is tired of being
in support of this philosophy
preached
to,
.vilified,
beaten,
generally believe that everyone who
separated from our children by an

The third ~chool of thought.believes
there is a simple solution tothe
apparently contradictory beliefs.
You out the oppressor, they say.
You out those in ~positions of power
who use their power to hurt you,
either through inaction or through
flagrant discriminatory practices.
You out the heads of the military
who state from their-closet that
homosexuals have no place in the
military. -You out the lesbian
against
legislators
who
vote
legislation that would include
anti-bias guidelines based on sexual
orientation. On the local level, you
out the Ku-Kinx-Kristian leaders,
those who are lesbian and still think
they can be head of a right-to-life
organization and no one will know.
You out the bar owners who,
because they’re in the closet and axe
afraid their family willfind o~:their
"disgusting, dirty little secret," are
sacred of the media. Because ~of
their personal .fear, these people
refuse to communicate with the
media portrays, which in turn makes
life miserable for lesbians and .gays
in Wichita. Through outing, those
who are eating their own will be
forced to deal with their sexuality. It
won’t be pretty. But, then again,
neither is hypocrisy. They will be
hurt and angry, andwill probably
become our enemy. But, then again,
aren’t they already?

Th~ parachute Page 5

:.:i

~__~lited by Lor~ine Hut~hins &amp; Lani
Kaahumanu
Re~vi~e~.wed by Catherine E. Boyle
Confu8~ Oversexed, Promim3ttous,

Sinful,

Incapable

Going . through

of

monogamy,

a

phase.

Aids-carriers. Unstable.
If you are family, all of these words ~
should sound familiar to you. For
years, the. heterosexual world has
used these words to justify their
discrimination’ against lesbians and
gays apply to bisexuals.
In
this
wonderful
anthology,
bisexual people themselves tell how
both straight and gay people have
perpetuated these myths
about
bisexuals. In a community where
"inclusiveness" and "freedom to
loveY are war-cries, these people
haveno homer"Each person-~IIS a
story, testifying to the individuality
of same-sex relationships. After
reading, their words, you may begin
to .see that loving people because
who th~ey arc, rather than the shape
of the genitals, is a rational, feminist
way to view the world¯
For anyone seeking a greater
understanding of queer diversity, Bx
Any Other Name is the perfect place
to start. However, this is not an
academically oriented work. If you
arc
searchin~
for
a -greater
understanding of bisexual studies,
you will~ t-rod overviews inadequ,a,te.
Also,
the
section
entitled
~Resources" is
brief, so you may
want to check out Bisexuality: A
Reader and Sourcebook, edited by
Thomas Gdler.

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Wichita, KS. (EGCM) "This is
the Land of Awes Information
Services
automated
notification system." This is what
you will hear if you are called
by the Gay Information Line
phone tree. Thisrevolutionary
new service is designed to
distribute important news and
information about gay and
AIDS issues, by calling people
directly and telling them what
is going on.
The notification system can-be
used
for
anything
from
reminding
people
of
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upcoming meeting, to telling
about an important vote in
Con,gress. The voice message
is digitally recorded by the
Land of Awes computer and it
is given a list of telephone
numbers to dial. Each person
on the list is called and the
message is played when they
say "hello." The recipient of
the message has the option of
repeating the message as many
times as they wish or to end
the call by pressing buttons on
their touch, tone telephone
pad.
"The Land of Awes has always
tried to used technology to
advance gay and AIDS issues,"
said Rex Rivers, who is the
manager of the information
¯ services. "This is another way
for us to use the power of our
computer systems to help
others even if they don’t .have
a computer themselves."

to

¯ and req
to the list. You may specify if
you wish to be notified on gay
or AIDS issues or both. Thisis an excellent way to :keepup
with what is going on with late
breaking news.
Likewise, if you have some
important news you . need
distributed quickly to the gay
community, or you would like
to get the word out about an
important meeting; call the
Gay Information I,ine° and
request that a notification be
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for gay and AIDS issues. Calls
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The Parachute page 7

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An
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"Made in Gay America is our chance
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The ¢olleetion features products that
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The catalog is the first gay
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The Par~hute Page 8

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The Parachute Page 9

�FLINT HILLS ALLIANCE

NEWS
BY KEVYN D. JACOBS
MANHATFAN
In March 1993, eight concerned
people from the Manhattan area
came together because they had a
dream
they wanted to start an
information &amp; education resource
center
for
the
same-gender
communities

of

North

Central

Kansas. Now, half a year later, that
dream is a reality. In six months,
The Flint Hills Alliance., has:
--Ineorporated as a non-profit
corporation in the state of Kansas
--Applied for IRS 501 (o)(3) status
for tax exemption. (Application still

pending as of this writing)
--Held

two

very

successful
fundraising dances at Revolutions, a
STRAIGHT bar in Junction City.
--Opened
an
office
at
1221
Thurston, on the second floor of the
UFM building (Office hours are
6-9pro &amp;
Saturday,
Thursday,

12-3pm)
--Started

a

lending

library

of

lesbiafl, bi and gay materials ..for
people to check out. (Donations

being sought!)
--Started a successful support group
for Lesbian, Bisexual &amp; Gays that
meets twice a month.

--Being hosting ’Third Thursday’
educational forums once a month.
Past forums have included a
discussion of Suzanne Pharr’s
Homophobia - a Weapon of Sexism,
a screening of Sacred Lies, Civil
Truths, and a guest speaker, Rev. L.
Johnathan
Loppnow
of
MCC
Manhattan.

903 N Kansas
Fopeka, Kansas 66608
~13-235-6010

--Started -a
gay
&amp;
Lesbian
information / help line for the city of
Manhattan.
--Became an information outlet and
member organiTation of Equality
Kansas.
But we’re not ones to rest on our
laurels. Here’s what’s coming up in
September:
**Our guest speaker for this month’s
’Third Thursday’ educational forum
will be Tom Poe, an expert on the
vicious anti-gay video, ’The Gay
Agenda’, giving a presentation called

2018, Manhattan, KS 66502-0023.
**Volunteers ar needed to operate
the phone line one evening a month.
If you are a good listener and a good
communicator,
please
consider

’Deconstruoting the Gay Agenda’.

To Brenda, Terese, Sharon, and
Sherrill: Thanks for the postage!
To Monique: Thanks for letting is

Mr. Poe is a professor of Media
Studies
teaching
Political
Communication at UMKC. He is also

a member of the-national board of
GLAAD: The Gay &amp; Lesbian
Alliance Against Defamation, and
active in KC gay politics. Mr. Poe

lectures

ragularly

on

The

Gay

Agenda,
revealing
the
videos
’agenda’ by showing what kinds of
propaganda
and
sensationalistic
techniques it uses. The Alliance is
very excited to wolcemo Mr. Poe to

Manhattan.
Everyoue is

welcome

to

the

screening, so please attend if you
can.The program starts at 7:30 p.m.
in the Banquet room of UFM, 1221
Thurston St. in Manhattan, on
THursday, September 16. Admission
is free. For information, call The
Alliance office at 913-587-0016.
**The Alliance is currently bolding a
membership drive to raise money to
cover operating costs of our office
and phone line. MEmberships in The
Alliance are $20/year for individuals,
$30/year for families, and $5/year
for individuals on public assistance.
Our mailing address is P.O. Box

helping us out in this project.
**I.just wanted to take a moment to
publicly thank everyone who has
helped make The Flint Hills.
Alliance, Inc. a success:
To Wes, Karen, Teri, Terry, Jim,
Penny and Earl, the founding
parents: Thanks for believing in the

dream.

use your bar, Revolutions, for our
fundraising dances. To Eileen:
hanks for programming the music at

actually DID take some of it!
To. Chuck and The- Parachute:
Thanks for all the free publicity
And to anyone else I may have
forgot: you know who you are.
THANK YOU- and lets make the
second s~ix months as successful as
the first!
Kevyn

the second dance. Because of the
help the two of you gave, we raised
enough money to pay for three
months rent!
To UFM and Stormy: Tanks for
giving us a reasonably priced office!
To Dave, John, Donni, Gary and
Wes: Thanks for UN-wallpapering
and then painting the office. It look
MUCH better.
To Loy: Thanks for the Air

Conditioner and answering machine.
To Margaret: Thanks for the
brochure racks!
To Teri and Sharon: Thanks for the
office supplies!
To Kathy and Gary: Thanks for
making the support group a success!
To Donni and Gary: Thanks for
making the Open House a success!
To Ercilia: Thanks for your advice
on the gay and lesbian information
line!
To Mike and John: Thanks for the
phone, and your hard work starting

National Coming Out Day
P.O. Box 34640
Washington, DC 20043-4640

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7am to Midnight
Including Holidays

ADULT
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organization
In Jtmo of 1993, Darlene Cornfield,
a fundamentalist state representative
from Valley Center, introduced a
resolution (a copy of which is
enclosed) to her colleagues in order
to seek their support when it is
introduced to the Ks. House of
Representatives shortly after the next
legislative session begins in January
1994. This resolution, while on its
surface a meaningless letter to the
U.S. Congress, actually endangers
the constitutionally-protected rights
of Lesbian and Gay Kansans A
state-wide coalition of individuals,
families, and organizations is
already in the process of mounting a
challenge, to the presentation .of this
resolution to the Ks. House.

That state~wide coalition is
Equality Kansas.
This resolution is being proposed at
a time when hate crimes against
Lesbian and Gay Kansans are
growing in both number and

124 S.W.8th

Topvka, Kansas
I

The Parachute Page 10

in starting up the information line!
To Pastor Johnathan and MCC
Manhattan: Thanks for the support
&amp; publicity.
To Wes: my right-hand man and
tireless treasurer.
To Mr. Bulky: you know why!
To Dean: volunteering!
To Rex &amp; The Land of Awes:
I
Thanks for all the advice

viciousness. Bill Tanner of Wichita
was recently gunned down by two
teenagers out for a night on the town
,beatin’ up fags." Despite this and
other signs of a rising tide of
violence against Lesbian and Gay
Kansans, Cornfield and other
fundamentalist
legislators have
proposed this resolution, further
encouraging
violence
and
endangering the lives and livelihoods
of Lesbian and Gay Kansans It is
time a .State-wide organization
worked to make our opposition to
such violence known in Topeka.

FundamentaliSts legislators plan to
canvass the state with a hate
campaign directed against Lesbian
and Gay Kansans, supported by
national evangelical organizations
such as Pat Robertson’s Christian
Coalition, in order to win support for
the
proposed
resolution.
State
legislator Kay O’Connor from Olathe
began an interview voicing her
support for the resolution by saying
"You know, the Indians were born a
problem," and concluded by saying
that Lesbians and Gays could
"control their behavior much the
dame way that the Indian has to learn
to control his behavior." If this
resolution passes, who will be next?
O’Connor and Cornfield have stated
that this resolution is just a
beginning; they plan to introduce
legislation
that
would
make
discrimination against Lesbian and
Gay Kausans a right incorporated
into the Kansas Constitution. This
proposed resolution must be stopped.
Equality Kansas can stop it,
with your help
Join us. Individual memberships are
only $10.00 a year, allowing us to
keep you informed as best we can,
with our regular newsletter. Or
simply permit us to retain your name
on our smiling list and we will keep
you informed with
the
most
important bulletins, as donations
allow.
Equality Kansas
P.O. Box 116
Topeka, KS 66601-0116

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THE YEAR
CONTEST

10:00pm
Featuring
Arin Austin

September 2 5th
FIRST CLASS
MALE
SHOW
11:00PM
COMING SOON!
Tommie Ross
"Miss Gay USA 88"

October 23rd

Jill St. John
OPEN THURSDAY - SUNDAY 9PM - 2AM
SUNDAY- SHOW AT 11PM
EVERY SUNDAY IS CUSTOMER APP~CIATION NIGHT
The paxachut~ Page 12

�Great Plains Regio al Rodeo
Labor Day Weekend
September 3-5
Kansas City, Mo.
Host Hotel: Americana 1301 Wyandotte
people ~ 50
58
13-42
includes all you can eat breakfast
for resevations call: 1-800-325-9149
mention G PRR for rodeo rate

Rodeo ~, Perfo rman ce:

$10- in-advance
$12 at~ the, gate

o
|

Rodeo Dance Parties:
Friday &amp; Saturday
Americana Hotel
Tickets
$5 in advance
$6 at the door
Event Sponsorship:
call Bobble at (816) 224-6139

Program Advertising:
call Fred at (816)- 561-6620

The Pa_ra~ute Page 13

�A

~

R

K

A

N

S

A

S

Pond Mountain
Lodge &amp; Resort
"Come experience the
unsurpassed beauty and serenity

of Pond Mountain."

Rt. 1, Box 50
Eureka Springs

Arkansas 726~2
(501) 253-5877

Debbie clay/Judy Jones

Parachute Nit~
Sept. 14 8pm-?
Center Street
1 Free Keg
and Door Prize-s!

e Leaf Inn
BED &amp; BREAKFAST

On The White River

Housekeeping Cabins ¯ Trout Fishing
CanoelJon Boat Rental
ONE MILE NORTH OF BEAVER DAM
ON HIGHWAY 187
J.R. &amp; Sue Ellen, Hosts
ROUTE 2, BOX 418
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS 72632
PHONE (501) 253-9241
The Parachute Page 14

Private Entrance to Suite
Private, Gourmet Breakfast ¯ Private Bath
Jacuzzi ¯ Off-street Parking
Air Conditioning ¯ Trolley Stop
Cable TV

A Victorian home, carefully restored and
conveniently located in the heart of
historic Eureka Springs
For Information &amp; Reservation:
Maple Leaf Inn
#6 Kingshighway
"Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632

(501) 253-6876

�WE ARE THE STARS
SEPTEMBER HOROSCOPES

FROM THE EMERALD

RAINBOW
September for All: Life needs a little
bit of change to keep the tedium away.
Learn to keep things exciting in small
ways so that restlessness doesn’t
overcome you and provoke an impulsive
revolution.
ARIES Mar. 21-April 20: You want
the best and the most and you’re not
likely to settle for less in either-love or
career. The less insecure you feel, the
more likely you are to get what you

GLEN

want.

And Authentic Costumes

All photos guaranteed not to

501-255-9010

fade.
(4x5, 5x7, 8xl0, 11x!4,
16x20, and wallet)

The Purple Iris Inn

Monthly Special-s

FAMILY Owned &amp; Operate~

Antique Photographers
t
-International
[ 1993 "Best of Show"
Award

[

New Orleans Hotel

RR 6 Box 339
~ur~ka Springs. Ark. 72632
501-25~8748

63 Spring Street
Eureka Springs, Ark.
501.253.7878

TAURUS
April
20~May
21:
Everybody wants something from you
and you’ll have to work hard to keep
you personal and professional lives
balanced. Use your-natural artistic
talents to release stress.
GEMINI May 21-June 22: Your
social life picks up and you may meet a
new romantic partner. Your thoughts
turn to fun and love, and even settled
relationships benefit from the extra
spark. Have a go6d time.
CANCER June 22-July 23: Finances
make you nervous this month but an
unexpected opportunity arises that can
get you out of the hole. Watch for your
break, but don’t use it rashly. Make
careful plans.
LEO July 23-Aug. 23:A significant
relationship undergoes a change. Don’t
be" tempted to use subversive tactics to
try to keep things stable. The change
will ultimately benefit you both.
VIRGO_Aug.-23-Sept. 23: A newcreative project may tempt you to
overspond on the ’necessary. supplies;
don’t

blow .the

rent

money.

LIBRA Sept. 23-Oct. 23: You’re in
the. mood for a change in your life but
you haven’t been quite ready to take the
necessary action until .now. Get going,
and things will go your way.
SCORPIO Oct. 23-Nov. 23: Peoplearound you seem picky and critical and
you may feel like nothing you do is quite
good enough. Keep out of the public eye;
when you work by yourself, creativity
flov~s.
SAGITTARIUS Nov. 23-I)ec. 22: Be
cautious if a friend proposes a
get-rich-quick scheme to you; ~ings may
not work out as well as you hope.
Success can come in more stable ways;
make your plans.
CAPRICORN Dec. 22-Jan. 2i: Your
practical talents make a good impression.
Finances improve near the end of the
month, but you don~t need to overspond
to build status. People admire you
anyway.
AQUARIUS Jan. 21-Feb. 20: You
crave excitement and you’re willing to
make Whatever changes you need to get
it. Ant creative project you start now can
lead to big rewards later.
PISCES Feb. 20-Mar. 21: Conflict can
arise between you and another over your
individual goals. Reveal your true
feelings. If you can’t reach a comprise, it
may be time for a change.
Visit
our
store
in
mystical,
metaphysical Eureka Springs. We
offer full astrological services and aH
your body, mind and soul needs,
downtown at 95 Spring Street, or call Kim &amp; Jan at 501-253-5445.

A

,.-. ,. "

.

h:~ae~ and cle~~e

Z

evident, we all. have even more to do
and are constantly tempted, by health

0
N
Meant To Be Fit

HIGH DESIGN
QUALITY MATERIAL
FINE CRAFTSMANSHIP

CRAZY BONE GALLERY
37 SPRING STREET
EUREKA SPRINGS
ARKANSAS 72632

501/253-6600

by: Stephen Scott. CMT~ CPFT

YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM:
KEEPING YOU HEALTHY FOR A
LIFETIME!
In thig day and age keeping your
immune system healthy is more
important than. ever!
The immune sys_tt~n is one of the
most complex systems in the human
body. It ]ms special cells in the
blood ~lled white cells, unique
proteins
in
the
blood called
antibodies (which arc chemicals that
mediate
imml~l~
.re~tious)~ and
special organs that,
supervise,
replenish and integrate the whole
immu~e pro~css. It even has its own
complex system of vessels called the
lymphatic system. In this column
duri~ the next several months, I’ll
explain how your immune system
works, how an unhealthy lifestyle or
toxic envimoment damages your
immtme system resulting~in allergies
and frequent infectians: andhow
better nutritional and lifestyle
choices can help your immune
system maintain your health. It’s

. damaging foods-knowing the facts
about how~ your nutritional choices
immediately impact our health can
help us choose wisely - at least most
of the time.
In this first installment let’s take a
look
at how your immune system
works. When a foreign invader enters
the body or a cell -becomes
cancerous, your immune system goes
into action in basically two ways.
One way, called cell mediated
immunity,
involves special white
cells (typically T cell lymphoeytes)
which directly attack the invader.
Cell-mediated immunity is important

in

resisting

infection

by

yeast

(including candida albicans). Fungi,
parasites (worms), and viruses
(including
herpes simplex
and
Epstrein-barr)~
Ceil-mediated
imm~lnity is alSO critical in protecting
against the development of cancer.
The second method is called humoral
immtmity and involves
antibodies.
Antibodies are special proteins which
are formed to uniquely match the
surface of invaders and either
directly
damage
the
invaders
(sometime by making them-clump
together) or alert your white cells to
come help.
The’ white blood cells involved in
cell-mediated immunity .are made in
your bone marrow and thymus and
distributed througlioutyour body.
Next time: THE THYMUS GLAND
AND THE LYMPHATIC SYSTEM.

:} ;4;

�Attention Members &amp;Guests

ARKANSAS’ BEST BLOCK PARTY
ENTERTA I NM ENT

A

A
T
E

= ~--’-] 1

!l

1

u
B

1021 JESSIE ROAD
LITTLE ROCK, AR
664-2744 or 666~6900

DISCOVERY, INC.

Come and see your New Look

1021 JESSIE ROAD

AI! New 501 Dance Floor - Dancing Now 7 days a week!

LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS 72202

Backstreet is Open 7 days a week 7pm - 3am

501-664-4784 OR 501-666-6900

We are open Wed - Sat at 9:00pm

"902" The GAMEROOM...our newest addition!

Showroom Open Wed - Sat.
LI’ITLE ROCK’S #1 DANCE CLUB

"701" Ladies Show every Saturday - 11 p.m.

There is always something happening on Jessie Road - 7 Days a wcck!

Park once Party all night! "We’ve got if good in Little Rock.."

1021 Jessie Road, Little Rock, Arkansas

SILVER DOLLAR BAR
2710 Asher
Monday - Friday 4pm- 1 am
Saturday 1 pm-Midnight
501-663-9886

Celebrating Thanksgiving in the Bi8 Apple
Dates: November 15-18, 1993 (4 days, 3 nights)
Tour Price Includes:
*Roundtrip air[are [tom Spz~nbotield. MO
*CJ~artered bus transportation from airport to hotel
"3 nights accommodations at "~he President" in the heart of Broadway (double occupancy)
*Backstage tours of current theatre productions on Broadway. including: Guys and Dolls and
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
*Informal questions and answer sessions with Broadway performers
*Admission to 2 Broadway shows: Kiss of the Spider Woman and Tommy
*Conti~ental breakfast each day
All for only $B75.00 per person

Little Rock, Arkansas

A $100.00 deposit holds YOUR place on this fabulous trip!.
This deposit is non-ref~dable - Balance due $775 by October 211
Registration deadline ~eptember 30.1993

The i993 Christmas Shopping Tour
Do Your Christmas Shopping in the Big Apple
December 14-19 (6 days and 5 nights)
Tour Price ladudes:
*Roundt~pairt~re form Sp~ngtield. MO.
*Roundtrip bus transportation t~om LaGuardia Airport

B &amp; B Lounge
1004 1/2 Garrison Fort Smith, Ark.
501-783-9347

Cruise Bar
18 and over
Beer &amp; Wine Coolers

"5 nights acconunt*tations at Milford Flaza Hotel (dble occupancy)
*Breakfast azid Dinner each da):
"5 Guided tours:Empire state Building.~qtatue of Liberty/Ellis Island~’BC Studios. Metro.
Museum of Modern Art. and Radio City Music Hall.
Broadway Fla.vs:(to be selected from:Ptmntom of the Opera. Guys and Dolls. C,azy for You.
"Camelot and others!)
*Guided Shoppb,g Tdps to Macy’s. Bloomingdales. Greenwid* Village.FAO Schwartz
*WalMng Tours of Central Park and Times Square

All for Only $1200 Per Person
A $100 deposit holcLs your place on this tabulous trip
(deposit is non-retundable) Balance due oi $1100 by Nov. 9
Registration Deadline September 30.1993
Complete .detach and rel~r~
Name
Address
llome Phone

~
Busine~ phone

_

Best time to
....
Yes Reserve _~laces tor 1993 Thanksgiving Trip My $100 check is enclosed
Yes Reserve___places for 1993 Chris~nas Shopping Tour. My $100 check is enclosed
Make Checks Payable to KML Tours and send to:
KML Tours. S16 ~ Lindberg Place. SpringIield. MO.
PtlONh" 417-886~ 1364

The Parachute Pag~ 16

State Zip_

�ACLU FILES .SUIT
AGAINST DEFENSE
DEPARTMENT
On
Tuesday,
July 27th,
the
American Civil Liberties Union~
.along with the Lambda Legal
Defense and Education Fund, filed a
lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for
the District of Columbia against the
U.S. Department of Defense and
Secretary of Defense Les Aspin. The
lawsuit was i~fled on behalf of seven
active-duty and reserve service
members of the U.S. armed forces.
The purpose of this action is to
strike down the new Department of
Defense
policy
regarding
its
Lesbian,
Gay
and
Bi-sexual
personnel. The legal counsel for the
plaintiffs alleges that ti~ new policy
violates the, First Amendment and
Equal Protection Clause of the U.S.
Constitution, as well as a section of:
the Unified Code of Military Justice.
"With this lawsuit, we seek furl
equality--nothlng more and nothing
less--for all Americans. Lesbian and
Gay service mvmber~ seek only to
serve their country and do their jobs
without being singled out for
harassment,"
remarked
William
Rubenstein, Director of ACLU’s
National Gay and Lesbian Rights
Project, "Tbe central promise of our
Constitution
is
that American
citizens should be judged accordingto their abilities--not their skin
color, their gender or their sextml
orientation. We have one simple goal
with this lawsuit--to force the
military to safeguard this principle
for Lesbians and GayAmerieans."

middle ~round, between civil rights
and
prejudice,"
added
Kevin
Cathcart, Executive Director of the
Lambda
Legal
Defense
and
Education Fund, "Both President
~Clinton and Secretary Aspin have
acknowledged that Lesbians and Gay
men serve with distinction in the
military, yet the new poficy singles
-out Lesbian and Gay service
members for completely different
.treatment."
The plaintiffs in the A CLU-Lambda
case range from a lieutenant colonel
to a petty officer and include one
active-duty service member and six
reservists. Fearing that the-use of
their, names in the court action would
endanger their military careers, two
of the plaintiffs are going forward
under a pseudonym.
Fora copy of the brief file by ACLU
and LLDEF, please send a self
addressed-stamped-envelope
to
ACLU of Oklahoma, 1411 Classen,
Suite 318, Oklahoma City, OK
73106

¯

Norma Kristie, Inc. presents
THE 11TH ANNUAL OFFICIAL

R, GAY

ALL-AMERICAN
CONTEST

Nation~l Comhag Out Dgy

..... P’O" BOX 34640
Washt~agton, ,DC 20043-4640

We hold these lruths
E.J. White
Mr. Gay all-American 1993

#110

~,ack

# ] 09

#108

Pink &amp; Gray
Design on
white

~o be serf evident--

SEPTEMBER 23-26, 1993
ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI

on Whlfo

f~

Hot Pink &amp;

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~,a~k
Des,on
White

Red design
on White

Thursday &amp; Friday ¯ September 23 &amp; 24
PRELIMINARIES
ANGLES ¯-3511 Chouteau ¯ St. Louis
FINALS
7:30 p.m. ¯ Sunday, September 26
Holiday Inn Downtown/Riverfront
200 North 4th Street ¯ St. Louis

Full Size Designs on Premium Ot~llW,

$14.95 oo. 1 O0 % pre-shrunk cotton

Plus $3.00 shipping ~i Hondllng
Cash, check or money order

Sl:~lh/de,slgn # ~ size. Sin. Please allow 3-4 weeks for delivery

The Parachute Page 17

�John Willis

MAZZIO’S RESPONDS

John Willi~ of Tulsa past away
Saturday August 28th. John had
owned: Zippexs, Laffs Underground,
Max’s, Tops, The Factory, Ikon, and
the Electric Circus:
John was 41 years old, and is
survived by his life partner JeW
Elder of Tulsa. John was a leader of

In the August edition of the
Parachute, we shared with you "A
message from the President" of
Mazzios Pizza, in which he made
some discriminatory remarks to his
employees.
The reader’s of the
" Parachute can be proud, after several
of you phoned and sent letters the
President has made an apology in his
latest "Message from the President"
as follows:
I have written 364 Messages
From the President" in the past 7
years and the last of April I wrote
one that was totally inappropriate
and in bad taste. I have received
several letters complaining about it,
and it has even been reproduced in a
newspaper of publication of some

the

Gay and Lesbian Community.

Ally time the zoning COmmission or

the city was trying to give trouble to
gay bars or for that matter the gay
community yOU could count on John

Willi.~ being on the front fighting
back.
John always had good business
sense, he helped several people
staring out in business, and was
always willing to give a helping
hand and some helpful advise.
John Willis was never afraid to take
a chance, and at times was willing to
risk everything to prove a point.
John
hardly ever
complained,
regardless of what others might say
or do, he would usually just ignore
it and go on.
John’s late~t business venture was
clumgi,g Top’s to a new and
exciting club called Electric Circus.
It’s hard to say good-by so we won’t
do that John, we will just ~ay that no
one will evertake your place and ~v~
will rni~s you more than anyo,v
could possib!y imagine.
In ~e
words of Carol Burnett...’I’m so
glad we had this time together, just

to have a laugh or sing a song, it
seems we just Set started and befot~
you know it, comes the time we ha~v~
to say so long.

I apologize for writing stwh a
discriminatory article and want
everyon~ to know that I do not
discriminate against anyone and my
article is not a true reflection of
Mazzio’ s
Corporation’ s
attitude
towards the gay community.

Parachute Welcomes Hew
Tulsa Sales Rcp.
The Parachute is proud to welcome
Tom Heal to the staff of the
Parachute.
Tom is a resident of
Tulsa.
He brings with him
experience in sales, and in layout and
design. We have been waiting a long
time to hire someone in Tulsa. The
response has been so tremendous we
haven’t been able to keep up. Tom
will serve as our Tulsa sales
representative and will also be one of
our
contributing
writers
and
reporters.
¯-,We are excited about the. opportuni~
-to-serve Tulsa,- which for.many years
has not been paid as much attention
as it deserves. How Tulsa we arc
going to make sure you are served
well!

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

THE TAJ MAHA.L

TNT’s 2114 S. Memorial
Time &amp; Time Again 1515 S. Memorial

Dart Tournament Tuesdays 8:00pm

Welcome to all ball players to Labor Day
~Happy Hour 12-7 $1.50 Small Pitchers of Beer
Softball Tournament
Friday’s 9-11 $3 Bccr Bust - Show starts at i I pm Check for Specials at TNT’s &amp; Time &amp; Time Again
Hours 12pm to 2am - 7 days a week

Auction for Midwest Flood Victims

Sponsored by Budweiser
2630 E. 15th Tulsa, Oklahoma 918-742=8274
The Parachute Page 18

September 12, 8:30 at TNT’s

�’

I

HIV TESTING
Every Thursday Evenin
Sponsored by:

Tulsa Oklahomans For
Human Rights
4154 S. Harvard, Suite H- 1
Tulsa, Oklahoma

Free and Anonymous
HIV Testin
Daytime testin by appt.

74.9-4/ 4 .

For more information call
"HELPLINE"o
For and by ,but not limited to the Gay/Lesbian
Community

and Bisexual

Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights
New in to wn ? Ha ving Problems ?Nccd referrals ?
The TOHR Gaylnformation line_ is here for you!
We offera var~eOc of referral~ , from legaland
meitical to ADS

¯

TOHR and bar Information
The belpline is staffed 6days a week, 8pm to l Opm

743- GAYS

--

Personal Touch
5 Private Massage RoOms

Spa

nEUJ

llTIPROUEI]!

Toning Tables

Massage Classes
A¢cupressure
- Rc~xolo~

NOTICE
WE NOW HAVE AFULL TIME
MASSEUR

A three day display of the NAMES
Project AIDS MEmorial Quilt, an
international memorial to those who
have died of AIDS, will open Friday
December third at th~ Tulsa
Convention Center.
In ,preparation for this event the
Tulsa Area NAMES Project Chapter
is sponsoring Sewing Bees to be held
the third Saturday of each month.
Persons interested in making a panel
for the AIDS Memorial Quilt can
receive guidance by attending the
Sewing Bees or by contacting the
NAMES
Project
Tulsa
Area
Chapter.
For
information
and
locations call 918-748-3111, or
write P.O. Box 3181 Tulsa, OK
74101-3181.
The local display will feature about
1,000 three-foot by six-foot panels,
each commemorating the life of
someone who has died of AIDS.
Panels are made by friends, family
members and lovers, and include a
wide variety of materials from a
favorite t-shirt to photographs to
teddy bears. The panels are just a
portions of the 23,000 panels that
make up the entire AIDS Memorial
Quilt.
The NAMES Project Foundation
displays portions of the Quilt
worldwide to encourage visitors to
better understand and respond to the
AIDS pandemic, to provide a
positiye means of expression for
those grieving the deaths of a-loVed
one, and to raise funds for people

living with HIV and AIDS.
The
NAMES
project
AIDS
Memorial Quilt was nominated for
a Nobel Prize
in 1989. In 1990,
Common Threads, a feature-length
documentary fill about the Quilt,
won an Academy Award. Since
1987, more than three million people
have
visited
the
Quilt,
and
organizations
throughout
North
America.
Tulsa Area Names Project Chapter
P.O. Box 3181
Tulsa, OK 74101

TULSA
585-3405

-Red Ribbon Revue Benefit
Saturday Sept. 4th

COME ON DOWN FOR
SOME TOMFOOLERY! AT
THE SILVER STAR
SALOON IN TULSA
Tomfoolery! a Lesbian/Gay/Bi-Pride
gift shop is open at the Silver Star
Saloon at 1565 South Sheridanin
Tulsa from 7-11 p.m. on Wed. &amp;
Thurs, from 7p.m.-la.m. on Fir.-Sat.
and Sun. 7-10p.m..
Tomfoolery!carries t-shirts from
In-10, :

flags and windsocks. Tomfoolery!
also has Pride jewelry, such as
In 1992, Oklahoma had-the
largest state increase in newAIDS
"Pride rings and triangles," rainbow
(and other) bolos and earrings for
cases with 44% increase over 1991.
pierced cars.
In response to the resulting unmet
Tomfoolery!has a selection of
legal needs of persons affected, The
greeting cards. Some specifically are
Young Lawyers Division of the
Lesbian and Gay and others are
Oklahoma Bar Association,
in
simply right for us all. Other gifts at
conjunction with Legal Aids
of
Tomfoolery!_ include sleek gift
Oklahoma, will bergin providing
items, such as photo frames,
free legal representation September
1, 1993, to financially qualified
welcome mats, coasters and the like
with more on the way.
persons who have AIDS or who are
Tomfoolery! owner, Tom Neal
infected with the tlIV virus in the
recently returned home to Tulsa
following areas of law:
from Dallas where he was co-owner
--Estate planning and living wills;
and manager of a Cedar Springs.
--Family law;
shop. He notes that Oklahoma City
--State and federal entitlement law;
and
Austin
are
served
by
--Insurance law, including ERISA
Lesbian/Gay-owned
shops
are
and COBRA issues;
comparable to Tulsa in size and says
--Discrimination
issues
in
"Tulsans deserve to have their own
employment, housing, education,
place - you should not have to drive
transportation and access to medical
2 or more hours to find a "family"
care;
store. I hope that folks will come out
--Debtor/creditor law,
including
to Silver Star and shop with us. If
bankruptcy.
Persons desiring legal assistance
we don’t have somethins, then will
certainly try to find
should contact the AIDS Legal
Resource Project Coordinator af
(405) 524-4611.

If,you were Rich,

Call for Appointment
49214 S. 83rd E. Ave. Ste. D
1 Block East Of Memorial off
-51st
918-665-1155
.Hours: Men-Sat 9am- 8pm

TULSA TO HOST DISPLAY
OF THE NAMES PROJECT
AIDS MEMORIAL QUILT
DEC. 3rd-5th

~ Coupon for 50% Off
One Hour
Massage
Expires 10/03/93

. . what would you buy.?
Get your lucky number ~eport based on your B~ Chart
With our new computeriy~d you get a lot of:.heavy
computer hel~. The day for the action, and the #’s to pu
the action on. Call today for only $I0 a too. or 3 mo.’s
for $25.00
Call Toll Free

1-800-460-STAR
The Parachute page 19

�SIMPLY EQUAL &amp; OK
NOW TELL THE NATION’S
GOVS AND BILL CLINTON
"WE’RE HERE, AND WE’RE
WATCHING"
Tulsa, Oklahoma. 8/15/93
On
this
hot
August
Sunday
afternoon, about 35 persons from
Simply
Equal,
and
Oklahoma
rights
civil
Lesbian/Gay
were
joined
by
organization,
representatives
of
NOW,
the

Oklahoma National Organization for
Women in a silent vigil outside
Tulsa’s
Maxwett
COnvention
Central, the site of the convention of
the National Governors Association.
Organizing in the shade neat the
library,
Simply
Equal_ OKC

facilitator,

P~gy

"John~0n

emphasized that the purpose of the
action at the Governors conference
was to remind the nation that
LEsbians &amp; Gay men &amp; friends are

here &amp;that we will not be silent. She
said the purpose of the action was
not to scream, yell at condemn the
President for failing to lift the ban
on "homosexuals" in-the military but
to continue to call for the end to
discrimination against Lesbians &amp;
Gay men.
After establishing the ground rules
for participation - only designated
representatives were to speak with

the media, all others were to be
silent, many in fact wearing
bandages taped over their mouths to
symbolize the silence imposed on
Lesbian &amp; Gay soldiers by the
"don’t ask, don’t tell" rule, the
participants marched around the

Maxwell Convention Center. Under
the blazing sun in paddock made
from sawhorses. &amp; yellow tape, the
protesters
sweated
&amp;
silently
witnessed to the occasional car
passing by, to the mounted police
with mirrored sunglasses nearby in
the shade &amp; to the teievision crews
talking with Simply Equal’s media
reps.
OKC
rep.
Terry
Gatewood
said,"...it’s immoral to discriminate
against individual on a biological;
basis...discrimination
occurs
on
housing and in employment...many
people don’t realize that ff you are
Jewish or Haitian you have recourse
that Lesbian &amp; Gay men don’t
have..."
Gatewood went on to say he doubted
that
President
Clinton’s recent
actions would be final l&amp; that
Gatewood was pleased that Clinton
had brought th~ i~St~e into.i ~ublic
debate, noting that Lesbian and-Gay
issues were not even discussed by a
president in the prior 12 years.
Gatewood further noted that the new
"don’t ask, don’t tell" rule introduced
great ambiguity. Under those rules,
service members can go to a
Lesbian/Gay bar or parade but
cannot say that they are Lesbian or
Gay.
"The
military’s
ban
discriminates by dollying those who

have boon &amp; would honorably
serve..." Gat~wood added, noting that
OKC facilitator, Peggy Johnson had
seved in the Navy with distinction.
Gatewood anticipated that the ban
would beoverturned eventually by
the courts.
Oklahoma NOW co-sponsored that
action &amp; were represented by Donna
Behnke
of
NEe
NOW,
the

NorthEastern Oklahoma National
Organization for Women. NOW’sposition paper encouraged Clinton to
continue work for:
an end to the ban of Lesbians and
Gay men in the military, the
proteeti0n of women’s reproductive
rights, uational health insurance
guaranteeing full access to bealth
care for all, &amp; the continued
appointment .of
women
and
minorities to government positions.
Simply Equal has chapter in
Oklahoma City, Norman, Tulsa &amp;
one forming in Ada with members
form each group in attendance.
Simply Equal began in response to
the efforts of anti-Gay Oklahoma
legislators who sought to add
Colorado-styie anti-gay amendments
constitutinn. While those efforts
quietly were defeated, Simply Equal
has continued, serving in Oklahoma
-,City a~- a general e6mmunity
-organization=
¯
In Norman, Simply ,Equal began
0 also in reaction to the passage of
Colorado"s Amendment 2. Its
to
agenda
now," according
co-facilitator Kerman Raines, is to
educate the Norman read about
Lesbian &amp; Gay issues, ultimately
helping to include civil rights
protections for Lesbians &amp; Gay mean’
rights
hmnan
to
Norman’s
¯
ordinance.
Because each Simply Equal oh-~tpter
is autonomous, each can adapt to its
local conditions. Simply’ Equal
Tulsa plays a somewhat different
role than other chapters. TOHR,
Tulsa Oklahomas for Human Rights
Tulsa
has
long . served the
community states" Robert Crow,
adds
Tulsa
co-facilitaor.
He

of the actions it can take by it
tax-exempt status and Simply Equal
works in a complimentary fashion,
providing an outlet for those
interested
in
more
politically
actions.
Down in Ada, a smaller college
town in central Oklahoma, ~two’
women have begtm a Simply Equal
chapter, bringing people together by
word of mouth. This effort &amp; their
presence at this vigil some form a
desire to be a part of the
Lesbian/Gay civil rights movement
despite the pressures of a smaller
town.
Surprisingly,
both
are
discreetlly "out" on the job and at
church, one serving as an officer on
the church board.
Though officially the vigil sought
not to attack Bill Clinton for failing
to lift the ,_ban, many were less
forgig’ing: Shanof Tulsa (speaking
as an individual not for Simply
Equat)~,;:watehed :!the
C-SPAN
broadcast of thd’ Congressional
hearings on the ban. She was gauck
by/the Lesbian and Gay soldiers
wlio testified. "Their graciousness
&amp; bravely (at the hearings)-that’s
/honorable. Clinton called "don’t
ask, don’t tell.." an honorable
compromise - it isn’t honorable. It’s
politics, possibly a trade-off for
national health care and the
budget..;-,"
Jimmy-Holland &amp; Scan Horn drove
over form the Univ. of Ark. in
Fayetville, in part angered by
- Clinton’s handling of the ban. Prior
to Clinton’s announcement of his
solution on the ban, Horn s~id he’d
been "guardedly hopeful* but "don’t
ask, don’t tell..." was just the same
policy refrained.

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Drag Search 93 Wednesdays at ~10:30pm

$100 in.Prizes.

Welcome
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Sept..5.~Miss~ Gay Tulsa Metroplex of A~erica
9pro with Special Gue.st:TillieL~e~,~.
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.:

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TheParadaate Page 21

�"Gay and lesbian people have existed in
our tribes for centuries. As more of us
are learning of this past, we are. also
learning of the silent spread of HIV
~through our people. Wemust stop the
spread of HIV so we can pass .our
traditions to future gene rattons.
"
Our future depends on you:"

Always gro
Always
Don Little~.~
A Service of the Oasis Resource Cer|t~r. To,volunteer call 405-525z2437.
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source.

AnceStry: Shawnee/Seminole: !ndlart..
- Oeeupati0n: Health Educator
Age: 49
Hobbies: Gardening
.......

MS, OKLAHOMA LEATHRR

the Opportunity to represent the state
of Oklahoma in 1994 International
Leather Finals in San Franciso.
The contestants, Jo Ann ’Shadow"
Farthln~,. Becky- Gardener, and
Cindy Bookout, appeared before a
panel of judges on Saturday
afternoon for the interview process.
The Parachute is proud to welcome
Leslie Thomas to the staff-of the
Parachute.
Leslie has a sales
background, and has owned her own
business. Leslie will be. working for
us Oklahoma City. Our hope is that
by having Leslie who can work
solely in Oklahoma City, that we
will be able to better serve OKC and
the other three states that the
Parachute Covers. Welcome aboard
Leslie!

The panel of seven judges, came
from lo~al organizations and fromacross the country, &amp; grilled the
contestants on their knowledge of
the leather organization, &amp; their
involvement, and also
political knowledge.
Later, the contestants appeared on
stage whexe they were judged for
attitude, image, on stage questions
and fantasy. Contestants were scored
on the positive leather image they
portrayed, their confidence their
ability to speak well before an
audience.
Following
the
judging
the
contestants placed in the following
order: Second runner up, Becky
Gardener; first runner up, Shadow
Farthln~; and the winner of the--’rifle
as the first Ms. Oklahoma Leather,
Cindy Bookout.

Mr. Woody’s
Barber &amp; S&amp;list
for Men &amp; Women
Eur Tan Beds
Men-Sat 9am~7pm

,50 Cents off
Tans

$1.00 off Styles
with this

943-4045
3914 North May
Oklahoma City. OK 73 112

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Michael. G.
Harmon has been ¯ named" first
executive director of Oklahoma City
Area HIV/AIDS Coalition.
Harmon will organize, administer
and coordinate programs as well as
- develop
funding
for
Coalition
projects. Don Bell, chairman of the
Coalition,
announced
Harmon’s
appointment at last monthis meeting
of the group’s membership.
"Harmon’s administrative and fund
raising skills, and AIDS volunl~er
efforts represent the quality of
leadership that the consortium
needed," Bell said.
ser~;ed
as
Harmon
previously
director for Omniplex Science
Museum, Oklahoma City, where he
more than doubled the museum’s
active
membership
base
and
managed an annual giving program.
He moved to Oklahoma City from
Durant, Oklahoma in 1988 to
assume the position of executive
director
of
development
and
plannln~ at Mount Saint Mary High
School.
At Durant, Harmon spent ten years
on the
staff of Southeastern
Oklahoma State University where he
directed the continning education
program and the Oklahoma Small
Business
Development
C.enter’s
south~ "¢eg~on. He is a former
exeeurive vic~ president ¯ of - the
..-Durant ~b~.L~of Commerce and
past president" of_ Bryan County
United Way.

Elected to serve on the Coalition’s
Executive Committee for the coming
year arc "Bell,
director, OK
Hemophilia Foundation;
Mike
Fischgr, HIV care coordinator, Dept,
of Human Services; Mary Catherine
Smothermon,
executive
director,
Regional AIDS In~rfaith Network
(RAIN); Roy Brown, Oklahoma City
printer and chairman of the NAMES
Project; Jan Hutehison, operations
Educatioual
OK.
assistant,
Terry
Authority;
Television
director
educational
Dennison,
services, Planned Parenthood of
Central Oklahoma; Howard Parker,
laboratory
technician,
Mary
Mahoney Memorial Health Center;
Jim Carter, counselor, Red Rock
Mental Health Center.
The OKC Area HIV/AIDS Coalition
is a not for profit Oklahoma
corporation serving OK eommtmities
throughout the 405 phone dialln~
area. Its offices are in Oklahoma
City. The Coalition was formed in
1989 as a consortium of community
based
organizations,
government
agencies and private sector entities
concerned with HIV AIDS .The Coalition provides HIV/AIDS
information and referral, education,
dire~t
services
and
advoeacy.Activities of the Coalition are
supporte~ by grants, donations and
fund raising efforts. Inquiries outside
of OKC can be made by callln~n
1-800-285-CARE. The toeal number
is 528-2273.

The Parachute Page 23

"

�A -concern has come to mihd. If a
group, organization or individual
chooses to do something in behalf of
another individual , arc you at risk
of public speculation and ridicule by
half-witted, poorly,reported articles?
I guess what is really getting at me is
the attack made by P. Hand in her
OKC/March on Wa~hlngton article
published in THE GAYLY directed
at people helping other people.
I have seen the exceptional work
done by many people who offer their
time and their hard work as
volunteers in our community who
must face the risk of this type
fictional scrutiny.
Volunteers in our community arc as
diverse as the gay community itself.
We sec daily those people who arc
heterosexually
inclined
who
participate in our lifestyle challenges
without being aske~ They choose to
work for a common purpose, human
beings, with many challenges and
few rewards, with the exception of
what they receive in helping ethos,
They are vital part of our
community,
not
by
sexual

orientation

but

by

the

for some people? I have no answer
for this and I know the people who
are leading the attack and those
gang-banging for fun don’t know
either.
I would challenge those people in
these various roles to no he subjected
on looking over your shoulder before
taking action for another human
being. If you have the opportunity to
give of yourself, do it and realize
there are fictional writers out there
waiting for their next sound-bite or
byline, but don’t give in to the
terrorism. I won’t.
H. P. OKC

EDITORIAL The Parachute policy is to publish all
letters received -to the editor. The
following letter’s we received are in
response to an article written by
Paula Hand, in the Gayly ( an
Oklahoma City based paper). We did
not have room to print all the letter’s
we received, however we will print

IN MEMORY OF
CHRISTINE BOUNELL
Jan. 1938-Aug. 1993
Many people have met Christine and
never knew it. She was a skinny
little person. She would he up before
most who stay at the Habana,
pushing~ that blue cart around,
cleaning rooms or calling to see if
you need fresh towels. A few months
ago Chris approached the Parachute
about a subject she felt strong about.
Chris was a tranagendered person in
OUr commtmity. She said much of
the time people like me fall .through
the cracks. Even people who have

The opinions in these lettersdo
not necessarily reflect the opinion of
the Parachute. We remain in support
of all those in the Gay and Lesbian
Community including the Gayly and
those whom the article is about.
With so many forces enmlng against
the gay , lesbian and bisexual

gone through ~ the - struggle of being

to help each other.

gay, a lot of times won’t a~cept
people like. me. Chris said, ~People
usually have trouble tellin~,~ if I’m a
manor a woman. I guess people just
don’t understand." Well Christine,
you were right. We would hope as
Gay and Lesbian people we would
be more compassionate of those who
arc stru~ilng to be accepted. We
were to do as more in-depth
interview in October. However,
since that isn’t possible we wanted
to take this opportunity to share our
conversations with
Chris.
She
touched our lives and hopefully
made us all more conscious of how
we treat others. Christine we witl
always remember yot~

caring,

compassionated, convicted way they
support those who have needs. Their
actions and their respect have been
witnessed by many of us in many
_ways, including marching with us
and verbally defending us in our on
going battle of affLrmation and
acknowledgment, whether we -are
HIV+ or not. Are they also at risk of
being alienated?
I have read letters in this publication
as well as others stating our need for
unity although we are diverse. What
makes this SO difficult
A concern has_ come to mind. If a
This letter is in regards to your
article on the "OKC/March on
This letter is in reference-to the
article March on Washington in the
August issne of the Gayly.
My first response is two pages,
WOW! I don’t think even President
Clinton got two pages. Mary must be
a very important person-to deserve
that many pages.
Second, I don’t think Paula must
have road the article because she
contradicted herself too many times.
Third, bashing these two women for
whatever reason you had is nor very
good journalism.
Fourth, if this was a respectable
investigative story it would have
been more balanced. Instead it was
very one-sided story that repeated
itself over and over again.
Fifth, I don’t know Mary and Kern
that well at all, but I know the work
they have doneand arc continuing to
do.

It

is

a

shame

to

hinder

the

wonderful work they do. Paula
Hand, what kind of volunteer work
have you ever done? You get paid to
destroy people by writing very
unprofessional articles. I would liketo see you get paid for nothing and
volunteer
all
your
time
to
HIV/AIDS.
Sixth, because of this story, I have
heard many people that back Mary
and Kern in their efforts, and I am
One Of them. Girls, keep your ohin~

up, .and don’t let someone like Paula
Hand keep you from the wonderful
work you both do.
Sincerely,
Mike Schiili~
The Parachu~ Page 22

Washln.mon Trip" printed in the
August 15, 1993 issue.
I do not know what set of
journalistic principles under which

you conduct your writing efforts, but
I think you have made it clear to all
readers of your publication that they
are minimal standards at best. Most
reporters who i~de stories for
reputable publications operate under
guidelines that separate themselves
from writers in newspapers and
of "yellow journalism."
Your obvious slant on this story
clearly places you in the latter
group. It is so clear to anyone
reading tiffs article that your opinion
of the people involved is what is
actually being reported. It is not a
news story, it is a "slam" against
two people that for one reason or
another you do not particularly care
for. This is stating the case very
lightly in my opinion, because your
attempt
to
~barbecne~
these
individuals is laughable, and your
credibility is the true victim of this
atta~k~
Ms. Hand, do you know what
objectivity in reporting requires of a
person who informs the public? It
means that before writing
a
two-paged condemnation of any
party in any circumstances, that you
must mak¢ the effort to contact all
concerned individuals to verify that
what you are writing ~ true. Your
selection of which interviews which
were to be included in your story
was an additional demonstration of

:’ ifi~g, which
position, and -not obtaining or
including others is clearly wrong.
I realize _that in response you would
argue that you included excerpts of

"interviews" of both parties you were
"slamming." However, it is also clear
that the statements you chose from
their interviews were ones that would ~
be the easiest to mi~3onstrue, or
through selective elimination of key
parts of their answers, to suggest
they were ineriminating themselves:
My suggestion is that in the future,
your "articles" would be better
classified in the editorial section.
You might even consider a new
colnmn
entitled
"Paula’s
Put-Downs" or maybe "Paula’s New

.

Inquirer are looking for someone at
least of your caliber to cover the
Whoopi Goldberg and Ted Danson
WeO__ding? Perhaps. if you’re lucky,
the llmo driver will not be qualiFted
to drive interracial couples, and ~he
organizer will fail her responsibility
to he well-liked by yot~
Sincerely,
Nick Porter.
Dear Pauia:
I thought you were a better writer
than that and I believe they had a
better
time than you "heard". That
would have made a hetter story. As
is this one is...

BORING ! !
It must be wonderful to be able to
indiseriminately ~take such public
"pot-shots" at people you don’t like.
BUt my suggestion to your readers is
that they complain and put a stop to
your
ov~-steppin8
of bounds,
because next week you may "throw a
hissy" towards one of them. And as
we’ve seen in this story of yours,
there’s no limit to what you would do
to maliciously slander a reputation.
You obviously aren’t constrained by
the .boundaries of dec~cy and
truthfulness.
Hurry

Ms.

Hand,

the

deadline

approaches and I’m sure you want to
include this letter in your next issue.
Have I given you enough time to pick
it apart and miseonstrne its menning?
I think I have after.all, you should he
able to do so very quickly now that
you’ve gotten so much practice.
But let’s look at the future: Why are

Two wbole pages! I don’t remember
when anyone had "two whole
pages’. There were much more
interesting topics to write about out
there, however, the cover~q~.e was
good for’ Mary. She is a splendid
person, as is Kern Wallace. We are a
much better world with those two
tha without them: Not many people
- can say that.
Cookie Arbuckle

�"Gay and lesbian people have existed in
our tribes for centuries. As more of us
are lea~rning of this past, we are-also
learning of the silent spread of HIV
~through our people, we must- stop the
spread iof.HIV so we can pass .our
traditions to future gene rattons.
"
Our future depends on you:"

Always g .owing.
.Always
A Service of the .Oasis Resource Center. To volunteer call 405’525:2437.
"Oklahoma’s-Gay and Lesbian Information Source.

Don Littl¢i
""-i~...
.AnceStry: Shawnee]Se~inolei!hdian :....
Occupation: Health Educator ....
Age: 49
.~_ "i’ - .........
Hobbies: Gardening
.....

MS. OKLAHOMA LEATHER

OKC Sales Representative

The Parachute is proud to welcome
Leslie Thomas to the staff of the
Parachute.
Leslie has a sales
background,-and has owned her own
business. Leslie will be. working for
us Oklahoma City. Our hope is that
by having Leslie who can work
solely in Oklahoma City, that we
will be able to better serve OKC and
the other three states that the
Parachute Covers. Welcome aboard
Leslie !

for the title, w~o~: gives the :wi~ner
the opporttmity to repre~nt the state
of Oklahoma in. 1994 Interimtional
Leather Finals in San Franciso.
The contestants, Jo Aim "Shadow"
Farthln~,_ Becky Gardener, and
Cindy Bookout, appeared before a
panel of judges on Saturday
afternoon for the interview process.
The panel of seven judges, came
from local organizations and from.
across the country, &amp; grilled the
contestants on their knowledge of
the leather organization, &amp; their
commtmity involvement, and also
political knowledge.
Later, the contestants appeared on
stage whexe they were judged for
attitude, image, on stage questions
and fantasy. Contestants were scored
on the positive leather image they
portrayed, their confidence their
ability to speak well before an
andienee.
Following
the
judging
the
contestants placed in the following
order: Second runner up, Becky
Gardener; first runner up, Shadow
Farthlns; and the winner of the "title
as the first Ms. Oklahoma Leather,
Ci_ndy BookotR.

Mr. Woocly’s
Barber &amp; S&amp;listfor Men &amp; Womvn
Eur Tan Beds
¯Mon-Sat 9am~7pm

50 Cents off
Tans
$1.00 off Styles
with ~s

943-404.5
39 14 North May

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Michael G.
Harmon has been named first
executive director of Oklahoma City
Area H1V/AIDS Coalition.
Harmon wilt organize, administer
and coordinate programs as well as
develop
funding
for
Coalition
projects. Don Bell, chairman of the
Coalition,
announced
Harmon’s
appointment at last month’s meeting
of the group’s membership.
"Harmon’s adminintrative and fund
raising skills, and AIDS volunteer
efforts represent the quality of
leadership that the consortium
needed," Bell said.
ser~;ed
as
Harmon
previously
director for Omniplex Science
Museum, Oklahoma City, where he
more than doubled the museum’s
active
membership
base
and
managed an annual giving program.

He moved to Oklahoma City from
Durant, Oklahoma in 1988 to
assume the position of executive
director of development and
planning at Mount Saint Mary High
School
At Durant, Harmon spent ten years
on the
staff of Southeastern
Oklahoma State University where he
directed the continuing education
program and the Oklahoma Small
Business
Development
Center’s
,,muthe~ Teg.ion. He is a former
executive vice president-of-the
..... Durant C~.,~~,.b~.L.of Commerce and
past presidvn’t of Bryan County
United Way.

Elected to serve on the Coalition’s
Executive Committeo for the comins..
year are "Bell,
director, OK
Hemophilia Foundation;
Mike
Fischgr, HIV care coordinator, Dcpt,
of Human Services; Mary Catherine
Smothermon,
executive
director,
Regional AIDS Interfaith Network
(RAIN); Roy Brown, Oklahoma City
printer and chairman of the NAMES
Project; Jan Hutohison, operations
Educational
OK.
assistant,
Terry
Authority;
Television
director
educational
Dennison,
services, Planned Parenthood of
Central Oklahoma; Howard Parker,
laboratory
technician,
Mary
Mahoney Memorial Health Center;
Jim Carter, counselor, Red Rock
Mental Health Center.
The OKC Area HI-V/AIDS Coalition
is a not for profit Oklahoma
corporation serving OK communities
throughout the 405 phone dialing
area. Its offices are in Oklahoma
City. The Coalition was formed in
1989 as a consortium of Community
based
organizations,
government
agencies and private sector entities
concerned with H1V AIDS .The Coalition provides HIV/AIDS
information and referral, education,

direct

services

and

advocacy.

Activities of the Coalition are
supported by grants, donations and
fund raising efforts. Inquiries outside

of OKC can he made by calling
1-800-285-CARE. The local number
is 528-2273.

Oklahoma City, OK 73 ] ] 2
The Parachute Page 23

�OTHER OPTIONS IN
OKLAHOMA CITY,

IS

MEETING THE NEEDS OF
PEOPLE LIVING WITH

HIV/AIDS AND THE

COMMUNITY
OOI
provides
comprehensive,
correct information and up-to-date,avallabld educational material to the
commtmity and PLWHA’s. HIV is a
chronic, manageable and serious
illness so areas of concern are to

maintain health, establish a uefwork
of early medical and psychological
support,
establish
a
financial
program and budget, seek emotional,
spiritual,
and
mental
health
assistance. We believe OI answers
those needs.
We still give out the AIDS FOR
HIV/AIDS book. As viable as it was
in 1987 with the first edition, the
expanded fourth v~rsion published in
1991 still remains the book of
choice.
In
1992,
2000
were
distributed. In 1993, 1800 have been
distributec~ New request for the
books receive inserts with updated
materials.
W provide educational publications:
OOI maintains a RESOURCE
DIRECTORY call
SUPPORT
GROUPS
STATE WIDE and
WHERE TO GO FOR HELP that is
corrected every 3-4 months and
copies made available to health
providers, social services, HIV
support
groups.
CBO’s
rural
Oklahoma and PLWHA’s. We also
give out POSITIVELY AWARE.
We provided case management,
counseling and social services to
facilitate the HIV persons access to
both medical

services. We offer confidential and
personal connections to~ assist them
in putting their lives back in
perspective and provide avenues to

increase their quality of life.
Our fourth area: Networking; referral
and
support
services.
Many
beginning support groups and those
in operation need assistance with
start
up - services,
facilitator,
speakers,
educational
materials,
access to other support services.
Those we sponsor receive assistance
in these areas because support groups
make a difference in peoples lives.
We continue to network for rural
Oklahoma,
discharge
planners,
physicians, and PLWHA’s. We
net-work, monitor, and provide help
with 3 active meal programs.
Our fifth area is HIV Testing and
COunseling. Our ability to provide
free, confidential and anonymous
testing at 5 test sites. Our sites arc
certified/monitored by Oklahoma
State Health Department as well as
providing ~xpert laboratory services.
Our sixth area is education and
public forum. We hold workshops,
seminarS, inservio0_ education for
commtmity
groups,
churches,
schools,
home
health/Infusion
services and nursing homes. Our
once-a-month ABC’s of HIV seminar
open-to-all meets on the last Sat. of
each month. ABC includes infection,
transmission,
prevention,
barrier~
protection, risk assessment, legal,
ethical, and psyohosocial issues. The
. last hours arefocused on Financial
Planning/Counseling for:THE HIV
INDMDUAL
AND
SOCIAL
SECURITY SUPPORT SERVICES
which covers budgeting, application
pro~ss~:, for. ~.state.,

~-programs, Fair Debt Law, How to
Pay Your Hospital Bill (hospital
low
income
plans),
viatical

we told folks it wouldhave to close.
Too ,high! TO much criticism. But I

Pharmacy first and the Coalition as
well as any other routes before you
try us. We urge you to support the
medication account by donations.
Funding for OOI has come from the
siarkeys Foundation of Norman,
Oklahoma, Kerr Foundation, Boeing
Aircraft Company, Metropolitan
Boards of Realtors, and especially
form entertainers, benefits and
individuals. We. have not received
any assistance through the death of
individuals with estates or insurance
bequest. Probably the reason for
that is we assist them early in the
disease
progression
with
medications,
SSI
Application
process and net-worklng, later on
those individuals have pretty mtmh
forgotten we were even there, We
do not charge for our services. NO,
never ! All our 265 people (52
tested counselors and 17 speakers)
arc volunteers. Our current ease
load is about 392 people in 1993, 42
people in rural Oklahoma, 15
families
with
chit&amp; n,
17
Hispanios, 31 Blacks, 1 Asian
American,
5 deaf individuals,
distributed over 100 educational
paoke~ in a month, Spoke to 912
people in 47 different workshops,
correspond and visit some 30 HIV+

personally to not have the heart to

prisoners.

insurance, how to obtain medical
records and legal issues. We go over
what is. required by Social Security
Admi~stration for SSI and SSDI. I
have completed over 200 Social
Security applications and of those
only two were denied so lets see
what I know. Our specifieally
designod
training
classes
and
seminars created for work place,
office staff, support groups and
Buddy programs are available by a
phone call. Our speakers. Bureau of
PLWHA’s are hand picked and most
have been trained by OSDH and
American Red Cross.
We are still doing the Medication
Program. We are usually the brunt
of every clown who wants to

criticize us-for medicating people
with HIV. It is a hard one °to listen

to. "No one wants to medicate an
AIDS patient" Direct quote from a
donor.
Some
really
special
individuals manage to keep this
account door open and we thank
them. You can help so it may stay
open longer. At one point last month

allow someone to do without. We do

not personally medica~te anyone~
although we h~ve been accused
that.

A physician must write a

prescription and it must be in the
pharmacist possession like any other
pharmacy. We are not a pharmacy.
We have an account at a pharmacy
and a detailed criteria for allowing
charge OOI for their

The congreghtion and leadership of
New Horizons MCC on Oklahoma

9~9 ~’. Yir~qit~i,~ ¯ OKC . {405) 272-9855

Open Th ursday-6: 3 0/Friday - 8: 3 0/Saturday- 8: 3 0
Live D.J.
Specials for the/Vlonll~ of September
Friday @- 11 ~ 1.00 domeslic beer
5at.~3. cover optional {or .25 cent beer
Coming in Ocotber New Winter Hours]
For both Sneakers and KA’s

KA"s Open Z days a week at 3pm
Happy hour 5 to 7 $1.50 bottles

$2.50 or $3.00 Pitchers
Oct 3rd last Sunday {or KA "s to be open
be{ore ~nter is on us.

The Parachute Page 24

City would like to invite the
Oklahoma City community to join in
a celebration of official installment
for Re . Kayo Lee, who has recently
selected as a permanent pastor. Re .
Lee has served the congregation of
New Horizons over the past several
weeks as interim pastor, and is now
relocating to the OKC area to serve
permanently at New Horizons.
Installment celebration activities
will take place September 10 and 11
with many South Central District
leaders in attendance. Re . Margaret
Walker from Fort Worth, Texas will
officiate. Also present will be many.
guest musician from Texas area.
New Horizons will sponsor a garage
sale on September 18 at .6415 N,
Laird
on
OKC.
The
OKC
Community is invited to come out
and brouso. Anyone having items to
donate for the garage sale _please
contact the church at (405)942-63
On October 3, in celebration of St.
Francis Day, there will be a special
service held as A Blessing of the
Animals,

The

OKC

community is

invited to bring all and any pets to
tho service and receive a special
blessing. The service will be held at
an outside location which will be
announced at a later date. Please
remember to put your pets on a leash
or in a cage as appropriate as many
animals will be in attendance.
New Horizons will be providing in
the near future, a meeting space for
CODA group. Anyone interested

Reeogniz~ HIV to he a deadly
disease, OOI had-been persistent in
ourneed to educate and dedicate on
making ourselves, our educational
materials, and our expert test
counselors, and volunteers available
to PLWHA’s, to our community
and tim
public...We believe our
programs to be the best contribution

contact the otturchat (~403)y42=o$1:L
Also, New Horizons is interested on
providing a meeting place for a
woman’s community choir and a
drum and bngle corp. Anyone
interested
in
organizing
or
sponsoring either the choir or the

drum and bngle corp. please contact
the church at (405)942-6313.

Support the
Organization
that
Supports
Your
Freedom

ACLU
The American Civil Liberties Union
Protest Your Rights of Fr~ Speech, Press
and Religion.
The American Civil Liberties Union
Helps Guarantee you Equality and Du~
Process.
You Can Support the ACLU by B~comin8
a Mamber or Making a Contribution.

Write to: ACLU, 132 West
Street, New York, NY 10036

43rd

�Oklalioma City’s

Habana I n n Comple x
~your home away [ram homel

The Habana Inn
A Fine Lodging Establishment
180 Guest Rooms

Poolside Rooms

Two Pools

Suites

Cable T.V.
Labor Day Weekend
Sunday&amp; Monday
_Pool Pro’tics 2pro

Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner and daily specials 7am-tO:30,P~M.
After Hours breakfast Friday &amp; Saturday until 3:30, A.M.

GUSHERS BA~
r busts
8" Shows
- Wednesday
8, Sunday
tC~:,eUrrent,
classic
and progressive
dance
music ~i
Male Dancers Friday 8, Saturday-

nishline

Live DJ, country dancing, beer

West encl, Habana Inn Comple×
Pool 8, Darts

2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY
(405) 524-JRED

OKLAHOMA ClT~, OK 73112

(405) 524-5733

Cards/Magazines, Lgather, T-shirt,Gifts

2200 NW 39 Expy, Oklaltoma City, OK 73112

Call for rares and i~vfoamario~vl

(405) 528-2221
The Parachute Page 25

Reservations Only
1-800-988-2221

�Kur~

MEXICAN I?ESTAUI?ANT

FI?EE

MUNCIqlE

4-6 ON %HE PATIO
?Z OZ: MUCHO MAPGAI~TAS ~;4~00

FOP I DOMESTIC
? FO!?l [MP012TS
La Roca !1
409 W. Reno

La Roca I11
7550 N. May.

.Contact Zena at 840-1968 for information on free after-work office par~y.

LEVI’S

2807 N.W. 36 - OKC
405-947-LEVI
The Parachute Pa_oe 26

�Help~ Wanted
Holy Trinity

~

PERSONALS -CONT.

~ic~f
"

C’affw~ C/tutti[
Sunday Mass 10:30a~m.

2328 N. MacArthur, OKC
For inforrnation (405) 942-2604

NOTICE

must be
computer

able to type, use
and
have
own
transportation.
Send letter or
resume to: Job 101 c/o:The
Parachute, P.O. Box 11347,
Wichita, Kansas 67202.

Girl You Better Work...those
dialing f’mgers (or toes) and
" place your fee personal ad (50
word minimum) with Single
Tree
international,
918-582-2952
Free personal ads. Worldwide
newsletter, newsletter cheap,
News
letter free to HIV+, AIDS,
Director discreet ads. SASE.to:
OWOM, #110, 116
Anaheim~CA. 92807

Part-time office help,. 15-20
hours per week, $5,00-per hour,

Tustin,

"Dave" the accountant: Call
Todd in Oklahoma City ASAP
please. I miss you and need to
speak with you

Sct yourownhours! If you live
in: Topeka, Wichita, Little
Rock. or Missouri, you can sell
advertisement in the Parachute
and earn commission while
having
fun.
Call
today:
316-651-0500
or
1-800-536-6519.
PIANIST
WANTED:
Chari.~matic church looking for
piano player, must be able to
play by ear. Pay little,- but
reward great.. 316-651-0603.

FOR RE~-~
Roommates serving Wichita
for 5 years, Landlords can
register without any advance
fee. Tenants may register: as
little as $15,00.
1529 W.
Douglas 262-8444

PERSONALS - CONT.

GWF 33, fun.seeking feminine;
athletic
and
.professional.

GWM 31, Br/BL 6’ 185. Broad
shoulders
handsome,well
Looking for GWF 25-40 who educated traveled. ISO similar
like life and,. a good woman. good men between their 20’s &amp;
Make mc smile, send photo. 40’s for friendship possibly
Box 126
more! Box 137
GWF- I travel KS. and N. Attractive GWM Bottom~ 5’ 10,,
Oklahoma on business. Looking.:~ 1401bs,
HIV-,
40’s,
non
for Gay female friends for smoker/drinker, looking for life
who
enjoys
boating,
dinner or movies.
I have a mate
partner of eight years.Box 136
traveling and romantic evenings.
No
fats
/
ferns.
,Photo/letter/phone: Box 140
Great Bend, Ks.
GWF mid 30’s Professional
seeks
. same
for
stable GWM, mid 20’s seeks same or
relationship, no drugs, social younger for safe fun. Bottoms
drinker only.
I enjoy sports, a plus, but versatile, send photo
C&amp;W music, sharing quiet times and phone. Box 142
and having fun. Box 123
Anywhere USA
You-a ranch hand? Ever, ride the°
GWM late 20’s seeks GW-M rodeo? If so, this late. 30’s good
20-35 for fun. Must be discreet. looking
masculine
guy
in
No fats. Send photo. Box 120
Austin, Texas wants to hear
from you. Box 141
Topeka, Ks.

Tulsa,0k.
GW-M late 20’s seeking gwm for
fun and friendship. Box 105

TO PLACE A PERSONAL
AD:
Name

GAY DOLLARS
.... Work harder on Wall Street
GWM early 20’S, seeks same for
in an investment’ club following
" " ....
discreet fun ano rnenusmp, seno _.__
, _
....
,t~Atu
. -,., groat|rueS.
.__;.
-Atmress
, Learn, earn! .Wanted: Locations wh~ gays...- photo and letter..~ BOx: 119- .
..~Jand- haWe~:.~ifun too: ~. ~C~l’-may share housing in-Wichita,-. i~-.:i~
~.
" " ~ ¯ .:
" . ¯ ¯

State

mtormatton.

.

Roommates 1529 Wi Douglas
262-84.a.~

Earthly Delights
"Celebrating
Women’s Creative Expression
PERSONALS
5% Gay/Lesbian Discount. 648
Hutehison: GWM looking for
W. Dickson St. Fayettville,Ark.
mate 47, look and act younger,
ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES
Amazingly
accurate,
computerized compility report~
for friends &amp; Lovers
only
$25.00 or 6 mo.’s personal
Horoscope $29.95
Call today 1-800-460-STAR

FOR SALE
K.A’s Women’s bar, oldest beer
bar in OKC, 2024 N.W. 1 lth,
speak to Janice or Michclc at
405-272-9833
....DEADLINE FOR OCTOBER
SUBMISSIONS TO THE
PARACHUTE

SEPTEMBER 21st.

honest, romantic, nonsmoker,
loyal. Slim build looking for
same 25-47. Let’s get together.
Box 127

Wichita
GWM, 25 HIV+ seeks GWM.
21-35
for
friendship
and
possible relationship. Serious
replies only. Send photo,phonc~
Penpals welcome. Box 122

GWM mid 20’s, seeks same for
discreet fun and friendship,
send photo andletter. Box 119
Shy
bottom
GWM,
29,
bin/blue, seeking top 21 to 40
for a relationship to build a life
together.
Are you .the one.’?
write to: Box 135

AMAZINGLYACCURATE
NANCEY

Zip

:

~i20’s, good looking," enjoys life.:

Let,me. show you a good time. -.Type .or prin.t your ad ~ 25 wo~ds
Box 138

or less~i Send w~,’th this coupon

GWF early 30’s enjoy going out
and dancing. I am exciting and
adventurous looking for gwf
30-50 who enjoys life. Box 139

and $6~00 to.: The Parachute,
Attn: Personals, P.O. Box 11347
Wichita, Ks. 67202
Your responses will .be mailed
to you when they arc received.

Oklahoma City, OK:
Have home, need mate, country
living, greater OKC, GWM 50,
sip hair, smoker, trim original
equipment, top, levi’s-camping
canoing, gardening. Seeks long
term partner. Box 117

TO RESPOND TO A
PERSONAL
1. Write your response, please it
in an envelope, and seal the
envelope. Be sure to include a
way for the advertiser to get in
contact with you.

2. On the sealed envelope, write
Gay male seeking male couples the advertisers box number in
for fun, mid 20’s. Send Photo’s lower corner and affix postage.
Box 109.
3. Place the sealed envelope and
$2.00 inside a 2nd envelope,
GWM 44 Professional very seal and address to : The
hairy, like smooth man 18-30 to Parachute
P.O.
Box
travel and be my sugar boy, this I 1347,Wichita, Ks. 67202
S|lmmer and beyond.
Please
Important Information:
send photo and phone. OKC Ad will Run only for the number of
insertions paid for, unless renewed. You
area please. Box 125
must be 18 years of age or older to u~ this
~rvice. All addresses / phone numbers
received are confidential and ale-not
released to anyone.

Psychic reading &amp; counseling
Call today for your personal .
appointment.
918"254"6687

Visa and Mastereard Accepted

The Parachute~,~aJ~,2.7 .................

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              <text>Wichita, Kansas (316)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Buddies Country, 4000 s. Broadwav&#13;
529-4953&#13;
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
South Forty, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
R &amp; R Brass Rail, 2828 E. 31st 684-9009&#13;
T-Room, 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327&#13;
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hillside&#13;
681-2746&#13;
Lassens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market&#13;
263-2777&#13;
Th.e Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln&#13;
683-8088&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Visions-&amp; Dreams, 3414 Maple&#13;
942-6333&#13;
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway&#13;
263-3007&#13;
733-4075&#13;
N. Market&#13;
267-6522&#13;
262-8444&#13;
269-441.1&#13;
832-1816&#13;
269-9036&#13;
688-5343&#13;
Queen Anne’s Lace&#13;
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 7(~0&#13;
Roommates&#13;
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry&#13;
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st&#13;
Plato’s, 1306 E. Harry St.&#13;
T.B.’s, 1516 S. Oliver&#13;
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. O1ive688-5343&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr3721 S. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 7805 W..Kellogg&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 2809 N. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entree’ South, 8025 S. Broadway&#13;
Circle Cinema, 2570 S. Seneca&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty. Health Dept.&#13;
1900 E. 9th 268-8441&#13;
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786&#13;
The Lesbian Celebration 683-7561&#13;
P-FLAG 687-4666&#13;
Gay Information Line 269-0913&#13;
Wichita, Kansas (316)&#13;
Churches&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Ctr. 651-6903&#13;
First Unitarian Church 684-3481&#13;
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633&#13;
Junction City, Kansas&#13;
Aftei Dark Video, 1206 Grant&#13;
Lawrence, Kansas (913)&#13;
Ek)uglas County AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
G~ty &amp; Lesbian Ser. of Kansas 864-3091&#13;
Manahattan, Kan/as (913)&#13;
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Topeka~ Kansas (913)&#13;
Bars &amp; Clubs&#13;
Classics, 124 SW 8th 357-1960&#13;
Expressions, 110 SE 8 233-3622&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas&#13;
Some Like It Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.&#13;
Organizations,&#13;
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727&#13;
Mayors Task Force 234-6699&#13;
Gay Rap Line 223-6558&#13;
Manhattan Outreach ’ 271-8431&#13;
HIV Affected Group 234-8562-&#13;
Churches&#13;
MCC of Topeka Z32-6196&#13;
United Methodist Affirmation 235-6101&#13;
Emporia, Kansas&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance&#13;
Box.65, ESU, 1200 Commercial, 66801&#13;
Salina, Kansas&#13;
Alternatives Lifestyles, POB 2532, 67402&#13;
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas&#13;
POB 153, Falun, KS.67442&#13;
Eureka Spr’gs, Arkansas&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Center Street, 10 Center St. 253-8071&#13;
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-8361&#13;
Ermillio’s, 26 White St. (501) 253-8806&#13;
Churches&#13;
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337&#13;
Bed &amp; Breakfast&#13;
Rock Cottage, 10 Enenia St. 253-8659&#13;
Dixie Cottage, 2 Prospect 253-7533&#13;
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800&#13;
Purple Iris Inn, RR 6 253-8748&#13;
Pond Mountain, Rt. 1 253-5877&#13;
Maple Leaf Inn, 6 Kingshgwy 253-6876&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Satori Arts, 81 Spring St. 253-9820&#13;
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St. 253-6600&#13;
Corcelli Studio, 159 Spring’St. 253-7399&#13;
Little Rock, Arkansas&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants-&#13;
Backstreet, 1021 Jessie Rd. Q 666-6900&#13;
Micheal’s, 601 Center 376-8301&#13;
Discovery III, 1021 Jessie Rd. 664-4784&#13;
Silver Dollar, 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886&#13;
Organizations&#13;
HPWA, POB 4379, 72204, 666-6900&#13;
AIDS Support Group 374-3605&#13;
RAIN-Arkansas 375-5908&#13;
The House 374-3758&#13;
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605&#13;
Womens ~oject 372-5113&#13;
Service &amp; R~ail Busin~es&#13;
Twis~ ~tennmt, 7201 Asher ~-4262&#13;
Shields:Marley Studios, 117 S. Victou&#13;
Travel by Philip 227-7690&#13;
Hot Springs, Arkansas,&#13;
Our House ~unge/Rest. _35 Broadway&#13;
6 2 4 - 6 8 6 8&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma (918)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Laff’.s " Underground. 31&#13;
Tops (across from Laffs)&#13;
4812, 4812 E. 33rd&#13;
Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S.&#13;
Taj Mahal, 2630 E. 15th&#13;
Time n’ Time Again, 1515 S.&#13;
l E. 7th&#13;
583-5233&#13;
587-8677&#13;
742-5262&#13;
Sheridan&#13;
834-4234&#13;
742-8274&#13;
Memorial&#13;
660-0856&#13;
664-8299&#13;
584-1308&#13;
TNT’s 2114 S, Memorial&#13;
Tool Box. 1338 E. 3rd&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Tomfoolery at the Silver Star&#13;
1565 S. Sheridan 832-0233&#13;
.Kelly Kirby, CPA 663-9399&#13;
Elite Goods, 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
Whittier Bkstore, 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
Dreamland, 8807 E. Admiral 834-1051&#13;
Organizations&#13;
ACT-UP; POB 532, 74101&#13;
Names Project, POB 3181, 74101&#13;
¯ 748-3111&#13;
P-FLAG POB 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-1&#13;
Gay Lin~ Info. 743-4297&#13;
Shanti Hotline 749-7898&#13;
STIR (Tulsa Univ. student ors,) 583-9780&#13;
Oklahoma AIDS Hotline 800-535-2437&#13;
Churches&#13;
Family of Faith MCC, 500 W. ’A" Jenks&#13;
298-4622&#13;
Affirmation (Methodist) 742-8213&#13;
MCC of Tulsa, 1623 Maplewood&#13;
838~1715&#13;
Dignity/Integrity 298-4648&#13;
Enid, Oklahoma&#13;
Phillips Univ. Gay &amp; Lesbian Group&#13;
242-0628&#13;
Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Angles, 2117 NW 39th 524-3431&#13;
Bunkhouse, 2800 NW 39th 943-0843&#13;
Coyote Club, 2120 NW 39th 521-9533&#13;
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Hi Ix) Club 1221 NW 50th 834-1722&#13;
KA’s, 2024 NW 1 lth 525-3991&#13;
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384&#13;
The Park, 2125 NW 391h 528-4690&#13;
The Porthole. 3630 NW39th 949-9’837&#13;
Sneakers, 919 N. Virginia 272-9833&#13;
Tramps, 2201 NW 39th 528-9080&#13;
Wreck Room, 2127 NW39th 525-7610&#13;
The Kitchen, 2124 NW 39th 528-5133&#13;
La Rocca Mexican Restaurants&#13;
SW 4th/Walker, 409 W.’Reno &amp;&#13;
7550 N. May&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses-&#13;
Banana Products 341-8965&#13;
Exec. Travel, 2113 NW 36th 521-9100&#13;
Habana Inn, 2200 NW39th 528-2221&#13;
Herland, 2312 NW 39th 521-9696&#13;
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733&#13;
Lobo’s, 2131 NW 39th 528-5156&#13;
Deb Roberts, Entertainer 843-5624&#13;
Second Chance Credit 752-2209&#13;
Stephen Scott, Masseur 525-8689&#13;
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/counselor&#13;
848-5429&#13;
Larry Prater, MD, Psychiat~’ 232-5453&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
New Beginnings MCC 3136 N. Portland&#13;
942-63 13&#13;
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 360-0414&#13;
Friends Meeting 632-7574&#13;
Gay Christian Ecum. Council 528-5635&#13;
Light House MCC, 2522 N. Shartel&#13;
524-4687&#13;
Unitarian Church, 600 NW 13 232-9224&#13;
Ft. Smith, Arkansas&#13;
Court Garden 305 Garrison 783-9822&#13;
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Garrison 783-9347&#13;
Fayetteville, Arkansas&#13;
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052&#13;
Wash. Cry. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS&#13;
Gay/Lesbian Act’n, Delegations 521-4509&#13;
MCC of the Ozarks 443-4278&#13;
Oklahoma City (405)&#13;
Organizations&#13;
ACLU, 1411 Classen, Ste 318 524-8511&#13;
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277&#13;
OASIS Resource Ctr. 2135 NW 39&#13;
525-2437&#13;
OK Gay Pol. Caucus POB 61186 73146&#13;
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc. 943-0843&#13;
OKC Metro Mens’ Chorus 424-1753&#13;
Pride Network 340-3575&#13;
RAIN 232-4372&#13;
ACT-UP/Queer Nation 447-4209&#13;
OU Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Alliance&#13;
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 73019&#13;
Womens’ Resource Ctr.&#13;
AIDS Mastery&#13;
A1-Anon (Gay)&#13;
Alcoholics Anonymous&#13;
OK AIDS Hotline&#13;
Other Options&#13;
364-9424&#13;
525-3636&#13;
947-3834&#13;
" 525-2437&#13;
800-535-2437&#13;
728-3222&#13;
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39th&#13;
843-8378&#13;
The Parachute Page 2&#13;
Springfield, Missouri (417)&#13;
Club 1105, 1105 E. Commercial&#13;
831 ~9043&#13;
Down Beat, 219 W. Olive 846-4572&#13;
Bolivar News, 4030 Boli.var 833-3354&#13;
Joplin, Missouri (417)&#13;
Billy Jack’s, 720 S. Main 781-6453&#13;
CG’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S, Main&#13;
781-9313&#13;
Lawton, Oklahoma (4o5)&#13;
HIV/AIDS Support ~48-5890/351-_8_0&#13;
SW AIDS Network, POB 3924, 73505&#13;
Great Plains MCC, 1416 W. Gore&#13;
357-7899&#13;
Stillwater, Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544&#13;
OSU Gay/Lesbian/Bisex Comm. Assoc.&#13;
Student Union 040, Box 601, 74078&#13;
Helpline (MWTh. 8-10pm) 744-5252&#13;
’ Subcription "&#13;
6 months = $12.00&#13;
1 year = $18.00&#13;
Name _&#13;
Address&#13;
City&#13;
State Zip.&#13;
$ Enclosed&#13;
Subscriptions will be mailed&#13;
out by the 5th of each month,&#13;
in a sealed vnvdop¢.&#13;
Send to:&#13;
Th~ Parachute&#13;
P.O. Box 11347&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67202</text>
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute, September 1, 1993; Volume 1, Issue 6</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>Chuck Breckenridge &amp; Wayne D. (assistant publisher)</text>
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                <text>John Christiansen&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Mary Arbuckle&#13;
Stephan Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Michael Canfield&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Scott Curry&#13;
Emerald Rainbow (horoscopes)&#13;
Catherine Boyle&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Kelly Kirby&#13;
David Stokes (volunteer)&#13;
Rhonda Guy (volunteer)&#13;
Leslie Thomas</text>
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                    <text>O0
the Ga~/’&amp; Lesbian Community in Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri
Box 11347i::Wichita, Kansas 67202

BUNKHOUSE
GREAT PLAINS

40~-943-0843

FRIDAY AUGUST 6TH- 10 PM
C.C. RAE Show
from Grcenbay,Wiscon sin

5th Annual Bar Games - Sunday August 22nd at
$25.00 per team - Contact Galen at 405-943’0843
AND.
AN EVENING WITH FRIENDS WHO CARE

at 10:OOpm
Proceeds go to benefit Other Options
Check our Specials at the
Buckboard Restaurant
"Real Home Cookin"

Vol. I, Issue VI

�The Parachute Directory
Wichita Kansas(5 !~)

Organizations&amp; R~sourcvs
Gay/Leshian Action Delegations 521-4509 ¯

Buddies Country 4000 S. Broadway 529-4953
Our Fantasy 3201 S. Hillside 682-5494
South Forty 3201 S. Hillside 682-5494
R &amp; R Brass Rail 2828 E. 31st 684-9009
T~Room 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327

~MCC of the Ozarks 443-4278

Eureka Springs Ark. (501)
Center S~eet 10 Center Street_ 253-8071
The HOP 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-8361
Ermillio’s 26 White St. 253-8806

Adult Entree 220 E. 21st 832-1816
Plato’s 1306’E. Harry St. 269-9036
T.B.’s 1515 S. Oliver 688-5343
Camelot Cinema 1519 S. Oliver 688-5343
Adult Entertainment Center 3721 S. Broadway
Adult Entertainment Center 7805 W. Kellogg
Adult Entertainment Center 2809 N. Broadway
Adult Enlree’ South 8025 S. Broadway
Circle Cinema 2570 S. Seneca

Churches
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337

Bed &amp; Bwadff~t
Rock Cottage 10 Enenia St. 253-8659
Dixie Cottage #2 Prospect 253-7533
The Sonflxxn Rose 09 Benten St. 253-5800
. Purple Iris Inn R.R. 6 253-8748
Pond Motmtian Rt. 1 253-5877
Maple Leaf Inn 06 Kingshighway 253-6876

Harbor Restaurant 3201 S. Hillside 6gl-2746
Lassens Bar &amp; C_rdll 155 N. Market 263-2777
The Upper Crust 7038 E Lincoln 683-8088
Orgaizizations ~ Bmdne~e.e
Wich. Sedg.Co. Hlth Dept. 1900 E. 9th 268-8441
W.ichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786
The.Lesbian Celebration 683-7561
PFlagg 687-4666
Gay Information line 269-0913
Visions &amp; Dreams 3143 Maple 942-6333
Watermark Books 149 N. Broadway 263-3007
Queen Ann’sLace 733-4075
Dr. Laura Shook - D.C. 700 N. Market 267-6522
Roommates 262-8444
Paradise Antiques 430 E. Harry 269-4411

Satori Arts 81 Sprin8 St. 253-9820
Crazy Bone 37 Spring St. 253-6600
Coreelli Studio 159 Spring St. 253-7399

Little Rock Arkansas. (501)
Backstreet 1021 Jessie Rd. unit Q 666-6900
Michials 601 Center 376-8301
Discovery III 1021 Jessie Rd. 664-4784
Silver Dollar 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886

~ift&amp; ,Cards_. &amp; Novelties
Art &amp; Pho_to~a_a~v
Shields- Marley Studios 117 S. Victory372-6148
HPWA P.O. Box 4379, 72204 666-6900
AIDS Support Group 374-3605
RAIN-Ark. 375-5908
the House 374-3758
Pals (People of Aitern. lifestyles)374-3605
Womens Project 372-5113

Junotion City, Kansas (913)
After Dark Video 1206 Grant

Lawrene. Kansas (913)
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040
Gay &amp; Lesbian Services of Kansas 864-3091

Trav~el

Chuck Bwckenridge
A~t~amt P~aliahm

Commrmi~
ACLU 1411 Classen #318 524-8511
Names Project P.O. Box 12185 625-6277
OASIS Resource Center 2135 NW 39th 525-2437
OK Gay Political Caucus P.O. Box 61186, 73146
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc. P.O. Box 12485 943-0843
OKC Metro Mens Chorus 424-1753
Pride Network P.O. Box 12415 340-3575
RAIN 232-4372
Aot up 447-4209
Queer Nation 24 hr action line 447-4209
OU Gay/Leshian &amp; Bisexual Alliance 303 Ellison
Hall, 633 Ell Ave. Norman.
Womens Rescource Center 364-9424

Wayae D.

Ch~rel~s &amp; J~Ii_MOIlS Or~aniz,~gon.q
New Beg. MCC, 3136 N. Portland942-6313
Dignity/Integrity P.O. Box 25473 360-0414
Friends Meeting 632-7574
Gay Christian2Ecumenical Counce1528-5635
Light House MCC 2522 N. Shartel 524-4687
Unitarian Church 600 N.W. 13th 232-9224

Twisted Entertainment 7201 Asher 568-4262
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center 651-0603
First Unitarian Church 684-3481
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633

Oklahoma City, Ok. (405)

1o~ d. C~’~
C~afive ~s~ Group, OKC
C~fi~ ~:
Chuck B,C~Me ~cMe, S~n Sco~
B~by, ~c~M ~eld,~ Jacob&amp;
Sco~ ~,~rly ~no~, Raye ~n
Tuck¢r~eRy ~y, Wwks ~vers.
Chuck B, M~ ~ucMe, ~sbb ~om~
~ Co~icaffons
213 ~50-6223
PHO~
1-316~51-0500 or 1-800-536~519
.F~
1-316-269-4208

Volunteers
David Stokes

Angles 2117 N.W. 39th 524-3431
Bunkhouse 2800 N.W. 39th 943-0843
Coyote Club 2120 N.W. 39th 52-1-9533
Finish Line 2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730
Gushers 2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730
Hi Lo Club 1221 N.W. 50th 834-1722
K.A.’s 2024 NW 1 lth 525-3991
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384
The Park 2125 N.W. 39th 528-4690
Tim Porthole 3630 N.W. 39th 949-9837
Sneakers 919 N. Virginia 272-9833
Tramps 2201 N.W. 39th 528-9080
The Wrack Room 2127 N.W. 39th 525-7610
AIDS Mastery PO Box 12151 525-3636
A1-Anen (Gay) 947-3834
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/Couneelor 848-5429
OK. AIDS Hotline 1-800-535-2437
Other Options P.O. Box 36 Bethany .728-3222
Lany Pratt M.D. Psyokiatrist 232-5453
¯Testing the Limits 2136 N.W. 39th 843-8378

Travel by Philip 227-7690

Manhattan Kansas (913)
Flint Hills AUiance, . P.O. box 2018, 539-6275
MCC Mamtmtten 913-271-8431
BGLS- SGA Box 63, KSU, Manhatten,66506
KSU Gay/Lesbian Supp.Group 913-532-6127

Topeka Kansas (913)
Bars &amp; Clubs
Classics 124 S.W. 8th 357-1960
EXPressions 110 S.E. 8th 233-3622

Adult Bookstores
Adult Entertainment Center 903 N. Kansas
Some like it Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.

~_~tions &amp; R~sourc~s
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727
Mayors Task Force 234-6699
Gay Rap Line 223-6558
Manhattan O~treach 271-8431
HIV Affected Group 234-8562

Churches
MCC of Topeka 232-6196
United Methodist AITtrmatien 235-6101

Emporia, Ks.
Gay &amp;Lesbian Allianee Box 65, ESU
1200 Commercial, Empria, KS. 66801

Salina, KS.
Alternative Lifestyles P.O. Box 2532, 67402
Pink.Triangle Parents of KS. P.O. box 153,
Falun,Ks. 67442-0153

Fort Smith Arkansas (501)
Bars &amp; ~staunmts
Cou~t Garden Complex 305 Garrison 783-9822
B&amp;B Lounge 1004 Garrison 783-9347

Hot Springs Arkansas (501)
Bars &amp; Restarts
Our House Lounge &amp; Restaurant 235 Broadway
624-6868

Fayetteville Arkansas (501)
Bars"&amp; Restaara~ts

.Publications
~ Parachute 1-800-536-6519
The Little Ro~k Conne~ions 227-7690

Tulsa Oklahoma (918)
L~ffs Underground 311 E. 7nth 583-5233
Tops (Across from Laffs) 587-8677
Soandals 4812E. 33rd 742-5262
New Age Renegades 17th &amp; Main 584-9405
Silver Star Saloon 1565 S. Sheridan 834-4234
Taj Mahal 2630 E. 15th 742-8274
Time n’ Time Again 1515 S. Memorial 664-8299
TNT’s 2114 S. Memorial 660-0856
Tool Box 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308

A d~lt Bookstores
Dreamland 8807 E. Admiral 834-1051
Elite Goods 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503
Whittier Bookstore 1 N. Lewis 592-0767

_Or!~mi~tions &amp; R~sources
Aetup P.O. Box 532, 74101 741-0644
Names Project P.O. Box 318t, 74101 748-3111
PFLAG P.O. box 52800, 74152 749-4901
TOHR 4154 S. Harvard S. H-1 743-4297
Gay Info. Line 743-4297
Shanti Hotine 749-7898
S.T.LR.(Studens of Tulsa for interpers.rights)
583-9780
Okla. AIDS Hotiine 1-800-535-2437
Kelly Kirby CPA 663-9399
Family of Faith MCC 500 W. A, Jenks,
296-4622
Affirmation (Methodist) 742-8213
MCC of Tulsa 1623 Maplewoed 838-1715
Dignity/Integrity 298-4648

Enid Oklahoma (405)

Subscriptions
6 months=S12.00
1 year = $18.00
Same
Address

City
State

Zip

$

Enclosed

Springfield Missouri (417)
Club 1105--1105 E Commercial 831-9043
Down Beat 219 W. Olive 846-4572

A dldt Bookstores
Bolivar News 4030 Bolivar 833-3354

Billy Jacks 720 S. Main St. 781-6453
C.G.’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S. Main 781-931.3

Subscriptions will be mailed

out by the 5th of each ~honth~
in a sealed envelope.

Send to:
The Parachute
P.O. Box 11347
Wichita, Kansas 67202

Phillips University Gay &amp;Lesbian Group
242-0628

Lawton Oklahoma (405)
HIV/AIDS Support Group 248-5890 or
351-2820
Southwest AIDS Network Box 3924 zip73505
Great Plains MCC 1416 W.. Gore 357-7899

Washington Co. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS

Stillwater Oklahoma (405)

Page 2

Restaurants
Gushers Bar &amp; Grill 2200 NW 39th Expwy
525-0730
TheKitehen 2124NW39th 528-5133
La Rocca Mexican Restaurants:
S.W. 4th &amp; Walker / 409 W. Reno
7550 N. May

Joplin Misso_m’i(417)

Ron’s Place 523 W. Poplar 442-3052

the Parachute

Misce//aaeous S~rvie~s
Banana Products P.O. Box 130255 Edmond, Ok
73013 341-8965
Exeoafive Travel 2113 SW 36th 521-9100
HabanaInn 2200NW39th 528-2221
Herhnd 2312 NW 39th 521-9696
Jungle Red 2200 NW 39th 524-5733
Lobo’s 2131 NW39th 528-5156
Deb Rol3erts Entertainer 843-5624
Second Chance Credit 752-2209 or 752-2155
Steph~a Scott Masseur 525-8689

Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544
Gay,Lesbain &amp; Bisexual Comm. Asso~ of OSU
Studen Union 040, Box 601 Zip 74078
Helpline (Men/Wed/Thurs. 8-10pro) 744-5252

hot
hoc tub, fireplace, VCR.
~~’~:~.... {~
You.~ay visit with fa~
pets
.....
You._may
farm.pets
. &gt;
/~
CaLl 316~33-4075
{~
or-stroll alofig
along the cree~
creek.. ’
’
Jackie &amp; Bob Collison ~
Hosts - JacMd
2617 Queen Anne’s Lace
Lace]~
Double with private ba{fi
ba~’h

�DEAR BABBY ADVICE COLUMN

WE ARE THE STARS

Dear Babby:
I’m a WM in my 40’s and hope you
can help me.
I am a novice to gay/hi-love,
but want to try it. I have been so
called "straight" all my life but I
have this neexl or strong desire that
will not go away. I guess what I
want to know is how do I get started.
I’ve been to a couple of gay bars
but nothing happened.
How do I let someone know
that I’m interested? I’m soared to
make the first move, but I know if
someone made the move I would
follow.
Do I wear something special
~o let people know I’m looking to be
"picked up’? Oh, I’ve tried ads and
most of them were just people
wanting to write and no action, also,
I would like to see what I’m getting.
Please Help
Looking in Wichita.

a drink. If they come over and thank
you for it, you are on the right track.
If not, then leave thvm alone and go
on to contestant number 2.
The best way to let someone
know you are interested is to talk to
them. Now ff you are shy this may
be difficult, but try smiling at them
and if they smile back try going over
and -talkimz. The first, move is very
difficult. One hint before I forget, I
seem to get lucky late ixt the night. I
wait until about 1:45 am and f’md the
dla_mk~st ~ in the bar and tell him
I_ am appointed his designated driver
then I drive him to my trailer.
About wearing something special,
in my younger days, I wore tank tops
and jeans and it worked wonders,
however as nature has taken it’s turn
on my body, I now Fnid the more
clothes I wear the better I do, ff you
get my drift. If you are desperate
buy a sexy t-shirt or a shirt with
something written on it like-’Try me"
or "Help. I’m lost, can you show
Dear Looking:
the way to your place."
Thank YOU for being so honest.
To let people know your available,
I find that very attractive in a man.
it is best not to wear your wedding
Well let me think ..... if you have been
band, I will be glad to hold on to it
"straight" most of your life then you
for you, just send it to me. The ad’s
are in for an experience, (let’s hope
work for some people and some they
you are anyhow). It’s hard for me
don’t. I have found the best way to
to tell you how to get started as I
meet someone who hasn’t seen fi~e is
have always_ been that way, when I
to lie like a dog, and hope they will
was born and the doctor slapped me,
have pity when they meet me. Well I
I wanted to follow him home.
hope this was some help. If not and
Seriously now_just going to the bar
you are really wanting that first
may not do anything, unless you are
a muscle bound h,nk you will. experience, I know a _pleasingly
plump , mature.drag queen ~ho
probably have to make the first
you_’ "the
move.
If you see someone you

AUGUST HOROSCOPE
FROM THE EMERALD
RAIlqBO W
August for all: Moving? Changing
jobs? Breaking up or getting together? If
you have been thinking about a major
change in your life, August is the month
to get those wheels in motion.
ARIES Mar. 21-April 20
-Success can be yours in nearly any
endeavor you start now, especially when
you work with others. Arrogance can
still defeat you, so try to hide the fact
that you know everything.
TAURUS April 20-May 21
You take pride in how much you can
accomplish, but it doesn’t seem like
you’re getting the credit you deserve.
Keep physically active--you’ll need to
blow off some steam.
GEMINI May 21-Jtme 22
Physical relationships become more
intense--or you want one more
intensely. A month of losts of fun and
little self-discipline; so don’t commit to
long-term projects yet.
CANCER June 22=July 23
You express yourself with zeal so it’s a
good time to sell yourself and your
ideas. You can also get into a lot of
pointles~ arguments; make sure a real
issue is at stake.
LEO July 23-Aug. 23
Your confidence is high_ and financial
luck prevails. Events mm out even
better than planned, as long as you avoid
showing off and taking ludicrous risks.
" .VIRGO Aug. 23-Sept. 23
Your theme this mo~th is "I gotta be
to dominate you

after what you want.

LIBRA Sept. 23-Oct. 23
Ever the diplomat, you may be stressed
out this month by an apparent case of
foot,in-mouth disease. A good month to
hibernate and contemplate the meaning
of life.
SCORPIO Oct. 23-Nov. 23
People who seem to be out to get you on
the career front merely have the same
motives that you do. Try to.find a way to
work together instead of doing battle
with them.
SAGITTARIUS Nov. 23-Dec. 22
You have a "can-do" image now, so you
attract people who can help you get
where you want.to go. Don’t rely on luck
to bring success to you; force yourself to
work for it too.
CAPRICORN Dee. 22-Jan. 21
You always want-to be your own boss
but, this month, you absolutely won’t
put up with anyone telling you, what to
do. Work alone, or at least make sure you
get the most credit.
AQUARIUS Jan. 21-Feb. 20
Authority figures often-get on your
nerves but you can impress them with
your clever thoughts this month. Try not
to get too stuck on your own ideas; see
the otherside too.
PISCES Feb. 20-Mar. 2i
Clear the air between you an a
significant other. Believe.it or not, it’s
OK to admit that you have needs too, so
don’t play the martyr role. Stick up for
yourself.
Visit
our
store
in
mystical,
metaphysica Eureka Springs. We
offer full astrological services and all
your body, .mind and soul needs,
downtown at 95 Spring Street; or call
.,us at 501-253-5445

Buddie" s Co.untry
4000 S. Broadway

Wichita, Kansas

316-529-4953

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The Parachute

Page 3

’

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’

�THE OFFICIAL
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OF THE
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Page 4

Brought to you by:
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Wichita, Kansas

MILLER BREWING COMPANY
REMINDS YOU TO PLEASE:

�ACLU Suit Provokes
Granting of Parade Permit
More Than 200 March for
Lesbian and Gay Pride in
Chattanooga

Chattanooga,
TN (EGCM)
Spurred by an American Civil
Liberties Union lawsuit, the
Chattanooga
Police
Department
has issued
a
hotly
contested
parade
permit for the Chattanooga
and
Gay
Pride
Lesbian
Committee,
allowing
more
than 200 people to march in a
celebration of gay visibility
and a call for gay and lesbian
rights.

"This year’s parade --which
was twice the size of last
year’s -- celebrated not only
gay pride,
but also our
protection
under the First
Marvin
Amendment,"
said
Parker, one of the parade
organizer. "Because we were
able to march down the route
we had selected~ -- rather
than the deserted warehouse
district
the
City
Council
picked for us - we achieved
recognition
in Chattanooga
and opened up a dialogue
about gay rights here."
The ACLU’s national Lesbian
and Gay Rights Project and
the ACLU of Tennessee had
filed suit on behalf of the
Pride Committee, after the

because of opposition within
that district, the City CounCil
on its own initiative- issued a
permit for a parade through
an industrial zone.
"The City Council’s decision
to shunt this parade - aside
because of its controversial
message
blatantly
Violated
the right to free expression
guaranteed to all Americans,"

said Marc E. Elovitz, Staff
Counsel
to
the
ACLU
national
Lesbian and Gay
Rights
Project
and
lead
attorney on the case.
"City streets must be made
available
for parades
and
marches on a content-neutral
basis," Elovitz said. "A city
council or any other city
official cannot sit in judgment
of the viewpoints
of city
residents."
Two days after the ACLU
lawsuit
was
filed,
Chattanooga
Police
Chief
Ralph Cothran exercised his
authority to grant a .permit
for
the
residential
route.
Although his decision allowed
the 1993 pride parade to go
forward as schedded, it did"
not
solve
the
underlging
problem
of
Chattanooga’s
impermissible
system
for
considering and granting such
permits.. The ACLU challenge
will
continue
until
Chattanooga
adopts
a
constitutional
system,
one
that
carefully
limits
the
discretion of city officials and
prohibits
decisions
based
upon the message of any
march.

"

"The Police.Chiefs coming to
his senses saved the City from
having to defend itself in an
emergency
hearing,"
said
Ruth E. Harlow,
another
ACLU attorney working on

situation."
The case

United

is pending .before

States

District

Judge

-Allan
-Edgar "
m
R.
Chattanooga.
Judge
Edgar
has
scheduled "
a
case
conference.. In addition to
Elovitz
and
Harlow,
the
plain~fs are represented by
Jay Ku of Chattanooga.

WELCOME IGRA FANs
&amp; PAR TICIPANTS
FR OM YOUR FRIENDS
A T. THE T-R OOM

LAURA L. SHOOK, D.C.Chiropractor

700 N. Market Suite A
Wichita, Kansas 67214

316-267-652~

The Parachute

Page 5

�Eansa~ Ccliseum

14, 15,
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I-~(~-47~-9~7 ~r 31~-1~1-0333
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The Parachute

Page 6

�About the Coloiado
Supreme Court Decision on
Amendment 2
By Mitzi G. Henderson,
Parents &amp; Friends of
Lesbians &amp; Gays

It is gratifying,
that
the
Colorado Supreme Court has
ruled
that
no vote
can
abrogate
the constitutional
rights - of our children. The
sponsors of Amendment 2 fail
to
recogn~ i~,e
true
family
values
are the American
values of personal dignity and
equal rights for all. In this
opinion, the Colorado court
has refused to allow any
group to be singled out for
second class citizenship. It is
a stunning defeat for the
homophobic group Colorado
for Family Values.
The Colorado ruling should
send a strong message
to
other
states
which
are
considering
similar
amendments -- it isn’t legal
to vote away the rights of our
children
and
families.
.Anti-gay initiatives .similar to
Amendment 2 are pending in
Washington,
Oregon, Idaho,
California, Arizona, Missouri,
Florida, Michigan and Maine.

I am skeptical that the U.S.
Supreme Court would grant

the
immediate
hearings
requested
by
Colorado
Attorney
General
Gale
Norton. If they do agree to
hear it, they will have in their
hands the fate of millions of
American citizens threatened
with
no
recourse
against
legalized
discrimination.
I
trust they will render justice
on the same strong grounds
cited by the Colorado Court.

GOD’S
FAMILY
VALUES!

LOVE
Wichita Praise&amp;
Worship Center
Wichita, Ks.
316-651-0603

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The Parachute

Page 7

�FLINT roLLS ALLIANCE
NEWS
MANHATTAN KS

from Community Spirit (tm) long
distance.
If you live in the Manhattan area,
you might
want to
consider
volunteering one night a month to
operate the gay and lesbian info line we need volunteers to make this
work. A training seminar for our
volunteers will be held in late
September. Give us a call if you are
interested in helping out!
Our next educational forum]general
mem~ship meetln~ will be on
Thursday, August 19 at 7:30 p.m. at
UFM (1221 Thurston, Manhattan).
Our guest speaker will be Rev. L.
Jonathan Loppnow, pastor of MCC
Manhattan, and he will talk on the
subject of Why Many Organized
Religions Hate Gays. Everyone is
welcome!

BY K~VYN D. ?ACOBS
The Flint Hills Alliance, Inc. is
pleased to announce that it has
FINALLY opened up an office of its
own in Manhattan~
For years, those of us in the
Manhattan/Junction City activist
community have dreamed of having
a space ~ the area to serve tbe local
same-gender commtmities." In July,
that dream finally came true when
we opened up an office at 1221
Thurston (The UFM Bldg.), on the
second floor.
Now we individuals in the Flint
Hills region of Kansas have a place
to come to get pamphlets and
brochures,
information
on
community events, and just hang
around in a qucer-friendiy space.
(We even are a distribution for free
copies of the The Parachute!) As of
this writing, office hours have not
yet been set, but it is a pretty safe
bet if you come by weeknights" from
6 p.m. to 8 p.m., somebody will be
there. Or call (913) 539-6275 for
information. Or come to our open
house, on August 5 from 7:30-10
p.m.!
Our next goal will be to begin
operatln~
gay
and
lesbian
information line. We are having a
fundralSing dance July 18, and are
sellin~ T-shirts to raise money for
that purpose. We have also applied
for IRS 501(c)(3) tax-exempt Status
(keep your f’mgers crossed), and
when that becomes finalized, we will
become eligible to receive funds
from Commqnity Spirit (to -

Wichita
( ay Inf l_ine
316-269-0913 Voice
269-4208 Fax/Modem
&gt;&gt; Referrals
&gt;&gt; Information
&gt;&gt; Events
The latest news and
information available from
Kansas’ largest gay database.
Sponsored by:
The Land of Awes
Information Services
Post Office Box 16782
Wichita, KS 67216-0782

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AUGUST 27-2.9
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The Parachute

Page 9

:

�ANALYSIS OF HOUSE
R.~OLUTION
BY SCOTF CURRY

created
equal,
neither
single
individuals,
nor
a
group
of
individuals, needs the protection of
our government.
After all the talk about everhedy
being equal, most people-do not
rvvo~n_i7~ what the authors of the
resolution are stating when they use
the term "protected ¢lass.’Most
people, after reading through all the
statements about everybody being
equal, see -’protected class" as
meaning "special class, with special
rights."
At this point we have to ask
ourselves whether homosexuals, are
asking for special rights. Is the right
to have housing a special right? Is the
right to be served food in a restaurant
a special right? Is the right to have
and raise children without state
seizing them a special rish~ Is the
right to walk down the street and not
get attacked because of who you are
and whom you love a special right?
These do not seem to be special
rights. These appear to be the
fundamental rights of life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness that the
Constitution guarantees to every
citizen of the United States of

Several Legislators .aligned with the
religious far-right have readied a
resolution that they will intro~_~¢¢ in
the Kansas House next session. The
wording of the resolution is very
similar to Amendment 2,~ which
re~ntly passed in Colorado, and
several other similar amendments
and resolutions that are now being
introduced all over the country. At
first glance, the resolution appears to
be harmless enough, staining that
since
"citizens
have
equal
fundamental rights and have equal
protection under law, " the
perferences of some people are not
entitles to have a priority over the
preferences of any other citizens."
If
all
citizens
have
equal
constitution,
and
if
those
fundamental rights include the rights
of life, liberty and "the pursuit of
happiness,
then
clearly
the
"preferences of some people are not
entitles to have a priority over the
preferences’of others.
So, why a resolution? The answer is
in the resolution’s next paragraph,
which states,
We memorialize
Congress to refain from enacting or
amending any legislation that defines
certain
sexual
or
life-style
preferences as having protected class
status."
With this sentence, the authors of the
resolution have leapt from equality
to bashlnS. What they are trying to
fool us into resolving is: Because the
Constitution stated that we are all

If we take these rights from the
homosexual
through
a
sleight-of-hand distortion of the
language, who’s nex~ Will it be a
race of individuals? Will it be the
Jews,
Muslims,
Catholic,
or
Protestants?
Republicans?
Democrats? Will it be the trade
unionists?
We would urge you to write to your
legislators. Explain that without civil
rights laws that specifically ban
discrimination based on sexual

orientation, gay people, as well as
those susp~ted of being gay, can
lose their .jobs,. their homes, and
their families and be refused service
at public accommodatio~ts simply
because they are gay--with no legal
recourse. Let Topeka know you are
watehin~ and you will no longer

tolerate your rights being usurped by
_ right wing zealots who speak of
special rights;, while wanting the
very special, right to discriminate
a~ainst those whom they hate.

Wichita Praise &amp;
Worship Center to Hold
Revival
Sister Evelyn Sehave from Seattle
Washington will be in Wichita to
hold revival at Wichita Praise &amp;
Worship Center, August 27-29. The
services will be held at 1501
Fairmont in Wichita (lst Unitarian
Church).
WPWC
is
a
Charismatic,
Evangelieal church in Wichita, open
to the Gay &amp; Lesbian Community.
Sister Evelyn Schave is a straisht
lady who for many yem~ condemned
homosextmlity as part of a religious
denomination.
However "Several

svriptures for herself, and being
around Gay and Lesbian Christians
she has changed her belief and now
she, along with her husband Denni~
evangelize in the Gay and Lesbian
Community. She was in revival at
WPWC several months ago and is
comin~ back by popular request.
The ~ services are Friday and
Saturday night at 7:30 and Sunday

New Bookstore Opens in
Wichita
Visions and Dreams has now opened
at3143 Maple Ave. The store is
~ in a mini shopping ~nter on
t~ south side of the street.,
Family owned and ope~tcd the store
is full of Gay and Lesbian books,
literature, and many other items.
We at the Parachute are excited
about this new Imsiness, as it is an
opportunity
for
the
Wichita
Community to have access to those
things which most would have to
order by mail and pay postage and

hand~g.
Raye and Renea invite you to stop by
and visit them, ~ is a room set
aside for you to visit and have
~offee, and get to know new and
exciting people. If the store doesn’t
stock something you are lookln~ for,

be sure to ask, more than likely they
can order it for you. Theyalso ~
a wide selection of t-shirts, like: I’m
not gay but my girlfriend (or

boyfriend) is, and many more. The
store has been open for a few weeks
now snd_ is already showing great
signs of success. Their hours are 10
am to 8pm Monday - Friday, and
Sundays 12 noon to 6pro. Be sure
and stop in, tell tliem you read about
them in The Parachute.

at 2:00pro (regular worship time).
For more information you may eall
the church office at 316-651-0603.

3143 West Maple, Wichita, Kansas 316-942-6333

10% OFF LESBIAN ROMANCE NOVELS
AUGUST 15TH

WICHITA’S ONLY GAY &amp; LESBIAN BOOKSTORE
OPEN
MONDAY - .SATURDAY 10AM-TO 8PM
SUNDAYS 12 NOON TO 6PM
The Parachute

Page 10

’

�The Ultimate In
Adult Entertaimnent
Abundance of Adult Vidoes, Magazines, Books.
Lubes, Lotions, Novelties &amp; Toys
We buy and sell used magazines
Large selection of gay &amp; lesbian material

Where everyone is treated equally
Adult
Entree
220 E. 21 st
Wichita, Ks.
316-838-1816

Most discreet

Gay Comic Tackles
Bewitched
Role in Stage Play
San Frandsco, CA (EGCM) In
the
retro
style
of
the
succ6ssful
Real Live Brady
Bunch, a new stage version of
the classic sitcom Bewitched
is. planned for a mid-summer
run at the New Conservatory
Theatre
in San Francisco.
The stage play caps a wave of
Bewitched
mania in recent
years, including the release of
a
companion
book
and
renewed interest in the stars
of the series, which ran on
ABC from 1964 to 1972.
Slated to play one of the
most
popular
recurring
characters on Bewitched
-the practical joking warlock,
Uncle Arthur -- is openly gay
and
comic,
Hank
actor
performer
is
The
Donat.
for
known
his
"thinking
person’s"
style of comedic
activism at stand-up and Gay
Pride venues and can be seen
at gay landmark
regularly
in
San
Cabaret
Josie’s
Prentiss
Director
Francisco.
SF-based
of
Smithson,
Productions,
says
Neptune
Donat was a natural for the
acerbic
Arthur.
"We knew
Hank had the right sense of
humor when we heard he was
organizing the other actors in
the audition hall into a TV
Child
Trivia
and
Inner
Parenting Workshop."

Platos
1306 E. Harry
Wichita, Ks.
316-269-9036

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Private Dancers
Conversation
Booths
316-554-0307

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Donat faces the challenge of
recreating the role originated
by Paul Lynde, whose camp
performance
as TV’s Uncle
Arthur
became
a favorite
among
viewers
whose
Gay-O-Meter jumped off the
charts when he appeared on
screen. "I’d like to make it
clear that I’m nothing like
Lynde,"
says
Donat.
Paul
Lynde
was
a
"Paul
50-year-old,
angry,
bitter
alcoholic. I’m 28."

Donat says the new show
introduces modern themes, to
the hexy series, bringing
Bewitched
into the gay 90’s.
’!The play provides a perfect
parable for gay oppression.
is
constantly
Darrin
tormenting
Samantha about
expressing her natural self,
and she relents. Who has the
in
this
power
real
relationship? In the revival, I
think
we’ll
see Samantha
start to take S6me of that
power back. It’s a somewhat
cerebral
interpretation,
but
still very fun and true to the
original"

Most discreet

conn’ection
gay
The
Co-star
Dick
continues.
made
national
Sargent
headlines when he came out
as a gay man in 1991 after
Governor
Pete
California
Wilson vetoed a gay rights
bill. The following year, he
and Montgomery were Grand
Marshals ~of the Los Angeles
Lesbian/Gay
Pride
Parade.
Diane Murphy, one of the
twin
sisters
who
played
Tabitha on the sitcom, is-alsoo
openly gay. Murphy runs a
organization
for
nonprofit
women and their
battered
in Santa Barbara,
children
California. Though Lynde did
not come out publicly during
his
lifetime,
his
homosexuality was no secret
in the Hollywood community,
and the same is true of Agnes
of
Endora
Moo.rehead,
Bewitched

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Elizabeth
Montgomery,
the
original witch Samantha, also
embraces political theory on
the ’60s sitcom, stating m a
interview, "
recent Advocate
is
about
Bewitched
repression in general and the
frustration it can cause. This
was about people not being
allowed
to be what they
really are."

available 2~ hours a day-just llke you have now.

The Para~hut~

Page 11

�Wichita "s Premier Down to wn
Steak House

Also featmqng Seafood, Smoked Meats &amp; P~’m¢ l~’b!

Market Center
155 N. Market Wichita, Kansas

316-263-2777

Lunch Served 11 to 2 M-F, Dinner 5:30 to 10 Monday - Saturday

Truly Dedicated to Service and Quality
Bears Update
Wichita,
KS
(EGCM)
The
Bears in the Woods Picnic
held on July 24th was well
attended despite the very hot
and
humid
weather.
Bears
from Oklahoma
City, Tulsa,
Kansas
City
and
Wichita
converged
for
friendship,
food and fun.

Hirsute Pursuit sponsored the
picnic in response to guys who
felt
that
they
wanted
a
non-bar event.
Although the
majority of the guys who went
to the picnic seemed equally
at home at the "T", Room bar
that
same
evening,
some
expressed
gratitude
at the
chance to meet big and hairy
men without the
smokefilled,- loud mum’c environment of a drinking
establishment.

The next event for Hirsute
Pursuit
will
be
another
BearChest Night at the "T"
Room on August 28th. There
will again be prizes for the
Best Chest contest as well as
a very large number of door
prizes.
Admission will be $1
except for ladies and shiftless
men.
This will probably be
the last major event for the.
men’s
club
until
the
nation.ally
publicized
Bear
Hug ’94 -in January.
"We need some time to pull
things
together,"
said
Rex
Rivers who is a representative
for Hirsute Pursuit.
"The
Bear Hug is a large event
that takes a lot of time and
planning.
Will be checking
out gay friendly hotels in the
Wichita
area and soliciting
input from other businesses
and organizations
for events
and activities surrounding the
Bear Hug weekend."

Paradise Antiques

There aren’~ any you can sea You can’t tell from outward
appearance who is infecte0 with ~ the virus that causes AI~S.
Know how to determine your risk. Call your State or local AIDS
hotline, or the National ~ Hotline at 1-800-342AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for deaf access.
HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
Public Health Service
Centers for Disease Control

430 East Harry
Wichita, K~ 67211
(316) 269 ~,~,~,1

The Parachute

Page 12

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sun 1pro to 5pro

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miss th e first gay rodeo in Missouril
Labor. Day weekend
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Tickets:
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Children Prices are $5 in adv. &amp; $6 at the gate
gates open at 10:00
Host Hotel : Americana 1301 Wyandotte,,KC, Mo.
Room Rates $50.00 1-2 people or $58.00 3-4 people
for reservations call 800-325-9149 (outside Mo.)
800-892-7162 (in Mo.)
Friday "Missouir Welcome" Party
Saturday Night Party at the Americana Hotel
$6 at the door or $5 in .advance
for more information call 8.16-224-6139 or 816-561-6620

r uoaa~snUF

~_~ncourages

Libra~es to Defend Books
"
" for Gay T~ns
Lakcv~c, CN (EGCM)
~hool Hbra~ns
a~ m a
~quc
pofifion
to
help
and gay t~nagcrs.
lesbian
~at
was
~e
message
defiver~ by pub~er Sa~a
~yson ~ a ke~ote s~ech to
¯e New England Ass~iafion
of
Inde~ndent
School
Librarians.
"Many of us who are gay can
tell you that our first step in
coming out involved a trip to
the library’s card catalog," he
told them. "Reading a book-is
safer for a gay teenager than
talking to a person, because
there’s no risk of rejection.
Today, there are dozens of
good books for gay teenagers
-- and if you aren’t making
them
available,
you
are
failing to serve many of your
students."

Just fiwe years ago,--Alyson
noted, .i~-- would .have - been¯ impossible,
for
most
high~b00~. ~:~’~i

~mply

~t :you

ke~ote s~ker Shows ~at
times are changing," he said..
"It’s ~now well recognized that
there are lesbian and gay
high
teenagers
in
every
school. The religious right has
tried to keep our children’s
boOks out of public libraries,
but they’re losing that battle.
They’ll try just as hard to
keep
books
for
gay and
lesbian teenagers out of high
school libraries. It’s our job
yours and mine -- to ensure
that the~ lose this battle, as
well."

informadon
more
For
Daly;
Alyson
contact:
Kim
Inc.;
40
Publications,
Plympton Street; Boston, MA
02118; Voice 617-542-5679.

l l O $.E. 8th, Topeka, KS.
913-233,3622

124 S. W.8th

Topeka, Kansas
The Parachute

Page 13

�A

R

K

N

A

A

S

"~’ PondMountain
Lodge &amp; Resort

.19th Year

~

"Come experience the
unsurpassed beauty and serenity

Rt. 1, Box 50
Eureka Springs

Arkansas 72632
(501) 253-5877

of Pond Mountain."

Debbie Clay/Judy Jones

Eureka’s Highest Quality Photos
And Authentic Costumes
All photos guaranteed not to"
fade.
(4x5, 5x7, 8x10, llx14,
16X20, and wallet)

Monthly Speciaf.s
Antique Photographers
International

1993 "Best of Show"
Award

E

New Orleans Hotel
63 Spring Street
Eureka Springs, Ark.
501.253.7878

~

¯ 26P.M.
11:3~2-~
White St. ~
On Historic Loop5
=Old
P.M.-9P.M.~
62B"
"
r~

B

Z
O

0
N
NE

Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632

501-253-8806 .

Housekeeping Cabins ¯ Trout Fishing
CanoelJon Boat Rental
ONE MILE NORTH OF BEAVER DAM
ON HIGHWAY 187
J.R. &amp; Sue+Ellen, Hosts

HIGH DESIGN
QUALITY MATERIAL
FINE CRAFTSMANSHIP

SPRI

TREET

EUREKA SPRINGS

+ARKANSAS 72632
ROUTE 2, BOX 418
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS 72632
PHONE (501) 253-9241
The Parachute

Page 14

501/253-6600

S

�ERMILIO’S ITALIAN
HOME COOKING
I think the name should be changed
and renamed "YUM-MILLIO’S’t!
But no one asked me.
From the moment I drove up to the
attravtive, garden-mounded home I
could smell nothi~ but itmredibly
heavenly thin£s. Mama mla! It was
nothln£
but
an
oregano/garlic-

Dixi~ Cotta~
Eurdm Springs, Arkaasas

501-253-90"10

As we walked into the house, we
could smell the wonderful sauces
and aromas that almost lured us
towards the kitchen before the
hostess had the time to show us to
our table2 My partner and I were
served promptly with fresh caraway
bread and sauteed garll~ cloves. We
were thankful as we spread the
garlic multiple slices that we were
only friendly companions on this
night and not loversl! After hearing
the "spevlals" (there were a number
of them-inclnding fresh fish) by our
cordial waitperson, w¢ decided on
the Eggplant Parmesan and Fettucine
Alfredo, two predictable choices by
those who are uusure what to order
from suvh a vast selevtion. What an
ineredible choicel! The Eggplant
was layer upon layer and seem to go
on forever. The sauce was rich and
flavorful. My partners Alfredo sauce
was some of the best I’vetastcd (and
I’ve tasted a few sauces in my days).
I hope you get the idea that we
enjoyed our meal. It not only was
gcod food, but the service and
ambience highlighted our trip. We
will return an we do hope to see you
there. Don’t. be offended ff my

The Purple lffs Inn
Family Owned &amp; ’ Operated

.Satori Arts
Mystical Art and Jewels

Beau Zar Satori
~o~-253-9820

RR 6 Box 339

Sureka Sp~ngs, Ark. 7263~

81 Sprin9 Street
~?-.reka Springs, Arkansas

501_-257,-8748

72632

Featuring private, individual cottages for two.
Nestled under trees and among hundreds of flowers.
@ O~een size beds @ Antique furnishings
tubs for two
COTTAGE1 @@ Whirlpool
Complimentary beverages
@ Large gourmet breakfast @ Cable TV
@ Offstreet parking @ On the trolley route
@ Walk to downtown @ .Smoke free, pet free
@ Open all year

,

1-800-624-6646
10 Eugenia St (on the Historic Loop) Eureka Springs, AR 72632

EXPERIENCE THE PURE PLEASURE
OF STAYING AT THE

~

I1he SoUthern Rose is a newly remodeled and de~o-

I ~ted cottage. It is in a great location right in Historic

.~. Downtown Eureka Springs. But, it is hidden away a
bit off the beaten path, where it is peaceful and quiet. Away
from the traffic and hustle and bustle. You just take some
steps down and you will be in the heart of downtown Eureka.
Walking distance to many shops, restaurants; nightlife, churches,.
The Eureka Springs Historic Museum, Trolley station, Bank and E~reka Performing Arts center, all within a one block area.

THE, SOUTHERN ROSE
......

Eureka:Sisrings, AR72632 - (501)253:5800

19 l/2Spring gtreet
In Historic Downtown Eureka Springs
Eureka!s Original 50’s &amp; 60’sRock&amp; Roll
Open 1 lain to 5pro Friday-.Wednesday

e Leaf Inn
BED &amp; BREAKFAST

Private Entrance to Suite
Private, Gourmet Breakfast ¯ Private Bath
Jacuzzi ¯ Off-street Parking
Air Conditioning ¯ Trolley Stop
Cable TV

A Victorian home, carefully restored and
conveniently located in the heart of
historic Eureka Springs
For Information &amp; Reservation:
Maple Leaf Inn
#6 Kingshighway
Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632

Featuring - Deli Sandwiches Piled High with Savory
Meats and Cheeses
-Daily Specials such as K.C. Style BBQ &amp; Authentic
Cajun Cuisine
Full Service Old Fashioned Soda Fountain
Our Own Fresh Homade Hamburgers
Vegetarian Specials
Tex Mex Cuisine

Draw Beer or Bottled Beer
THE HOP-We’re a family, where ALL families
are welcome,

(501) 253-6876
The Parachute

P~,

15

�T
ENTERTAINMENT

1021 JESSIE ROAD
LII~’LE ROCK, AR
664-2744 or 666-6g00

DISCOVERY, INC.

Come a~d see yo~ New
AH New 5~ D~ce F~r- D~ci~g Now 7 day~ ~ w~M

BacksWee~ is Open 7 days a week 7pro - 3~
"902" ~e GA~ROOM...o~ newest addifio~

1021 JESSIE ROAD
LYFTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS 72202

501-664-:,7s~, oR 50!-666-6900
Showroom ~ Wed - Sun at 9:00 a.m.
LITTLE ROCK’S #1 DANCE CLUB

There is a~ways somefhing happening on Jessie ~oad - 7 Days o week!

FOR_IMMEDIATE

RELEASE

RAIN
"The ~ for non-judgn~atal love
~ from ~mplo of f~
~o~ D~ ~ ~ md A~S has
~ ~ b~is for ~o ~onal
AIDS ~ffai~ No~ork (B~
0~~ said M~
Smo~o~ Execu~ D~c~r of
~ and S~g
m~r
of
~
C~sfi~ A~S Ne~ork
1CAN
s~ves
~
~n-j~ml love md
reafiW on a global ~is. Fo~ed

AIDS ~ ~~ 1~ ~,
[CAN S~
~mmi~
w~r~d ~fly ~ ~ve ~put

~Rn, ~any.
Dolt ~e~r ~ from 24

com~es ~o~d ~ world who
~eh ~ ~ a safe p~ of love and
for ~rsons
li~
~/A~$ {PLWAs). ICAN
~v~s for ~e h~an @~ of

worl~ ~d sN~ o~
iss~s where Ch~(n ~o~d
Nvolved. Fi~cial suppo~ for
w~rk of 1CAN has co~ from
CARA N ~n~n, Ne World
~c~
of
Ch~nes,
~ms
~ups ~ el~t a ~~
1CAN pr~s f~r Ne
~d SmoNem~n was

as the representative from North
America. The Committee includes
representatives from Argentina,

Australia, England, Ethiopia, Fran~,
Hollatut, Ivory Coast, Switzerland,
U.S.A., and the Vatican.
ICAN presentexl "Creative Use of
Religious Resomv,es" during the

International Conference. The 250
people who attend the presentation
and the htmdreds who ~5sited the
ICAN booth during the Conference
t~stify to the importance of the
spiritual approach b~ing part of the
global response to HIV.AIDS.
South, Executive Director of the
AIDS National Interfaith Network
(AN1N), drew applause whe~ he
said, "~ne Rdigious community in
America is one of the b~st my.as of
F~ling strongly that HIV/AIDS
conferences should be hold in the
d~veloping nations of the world
(since the hig~st numbers of
di~ are in thos~ areas), ICAN is
scheduling another Pro-conference to
b~ held n~xt year in Bangkok,
Thailand hoforo the International
Conference in Yokohama, Japan.
For further information contact:
Mary Catherine Smothormon,

Executive director
R~on~ ~S In~
N~ork
924 N. Rob~n
O~om~ Ci~, OK 73102

(405)232-4372 ~a~g ~ea (8~) 324-7246

SILVER DOLLAR BAR
2710 Asher
Monday- Friday 4pro- am
Saturday pm M dmght
501-663-9886

Little

&amp;

ounge

004 1/2 Gar~’ison Fo~ SmiCh, A~’k.

501- 783-934 7

1 ,

d over
Coo ers
~e Parachu~

P~e 16

�Gay and Lesbian Leaders
Arrested at White House
In Protest Against Military
Policy
Washington, DC (EGCM) Gay
and
lesbian
veterans
and
their
supporters
protested
against the President’s "don’t
ask, don’t tell, don’t pursue"
policy for gay and lesbian
members.
Eleven
serwce
including
gay and
activists,
lesbian
veterans
and
the
leaders
national
of several
organizations
were a rrestcd
outside
the
White
House
following
a
demonstration
involving
more
than
!00
~ople.
The
demonstration
was among dozens of other
actions around the country
organized to oppose the new
military policy.
Tanya Domi, a former

Army

captain and currenl direc|or
Military
NGLTF
of
the
Freedom
Initiative.
participated
in
civil
the
first
disobedience
for
time in her life. Other leadcrs
who were arrested
include
Tim
McFeeley,
executive
director of the Human Rights
Campaign
Fund;
Rosemary
Dempsey, vice president
of
the National Organization for
Women;
and
Maurice
Franklin,
a
former
Navy
officer and representative
of
the National Black gay and
Lesbian
Leadership
Forum
and
the
Campaign
for
Military Service (CMS).

TICIPANTS/

When
police
ordered
the
crowd
to disperse,
eleven
activists
remained
on
the
chanting
"Shame"
sidewalk,
at the White
House
and
"Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Won’t
Work." Police then arrested
Domi,
McFeeley,
Dempsey
and
Franklin
and
the
following
other
activists:
Michael
Bustamontc,
a
Vietnam veteran and officer
with
the
Gertrude
Stein
Democratic
Has,an
Club;
Shafiqullah,
of the United
States Students
Association;
ThOrn
Turner
of
the
Campaign
for
Military
Service; Jason Rigg; Andrew
Francois
Alexis;
de
Montequin;
and
Matt
Marcos.
They
were
all
charged
with demonstrating
without a permit and fined
$50 with a future court date.
"~s issue will not go away,
and
the gay and
lesbian
movement will not go away,"
Domi
added.
"This
capitulation
to bigotry will
not deter our struggle
for
equality
and fairness.
The
’don’t ask, don’t tell, don’t
pursue’ poficy is completely
unacceptable.
We will fight
the policy in the streets, in
the courts, and in Congress.
We will not end this battle
until we attain justice."

~ ~ar~hu*~e

P~,ge 17

�RON’S PLACE
P.O. BOX 367 523 W. POPLAR FAYETTEVILLE, AR 72702
(501) 442-3052

SUNDAY SHOWS FEATURING

GINGER ST. JOHN
EVERY 3RD SUNDAY IS TALENT NIGHT

-$50.00 CASH PRIZE
POOL TABLES AND PINBALL MACHINES

COMING
AUGUST
7TH

IST
-CLASS
MALE

SEPTEMBER
5TH
FAYETTEVILLE
ENTERTAINER
OF
THE
YEAR
CONTEST

OPEN THURSDAY - SUNDAY 9PM - 2AM
SUNDAY - SHOW AT 11PM
EVERY SUNDAY IS CUSTOMER APPRECIATION NIGHT

Page 18

�.ELITE GOODS
SERVING THE GAY &amp; LESBIAN COMMUNITY
°
OVER 20 YEARS -

Videos
Condoms
Travel _Guides Gag gifts Handcuffs
Cards Novels Magazines Lingerie Lube
Red Ribbons (Metal &amp; Leather)
Newspapers
OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY .7 DAYS A WEEK
.814 S. Sheridan Tulsa,-Oklahoma 918-838"8053
Mr, Tulsa Loathzr ’94
Contest
The Tool Box &amp; Mr. Tulsa Lzatlmr
"93~have announced tl~ third annual
Mr. Tulsa I~atl~r Contest for 1994.
S¢l~lul~ for Saturday, August 21st,
tbe Tool Box is proud to.host this
~ontestants must be a resid~ut of
N.E. Oklahoma. Com~tition will

consist of and j~a~’~ win be based
on stn~ we~r, swimw0ar and full
l~thex image, as well as questions by

the ~ontest judges. Keep in ,-i,,d that
the judges will b~ looking for will
not n~cessarily be th~ most handsome
face or tl~ most muscular body, but
rath~ tbe man who best typif~s tl~
Applications are available throughout
th~ Tulsa club sc~m~.
Tbe rules,
requirmn~nt, s judging criteria-and
~ information are available
award~l to t~ Top 3 Wln_ne~s along
with a title belt and ~ntry fee to Mr.
Oklahoma Leath~ "94 for ~ first
Pla~ Winner.
contact Tool Box
for
(918--584-1308)
more
information.

Tulsa

.Oklahomam

for

Human

~ (TOm~) is~ sponsor~g a

I

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

picnic (BYOBaskct) to be held at
Bartlett Square on the Main Mall
(5th and Main) from 6:30 to 10 pan.,
Tuesday, August 3, 1993. The pkmic
will be held in lieu of TOHR’s
regularly sc~bedul~ monthly mceting
Free mnsi~, ~ntertainment, dancing
and information will be served up
with soft dr~nk~ provided by TOHlh
Please bring your own pi~mic dinner
snd dr~ss for the weather.
attend. All area lesbian, gay, and
AIDS
organizations,
TOHR
members, friends and fsmily are
welcome for what is sure to be a
si~.li~ p~a~y in downtown T-Town.
The fountain at Ba~ett Square will
certainly cool your red-hot~ rockets,
so come OUT and bring everyone
you know and love to celebrate
stammer and TOHR in the heart of
If you or your organization wishes
community,

this

is

an

THE TAJ MAHAL
Dart Tournament Tuesdays 8:00pm
Pool Tournament Wednesdays 8:00pm

excellent

Call the Heipliae at 743-4297 for
more information.

Happy Hour 12-7 $1.25 Small Pitchers ofBeer

Hours 12pm to 2am - 7 days a wcck
2630 E. 15thTulsa, Oklahoma 918-742-8274
585-3405

17th &amp; Main

I

The Parachute

Page 19

�SATURDAYS
FRIDAYS
MUST BE 2 !
10PM - 2AM
606 S. ELGIN
918.587.8677
The Parachute

Page 20

�Remember: Trash Disco nite - Thursday’s
2 Step lessons Wednesdays 8-10pm
Line Dance Lessons Sundays 7-9pm

R

Improved Sound Sytem

August 6th

August 6th

Tomfoolery
Exclusively Gay
Merchandise
T-shirts/Gifts!Jewlery/ Cards/Leather

Tulsa’s newest Gift Shop
DEB ROBERTS LIVE!
With Special Guest
Mychall Lee Allen

FAMILY OF FAITH

MCC
Family of Faith is a member church
of the Universai Fellowship of
Metropolitan Commt~nity chill~3h~s.
Family of Faith has a ministry to
gay people and to non-gay people.
who
a~c~pt
the
validity
of
gay-lifestyle.
The membership is
made up of diverse backgrounds,
gender, sexual orientation, race,
national
origin,
and
religious
persuasion They have a common
purpose...to proclaim the Good
News that everyone is loved and
accepted by God a persons of sacred
worth.
Family of Faith
Metropolitan
Community Church has s~heduled a
wide range of programs for the
coming weeks, these are planned to
meet various needs and interests.
Program highlights are as follows:
U~ing
the
Bible... This
course
will
be
offered
on
Wednesday.evenings August llth,
August 25th, September 8th, and
September 22nd beginning at 7:30
p.m.
course
will
be
offered
on
Wednesday evenln~;
September
29th, Oztober .13th, and O~tober
27th be~’rmin~ at 7:30p.m.
This
will
explore
the
grassroots
theological development as people
oppressed because of sexuafity and
liberated by the Good News.
FIRST Wednesday of each month at
7:30pro The church will gather
together for the mirdsfl~jr of Word
and Prayer just like "The Old Prayer
Time Meetings."
This is an

Here at the Silver Star

opportunity to ,explore a deeper
walk with Spirituafity as well as a
prayer~:~, i~up sx~sa~d :br6thers
in Christ. The’THIRDWednesday
of each month at .7:30 p.m., the
church will celebrate with an "Old
Fashion Gospel Sing Time." THe
church invites you to come celebrate
Worship Services are held ea~h
Sunday at 1 la:m. and Sunday
School is held each Sunday at
10a.m.
Family of Faith is located at 500 W.
A Street, Jenks, OK. Pastor is Rev.Marian Fink Minister of Care is
Rev. Pare Cro~ker.
For further
information call 918-298-4MCC

Family of Faith
MCC
Sundays 1 lam
Wednesdays
7:30 pm
500 W. A
Jenks, Ok.
918-296-4622

¯

Certified Public Accountant

ILet us help you with your monthly, quarterly
and annual tax and accounting needs.
9933 East 16th, Suite 104
Tulsa, OK 74128
(918) 663-9399
OKC (405) 942-1062

Thanks Tulsa
For Your Support
_

The Parachute
The Parachute

Page 21

�PRESS RELEASE

HIV TESTING
very Thursday veninB
Sponsored by:

Tulsa Oklahomans For
Human Rights
4154 S. Harvard, Suite H- 1
Tulsa, Oklahoma

Free and Anonymous
HIV Testing
Daytime testing by appt.
749-4194
For more information call
"HELPLINE’o
For and by ,but notlimited to the Gay/Lesbian
Community

and Bisexual

Tulsa Oklahomans for Human Rights
New in town7 Having Problems7 Need referrals7
The TOHR Gay Information line is here for you.t
We offer a variety of referrals - from legal and
medical to AIDS ¯
"
TOHR and bar Information

The helpline is staffed 6 days a week, 8pro to lOpm

743-GA YS

Personal Touch
5 Privat~ Masg~o Rooms
Toning Tables
M~ssage Classes
A¢cupressmv
ReHcxology

NOTICE
WE NOW HAVE A FULL TIME
MASSEUR
Call for Appointment

4944 S. 83rd E. Ave. Ste. D
1 Block East of Memorial off
51st
918-665-1155
Hours: Mon-Sat 9arn - 8pm

Coupon for 50% Off
One Hour
Massage
Expires 8/3/93

Re:Mazzio’s PizTa
July 7, 1993
Dear Editors:
Attached you will find a copy of an
internal newsletter from Mr. Craig
Bothwell who is the president of
Mazzio’s Pizza that I was able to get
a hold of from a good friend who
happens to be an employee-of
Mazzio’s. I thought that all your
readers should know what kind of
mentality Mazzio’s Pizza has in
Personally I won’t visit another
Mazzio’s or Kens Pizza unless they
release
an
apology
to
our
D.B.

A MESSAGE FROM
PRESIDENT
It could only happen to me. I went to
WashinL~on, D.C., to attend the
International Franchise Expo last
week and what timin!! It also
happened to be the weekend that
500,000+ gays and.lesbians gathered
to demonstrate for their eauses. I
notic~l that President Clinton was
conveniently out of town. Regardless
of your views on the subject, this
Okie wasn’t ready for what he saw.
I was very happy to leave our
nation’s capitol this trip
Mr. Crai8 Bothwell
Mazzio’s Pizza

Partners of _gays offered
insurance
HBO, the television entertainment
division of Time Warner In~., has

began offering health insurance on a
trial basis to domestic partner~ of its
gay and lesbian omployees.
HBO
made
the
move
after

considering it for a year, largely to
bring, gay and lesbian employee
compensation into party with that of
heterosexual
employees,
the
company employs about 1600 people.
Time Warner’s Hollywood studio
subsidiary, Warner Bros,, said that
boginnlnoo August 1, it too will extend
the health insuranee coverage it
provides for the families of its 3,500
employees to same-sex domestic
parlxIors.

Presidential Decision on
Military Called "A
Shattering Disappointment"
Washington, DC (~EGCM) Tim
McFeeley, Executive Director
of
the
Human
Rights
Campaign
Fund issued the
following
statement
in
response to the President’s
announcement
on the issue
of lesbians and gays in the
military:
"President Clinton’s decision
to accept the demands of the
Joint
Chiefs
to
require
homosexuals
serving in the
U.S. military to hide is a
shattering disappointment for
millions of gay, lesbian and
bisexual
Americans.
It
is
literally ridiculous to see the
lengths
to which
General
Powell,-Secretary Aspin, and
President Clinton will go to
ensure
that
bigoted
heterosexamls
never see or
hear a homosexual.
The
President
and
his
defenders
tell us that he.
wanted
to
lift
the
ban
entirely,
but that
political
realities
stand in the way.
When didn’t political realities
block the path of ending
discrimination "and extending
freedom and the American
dream
to
minorities
and
women in this country? We
elected, a leader and got a
barometer.
Great presidents
like Roosevelt, Truman and
Kennedy
alter
political
reality, rather than use it as a
reason to avoid the challenge
of change.
President
asked
the
.... The
nation’s
military leaders to
take six months to find a way
to lift the ban and ease the
process. Instead, our military
brass have spent the last six
months in a puerile pursuit of
punishing the President and
gay and lesbian patriots. They
should all resign in shame.

�SCANDALS
RUMORS
(RESTA URA NT)

TULSA’.S #1
UNISEX
BAR

Scandals, formerly Flamingo,s, is now under new ownership and management.
Scandals is undergoing a face-lift and incorporating a new line-up:
New DJ ~ Light show, a ladies night, and a new restaurant -Rumors (opening later in August), etc...
We are excited about the changed and hope you are too. At this time; we would like to thank our
valued regulars and those.ofyou who have not checked us out yet we extend a warm welcome and look
forward to seeing you.
Tbank.~ and Party Smart!
The entire staff and management of Sandals
Our Weekly line up:
Mondays: Closed (for the summer we will be closed on Mondays in celebration that the wicked queen
is gone.
Tuesdays: Movie Night: shows at 7:30,9:30 &amp;-l 1:30 free popcorn &amp; 50 cent hot dogs
Wednesdays: Techno-Rave Night
Thursdays: Starting Thurs.August 5th "ladies Night" All ladies - no cover
$1 Miller long necks, wine co61ers. Fr~ Poo!
o

Fridays &amp;.Saturdays: Dance, Dance, Dance : Party with 0ur new : in houSe DJ" Michael
The latest in lights.and/sound. °~
~
Sundays:Fabulous showtime with mc Sensuous_a lady of the 90’s_

August 6 &amp; 7
Black &amp; White Weekend
August 15 (Sunday)
Our First Annual .Miss Scandals
Applications can be picked up at the Bar
$25.00 Entry fee.
Winner will represent Scandals at Miss Gay
Tulsa Metroplex pageant to be held at
Scandals
An Evening of Pageantry with
Anita Richards &amp; Others
Limited advance reserved seating available
$10.00 includes free champagne
cocktail hour 8-9 General admission $5.00
no seating
August 27 &amp; 28 "Scandals Beach Party 93
Come in your Beach attire
August 29 MC Sensuous Special Beach
Party Performance

Located at: 33rd &amp; Yale .in Tulsa
Beside Git N Go
918-742-5262
Th~ Paxachut~

Page

August 20 &amp; 22nd
Super Porn Star
Chip Daniels

Showtime at 1 lpm
Chip has starred in numerous films
including Scorcher

�"As we in the gay community
learn to value ourselves, we’ll want
to take care of ourselves.
With
dignity and love we’re beginning
our own traditions of safer sex. "

A1WayS gro W1"ng...
...Always safe.

A Service oflhe Oasis Resource Center. To volunteer call 405-525-2437.

Reverend John Nicholas of Lighthouse MCC

"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source.Y

Occupation: Clergy
Age: 45
Hobbies: C &amp; W music, Sci-Fi, Asian Lit.,
and Comparative Religion

LETrER TO THE
EDITOR

Oklahoma with new copies made
available free of charge to people

makes this SO difficult for some
people,s? I have no answer for this

It’s an interesting life when you
spend your days plotting and
planning on how to keep your
heartfelt project r~mning if you are
running low on funds. You may
think I’m describing my court case
with the Oklahoma Judicial System
regardlnS losing custody of my
children this past year. I guess that’s
why I’m so sensitive in this area, but
-it isn’t my project that I’m writing
about’.
Other Options, Inc., a nonprofit
organization in our community,

anyone else interested in the book
I hope I’m not telling anyone
anything they don’t already know. If
I am being informative, GREAT!, I
think you should know and be proud
of another great service organization
available in our commnnity.
I guess, wlmt is really getting at me,

leading the attack and those gang
banging for fun don’t know either.
If you have the opportunity to see
Cookie Arbuelde or anyone else on
our community that gives their time
to others, whether it is in a

though,, is_ Other Options has

individuals or our comm~mity, tell

under attack by people who seem to
think ~hey need to undermine any
.organization or anyone who doesn’t
see things their way or according to
their
own
bias.
Malicious
condemnation is undeserving to those
who think with their own
and convictions. It is undeserving to
those who choose not to be a part of
the PC (pofitically correct) crowd in
our ctwamtmity. I have seen the
exceptional work done by many
people who offer their time and their
hard
work at Other Options as
volunteers including my son, Scott.
These are people as diverse as the
gay commtmity that work for a
common purpose with few waved
and many challenges. They are a vital
part of our community, not by sexual
orientation but by the caring,
compassionate, convicted way they
support those who have needs. Their
actions and their respect have been
witnessed by many of us in~ many
ways, including marching with us
and verbally defending us in our
ongoing battle of affirmation and

them thanks for what they do. There

running at high speed for 5 years.
Their purpose is to help those who
have tested H1V + or are diagnosed
with AIDS. Their services are
confidential, 24 hours a day, no
charge, without prejudice or bias.
Cookie Arbuelde works 365 days a
year, 24 hours per-day ff not at her
office or in her vehicle,
in her
mind. This organization provides
case management, counseling, and
social services to HIV + persons.
They facilitate the client’s access to
both medical and COmmUIlity based
services. There is a supplemental
emergeuey
fund
assist
with
medication, due to $500 - $700
worth of medication state and
federal aid programs don’t cover.
They match funds with churches and
businesses
for
rent,
utilities,
groceries, and transportation, etc.
and assistance as well. The two most
impressive things I have seen since
spelldin~ volunteer hours at their
modest office is the AIDS FOR
a resource dir~tory for the state of

earegivers role, political action, oranything that : benefits another

are many and I’m sure they need to
hear it more, plus we may enjoy the
good fcellng we get from saying it
more.

O ye critical ones, take heed: You
don’t have toagrce, you don’t have
to join anyone’s doctrine, and you
certainly have every right to not
participate something you don’t
believe in. I would he willing.to bet

there are those who don’t prescribe
to your way of thlnidng, yet they

five and let live all the same. We are
as diverse as the colors in the
rainbow,
thank
God.
My
grandmother, l~mily, rest her soul,

told me a very-simple solution to
this problem that I always need to
hear time’and time again, "If you
can’t think of something nice to say,

don’t say anything at alL"
Kemily Wallace

Oklahoma City, OK

acknowledgment,, whether we are
HIV+ or not:

I have read letters in this publication
as .well as others stating our need for
unity although we are diverse. Wbat
The Parachute

Page 24

BOOK. REVIEW

In Soul Snatcher, which is Grae’s
third novel, she takes uson a
journey of self discovery, deception
and insecurities. We enter into’the
life of Sharla, a sad and lonely
woman in search of her own power
yet completely unaware that she
poses any at all. She wanders into
the life of a woman named Men’dith
who could possibly he Sharla’s twin,
and is out of town. A twist of fate
throws
Sharla
into
Meridiths
apartment and into her lesbian
lifestyle with a group of warm and
caring lesbian wome~ Although she
knows she is wrong, she continues to
live Meridiths life and becomes so
convincing that she soon begins to
lose her own identity into this dream
world. Sharla discovers the joy and
excitement of women in a way that
she never realized was possible.
Until Meridith returns and Sharla
must either c~nfront her own life or
completely take over Meridiths.
The book flows in that standard
Camarin Grac style with odd twists
and turns. This book is not as
predictable as some of her work has
been and although c~ertain areas of
this novel were unrealistic, it
continued to provide an intcrestin~
plot and did not become
easy.to
figure out the ultimate outcome. If
you are a Camarin Grac fan then you
will surly want to read thi~ book If
you have not yet exposed your mind
to this author, I think you will f’md

�ATTENTION ALL LADIES

SPECIALS

Tired of trying to find a place to
park?
Does Gay Bashing Scare You?
Tired ,Of The Drugs?
I have the answer ......

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Fridays 9-11
Sat 9-12 $4.00 Cover
Domestic Bottle Boer

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A place off the strip, qui~t and

anyone who doesn’t want .,25
beer will not be staml~ &amp; can
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and maybe your life!

AUGUST 20th
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I

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Wells $2.25 Call $3.00
Regular Schnapps $1.00
Bottle Dora. Bcer $1.50

MEANT TO BE
FIT by Stephen Scott

K.A.’s 2024 N:W. 1 lnth - Open 7 days a week
Sunday August 8 - Ccl0bra~ Leo Birthdays - Free Food
Beer Bus 4-6 $3.00 / Bottle Beer $1.50
Water Gun Fight Outside
Sunda_v August 22- Cook
August Specials: Tues. and Sun. : $1.50 bottle beer all day
Men. Beer Bust 9-11 $3.00 / Wed. Bottle Beer $1.25 8-10

BIOGRAPHY OF.MARY-

CATHERINE
SMOTHERMON._ _
RAIN-OKI.AHO]VIA .... -

care

to

over

150

HIV-infe~ted
individuals, their families, and
,.~’~ve~.fl~ 49 ,clients are e~,tly

EXECUT/VE~D:IRE~OR .,.~.-

trai~i.~-sessions are helff sever~
times a year in various, parts of the

Following the diagnosis of AIDS in
her son, Kirt, in 1987 Mary
Catherine
Smoth~imon
became
active in AIDS Support Programs
(ASP) in Oklahoma City. She served
on the ASP Board of Directors and
on the Advisory Council for the
Oklahoma
Center
for
AIDS
Resources
and
Education

state. A Coordinator~ based in Tulsa,
oversees the program in the Eastern
half of the state while MS.
Smothermon concentrates on the
needs of Western Oklahoma.
Ms. Smothermon and her husband,
Skip, who teaches High School
Geometry and Physics at Midwest
City High School live in Edmond.
They have four surviving children
and one grandchild.

(OK-CAR~). She is certWzd by the
Oklahoma State Department of
Health as an HIV Educator and
-Counselor, is a member of the.
Oklahoma
Conference
United
Methodist AIDS Task Force, and
serves on an international steering
committee

whleh

is

workin~

to

develop spiritual support programs
worldwide.
Ms. Smothermon is a Registered
Emergency Medical Tevlmician and
was Coordinator of Ambulance
Services in Chandler, Oklahoma,
until the death of her son in 1989
when she resigned to work full-time
in.the field of HIV and AIDS.
Since RAIN was established in
Oklahoma in February 1990, more
than 16,207 people have been

educated

through

program
schools,
settings,

in faith communities,
businesses, health care
and community groups.

a

continuing

RAIN has trained and is supervising
(as.of 05/30/93) 61 Care Teams
throughout the state. These teams
encompass more than 650 volunteers
and have given practical support and

When we hear the word, or better
yet, seemuscle, our hearts usually
skip a beat! But, what, really, is the
reality of muscle?
A muscle is a group of muscle fibers
that are bound together and work

which

occurs

when

lowering

ahand-held weight from the shoulder)
is an eccentric contraction.
Muscle fibers have their own energy
area; each cell contains energy
sources which chemically change to
produce energy. The energy sources
are carbohydrate, fat and protein.
The process of chemically changing
these food-stuffs may occur in the
body of the muscle cell or in a
sp~oiaiized cell structure called
mitochondlron that aerobic chemical

changes occur.
Muscle ceils, which are also calle~
muscle fibers, differ considerably in
length. Some my he many

centimeters in length, but the largest
fibers are less than 0.1 millimeter in
diameter.

together to develop muscle tension.
. ~ ..mus0~s,:~..,~u~:d" :in ,; ph.y~?M:

" Within each, muscle-cell are hundreds

~. ~y ~-a~-at-~

myofib~s wMch con~ a ~

ends.to?~the~.~bones of the skeleton,
When these muscles contract-they
pull on bones. Skeletal muscles
make up nearly half of your body
weight. There are over 20 major
skeletal muscle in your body. Two
other types of muscle contract and
generate tension, but do not pull on
bones. Cardiac muscle Vpropels
blood from the heart’s chambers and
smooth
muscle
in
contraction
typically
constricts
blood
and
respiratory vessels and walls of

digestive organs.
If a muscle shortens when it
contracts this process is called an
isotonic contraction. If a muscle
contracts but does not change in

length , this process is an isometric
contraction. A contraction of the
muscle lengthens (such as a
lengthenin~ contraction of the biceps

enucentration of contractile, proteins

which regulate contraction; ’ It is the
action of these contractile and
regulatory p~:oteins which bring about
movement.
The only way to increase these
proteins--iS to do physically stressful
work or exercise; the stress is the
stimulus for the muscle cell to make
more protein. When you lift weights
or otherwise exercise to increase

your muscle you increase the number
of myofibrils within each fiber.
When you lose muscle mass because
of physical inactivity, myofibrils are
lost. There is vidcnce that trainln£
may. increase fiber (cell) numbers

due to a ""splitting"" of existing
fibers.
myofibrils

The gain or loss of
with trainin£ or not

training,

respectively,

is

well

documented.

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Page 25

�ACLU BIENNIAL
CONFERENCE STIRS
ENTHUSIASM IN
OKLAHOMA DELEGATION
The lovely city of Atlanta, Georgia
served as meeting place for hundreds
of Civil Libertarians this year during,
the
1993
ACLU
Biennial
Conference. ACLU of Oklahoma
was represented by three Board
Members: Mark
Henri~ksen, Dr.
Larry Prater and William ~linkle.
The aWdiate staff, consisting of
Joann Bell, Lueille McCord and
Michael Camfield, also attended the
conference, which lasted from Ju~e
16th through June 20th.
Three
themes
permeated
the
gathering thi~ year: "what we’ve
done, what. we’re doing and where
we’re going." ACLU National Board
President Nadine Strossen and
Executive Director Ira Glasser both
gave powerful opening addresses to
the assembled delegates.
They
challenged everyone to play more
active part in moving forward the
fight for the Bill of Rights into the
Twenty-First Century. Both of these
leaders made themselves available
for conversation and participated
actively in the featured panel
discussions and workshops.
Board Representatives-and Staff
from ACLU/OK took part in
seminars covering a cariety .of issues
and organizational strategies. The
plight of Urban America and the
changing role of A CLU were two
major topics addressed at the
conference.
In
addition,
Church/State Separation.
Cenorship, Gay and Lesbian Rights,

Bniiding on his favorite theme of
’~’, Reverend-Jackson ask~
ACLU’s helping re~laimi~ Urb~m
America. He cited past struggles in
which ACLU-has worked to end
diserimln~tion, pmtlcularly in the
South. He spoke about ending
dis~rimi~tion

Lesbians.

agai~xst

Gays

and

Reverend Jackson also

po~ted out that we are experiencing
a shift to the Right by those people
who
have
established
their
credentials as champions of Civil
Rights and Civil Liberties. He used
President Clinton as the prime
example of this ideological "caving
how important it is for is to "lead
" President Clinton, rather than allow
ourselves to be led by him" Jesse
Jackson kept the. ACLU crowd
spellbound for well over an hour

Although
there
were
many
utilitarian aspec_ts in the Oklahoma
delegation’s participation in the
1993 Biennial, the most importan~t
gains were nmde by meet~n~
like-minded people from across the
nation who are eogaged in the same
s~s wlfich occur in Oklahoma.
Canvcntion delegate Dr. Larry
Prater found out that the ACLU of
Georgia has a Gay and Lesbian
chapter, and he will be investigatin~
the possibility of formin~ a similar
chapter within Oklahoma ACLU
affiliate. The positive effect on
morale is somcthinS that can be
brought back from such a meeting
and used to great advantage loeally!
ACLU
1411 Classen, Suite 318
Oldahpm~ City. OK 7~I06

Binkle

and

The American Civil Liberties Union Pro~ects

Your R ~,hLs of Free Speeck, Press and
Religion.
.~The American ~ L~bertles Union Helps
~uarantee You Equality a~dDue Process.
emoer ur Making a Gontribution.
.Write t~. ACLU0132 ~st 43rd Street, ~ew
mrl~ ITk" 100~6.

The Parachute

Page 26

Even if you and your partner have
complete horoscopes with .every
planet included, you’re still unlikely
to get good advice from an astrologer
who uses standard methods because
(s)he just won’t be looking for the

right stuff
buildln~ and maintenan~ of a good
relationship."
"SAGITFARIUS
always open for new adventu~."
If you read the personals for
entertainment, or if you’re playing
the mating game yourself, you’ve
seen ads like these. Astrological.
"Love Sign," books are everywhere,
from
library
shelves
to
the
Milli~n~ of people rely on astrology
to guide them in their seareh for a
lnsti~ love; but if you are Gay or
Lesbian, you won’t fmd " the
information you need.
All astrology is based on the
information gathered by astrologers
who have spent the past four
thousand years studying hnm~n
nature. Since few astrologers have
studied homosexuality, all of the
information that exists is based on
relationship
between men
and
women. Unless you actually have an
_answer to that eternal question, "So,
who
plays
the
man?,"
your
relationship is different from the
kind of alliance describe~l by popular
astrology.
This doesn’t mean that Gays and
Lesbians can’t use astrology to
explain their love lives. People are
people and love is love and, to some
extent, the rules are th~ same for
everybody. But, where Gay and
Lesbian relationships differ from the
majority, the rules of astrology must
change ~-reflect these differences,

share your Sun Sign with one twelfth
of all the people on Earth.
A "Gemini" might be a radical
Lesbian.separatist; a "Gemini could
just as easily be the macho leader of
your local nee=Nazi club. Ac~3ordin~
to Sun Sign astrology, both of these
people would ideally mated to
Aqnarian Ronald Reagan. Please.
How mueh sense does this ma~?
While itis true that each Sun Sign is
like a tribe whose members all have
some traits "m common, if you want
to use astrology to describe each
member of the clan as a unique
individual, at the minimum, you have
to use the entire solar system to do it.
Certain planets are more imporfamt
than others in love relationships. For
example, the San describes the ego
and what the person is llke .on the
inside; the Moon describes how .an
individual responds on an emotional
level. Venus shows the capacity for
love and affection; Mars reflects the
sexual style and Satm~ shows the
ability
for
longevity
and
commitment.

]Vlichael

Camfield distinguished themselves
and
ACLU/OK
by
presentin~
hilarious
show-stopping
musical
numbers. One of the highlights was a
segment performed by C~mfleld
entitled, "General Colin PowelPs
Nightmare." Camfield, belting out
altered lyrics to .the tune of "I Enjoy
Being a Gir!’, appeared onstage with
a ridiculously large green boa in a
mockery of the military’s equally
ridiculous mi~trt~ of Gay soldiers.
It brought the house down. "It’s nice
to be from.the afVdiate-that has the
stars of the show," said ACLUIOK
Executive Director Joann Bell after
seeing the Freedom Follies.
Keynote speaker for the Biennial
Conference
Banquet
was
the
Reverend Jesse Jackson. His address
was an incendiary blend of history,
current analysis and a call to action.

Kimberly Y.
"AQUARIUS
seeks
special
friendship maybe more.* TAURUS

written about. Sun Sign compatibifity,
Male or female, Gay or straight, you

Students Rights, Capital Punishment,
AIDS related issues, Women’s
Rights and Police Misconduct were
all exhaustively treated in 8~rminar
Sessions." Various
tralnin~
and
discussion groups treated internal
afTdiate
organizational
subjects,
including
Public
Education,
Fund-raising,
Lay
Leadership,
Litisation and Legislation.
The 1993 Freedom Follies, a musical
send-up recent events, was presented
to a full house audience of Civil
Libertarian comedy lovers. This
recently established tradition is
produced by a handful of participants
with no budget and limited.rehearsal
time. These constraints did _ not
¯hinder anyone’s-enjoyment, however.
William

DOES ~ SUN StoNE ON
YOUR .LOVE?

In the symbolic language of astrology
everythin~ means somethin2. In fact,
everythi~ has several layers of-

relationship issues, we have to dig
even deeper into the symbolism.
Besides being the ruler of ego, the
Sun is also the representative of men
and all things nmsculine in nature.
The Moon is not only .emotions; it
also rules women and everything
~ essentially feminine. Venus is the
"feminine* urge to love and to be
loved; Mars is the "masculine" urge
to desire and to conquer.
If you go to° an astrologer who uses
the usual rules, (s)he will be
for good Sun/Moon and Venus/Mars
contacts. Remember that standard
astrology looks at male.female
relationships;
standard
so
astrologers look at things that
indicate a good balance between
men and women.
But, since Gays and Lesbians don’t
participate in the battle of the sexes,
these astrological
relationships
seldom exist. What we need instead
are good Sun/Mars
or male
relationships for men; and positive
Moon/Venus. or female contacts for
women. In other words, in Gay and
Lesbian astrology, we look first for
indications of a good relationship
that is either essentially masculine
or essentially mascnli~_, essentialIy
femlni~, in nature

comp~ibility--- "-comparisons
between
Venus
(female) and Mars (male)~ But,= in
Gay and Lesbian relationships, we
have to add a completely new
component--the
planet
Uranus,
representative of all things that go
against the grain of society; thus the
official envoy of all Gay and
Lesbian issues.
Is it passion you desire? Look for
good contacts between Mars and
Uranus. For. that cuddly, warm and
fuzzy feeli~ positive combinations
of Venus and Uranus are what you
want.
You won’t find the planet Uranus
mentioned in most books about
relationship astrology because it’s
only significant in a love to sexual
union that defies the rules of

society.

continued on pg. 27

�DISCIPLES ELECT PRO
GAY GENERAL MINISTER
AND PRESIDENT
In a positive turn of events, the
General Assembly of the Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ) have
elected a pro gay General Minister
and President. Dr. Richard Harem
was elected to take the helm of the
1.6. million member main
denomination with over 90% of the
vote. Approximately 10,000 persons
gathered in St. Louis July 15-20,
1993 for the biennial meeting, this
year held in conjunction with the
General Synod of the United Church
of Christ.
At the last assembly, held in Tulsa
in 1991, Dr. Michael IOnammon was
narrowly defeated for the GMP spot.
Kinammon, Dean of Lexington
Theological Seminary, is higldy
vucal in his support of ordination of
openly gay and lesbian clergy, which
is believed to be the source of his
defeaL While Harem has perhaps not
spoken as loudly, his stated positions
on gay and lesbian clergy have been
totally supportive down the line.
Also passed was a gay civil rights
resolution by a 2-1 margin. The
resolution stated in part, "that the
General Assembly encourage and
support the enactment of laws at all
levels of government which will
ensure the civil rights and civil
liberties of all persons, regardless of
sexual orientation, ancL..to advocate,
SUl~port and maintain the passage of
....such ~ws, and work to change
°die’minatory laws, policies and
procedures where they exist". This is
~. a. strong ¯restatement ’-of~ -w-church
FOLLIES REVUE, INC.
SPONSORING*AN
EVENING OF CABARET*
Follies Revue, Inc. will sponsor "An
Evening Of Cabaret" August 26, 27,
&amp; 28 1993 at escargot (formerly
Harrington’s Department Store), 8th
Street and South Main, Downtown
Tulsa. Follies Revue Incorporated
five years ago with sole purpose of
presenting
and
entertainment
program with the goal of raising
funds for Tulsa area agencies that
provide direct care to persons living
with AIDS or HIV. Previous
fundraising efforts have resulted in a
distribution of nearly $60,000 to
local agencies.
-Celebrating. five years of successful
fundralsing efforts, the Follies
Revue Board of Directors has
changed the variety Revue format of
previous years to one of Cabaret
Entertainment. Each evening of the
Cabaret Event doors will open at
7:00 p_~m. for beverage service.
Dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m.
and dinner entertainment will. be
Pare Van Dyke and a Tulas Jazz
Trio. At-approximately 8:30 p.m.
each evening the Follies performers
will entertain with a variety of vocal
arrangements and styles.
Tulsa’a finest entertainers will
perform song and dance numbers
ranging from Jazz sets to Broadway
selections
including
vocal
performances of music from decades
Spanning the 1940’s to 1990’s. Each
evening will be~ hosted by Master Of
Ceremonies Melanie Fry. Long time

Tulsan’s will ,remember Miss Fry’s
performances in The Joyce Martel

resolution passed in 1977.
In a pre assembly event, Gay,
Lesbian and Affirming Disciples
"GLAD" Alliance held their annual
meeting at Washington University in
St. Louis. GLAD members also met
in partnership with their United
Church of Christ counterparts, the
UCC Coalition for Lesbian and Gay
Concerns. The two groups held both
separate and joint meetings in a
celebration as "Partners for the Glory
of God". During the GLAD business
meeting, Tulsan Kelly Kirby was
elected to the Alliance Council, the
steering body for the US and Canada.
Submitted by Kelly Kirby

MEXICAN I ESTAUI ANT

continued from pg. 26

On me otlaer hand, you won’t find
an important Gay or Lesbian
relationship
without
Uranus
contacts because,
without the
implied challenge to society’s rules

of conduct the relationship wouldn’t

6519

FPEE

MUNCHIE HOUP
4-6 ON THE PATIO
2 FOP I DOMES IC
2 FOP I IMPOPI"S
La Roca II
409 W. Reno

exist in the first place.
We at The Emerald Rainbow have
been-gathering data for years,
working to define the rules of Gay
and Lesbian astrology. Our study
had revealed some fascinating
observations
about
both
the
practical and the spiritual issues
that confront Gays and Lesbians.
We’ll be passing this information
on to you in The Parachute in the
months to come.
To further our research on Gay and
Lesbian Astrology, we need more
data. We gather this information in
the form of surveys and personal
charts for individuals, children,
relationships and businesses. If you
would like to participate, we are
offering’our services to you at great
discounts. Call or write for details,
The Emerald Rainbow, 95 Spring
St., Eureka Springs, AR 72632,
501-253-5445.

La Roca III
7550 N. May

Contact Zena at 840-1968 for information on free after-work office party

restaurants and clubs as well as the
Greenwood Jazz Festival, Mayfest,
and many other events. Follies
Cabaret performers include the Green
Country Cloggers, Isabell Estes,
Patrick Hobbs, Larry Gray, John
Orsalak, and Onita Prichard to name
a few of the cast memberS.
Patron’s evening performances will
be held on August 26, 1993. Tickets
are $35 per person, or $240 for a
table of eight dinner guest&amp; Tho
August 26th a~mi~sion includes valet
parking,
dinner,
wiI~,
and two
distinctively
different
cabaret
performances. A cash bar will be
open throughout the evening.
Follies Revue had provided a method
for many Tulsa area residents and
businesses to participate in helping
those who are living with AIDS and
HIV. In addition to ticketed events,
souvenir programs are provided, and
advertising is sold to supplement
funds raised. Iris Studenny is
chairing advertising sales, and can be
contacted at The Follies Revue
address, P.O. Box 52862, Tulsa,
Oklahoma
74152,
for
further
information.
Tulsa artist Kelly Vandiver has
created the 1993 -poster image using
Lisa tiger as the artists subject. Miss
Tiger who is HIV positive has
-become a major force in educating
the Native American population
relevant to the AIDS Epidemic. 1993
posters will be available for purchase
at each of the entertainment evenings,
as well as after the event at Frame Of
Mine Gallery, which retailed the
1992
poster created by
Mr.,
Vandiver.

A .~Friend Helping Friends Club"
was established three years ago to
enlist
special
donations.
The
following categories and what the
contribution provides is as follows:
Benefactor
$1,000.00 &amp; up
Patron
500.00
Donor
250.00
Supporter
150.00
There is also a "FRIEND" category
in which any amount donated under
$150.00 is accepte(L All participants
are liste~i in the souvenir program.
Eleven Tulsa are agencies have
requcsted funding from the 1993
Follies Revue event. The requests
submitted total $35,000, .which has
been accepted by the Follies Revue
Board of Directors as the 1993
Fundraising Goal. Agencies who
will receive donations from this
event include:
Hospice of Green Country, Planned
Parenthood,
Visiting
Nurse
Association of Tulsa, Catholic
Charties,
Interfaith
AIDS
Miniatries, Tulsa Oklahoman’s for
Human Rights,
HIV Resource
Consortium,
Shanti-Tulsa,
Inc.,
AIDS Coalition for Indian Outreach,
R.A.I.N. Oklahoma, and Sandra J.
Hill, M.S.
T11 services provided by the eleven
recipent agencies include housing,

nursing care, counseling, anonymous
testing,
medication
funds,
storehouse supplies, and volunteer
support. CoBectively, the agencies
represented provide a full range of
care services for those living with
AIDS.
~t
statistics
account
for
300,000 persons in the United States
who have AIDS. Women are now
13% of the total number who are

infected. One out of four newly
tested persons is female. Of those
testing positive the adolescent age
group is split 50/50 male and
female. Persons in their early
twenties are positive at a rate of 2 to
1 male to female. Of those in their
early twenties who are testing
positive for HIV infection, most
were infected in their adolescent
yoars,
Oklahoma has 1,600 cases of AIDS
with additional 1,500 who have
tested HIV positive. HIV positive
numbers are considered low as
those reflect only those who have
voluntarily tested. The State of
Oklahoma is one of the leading
states in teenage pregnancies and
sexually
transmitted
diseases,
making
the
Follies
Revue
Fun&amp;aising effort especially critical
to area residents, and particularly
the adolescent population.
Tickets for all Follies Revue events
may be ordered by mail. All
requests should be accompanied by
a check and mailed to Follies
Revuo, Inc. P.O. Box 52862, Tulsa,
OK 74152. After August 1, tickets
may be purchased through Tulsa
area Dillard’s Department Stores, or
can be ordered by telephone
1-800-654-9545.
Dillard’s
will
accept Master Card, Visa, American
Express, Discover, Carte Blanch,
Diners Club, or Dillards Credit
Cards as well as cash or payment by
check. Seating is limited for this
intimate evening and all patron’s arc
encouraged to order tickets as soon
as possible.

The Parachute

Page 27

�AIDS FOR AIDS BY:COOKIE ARBUCKLE - .DIRECTOR OF nOTHER OPTIONS~ OKLAHOMA CITY, OK.

MAXIMUM SECURITY
PRISON AND HIV
I have been 3 significant places
(events) in this life time - Places that
have radically changed how I think;
feel and act.
The first one was during 2
near=death experiences. I "went" to a
place as close as heaven as I will
ever experience here on earth. More
peaceful than any I have ever felt
before and so much so that I did not
want to return. It has shaped my life.
The
second
place
was
a
demonstration - earth shaking in its
magnitude and depth, a non-violent,
civil disobedience led by Martin
Luther S:i~ in Selma, Alabama. In
the summer of 1964 I was one of
several middle class, white women
who volunteered to drive people
from airport to the march site in
Mississippi and Alabama for a
peaceful demonstration with Martin
shot at, I came away radically
changed. I learned I must look at life
and its choices through the eyes of
others.
Abraham
Lincoln
said
something to the effect that ff there
is any distinction of equality
between peoples
it is not
democracy! That gave my life
further meaning.
The last place was a maxim~lm
security prison. That place was as
close as hell as I want to get. I feel
like putting that title in capital
letters, underlining and then boldlng
just to emphasize how strongly I feel
about that incident. Fortunately, I
have always been a visitor and not
an inmate.

Maximum Security Prison - there for
a reason. There are signs up in the
hallway to remind you of that reason.
"We are here to protect the public,
the employees and the offenders’. 24
hour surveillance for prisoners.
Generally there is no parole from
maximum security. And it rcally
feels like US and THEM, even to me
as a visitor.
As I entered the prison for the first
time, my normal, hopeful and
full-of-life self ebbed away within a
few hours. I came away sobered and
empathic to the despondence and
hopelessness many must feel, staff as
well as prisoners. I know we must
have a place for violent offenders
and must have special people to staff
these places. However, humane
treatment by humane people is
critical and necessary.
Non-violent offenders - what a set of
words. They are meaningful words
and I question allowing non-violent
to be in Macalister prison. Not
necessary. Then why are they there?
Those with HIV I really question,
they surly do not belong there. They
do not meet the criteria in any way,
shape or form. When I hear from
prisoners in maximum security with
HIV, I shudder!
We, as the public, tolerate the system
and, as long as we do that it will
remain as it is. Take warning. There
but for the grace of God I go. Those
are sobering words. Many of us are
"offenders" of a kind and have not
been "caught". Be tolerant of your
brothers and sisters.
I truly believe AIDS is the very
worst disease that any one human
being must have to endure. The
devastation to the body of a

living with AIDS is a war - an
incredible onslaught of disease after
disease invasion. The progression
from diagnosis of AIDS to death is
a "short walk through the park’,
regretfully. The average life span
varies from men to women and from
east coast to west coast, etc, but.still
remains an average of 3 years.
In a maximum security prison, that
"short walk through the park" is
hell.
I have been an integral part of the
AIDS pandemic in Oklahoma State
for many years. There is nothing out
there new for the HIV person,
nothing in the World Conference
that has made me stop and take
notice, no "have you heard about
that’, that I want to share.
Life is precious and life is short for
those living with HIV/AIDS.
The best news I have heard in many
years comes from a man cadled Cad
Hobson. Senator Hobson penned a
bill that makes me know he is one of
those persons
to "risk it’. There
aren’t many of them. I feel
Representative Jeff Hamilton is one
of them. IF NO ONE RISKS
ANYTHING, NO ONE WINS, NO
ONE LOSES AND NO ONE
GROWS.
Thank you,
Senator
Hobson - Your willin_mless risk for
an unpopular.group will give Lhem
the hope to grow.
Cal Hobson’s Senate bill # 565 will
release 500 non-violent offenders as
the prisons systems begins to
expand. Keep in mind they will not
be released without criteria, without
specific rules and regulations. There
will be lots of chocks ~and balances.

The best of this news is dear to..~ny
heau~ Non-violent offenders who

LEATHER
We are pleased to announce the
Upcomin~- ]~rtr.

Oklahoma

Leather

1994 contest will be held October
15, 16, and 17-in Oklahoma City at
Levi’s, 2807 N.W. 36th. Weekend
packet and contestant information
may be obtained by writing to:
Mr. Oklahoma Leather 1994
P.O. Box 76146
Oklahoma City, OK 73147,
or calli~ (405) 525-5297
Posters will be mailed by July 30,
1993.

Thanks OKC

For Your Support
The Parachute

1221 N.W. 50th OKC, :.,.405-843 I722
Tuesdays Bud Beer Bust 8pm
igh(
Fridays Tony Sinclare &amp; .theGifls

The Parachute

Page 28

arc HIV positive and fulfill the
critieria will be included on this
"list’. Thank God!
To you in prison - however you get
thi~ word, have hope now. There is
a light at the end of the tunnel.
Always hope. Please keep your
noses clean when you do get out
because ff this works others will be.
able to have a "second chance" too.
God bless you.
Director
Other Opitions, Inv.

.ADVANCE CHRISTIAN
MINISTRIES
ADVANCE Christian Ministries in
Dallas, Texas has announced the
dates for it’s annual Conference
which is to be held in Houston,
Texas. The conference will begin
with a
Pastors’ &amp; Minister’s
Fellowship on October 18th and go
through Wednesday October 20th.
October 20th will begin the *school
of The Prophets" a teaching
of
workshops and seminars on ,
worship, music, finances, ethics, etc.
Friday October 22nd will begin the
ADVANCE weekend of services.
The theme for ADVANCE 93 is
"THE
BLOOD
OF
JESUS,
REDEEMING, RESTORING, AND
EMPOWERING’.
ACM is a group of independent
churches working with but no
limited to the Gay and Lesbian~_~.~
Community, throughout the United

States,.=
. and~. with a ministry-in gl0bal

ADVANCE

has

Parachute and ask that those who
called earlier in the year should call
back as due to moving the Ministry
Office, .some phone numbers and
addresses were lest.
You may
contact
them
by
214-522-1520.
Reservations and Registration is
required for ADVANCE weekend.

�Habana Inn Comp’lex
your home Away from ~omel

¯

lhe H abana Inn
A Fine Lodging Establishment
180 Guest Rooms

Poolside Rooms

Two Pools

Suites

Cable T.V.

Featuring

~¯ breakfast &amp; luncli served daily 9am-Spml
¯ nigltTly .specials available 5 pro- 1 0pml
¯ aher-I~ours br~kfast friday &amp; saturday nigl~lsl

GUSHERS BAR

cuRRENT, classic Arid p~ogRessive dA~vce a~usic,,

bee.~ busts, special shows &amp; evenTsl

Finishline
Live DJ, country dancing, beer bt~sts
West end, Habana Inn Complex

2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY

(405) 524-JRED

OKLAHOMA CIT~, OK 73112
(405) 524-5733

2200 NW 39 Expy, Oklal~oma City, OK 73112
C~ll fort ~ares ,eNd irvfonm~rio~vl
Reservations Only

(405) 528-2221

1-.800-988-2221
The Parachute

Page 29

�LOV~E$ PiE AND
TH£
SH IE’S RUN
0PP ~iTH

))

I~Ul" I’M .5 LOW L.Y .STF~KT/N~
TO 5£E. THAT .SO~F~ Ti~P~S
A DOOK CLOSE

LOY E.

The Parachute

Page 30

AWi

W 0

�HELP WANTED

PERSONALS

Sales people , high c~mmi~sion plus
expenses, call The Parachute at:
316-651-0500 or 1-800-536-6519

Miscellaneous
Women’s Creatiw Expression’5%
Gay/Lesbian Discount
648 W. Dickson St.
Fayetteville, Ark. 501-442-5598

WICttITA/MEN
GWM, 25 HIV +. Seeks GWM 21-35
for friendship and possible relaitousip.
Serious replies only.
Send photo,
phone. Penpals welcome. Box 122
(~WM mid 20’s, seeks same for
discreet fun and friendship, send photo
and letter. Box 119

Newton Kansas
K.A.’s Women’s bar, oldest beer bm
in OKC, 2024 N.W. 11th, speak to
Janlce or Micbele at 405-272-9833

~penly, can also be a slave to anyone
:oes, will answer all. Box 124

For Rent

WICHLTA/WOMEN

Roommates
serving
Wichita
Community for 5 y~ars, Landlords
van rvgis~ without any advenw fec.
Tenants ,may register: as little as
$15.00 1529 W. Douglas 262-8444

GWF 33, fun seeking, femini~e
thletic and professional. Looki~,~fo~
aWF 25-40 who likes life and a good
woman. Me mv mile, ~ ~photo. Box
[26

Wanted: Lo~tiona where gays may
share housing in Wivhita area. Call
or stop by Roommates 1529 W.
Douglas 316-262-8~.~.~.

Hutchinson

Great Bend Kansas
aWF mid 30’s Professional secic
mine for stable relationship no drugs,
racial drinker only. I enjoy sports,
C&amp;W music, sharing quet times and
having fun. Box 123

GWM, lloking for mate. 47, look
~and a~t younger, henesg, romantic,
,

loyal.

Slim

for same 25-47.
~os~ther. Box 27

NOTICE

GWM, late 20’s~ seckln~ 8wm for ftm
~nd friendship. Box 105

"Free personal ads.
Worldwide
newsletter,
newsletter
cbeap.
Newsletter fr~ to HIV+, AIDS,
Direct or disereet ads.
SASEto
OWOM,#ll0, 116 Tustin, Anaheim
CA 92807

GWM, early 20’s seeks others my age
For fun only.
Must be safe and
discreet. Box 130

TULSA/WOMEN
;WF, 33years old, like.classical music,
md the tbeator, s~kin~ gwf, 30-40
who enjoys lff~. Box 106

~

Girl You Better Work...

thOSe dialin~ fingers (or toes) an,
plac~ your free personal ad (50 word
minimum)
with
Single
Tree
International!(918)582-2952 (24hrs)

T.V.- wants friends to go out wil

FOR SALE

~=.~

TULSA/MEN

build,

Lets gel

Deadline for Sept, Issue
~"~A~l~t~20

TOPEKA/MEN
3WM late 20’s seek GWM 20-35 fol
and friendship .must. bo~liser~t~
~end photo_please. Box 120

TO PLACEA PERSONAL AD:
Name

Address

OKC/MEN
[lave home, need mate, country living,
~reater OKC, GWM 50, s/p hair,
tevis-eamping-cenoeing,
gardening.
Seeks long term partner. Box 117
~WM, 29 looking for other gwm’S my
for friendship and fun, Box 108
Gay male seekln~ male couples foz
~an and friendship, mid 20’s. Send
Photo’s Box 109

To Place a Classified Ad:
Send written ad with check
or. money order to :
ParachuteP.O{Box 11347,
Wichita,, Ks. 67214
(25 word limit)
$6.00 per insertion
insertions

DKC GWM 44 Proffessional vex"
~rily, like smooth man 18-30 to travel
~ith and be my sugar boy, this summer
md beyoncL Please sen dphoto and
~hone. OKC area please. Box 125

OKC WOMEN
]WF, 33 years old, like theate~r~ and
[Lomantic evenings for two.- Secki~
~WF 25-35 who enjoys the f’mer things
life. Box .118

FINAILY, LONG DISTANCE
CALLING FOR GAYMERICA

City.
State
Zip
Type or print your ad, with no more than 25 words. Send
with this coupon and $6.00 to:The The Parachute
Attn:Personals
P.O. Box 11347, Wichita, Kansas 67202

Your responses will be mailed to you when they are
received.
insertions requested ($6.00 per insertion)

TO RESPOND TO A PERSONAL AD
I. Write your response, place it in an envelope, and seal the
envelope. Do not put your return address on the envelope.
Be sure to include a way for the advertiser to contact you.
2. On the sealed envelope, write the advertisers box number
in lower letter comer and affix postage.
3. Place the sealed envelope and $2.00 inside a 2nd envelope,
seal and address to: The Parachute, ArCh:Personals, P.O. Box
11347, Wichita, Ks.67202 It will be forwarded to

Call anywhere in the
from your home-just like
calling card to use a¢ ray fi
now. Customer service and
are available 24 hours a

We provide a
like you have
operators
you have now.

WE ~ ADMIT, THERE IS A DIFFI~B~N~E...
OFFICIAL LONG DISTANCE
TH[ 1993/dAl[OI O~ ~iSHINETOH

advertiser. Please enclose $2.00 for each reply.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
AD WILL RUN ONLY FOR NUMBER OF INSERTIONS PAID FOR, UNLESS RENEWED
YOU MUST BE 18 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER TO USE THIS SERVICE, YOU CANNOT PLACE
AN AD FOR ANOTHER PERSON.
ALL ADDRESSES OR PHONE NUMBERS RECEIVED ARE CONFIDENTIAL AND ARE NOT
RELEASED TO ANYONE.

2% of your long distance
charges aredonated to the
gay, lesbian, bi and AIDS
groups of ~Q~lr choice_,

You can save up to 25% off
your long distance charges
compared to the rates of
AT&amp;T, MCI or Sprint.

MAKE THE SWITCH TODAY

1-800-546-0556
The Parachute

Page 31

�Friday, August 6th

( ushers

at the Habana Inn Complex
Oklahoma City
General Admission $7.50
Special Seating $10.00
Special Guests
1992 Entertainer of the Year

Amazing Grace
1993 Midwest
Entertainer of the Year

Jacqulyn DeVaroe
cALL: (405) 525-0730

a preliminary pageant to

National Entertainer of the Year

�</text>
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        <element elementId="1">
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            <elementText elementTextId="5614">
              <text>The Parachute Directory&#13;
Wichita Kansas(5!~)&#13;
Buddies Country 4000 S. Broadway 529-4953&#13;
Our Fantasy 3201 S. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
South Forty 3201 S. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
R &amp; R Brass Rail 2828 E. 31st 684-9009&#13;
T~Room 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327&#13;
Adult Entree 220 E. 21st 832-1816&#13;
Plato’s 1306’E. Harry St. 269-9036&#13;
T.B.’s 1515 S. Oliver 688-5343&#13;
Camelot Cinema 1519 S. Oliver 688-5343&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 3721 S. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 7805 W. Kellogg&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 2809 N. Broadway&#13;
Adult Enlree’ South 8025 S. Broadway&#13;
Circle Cinema 2570 S. Seneca&#13;
Harbor Restaurant 3201 S. Hillside 6gl-2746&#13;
Lassens Bar &amp; C_rdll 155 N. Market 263-2777&#13;
The Upper Crust 7038 E Lincoln 683-8088&#13;
Orgaizizations~Bmdne~e.e&#13;
Wich. Sedg.Co. Hlth Dept. 1900 E. 9th 268-8441&#13;
W.ichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786&#13;
The.Lesbian Celebration 683-7561&#13;
PFlagg 687-4666&#13;
Gay Information line 269-0913&#13;
Visions &amp; Dreams 3143 Maple 942-6333&#13;
Watermark Books 149 N. Broadway 263-3007&#13;
Queen Ann’sLace 733-4075&#13;
Dr. Laura Shook - D.C. 700 N. Market 267-6522&#13;
Roommates 262-8444&#13;
Paradise Antiques 430 E. Harry 269-4411&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center 651-0603&#13;
First Unitarian Church 684-3481&#13;
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633&#13;
Junotion City, Kansas (913)&#13;
After Dark Video 1206 Grant&#13;
Lawrene. Kansas (913)&#13;
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Services of Kansas 864-3091&#13;
Manhattan Kansas (913)&#13;
Flint Hills AUiance, . P.O. box 2018, 539-6275&#13;
MCC Mamtmtten 913-271-8431&#13;
BGLS- SGA Box 63, KSU, Manhatten,66506&#13;
KSU Gay/Lesbian Supp.Group 913-532-6127&#13;
Organizations&amp; R~sourcvs&#13;
Gay/Leshian Action Delegations 521-4509 ¯&#13;
~MCC of the Ozarks 443-4278&#13;
Eureka Springs Ark. (501)&#13;
Center S~eet 10 Center Street_ 253-8071&#13;
The HOP 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-8361&#13;
Ermillio’s 26 White St. 253-8806&#13;
Churches&#13;
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337&#13;
Bed&amp;Bwadff~t&#13;
Rock Cottage 10 Enenia St. 253-8659&#13;
Dixie Cottage #2 Prospect 253-7533&#13;
The Sonflxxn Rose 09 Benten St. 253-5800&#13;
. Purple Iris Inn R.R. 6 253-8748&#13;
Pond Motmtian Rt. 1 253-5877&#13;
Maple Leaf Inn 06 Kingshighway 253-6876&#13;
Satori Arts 81 Sprin8 St. 253-9820&#13;
Crazy Bone 37 Spring St. 253-6600&#13;
Coreelli Studio 159 Spring St. 253-7399&#13;
Little Rock Arkansas. (501)&#13;
Backstreet 1021 Jessie Rd. unit Q 666-6900&#13;
Michials 601 Center 376-8301&#13;
Discovery III 1021 Jessie Rd. 664-4784&#13;
Silver Dollar 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886&#13;
~ift&amp; ,Cards_. &amp;Novelties&#13;
Twisted Entertainment 7201 Asher 568-4262&#13;
Art&amp;Pho_to~a_a~v&#13;
Shields- Marley Studios 117 S. Victory372-6148&#13;
HPWA P.O. Box 4379, 72204 666-6900&#13;
AIDS Support Group 374-3605&#13;
RAIN-Ark. 375-5908&#13;
the House 374-3758&#13;
Pals (People of Aitern. lifestyles)374-3605&#13;
Womens Project 372-5113&#13;
Trav~el&#13;
Travel by Philip 227-7690&#13;
.Publications&#13;
~Parachute 1-800-536-6519&#13;
The Little Ro~k Conne~ions 227-7690&#13;
Oklahoma City, Ok. (405)&#13;
Commrmi~&#13;
ACLU 1411 Classen #318 524-8511&#13;
Names Project P.O. Box 12185 625-6277&#13;
OASIS Resource Center 2135 NW39th 525-2437&#13;
OK Gay Political Caucus P.O. Box 61186, 73146&#13;
OK Gay Rodeo Assoc. P.O. Box 12485 943-0843&#13;
OKC Metro Mens Chorus 424-1753&#13;
Pride Network P.O. Box 12415 340-3575&#13;
RAIN 232-4372&#13;
Aot up 447-4209&#13;
Queer Nation 24 hr action line 447-4209&#13;
OU Gay/Leshian &amp; Bisexual Alliance 303 Ellison&#13;
Hall, 633 Ell Ave. Norman.&#13;
Womens Rescource Center 364-9424&#13;
Ch~rel~s &amp;J~Ii_MOIlS Or~aniz,~gon.q&#13;
New Beg. MCC, 3136 N. Portland942-6313&#13;
Dignity/Integrity P.O. Box 25473 360-0414&#13;
Friends Meeting 632-7574&#13;
Gay Christian2Ecumenical Counce1528-5635&#13;
Light House MCC 2522 N. Shartel 524-4687&#13;
Unitarian Church 600 N.W. 13th 232-9224&#13;
Angles 2117 N.W. 39th 524-3431&#13;
Bunkhouse 2800 N.W. 39th 943-0843&#13;
Coyote Club 2120 N.W. 39th 52-1-9533&#13;
Finish Line 2200 NW39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Gushers 2200 NW39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Hi Lo Club 1221 N.W. 50th 834-1722&#13;
K.A.’s 2024 NW 1 lth 525-3991&#13;
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384&#13;
The Park 2125 N.W. 39th 528-4690&#13;
Tim Porthole 3630 N.W. 39th 949-9837&#13;
Sneakers 919 N. Virginia 272-9833&#13;
Tramps 2201 N.W. 39th 528-9080&#13;
The Wrack Room 2127 N.W. 39th 525-7610&#13;
AIDS Mastery PO Box 12151 525-3636&#13;
A1-Anen (Gay) 947-3834&#13;
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437&#13;
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/Couneelor 848-5429&#13;
OK. AIDS Hotline 1-800-535-2437&#13;
Other Options P.O. Box 36 Bethany .728-3222&#13;
Lany Pratt M.D. Psyokiatrist 232-5453&#13;
¯Testing the Limits 2136 N.W. 39th 843-8378&#13;
ChuckBwckenridge&#13;
A~t~amt P~aliahm&#13;
Wayae D.&#13;
1o~ d. C~’~&#13;
C~afive~s~ Group, OKC&#13;
C~fi~~:&#13;
ChuckB,C~Me~cMe, S~n Sco~&#13;
B~by, ~c~M~eld,~Jacob&amp;&#13;
Sco~~,~rly~no~, Raye~n&#13;
Tuck¢r~eRy~y,Wwks ~vers.&#13;
ChuckB,M~~ucMe, ~sbb ~om~&#13;
~Co~icaffons&#13;
213~50-6223&#13;
PHO~&#13;
1-316~51-0500 or 1-800-536~519&#13;
.F~&#13;
1-316-269-4208&#13;
Volunteers&#13;
David Stokes&#13;
Topeka Kansas (913)&#13;
Bars &amp; Clubs&#13;
Classics 124 S.W. 8th 357-1960&#13;
EXPressions 110 S.E. 8th 233-3622&#13;
Adult Bookstores&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 903 N. Kansas&#13;
Some like it Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.&#13;
~_~tions &amp;R~sourc~s&#13;
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727&#13;
Mayors Task Force 234-6699&#13;
Gay Rap Line 223-6558&#13;
Manhattan O~treach 271-8431&#13;
HIV Affected Group 234-8562&#13;
Churches&#13;
MCC of Topeka 232-6196&#13;
United Methodist AITtrmatien 235-6101&#13;
Emporia, Ks.&#13;
Gay &amp;Lesbian Allianee Box 65, ESU&#13;
1200 Commercial, Empria, KS. 66801&#13;
Salina, KS.&#13;
Alternative Lifestyles P.O. Box 2532, 67402&#13;
Pink.Triangle Parents of KS. P.O. box 153,&#13;
Falun,Ks. 67442-0153&#13;
Fort Smith Arkansas (501)&#13;
Bars&amp;~staunmts&#13;
Cou~t Garden Complex 305 Garrison 783-9822&#13;
B&amp;B Lounge 1004 Garrison 783-9347&#13;
Hot Springs Arkansas (501)&#13;
Bars &amp;Restarts&#13;
Our House Lounge &amp; Restaurant 235 Broadway&#13;
624-6868&#13;
Fayetteville Arkansas (501)&#13;
Bars"&amp; Restaara~ts&#13;
Ron’s Place 523 W. Poplar 442-3052&#13;
Washington Co. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS&#13;
the Parachute Page 2&#13;
Tulsa Oklahoma (918)&#13;
L~ffs Underground 311 E. 7nth 583-5233&#13;
Tops (Across from Laffs) 587-8677&#13;
Soandals 4812E. 33rd 742-5262&#13;
New Age Renegades 17th &amp; Main 584-9405&#13;
Silver Star Saloon 1565 S. Sheridan 834-4234&#13;
Taj Mahal 2630 E. 15th 742-8274&#13;
Time n’ Time Again 1515 S. Memorial 664-8299&#13;
TNT’s 2114 S. Memorial 660-0856&#13;
Tool Box 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308&#13;
Ad~lt Bookstores&#13;
Dreamland 8807 E. Admiral 834-1051&#13;
Elite Goods 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
Whittier Bookstore 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
_Or!~mi~tions&amp;R~sources&#13;
Aetup P.O. Box 532, 74101 741-0644&#13;
Names Project P.O. Box 318t, 74101 748-3111&#13;
PFLAG P.O. box 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
TOHR 4154 S. Harvard S. H-1 743-4297&#13;
Gay Info. Line 743-4297&#13;
Shanti Hotine 749-7898&#13;
S.T.LR.(Studens of Tulsa for interpers.rights)&#13;
583-9780&#13;
Okla. AIDS Hotiine 1-800-535-2437&#13;
Kelly Kirby CPA 663-9399&#13;
Family of Faith MCC 500 W. A, Jenks,&#13;
296-4622&#13;
Affirmation (Methodist) 742-8213&#13;
MCC of Tulsa 1623 Maplewoed 838-1715&#13;
Dignity/Integrity 298-4648&#13;
Enid Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Phillips University Gay &amp;Lesbian Group&#13;
242-0628&#13;
Lawton Oklahoma (405)&#13;
HIV/AIDS Support Group 248-5890 or&#13;
351-2820&#13;
Southwest AIDS Network Box 3924 zip73505&#13;
Great Plains MCC 1416 W.. Gore 357-7899&#13;
Stillwater Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Comm. AIDS Action Network 624-2544&#13;
Gay,Lesbain &amp; Bisexual Comm. Asso~ of OSU&#13;
Studen Union 040, Box 601 Zip 74078&#13;
Helpline (Men/Wed/Thurs. 8-10pro) 744-5252&#13;
Misce//aaeous S~rvie~s&#13;
Banana Products P.O. Box 130255 Edmond, Ok&#13;
73013 341-8965&#13;
Exeoafive Travel 2113 SW 36th 521-9100&#13;
HabanaInn 2200NW39th 528-2221&#13;
Herhnd 2312 NW 39th 521-9696&#13;
Jungle Red 2200 NW 39th 524-5733&#13;
Lobo’s 2131 NW39th 528-5156&#13;
Deb Rol3erts Entertainer 843-5624&#13;
Second Chance Credit 752-2209 or 752-2155&#13;
Steph~a Scott Masseur 525-8689&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Gushers Bar &amp; Grill 2200 NW 39th Expwy&#13;
525-0730&#13;
TheKitehen 2124NW39th 528-5133&#13;
La Rocca Mexican Restaurants:&#13;
S.W. 4th &amp; Walker / 409 W. Reno&#13;
7550 N. May&#13;
Springfield Missouri (417)&#13;
Club 1105--1105 E Commercial 831-9043&#13;
Down Beat 219 W. Olive 846-4572&#13;
Adldt Bookstores&#13;
Bolivar News 4030 Bolivar 833-3354&#13;
Joplin Misso_m’i(417)&#13;
Billy Jacks 720 S. Main St. 781-6453&#13;
C.G.’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S. Main 781-931.3&#13;
$ Enclosed&#13;
Subscriptions will be mailed&#13;
out by the 5th of each ~honth~&#13;
in a sealed envelope.&#13;
Send to:&#13;
The Parachute&#13;
P.O. Box 11347&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67202&#13;
hoc You._may farm.along creek..&#13;
Hosts - Jackie &amp; Bob Collison&#13;
ba~’h 2617 Queen Anne’s Lace&#13;
Subscriptions&#13;
6 months=S12.00&#13;
1 year = $18.00&#13;
Same&#13;
Address&#13;
City&#13;
State Zip&#13;
hot tub, fireplace, VCR.&#13;
~~’~:~.... {~&#13;
You.~ay visit with fa~ pets&#13;
..... . &gt; /~&#13;
or-stroll alofig the cree~ ’ CaLl 316~33-4075 {~&#13;
- ’ JacMd ~&#13;
Double with private ba{fi Lace]~</text>
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute, August 1, 1993; Volume 1, Issue 4</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>John D. Christiansen&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Stephan Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Michial Camfield&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Scott Curry&#13;
Kimberly Ridenour&#13;
Raye Ann Tucker&#13;
Kelly Kirby&#13;
Wreks Rivers</text>
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                    <text>,-&amp; Lesbian Community in Kansas,
1347 Wichita, Kansas 67202

BUI iIHOUSE
~ND THE~

2800 N.W. 39th ~m’px~,msway

Oklahoma

~.It’y, Oklahoma

40~ 943 0843

’i

VOTED MOST OUTS TANDING
, .~,
MALECLUB
BY:GALAAWARDS11993 " .~:i

July 23rd 25th
Ist Anniverssary Celebration

"

IFriday 23rd Miss Title Holders:Show I . ~,,. .
Saturday 24th- Danee Fest with
.,~. ~," ~ 1~ ., d~
Sunday 25th Best of the Best, Employee
Customer Tumabom Slmw

Arkansas and Missouri

,Vol. I, Issue V

�The Parachute Directory
Oldahom City, Ok. (405)

,I

Gay/Lesbian Action Dd~iens 521-4509
Buddies Country 4000 S. Broadway 529-4953
Our Fantasy 3201 S. Hillside 681-2746
South Forty 3201 S. Hillside 681-2746
R &amp; R Brass Rail 2828 E. 31st 684-9009
T-Room 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327

MCC of~ Ozarks 443-4278

Eureka Springs Ar . (501)
Canter Street 10 Center Slmet 253-8071
TheHOP 19 112 Slxing St 253-8361
Ermillio’s 26 White St. 253-8806

Adult Entice 220E. 21st 832-1816
Plato’s 1306 E. Harry St. 269-9036
T.B.’s 1515 S. Oliver 688-5343
Camelet Cinemit 1519 S. Oliver 688-5343
Adult Entertainment Center 3721 S. Broadway
Adult Ente~ai,mont Center 7805 W. Kellogg
Adult Entertainment Center 2809 N. Broadway
Adult Entree’ South 8025 S. Broadway
Circle Cinema 2570 S. Seneca

MCC of~he Livin8 Springs 253-9337
Rock Cottage 10 Enenia St.. 253-8659
Dixie COtta~ #2 Prospect 253-7533
The S6uthem Rose #9 Benton St. 253-5800
SatoriArts 81 SpringSt. 253-9820
Crazy Bone 37 Spring St. 253-6600
Corcelli Studio 159 Spring St. 253-7399

Harbor Restaurant 3201 S.Hillside 681o2746
Lassens Bar &amp; Grill 155 N. Market 263-2777
The UpperCrust 7038 E Lincoln 683-8088
WiehitaAIDS 1"121 S. Clifton 689-5250
Wich. Sedg.Co. Hlth Dept. 1900 E. 9th 268-8441
W.ichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786
The Lesbian Celebration 683-7561
PFlasg 687’-4666
Gay Information line 269-0913
Visions&amp; Dreams 3143 Maple 942-6333
Watermark Books 149 N. Broadway 263-3007
Queen Ann’s Lace 733-4075

Little Rook Arkansas (501 )
Backsmmt 1021 Jessie Rd. unitQ 666-6900
Michiais 601 Center 376-8301
Discovery.IlI 1021 Jessie Rd. 664-4784
Silver Dollar 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886

GiftS, ~ &amp; Nor~lties
Twisted Entertainment 7201 Asher 568-4262

Art &amp; Ph~h.v _
Shields - Marley. Studios 117 S. Vietory372-6148

Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center 651-0603
First Unitarian Church 684-3481
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633

’~)mmnniW ~tfo~s
HPWA P.O. Box 4379, 72204 666-6900
AIDS Support Gloup 374-3605
RAIN-Ark. 375-5908
the House 374-3758
Pals (People of Alterm lifestyles)374-3605
Womons Project 372-5113

Juaotion City, Kamas (913)
After Dark Video 1206 Grant

Lawx~m~e Kansas (913)

Travel

Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040
Gay &amp; Lesbian Services of Kansas 864-3091

Travel by Philip 227-7690

Publications

uaghtm zan (913)

The Parachnm 1-800-536-6519
The Little Rock Connections 22%7690

Gay &amp; Lesbian Resource Center 539-6137

Topeka Kansas (913)

....

Classics 124 S.W. 8th 35%1960
EXPressions 110 S.E. 8th 233-3622

Laffs Undmground 311 E. 7nih 583-5233
Tops (Aeross from Laffs) 58%8677
Flamingos 4812 E. ~3rd 742-5262
New A~e Rane~ades 175 &amp; Main 584-9405
Silver Star Saloon 1565 S. Sheridan 834~4234
Taj Maha12630 E. 15th 742-8274
Time n’ Time Again 1515 S. Memorial 664-8299
TNT’s 2114 S. Memoriai 660-0856
Tool Box 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308

Adult Entertainment Conte~ 903 N. Kansas
some like itHot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727
Mayors Task Force 234-6699
Gay Rap Line 223-6558
Manlmttan Ommach 271-8431
HIV Affected C~onp 234-8562

Springfield Missouri (417)
Club 1105---1105 ECommercial 831-9043
Down Beat 219 W. Olive 846-4572

Bolivar News 4030 Bolivar 833-3354

Act u~ P.O. Box 532, 74’101 741-0644
Names Projeot P.O. Box 3181, 74101 748-3111
PFLAG P.O. box 52800, 74152 749-4901
TOHR4154S.Harvard S.H-1 743-4297
Gay Info. Line 743-4297
Shanti Hotine 749-7898
S.T.I.R.(Studens of Tulsa for interpers.rights)
583-9780
Okla~ AIDS Hotline 1-800-535-2437
Kelly Kirby CPA 663-9399

Joplin Missouri(417)
Billy Jacks 720 S. Main St. 781-6453
C.G.’s ChaClmPalace 722 S. Main 781-9313

Fort Smith Arkausas (501)

Family of Faith MCC 500 W. A, Jenk~,
296-4622
Afftrmation (Methodist) 742-8213
MCC of Tulsa 1623 Maplewood 838-1715
Dignity/Integrity 298-4648

Bars &amp; R~s~aunmts

Enid Oklahoma (405)

Court Garden Complex 305 Garrison 783-9822
B&amp;B Lounge 1004 Garrison 783-9347

Phillips University Gay &amp;Lesbian Gxoup
242-0628

Hot Springs Arkansas (501)

Lawton Oklahoma (405).

Our Home Lense &amp; Restaurant 235 Broadway
624-6868

HIV/AIDS Support Group 248-5890 or
351-2820
Southwest AIDS Network BOx 3924 zip73505

Fayb-qtmrille Arkausas (501)

W8shi,~mon Co. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS

The Parachute

G~at Plains MCC 1416 W. Gore 357-7899

Stmwater Oklahoma (405)

Ron’sPlace 523 W. Poplar 442-3052

Page 2

tTh~hes &amp; Reli_m’ous O~_aaizatio~s
New Beg. MCC 3136 N. Po~land942-6313
Digniry/Int~grity P.O. Box 25473 360-0414
Friends Meeting 632-7574
Gay Christian Ecumenical Counce] 528-5635
Light House MCC 2522 N. Shartel 524-4687
Unitarian Chinch 600 N.W. 13th 232-9224

My parents asked "Aro you Gay?."
I said, "Does it matter7"
They said, "Not really."
I said, "Yes, I’m Gay."
Thzy said "G-~t out of our five!!"
I guess it mattered.
My boss asked me,’Aro you Gay?"
I said, "Does it matter?"
My boss said, ~Not really."

I said ,sYes, I’m Gay."
My boss said, "You’re f’Lred,

Cmm~ AIDS Action Network 624-2544
Gay,Lesbain &amp; Bisexual Comm. Assoc of OSU.
Studen Union 040, Box 601 Zip 74078
Helpllne (Mon/Wed/Thu~. 8-10pro) 744-5252

-

I guess it matter~
My spouse aslw~ "Do you love
I said, "Does it matter?~

My spouse said, "Yes."
I said, "Yes, I love you. ~

Angles 2117 N.W. 39th 524-3431
Btmkbouse 2800 N.W. 39th 943-0843
Coyote Club 2120 N.W. 39th 521-9533
Finish Line 2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730
Gushers 2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730
Hi Lo Club 1221 N.W. 50th 834-1722
K~.’s 2024 NW 1 lth 525-3991
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384
The Park 2125 N.W. 39~ 528-4690
The Porlhole 3630 N.W. 39th 949-9837
Sneakers 919 N. Virginia 272-9833
Tramps 2201 N.W. 39th 528-9080
The W~k Room 2127 N.W. 39th 525-7610
~o;m~lin~_ &amp; l~fernd.~rvi~s
AIDS Mastery PO Box 12151 525-3636
AI-Anon (Gay) 947-3834
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/Co~mcelor 848-5429
OK. AIDS Hofline 1-800-535-2437
Other Options P.O. Box 36 Bethany .728-3222
Lany Prater M.D. Psychiatrist 232-5453
Testil~ the I Jmits 2136 N.W. 39th 843-8378

My spouse said,"Hold me in your
ar111s."

Finally something .in my life
mattered.
God asked, "Do you love yourself?."
I said, Does it matter?"
God said,’Yes. ~
I said How can I love myself if I
am Gay?~
God said,~Because that is how I
made you.

Nothing will ever matt~ again!
Author unknown
Brought to you by:
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center
1501 Fairmont, Wichita, Ks.

O aho,ma(918)

Dreamland 8807 E. Admiral 834-I051
Elite Goods 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503
Whittier Bookstore 1 N. Lewis 592-0767

MCC of Topeka 232-6196
United Methodist AWmnafion 235-6101

ACLU 1411 Ciassoa #318 524-8511
Names Project P.O. Box 12185 625-6277
OASIS Resoaroe Center 2135 NW 39th 525-2437
OK Gay Political Caucus P.O. Box 61186, 73146
OK Gay Rodeo Ass~. P.O. Box 12485 943-0843
OKC Metro Mons Chorus 424-1753
Pride Network P.O. Box 12415 340-3575
RAIN 232-4372
Act up 447-4209
Q~eer Nation 24 hr action line 447-~1209
OU Gay/Lesbian &amp; Bisexual Alliance 303 Ellison
Hall 633 Elm Ave. Norman.
Womons Rescource Center 364-9424

DOES IT REALLY
MATTER?

73013 341-8965
Exeoutive Travel 2113 NW 36th ~21-9100
Habana Inn 2200 NW 39th 528-2221
Herland 2312 NW 39th 521-9696
JuagIe Red 2200 NW¢ 39th 524-5733
Lobo’s 2131NW39th 528-5156
Deb Rol~as Entertainer 843-5624
Second Chance C~dit 752-2209 or 752-2155~
Stephen S~ott Masseur 525-8689
Gushers Bar &amp; Grill 2200 NW 39th Expwy
525-0730
The Kitohon 2124NW39th 528-5133
La Roc~.a Mexican Restaurants:
S.W. 4th &amp; Walker / 409 W. Reno
7550 N. May

Chuck Bwckenddge

Oeative Commltunts
John D. Cl~s~’ansen
Creative Design Group, OKC

Contdlmfla~ Writer~
Chuck B.,Cookie Arbuck-le,MatY
ArbucMe, SWphen-Scott, Babby,ACLU

Cbuck B.,Mary.7~rbucMe, Kay Williams
Nafloall AdvertiaiaS .
aka Communications
213-650-6223

Phone:
I-316-651-0500 or 1-800-536-6519
316-269-4208

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316-529-4953

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, AMI~RICAN CIVIl. LIBERTIES UNION I~EPORT: .LIIq’iNG "rile MILITARY BAN DEBATE.

The ,~~ Civil Liberties
Union of Oklahoma hosted its
general membership meetin8 on
May 15th at the -Oklahoma
University Law Center. Those in
attendance were treated to a
buffet.
The lounse area was
humming with the sounds of
socializin8 and discussion.

the auspices of addressing the
HIV health risk of Gay men in
the military. It is interesting to
note that he did not discuss
Lesbian sexual pra~ti~es or
address the risk of heterosextmly
transmitted HIV.
Rep. Graves
relied primarily-on scare tactics
which appeal to commen phobias.

The high point of the proceed~

betweell~ oiIrreut military ball on

was a f’h-st class debate on Gay
and Lesbian military service
between two ACLU/OK board
members and two Oklahoma Sate

Gays and Lesbians and former
ban on People of Color, Mr.
Graves quoted an authoritative
statement hy General Colin
Powell
which
says
that

~tives.

WiHia~ ~linkle

the ACLU view in favor
liftiu8 the ban on Says
lesbhm8

in

the

of
and

_~n color is not’. A~or_dln_~ to
Graves General Powell has also

military.

Oklahoma Representatives Bill
Graves and Don Weese argued
against this reform
Rick
Tepker, University of Oklahoma
Law Professor, provided pre~ise
and impartial moderation between
the two parties and the, andience,
which was allowed to question

Graves took this grain of wisdom
a Step furtJ~r by trying to llnk it

with current national awareness
of sexual barns_renan_t. He raised
questions of possible abuses and
sexxml harassment by Gay. and
Lesbian officers. This position

"unspeakable

umdu~t’.

lr~y,
immediately

Mr.Graves
~ymmeuded
a

ACLU Board member William
ttlnkle, prefaces his opening
remarks with a statement of his

ha~ksro,und

as

a

married,

heterosexusl veteran who served
in the Vietnam conflict as a
sergeaut.

sexusl pr~tices.

for his interest .in this issue,

Mr. Hinkh~, ilP,,~O~llg

homosexuality in the military.
Hinkled responded that sttch ties
have long been a part of military
camaraderie,
even
among

heterosexual citizens are opposed
orientation.

Hinkle cited job

performance as being ~ most

the armed forces.

important fact in maintainin8

present that the military has been
considm~ throushom history to
b¢ t]~ mast appropria~ millcu for
He then moved on tO. cite the
results of the CriUmulon report
for~the ~t of Dcfmm¢, a
Navy ~t report and
special survey of ~. Allof
the~ studies dis~l the current
policy myths that Gays and
Lesbians are unfit for ~l~taty
service.
-’Ex-Cathedra
sta~
by
certain military officers, "are the
only support for retainin8 the
Mr.Hinkle.

In

respol~

to

General Powelis’ statem~t about
the difference betWeen people of
color and Gays and Lesbians,
~

that

both

were

pereeption of Gay and Lesbian
citizens as morally and ethically

detailed spoken th~ of. Gay
He did under

all veteralM~militsry perl~l~el or

]:[i,kle

Representative Graves kicked off
that "This country was founded
on Judeo-Christia~ principles."
~n~_ from this premise he
then felt free to quite a Biblical

.explained--that his son is Gay:
The statement of th~se farm were
pointed out as an example that not

status. He said that the erroneous
assumption in the past about
people of color are analegous to
current miseoncepf!ons
about
Gays and Lesbians.
~mcern
about
intra-m~it
homosexual ties. He said 23% of

$493,000,000
spent by the
military, from 1980 to 1990 for
homosexual witch hunts and.
discharges as a waste of tax"
dollars. The reply by
Weese
was "I am not here to defend the
General Ac~mtin8 Officer"
Mr.lnglish was forc~l to point
the Defense Ikpartment.
mIsn’t
this
really
behavior?"

about

Mr.Weese

out although a reputed 90% of
heterosextmls ensage in sodomy,
such behavior is not pursed with
the harshness °reserved for
homosexusls’ This was cited as
eviden~
that
dis~l~mi~ttion
against Gays and Lesbian’s is
based on status rather than
behavior.
Mr. Graves and
Mr.Hinkle orossed swords with

scripture quotes. This was an
excellent opportunity for people
of both sides of this controversy
to ~ better inform~ in a
civilized manner and hopefully
some
walked away with an

improved perspective;

WICHITA ’S ONLY GAY &amp;.. LESBIAN BOOKS TORE

Hours 10am to8pm Mon-Sat
Sundays 12noon to 6pm
3143 W. Maple, W ichita, Kansas 316-942-6333
The Parachute

Page 4

�To Support -&amp; Defend
Shown to Public- .
Wichita, KS (EGCM) About. 60
people came to the Wichita
Public
Library
to attend
a
.public showing of To Support
&amp;
De[end,
a
video
documentary
on gays in the
military. Response to the video
was generally
positive,
with
requests for private showings
still being made.
"The producers of the video"
asked me to show it to my
friends,
and
acquaintances,"
said Rex Rivers,. manager of
the Wichita Gay Information
Line. "I talked with my good
friend Beverly Feedler
-- a
non-gay woman who’s son died
of
AIDS
-about
this
documentary.
We both agreed
that it needed to be shown to
the public at large, not just the
a portion of the community
who already supported gays m
the military.
So we set out to
have a general viewing."

Corporation.
The
report
apparently
confirms
the
findings
of several
studies
conducted
by the
Pentagon
over the past thirty years that
discrimination
against
lesbian
and gay personnel serves no
valid military purpose.
"Lambda calls for immediate,
public release
of the Rand
report,"
said
Lambda
Legal
Director Beatrice-Dohrn. "And
to that end, Lambda has filed a
Freedom of Information
Act
Request seeking to obtain it.
The public, as well as the
Members of Congress playing
politics with the civil fights of
lesbian and gay people in the
Armed
Forces,
should
have
access to all the facts."

continue the legal fight should
President Clinton not honor his
commitment
to
eliminate
discrimination
against lesbians
and gay men in the military."

For more informatio~ contact:
Paula
Ettelbdck;
Lambda
Legal Defense
&amp; Education
Fund; 666Broadway; New York,
NY 10012; Voice 212-995-8585;
Fax 212-995-2306.
Lambda~
Legal Defense
&amp; Education
fund; 606 South Olive Street
#580; Los Angeles, CA 90014;
Voice
213-629-2728;
Fax
213-629-9022.
Be sure
to
mention in your letter that you
heard of this_ through
The
Electronic
Gay Community
¯ Magazine.

"Constitutionally,
as well as
practically
speaking a ’don’t
ask, don’t tell’ policy cannot
stand," said Lambda Executive
Director Kevin M. Cathcart.
"Lambda
is
prepared
to

The public
showing
of To
Support
&amp;
De[end
was
surrounddd by a virtual media
blitz.
Many Wichita
radio
stations
announced
details
about the showing, somethingthat has never happened for a
gay-sponsored
event
before.
Wichita
Eagle
reporter and
movie
critic
Bob
Curtright
wrote an article
about the
documentary which was printed
in the Wichita- paper several
days in advance of the showing.

DON’T CALL
FALWELL
The Parachute would like to
remind it’s readers not to call the
survey line on Jerry Falwells
show. He is still taking a poll and
asking forSignatures. At last
count he had 280,000 signatures
to send to President Clinton. The
poll is suppose to be included in
that report, but as you can
imagin~ there aren’t many people
who watch him who would vote
on lifting the ban, or equal rights.
So by calling and just voting you
have donated approx. $4.00 to
Jerry Falwell’s campaign against
YOU!

THE OFFICIAL
BEER SPO NSOR
OF TH

rumors that
came . because
Fred
Phelps, " the
anti:gay
minister, from Topeka,
was
going to protest outside the
library during the video. Even
though Phelps’ did not" show up,
the media did an overall good
job of covering the issue of gays
in the military and the showing
of the documentary.
If you have a group who would
like a private wewmg of To
- Support
&amp; De[end
contact
Rex Rivers at the Wichita Gay
Information Line; 316-269-0913
voice; 316-269-4208 fax.

Lambda Demands
Equality for Gays in
the Military
New York, NY (EGCM) In
response-to reports that the
Clinton Administration is about
to announce
its
policy
on
lesbians and gay men m the
military,
Lambda
Legal
Defense and Education Fund
warned that anything less than
a complete lifting of the ban
and equal treatment
for all
personnel’would be unworkable
as well as nnconsfitutioual
and
would lead to swift challenge in
the courts.
Lambda noted that during the
six
months
since
President
:Clinton. initially
declared
his
intention to end the anti-gay
policy,
the
Pentagoncommissioned but has refused
an
independent
to
rdease
report
by
the
Rand

REMINDER

Miller Lite.
It’s it and that’s that:

Brought to.you by:
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Wichita, Kansas
Miller Brewing Company. Milwaukee, Wisconsin

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Also featuring Seafood, ~
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316-263-2777
Lunch Served 11 to 2 M-F, Dinner 5:30 to 10 Monday - Saturday

Truly D ch’cated to Service and Quali y

KAHSAS LAWMAKER
EYES BANNINGGAY . .

RIGHTS

. ~

A conservative state lawn~l~ said
session that would prohibit state and
loud units of government from
specialrights.
Pep. Darl~
R~Valley
Center, said she already is a
co-sponsor of a resolution .urging
Congress not to pass say laws that
would grant prote~ed-clase status/o

orientation or lifestyles.

we~

Vinee. Snowbarser, R-Olatbe, the

~ asesnent,
"If it’s talkin8 about constitutional
rights, I would think it wottld have to
be ratif’ted by the people of the state."

mjori~ leader, are among the 18
co-sponsors of the resolution to

Proposed

the

House who is a ~o- sponsor of the

submittedto the people in a statewid~
referendum and must be passed by a
simple majority of the votes cast to
become effective.
"
Stories published Monday reported

Marvin Smith, R-Topeka.
However, others .could sign onto the
measure before it is formally
introduced next session.

amondmsats

to

Congress to not pass any law~ 8ivin8

is ready for introdu~ion when the
1994 Lesislature convenes.
"If you’re 8oin8 to f’q~ht ti~ battle by
tryi~ to memorialize Congress to
not grant homosexuals special status,
you might as well go ahead and Yq;ht
the battle on the state level,"
Cornf’~ld said~
"If we’re going to have an uproa:,
we’d just as well do both of the~"
other co-~ of the resolution
to Congress and see if they would

sisn onto a measure banning special

immediately, prompted criticism of
CornfiekL
An editorial cartoon in Wednesday’s
Wichita Eagle showed a caricature of

Cornfield on a stepladder, paiutin~
the

word

"hate"

over

the

welcomln_~_ motOrists to Kansas.
Cornfield called the editorial cartoon
wouldn’t
dissuade
her
frmn
intredoein8 a _~mil~ ~onal
"Absolutely not," she .sai~L "If I’m

8oia8 to do something, I’m going
to do it regardless of what

me approved by Colorado

other people think,w

that

amendmeut, it is certain to slir
controversy in the Legislate. But it
also pmhably would receive a
hearing, especially if some of the
same. o-sponmrs. of the resolution to

The Parachute

Page 6

Saturday, July 24th
Starts at NOON - Come Any Time!

word

"sunflower" on a hishway sisn

She expe~ts to intredoce a proposed

furor in that state. A number of

~tltgre88.

The only member of the non-person

On Kansas Street near Harr~ &amp; H~drauli¢

¯

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¯
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Ever~ne Welcome
Bring Your Own Food &amp; Drink
Party with the Bearst

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I~cst l~ctel - Wichita ~arrictt
I-S(~(~-~7~-~)~7 ~r 31~~1-~333
I~tlec i~ctline
I-3.~3-$3~-I~1~ cr

�DEAR HA HB Y A D VICE COL UMN
Dear Babby:
Recently my lover told me he wanted to start seeing other
people after 5 years together, I was shocked I thought we were
doing fine,-he says he just feels trapped and there are
somethings he never got to do and he wants to have some fun
while he ls still young’ enough to attract other men. I .am so
confused I don’t know what to do. My friend said I should just
be supportive and let him get it out of his system, that sooner
or later he will be back. But I can’t stand the thought of him
with someone else. I have tried to make myseff more attractive,
and tried to make our life more exciting, but I seemed to have
failed. Please tell me what should I do.
Confused in OKC
Dear Confused:
What I feel you should do is wait until he’s asleep and fix-him
where he won’t want any man for a long time, .possibly
permanently.
I don’t think you failed, you must be doing
something right for it to last 5 years~
It sounds like he is
afraid of getting old. As for your friend saying you should
stick by him and wait, your friend is full of cow dung ! He
may come back and he may not, but do you really want
someone
like
that?
I
would
suggest
a
good
coda
meeting(Codependents Anonymous) for you and a good kick in
the a-- for him. Pack his bags, tell him if he .is going to shop
around, he best plan on living in the mall, cause you ain’t
havin no whore in your bed! Honey I don’t know what you look
like but-whatever it is learn to love yourself, if you are going to
change do it for yourself not for some, sh-t head: You didn’t
fail, you may have gained by getting this over with. I’m not
saying it’s over, but don’t allow him to make your decision, it’s
your choice not just his.
I personally have never had a
relationship that lasted longer than 3 ,weeks, and that one
ended because the nursing home came and took him back.
Good luck and if you decide to wait this out, buy condoms and
penicillin.

Sign up for Saturday trip to Kansas City
with Karaokee at: Buddies Country

CASH PRIZES FOR ALL
TOURNAMENTS
i

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Tuesday- Pool Tournament
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316-683-2716
The Par~hute

Page 8

�WICHITA PRAISE &amp; WORSHIP _CENTER

1501 N. FAIRMONT, WICHITA, KS.
For God~ so. loved the
world that He gave-His
only begotten Son, that
WHOSOEVER
Ilbelieveth in Him, shouldl
not perish but have
everlasting life.
John 3:16

A church alive in Praise &amp; Worship
SUNDAYS AT 2:00PM
31..6,65i -0603
CANADIAN .mv-Pos_ITD/E

QUOTE’S
"WE’RE LIKE THE Evian water of
the ’90s. Everybody wants to know a
lesbian or to be with a lesbian or just
dress like one."--Comic Suzanne
Westenhoefer,
quoted
on
a
NEWSWEEK article on the growing
visibility of lesbians.
"IF YOU WANT me to say I’m a
lesbian,
then,
yes,
I’m
a
lesbian."--David Corn, Washington
editor of THE NATION, responding to
a hostile phone caller on C-SPAN who
accused him of being an "in-th-closet
lesbian" because of his pro-gay support.
"I THINK ~my lmOple are like blonds;
there’s fewer of them, but they have
more fun."--Rim Mae Brown on the
Maury Show.
"I DON’T KNOW what Colin Powell
and all the other colons are worried
about--do they really think that millions
of gays and lesbians will enlist? Now
really! I mean, isn’t that a job where you
have. to get up early?"--Lesbian
comedienne Marga Gomez, performing
at the Obie Awards.
"IF tlOMOSEXUALITY is a disease,
let’s
call
in
queer
to
work."--Comedienne
and
rally
co-producer Robin Tyler, at the March
on Washington.
"WItY," I’VE BEEN asked on top Of
being a female and Hispanic would you
willingly choose further oppression?
Defensively I’ve answered with a joke
’Because I’m an ex Catholic and I was
trained for martydom--Mimi Freed

MALE HOMOSEXUALITY
MOSCOW--Rejeeting the Stalin-era
code of morality that condemned male
homosexuality as a crime, the Supreme
Soviet and Russian President Boris
Yeltsin quietly repealed the nation’s
59-year-old statute that prohibits sex
between men. Yeltsin allies in Russia’s
ruling legislative body actually won the
repeal-of Article 121.1 of the Russian
Criminal Code on April 29 by referring
only to its code number among a set of
sweeping revisions to the penal code and
not directly mentioning that the change
had anything to do with homosexuality.
The "stealth" strategy apparently worked.
Oleg Plomikov a Russian legislator and
Yeltsin supporter, said opponents of
ehaa#ng the anti-gay law "obvious~ly
didn’t bother to look up the existing
a~ticle in the code." Plotnokov told THE
LOS ANGELES TIMES,-i’That explains
why this law was passed.quietly, without
headlines in the mass media, or
opposition in the Parliament."
Punishable by up to five years in prison,
male homosexuality has been illegal in
Russia since 1934 when Soviet ,dictator
Josef Stalin started a campaign to
eradidate behavior he considered deviant
and undisciplined.
Article 121 now only forbids rape and
statutory rope. Consensual sex between
women was never eriminalized.

- SAH-OR WINS:CASE
TORONTO--A Canadian court has
ruled that the nation’s armed, forces
illegally dl~riminated aga~st a sailor
who was discharged after he revealed
the he was HIV-positive~ The court
rewarded the sailor $150,000 in
damages .and legal fees. Attorneys said
the case will set a precedent and make it
easier for other infected people in the
forces to come forward. Canadian
military officials did not comment on

the ruling.

LINCOLN
STREET HAIR

COMT’ANY
7062 East Lincoln

"If I were in th~
would rise on the Senate floor in
mzpport of our commander in chief
"wrote former Arizona ~mtor Barry
Goldwater,
a
1964
Repubizan
presidzntail nominee, in an essay
published June 10 that supports
President Clinton’s effort to lift the
ban. "he may be a Democrat, but he
happens to be right on this
question, "he said
In a viewpoint published in the
Wa~hin_oton Post, Goldwater said
conservatives who support tim ban
principle, "the government should
stay out of people’s private lives."
Study after study his essay said,
proved that homosexnals were not
security risk and that the current
fisht is a waste of time bet~llso the
ban ultimately will be rifted anyway,
jUSt llke the previous balls on

and women in the military.

JOttN GOODNER
Hairs tyling/Color
Tec~nicion

"When the facts lead to one
conclusion, I say it’s time to act, not
to hide ," said Goldwater, who
retired from the Air Forces a~ a

major general. "I served in the armed
for~es. I have flown more than 150

let John m~e you....
PICTURE PERFECT
Call for Appointment
316-682-3836

of

the

best

I

founded

fighter planes and

the

Arizona

National

Sorvi~s Committ~. Alld I think it’s
high time to pull the curtains on this
charade of police.
"You don’t need to be ’straight’ to
fight and die for your country. You

just need to shoot straighL"
The: Parachute

Page 9

�Bears in the
Woods Picnic
Wichita; KS (EGCM) Hirsute
Pursuit will be sponsoring
a
picnic
in Wichita’s
Linwood
Park on Saturday, July 24th
starting at noon.
Once again
this men’s club for guys who
like big and burly men is
holding an event for the gay
community in Mid-America.

ofh,avir HIV.

There aren’t any you can see. Yo~ can’t ten from outward
appearance who is infected with ~ the virus that causes AIDS.
Know how to determine your risk. Call your State or local AIDS
hotline, or the National AIDS Hotline at 1-800-~42AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for deaf access.

HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.

"The purpose for this picnic is
to allow the bears a non-bar
event," said Mike Sullivan, one
of Hirsute Pursuit’s organizers.
"We have received comments
that some guys just don’t like
the smoke-filled,
loud music
environment of a gay bar, so we
decided to have a picnic."
Picnic goers do not have to be
hairy
chested
to participate
(although
it
doesn’t
hurt),
everyone is welcome.
There is
no charge to attend.
Linwood
Park
is located
on Kansas
Street
near
Harry
and
Hydraulic.

Public Health Service
Centers for Disease Contro:

Brought to you by:
Wichita-Sedgwick County Health Department
1900 E. 9nth Wichita, Kansas
Confidential AIDS/HIV Testing
Fees based on a sliding scale

Military ~ountdown
Coustitu~ts throughout the United
States anxiotmly walt for President
Clintous ene~utive order on ~uly
15th, lifting_ the ban on gays in the
military. However the situation may
have roadbed a hopeless shade of
gray and compromise.
What we are w.aHy fozused on right
now is what’s going to be the
recommendation of Sez. of Defense
Los Aspin on how to implement a
change in the police," said David
Smith. spokesman for Campalgn~for
Military Service; "The President has
asked for his recoramendation by the
15th
The President at that point, cam do
anything he wants to do. He doesn’t
have to make a de,ision then, but be
has indicated that he will a~t by the
15th. Whatever he de,ides will be
some type of emmpromise., but we
remain confident that a proposal
could creme forward- from the
President that is mtmh closer to our
position. People must aztivate their
personal networks to communicate
On June 10, Gen. Colin Pow~lL who

The picnic is really just an
excuse for old friends to gossip
and flew friendships to form.
Everyone is expected to bring
their own food and drink. Event
organizers also ask that people
bring a softball, bat, Frisbee,
etc. with them when they come.
Don’t forget sunscreen!
If
there is rain on July 24th, the
picnic will be held the next day
instead.
For more information
on the
picnic or Hirsute Pursuit, call
the WicMta Gay Information
Line
at 316-269-4208
voice;
316-269-4208 fax.

shamelessly has led the charge
against lifting the ban, gave the
342nd commencement address at
Harvard University. About 200 of
the 5,812 gradustes,.along with some
faculty members,-stood and turned
their bazks on Powell when he
received an honorary law degree
before giving his 20 minutes 8pooh.

The President has given us clear
dir~tion to reconcile these interest
and I befieve we are near a solution
that will do so,’Poweli said.
will he faithfully executed to the
very best of our ability.

Ken-Gold, lnc
presents
in accordance with
USA Pageantry, Inc
The .First Official
MISS GAY WICHITA
USA AT-LARGE PAGEANT

Sunday, July 11, 1993
10:00 PM
at Our Fantasy
for information contact Our Fantasy
The Pare~rhute

Page 10

OFFICIAL USA
PRELIMINARY

�FRED WATCH
THE PHELPS CULT
~ ......
will Topeka, Kallsa8 be

the next Waco Texas
-" ....~

Phelps. In return, Phelps sees to it
that they receive food,~ shelter andother necessities, for survival.
In
addition to living together, they 80
shopp~ together, and of course

Currently, tile Phelps cult has been
piclmia8 a restaurant called The
Vintage, where the Owners refuse to
firea wmnan who testified for the
Mayor’s Commission on Gay and
Lesbian Issues;
A demonstration

occasions , he would run into the_
Phelps’, kids, but by then, their
father’sprogrammed "message of
hate had taken effect. "I remember
Kenny ran into Fred’s da~q~hter,
Margie Phelps. Kenny just~ha~l one

wa

As the.stand-off in Wa~o, Tens was
~ the two month mar~,
__
k __
the. etty
"~r
of Topeka, Kansas had a ~
problem with religious cult lead~

ppmg
~elps
._
8
cUlt has their own version of a pub
.
.
.
erawl, whieh can best he described as
a "hat~. ~rayl’. Phelps has a rou~

violent last week, and_ 5 members of
.,the. Phelps cult were senL, to the
¯
hospital.
.
Be~mme of
event Fred Phelps

didn’.t say a word to him-as a child,
she grew up with him and now she
wouldn,tevenspeaktohlm~-The f’mal heart-wrenching blow

member 8roup,
left a trail of
devastation ti~ tore Topeka aoart. ¯
In a ~h~e.ki~ ,~_-,~1.~-~, ~..~’~’o~’.learned--~-’~ ~"~ ~u~ ~’t~
Phelos’ m0u~ .........
CultWat~h the national organization
whose sole purpose is to m~nitor and
a~ses relisious groups who possess
"
"cult" characteristics.
.

y par me ous
:
outside a church and demonstrate for
45 mlnqtes, then they load up and

television station. When a reporter

f°n°.wer~..’ he 8.nes on a minion. Hi~
.~..w~.st tarset ss the Topeka school

..a~edI Phelps if it bothered him that
his followers were injured, he
blasted,.~I don’t’~c~tre if 5, 10,15, or
-20 peoplein my group go to ;the.
hospital. Hell, I don’t even c~re if
they DIEIJ"
.
John says this statement proves that
the Phelps cult is on the verge of

AIDS, and Fred Phelps and his~
group jumped ,_on the opporttmi~ to.
picket Kenny s fanm~. - Susan
remembers,
"Our mother was
de~ " She was desperately
trying to cope, not only with her
son’s
death;
but ~ with
the
homosexuality as ~weIl. Then here
comes the Pbelps andhis bunch

a .num"and a women~ both from

.get tl~.., .sch.ml .._,b~,_d to stop the

that.Phelps feels llke he’s losing his

false rhetoric. ~in our time oT grief,

how vicious Fred Phetus ~ h;o
followers can he Due ~o n~-r~’~

rnctps
says
1~
wm
lesbianism in the school."

promote

more and more, desperate.
The
problem is that desperate people do

horrible things about my brother.
Fred Phelps isa bcast~"

¯~f you look at ~ ~-,~, of

op~ous-~t is, p~,d. ~ti~

b~other ~w up with ~d ehelp,

m_0_ve_ on to another tarset and picket
at 7:00am_ and so on"
.J.o.lm~._a~o,_..ad~l,..When
~
Phelps fey..Is
~ ne s msm8 ms power over his.

wncrc.., zour or tree Phelps group)
~j,,., t,,
live. in a~ compound"
no.
w~,
.........
compound takes tm most ,~f

f.H

cruel, heartless attacks.

r

m

Guldelines for.ssions
"
¯
+.

-6. The foIlowin8 pherses should:
. incorporated on the Io8o: ¯

2. The L~g~os should be eith~
2-colors or 3-colors at the most,
both suitable for printi~ on white.
3. All losos should be submitted in
¯
two sizes:
.

8ay-Pride and Protest
International March and Rally
¯
. New York City
June 26, 1994
"
.
+
. , ¯

ap_pro_x, tl’wx, t2".~h.)
.
.,
..
B. Button. raze tmay ne etmer o~

selected+rat the end-oi "july, at the
next mee’tin8 of the Stonewall 25
National Steering Commltte~ to tak~

2~

Susan " i i i i

~

omcrs smoam a ctrc/e formation to

¯

the fo~owms;) 1 "

~

2. Rotmd 1.75" or 2"
"
Ausust 1st.
Se~d desimm to Mary Ar
4¯ The me,or(s) of. the official
.....
~
buckle,
Stonewall 25 Logo will be ~
P.O. Box 36, Betlmny, OK 73008
as st~h in press release andtbe
¯
button wrap aroun~L
"
property
Stonewa1125.5"
All desisus
of
submitted becxmxe

¯

-

¯

’

--

"---.----

++.. +

+I.../.COME -IOME.:TO

N

|

"

|

.

~

~
’

I
"

|
I

.

¯

~ Global Celebration of

" New.YorkLesbian&amp; Gay Pride 26th,
&amp; Protest-

City V June

1994

~
|

~ Add me to your mailing list.
V D.orlation enclosed S

~

adult lounge
.

e erybod. .,

~IOWS.J,zOUI" ilc211~1~..

-1 4 S. W. 8

,

¯ .
address~ame
....
_
__
c~ty

._

_

-:- state __

z~p

Stonewall 25 ~208 West 13th St. ¯ New York, NY i0011

(2~2) 4~9-~o3~
The Parachute

Page II

mm m---mmm mmm mm--.,mmm mm mm

�SUPREME COURT BACKS
HATE CRIMI~ LAWS
WASHINGTON-The
U.S.
Supren~ Court June 11 ummimonsly
uph~Id a Wisconsin law imposing

longer prison senteuces and larger
fines on assailants who attsvk

someone b~u~l on a vadety of
categories,

in~luding

sexual

~nbauciug laws in Illinois and 24
other states. The justices said such
laws do not infringe on free speech,
because they are aimed at conduct.
The
decision
reinstated
the
conviction of a Black youth whose
after 1~ l~ll~d instigate th~ racially
motivated be~ting of a white youth,
reports th~ CHICAGO TRIBe.
Wisconsin’s law allows judas to
giv~ longer sentimos to defondants
who choose their victims based on
such categories as ra~, ~ligion,
etlmicity, sexual orientation or
Said
Chief
Sustice
William
P~hnquist: "Our c~ses ~j~t
view that an appar~ntiy limitless
var~ty of condu~t can be labeled
’Sl~h’
whomever
th~
l~Son
theruby to express an id~ A
physical assault is not by any stre~h
of ti~
imugination
expressive
conduct prorated by th~ 1st

down a St. Paul, Minno,
Sl~c~h" law that criminaliz~l th~ use
of symbols such as burni~ ~rosses
Th~ Parachute

Pa~

the TRIBUN-~
reports. Rehnquist said that law "was
explicitly dL,ect~ at expression."

AMElUCAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION ADDS
SEXUAL ORIENTATION TO
BIAS CODE
CHICAGO--The American Medical
Association has decided to ban
discrimlnatlon agall~t gay and
lesbian physicians in the professional
organization. By a voice vote, AMA
delegates Jlme 15 gave approval to
adding.the wor&amp; "sexual orientation"
to the AMA’s non-discrimlnation
code. The association had rejected
the motion in four previous votes.
Dr. John Clowe, the AMA’s outgoing
president, said the group is not
condonin~ any lifestyle but the AMA
board.of trustees believed bylaws had
The
American
Association
of
Physicians for Human Rights, an
organiTation of gay and lesbian
physicians, had lobbied extensively
for the measure, convincing
the
AMA’s board of trustees to push
both publicly and privately for the
policy change.
"Today’s
~vote
constitutes
a
recognition by the AMA that anti-gay
discrimination
is
not
only a
civil-rights issue, but a health
problem as well," said AAPHR
~r Benjamin Schatz. "The fa~t
is that ourso~iety’s pervasive
anti-gay bias results in the loss of
thousands of gay and lesbian lives
each year through increased teen
suicide, anti-gay violence, higher
rates of drug and alcohol abuse,

HAITIANS ARRIVE FROM
CUBA
MIAMI, Fla.--The first of more
than 150 Haitian refugees began
arriving after a federal court ordered
the U.S. government to m~n~t them
to this country. An Air Force
transport plane carrying 21 adults
and six children, most of whom are

SALESPERSON
WANTED
CALL

The Parachute
1-800-536-6519

June
14.
Some
140
other
HIV-positive Haitians remain at the
Guantanamo Bay Navel Base in
Cuba. Most of the refugees have
been detained there for the past 1
1/2 years although U.S. immi~ration
officials agree they have legitimate
claim~ as politicjd ref@gces but~have
been detained in Cuba because of
Haitians in Cuba were s~heduled to
arrive in the U.S. th~ end of Jlm~.

Kelly H. Kirby
Certified Public Accountant
Let us help you with your monthly, quarterly
and annual tax and accounting needs.
9933 East 16th, Suite 104
Tulsa, OK 74128
(918) 663-93.99
OKC (405) 942-1062

�BACKBYPOPULAR DEMAND

The Taj Mahal
Dart Tournament Tuesdays 8:00 pm
Pool Tournament Wednesdays 8:00 pm
Happy Hour 12-7
$1.00 small
Pitchers of-beer

July Shows
July 9th &amp; 23rd

at llpm

¯2630 E. 15th Tulsa, Oklahoma 918-742-8274 Hours 12pm- 28m

The ~ontroversy continues about
how mu~h an AIDS-educator can say
Numerous stories are told to me by
s~hool
officials
about AIDS
educators whose explanations border
on
pornosraphy,
who
bring
"surprises’, who utilize s~re tactics
or lecture about the evils of sex and
homosexuality. Somehow none of
those techniques truly _fulfill the
mi~xion of obj~tives of AIDS

A student tht~ combines that
information with his/her past
experiences, beliefs, knowledge, and
will. The result is behavior and

Fear tactics c~mea person to judge
person in isnorance and fear.
"Surprises" alienate school officials
from the educator. Lectures that
umdemn "sinful" behaviors of
"sinfnl" people

HIV/AIDS
imowtedge
and
appropriate
presentations.
They
receive_guidelines for age appropriate
mterial in accordance with CDCP
8uidelines, Oklahoma State statates,
school gnidclim~, Amcrioan
Cross guidelines and Other Options’
Other Options’ presentations have
received excellent ratings and earned
the respect of many professional
organization.
Groups_ requesting
speakers in the first 4 months of
1993 include:
24 lementary, middle, hish schools
5 universities
30 health care professionals groups
64 organizations
18 churches
14 businesses

Something Wonderful Is Coming To Tulsa.

volunteer ~tra’min8 or to become a
Other Option educator carl Le~Arbucklc, Director of Education at
728-3222.

that facts ~o~d save hi_~hcr life.
teelmk~/ points of how an
modification,

barrier

hopes, and ~larification.

pro~tion,
The Parachute

Page 13

�Tulsa Oklahomans for H.~man Rights

HELPLINE
New in town? Having Problems?Need
referrals?
The TOHR Gay Information Line is here for you!
We offer a variety of referrals - from legal and
medical to AIDS
TOHR and bar information
Fhe helpine is staffed7 days a week, 8pm to 10pm

4812 East 33rd, Tulsa, OK 918-742-5262

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PROOF

The Parachute

Page 14

OF

title

21

FOB

HOlvllSSIOH

�NGLTF Hails
Supreme Court
Ruling In
Wisconsin
Case

Gay Groups Split
on Ginsburg
Nomination

Washin~on, DC (EGCM) The
National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force
(NGLTF)
hails
the
unanimous U.S. Supreme Court
in
Wisconsin
decision
v.
Mitchell.
The Supreme ’Court
affirmed
the consfitutionafity
of a Wisconsin
state statute
that
enhances
penalties
for
crimes motivated
by a bias
against
the
victim’s
race,
religion,
disability,
color,
national
origin,
ancestry
or

Washington, DC (EGCM) The
National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force
(NGLTF)
and
the
Human Rights Campaign Fund
(HRCF),
two top gay and
lesbian
political
orgdnizations
are split in their opinions of the
Presidents nomination of Judge
Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
While
NGLTF
issued
a statement
supporting
the
nomination,
HRCF seeks clarification
of
Ginsburg’s position on privacy
issues before they will give their
endorsement.

sexual orientation.
The Supreme Court justices
made clear that the derision in
Wisconsin
v. Mitchell ~ differs
significantly from their rnling
last year in a hate speech case
known as R~A.V. v. St. Paul.
While the St. Paul ordinance
punished
hate
speech
or
"messages",
the
Wisconsin
statute allows for increased
sentences when illegal conduct
is motivated by bias.

In 1984 Judge Ginsburg favored
a majority decision to deny the
rehearing
of Droneburg
v.
Zech, which challenged a Navy
sailor’s
discharge
due
to
homosexual
activity.
Judge
Ginsburg
stated
that
her
decision to deny a rehearing of
the case was based on her
opinion
a
previous
that
Supreme Court case showed a
precedent
which limited
the
plaintiff’s .basis for a suit.

NGLTF interprets this decision
on Judge
as no reflection
Ginsburg’s- opinions about the
right, to privacy or the mil~itary’s
anti-gay ban. Torie Osborn of
the Task Force stated, "While
her support for the decade-old

with
impunity
any
more.
Second, to state and Federal
legislators -- now is the time to
and
crafted
pass
careful
sound
constitutionally
hate
legislation
combat
to
crimes."

The jury is not out for HRCF.
"Judge Ginsburg is a respected
jurist with a long record of
leadership
on
discrimination
and women’s issues," said Tim,
McFeeley
of the
Campaign

When
the
Anti-Defamation
League of B’nai B’rith files and
amicus brief in Wisconsin
v.
Mitchell,
NGLTF joined it and
15 national Jewish, civil fights
and law enforcement agencies
in supporting
the state of
Wisconsin.
"Lesbians,
gay
men
and
bisexuals must now push for the
passage of hate crimes penalty
enhancement
legislation
m
their own cities and states,"
urged Haraga. "And whenever
such laws already exist, we must
monitor
law
Constantly
authorities
to
enforcement
make sure that the laws are
being implemented and used to
counter hate crimes."

5 Privat~ M~,mlg¢ Rooms

By Rex Rivers

"The Wisconsin
V. Mitchell
decision, and the fact that it
was unanimous,
is a critical
victoryfor the lesbian and gay
said
Martin
movement,"
Hiraga, NGLTF Anti-Violence
Project Director.
"It vindicates
our contention
that because
hate crimes are not simple
assaults,
but attacks
against

NGLTF has been documenting
anti-gay
hate violence
since
NGLTF produces an
1982.
report
on
violence,
annual
victimi7ation
and
defamation
against lesbians, gay men andbisexuals in .the nation, has
pushed for local,
state and
national hate crime legislation,
such" as the Wisconsin law and
the Hate Crime Statistics Act.

Personal Touch

Fund.
some

"However, we would like
clarification
of Judge
Ginsburgs position on the right
to privacy as guaranteed by the
U.S. Constitution."
As
the
Senate
Judiciary
Committee begins hearings m
the Ginsburg nomination, it is
expected that clarification
on
the Droneburg
decision
as
well as other opinions will come
out.
The timetable for the
confirmation . hearings has not
been set yet.

NGLTF Launches
Mobilization Against
the Military Ban
Washin~on,
DC (EGCM) As
the deadline approaches for an
executive order regarding gay
men
and
lesbians
in
the
military, the National Gay and
Lesbian Task Force (NGLTF) is
launching
a
national
Mobilization
Against the Ban
be#nnlng
July
4.
The
Mobilization
m intended
to
unite
the
gay and
lesbian
community and send a visible
message to the White House,
Congress
and
the
Pentagon
that
any compromise
policy
that
enforces
discrimination
against gay men and lesbians
will not stand.

nELU

Toning Tables

M~

Cl~s

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NOTICE
WE NOW HAVE A FULL TIME
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One Hour
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On July 4, the Mobilization will
kick off with a demonstratioh
in Lafayette Park across from
the White House.
Led by
veterans
and
supported
by
leaders and executive ,directors
of. community
organizations,
the action will call for an end
to the military’s disCriminatory
policy.

Barney Frank. NGLTF opposes
current .de~scriptions of such a
compromtse because- the policy
would . continue to reinforce
create
and
discrimination
-separate conduct standards for
non-gay
service
gay
and
The Mobilization
members.
will include a massive action on
July 15 with a march to the

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COMING IN AUGUST
DEB R OBER TS LIVE!
The Paraohute

Page 15

�WATCH ~ PARACHUTE
FOR MONTHLY REPORTS
OF TOHR NEWS AND
EVENTS

TOHR Pool Party
~

Oklabomans

for

Human

Rights will host a pool party for
July for-more information call th~
Helpline at 918-743-GAYS.

Delegates Eleoted for
Stonewall 25
o-Kelly Kirby of Tulsa and Kerman
Rains of Norman have been elected
as Delegates from Oklahoma for
Stonewall 25. This event will be
held in conjum3tion with Gay Games
’94 in New York City. Watch The
Parachute for more information as it
becomes available.
TOHR FOLLIES A SUCCESS
TOHR Annual Follies were held
Juno 19th, this is one of TOHR’s
major fundrais~s. There was great
entertsinmeut with an estimated
att~dance of 150 to 200 people.

COMING TO TULSA IN
AUGUST

S.TJ.R.
(Stadeats of Tulsa fe~ ~pe~maat Rights)
S.T.I.IL
a
newly
reactivated
organization at the University of
Tulsa. S.T.I.R is a place to provide
gay/lesbian/bisexual students in the
Tulsa area support and join in social
educational and political activities.
The group sponsors educational
activities at the University of Tulsa
to inform tbe public about issues and
also provides
disoussions
and
speakers at its weekly meetings that
are
of
speoial
interest
to
gay/lesbian/bisexual students. The
group also tries to engage in political
activities,
such
as
visibility

campaigns and other demonsUations
on the University of Tulsa campus.
S.T.I.R. meets at The Canterbury
Center for United Ministry.
The
campus minlb’try that is committed to
issues of social justice and human
If you have any questions regardin~
this organi~atioll .you may ¢Atll
918-583-9780. S.T.I.R believes that
a void exist in the Tulsa area
~ommtmlty for gay/lesbian/bisexual
young people, and they are twing to
fill that void and support their peers
with a safe and affirmln$ place to go
as they coe~ into their sexuality.

The first ~y in August TOHR
will host a Picnic and Dance in
Bartlet Square in Dowatowa Tulsa.
Them will be gr¢~ music~ and lot’s
of fun and cxcitemenL Bring your
own food and TOBIt will provide

July for All:Cars break down,
appliances
get
vindictive
and
communication becomes muddled. If
you’re planning to sign a contract or
spend major bucks, wait until the last
week of the month to f’malizc.
ARIES March 21-April 20
It may seem like the world is testing you
this month; home and family concerns
can add to the tension. Stand up for
yourself on big issues; try to let the little

s~fgnby.
TAURUS April 20-May 21
You’re full of energy and ready to work.
People around you suppor~ your efforts.
If you have been thinking about taking a
gamble, now is the time to begin your

good time to plot and plan for the future.
Use your ample energy to consolidate
recent gains.
SAGrlWARIUS Nov. 23-Doo. 22
Your boss may be a real pain in the neck
this month if your personal goals conflict
with the company line. "You’re feeling
amorous--just try to be a bit

venture.

GEMINI May 21- June 22
You’re vigorous and assertive and you
can get a lot done this month, but it
seems like you have to prove yourself at
every turn. Try to replace confrontation
with compromise.
CANCER June 22-July 23
New opportunities open up for you this
month, your self confidence is high and
you’re ready to take advantage of every
chance you get. Speaking or writing play

a major role.
LEO July 23-August 23
You fccl unusually sociable this month;

you enjoy being around others and
people like you. more than usual too. If
you need a favor from someone, this is a
good time to ask.

VIRGO August 23-September 23

at 7:00 p.m.

LIBRA September 23-October 23
You’re al.ways good at teamwork but,
this month you’re even better at it than
usual. Creative energies are high; try to
get the ball rolling on a new joint
venture.
SCORPIO Ootoher 23- November 23
Your health is good and the stress level
in your life is low this month. Now is a

TULSA~

Love is in the air this month and
interesting people arc drawn to you, but
Main
let some thne pass before_you ~..rcn.t.;~
L... U:~.~¥our,~tion~ may pm~0~oto
, be purely hormonal.

HIV TESTING

CAPRICORN Dec. 22-Jan. 21
Projocts begun this year arc reaching a
climax now, but your ambition may
provoke opposition from others. Sweet
talk plus decisive action leads to
triumph.
AQUARIUS Jan. 21-Feb. 20
Family and partners create frequent,
minor annoyances and this can reflect on
your health. A good month to hide out
and work on some odd invention in the
basement.
PISCES Feb. 20-March 21
Take some time to look at your recent
achievements; keep what works and
throw out the rest. Partners need extra
TLC this month; let your natural
compassion kick in.

Visit our store in mystical,
metaphysical Eureka Springs.
We offer full astrologiaal

downtown at 95 Spring Street;
or call us at 501-253-5445.

Every Thursday Evening
Sponsored by:

TULSA OKLA FOR

HUMAN RIGHTS
4154 S. Harvard, Suite H-I
Tulsa, Oklahoma

Free and Anonymous
HIV Testing
Daytime testing by appt.
749-4194

For more information call.

many peopte oe u
A lot of people don’t think they have to worry about HIV.
But the truth is, you can get HIV infection if you share drug needles,
and syringes or have sex with an infected person. Call your State or
local AIDS hotline, or the National AIDS Hotline
at 1-800-342-AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for
deaf access.

H1V is the virus that causesAIDS. ~
~’~]~’~

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health Service
Centers for Disease Control

’HELPL1NE o
For and by ,but not limited to the Gay/Lesbian
and Bisexual Community

The Par~hute

Page 16

�A

,EUREKA SPRINGS
Canoeing, fisbi~S~ sights~ing, ~or
just swinging on th~ porch is just a
small part of what Eur~lm Springs
and Be~wr Lalm can offer.
Quit~ and ~ Eureka Springs
enjoyean array of a~ommodations.
Th~ popularity of th~ bed ~and
breakfast c~s em~h owner to
off~ their p~rsonal styl~ of
exc~llenc~.
At tl~ end of a st~p path n~stl~
Within its own forest you willFmd a
beautiful victorian hom~. Offering
splendid accommodation which
include hot tubs, a back porch

R

A bit around the bend your eyes will
fall
upon the colorful and
wonderfully displayed gardens of
Rock Cottage. The gardens surround
the private cottages each with its
own ~, and offers a r~laxing
ja~uzzi for two. Not far away sits
tl~ main hous~ wh~r~ your hosts
Stove and Lament will pr~u~ a
gourm~ hr.&amp;fast for all to anjoy.
Within
wslkin2
distan~ from
downtown Eureka Springs them is
tl~ So~ Ros~ wl~m CJ~yl and
Pam
provide
your
romanti~
hid~way. Upon your arrival you
will f’md a jacuzzi for two,
champagne, and a wat~rbod for your

s~_ins p~asur~. A d~partur~ from

~

her~..you can enjoy an
light prepared by your
¯

lenn ........

-.,.

-K-

_~A

N

S

A

S

THE
IMA GER Y
Eureka’s Highest Quality Photo~
and Authenfic Costumes
Al! photo’s guaranteed not to fade

MONTHLY SPECIALS
New Odeans Hotel
63 Spring Street
Eureka Springs, Ark.

the traditional B &amp; B your hostess
do not provide, the-~orni~ meal
~r~:..m

for a completely, private.

OF STAYING .AT THE~

T

he Souther~ Rose is a newly remodeled and deco-

ted cottage. It is in a great location right in Historic

,i.. Downtown Eureka Springs~ But,it is hidden away a

bit off the beaten path, where it is peaceful and quiet. Away
from the traffic and hustle and bustle. You just take some
steps down and you will be in the heart of downtown Eureka~
Walking distance to many shops, restaurants; nightlife, churches,
The Eureka Springs Historic Museum, Trolley station, Bank and Eureka Performing Arts center, all within a one block area.

19 112 Sp~ng Street

In Historic Downtown Eureka Springs

THE SOUTHERN ROSE
#9 Benton Street
Eureka Springs, AR 72632 - (501) 253-5800

Eureka!s Original 50’s &amp; 60’s Rock &amp; Roll
Open 11 am to 5pro Friday- Wednesday
Featuring - Deli Sandwiches Piled High with Savory

Meats and Cheeses
-Daily Specials such as K.C. Style BBQ &amp; Authentic

Cajun Cuisine

On The White River

Full Service Old Fashioned Soda Fountain
Our Own Fresh Homade Hamburgers

Housekeeping Cabi~s ¯ Trout Fishing

Vegetarian Specials
Tex Mex Cuisine
Draw Beer or Bottled Beer

Canoe/Jon Boat Rental
ONE MILE NORTH OF BEAVER DAM
ON HIGHWAY 187
J.R. &amp; Sue Ellen, Hosts

THE HOP-Wo’m a family, wh~m AI.L families

,are ,w~lcome.
The Parachut~

Pal~ 17

ROUTE 2, ~BOX 418
EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS 72632
.
PHONE (501) 253-9241
.

�/~-~’~’-.,

Featuring private, individual cottages for two.
Nestled under trees and among hundreds of flowers.

p C’i~.
~ 0 ~T~.G E

~ Whirl~l t~s for two

i@ O~een size ~ds ~ Anti~e ~rnishi~s
ar~en~ ~ Largegourmetbreakfast. ~ C~le~
"~ ~ ~ ~-.! * O~trooL parki~ * O~ Lh~ trolley route
.

~_i ~ O~n all year

1-800-624-6646
10 Eugenia St (on the Historic Loop) Eureka Springs, AR 72,632

Rock Cottage Gardens

B
0

Gift
Shop

37 Spring Str=ct
E~reka springs, Arkansas 7"2632
501-253-6600

The Southern Roso

The Purple Ida Inn
Cam.fljr Owned &amp; Operated

EMERALD
RAINBOW
Metaphysical I?~oks * Candles * Incense
C~/sSals * Storles ¯ Herl~a ¯ and more!

Women O~ned &amp; Operated
Per~nal Relationship &amp; Business As~’ol~ly

RR 6 Box 339
Eureka Springs, Ark. 7263~
501-253-8748

95 SPRING ST. MALL ¯ 501-253-5445 ¯ EUREKA SPRINGS, AR

Satori Arts
Mystical Art and
Jewels

~ Arbour Glen, Circa 1896, i.~ locatedon tl~ EurekaSprlngs
9~storic District loop, ",.~th ~ou~ shops and
res w.v.rant~ ordy steps azomj.
Complet~j renovated with your comfort in mind.
~ Arbour Glen stillretains its Victorian ~,

Beou Zar 5atori
501-253- 9820
- 8 1 Spring St.
Eureka Springs. Ark.
72632
The Parachute

Pas¢ 18

Pcl~ and enjmJ t~e pict~r~sque se~ng ~ our tree-covered,~ollow
for an unforgettabl~ e~eriznce,

�B &amp; B Lounge
1004 1/2 Garrison Fort Smith, Ark,
501-783-9347

Cruise Bar
18 and over
Beer &amp; Wine Coolers

501-253-7399

Her props and accessories are real
too.
All of these elements lend her
photographs an authenticity rarely
seen in- other
antique photo
The overall look of her images is
different, because she involves
several aspects Of composition,
lighting and materials to create

When Storch came to Eureka
Springs in 1975, she didn’t know
exactly what she would do-for a
career. If you had asked her 20
years ago in New York City. where
she would have been today, she
probably would never have guessed
she would be in Eureka Springs.
Her hard work and talents have paid
off. Today the Imagery preserves
award winnins modern images of a

"I use very high quality of materials
which gives my work a range of
tones that most don’t have." she
"But the convention was good for
artisans in the industry that ~reate
wonderful costumes, hats and
backdrops~ as well as photo
suppliers," Storeh said.

THE SHOW

EUREKA SPRINGS--When antique
photosxapher-Susan Storeh made
plans to attend her first professional
conven’~ti0n,~ little did she know that
she would end up being the toast of
"In
1992
I
was
in
this
photographer’s studio in Las Vegas,"
she sakL "We got into conversation
and he told me about the group."
"I had no idea sueh an organization
even existed," Storeh langhe&amp; She is
the owner of the Imagery on Spring
Street~
She found out about the group’s
mnnu~l photo contest. Storeh’s
te~lmique is a mix of old-fashi0ned
equipment and modern technology
with a little patient psychology
thrown in for good measure. Whil~e
setting .up any portrait she works
with the subject 8ettln~ an idea of
their personality and what sort of
photograph would best suit them.

- Ste~oh~imtled ~at Of~’~otsof.
locals from her portfolio andlefl for
Las Vegas.
Sto~h has been a professional
photographer her entire career, but
learning the antique photo business
was something she did with little
outside help.
"All of the big shots were there,
Kodak and Agfa (photo .supply and
equipment
companies).
In
the.
newsletter they sent me before I left
brought along some shots," site sal~
Storeh was surprised to t-md that she
had two first places, two second
places and Best of Show.
"I drew from my favorite photos of
locals. While I knew what we did
here was good, I was impressed with
the work of everyone else. I was
shueked to win. It’s wonderful to he
honored by your peers," she said.
"I even had people come up to~ me
afterward and tell me they voted for
my work over their own,~ Storch
sai&amp; The contest led to a short
workshop on how she a~hieves
realism in her work In fact, she’s
already on the teaching s~hedole for
next convention.
The prizes Storeh won as part of the
c~mtest made some very good
¢~mta~s for her. As a result she has
met with a new customer and an
incredibly talented milliner.
Up until the convention, Storeh was
never satisfied with commercially
prodm:ed costmnes. They didn’t have
the look and feel ~f real. So she
found a talented seamstress and set to
work having real clothes made. Once
she fiai~hed, they are slit up the b~k
for a 0ne-size fits all capability.

" -

.....

Come See The New
Expansion

MENS BAR
HOliEST DANCE BAR
NEW WOMAN’S BAR
Big Patio Out Back
25 .cent draft 5pro to 9pm Daily
Monday-Free Pool $2.00 Well Drinks
Tuesday-Singles Pool Tournament
Wednesday -$1.00 off ALL MIXED DRINKS
Thursdays .- Doubles Pool Tournament
Friday-Sunday Midnight Madness 1 lpm to lain
$1.00 off ALL mixed drinks

Sunday Show 10 pm 75vent Drafts/S2.00 Well Drinks
Open 5pro to5am Liquor-Beer &amp; Wine

Private Club M~nbers &amp; Guest Only

305 Garrison Fort Smith Arkansas 501"783-9822
~The parachute

Page 19

�R ON’S PLACE
P.O. 367 523 W. Poplar Fayetteville, Arkansas 501-442-3052

Sunday Shows Featuring: Jill St.John
Every 3rd Sunday is Talent Night
$50.00 Cash Prize

JULY 17TH
Pool Tables
&amp;
Pinball Machines

MALE ORDER

September 5th

Fayetteville

Entertainer of The
Year Contest
The Parachute

Pa~¢ 20

�Attention members &amp; Guest

RKANSAS’ BEST BLO’CI P RTY
ENTERTAINMENT
A
P
R
I
V

1021. JESSIE ROAD
LITTLE RO~K, AR
664-2744 or 666-6900

BacksO~ ’s 2 year Anniversary Celebration
July 2,3, &amp; 4 - Come and see your Now Look
AH New 501Dao~e floor Op~s July 2rid with Ryan Idol!

Open 7 days a week 7pm - 3am
"902" The GAMEROOM...our newest addition[

DISCOVERY, INC.
1021 JESSIE ROAD
LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS 72202
501-664-4784 OR 501-666-6900

Showroom Open Wed. thru Sun.

There is always something happening on Jessie Road - 7 Days a wc.c.k!

The ] 993/V~iss Goy Arkansas Pageanf July 3 ] st and Augusf ] sf

Pork once Par.ty all nighf! "We’ve gof if good in [iffle ~oc~.."
]O2 | Jessie Road, Little l~ock, Arkansas

lVlA~mG~DRESS: P.O:BOX
254, AVOCA, ARKANSAS
72711-0254
FACTS: LIVING PENS was
(referred to as
"Pals’)
for
HIV+/ARC/AIDS tested individuals
(ref,er,re~l

to

as

"Honor

Roll

Members/Clients’) across th~ U.S.
who are in search of a steady,
understanding ear for their daily
It is understood that infection often
isolation into the lives that it
touches.
Desertion by family
members and past friendships often
compound these feelings. LIVING
PENS offers
friendship to combat
those negative motions. Pals
provide constant, CONFIDENTIAL
correspondence. Content of letters
between a LIVING PENS Pal and
~

~ 1

Honor

Roll

~O ~PENS PalsARE- NOT
Therapists,
Pals :. provide, true
friendships; 8¢t involved Imrsonally.
They provide positive attitudes and
positiv~ thinking wbaaever possible
ac~eptam:e, and dedication.
Pals are strictly volunteer. This
service
is
offered
to
its
Members/Clients
FREE
OF
CHARGE. Postase is the individual
responsibility of eaoh Pal and Honor
Roll Member/Client for their letters
only. The organization does acoept
.donations of postage stamps and/or
fnnde to support the work it does.
RIV+/ARC/Arr~s
individuals
wi~hi~ to join the Itonor Roll or
individuals wishing to become Pals
(regardless of flair own BIV status)
may contaot the group at the address
listed above.
We are in great need of volunteers to
become Pals. We particularly need
~ with RIV+ people who

one-on-one relationship of those two
individmls without the express
permission

of the

Member/Client

involve~L Names and addresses of
Honor Roll Members/Clients- are
keptconfidential at all tim~.
This is not a mate ~earohing club or
a place to search for ~xnal partners.
LIVING PENS is a~n~sed by the
profe~innals of the Washington

We are now not only servin8 the
entire U.S.; but we have began
reachi~ into other oountrios--18rael,

Uganda, Peoples Republic of China,
and Aus~alia to mention a few.
Terry D. Delimont
Fouader

o

DIGNITY/LITI~E ROCK

Disnity/Little Reek announces that
the Chapter will be having it’s Third
Annual Spiritual Retreat for gay and
lesbian Catholh:s, their families, and
their friends on August 20, 21, and
22, 1993. People of all faiths
wanting to maim a retreat are
welcome, a Catholle affiliation is
not require~
This year’s Spiritual Retreat will be
held at "Ro~khavon" retreat center
in
House
Springs,
Missouri.
Ro~khaven is a private home owned
by the Sisters of St. Joseph and is
located 25 miles southwest of st.

Ro~khaveu

ia

a

besutiful

8cemo

location with a welcomln$ s~aff,
swimmi~, ~ f~, ~fio
~ ~ ~ fm~ of ~
O~ ~ ~ ~n~ of ~ B~ ~v~
~j~t ~ 8-10 miles of w~
~ ~.
It off~ ~

F~ mo~ ~~ or ~ ~ive
fo~ ~n~t B~
B~h at (501) 758-3512, or you

.~fi~

~. P.O. Box 3015, ~ R~
~ 72203

SILVER DOLLAR BAR
2710 Asher
Monday - Friday 4pm- 1 am
Saturday lpm-Midnight
501-663-9886

mgaaiZatio~ LIVING PENS lm ao

Little Rock, Arkansas
The Paradn~

Page 21

�BRADY &amp; ASSOCIATES
INSURANCE AGENCY
¯ DAVID BISHOP ¯
Guaranteed Issue Life(ages 0-99)
NO Medical Ouestions
Cancer Policies
Annuities
only eligible in Oklahoma

919 N. virginia ¯ OKC ¯ (405) 272-98~

1-800-25;6"6297
(405;)
FAX

Coming Attractions
July 9-30 Red Dog Dancers $2.00 Cover
July 10 th - lst Annual Red and Black Tie Affair

Crowing of King and Queen of Sneakers
Celebrating Michel and Jmti~e’s 5 year A nniv~

In 1986 Ken Taylor, Blake Rothous,
and Jim Carter had a dream about a
book that would bring tosether

Fre~ K~g Bud Light - No Cover
July 17th - 1st Year Anniversary Party - No Cover
Drama Bonn, Undocido~ and CocMa will sing

with HIV/AIDS Ken knew a book
of that szope would help people to
live with HIV disease, to grieve,
~ome together in support of each
other.
A ~olle~tive effort was
begun. After Ken and Blake died,
Jimmy Carter (1988) began to
actively advoc~e for the book and
stories kept zeroing in .... and so we
stories, poetry, proceedswill 8o to
all H1V/AIDS organizations in need
by-application provess. To that end
we ask you to begin a collection of
stories. We have on hand some 15
stories and poems and want to thank
all those who have offered theses
gems for the "Book’. We invite you
to continue thb process by sharing
experiences, the hmmm interest
stories, the joys and tears, funny
moments and dying moments, fears
and sadness, letters from and to.

Free keg -. 75 c~mt Schnapps
July 21 Sue &amp;Sherry °s Ba¢lwlor Party

Michele °s 31st Birth~y Party
Chips &amp;Salsa/S1.25 Bottle B~r/. 75 Schnapps~. 75 ~nt Jdlo sho~
Yuly 25 Door Op~ 1:30

3:00 Sue and Sherry’s Holy Union, Donna Bean singing. Fr~
Keg.
Friday l~ghts 9-11 $1.00 domesO’¢ beer, no cover/Excluding
. sp~id events.

Dm-t Tournament ~ ~ an r~ursdays
Hours: Closed Sun-Wed.
Thurs. 6:30 to ?/Friday.8:30 to ?/ $~,turday ~:30 to ?

CITY OF OKLAHOMA CITY
NEIGHRORHOOD
COMMUNITY PLANNING
HOUSING

REHA~n.rrA~oN
. PROGRAM

forgotten we .want you to ~write, read
and share with others. You my send
in suggestions for the title of the
book
Submit in whatever form you
choose, typed is preferab~ but not
necessary. Past story tellers, Blake
Rothous, Ken Taylor, Jim Carter,
Joan Foreman, Cookie Arbuoide,
Mike Schilfin8, Mizhael and Kathy.
Robert, Keith, Jeff, Edna Resets,
Mr. and Ms. Welton, Bill Murphy,

Larry, Bob.
Send your stories, choose a title,
mak~ susgestions. If you would like
to submit a story, etc., send it to the
Parachute in zare of Cookie Arbuolde

of Othe: Options.

The HOME OWNERSHIP
OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM

t~op)
The City of Oklahoma City has a
limited llumber of vacaut residential
struztures in need of rehabilitation.
The purpose of the program i~ to put
homes back in produztive use, to
preserve
sto~k
o;f
standard
residential property and to provide
This is not an open enrollment
prosrant nor an ongoing city
13ecember 1992. They are now
processing these applicants. You
must cadl to access the time of
enrollm_,~ltt.

Eligible appficamts will be grouped

The Pasachute

Pa~ 22

o.n : -Other " Optiens~ ~-~-~’ ,-O~C:~"

Hop.proparties cannot be zonveyed to
separated
individuals.
After
submitting an application you will be
notified in writin8 as to your
elisibility to participate thewatfter a
notive to attend an open house will be
sent. Submit your name to house of

405-728-3222
for
further
information THe information was
suimdtted by Jack Childers who
invites your ~ also. Contazt Jack
at 528-8083

agree to fotlowing:
I. Rehabilitate property to program
2. Provide all funds necessary to
complete work in advance. You my
be elisible for a HOP loan to repair.
3. Live in property for five years
after work is unnplete~
4.
Be prompt and ma~nt on all
payments, taxes, inmmmce for home.
5. Maintain home and allow periodic
inspections for five years.
6.
If
you
meet
elisibility

zompete against other famiti~ in
their grouping through a drawing for

requirements, (they determine those

appropriately

hom~ s what it would c~st applicator.
GROSS
ANNUAL
INCOME
STANDARDS FOR PROGRAM
ALLOWANCE
1 person-$19,300ysar-$1,609monthly
2 persons-22;100ysar-1,842monthly
3 persons-24,850yoar-2,07 lmonthly
4 persons-27,600year-2,300montldy
5 persons-29,800year-2,484montidy
6 persons-32,000ysar-2,667monthly
7 persons-34~00ysar-2,850montidy
For more information on this

sized

homes

that

beceme available.
GENERAL
REQUIREMENTS
ARE:
* Be at leost 21 years of age
* Be a resident of Oklahoma City; or
be employed in OKC; or be offered

and have au~ted a position on
OKC
* Cannot own residential property at
the time of applivation, or 12 months
prioito the date of app~
*
Must
demonstrate
~x~lit

Rehabilitation. Since this is not an
onsoing program it would be
advisable to zontavt the _City from

existing boosm8 conditions

an opportunity for home ownership.

by family size ami family does not
have .to be biologically related

Congratulations
To:
The Porthole
Best Theme Float
&amp;
Gushers/Pipeline
Best Spirit

*Gross Annual Income cannot exceed
80% of median for OKC scaled to
family size

K.A. ’s
Open 7 days a wevi
2024 N. W. l lth
405-525-3734
Comin_e A ttractiom
Sun. ~uly 4th Cookout
Free Hotdogs
B~t’r Bust 4-6 $3.50

worthiness, abifity and attitude to

of

¢upay any ~ for mhab~fitation

Co~m-~ty

Oklahoma

city,

Sun. July l gth
Beach Party
Lif~mards Pro~idod
Cookout Hamburgers
Free Draft boer 2-4
Beer Bust 4-6 $3.50
$1.50 bottle
AH Day Sundays and
Tuesdays 6pro to ¢los~

Neighborhood

~.hum~,

Housing

Open at 3pro
POOL, DARTS &amp; MORE!

�Oklahoma Ciry’s

your home Away from homEl

The Habana I,nn
A Fine Lodging-Establishment

180 Guest Rooms

Poolside Rooms

Two Pools

Suites

Cable T.V.

Featuring

GUSHERS BAR

¯ breakfast &amp; lu~cli senved daily 9am-Spml
¯ nigl[tly.specials available 5pm-10pml
¯ aher-I~ours br~kfast friday &amp; saturday nigl~1sl

cur~r~e~-, classic-ANd p~og~essive cl~ce music,
beel~ bus~s, special sl-Jo~s &amp; ~VE~sl

F-inishline
Live DJ, country Llancing, beer b~;lsts
West end, Habana Inn Complex

2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY

(405) 524-JRED

OKLAHOMA ClT~, OK 73112

(405) 524-5733

2200 NW 39 Expy, Oklal~oma City, OK

Call for rarES and i~[ormafioM

(405) 528-2221

,

73112

Reservations Only
1=800-988’2221

�MEANT-TO BE
FIT
by Stephen Scott

_

The Reality of FAT
When we hear the word "fat," we
usually run the unglamorous image
fat is essential to the proper
functioning of the body.
There are two categories fatty acids
fall
under:
saturated
and
unsaturate~ Saturated fat occurs
when hydrogen atoms att~h to a
fatty mid chain. Once the fatty acid
chain is filled with hydrogen atoms,
the chain becomes saturated. These
include
butter,
lard,
vegetable
shortening,
meat
and
animal
proteins. On the other hand, ff not
all the places hydrogen atoms can
attach have pairs of hydrogen atoms
attached, the chain is not saturated
with hydrogens, and this is called an
unsaturated fat.
The category of unsaturated fatty
other categories. Dependl-g on how
close and unsaturated fatty acid
chain is to being saturated, it is
e~dled either mon0uusaturatcd or
polyunsaturate~ A fatty acid with
only one pair of hydrogens short of
monouasa~
These
iuclude
olive, peanut, and avacado oils.

A fatty a~id with more than one pair
of hydrogens
short
of being
polyunsaturated (poly=many). Tbese
include corn, safflower and so~
OilS.
In general, saturated fats tends to
raise the level of cholesterol in your
blood, increasing the hardening of the
arteries. Polym~aturated fats tends to
lower blood cholesterol decreasing
the hardeni~ of the arteries;
monouusaturated fats also lower
cholesterol.
When grocery shopping stay away
from
products
containing
"hydrogenated vegetable oil." This
ingredient is a product that started
with an unsaturated vegetable oil that
the. processor c~mbined with extra

hydrogen., making the unsaturated oil
Saturated fats have longer sl~lf life
than unsaturated fats, and it’s
fat (i,e. soybean oil) and hydrogenate
it than to use a saturated, fat (i.e.
batter).
Fat does much more than just bring a
lot of calories into your body. Fat:
1) prote~ts your internal organs from
injury with a protective layer
2) insulates *and keeps you warm
3) viable energy source
4) absorbs fat-soluble nutrients,
vitamin A, D, E, and K
Ideally your daily diet should consist
of less than twenty percent of fat.
You can start at thirty percentS from
all calories, with no more than ten
perc~mt coming from saturated fat.
Then go to the twenty percent
category,

for example, a layer of fat appears
covering the muscles. The thicker
the fat la3~r, the harder it is to see
your muscles no matter how well
.dsveloped they are. Gettin grid of
unwanted fat, is that your goal, is
simply a matt~ of adjusti~.diet and
a~tivity level so you use more
calories that you consume.
(Creatlng a calorie deficit)
Calorie deficit...leads to...fat loss
Fewer caloricsin diet+More calorics
out(aerobi~ exercise)
Doing muscular work requires
energy. Your body draws that
enersy from the food you eat and
from your fat stores. If you deercase
food intake and/or in~me energy
output, you’ll lose-faL
This brings me to my last point.
Spot-red~ing...many
people
misq~tkenly believe that they can
burn fat from around their middle
by doing aerobic exercise...sit-ups,
side bends, etc. The fact is, .spot.
red~ing doesn’t work
Doing
exercises for any single mu~le
group doesn’t burh enough calories
to
noticeably
reduce
faL
Fm~hermore, when fat does come
off, it comes off from all over the
bedy..not just from the area being
worked.
TO get rid if excess fat, rogardless of
where it is, you must do exercises
involving as many major muscle
grOup

as

possible...exercises

like

rulm~, swimming, cycling, aerobic

dance, or jumping rope...you must
do them consistently over a period
of time..
I trust this helps in clearing up any
myth~.. .about
~
fat and its relation to

you body.
developed they are

Next time...The. ~ality of Muscle

BE AWARE
Wichita AIDS was recently involved
With. a ma~ who r6~prese~ltod himself

as a Dr.Christopber Harvey from
California who supposedly came to
Wichita to help HOPE Inc. get the
Wichita AIDS program started.
However the Parachute along with
several individuals was mislead by
this person.
According to the
Founder of HOPE Inc. Jean Carter
this
person
miaha~dled
many
different items in tbe miniatry and
-further more actually took money
from a local AID’s patient for his
rent. When approached about some
of these ac~usatious "Dr.Harvey"
has disappeared. If you have
c~mtacted by this person you are
urged to call the pofice department.
Any information concerning his
where abouts would be greatly
appreciated. He is black and in his
late 40’s or 50’s, be is about 5 ’ 8
and weighs about 150. He wears
glasses, and most of the time wears a
ball cap as he is balding on top.
What thi~ man did is inexcusable.
The Parachute will give a $25.00
reward for information leading to his
arrest. He was possibly last seen in
the OKC area.

The Parachute

Page 24

President Clinton
Signs Landmark
Legislation to
Strengthen AIDS
Efforts
Washin~on,
DC
(EGCM)
invited
President
Clinton
representatives
of health care,
women’s and lesbian and gay
organizations
to
the
White
House to witness his signing of
National
Institutes
.of
the
Health
Revitalization
Act,
landmark
AIDS
legislation
which will strengthen the Office
of AIDS Research at NIH.
The-AIDs provisions included in
the law emerged from a reform
by
the
ori~nally
proposed
Group
Activist
Treatment
(TAG) and was hailed by AIDS
activists as a major step to
improve
and
coordination
research
management
of
the
throughout
programs
. that
institutes
twenty
-one
comprise the NIH.
planning,
"The
central
evaluation
and
budgeting
by
this
created
functions
reform will ensure that funds
-are spent and managed more
efficiently than they have been
in the past," said Steve Smith
of the Human Rights Campaign
Fund who attended the White
House signing ceremony and
spoke
with
the
President.
"With this law, we will be able
to ge the maximum benefit
from the dollars the federal
to
government
is committing
AIDS."
President Clinton stressed the
iimportance .of. the_. legislation in
battlin¢
AIDS and women’s..............
.concerns, ~’--~
noting
health ....................
..... m
"
particular his support "for the
and
inclusion
of
women
minorities in research activities.
It’s important that we ensure
that resources are devoted to
increasing our knowledge about

which
uniquely
conditions
affect these popalations~"
The President called the battle
against
AIDS
"an
immense
undertaking"
and noted that
"nearly
300
of
our
fellow
citizens" become infected with
HIV each day.
"We must
improve the effectiveness
of activity,
prevention
our
increase
access
to
earl);
treatment for already infected
individuals, and strengthen our
research
programs,"
the
President said.
The President expressed thanks
that
for several organizations
in the effort to
participated
health
reforms,
enact
the
Women’s
them
the
among
Health
Network,
the Breast
Coalition
and
the
Cancer
Human Rights Campaign Fund.
"We have to learn to deal with
the President
AIDS better."
said. "I think we could benefit
people all around ~if we can
make progress on AIDS."

�graiohac.¯
you
FPEE

want to be?

4-6 ON THE PATIO
22 OZ. MU~0 MAI~GAI~ITAS !;4.00

We can bepretty graphic. But, that’s what we do. We get down-and

2 FOP I DOMESTIC

dirty with newspaper advertising, brochures, company logos &amp; stationery,

2 FOP l IMPOPTS

magazines, programs, company newsletters and flyers. C.D.G., Inc. even
helps design ads and other graphics for ’The Parachute’.

La Roca II
409 W. Reno

We would like to help you make your-printed
material as stunning as possible. Just give us a call and
we’ll be.as graphic as you want to be.. "

Contact Zena at 840-1968 for information on free after-work office part~.

3917 W. Park Place~ ¯ Oklahoma City~ OK.73107, (405)~,94~5517

~C~ISHOP OF

~ ~o~ ~o~ ~ ~o~

May 25~ 1993
I (in cla~ a~ion) wish to formally
file a "complaint" under canon law
and state that the Catholic Bishops
of the .United States are spondi~
$6.5 millioll of hard earned Catholic
contributimm so that 200,000 youths,
ages 13 to 39 can 8o on a
"pilsr~__age’, not to a "National
Sacred Shrine" put to Cherry Creek

people and ~ause public s~andal,

Jerome E. Kroll

teachers, ~)a~hee, atld military
personael.
I complnin that Ottholic Bishops of
the ~U.S.A. by ~ $6.~ ,million

"p’dgrhaaSe’. wm injury "public
and lesbian people’by breaking the
Gay and Lesbian Boycott of ~e state

o~

Colorado.

Wm

inj=y

demonslrators
who
the
erowd-c~mtml police say "...will be
e~rted ofP’.
My experienee
is
that .most

The American Civil Libe~ies Union Protects
Your Rigl~ts of Free Speech, Press and

Religion.
The American Civil Liberties Union Hell~
Guarantee You Equality and Due Process
You Can Support the ACLU By Becoming a
Member Or Making a Contribution. "
Write to: ACLU, 132 West 43rd Street, New
Yor~ NY

K.C..Anti-Gay incident

proposal presentedby the Oklahoma
Lambda
Bowlln_~
Asseciation
(OLBA), IGBO voted .to ¢arme to
Oklahoma City for IGBO ’94, the
Fourteenth annual meet~ag of the

John Lyneis who told Albin the
restaurant has a non-discrimination
policy and the manger would be
removed from his post at the

Sinee being awarded the bid to host

(Catholic monies) and will injury"

in our community. A portion of the
proeeeds from OLBA-spousored
to~ts also goes to local AIDS

weeken~t last May, acting on a

the United States, Canada, Australia
and New Zealand, IGBO is the
larsest sinsle Gay and Lesbian sport
organization in the Worldl
Each year it hold its annual meeting
and tournament over Memorial Day

health beaefits, and tbe hirin8 of

The ~Oldahoma Iaml~la Bowling
Association ~iates your support
for this event and ftm~re fundraisin8
a~tivities~fdr .the tournament. We
welcome the opportunity to co-host

at Denny’s
K.C. MO- The gay newspaper FINE
PRINT has reported that the
manager of a Kansas City, MO.,
Denny’ s
restaurant
has
~
removed from his job after he
reportedly told customers from a
local gay mon’s support group in
May that the restaurant would not
serve gays and lesbians.
The paper reports the Rabbi Barry
Albin of Queer Naiton/Land of Oz

members 150 bowling leasues aero.

2 which backs the Vatican Letter of1992 which supports diserimln,,tion
~al.~ ~ays and leshia~ in such
areas as~ public housing, family

lands" in Denver. Will inju~ gay

The Oklahoma Lambda Bowli-g
Association will be
variety show at Tramps on Sunday,
July 18, at 6:00 p.~ Tramps is
located at 2201 N.W. 39th, OKC.
There is sure to be something
everyone in the show.
This is
guaranteed to be a fun eve-lng. All
proceeds from ~ show will go to
benefit IGBO ’94.
IGBO
is
an
acronym
for
International
Gay
Bowling
Orsanization. With over 30,000

character of the state park.
The Catholic Bishops are using $~.5
million of earnings of Catholic
people to break the Gay Lesbian
Boycott against the
state of

our youth by promoting a mL~uided

-BO m( ASSOCIATION
A_NS
SNOW’.

WHAT IS IGBO?

state Park, and endanger the pristine

La Roca III
7550 N. May.

IGBO, the
Oklahoma Lambda
Bowling Association has been
the tournament a~ross the country.
To be co-hosted with the Oklahoma
Gay Rodeo" Association’s
Great
Plains l~ginnal Rodeo, IGBO XIV
and Memorial Day.weekend 1994

prumisee to the bitter event ever
for the Oklahoma Gay and Lesbian

The
Spartanburs, S.C. based
restaurant chain has been plagued by
a
number
of complaints
by
customers
who
have
charged
Deuny’s restaurant in Maryland,
California and Michigan with racial
and ethnic bias.
One of these
complains was made by a group of
Black Secret Service agents who
were on-their way to an assisnment
with President Clinton.
The Parachute

Page 25

�mRrlnR

~ur~ Erich-~mn

OFF "rl4E

Ni~ e’r’l

by boogie bryant

Page 26

�HELP WANTED

PERSONALS

:o=~i~sion plus cxpemc,, ~ The
Parachute at: 316-651-0500 or
1-800-536-6519

Miscellaneous
Women’s Creative Expression’5%
Say/Lesbian Dis~unt
$48 W. Dickson St.
Fayetteville, Ark. 501-442-5598

NOTICE

TUI~A/MEN

WICHITA/MEN
GWM, 25 HIV +. Seeks GWM 2I-,
for friendship.and po~ible relaitousip.
~=rious replies only.
Send
~hon¢. Penpals welcome. Box 122

~WM, lat~ 20’s, seeking gwm for
md fri0ndship. Box 105.
~WM, early 20’s seeks others my
~or fun only.
Must be safe
tisereet Box 130

"Free personal ads.
Worldwide
aewsletter,
newsletter
cheap.
New~letter free to HIV+, AIDS,:
Direot or disoreet ads. SASE to
DWOM, #110, 116 Tustin, Anaheim
CA 92807

Girl You Bottor Work...
¯os¢ dialing t’mgers (or toes) an,

3WM mid 20’s, seeks same
discreetfun and friendship,, send
md letter. Box 119

3WF, 33years old, l~e classical musie
and tho theater, .seeking gwf, 30-4(
who enjoys’ life. Box 106

Newton Kansas

place your free Imrsonal ad (50 wor~
minimum)
with
Single
Tr~
[nternational! (918)582-2952 (24hrs)

T.V. wants friends to ~o out

FOR SALE
K.A.’s Women’s bar, oldsst beer bar
in OKC, 2024 N.W. l lth, speak to
Janiee or Michele at 405-272-9833

For Rent
~oommates
serving
Wiohit~
~mm,mity for 5 years, Landlord~
mn regis*.er without any advance fee.
tenants may reSister~ as little ~
~15.00 1529 W. Douglas 262-8444
ranted: Locations where gays ma3
thare housing in Wichita area. ~
~r ~p by Roommates 1529 W.
Douglas 316-262-8~A~.
~kar Par~hute:
Just a note to say thanks for yore
roper, I plac~d a personal.ad,. I wm

peaty, ~n also be a slave to

OKC/MEN

goes, will amwer all. Box 124

Have home, need mate, ~ountry living~
greater OKC, GWM 50, s/p
smoker, trim, original equipment,

GW~, late 30’s, christian,
~ountry music, and friends, not
bar soene, seeking stable relationship.
Box 102

_ Great Bend Kansas

~ks long term partner. Box 117

GWM, 29 leoking for other
age for friendship and fun, Box 108
Gay male seeking male enuples
fun and friendship, mid 20’s.
Photo’s Box 109

GWF mid 30’s Professional
~mme for stable relationship no
moial drink~ only. I enjoy
~&amp;W music, sharing quot
~aving fun. Box 123

To Place a Classified Ad:
Send written ad with check
or money order to :
Parachute P.O.Box 11347,
Wichita, Ks. 67214
(25 word limit)
$6.00 per insertion
insertions

3KC GWM 44 Proffessional
harily, like mllOOth man 18-30
with and b~my sugar boy, tiffs
~nd beyon~ Please sen dphoto
~hone. OKC area please. Box 125

TOPEKA/MEN
~WM late 20’s seek GWM .20-35
and friendship must be.
please. Box 120

OKC WOMEN

.~spotme when Igot3 and

Romantic
Danlal in Wichita

~£issouri, send picture Box 121

.-~.~.

~ -"

Ln life. Box 118

FINALLY, LONG DISTANCE
CAILING FOR GAYMERICA

¯ TO PLACE APERSONAL AD:
Name

Address
City.
State
Zip.
Type or print your ad, with no more than 25 words. Send
with this coupon and $6.00 to:The The Parachute
Attn :Personals
P.O. Box 11347, Wichita, Kansas 67202
Your responses will be mailed to-you when they are

received.
insertions requested ($6.00 per insertion)

TO RESPOND TO A PERSONAL AD
1. Write your response, place it in an envelope, and seal the
envelope. Do not put your return address on the envelope.
Be sure to include a way for the advertiser to contact you.
2. On the sealed envelope, write the advertisers box number
in lower letter corner and affix postage.
3. Place the sealed envelope and $2.00 inside a 2nd envelope,
seal and address to: The Parachute, Attn:Personals, P.O. Box
11347,~.Wichita, Ks.67202 It will be forwarded to

Call anywhere in tP
from your home-just like
calling card to use away
now. Customer service and
are available 24 hours a

We provide a
like you have
operators
you have now.

OFFICIAL LONG DISTANCE
IH| 1993 ~l~li OM Wk~HINGION

advertiser. Please enclose $2.00 for each reply.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
AD WILL RUN ONLY FOR NUMBER OF INSERTIONS PAID FOR, UNLESS RENEWED
YOU MUST BE 18 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER TO USE THIS SERVICE, YOU CANNOT PLACE
AN AD FOR ANOTHER PERSON.
~ ADDRESSES OR PHONE NUMBERS RECEIVED ARE CONFIDENTIAL AND ARE NOT "
RELEASED TO ANYONE.

2% of }’our long distance
chargesaredonated tothe
gay, lesbian, bi and AIDS
groups of your choice.

You can save up to 25%off
ygur long distance charges
compared to the rates~of
AT&amp;T, MCI or Sprint.

MAKE THE SWITCH TODAY
The Pmachute

Pase 27

1,800-546-0556

�pRESENTS

a prel’mgina~ pageant to national

Ente ainer of the, Year
Friday, August 6th
at the Habana Inn Complex
2200 NW 39th Expressway
oklahoma City, OK
For le~ails or reglslration information c~,ll (40~) 527,0730

�</text>
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              <text>The Parachute Directory&#13;
Buddies Country 4000 S. Broadway 529-4953&#13;
Our Fantasy 3201 S. Hillside 681-2746&#13;
South Forty 3201 S. Hillside 681-2746&#13;
R &amp; R Brass Rail 2828 E. 31st 684-9009&#13;
T-Room 1507 E. Pawnee 262-9327&#13;
Adult Entice 220E. 21st 832-1816&#13;
Plato’s 1306 E. Harry St. 269-9036&#13;
T.B.’s 1515 S. Oliver 688-5343&#13;
Camelet Cinemit 1519 S. Oliver 688-5343&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 3721 S. Broadway&#13;
Adult Ente~ai,mont Center 7805 W. Kellogg&#13;
Adult Entertainment Center 2809 N. Broadway&#13;
Adult Entree’ South 8025 S. Broadway&#13;
Circle Cinema 2570 S. Seneca&#13;
Harbor Restaurant 3201 S.Hillside 681o2746&#13;
Lassens Bar&amp; Grill 155 N. Market 263-2777&#13;
The UpperCrust 7038 E Lincoln 683-8088&#13;
WiehitaAIDS 1"121 S. Clifton 689-5250&#13;
Wich. Sedg.Co. Hlth Dept. 1900 E. 9th 268-8441&#13;
W.ichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942-1786&#13;
The Lesbian Celebration 683-7561&#13;
PFlasg 687’-4666&#13;
Gay Information line 269-0913&#13;
Visions&amp; Dreams 3143 Maple 942-6333&#13;
Watermark Books 149 N. Broadway 263-3007&#13;
Queen Ann’s Lace 733-4075&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp;Worship Center 651-0603&#13;
First Unitarian Church 684-3481&#13;
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539-0633&#13;
Juaotion City, Kamas (913)&#13;
After Dark Video 1206 Grant&#13;
Lawx~m~e Kansas (913)&#13;
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Services of Kansas 864-3091&#13;
uaghtm zan (913)&#13;
Gay/Lesbian Action Dd~iens 521-4509&#13;
MCC of~ Ozarks 443-4278&#13;
Eureka Springs Ar . (501)&#13;
Canter Street 10 Center Slmet 253-8071&#13;
TheHOP 19 112 Slxing St 253-8361&#13;
Ermillio’s 26 White St. 253-8806&#13;
MCC of~he Livin8 Springs 253-9337&#13;
Rock Cottage 10 Enenia St.. 253-8659&#13;
Dixie COtta~ #2 Prospect 253-7533&#13;
The S6uthem Rose #9 Benton St. 253-5800&#13;
SatoriArts 81 SpringSt. 253-9820&#13;
Crazy Bone 37 Spring St. 253-6600&#13;
Corcelli Studio 159 Spring St. 253-7399&#13;
Little Rook Arkansas (501)&#13;
Backsmmt 1021 Jessie Rd. unitQ 666-6900&#13;
Michiais 601 Center 376-8301&#13;
Discovery.IlI 1021 Jessie Rd. 664-4784&#13;
Silver Dollar 2710 Asher Ave. 663-9886&#13;
GiftS,~&amp;Nor~lties&#13;
Twisted Entertainment 7201 Asher 568-4262&#13;
Art&amp;Ph~h.v _&#13;
Shields - Marley. Studios 117 S. Vietory372-6148&#13;
’~)mmnniW~tfo~s&#13;
HPWA P.O. Box 4379, 72204 666-6900&#13;
AIDS Support Gloup 374-3605&#13;
RAIN-Ark. 375-5908&#13;
the House 374-3758&#13;
Pals (People of Alterm lifestyles)374-3605&#13;
Womons Project 372-5113&#13;
Travel&#13;
Travel by Philip 227-7690&#13;
Publications&#13;
The Parachnm 1-800-536-6519&#13;
,I Oldahom City, Ok. (405)&#13;
ACLU 1411 Ciassoa #318 524-8511&#13;
Names Project P.O. Box 12185 625-6277&#13;
OASIS Resoaroe Center 2135 NW39th 525-2437&#13;
OK Gay Political Caucus P.O. Box 61186, 73146&#13;
OK Gay Rodeo Ass~. P.O. Box 12485 943-0843&#13;
OKC Metro Mons Chorus 424-1753&#13;
Pride Network P.O. Box 12415 340-3575&#13;
RAIN 232-4372&#13;
Act up 447-4209&#13;
Q~eer Nation 24 hr action line 447-~1209&#13;
OU Gay/Lesbian &amp; Bisexual Alliance 303 Ellison&#13;
Hall 633 Elm Ave. Norman.&#13;
Womons Rescource Center 364-9424&#13;
tTh~hes &amp; Reli_m’ous O~_aaizatio~s&#13;
New Beg. MCC 3136 N. Po~land942-6313&#13;
Digniry/Int~grity P.O. Box 25473 360-0414&#13;
Friends Meeting 632-7574&#13;
Gay Christian Ecumenical Counce] 528-5635&#13;
Light House MCC 2522 N. Shartel 524-4687&#13;
Unitarian Chinch 600 N.W. 13th 232-9224&#13;
Angles 2117 N.W. 39th 524-3431&#13;
Btmkbouse 2800 N.W. 39th 943-0843&#13;
Coyote Club 2120 N.W. 39th 521-9533&#13;
Finish Line 2200 NW39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Gushers 2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Hi Lo Club 1221 N.W. 50th 834-1722&#13;
K~.’s 2024 NW 1 lth 525-3991&#13;
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th 947-5384&#13;
The Park 2125 N.W. 39~ 528-4690&#13;
The Porlhole 3630 N.W. 39th 949-9837&#13;
Sneakers 919 N. Virginia 272-9833&#13;
Tramps 2201 N.W. 39th 528-9080&#13;
TheW~kRoom 2127 N.W. 39th 525-7610&#13;
~o;m~lin~_ &amp;l~fernd.~rvi~s&#13;
AIDS Mastery PO Box 12151 525-3636&#13;
AI-Anon (Gay) 947-3834&#13;
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437&#13;
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/Co~mcelor 848-5429&#13;
OK. AIDS Hofline 1-800-535-2437&#13;
Other Options P.O. Box 36 Bethany .728-3222&#13;
Lany Prater M.D. Psychiatrist 232-5453&#13;
Testil~ the I Jmits 2136 N.W. 39th 843-8378&#13;
DOES IT REALLY&#13;
MATTER?&#13;
My parents asked "Aro you Gay?."&#13;
I said, "Does it matter7"&#13;
They said, "Not really."&#13;
I said, "Yes, I’m Gay."&#13;
Thzy said "G-~t out of our five!!"&#13;
I guess it mattered.&#13;
My boss asked me,’Aro you Gay?"&#13;
I said, "Does it matter?"&#13;
My boss said, ~Not really."&#13;
I said ,sYes, I’m Gay."&#13;
My boss said, "You’re f’Lred, -&#13;
I guess it matter~&#13;
My spouse aslw~ "Do you love&#13;
I said, "Does it matter?~&#13;
My spouse said, "Yes."&#13;
I said, "Yes, I love you. ~&#13;
My spouse said,"Hold me in your&#13;
ar111s."&#13;
Finally something .in my life&#13;
mattered.&#13;
God asked, "Do you love yourself?."&#13;
I said, Does it matter?"&#13;
God said,’Yes. ~&#13;
I said How can I love myself if I&#13;
am Gay?~&#13;
God said,~Because that is how I&#13;
made you.&#13;
Nothing will ever matt~ again!&#13;
Author unknown&#13;
Brought to you by:&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center&#13;
1501 Fairmont, Wichita, Ks.&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Resource Center 539-6137&#13;
Topeka Kansas (913)&#13;
Classics 124 S.W. 8th 35%1960&#13;
EXPressions 110 S.E. 8th 233-3622&#13;
Adult Entertainment Conte~ 903 N. Kansas&#13;
some like itHot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.&#13;
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Task Force 357-8727&#13;
Mayors Task Force 234-6699&#13;
Gay Rap Line 223-6558&#13;
Manlmttan Ommach 271-8431&#13;
HIV Affected C~onp 234-8562&#13;
MCC of Topeka 232-6196&#13;
United Methodist AWmnafion 235-6101&#13;
Springfield Missouri (417)&#13;
Club 1105---1105 ECommercial 831-9043&#13;
Down Beat 219 W. Olive 846-4572&#13;
Bolivar News 4030 Bolivar 833-3354&#13;
Joplin Missouri(417)&#13;
Billy Jacks 720 S. Main St. 781-6453&#13;
C.G.’s ChaClmPalace 722 S. Main 781-9313&#13;
Fort Smith Arkausas (501)&#13;
Bars&amp;R~s~aunmts&#13;
Court Garden Complex 305 Garrison 783-9822&#13;
B&amp;B Lounge 1004 Garrison 783-9347&#13;
Hot Springs Arkansas (501)&#13;
Our Home Lense &amp; Restaurant 235 Broadway&#13;
624-6868&#13;
Fayb-qtmrille Arkausas (501)&#13;
Ron’sPlace 523 W. Poplar 442-3052&#13;
W8shi,~mon Co. AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS&#13;
The Little Rock Connections 22%7690&#13;
.... O aho,ma(918)&#13;
Laffs Undmground 311 E. 7nih 583-5233&#13;
Tops (Aeross from Laffs) 58%8677&#13;
Flamingos 4812 E. ~3rd 742-5262&#13;
New A~e Rane~ades 175 &amp; Main 584-9405&#13;
Silver Star Saloon 1565 S. Sheridan 834~4234&#13;
Taj Maha12630 E. 15th 742-8274&#13;
Time n’ Time Again 1515 S. Memorial 664-8299&#13;
TNT’s 2114 S. Memoriai 660-0856&#13;
Tool Box 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308&#13;
Dreamland 8807 E. Admiral 834-I051&#13;
Elite Goods 814 S. Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
Whittier Bookstore 1 N. Lewis 592-0767&#13;
Act u~ P.O. Box 532, 74’101 741-0644&#13;
Names Projeot P.O. Box 3181, 74101 748-3111&#13;
PFLAG P.O. box 52800, 74152 749-4901&#13;
TOHR4154S.Harvard S.H-1 743-4297&#13;
Gay Info. Line 743-4297&#13;
Shanti Hotine 749-7898&#13;
S.T.I.R.(Studens of Tulsa for interpers.rights)&#13;
583-9780&#13;
Okla~ AIDS Hotline 1-800-535-2437&#13;
Kelly Kirby CPA 663-9399&#13;
Family of Faith MCC 500 W. A, Jenk~,&#13;
296-4622&#13;
Afftrmation (Methodist) 742-8213&#13;
MCC of Tulsa 1623 Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
Dignity/Integrity 298-4648&#13;
Enid Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Phillips University Gay &amp;Lesbian Gxoup&#13;
242-0628&#13;
Lawton Oklahoma (405).&#13;
HIV/AIDS Support Group 248-5890 or&#13;
351-2820&#13;
Southwest AIDS Network BOx 3924 zip73505&#13;
G~at Plains MCC 1416 W. Gore 357-7899&#13;
Stmwater Oklahoma (405)&#13;
Cmm~ AIDS Action Network 624-2544&#13;
Gay,Lesbain &amp; Bisexual Comm. Assoc of OSU.&#13;
Studen Union 040, Box 601 Zip 74078&#13;
Helpllne (Mon/Wed/Thu~. 8-10pro) 744-5252&#13;
73013 341-8965&#13;
Exeoutive Travel 2113 NW 36th ~21-9100&#13;
Habana Inn 2200 NW39th 528-2221&#13;
Herland 2312 NW 39th 521-9696&#13;
JuagIe Red 2200 NW¢ 39th 524-5733&#13;
Lobo’s 2131NW39th 528-5156&#13;
Deb Rol~as Entertainer 843-5624&#13;
Second Chance C~dit 752-2209 or 752-2155~&#13;
Stephen S~ott Masseur 525-8689&#13;
Gushers Bar &amp; Grill 2200 NW39th Expwy&#13;
525-0730&#13;
The Kitohon 2124NW39th 528-5133&#13;
La Roc~.a Mexican Restaurants:&#13;
S.W. 4th &amp; Walker / 409 W. Reno&#13;
7550 N. May&#13;
ChuckBwckenddge&#13;
Oeative Commltunts&#13;
John D. Cl~s~’ansen&#13;
Creative Design Group, OKC&#13;
Contdlmfla~ Writer~&#13;
ChuckB.,CookieArbuck-le,MatY&#13;
ArbucMe,SWphen-Scott, Babby,ACLU&#13;
CbuckB.,Mary.7~rbucMe,Kay Williams&#13;
Nafloall AdvertiaiaS .&#13;
aka Communications&#13;
213-650-6223&#13;
Phone:&#13;
I-316-651-0500 or 1-800-536-6519&#13;
316-269-4208&#13;
The Parachute Page 2</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
</text>
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                <text>John D. Christiansen&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Mary Arbuckle&#13;
Stephen Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
ACLU&#13;
Kay Williams</text>
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                    <text>VII

Second-Annual

OCTOB.ER 1 O, 1993
IN BRICK~OWN
¯ OKLAHOMA CI~!’ OKLAHOMA
Check In t2 Noon/Opening Ceremonies 1 p.m.
"
WalkStep, Off,::2 p-m-

We now cover
~~e,
’ "Rick" had or,
out of a gay

�Wichita Men of All Colors
iii~-~nd C~l~U~$,Together i,
It is so~.exCitingto see.theiGay,:Les- - "-The WiChita Cl{aptbr of Menof All
bia n-.. a’a~i!bj~exu a I ~ c0 m ~ ~i:n ity in ¯ :Cole~s and C~items~ogetherwiilt~old
Wichita ~hbw signs of unity. ThiSyear ..its secend meeti~g~at 7:00; pm en.
hasalready ,m.~tw~hdisappointments - .TueSday, October~at the South
Forty, 3~01-S. Hil!si~ MACCT is a
,-however as ~ework together we Can
gay multi-racial, multi.cultural .orgashow that even though we are-very
nization committed to fostering supdiverse, we can work together.
portive environments Wherein racialand cultural barders can be overcome
Just because we may begay or les-

,Z. Octeber I-T.L~C: meeting .o :,
Loss of LeSbian CivilRights
October 3rd-Stonewal125 Break=fast meeting 10am Furrs Cafeteria
(Pawnee &amp; Broadway)
October 4-Community Meeting
bian doesn~ mean we-have to think
and the goal Of human equality real"
alike nor do we have to a-ree on ev
ized. They will be electing intedm
- 156 S. Kansas
¯ -"v^--one ^-^^"ra:’ed "o atten(
’
"
~. ¯
,7
officer~ and planningaregional chap--..e~tssue. However wewill never~- ~ ~=rd==v~onme,tw~kSh~:~ar~v~
October~5th=,PFLAG Meeting ;~: :--_ !(i~a~i’~i resDect"the So~ibt~ ffwe d~ ; ~’~:~l~i~i ~t"~ti~, A~v’~i~.~i~f~"’i~;
at,-~si0ns &amp;DreamsS:30pm .....
O~ober 11th-Uational Coming Out"
" Da Y
-

October 12-Project Acceptance
Ages 14,18ca!1687=4666 October 14th~t 0% meeting (WSU)
WGLA-meeting
.
October 15th-T.LC. event~ author:
~ainnie Brucel Pratt 8:00pro
.Gay&amp; Lesbian~Round up :
(15th=17th)
oct. 1.7th-Lesbian Readers group.,
6:30pm
October 19th-PFLAG meeting/
Project Acceptance
October 23~- W.L.M:G. meeting
- at YWCA
October 24th-Stonewal125 Potluck
6pm
October 26th P~oject Acceptance
~ October 28th’10%.meeting
~Oct. 30th; MothersGroul~ Hallowi~een partyipotluck 302- S. Walnut.,
; for. more info. :on these activities
call 942-633,3 "

"

THE GASTRONOMICAL
BEAN -~TORY
- ’

blindfold un.til he re~ then went
- to -answer .the,photm~.~izing-:the .. -.

of ~S ~o let:o~~:~o~~and ~~ai~ :iiti~l,~cultura!..o~ci~l:a~iv~d~sagenda’s get in.th~y¯ If s~mehow
a ~eans~of dela~n?:with t~e~acis~,
.. ~ sexism, nomopnoDla and ozner.l~:-....
we ~uld all peel of our mask and be
equalities is welcome ~to affend, For
whbwe are and accept everyone else
more information, call Rob at 651=
for who they are, Kansas wouldn’t
0251.
know what hit it.
Weat the Parachute would like to
give an invitation to the community
to join together in Pdde, and get im
volved. We ca.n all talk about .the
problems however nothing will ever
be accomplished if that’s all we do.
We would like to thank Wichita for
lq~ -$18.OO
hel ping the Parachute become a success, we never dreamed it would
reach this size, and all the credit goes
tothe readers and advertisers.- Although there :are still places the Parachute is not necessarily welcomed we
hope that what we have in common
will outweigh other circumstances.
¯}.-Again let’s ~6rk .togetherand~
The Po,ochut¢
watch our Pddegrew! ~hank you f~E,
P.O.tSo. 1134~ "
your~support! "
-."
¯ ,
. ~.~
-_:
_:
The:Parachute

Th+, Pomchut+

Add.¢ss .........
Cih

¯

Peri Jude Radecic Named
. NGLTFiExecutive~_Director_~:....... ....... .~. ,~~,~_,,,~,_,.. .............

¯ . ........
Detrozt,.
MI (EGCM
Board.
~~DEP~~ . ¯
. . .
. ..
, ) The.....
~ ¯~ a~ ~t ¯ o~-go. It ~ not.. .......
.~,
,
.
.......
who
n~
a
m~
p~mon
for
;
"
....
’:~..............
al
G ay , . ........
.......
...............
~.
~.
~.,a.
~,a
~,~
~
~
0..~,~
of
D~r~tors
of
the
Nat~on
¯
&lt; -" ",, ’
:
.
-..- ~
.
.
.
,,- "~] ~ ~,~:~=~ ~ - ~u
¯~
b~ ~. ~::~ b= ~ .. " . ~ .... ,,:..;_ .....
?
an@.Lesbmn
Task
Fetch.
(NGLTF)~.~ .....
?~w~t Hv¢ly ~on-~-5. hi~, " ~/,~0ro~y
~ .:
": ~
....... ~ ~ ~ :
organ~ations.-- new
executive
~
We wo~
director at a meeting held in
not~u..wncn -ne.-,ze,tz anomer urge
Detroit.
Radecic,-the
organ-~
we have: an-alcohol"--and dr~
i~
~ai- ~ " ~t that : ....
ization’s
current
Deputy-Director
"~t
group sp~irmally for-the
*=ether ~- th0~t tn him~i£
fOr. PublicPolicy, Will rdplac~ Tori
gay and lesbian population.
Osborn, who announced her
This group will he closed t~the
~ he ~ ~ gofer ~
resignation earlier.
h~texos~xual
population’ .so thatof .eatrrying on." So he nmd~ the winn~. While_k~-ping his ear on the
t~¢atm~nt
issues
sp~ifi~ in-the gay
supreme sa~,t~ mid saw up .beams.- ,. ~onv~tion in .the hail, he iwent on
"PeriJude is a Task Force success
,~nd
lesb.ia~,
population
can he.more
Som~ months .lat~. his catr bro]m -:.1iI~ thix for t~n minu~S, lmti[ hestory,"
said
-Elizabeth
Birch,
down on the way heinz from worlg { knew the phot~ "farewells ~dieated
Co-Chair of
the
Board
of
This group will be..closed tothe
and s’.m~ tl~y lived.in th~ country ~ th~ end of his frm~lom. He plagaxl his
Directors. "With her dynamic
,h~ros~xual
population so that
he Called homeland told him that,h~ ~ napkin on hi8 lap and folded his
l~adership abilities, institutional
treatment issues sp~ifi¢ in the gay
Would be late bemuse he had to" walk
hands on top of it, and smiled
knowledge and ~tireless energy, the
¯
.....
cont~ted~
hlm~]f, he was the.
TaskForce could not be in better
and l~sbian population c~n he mor~
home. Onhisway,.hepass~asmatt
.
..
..
,. ~_.~Y to ....
.hands."
:very
ptemre
o[-mocence
.when
ms
re.lily addr~sse~
’, hake.,
~
,.., .,--, ¯
........ . .
cat~e and " the .odo.r o-f fresli~
-.
Not only will drug and alcohol
beatm was overwhelming. ~".m~,.I he
lover tetutne~ apologizing for .takin~
Radecic, 33, brings more than 15
st~ ~.~ ~.;,.~i =.~.. ~ ~.~k;. he"- ~o~to~. He aa=d.tf he.hed peeked
~ he addr~ss~ bu~ also
years experience in movement
r~lationship, and family., issues., as
organizing,
management commun~
At
th~
pom~
ne
remove(]
me
well as-s~xuality issues. Issues
gleffe=ts’~used:bythe ~s before ’:
.
ications and top notch political
surroxmdins
AIDS - and.
skillS:to her new position. She
:.Twelw;
dimmrgu~sts
seated
around
infection
and
~
how that :.-impacts
the mffe. B~fore leaving he" eatten
joined the staff Of the Task Force
, the table for a -"happybirthday party"
as a lobbyist in 1987, organizing
~.
.fo~:ffim..{ !:
::
The group will..hea 12: st~p. has~d
the-lobby days around the 1987
~ ~ ~y h~;~:p~p~ ~d
group
and will ~.*w~lve.w~ks in
March
on
Washington.
She
by ~ ~m¢ ~ ~ ho~ he. felt
L--ngth,
i,~\~i ~ a w~k for an
moved
on
to
become
the
~ly
~e " ~ ~at " ~
organizations’
first
Legislative
hour
each
s~Ssion,..W¢ ol~tat~ on a
p~-p~ ~.._ ~. Hi. lov~
Director, then was promoted to
sli~~"
’
~ m~W~tr ~

- -’h-’a

throe ~ ~s~,.:,~f ~

exei~ ~ ~ him ~ ~d ex~

~~y, "~, I ~ve: ~
mo~ wo~ .~ f~
~t." He b~ol~him ~d ~
*\

~ ~b~. He ~...hlm~, ~d
j~ ~ lov~ ~ ~,~ ~ove
~ b~o~ ~e ~~.~.~
~ him vow ~t ~ ~h~: ~"

,:Upper
Crust

7038 Lincoln
Wi chi ta ,Ks",.
316"683-8088

.7

her. curr~ni "poSition as Depmy

~t~::~’ u~stions er are

~amming. R adecic was "a central ¯ ~:.~T~t ~s .- 383"8015,-:. "
figure ~ the successful .effort to. .&gt;-~r:: ~~/::: "
’.
- .....
pass the Hate Crime Statistics
: ..... Act, a key le~slative victo~ for
’
the gay, lesbian,-and bisexual =’ ). - ’:: ":
-

~ho~

�.

i

=OC~O,BER HOROSCOPE FRoM’~ . LiBRA-SEPT 23~OC’
fOUl social
i. zl life
OG~%%REI~g~R~ALLDL _RAIN..B.pW:I,: ~
ma~ce, childr~’n and your
life
/~LL: L;onalzmns~mat
can Causea financial drain:
: -!J
Wail YouL love
love
ha~e.,limited your room tomove:will . lU:~UW but you just mayy nothave
tl~e
n(
~ e the
: heap
to ha~
h
;~r~sa.kdow_n,.w~hor.wjtho.-ut ~purPer~. -cash to ind[Ji~e. Leam
t~
c~ap
¯ "
. ISSIOn; f~O -aneaarana~rattleyoUr
. fun
."
¯
.. " , ~ cage; involving situationsare bigger .sG~RPIO OCT. 23-NOV.23" Your
.Your

~ ~.z::~ .M.P~ .~.fl]~!-,~!L’ZU:)TO.q may
¯
D.e.,tem_ ~:.e~ :m~.~ana0~ o!~.,fd~n.o. s.njL~S, a.noj.o.ngi.t~fl~a!s-/tSO.K to.
¯ " e,mmate.tnmgslnat~are a~wasteof,
" "
.en.p.rgy.,: but do~ :a.ct out of anger-

vith

~ee~s..

,, ta

tour-_

0f~your,farnily;or.withsomeone
who’
shares
your- home~- Be’son
tmevto your--

self, but be patient.and
o~heis
=d give
g
) thets"the:chance to undei~’tand’you
and
. SAGITTAI~IUS NOV. 23-DECI!22:
Z3-[
:22: ItIt
seemslike others misunderst~anding
==ding
;nd~
~ntk~!n,.gs. l,h,~.ug_n=~ ~ ~ :-~ :.~ ." ’
u.~.U~,/~,,, ~’U:MAY ~.~ : Your
you~but your¯ own feelings
iljn~ of Madinadn.Fe.oxo.r..su.~ ann r.ecog..nition .corn
e~luacy are :the ma[.cdlpdt,
Exam,
~ulp
! (am,
mczswnn me oemanos ot:aparmer,
ine external blocks to .find
¯ fin( .the internter,
Don~ let y,our innate fear of change
nal feare:that cause them:-prevent you from going afterwhat you
CAPRICORN DEC. 22-JAN.21’. You
really want. "
can: provoke :needless ~conflict with.
GEMINIMAY 21-JUNE 22: Your,daily
your friends i~by insisting that. your
routine i seemS;limited ~nd boring.; ’ w~yis.the 0rily,.dght Way; Learn that
time to take ~0n ~new acti,vities
~y0~r values are correct:; but maybe.
expand your knowledge¯ and view~
~i0t for e~erybody:. : .~,.
’i:
Avoid work, related travel_this .month
AQUARIUS JAN. 21-FEB:’20:.Work
if you can.
_ ,hard,
highlights, your
hard, in a way that highlights
CANCER JUNE 22-JULY 23: Credit
unique: skills and ...you
unique
you can..make
can .make sigand theSupport of others is hard. to
nificant career:progress. Show. reobtain. Y0u~l =have to rely on your Own .¯ specttothosein adh0dty; defiance
defiance.
resources for happiness andfinancial
could blow it
itall..
all. .... : :"
success. Prove to yourself thatyou ~ .PISCES
PISCES FEB.~
FEB.120,MARCH.21~
20,MARCH-2,1~ You
~an.
~
have important thLngs to do a~dsay,
haveimportantthi_ngstodoa~dsay,~
: ~
" , ~
LEO JULY 23-AUG. 23: Family.and
but circumstances Seem-to prevent.
partners stir your emotional cauldron
,you f~m
from making y0urmark; "l:hiswill
Thiswill
-and you may fihdyourselfacting out :i ~ss:,,
ombineintuitionwith-logicto
~ss:,’combine
intuition with logic, to
old,_ unconscious behaviors.Abolish. ’.~makefuture
:makefuture plans:plans:’ "
-outmoded, attitudes to ke~p worth’.::VI$iT:OUR, STORE IN :., META" while relationships.
i:*HYSICAL EUREKA SPRINGS~
VIRGOAUG
~23;SEP~
23’
~:
OFFER
FULL A!STROLOGI
" Your life.
’
.,-.
.~,-:
....
.
¯
.~WE
.......
: DLOGI ,
..... has been busier than ~ual lately:and .... ;CAL’SERVlCES
AND:ALL. YOUR
Your
MEEDS

I was.so con~,emed that last ¯ mentary’box of Pepto Bismat(12 of
_month your column was n.ot .in the
them to be exa.ct). The. old woman
~’arachute that I had to write,to, see.. next to me swalldwed her gum when
:what,waswrong. A.re you-OiK;~..did
my wig-started itchin9 an~ I h.~d to
.-: you quit? Please-oon~. stop wnti.ng
mplac~ my.stocldng because it was.
~ there are.so ma.ny people I~nowwho_: ci~eping. She pretended ~not. to un;:
ders~and English but I~knowsne was
- re.:ad :ygu.r ,c.olumn .e~c.h month,
- ~lease let us.knowwnat nappened. :-lyingbeCa~de her husband"kept call
_we miss you! .......... .
herM.yrtle;and he already told me he .
: b:igned~
.¯
.
was from Kentuclqb .
, .:.
uoncemed in..OKC..:
California was fun; especially th.e.
ocean. AIthough the -lifeguard quit ’ .::,:
,. _
"
.~ : ~, ’
coming after:me on the 2nd-day, when
uea~;Co.ncemecl: "
’ . .~
. ;
LnanK you so m.uc.h tor y;our I.e.t- ~ he fina’lly figured-out eve.n if I~buldn~
ter, i,z,.was ~.sweet 0ryou t0.wdte . . swim I d,ould f!oatfor:a long time,..It ....
and I m glad I ~was misded. Yes]’m ..... pr,0bablv.didNt ~h~lp that-wfien I was.
fine: .Quit the: Par@chute? NE~ER! : sun ba{hingJ had forggtten.to do uesi,d~.s.:~l~e~p.eroeing so neat’.a.n.d ;::someth!.r~,:admgqueen~:hould:never
mycait~fq!~Tpap.ers,, o.ncein a while "fo~let,l Illet you gUesswhatthat~was;
t.h:~;: ~e~,:~b][:Shertakes me out tq ~but-justletmesayitwasmucheasie~
diiirt~r!~a!r:~0~:~n eatbuffet) atleast..!-touse the restmom that~Wayhe;:t!~’dfitilthey, bar .us fr0m.all of : Dear Babby"
"
,the.~;,:’ThP ~heraaywhen.we,came . :
I knqw:~,ou’are .an older female
In. tne anor tne manager maae me.
Impersonator, but I was curious, do
pro. mise.p~to t.dp..t.he ~.wajtr.ess., .q.ot ¯ .yo0 live’in drag or do you go out as a~
tot.easeme.cooK~m a ~utcner,ne.
man
"
- . : :
.. ¯ "
and~ot t0~Spit~watem).elon seeds a.! : Cud~us in.¯Tulsa
"
9nyba!d:olff~en. Honest I donx ,.
: .:~:..
:
..
kn~:What:he:Wastalkingabout.(Ha! !.’,Dear Curious,:.
:
¯ "
Ha;!).. -,-.:::::,.:---~.:i
- ¯ ¯ .
’ .
. : Th~lks for th~ interest;ye~ i-~usuatly
] waSactua,y on.vacadon:~ i went
on out as a woman; it ~ti0WSrnV be~t ......
seVeral differerit p!a.ces. My.~mt t.rip . ~’eat~i~s, Men con~t~intly-n0ti~,~e .me
¯
that-wa~
But on behalf of females"
_was to ~rkans@s.. ~ _went.t0 I=u~Ka
:
,e~,-~r~,-I’~
nO{ sure
~pdngS t.o th:e.:/~nita .B. ryant: Theater,. :.:.. one.~!loo.ks..quite
like me: Although -.
.was :actua.lly ne.eo!ng :some .~ew
comedy .material, but the~nlything " !-ha.v..e.~en .tol0 by maqy..th~t..I Ipo~ .a, .
funn.~LWa,S her dr..~: . ::" ... ¯ ; .. : Iot_.l!k.e. M,aq_onn.a. o~. atlea, s~:.wqat
~.wou. Id-:lOgK ,!.Ke !!. sne ana t&lt;osanne ..
After leaving them I flew zo uali,
:~
f_ornia. ¯ (I w.anted.~to~ use.:Anita’~s ;: n_ao a.D.aDy.togemer.,
~room. but-she wa.s getting reedy.to :~ S.e.do.usly. ibefiev,e pe
!.be ."
~hey -~
go on tour); The plaribdde wasni~e
able .to dressanO, act
thb
are.. After allit’s not
rhad never flowfi~before..The flight
rays (::~..i
attendantgot.-realnervouswheh I i:.ou[side:that ;counts!
.~p~
told her heights giveme diarrhea, as ;. :~elieved) ~a
-..a matteroffactl-didn~ see her until ~some .of us

:the: Alcohbl

~ffective
lesbian .population because 0f the
h~mopl~obic: attitudes Of:: the :other"
indi~duals .in: .treatment. :The
AddiCtiOn Treltment Services Of
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of :Mental Health h~s developed a
::.~termine individual :fees.
:
~ .
~
::s~ialized: Service i that:., will not: ::::~:’
o~IY P f0vide ~ffective treatment
~
.
f
....
.........
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:.. ....
for :individuals:: ~fr0m the :gay:and ...... :’~icia at316:383
:’::
:legbian communit:y~:but ~H also:
::::::
~
’ : pr0~ide a: safe ~m~sphere to: deal :
:~th:-::other issues: specificS.to that "
¯
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I~0w how to determine your ~n’s.~ ~ your ~ or ~°cm

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National Alliance of
Lesbian &amp; Gay Health
Clinics Merges with
National Lesbian &amp; Gay
Health Foundation

"We didn’t_ want .tor:i:~invent the
wheel,"
said
Mike¯
Savage,
. Executive Director of the Fenway
HealthCenter.

-

"We think the Alliance and its.
members will
strengthen
the
Foundation. The merger makes a
lot of
sense;~ said NGLHF
President Joyce Hunter.
The
m.efger Was:: . approved ’by both
groups at~ meetings . held¯ at ,the
NLGHF Conference in Houston.

Wasl~ington, DC (EGCM) In an
effort to better represent lesbian
and gay health issues on a national
level, the National Alliance .,of~
¯-Lesbian and Gay HeaRh Clinics
has merged with the National
Lesbian and-Gay Health FounThe Alliance~ established in.1992,
is. corn prised "of eleven, gay_ and
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!the NI~G~!F rathat ~than start
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="5640">
              <text>Second-Annual&#13;
OCTOB.ER 1 O, 1993&#13;
IN BRICK~OWN&#13;
¯ OKLAHOMA CI~!’ OKLAHOMA&#13;
Check In t2 Noon/Opening Ceremonies 1 p.m.&#13;
" WalkStep, Off,::2 p-m-&#13;
VII&#13;
’ "Rick" had or,&#13;
out of a gay&#13;
We now cover&#13;
~~e,&#13;
,Z. Octeber I-T.L~C: meeting .o :,&#13;
Loss of LeSbian CivilRights&#13;
October 3rd-Stonewal125 Break=-&#13;
fast meeting 10am Furrs Cafeteria&#13;
(Pawnee &amp; Broadway)&#13;
October 4-Community Meeting&#13;
It is so~.exCitingto see.theiGay,:Les- -&#13;
bia n-.. a’a~i!bj~exu aI ~c0m~~i:n ity in&#13;
Wichita ~hbwsigns ofunity. ThiSyear&#13;
hasalready ,m.~tw~hdisappointments -&#13;
,-however as ~ework togetherwe Can&#13;
show that even though we are-very&#13;
diverse, we can work together. -&#13;
Just because we may begay or les-&#13;
Wichita Men of All Colors&#13;
iii~-~nd C~l~U~$,Together i,&#13;
"-The WiChita Cl{aptbr of Menof All&#13;
¯ :Cole~s and C~items~ogetherwiilt~old&#13;
..its secend meeti~g~at 7:00; pm en.&#13;
.TueSday, October~at the South&#13;
Forty, 3~01-S. Hil!si~ MACCT is a&#13;
gay multi-racial, multi.cultural .organization&#13;
committed to fostering supportive&#13;
environments Wherein racialand&#13;
cultural barders can be overcome&#13;
bian doesn~ mean we-have to think and the goal Of human equality real-&#13;
- 156 S. Kansas " alike nor do we have to a-ree on ev ized. They will be electing intedm&#13;
¯ -"v^--one ^-^^"ra:’ed "o atten( ’ " ~. ¯ ,7 officer~ and planningaregional chap--&#13;
-..e~tssue. However wewill never~- ~ ~=rd==v~onme,tw~kSh~:~ar~v~&#13;
October~5th=,PFLAG Meeting ;~: :--_ !(i~a~i’~i resDect"the So~ibt~ ffwe d~ ; ~’~:~l~i~i ~t"~ti~, A~v’~i~.~i~f~"’i~;&#13;
at,-~si0ns &amp;DreamsS:30pm ..... of ~S ~o let:o~~:~o~~and ~~ai~ :iiti~l,~cultura!..o~ci~l:a~iv~d~s-&#13;
O~ober 11th-Uational Coming Out- agenda’s get in.th~y If s~mehow a ~eans~of dela~n?:with t~e~acis~,&#13;
Da :-....&#13;
¯ - .. ~ sexism, nomopnoDla and ozner.l~-&#13;
" " Y - we ~uld all peel of our mask and be October 12-Project Acceptance equalities is welcome ~to affend, For&#13;
Ages 14,18ca!1687=4666 -&#13;
October 14th~t 0% meeting (WSU)&#13;
WGLA-meeting .&#13;
October 15th-T.LC. event~ author:&#13;
~ainnie Brucel Pratt 8:00pro&#13;
.Gay&amp; Lesbian~Round up :&#13;
(15th=17th)&#13;
oct. 1.7th-Lesbian Readers group.,&#13;
6:30pm&#13;
October 19th-PFLAG meeting/&#13;
Project Acceptance&#13;
October 23~- W.L.M:G. meeting&#13;
- at YWCA&#13;
October 24th-Stonewal125 Potluck&#13;
6pm&#13;
October 26th P~oject Acceptance&#13;
~ October 28th’10%.meeting&#13;
~Oct. 30th; MothersGroul~ Hallowi~&#13;
een partyipotluck 302- S. Walnut.,&#13;
; for. more info. :on these activities&#13;
call 942-633,3 "&#13;
whbwe are and accept everyone else&#13;
for who they are, Kansas wouldn’t&#13;
know what hit it.&#13;
Weat the Parachute would like to&#13;
give an invitation to the community&#13;
to join together in Pdde, and get im&#13;
volved. We ca.n all talk about .the&#13;
problems however nothing will ever&#13;
be accomplished if that’s all we do.&#13;
We would like to thank Wichita for&#13;
hel ping the Parachute become a success,&#13;
we never dreamed it would&#13;
reach this size, and all the credit goes&#13;
tothe readers and advertisers.- Although&#13;
there :are still places the Parachute&#13;
is not necessarily welcomed we&#13;
hope that what we have in common&#13;
will outweigh other circumstances.&#13;
¯}.-Again let’s ~6rk .togetherand~&#13;
watch our Pddegrew! ~hank you f~E,&#13;
your~support! " -." ¯ , . ~ . ~&#13;
The:Parachute -_: _:&#13;
more information, call Rob at 651=&#13;
0251.&#13;
Th+, Pomchut+&#13;
lq~ -$18.OO&#13;
Add.¢ss .........&#13;
Cih ¯&#13;
The Po,ochut¢&#13;
P.O.tSo. 1134~ "&#13;
.7&#13;
i~ ~ai- ~ " ~t that :.... not~u..wncn -ne.-,ze,tz anomer urge&#13;
*=e-th-e’rh-~’-ath0~t tn him~i£&#13;
~he~~gofer~&#13;
THE GASTRONOMICAL blindfold un.til here~ then went Peri Jude Radecic Named&#13;
" BEAN -~TORY - ’ - to -answer .the,photm~.~izing-:the .. -. . NGLTFiExecutive~_Director_~:...............~. ,~~,~_,,,~,_,.. .............&#13;
¯ . .. . .. ....- ..... ~ ¯ a~ ~t ¯o~-go. It ~ not.. ......~,.. Detr, ozt,. MI (EGC, M) The.B.oa.rd.. . ~. ~.-.D..E.P..~~ . ¯&#13;
.wh.o.n.~.a.m.-.~.......p.~..m.o..n. for~. ~.~~.,a. ~,a ~,~ ~~0..~,~ :’~..o.f.D~.r~.to.rs.o.f .th.e .Na.t~.onal Gay ,,. ........ ; " ....&#13;
: &lt; -" ",, ’ - . ,,- "~]~~,~:~=~ ~ -~u -..- ~ . . ~ . ¯ - b~~. ~::~b=~ .. " . ~ .... ,,:..;_ .....&#13;
~.~ .....&#13;
? an@.Lesbmn Task Fetch. (NGLTF)- ¯&#13;
?~w~t Hv¢ly ~on-~-5. hi~, "~/,~0~ r.:o~y":~....... ~ ~~ : organ~ations.-- new executive&#13;
~ director at a meeting held in We wo~&#13;
*\&#13;
of .eatrrying on." So he nmd~ the winn~. While_k~-ping his ear on the&#13;
supreme sa~,t~ mid saw up .beams.- ,. ~onv~tion in .the hail, he iwent on&#13;
Som~ months .lat~. his catr bro]m -:.1iI~ thix for t~n minu~S, lmti[ hedown&#13;
on the way heinz from worlg { knew the phot~ "farewells ~dieated&#13;
and s’.m~ tl~y lived.in th~ country ~ th~ end of his frm~lom. He plagaxl his&#13;
he Called homeland told him that,h~ ~ napkin on hi8 lap and folded his&#13;
Would be late bemuse hehad to"walk hands on top of it, and smiled&#13;
- home. Onhisway,.¯hepass~.a.s.m.a.tt c. ont~te,.d~~_.~Y to ..h.l.m~]-f, he w..as t.h.e.&#13;
cat~e and "the .odo.r o-f fresli’, ~ h~ ake., :very,p..,te.,-m-, ¯re o.[..-m..o.c.e. n.ce ..when-.ms&#13;
beatm was overwhelming. ~".m~,.I he lover tetutne~ apologizing for .takin~&#13;
st~ ~.~ ~.;,.~i =.~.. ~ ~.~k;. he"- ~o~to~. He aa=d.tf he.hed peeked&#13;
gleffe=ts’~used:bythe~s before ’:At th~ pom~ ne remove(] . me&#13;
the mffe. B~fore leaving he" eatten&#13;
throe ~ ~s~,.:,~f~~.&#13;
~ ~~yh~;~:p~p~~d&#13;
by ~ ~m¢ ~~ho~ he. felt&#13;
~ly ~e " ~ ~at " ~&#13;
p~-p~ ~.._ ~. Hi. lov~&#13;
~ m~W~tr ~&#13;
exei~ ~ ~ him ~ ~d ex~&#13;
~~y, "~, I ~ve: ~&#13;
mo~wo~.~ f~&#13;
~t." He b~ol~him ~d~&#13;
~~b~. He ~...hlm~, ~d&#13;
j~~lov~~~,~~ove&#13;
~ b~o~ ~e ~~.~.~&#13;
~him vow ~t ~~h~: ~"&#13;
:.Twelw; dimmrgu~sts seated around&#13;
, the table for a -"happybirthday party"&#13;
.fo~:ffim..{ !: ::&#13;
,:Upper&#13;
Crust&#13;
7038 Lincoln&#13;
Wichi ta ,Ks",.&#13;
316"683-8088&#13;
Detroit. Radecic,-the organ-~&#13;
ization’s current Deputy-Director&#13;
fOr. PublicPolicy, Will rdplac~ Tori&#13;
Osborn, who announced her&#13;
resignation earlier. -&#13;
"PeriJude is a Task Force success&#13;
story," said -Elizabeth Birch,&#13;
Co-Chair of the Board of&#13;
Directors. "With her dynamic&#13;
l~adership abilities, institutional&#13;
knowledge and ~tireless energy, the&#13;
TaskForce could not be in better&#13;
.hands."&#13;
Radecic, 33, brings more than 15&#13;
years experience in movement&#13;
organizing, management commun~&#13;
ications and top notch political&#13;
skillS:to her new position. She&#13;
joined the staff Of the Task Force&#13;
as a lobbyist in 1987, organizing&#13;
the-lobby days around the 1987&#13;
March on Washington. She&#13;
moved on to become the&#13;
organizations’ first Legislative&#13;
we have: an-alcohol"--and dr~&#13;
"~t group sp~irmally for-the&#13;
gay and lesbian population.&#13;
This group will he closed t~the&#13;
h~texos~xual population’ .so thatt~¢&#13;
atm~nt issues sp~ifi~ in-the gay&#13;
,~nd lesb.ia~, population can he.more&#13;
This group will be..closed tothe&#13;
,h~ros~xual population so that&#13;
treatment issues sp~ifi¢ in the gay&#13;
and l~sbian population c~n he mor~&#13;
re.lily addr~sse~&#13;
Not only will drug and alcohol&#13;
~he addr~ss~ bu~ also&#13;
r~lationship, and family., issues., as&#13;
well as-s~xuality issues. Issues&#13;
surroxmdins AIDS - and.&#13;
infection and ~ how that :.-impacts&#13;
The group will..hea 12: st~p. has~d&#13;
group and will ~.*w~lve.w~ks in&#13;
L--ngth,i,~\~i~a w~k for an&#13;
hour each s~Ssion,..W¢ ol~tat~ on a&#13;
Director, then was promoted to sli~~" ’ her. curr~ni "poSition as Depmy ~t~::~’ u~stions er are&#13;
~amming. Radecic was "a central ¯ ~:.~T~t~s.- 383"8015,-:. "&#13;
figure ~ the successful .effort to. .&gt;-~r:: ~~/::: " ’. -.....&#13;
pass the Hate Crime Statistics&#13;
Act, a key le~slative victo~ for ’ : .....-&#13;
the gay, lesbian,-and bisexual =’ ). - ’:: ": -&#13;
~ho~&#13;
fOUl i. zl life&#13;
Wail L love&#13;
y n( ~ e the&#13;
to h : heap&#13;
.Your&#13;
vith ~ee~s..&#13;
son&#13;
,, ta tour-_&#13;
=d g ) thets"-&#13;
and .&#13;
Z3-[ :It&#13;
;nd~ ==ding&#13;
iljn~ inad-&#13;
~ulp ! (am,&#13;
¯fin( nter,&#13;
nal feare:thatcause them:-- -&#13;
CAPRICORN DEC. 22-JAN.21’. You&#13;
can: provoke :needless ~conflict with.&#13;
your friends i~by insisting that. your&#13;
’ w~yis.the 0rily,.dght Way; Learn that&#13;
~y0~r values are correct:; but maybe.&#13;
~i0t for e~erybody:. : .~,. - ’i:&#13;
AQUARIUS JAN. 21-FEB:’20:.Work&#13;
,hard, in a way that highlights, your&#13;
unique: skills and you can.make significant&#13;
career:progress. Show. re-&#13;
¯ specttothosein adh0dty; defiance.&#13;
~ could blow itall...... : : .PISCES FEB.120,MARCH.21~ You&#13;
have important thLngs todoa~dsay,&#13;
but circumstances Seem-to prevent.&#13;
,you from making y0urmark; Thiswill&#13;
ss:,’combine intuition with logic, to&#13;
:makefuture plans:- ’ " --&#13;
’.::VI$iT:OUR, STORE IN :., METAi:*&#13;
HYSICAL EUREKA SPRINGS~&#13;
DLOGI&#13;
. Your&#13;
MEEDS&#13;
=OC~O,BER HOROSCOPE FRoM’~ . LiBRA-SEPT 23~OC’&#13;
OG~%%REI~g~R~ALLDL _RAIN..B.pW:I,: ~ ma~ce, childr~’n and your social life&#13;
: -!J /~LL: L;onalzmns~mat can Causea financial drain: You love&#13;
ha~e.,limited your room tomove:will . lU:~UW but you just may nothave tl~e&#13;
;~r~sa.kdow_n,.w~hor.wjtho.-ut ~purPer~. -cash to ind[Ji~e. Leam t~ ha~ c~ap&#13;
. . ISSIOn; f~O -aneaarana~rattleyoUr . fun ." ¯ ¯ " .. " , ~ -&#13;
cage; involving situationsare bigger .sG~RPIO OCT. 23-NOV.23" Your&#13;
i ~ ~.z::~ .M.P~.~.fl]~!-,~!L’ZU:)TO.q may 0f~your,farnily;or.withsomeone who’&#13;
¯ D.e.,tem_~:.e~ :m~.~ana0~ o!~.,fd~n.o- shares your- home~- Be’ tmevto your--&#13;
¯ - . s.njL~S, a.noj.o.ngi.t~fl~a!s-/tSO.K to. self, but be patient.and give o~heis&#13;
" e,mmate.tnmgslnat~are a~wasteof, the:chance to undei~’tand’you -&#13;
" " .en.p.rgy.,: butdo~ :a.ct out of anger- SAGITTAI~IUS NOV. 23-DECI!22: It-&#13;
~ntk~!n,.gs. l,h,~.ug_n=~ ~ ~ :-~ :.~ ." ’ seemslike others misunderst~anding&#13;
u.~.U~,/~,,, ~’U:MAY ~.~ : Your you~but your¯ own feelings of Madn.&#13;
Fe.oxo.r..su.~ ann r.ecog..nition .corn e~luacy are :the ma[.cdlpdt, Exam,&#13;
mczswnn me oemanos ot:aparmer, ine external blocks to .find .the inter-&#13;
Don~ let y,our innate fear of change&#13;
prevent you from going afterwhat you&#13;
really want. "&#13;
GEMINIMAY 21-JUNE 22: Your,daily&#13;
routine i seemS;limited ~nd boring.;&#13;
time to take ~0n ~new acti,vities&#13;
expand your knowledge¯ and view~&#13;
Avoid work,related travel_this .month&#13;
if you can. _ -&#13;
CANCER JUNE 22-JULY 23: Credit&#13;
and theSupport of others is hard. to&#13;
obtain. Y0u~l =have to rely on yourOwn&#13;
resources for happiness andfinancial&#13;
highlights unique ...you can... defiance&#13;
it all. - "&#13;
success. Prove to yourself thatyou PISCES FEB.~ 20,MARCH-2,1~ ~an. ~ : ~ " , ~ haveimportantthi_ngstodoa~dsay,~&#13;
LEO JULY 23-AUG. 23: Family.and partners stir your emotional cauldron f~m "l:hiswill&#13;
-and you may fihdyourselfacting out :i ~ss:,,ombineintuitionwith-logicto&#13;
old,_ unconscious behaviors.Abolish. ’.~makefuture plans:-&#13;
outmoded, attitudes to ke~p worth-&#13;
" while relationships.&#13;
V-IRGOAU’ G.,-~. 23;SEP.~~,-:2...3. ’" Your lif.e.¯ .~~:WE OFF.E.R..F.U.LL.A!S:TROLOGI, ..... has been busier than ~ual lately:and ....;CAL’SERVlCES AND:ALL YOUR&#13;
I was.so con~,emed that last ¯ mentary’box of Pepto Bismat(12 of&#13;
_month your column was n.ot .in the them to be exa.ct). The. old woman&#13;
~’arachute that I had to write,to, see.. next to me swalldwed her gum when&#13;
:what,waswrong. A.re you-OiK;~..did my wig-started itchin9 an~ I h.~d to&#13;
.-: you quit? Please-oon~. stop wnti.ng mplac~ my.stocldng because it was.&#13;
~ there are.so ma.ny people I~nowwho_: ci~eping. She pretended ~not. to un;:&#13;
- re.:ad :ygu.r ,c.olumn .e~c.h month, ders~and English but I~knowsne was&#13;
- ~lease let us.knowwnat nappened. :-lyingbeCa~de her husband"kept call&#13;
_we miss you! .......... . herM.yrtle;and he already told me he .&#13;
: b:igned~ .- ¯ . was from Kentuclqb . , .:.&#13;
uoncemed in..OKC..: California was fun; especially th.e.&#13;
,. _ " .~ : ~, ’ ocean. AIthough the -lifeguard quit ’ .::,:&#13;
uea~;Co.ncemecl: " ’ . .~ . - coming after:me on the 2nd-day, when&#13;
; LnanK you so m.uc.h tor y;our I.e.t- ~ he fina’lly figured-out eve.n if I~buldn~&#13;
ter, i,z,.was ~.sweet 0ryou t0.wdte .. . swim I d,ould f!oatfor:a long time,..It ....&#13;
and I m glad I ~was misded. Yes]’m..... pr,0bablv.didNt ~h~lp that-wfien I was.&#13;
fine: .Quit the: Par@chute? NE~ER! : sun ba{hingJ had forggtten.to do -&#13;
uesi,d~.s.:~l~e~p.eroeing so neat’.a.n.d ;::someth!.r~,:admgqueen~:hould:never&#13;
mycait~fq!~Tpap.ers,, o.ncein a while "fo~let,l Illet you gUesswhatthat~was;&#13;
t.h:~;:~e~,:~b][:Shertakes me out tq ~but-justletmesayitwasmucheasie~&#13;
diiirt~r!~a!r:~0~:~n eatbuffet) atleast..!-touse the restmom that~Wayhe;:&#13;
t!~’dfitilthey, bar .us fr0m.all of : Dear Babby" "&#13;
,the.~;,:’ThP ~heraaywhen.we,came . : I knqw:~,ou’are .an older female&#13;
In. tne anor tne manager maae me. Impersonator, but I was curious, do&#13;
pro.mise.p~to t.dp..t.he ~.wajtr.ess., .q.ot ¯ .yo0 live’in drag or do you go out as a~&#13;
tot.easeme.cooK~m a ~utcner,ne. man " - . : : .. ¯ -&#13;
and~ot t0~Spit~watem).elon seeds a.! : Cud~us in.¯Tulsa "&#13;
9nyba!d:olff~en. Honest I donx ,. : .. : .:~:.. "&#13;
kn~:What:he:Wastalkingabout.(Ha! !.’,Dear Curious,:. : ¯ "&#13;
Ha;!).. -,-.:::::,.:---~.:i - ¯ ¯ . ’ . . :: Th~lks for th~ interest;ye~ i-~usuatly&#13;
] waSactua,y on.vacadon:~ i went on out as a woman; it ~ti0WSrnV be~t......&#13;
seVeral differerit p!a.ces. My.~mt t.rip . ~’eat~i~s, Men con~t~intly-n0ti~,~e .me&#13;
_was to ~rkans@s.. ~ _went.t0 I=u~Ka ¯ that-wa~ But on behalf of females"&#13;
~pdngS t.o th:e.:/~nita .B.ryant: Theater,. : ,e~,-~r~,-I’~ nO{ sure&#13;
.was :actua.lly ne.eo!ng :some .~ew :.:.. one.~!loo.ks..quite like me: Although -.&#13;
comedy .material, but the~nlything " !-ha.v..e.~en .tol0 by maqy..th~t..I Ipo~ .a, ..&#13;
funn.~LWa,S her dr..~: . ::" ... ¯ ; .. : Iot_.l!k.e. M,aq_onn.a. o~. atlea,s~:.wqat&#13;
After leaving them I flew zo uali, ~.wou.Id-:lOgK ,!.Ke !!. sne ana t&lt;osanne ..&#13;
f_ornia. ¯ (I w.anted.~to~ use.:Anita’~s ;: n_ao a.D.aDy.togemer., :~&#13;
~room. but-she wa.s getting reedy.to :~ S.e.do.usly. ibefiev,e pe !.be ."&#13;
go on tour); The plaribdde wasni~e able .to dressanO, act ~hey -~&#13;
rhad never flowfi~before..The flight are.. After allit’s not thb&#13;
attendantgot.-realnervouswheh I i:.ou[side:that ;counts! rays (::~..i&#13;
told her heights giveme diarrhea, as ;. :~elieved) ~a .~p~&#13;
.a matteroffactl-didn~ see her until ~some .of us -.-&#13;
:the: Alcohbl&#13;
~ffective&#13;
lesbian .population because 0f the&#13;
h~mopl~obic: attitudes Of::the :other"&#13;
indi~duals .in: .treatment. :The&#13;
AddiCtiOn Treltment Services Of&#13;
it~:Sedgwick C0u~ty DePartment&#13;
of :Mental Health h~s developed a ::.~termine individual :fees.&#13;
::s~ialized: Service i that:., will not: ::::~:’ ~ . ~ :&#13;
......o.~..IY Pf0vide ~ffective treatmen.t.~ ..:.. .... . f ....&#13;
for :individuals:: ~fr0m the :gay:and ......:’~icia at316:383&#13;
:legbian communit:y~:but ~H also: :::::: ~ :’::&#13;
’ : pr0~ide a: safe ~m~sphere to: deal :&#13;
:~th:-::other issues: specificS.to that "&#13;
populatiom: :.-: . ~ :.:. - ¯&#13;
::~~ " .’&#13;
:; :.:~ There aren:tanyyou. can:se_a&#13;
:i:: I~0whow to determine your ~n’s.~~your~or ~°cm&#13;
:5.’ libtline, or the National AIDS Ho"thheat 1-800-3g : -;: . :~ .:...:&#13;
:~ ::’:: ~U;S" DEPARTMENT ~)~FbI~EHA~aLI~HseArvNicDeHUMAN SERVICES "(~&#13;
plus pdzes!&#13;
rout name to the&#13;
will&#13;
meeting or vote in Congress :!is coming up.&#13;
to the gay o~ ~iDS phone list (or bot&#13;
is limited to the local Wichita dialing area only.&#13;
r Awes [ PO Box 16782 I Wichita; KS 67216 ....&#13;
a Spectacular Prc&#13;
:o Comedy,; ~ward ~innin~..i.. Na~iC~l&#13;
..... 3 of the Hottest Dancers,from all&#13;
’ Tuesday October&#13;
¯&#13;
S~ Hillside&#13;
gold-on black " ¯ lOd, black on ~pink. ~ ~i&#13;
.Total&#13;
City, ST&amp; ZIP .&#13;
Shir~oine ~Put me on your Mailing List!&#13;
Upto $25.00, add $3.50 Out,of fig Clos~t, Inc.&#13;
$25.01 to 50.00, add$4~50 Suit~ 199, !61.I So. Utica&#13;
$50~01 to 100.00, add $5.95 Tulsa, OK 74104 ’,&#13;
$101,.00 to 200.00, add $7.50&#13;
National Alliance of .&#13;
Lesbian &amp; Gay Health&#13;
Clinics Merges with&#13;
National Lesbian &amp; Gay&#13;
Health Foundation&#13;
Wasl~ington, DC (EGCM) In an&#13;
effort to better represent lesbian&#13;
and gay health issues on a national&#13;
level, the National Alliance .,of~&#13;
¯-Lesbian and Gay HeaRh Clinics&#13;
has merged with the National&#13;
Lesbian and-Gay Health Foundation&#13;
(NLGHF).&#13;
"We didn’t_ want .tor:i:~invent the&#13;
wheel," said Mike¯ Savage,&#13;
Executive Director of the Fenway&#13;
HealthCenter. - "We think the Alliance and its.&#13;
members will strengthen the&#13;
Foundation. The merger makes a&#13;
lot of sense;~ said NGLHF&#13;
President Joyce Hunter. The&#13;
m.efger Was:: . approved ’by both&#13;
groups at~ meetings . held¯ at ,the&#13;
NLGHF Conference in Houston.&#13;
The Alliance~ established in.1992,&#13;
is. corn prised "of eleven, gay_ and&#13;
lesbian health clinics located&#13;
....l’his is an,exciting, momentin-th~ ~ thrb:ughout,.,the United States ~Ohistory&#13;
of: the i~ay and legbian - Iinl~" the emergent gay and.::lesbian&#13;
health:.move~ie_.n’t~!’"saidWhitm,an .... healthFca~e system. The Alliance&#13;
¯ Walker:Clinic:~FjJcecutivd Dii~ctor - ._pmyid~s’, support ¯ and technical&#13;
Jim G~:~iham. ~. ’. : ~-¯ ~::: " ." ~ a~Sistance: to member clinics: It&#13;
~ " .’.~ also develops national funding&#13;
~The/~Ri:~f£mh6S~,:to merge with strategies and policy advocacy on&#13;
!the NI~G~!F rathat ~than start issuegimpac:ting the health status:,.,&#13;
anothetnewnati0nal.organization, o£,the~a~ and lesbian community,:,&#13;
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Featuring priVate, individual cottage~ for two.&#13;
Ne~tled unde_r trees and ~mO~ng _hundreds of. floxvers.&#13;
~ O%e~n ¯size.beds @.i Antique furnishings&#13;
~ Whirlpooltubs for tw,o ,&#13;
¯ ~ Complimentary beverages .---&#13;
: ~"~Lai~ge-gou~fi&amp; break~fasb ,~ Cable TV&#13;
"~ Ol~stmet:.p,.a~Ri:n~&amp; ~ On]ke trolley route;~ "&#13;
aCome experience, the&#13;
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" EUREKA S i/ - : ~m~~ ’ / - ARKANSA~~- . ¯ i.t&#13;
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I~, n +P u’p Fotletcvill¢[:: t+,toin, of. V+OP&#13;
Showlm+ llpm&#13;
¯ SUNDAY SHOWS FEAT~G&#13;
-GINGER ST. ,-&#13;
EVERY .3RD SUNDAY IS T~E~’:~G~&#13;
$50,00-. CASH PRIZE&#13;
OPEN THURSDAY- SUNDAY 9PM- 2AM&#13;
SUNDAY- SHOW AT 11PM&#13;
EVERY SUNDAY ISCUSTOMER APPRECIATION NIGHT&#13;
Attention. Members &amp;i Guests&#13;
ARKANSAS’ BEST BL,, K,PARTY&#13;
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AllNew 501 Da~.¢e Floor - Dancing Now 7 days&#13;
Backstreet is Open 7days-a.week 7pm ~ 3am&#13;
’"902" The GAMEROOM....our newest addition!&#13;
"70!~" Ladies Show every Saturday.-. 11p~m.&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
,DISCOVERY, INC.&#13;
1021 JESSIE .ROAD.&#13;
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50i :664-4784 OR 50 i-666=6900&#13;
We are~wed- Sat at 9:00pm&#13;
S~~mOpen Wed- Sat.&#13;
LHWLE ROCK’S #1 DANCE-CLUB&#13;
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Thei~e is always something ~ppening on Jessie R~d ~ 7. Days a week!&#13;
Park . Wevegof if good m L,ttle.Rock..&#13;
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Little R0ck,Arkansas ......&#13;
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute, October 1, 1993; Volume 1, Issue 7</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Mary Arbuckle&#13;
Stephen Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Michael Camfield&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Scott Curry&#13;
Kim Ridenour&#13;
Catherine Boyle&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Kelly Kirby&#13;
Leslie Thomas&#13;
Orin Shank&#13;
David Stokes (volunteer)&#13;
Sherri Guy (volunteer)</text>
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                <text>The Parachute/Dennis R. Neill Equality Center</text>
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                    <text>the Gay &amp; Lesbian Communi~ in Kansas, Okllahoma, Arkansas and Nissouri

VoL t issue

(

Across the United States Decem~r

dbbon.
The Postal Service is priinting 25
million booklets of 10 Stamps for a
total of 250 million stamps.
The
design of the red dbbionoriginated
w~h Broadway Cares&gt;Equity Fights
AIDS on the 1991 Tony Awards

zations.
fundraising and ed
,
Pararachute will send it s entire mailing list along with all correspondence
for the month of December with the

1993:
ers! The employee

@ 7:00pro
Va~e&gt;y /
@ 9:00pro

(K~raok~ Tt~rough0ut Th~ Evening
2

1 DRAWS

2 FOR 1

.....

r,

who is
promiscuous and who vigorously promotes the militant fag agenda..."
(See reprint of tetter on page 7.)
Again Fred has outdohe himself and
his reputation in Wichita and the
state of Kansas, The c~ative letter
was also composed o{ the church
name and all perti~ht information

constitutional, By fa×ing alette~ead
with all important information t5 contact Rev. Phelps, he has give6 ~way
all pdvacy dghts to this info~ation.

pany to"investigate" tSis problem
and to contact him at thier"eadiest

Gay and Lesbian clienteile.
Paul Scott

�PARACHUTE
Publisher/Editor
Asst. Publisher
Wayne D.
Odn E. Shank .

Contn~uting Writers:
Chuck B., Cookie Moudde, Stephen Scott,

Adve~
Kim Ridcnour, Tom Neal, Odn Shank,

~anny ~ Jim wa~n
~ Staff:

Volunteers:
Ann Marie Lochncr, J.T Si~m!~n, Donna

316-6514~500

Thoughts of Yesterday, Tomorrow
and Today

Letters to The Editor
Three cheers to Kevyn Jacobs for denoundng NAMBLA. Just like Mr. Jacobs,
t once felt hypocritical, denouncing the
right-of a minority group like NAMBLA
while speaking out for the fights of the
gay community. But l don~ feel that way
any more. There is a great diversity in
the gay world I realize. And there is a
colorful and pleasantvarlety of people
and their tastes in the gay and lesbian
community too. That’s fine. To each his
or her own. But in my heart I can no
longer keep silent about anyone who
would sexually seduce children. That’s
sick. And it’s wrong because children,
young boys or girls, are innocent. Andto
make matters worse, the right-winged
movement uses groups like NAMBLA to
smear and scandalize the gay community. We must let society know that we
are not a bunch of pedophiles. Therefore, we must also stand up against
NAMBLA. if you are a memberof
NAMBLA, that’s your business but don~
go using the predous gay community for
your agenda. The gay movement must
stand up and say that we are not a movement of pedophiles or into besliality or
anything like that. We are honest,
hardworking, decent people who only
wish to spend our lives loving someone another decent adult - of the same gender. NAMBLA would greatly damage all
we have .worked for in the gay fights
movement.
Sincerely,

Dear .Editor:
I am a full fime student at W~,hita State
University. Ourcampus nsv,speper"Tbe Sunflowe¢’ adver’dsss for student submissions of

loss of a close filend of mine to AIDS, I de-cldedto submit ~tha following letter and POem
’ . in his memory. I was notso.much displeased
thatmy work had not.been printed since I did
not feel it to be of publishable quality. However, after much urging from a graduate instructor friend of mine i went to the Sunflower
office to find out what had happened. Much
to my dismay my poem and letter had been
circulated among the staff, for after, I had been
associated with my work the recep’donist
could no longer speak to me and went for
someone else to talkwith me. I was talked at
and around but not too, as if, I were not real
and that I did not exist. This angered me so
much to realize that the Pat Roberlson’s and
Fred Phelps of this wodd had ~ly harbored
this much hornophobia among campus students that run and support this newspaper
and even more ~ fact that they a,ow themselves to be spoon fed and braces placed
upon their brains.
Ionly hope that through your publication 1hat perhaps my letter and people could
possibly be pdnted. I realize that my work
may remain ~vialto our community and may
not prove woilhy but I would like to lake that
chance with you and would welcome any responses that you might have to it.
Thank you~for your Time and Consideration.
Sincerely,
Thos W. Burnham
Editors Note: W’~ Pleasure, here is
your poem:

In Memory of Larry D. Jones

just memories to be made. The memories
made, when remembered were, to be shared.
Somewhere along .~e way we must have
made a-wrong turn or maybe a wrong decision.
It must be that we are to teach others,
hoping to gaurd them from our mistakes.
Now, withtha beginning of each new
day, the memories we once had are rememobered fondly wi~ smiles and tears.
Maybe a small part of our heart sUII
aches for that which we have no longer, yet
our heart has grown enough to hold the
memories to be made in the future:
Greet each new day with a smile on
your lips and a song in your heart, for we know
not what awaits with each step we take, each
turn we make. Seek only the best in everyone you meet, otfer the best you have to give,
and we all shall be truly blessed.
¢op~gbt ~’e=l~ Ja~1993 Tmm~ ~

VISIO
Wichita’s Only
Gay &amp; Lesbian Bookstore
3143 w. Maple
Wichita, KS 67213
(316) 942-6333

Located in Maple Villa
MANY NEW GIFT ITEMS ADDED FOR THE HOLIDAYS

HOT CHOCOLATE &amp; COOKIES
COME IN AND SEE US!
We will raffle off a "Claire of the Moon" video cassett &amp;
a "Embrace" poster.

Drawing will be held on Dec. 23rd

The Parachute Page 2-A

J

�WATCH FOR-OUR
GRAND OPENING
IN THE WAREHOUSE
-DISTRICT !

A NEW

ALTERNATIVE
in Entertainment!

PRESENTED BY

F.U:D.D. INCORPORATED
FOR INFORMATION CALL ( 3!6 ) 269 - 4070
Copyright 1993

�THE LESBIAN MOTHERS’ NATIONAL DEFENSE FUND
"Raising our children a heterosexual privilege," is the motto of the cites various studies comparing
Lesbian Mothers’ National Defense children of lesbians with children of
Fund. LMNDF has been assisting heterosexualmothers, which have
lesbian mothers with custody cases fOund no_ significant differences in
for twenty years, offering informa- the children’s self -concept,
tion, attorney referrals, emotional intellegence, gender identity, sexual
support and financial assistance for orientation or moral judgement.
lesbian and gay parents involved Furthermore, children of lesbian
and gay parents do not experience
in custody disputes.
The greatest obstacle facing les- a great deal more harassment from
bian and gay parents in a custody their peers than do other children.
battle is poverty. LMNDF encour- They do develop independent
ages attorneys to accept custody judgement and strength of characcases at reduced fees and provides ter to resist prejudice in vadous
useful information to mothers and forms.
attorneys preparing for litigation. However, despite these positive reports,
lesbian mothers still face dismal prosThrough their "Adopt -A-Mother~
pects in courts outside areas, about a
program, a support group chooses
ten percent chance ofretaining pdmary
an individual mother to sponsor,
custody. In the Bible Belt, children are
sending personal notes of encourturned over to abusers, alcoholics and
agement and organizing fund-rais- violent criminals rather than being altr~prmation is also available about lowed to stay with nurturing gay or lesa broad range of parenting issues, bian parents.
indudingdonor insemination, adop- Recent media attention to the plight of
tion, childreadng and advocacy for lesbian and gay families has stirred pubfamilies.
ic anger at these atro~es. While the
According to a study by the LMNDF has labored foryears in relate
American Bar Association eight to obscurity, today the organization has
twelve million Amedcan children become the focus of a new effort toadare currently being reared by les- vocate for lesbian and gay families.
bian and gay households. ApproxiFor more inform~on contact the Lesmately six percent of the U.S. popu- bian Mothers’ National Defense Fund
lation is made up of lesbianand gay P.O, Box 21567, Seattle~WA. 98111
or(206) 325-2643. Local contact, Kim
families with children.
LMNDF Director Jenny Sayward Ridenour (501) 253- 5445 or (501) 2539588.

KFHD REVIVED!
BY: PHIL GRIFFIN
Kansans For Human Dignity (hereafter KFHD) has been revived and is deftnitely alive and well in Wichita. KFHD is
a 501(c)3 non-profit, tax deductible organization which was originally incorporated
in 1985.. KFDH is a twin-like organization
to WGLA (Wichita Gay and Lesbian Alliance). The purpose of KFHD is similar
to that of WGLA with a primary difference
being it is not allowed to be ~volved in
politics. Although KFHD is nearly eight
years old, it has been dormant for some
time now.
So why has it been revived? -At the
community meeting for WGLA in October, there was talk about what had happenedtothis organization. Forthosewho
were in attendance, there was some confusion about what the organization was
all about, The need for Stonewall 25
Committee to fail under the umbrella was
also brought up around the same time.
The Board of WGLA, under the leadership of Moderator Unda~Santiago set out
to find out what is was andwhy it was not
active. The old by-laws which govern
KFHD were located and reviewed by the
Board of WGLA and an interim Board of
Directors for KFHD wasappointed at the
OctoberWGLABoard meeting. A nomk
hating committee was. also formed at the
time with election of active Directors of
KFHD set for .two weeks later. ;On November 4th, the Directors for
KFHD were elected and the new Board
haditsfirstmeetingon November7th. Ofricers were elected at the meeting. The
by-laws require that four directors come

from the Board of WGLA and three directors from outside of the WGLA Board.
The current Directors (and o~ce) are
Linda Santiago (Chairperson), Ann Marie
Lochner (Assistant Chairperson), Raye
Ann Tucker (Treasurer), Phil Griffin (Secretary), Steve Aaron (Member), Tracey
Hughes (Member), and.Steve Swint
(Member).
So you may still be.asking, why has it
been revived? it has been revived for the
purpose of providing the umbrella for
Stonewall 25 as was requested by the National Stonewall Committee. This makes
all gilts and donations to Stonewall 25 tax
dedu~ble. Secondly, ithas been revived
for the purpose of obtaining and maintaining a community center for the Wichita
Lesbian, Gay and BiSexual Community.
As the Parachute goes to press, much
work has already been done in the process of opening the first Center for the
Community. You will be hearing a lot
aboutthis projectinthe near future. Each
organization is being contacted for input
and assistance. KFHD needs the whole
Community to become involved with the
Center.
If you would like more information
about KFHD, feel free to wdte; KFHD,
P.O. box 2845, Wichita, KS 67201. Visions and Dreams has also agreed to
serve as a communication, center for
those who have questions or who would
like to volunteer to help with the Center.
You can also contract anyof the Board
Members of KFHD for information. Remember, a great deal is happening, more
information is coming, and YOUR help is
needed.

Community Center
Tax Deductable Donations
RAINBOW CLUB
Please check one

,

, , ,$25 per mo. - Lambda Contributor
,, $50 per mo.,Tdangle Contributor
$75 per rag. - Red Ribbon Contributor
~ $100 per mo. - Freedom Ring Contdbutol
$ other one time donations
Donor ($1201 - $2499) Patron ($2500-$4999)
Benefactor ($5,000+)

Mail Contributions to:
KFDH
P.O. Box 2845
Wichita, Kansas 67201

For more information Call
Raye Ann at 316-942-6333

Watermark .Books

Downton: 149 North Broadwy, Wichita, Ks. 67202
=iccadilly Square: 7732 E. Central, Wichita, KS. 67206

�Wichita Praise &amp; Worship
Center Moves on 2nd
Anniversary..
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center, a
full Gospel church in Wichita, accepting of Gbys and Lesbians, has
recently moved to a new location.
2519 E. Lincoln.
The location is a store front building
with more space than the church had
at the recent building. Services will
continue to be at 2i00 pm on Sundays. The church has grown over
the last two years to now have a staff
of 6 people. WPWC is affiliated with
over 50 other independent cfiur~,hes
in the gay community throughout the
United States.
The church will celebrate it’s 2nd
Anniversary in services on December 10, 11 and 12. Friday night December 10, services will be at 7:30
with Thomas Hirsch from Advance
Christian Ministries in Dallas, Texas.
Saturday the church will celebrate it’s
2nd anniversary with a luncheon at
the church at 12 noon. Reservations
are required. Saturday evening service will beat 7:30.with Rev. Judy
Horn, Pastor of Chdst Chapel of the
Rockies~ in Denver, Colorado. Sunday celebration seFvicer will be at
2:00pm.. The congr.~ation and staff
invite#l[ to attend.

Dear Babby Advice Column

AIDS

IREFERRALU
SERVICE
HOTLINE
264-2437
LOCATED
AT
17TH &amp;
BROADWAY
WICHITA,
KANSAS

Dear Babby:
I read your column every month,
my friends and I called the Parachute
last month when we did#t see your
column again, but they said you were
out sick, we hope your o.k.
Now for my problem,. I can’t seem to
find Mr. Right, ! am 33 years old and
everytime ! think I have found him,
he turns out to be the wrong one.. I
think maybe I should try somewhere
besides the bar, but i’m not sure
where or how to go about it. All I am
use to is the bar. Could you please
give me some advice.
Looking in OKC.
Dear Looking:
"
Well honey your only 33, you still
-have time before the retirement
home. I was looking for Mr.Right and
sometimes Mr.Right Now would do.
You may be right, try looking for him
somewhere else. I have had wonderful luck at the grocery store, I try
to stay away from the candy sections,
guys just don’t seem interested in us
when we have chocolate dripping out
of our mouth. The fruit section is my
favorite, when one comes by that you
like, try to start a conversation with
him, like" Don~ this fruit look good?
if he say’s yes, then tell him, well.you
know that’s not the only. thing looking
~
i do.e~n’t act

This

interested go .on to the next one.
Another place that has worked for me
is the laundry mat. Try to get the
washer or dryer next to the cute guy,
and watch his laundry, when he
seperates the clothes, say" my it
must take a real man tofill those out"
if he replies jump in and go for it gid!
If he has some purple sequenced
underware, and looks extremely
dashing,, congradulations you have
just .met Dear Babby. If he is tall,
blonde, and built, leave him alone,
he°s mine. Last but notleast is the
mall, you may not find Mr.Right but
atleast your .in a place where rejection can easily be healed by a_quick
trip through iDillards, i seriously wish
you the best of luck, if you find an
extra send him my way!
Dear Babby:
I like to make my own clothes, and
my gidfdendsays that’s.not in style~
should I, just buy clothes from the
store?
confused in Wichita
DearConfused:
Wear what you like, if-she loves.
you it wonl matter. I haveanOIdpair_.
of curtiansl turned into a lovely d~ess,.
my dat~ said it was the pretties thing.
he had ever seen. I said thankyou,
saw it in the window .and had .to have

th l ly1

many people oea

with

A lot of i)eople don’t think they have to worry about HIV.
But the truth is, you can get HIV infection if you share drug needles
and syringes or have sex with an infected person. Call ~our State or
local AIDS hotline, or the National AIDS Hotline
at 1-800-342-AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for
deaf access.

HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
.... ,,~,~ ........

Public Health Service
Cemers lot Disease Control

~.

,_/It~

Brought- to you by:
Wichita-Sedgwick County Health Department

~,,
The-Parachute Page 6-A

1900 E.-9nth Wichita, Kansas
Confidenfial.AIDS/HIV Testing
Fees based on a sliding scale

�Laura L. Shook, D,C,
f~
L~,

.

..i.~:

ChiropraCtor

:::":

.~ M~assageTherapist

....

~ iX Pu.in~ C~o ,ack ~n~o.o~’~h ~a~o
b/

GIFT CERT. AVAILABLE
Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield Provider

~
700 N. Market, Suite A
Wichita, Kansas 67214

316-263-6883

(316)267-6522

WICHITA GAY &amp;
LESBIAN CHORUS

you get in FREE
I

4

~1 Coronitas .1t Draws
[] ~ P:cart=Jam tick-ct
91vcaway

~t.50 Red Hot Shot~
Boxers &amp; Bowtics
Competltlon.

Ladi¢~-On-I~, Balloon
Drop

£ive Sumo
l;Urestlino!

~q’i.chita’s. Hottmst

2 64 1544
The,Parachute Page 6-A

�ORGANIZED MAY 20, 1956
Fred W. Phelas. Pastor

~7~.~N[ 91327392.28

3701 W~t 12th *
POo Box 1886
O(fice: 913,273-0325

November 13, 1993

.

TOPEKA. KANSAS 66604
Lib~a~: 9 I.tt 273-0338

LEX~T~CUS 18

22 Thou shalt not lie with manPlasma Alliance, Inc.
1515 Ease Central
Wichita, ~sas 67214

kind, as with womankind: it is
abomination.

Dear Citizens:

WBC has received reports that you ~axe a fag working there ruined
jim Watson Jr, who is
militant fag agenda and who may have AIDS or HI~. ~n light of the
mounting anecdotal evidence such as the fag denklSh in Florldawho
deliberately infected and killed ~im Bergalls and ~hers to take
the onus of AIDS off the fags in light of the d@vastatlng risk
posed by a tainted blood supply, and in llght of hhe reliability
of t~ information~on Watson coming as it does from one very near
to him. WBC believes this matter should be inveshlgated, and we’d
appreciate receiving information from you thereon at ~our earliest
convenience.
Your consideration is appreciated.

Fred Phelps

CALL

TROY
E~TLE£
FOR A FREE
CONSULTATION

REALTY
EXECUTIVES OF
WICHITA
316-722-9393

Now Open

the Right

u

’94

�GPON$ORII~G NEW

YOUTH GI~OUP
The ~ita Cha~er of Parents,
Families, and Fde~s of L~ans and
Gays is s~n~dng a new teen su~
po~ group, P~OJECT ACCEPTANCE. This group ~11 provide a
pla~ o~ a~an~ for gay, lesbian,
and ~xual yo~h and their fdends
in which adult facilit~o~ and the
youths’ ~er are ~o~ive and affirming.
We therefo~ provide:
*An edu~4acil~at~ w~kly
group for youth (ages !4-18)
*A ~fe pla~ for young gay,
bian, and bi~xual individuals to
cia{ize and suppo~ each other.
s~bst~nce abuse, AiDS and other
~mpo~ant i~es.

vadous social opportunities as well
some decor items for their morn.
There will be a list posted of specific books, videos and items such
as bowling passes or gift certificates
to the movies. These lists will ~
available at Visions and Dreams
and Fantasy. Some of these books
cost as little as $4. We would then
ask that as you wrap your present
and put it under the tree that you
take a moment and write an inscription into the front of the book.
Please He from your heart to the
young person that might need your
encouragement. If you would rather
send a cash contribution to this
project-please send it to our P.O.
Box 686, Wichita, KS 67201-0686
and label it Project Acceptance
Christmas. Please help us to make
this Christmas a meaningful one to
our younger brothe~ and sisters, A
special than~s to Linn Copeland and
Raye Ann Tucker and Renee
FMtcher for their sssts~ance and
support.

RE$OU flOES AVAILA~LE
T~UG~ ~C~]TA

¢~AP~E~ ~F ~oF~G
V’qiTH AR~S THAT ENCIRCLE

(Being gay in Wichita Video - now
available for $20)
SPFJ~KERS ~UREAU
VIDEOS; BOOKS;PAMPHLETS
RESOURSE BOOKLET
STORIES BOOKLET ......

S

And
The Dedication Of
New Building

Praise
2519 E~ LNeoN
Fri. Decol0 7:30pro Rev. Thomas Hirsch
Sago Dec.11 12:00pro Anniv. Banque~
(Reservations Req uired)
Sat. Dec~11 7:30 Rev. Jud7 Horn

You can ~ave up to 25% offyour long
distance charges compared to the rat~-~
of AT&amp;T. MCI or SlaSnL

N~ "ran Swrrc~ Ton,~x 1-800-546-0556

SATURDAY- DEC. 11
&amp;
SUNDAY DEC.12

0929o95
Call For Appointment

(316) 651-0603
Fundraiser For

The Parachu~ Page

��FamilY Portriats Available
WichitaPraise&amp;W0rshipCenterwill "
be holding a fundraiser by selling professional family portraits to be taken
Saturday-Dec: 11th, and Sunday
Dec.-12th dudng the mornings. This
will be at the.new building at 2519E.
Lincoln. The cost will be $29,95
which includes 1-8x10, 4-5x7’s and
10 wallets size photos. - The photos
will be back in time for Christmas.
The photographer has said that those
who have animals may have ,their
picture taken also. You must make
an appointment by calling the office
at 651-0603, a $9.95 deposit is required to set apppointment. The
photography will be taken by L.G.
Smith Photography, a family owned
and operated business in Wichita.

am of--~e CloSet.~I. .-

and Onto Th,ePhone

Call \Xfirh Pride. Switch to CommuniwSpirit
Te cpho ~e Long Dis~uace ~bdas".

IECEMBER for all:
You’re
~robably ready for a little R&amp;R after all
~e activity of the past few months and
aow you finally get it. Relax, enjoy,
md loaf your way through the holidays.
~II]~S Maz: 21-Apr. 20: Far away
~eople and places are on your mind. so
;o ahead and take that trip. Now is the
:ime toformulate long-range plans for
,~e future; make your New Year’s
~solutions early.
rAURUS Apr. 20-May 21: Your

ioint finances are in the spotlight now.

COM3T~J!VITYSPIRIT

,.Make The Sv:i:ch "Ibdav

1-800-546-0556

Marital or other partnership assests are
:asier to handle than usual. You get
what you want, so go for it.
GEMINI May 21-Jtme 22: You are
able to.negotiate successfully with both
mrtners and competitors because you
:an balance others’ needs with your
)wn. Make the deal this month.
~AHCER June 22-July 23: Work
akes a turn for the better. You can
:ount on being busy; if you stay
rganized and pay attention to details,
’ou can also count on being successful.
,EO Joly 23-AUg. 23: You get the
~un award this month; romance and
)ther pleas~es are in the scene. You
mow hOW you lik~e.m sliow off, so go
d~ad and be the life of the party:. "
VIRGO Aug. 23Sept. 23:.T~e all
hat old, emotional garbage to the
~eeycling center this month. You are
,,oing to need room for the bigger and
)ettcr future you’re planning right now.

Eta~a spr~.e~m 50~-253-5445

LIBP~ 8 1)L 23-O¢t.23: A busy
month of talking, visiting, and running
hither, thith~ and yon. Relatives and
neighbors give advice that l~ds to new
opportunities, so pay attention.
SCOI~IO OCt. 23-Nov. 23: Finances
’aren’t much of a problem this month, so
you arc able to give the gifts you want
to-you get good stuff too. A new door
to fumm financial gains opens now.
SAGITI’ARIUS Nov. 23-Doe. 22:
You get better looking--new clothes, new
hair, maybe just a newly cheerful
expression. If you’re thinking about
s~arting anything new, this is the best
month to do it.
CAPRICORN Dec. 22-Jan. 21:
You’re in the background this month,
but you kind of like it there. Support
comes from hidden and unexpected
places. Ditch your usual suspicion and
accept it gracefully.
AQUARIUS Jan. 21-Feb. 20: You’re
always a friend to the world and, this
month, you can have fun with
community projects and group ventures.
You meet people who will give a boost
to your ambitions.
PISCF_~ Feb. 20-M~. 21: Everybody
is watching you now, but there’s no need
to get rattled by all ~ attention. You
get to achieve the goals you have been
w~ing on, so revel in the limelight.
Visit ’~our store in mystical,
mctaphl~ical l~m’~ka. Springs. We

downtown at 95 Spring Street; or call
1Hm’and Jan at 501-253-5445.

~lle~Ubles, I~ttery, Glassware
~ntique and Used Furniture
~praisal, Auction, &amp; Estate
Ser~ice~ Available
43O last I~arly

The Heart

Wiclfita, I~ansas
1 pal I~ ~plll

Always Euyin~!

19rcprietcr

CJ. (~han

Wichita’s. Community Re~dtor®

"FIGHT THE RIGHT"
Pl~os~ h~lp ECpUALITY KANSAS defeat the Cornfield
R~solution. Send~a donation oF anV amounL to:
1221 N. Waco, Wichita, KS 67203. So much has to
b~ don~ b~for~ th~ Kansas Hous~ vot~ in January.
~i~ate Office
10300 W. ~nlral, Suite 200
Wichit~ ~ 67212
The Parachute Page tO-A

Office Phone
Cellular
Personal Fax

722-9393
648-4944
722-1914

�LI=TT~ 1’0 THE EDITOR
~ Three~¢~rs to Kevyn Jacobs for

Equality,
Justice And

EQUALITY

Inclusion For
All People

KANSAS

NEEDS YOU TO HELP!
For Volunteer Information Call
Jim Watson 265,7240

OR

2% of y~.~ur IOfig distance

b~is donated to the gay,
i v-!esbian;, or. ~AIDS group
- -.~.-

Doug Glaze 267-7248

Save up to 25% offyour
long distance bill compared
to the rates of AT&amp;T, MCI

- -~ -~of¥our choice:

~cks.

denouncing NAMBLA.. Just like Mr.
Jac0bs, I’ 0nce-felt hypocdtloai denouncing the right .of a minority group like
NAMBLAwhile speaking out for the rights
of the gay community. Buti don’tfeelthat
way any more. There is a great diversity
in the gay world I realize. And there’is a
colorful and pleasant variety of people
and their tastes in the gay and lesbian
commun~ too, That’s fine. To each his
or her own. But in my heart I can no
longer keep silent about anyone who
would sexually seduce children. That’s
sick. And Ys wrong because children,
young boys or girls, are innocent. Andto
make matters worse; the fight-winged
movement uses g~oups like NAMBLA to
smear and scandalize the gay community. We must let society know that we
are not a bunch of pedophiles. Therefore, we must also stand up against
NAMBLA. If you are a member~of
NAMBLA, that’s your business but don~
go using the precious.gay-community for
your agenda. The gay movement must
stand up and say that we are not a movement of pedophiles or into bestiality or
anything like that. We are honest,
hardworking, decent people who only
wish to spend our lives loving someoneanother decent adult ~ of the same gender..NAMBLA would greaUy damage all
we have worked for in the gay fights
movement.
S~ncereS/,
D.L

~I-~EXUAL
~UPPO~T GI~OUP

Revolutions Bar

l

902 W. 7th, Junction City, Kansas

8:00pro ~o 2:00am
$2.00 Cover/ Live DJ
BRING UNISEX GI~AB BAG GIFT

For More lnfo Contact Jeff

AN AN ADULT BAR WHERE
EVERYBODY KNOWS YOUR NAME

(91~) 225-6125

(913) 238-6374

124S. W. 8TH, TOPEKA ,KS.
The Parachute Page 11-A

�HELPING PEOPLE WITH
AIDS
THE DEFINIATION
Acquired immune Deficiency
Syndrome (AIDS) is the most serious epidemic to strike the American
public in the last 50 years. This disease has no respect for income,
color, gender or sexual orientation.
Expe~ts conservatively estimate that
approximately 6 to 7 thousand Arkansans have been or will become
infected with AIDS, based on national averages.
With the rising costs of medical
care and drags for PWAs (Persons
with Aids), such as AZT, DDI; etc.,
the need for financial assistance has
become more and more urgent.
Many organizations were formed for
education awareness but none for
direct financial assistance until the
birth of HPWA.
THE HISTORY
When the AIDS cdsis began to
extract its t011 on the Arkansas community, a group of.concerned indi,
viduals metin February 1988 determined to form an organization dedicated to providing =assistance to
those in need. HPWA is an Arkansas non-prot’R charitable corporation
established to assistindividuals who
suffer from AIDS. HPWA issues
direct financi~al .payments for medical bills, nursing care, pharmacy bills
and living expenses and any emergency funding necessary. No mon-

ies are distributed directly to PWAs.
Through these direct financial payments, HPWA strives to allow
PWAs to continue to live their
liveswith dignity and self esteem.
Funding for HPWA is dedved
from volunteers from all walks of
life who raise needed monies
through fundraisers and pledge
drives. No member of the HPWA
staff receives compensation for his/
her services. Ninety percent (90%)
of funds raised by HPWAare dedicated to direct assistance payments. The Board of Directors of
HPWA is composed of professionals and lay members from vadous
fields including education, business,
medicine, law, health and theology.
Currently based in Little Rock,
HPWA offers assistance to all Arkansas residents who meet the required criteria for funding.
HPWA is a duly licensed chadtable organization and maintains
complete financial records available
for public inspection dudng normal
business hours.
THE CRITERIA
HPWAis vitally concerned.with
the accountability of its fund-raiS-

2)
Each applicant must submit a
complete ~’mancial disclosure of all
monthly income or benerds received
by them.- Mandatory receipt of or
application for S.S.I. benefits is required.
3)
Each applicant must permit a
home visit(s)-by HPWArepresentatives. HPW will contact and coordinate funding through a social worker
of the PWA’s choice.
4)
A thorough verification of the
PWA’s expenses must be provided.
Following receipt of a written application for assistance containing
the information listed above, representatives of HPWA will conduct a
home visit with the PWA to determine the degree of assistance
needed. A formal recommendation
for assistance will then bepresented
to the Board of Directors of HPWA
forfinal action. Distribution of funds
is determined on a case-by-case
basis. Some restrictions as to funding requirements exist. All information conceming individual cases is
kept strictly confidential. HPWA
does-not discriminate on the basis
of creed, color, gender, or sexual orientation.

ing and disbursal efforts. To receive ¯ .- ~THE NEED
HPWA is constantly in need of
assistance from HPWA, the follow.Volunteers and funding. HPWA ex~
ing criteda must be mat:
tends an open invitation for you to
1) Each applicant must submit a
become involved in its ongoing efwritten confirmed diagnosis of AIDS
fortto minimize the burdenthat AIDS
from a licensed physician.

Join HPWA or its branch organizations in towns throughout Arkansas. Organize pledges and fundraisers through HPWA. Inform
fdends and family about HPWA and
the dsing AIDS epidemic.

NOWIS THE TIME
TO ACT.
ALL
CONTRIBUTIONS
TO HPWA ARE

TAX
DEDUCTIBLE.

HELPING
PEOPLE WITH

AIDS
P.O. BOX 4397

LITTLE. ROCK,
AR 72204

extracts from oursoclety. YOU CAN
MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
THE WAY

2710 Asher

Monday- Friday 4pm-lam

Christmas

Saturday lpm-Midnight
501-663-9886

Little Rock, Arkansas

Ozar
The Parachute Page 12-A

B

1004 Garrison

B

Ft.Smith, Arkansa~

(501)783-9347
Ope~ Mon-Fri 8am-lam Sat 8am-12am

�.

OZARK PRIMITIVES

Located on
Hwy 62W
58 Kingshighway
Eureka Springs,
AR. 72632

,.o. Box 263
\~,~’75-/_
~ Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632
(501) 253-6148

DINNER

Victorian
Reflections

HIGH DESIGN
QUALITY MATERIAL
FINE CRAFTSMAN:SHIP

Helen .Jeffrey

CRAZY BONE G.ALLERY

¯ TLffany &amp; Fenton Lamps
....:.~Victoriana.-~l~welryI

;37" SPRINO ~STREET
EUREKA SP-RINGS
ARKANSAS-72532

19 Spring.

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under trees and :iamong
%OC&amp; ’ N~tled
O~een size beds @ Antique furnishings

COTTAGE

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ComplimentaO, beverag~
Large gourmet breakfast. ~ Cable TV
O~street parking @ On the trolley’ route
Walk to downtown @ Smoke free, pet fi’ee
Open all year

1~8oo-624-6646
J
10 Eugenia St (on the Historic Loop) Eureka Springs AR 72,632

"Eurika’s Storybook Inn"
Antique Furnishings
Suites for 2-4
Full Gou=met Breakfast
Flexible Breakfast Time
Private Di~ On R.ec~JeSt
PrSvate ~aths

o

Some Jac~zzis

* Guest Kitahen-Wethas
* F!o~e_rs 5Ja Season
* Off Street Parkin~

o Trolley Stop
~ Cable TV

BED &amp; BREAKFAST
VICTORIAN INN

with downtonw sops and rzanurants on(y s~s away.
~ot~letely renovatedwith your cort~ort in trlnd, qT~e Atlmur glen stiff
ratim~ it’s VictorIan charm, elegance and romance.
Relax and mjoy the picturesque setting of our tree covered hollowfor an

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#7 Lema St.
Eureka Springs, AR. 726321-800-515-GLEN

�WHERE Fm uns

RON’S’PLACE
523 W. Poplar Box 367
Fayetteville, AR. 72702
501.-442-3052

Dec. 1 1
Sweet Savage
Tommie Ross
Ginger. ST. ;John

Arin .Austin "

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NEW YEARS EVE
WITH
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FRIENDS
PARTY
COMING IN
KARL
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MORE!
HLM STAR
FEB.5TH
YEAR - FEB 12

�IRANCH &amp; RESORTI
PO BOX 2281 . Athens. TX78751 ¯ ~903) 338"2288

December 1993

Dear Michael
Howdy! Ijust returnedfrom a fabulous vacation at
Meadowood Ranch and Resort. The resort was beautiful; it was once
owned by a wealthy oil baron. It’s located on 650 acres" ofgreen hills’,
meadows andforests.t I wenthorseback-Hding on Friday andfishing
(caught a 12lb. largemouth bass) Saturday, following a delicious"
breakfast on. the decks overlooking the gorgeous countryside. I tanned
poolside, played tennis and volleyball, Then I went hiking with some
friends I met here.~.saw some dee "-.-"~tn one of the coolpme forests.

pictures.

Wa n ted to get
th is letter off to.
you. Can’t wa#
to return to
Meadowood.

The Parachute Page 15-A

�Have Moved!
@

W

Wors
2514 East Lindon

$ nday

316-651-0603

Going Up ~.
PROBLEM!

D~P~"~T:

Friday, February 4, * 994 at ~:30 pm

R~TUR~:

Ask for
Michael 5ertsch
BRING IN THIS AD FOR

$1OO OFF
ANY DEAL!

tax included
Includes: Transportation

=

Lodging

=

Ski Rental

Limited to first 40 people
Sleeper Bus
Will need $ 50.00 Deposit Down by December 11, 1993
Balance Due By January 15, 1994

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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    </fileContainer>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="5653">
              <text>the Gay &amp; Lesbian Communi~ in Kansas, Okllahoma, Arkansas and Nissouri VoL t issue&#13;
Across the United States Decem~r&#13;
dbbon.&#13;
The Postal Service is priinting 25&#13;
million booklets of 10 Stamps for a&#13;
total of 250 million stamps. The&#13;
design of the red dbbionoriginated&#13;
w~h Broadway Cares&gt;Equity Fights&#13;
AIDS on the 1991 Tony Awards&#13;
(&#13;
zations.&#13;
fundraising and ed ,&#13;
Pararachute will send it s entire mailing&#13;
list along with all correspondence&#13;
for the month of December with the&#13;
1993:&#13;
@ 7:00pro&#13;
Va~e&gt;y /&#13;
@ 9:00pro&#13;
2&#13;
(K~raok~ Tt~rough0ut Th~ Evening .....&#13;
1 DRAWS 2 FOR 1&#13;
ers! The employee r,&#13;
who is&#13;
promiscuous and who vigorously promotes&#13;
the militant fag agenda..."&#13;
(See reprint of tetter on page 7.)&#13;
Again Fred has outdohe himself and&#13;
his reputation in Wichita and the constitutional, By fa×ing alette~ead&#13;
state of Kansas, The c~ative letter with all important information t5 conwas&#13;
also composed o{ the church tact Rev. Phelps, he has give6 ~way&#13;
name and all perti~ht information all pdvacy dghts to this info~ation.&#13;
pany to"investigate" tSis problem Gay and Lesbian clienteile.&#13;
and to contact him at thier"eadiest Paul Scott&#13;
PARACHUTE&#13;
Publisher/Editor&#13;
Asst. Publisher&#13;
Wayne D.&#13;
OdnE. Shank .&#13;
Contn~uting Writers:&#13;
Chuck B., Cookie Moudde, Stephen Scott,&#13;
Adve~&#13;
KimRidcnour, TomNeal, Odn Shank,&#13;
~anny~Jimwa~n&#13;
~Staff:&#13;
Volunteers:&#13;
Ann Marie Lochncr, J.T Si~m!~n, Donna&#13;
316-6514~500&#13;
Letters to The Editor&#13;
Three cheers to Kevyn Jacobs for denoundng&#13;
NAMBLA. Just like Mr. Jacobs,&#13;
t once felt hypocritical, denouncing the&#13;
right-of a minority group like NAMBLA&#13;
while speaking out for the fights of the&#13;
gay community. But l don~ feel that way&#13;
any more. There is a great diversity in&#13;
the gay world I realize. And there is a&#13;
colorful and pleasantvarlety of people&#13;
and their tastes in the gay and lesbian&#13;
community too. That’s fine. To each his&#13;
or her own. But in my heart I can no&#13;
longer keep silent about anyone who&#13;
would sexually seduce children. That’s&#13;
sick. And it’s wrong because children,&#13;
young boys or girls, are innocent. Andto&#13;
make matters worse, the right-winged&#13;
movement uses groups like NAMBLA to&#13;
smear and scandalize the gay community.&#13;
We must let society know that we&#13;
are not a bunch of pedophiles. Therefore,&#13;
we must also stand up against&#13;
NAMBLA. if you are a memberof&#13;
NAMBLA, that’s your business but don~&#13;
go using the predous gay community for&#13;
your agenda. The gay movement must&#13;
stand up and say thatwe are not a movement&#13;
of pedophiles or into besliality or&#13;
anything like that. We are honest,&#13;
hardworking, decent people who only&#13;
wish to spend our lives loving someone -&#13;
another decent adult - of the same gender.&#13;
NAMBLAwould greatly damage all&#13;
we have .worked for in the gay fights&#13;
movement.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dear .Editor:&#13;
I am a full fime student atW~,hita State&#13;
University. Ourcampus nsv,speper"Tbe Sunflowe¢’&#13;
adver’dsss for student submissions of&#13;
loss of a close filend of mine to AIDS, I de--&#13;
cldedto submit ~tha following letter and POem&#13;
’ .. in his memory. I was notso.much displeased&#13;
thatmy work had not.been printed since I did&#13;
not feel it to be of publishable quality. However,&#13;
after much urging from a graduate instructorfriend&#13;
ofmine i went to the Sunflower&#13;
office to find out what had happened. Much&#13;
to my dismay my poem and letter had been&#13;
circulatedamong the staff, forafter, I had been&#13;
associated with my work the recep’donist&#13;
could no longer speak to me and went for&#13;
someone else to talkwith me. I was talked at&#13;
and around but not too, as if, I were not real&#13;
and that I did not exist. This angered me so&#13;
much to realize that the Pat Roberlson’s and&#13;
Fred Phelps of this wodd had ~ly harbored&#13;
this much hornophobia among campus students&#13;
that run and support this newspaper&#13;
and even more~fact that they a,ow themselves&#13;
to be spoon fed and braces placed&#13;
upon their brains.&#13;
Ionly hope that through your publication&#13;
1hat perhaps my letter and people could&#13;
possibly be pdnted. I realize that my work&#13;
may remain ~vialto our community and may&#13;
not prove woilhy but I would like to lake that&#13;
chance with you and would welcome any responses&#13;
that you might have to it.&#13;
Thank you~for your Time and Consideration.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Thos W. Burnham&#13;
Editors Note: W’~ Pleasure, here is&#13;
your poem:&#13;
Thoughts of Yesterday, Tomorrow&#13;
and Today&#13;
In Memory of Larry D. Jones&#13;
just memories to be made. The memories&#13;
made, when remembered were, to be shared.&#13;
Somewhere along .~e way we must have&#13;
made a-wrong turn or maybe a wrong decision.&#13;
It must be thatwe are to teach others,&#13;
hoping to gaurd them from our mistakes.&#13;
Now, withtha beginning of each new&#13;
day, the memories we once had are rememobered&#13;
fondly wi~ smiles and tears.&#13;
Maybe a small part of our heart sUII&#13;
aches for that which we have no longer, yet&#13;
our heart has grown enough to hold the&#13;
memories to be made in the future:&#13;
Greet each new day with a smile on&#13;
your lips and a song in yourheart, forwe know&#13;
not what awaits with each step we take, each&#13;
turn we make. Seek only the best in everyone&#13;
you meet, otferthe best you have to give,&#13;
and we all shall be truly blessed.&#13;
¢op~gbt ~’e=l~ Ja~1993 Tmm~~&#13;
VISIO&#13;
Wichita’s Only&#13;
Gay &amp; Lesbian Bookstore&#13;
3143 w. Maple&#13;
Wichita, KS 67213&#13;
(316) 942-6333&#13;
Located in Maple Villa&#13;
MANY NEW GIFT ITEMS ADDED FOR THE HOLIDAYS&#13;
HOT CHOCOLATE &amp; COOKIES&#13;
COME IN AND SEE US!&#13;
We will raffle off a "Claire of the Moon" video cassett &amp;&#13;
a "Embrace" poster.&#13;
Drawing will be held on Dec. 23rd&#13;
J&#13;
The Parachute Page 2-A&#13;
WATCH FOR-OUR&#13;
GRAND OPENING&#13;
IN THE WAREHOUSE&#13;
-DISTRICT !&#13;
A NEW&#13;
ALTERNATIVE&#13;
in Entertainment!&#13;
PRESENTED BY&#13;
F.U:D.D. INCORPORATED&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CALL ( 3!6 ) 269 - 4070&#13;
Copyright 1993&#13;
THE LESBIAN MOTHERS’&#13;
"Raising our children a heterosexual&#13;
privilege," is the motto of the&#13;
Lesbian Mothers’ National Defense&#13;
Fund. LMNDF has been assisting&#13;
lesbian mothers with custody cases&#13;
for twenty years, offering information,&#13;
attorney referrals, emotional&#13;
support and financial assistance for&#13;
lesbian and gay parents involved&#13;
in custody disputes.&#13;
The greatest obstacle facing lesbian&#13;
and gay parents in a custody&#13;
battle is poverty. LMNDF encourages&#13;
attorneys to accept custody&#13;
cases at reduced fees and provides&#13;
useful information to mothers and&#13;
attorneys preparing for litigation.&#13;
Through their "Adopt -A-Mother~&#13;
program, a support group chooses&#13;
an individual mother to sponsor,&#13;
sending personal notes of encouragement&#13;
and organizing fund-raistr~&#13;
prmation is also available about&#13;
a broad range of parenting issues,&#13;
indudingdonor insemination, adoption,&#13;
childreadng and advocacy for&#13;
families.&#13;
According to a study by the&#13;
American Bar Association eight to&#13;
twelve million Amedcan children&#13;
are currently being reared by lesbian&#13;
and gay households. Approximately&#13;
six percent ofthe U.S. population&#13;
is made up of lesbianand gay&#13;
families with children.&#13;
LMNDF Director Jenny Sayward&#13;
NATIONAL DEFENSE FUND&#13;
cites various studies comparing&#13;
children of lesbians with children of&#13;
heterosexualmothers, which have&#13;
fOund no_ significant differences in&#13;
the children’s self -concept,&#13;
intellegence, gender identity, sexual&#13;
orientation or moral judgement.&#13;
Furthermore, children of lesbian&#13;
and gay parents do not experience&#13;
a great deal more harassment from&#13;
their peers than do other children.&#13;
They do develop independent&#13;
judgement and strength of character&#13;
to resist prejudice in vadous&#13;
forms.&#13;
However, despite these positive reports,&#13;
lesbian mothers still face dismal prospects&#13;
in courts outside areas, about a&#13;
ten percent chance ofretaining pdmary&#13;
custody. In the Bible Belt, children are&#13;
turned over to abusers, alcoholics and&#13;
violent criminals rather than being allowed&#13;
to stay with nurturing gay or lesbian&#13;
parents.&#13;
Recent media attention to the plight of&#13;
lesbian and gayfamilies has stirred pubic&#13;
anger at these atro~es. While the&#13;
LMNDF has labored foryears in relate&#13;
obscurity, today the organization has&#13;
become the focus of a new effort toadvocate&#13;
for lesbian and gay families.&#13;
For more inform~on contact the Lesbian&#13;
Mothers’ National Defense Fund&#13;
P.O, Box 21567, Seattle~WA. 98111&#13;
or(206) 325-2643. Local contact, Kim&#13;
Ridenour (501) 253- 5445 or (501) 253-&#13;
9588.&#13;
Community Center&#13;
Tax Deductable Donations&#13;
RAINBOW CLUB&#13;
Please check one&#13;
, , ,$25 per mo. - Lambda Contributor&#13;
,, $50 per mo.,Tdangle Contributor&#13;
$75 per rag. - Red Ribbon Contributor&#13;
, ~ $100 per mo. - Freedom Ring Contdbutol&#13;
$ other one time donations&#13;
Donor ($1201 - $2499) Patron ($2500-$4999)&#13;
Benefactor ($5,000+)&#13;
Mail Contributions to:&#13;
KFDH&#13;
P.O. Box 2845&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67201&#13;
For more information Call&#13;
Raye Ann at 316-942-6333&#13;
KFHD REVIVED!&#13;
BY: PHIL GRIFFIN&#13;
Kansans For Human Dignity (hereafter&#13;
KFHD) has been revived and is deftnitely&#13;
alive and well in Wichita. KFHD is&#13;
a 501(c)3 non-profit, tax deductible organization&#13;
which was originally incorporated&#13;
in 1985.. KFDH is a twin-like organization&#13;
to WGLA (Wichita Gay and Lesbian Alliance).&#13;
The purpose of KFHD is similar&#13;
to thatofWGLAwith a primary difference&#13;
being it is not allowed to be ~volved in&#13;
politics. Although KFHD is nearly eight&#13;
years old, it has been dormant for some&#13;
time now.&#13;
So why has it been revived? -At the&#13;
community meeting for WGLA in October,&#13;
there was talk about what had happenedtothis&#13;
organization. Forthosewho&#13;
were in attendance, there was some confusion&#13;
about what the organization was&#13;
all about, The need for Stonewall 25&#13;
Committee to failunderthe umbrella was&#13;
also brought up around the same time.&#13;
The Board of WGLA, under the leadership&#13;
of Moderator Unda~Santiago set out&#13;
to find outwhat is wasandwhy itwas not&#13;
active. The old by-laws which govern&#13;
KFHD were located and reviewed by the&#13;
Board ofWGLA and an interim Board of&#13;
Directors for KFHD wasappointed at the&#13;
OctoberWGLABoard meeting. A nomk&#13;
hating committee was. also formed at the&#13;
time with election of active Directors of&#13;
KFHD set for.two weeks later. ;-&#13;
On November 4th, the Directors for&#13;
KFHD were elected and the new Board&#13;
haditsfirstmeetingon November7th. Ofricers&#13;
were elected at the meeting. The&#13;
by-laws require that four directors come&#13;
from the Board of WGLA and three directors&#13;
from outside of theWGLA Board.&#13;
The current Directors (and o~ce) are&#13;
Linda Santiago (Chairperson), Ann Marie&#13;
Lochner (Assistant Chairperson), Raye&#13;
Ann Tucker (Treasurer), Phil Griffin (Secretary),&#13;
Steve Aaron (Member), Tracey&#13;
Hughes (Member), and.Steve Swint&#13;
(Member).&#13;
So you may still be.asking, why has it&#13;
been revived? it has been revived for the&#13;
purpose of providing the umbrella for&#13;
Stonewall 25 aswas requested bythe National&#13;
Stonewall Committee. This makes&#13;
all gilts and donations to Stonewall 25 tax&#13;
dedu~ble. Secondly, ithas been revived&#13;
for the purpose of obtaining and maintaining&#13;
a community center forthe Wichita&#13;
Lesbian, Gay and BiSexual Community.&#13;
As the Parachute goes to press, much&#13;
work has already been done in the process&#13;
of opening the first Center for the&#13;
Community. You will be hearing a lot&#13;
aboutthis projectinthe near future. Each&#13;
organization is being contacted for input&#13;
and assistance. KFHD needs the whole&#13;
Community to become involved with the&#13;
Center.&#13;
If you would like more information&#13;
about KFHD, feel free to wdte; KFHD,&#13;
P.O. box 2845, Wichita, KS 67201. Visions&#13;
and Dreams has also agreed to&#13;
serve as a communication, center for&#13;
those who have questions or who would&#13;
like to volunteer to help with the Center.&#13;
You can also contract anyof the Board&#13;
Members of KFHD for information. Remember,&#13;
a great deal is happening, more&#13;
information is coming, and YOUR help is&#13;
needed.&#13;
Watermark.Books&#13;
Downton: 149 North Broadwy, Wichita, Ks. 67202&#13;
=iccadilly Square: 7732 E. Central, Wichita, KS. 67206&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship&#13;
Center Moves on 2nd&#13;
Anniversary..&#13;
Wichita Praise &amp; Worship Center, a&#13;
full Gospel church in Wichita, accepting&#13;
of Gbys and Lesbians, has&#13;
recently moved to a new location.&#13;
2519 E. Lincoln.&#13;
The location is a store front building&#13;
with more space than the church had&#13;
at the recent building. Services will&#13;
continue to be at 2i00 pm on Sundays.&#13;
The church has grown over&#13;
the last two years to now have a staff&#13;
of 6 people. WPWC is affiliated with&#13;
over 50 other independent cfiur~,hes&#13;
in the gay community throughout the&#13;
United States.&#13;
The church will celebrate it’s 2nd&#13;
Anniversary in services on December&#13;
10, 11 and 12. Friday night December&#13;
10, services will be at 7:30&#13;
with Thomas Hirsch from Advance&#13;
Christian Ministries in Dallas, Texas.&#13;
Saturday the church will celebrate it’s&#13;
2nd anniversary with a luncheon at&#13;
the church at 12 noon. Reservations&#13;
are required. Saturday evening service&#13;
will beat 7:30.with Rev. Judy&#13;
Horn, Pastor of Chdst Chapel of the&#13;
Rockies~ in Denver, Colorado. Sunday&#13;
celebration seFvicer will be at&#13;
2:00pm.. The congr.~ation and staff&#13;
invite#l[ to attend.&#13;
AIDS&#13;
IREFERRALU&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
HOTLINE&#13;
264-2437&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
AT&#13;
17TH &amp;&#13;
BROADWAY&#13;
WICHITA,&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
Dear BabbyAdvice Column&#13;
Dear Babby:&#13;
I read your column every month,&#13;
my friends and I called the Parachute&#13;
last month when we did#t see your&#13;
column again, but they said you were&#13;
out sick, we hope your o.k.&#13;
Now for my problem,. I can’t seem to&#13;
find Mr. Right, ! am 33 years old and&#13;
everytime ! think I have found him,&#13;
he turns out to be the wrong one.. I&#13;
think maybe I should try somewhere&#13;
besides the bar, but i’m not sure&#13;
where or how to go about it. All I am&#13;
use to is the bar. Could you please&#13;
give me some advice.&#13;
Looking in OKC.&#13;
Dear Looking: "&#13;
Well honey your only 33, you still&#13;
-have time before the retirement&#13;
home. I was looking for Mr.Right and&#13;
sometimes Mr.Right Now would do.&#13;
You may be right, try looking for him&#13;
somewhere else. I have had wonderful&#13;
luck at the grocery store, I try&#13;
to stay away from the candy sections,&#13;
guys just don’t seem interested in us&#13;
when we have chocolate dripping out&#13;
of our mouth. The fruit section is my&#13;
favorite, when one comes by that you&#13;
like, try to start a conversation with&#13;
him, like" Don~ this fruit look good?&#13;
if he say’s yes, then tell him, well.you&#13;
knowthat’s not the only. thing looking&#13;
~ i do.e~n’t act&#13;
interested go .on to the next one.&#13;
Another place that has worked for me&#13;
is the laundry mat. Try to get the&#13;
washer or dryer next to the cute guy,&#13;
and watch his laundry, when he&#13;
seperates the clothes, say" my it&#13;
must take a real man tofill those out"&#13;
if he replies jump in and go for it gid!&#13;
If he has some purple sequenced&#13;
underware, and looks extremely&#13;
dashing,, congradulations you have&#13;
just .met Dear Babby. If he is tall,&#13;
blonde, and built, leave him alone,&#13;
he°s mine. Last but notleast is the&#13;
mall, you may not find Mr.Right but&#13;
atleast your .in a place where rejection&#13;
can easily be healed by a_quick&#13;
trip through iDillards, i seriously wish&#13;
you the best of luck, if you find an&#13;
extra send him my way!&#13;
Dear Babby:&#13;
I like to make my own clothes, and&#13;
my gidfdendsays that’s.not in style~&#13;
should I, just buy clothes from the&#13;
store?&#13;
confused in Wichita&#13;
DearConfused:&#13;
Wear what you like, if-she loves.&#13;
you it wonl matter. I haveanOIdpair_.&#13;
of curtiansl turned into a lovely d~ess,.&#13;
my dat~ said it was the pretties thing.&#13;
he had ever seen. I said thankyou,&#13;
saw it in the window .and had .to have&#13;
This th l ly1&#13;
manypeople oea&#13;
with A lot of i)eople don’t think they have to worry about HIV.&#13;
But the truth is, you can get HIV infection if you share drug needles&#13;
and syringes or have sex with an infected person. Call ~our State or&#13;
local AIDS hotline, or the National AIDS Hotline&#13;
at 1-800-342-AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for&#13;
deaf access.&#13;
HIV is the virus that causesAIDS.&#13;
Public Health Service ~. ,_/It~&#13;
.... ,,~,~........ Cemers lot Disease Control&#13;
Brought- to you by:&#13;
Wichita-Sedgwick County Health Department&#13;
~,, 1900 E.-9nth Wichita, Kansas&#13;
Confidenfial.AIDS/HIV Testing&#13;
Fees based on a sliding scale&#13;
The-Parachute Page 6-A&#13;
Laura L. Shook, D,C,&#13;
f~ ChiropraCtor :::":&#13;
L~, . ..i.~: .~ M~assageTherapist ....&#13;
~iX Pu.in~ C~o ,ack ~n~o.o~’~h ~a~o&#13;
b/ GIFT CERT. AVAILABLE&#13;
~&#13;
Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield Provider&#13;
700 N. Market, Suite A&#13;
Wichita, Kansas 67214 (316)267-6522&#13;
316-263-6883&#13;
WICHITA GAY &amp;&#13;
LESBIAN CHORUS&#13;
2 64 1544&#13;
4&#13;
I&#13;
you get in FREE&#13;
~1 Coronitas .1t Draws&#13;
[] ~ P:cart=Jam tick-ct&#13;
91vcaway&#13;
~t.50 Red Hot Shot~&#13;
Boxers &amp; Bowtics&#13;
Competltlon.&#13;
Ladi¢~-On-I~, Balloon&#13;
Drop&#13;
£ive Sumo&#13;
l;Urestlino!&#13;
~q’i.chita’s. Hottmst&#13;
The,Parachute Page 6-A&#13;
ORGANIZED MAY 20, 1956&#13;
Fred W. Phelas. Pastor ~7~.~N[ 91327392.28&#13;
3701 W~t 12th * POo Box 1886 . TOPEKA. KANSAS 66604&#13;
O(fice: 913,273-0325 Lib~a~: 9 I.tt 273-0338&#13;
November 13, 1993&#13;
Plasma Alliance, Inc.&#13;
1515 Ease Central&#13;
Wichita, ~sas 67214&#13;
LEX~T~CUS 18&#13;
22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind,&#13;
as with womankind: it is&#13;
abomination.&#13;
Dear Citizens:&#13;
WBC has received reports that you ~axe a fag working there ruined&#13;
jim Watson Jr, who is&#13;
militant fag agenda and who may have AIDS or HI~. ~n light of the&#13;
mounting anecdotal evidence such as the fag denklSh in Florldawho&#13;
deliberately infected and killed ~im Bergalls and ~hers to take&#13;
the onus of AIDS off the fags in light of the d@vastatlng risk&#13;
posed by a tainted blood supply, and in llght of hhe reliability&#13;
of t~ information~on Watson coming as it does from one very near&#13;
to him. WBC believes this matter should be inveshlgated, and we’d&#13;
appreciate receiving information from you thereon at ~our earliest&#13;
convenience.&#13;
Your consideration is appreciated.&#13;
Fred Phelps&#13;
CALL&#13;
TROY&#13;
E~TLE£&#13;
FOR A FREE&#13;
CONSULTATION&#13;
REALTY&#13;
EXECUTIVES OF&#13;
WICHITA&#13;
316-722-9393&#13;
Now Open&#13;
the Right&#13;
u ’94&#13;
GPON$ORII~G NEW&#13;
YOUTH GI~OUP&#13;
The ~ita Cha~er of Parents,&#13;
Families, and Fde~s of L~ans and&#13;
Gays is s~n~dng a new teen su~&#13;
po~ group, P~OJECT ACCEPTANCE.&#13;
This group ~11 provide a&#13;
pla~ o~ a~an~ for gay, lesbian,&#13;
and ~xual yo~h and their fdends&#13;
in which adult facilit~o~ and the&#13;
youths’ ~er are ~o~ive and affirming.&#13;
We therefo~ provide:&#13;
*An edu~4acil~at~ w~kly&#13;
group for youth (ages !4-18)&#13;
*A ~fe pla~ for young gay,&#13;
bian, and bi~xual individuals to&#13;
cia{ize and suppo~ each other.&#13;
s~bst~nce abuse, AiDS and other&#13;
~mpo~ant i~es.&#13;
vadous social opportunities as well&#13;
some decor items for their morn.&#13;
There will be a list posted of specific&#13;
books, videos and items such&#13;
as bowling passes or gift certificates&#13;
to the movies. These lists will ~&#13;
available at Visions and Dreams&#13;
and Fantasy. Some ofthese books&#13;
cost as little as $4. We would then&#13;
ask that as you wrap your present&#13;
and put it under the tree that you&#13;
take a moment and write an inscription&#13;
into the front of the book.&#13;
Please He from your heart to the&#13;
young person that might need your&#13;
encouragement. If you would rather&#13;
send a cash contribution to this&#13;
project-please send it to our P.O.&#13;
Box 686, Wichita, KS 67201-0686&#13;
and label it Project Acceptance&#13;
Christmas. Please help us to make&#13;
this Christmas a meaningful one to&#13;
our younger brothe~ and sisters, A&#13;
special than~s to Linn Copeland and&#13;
Raye Ann Tucker and Renee&#13;
FMtcher for their sssts~ance and&#13;
support.&#13;
RE$OUflOES AVAILA~LE&#13;
T~UG~ ~C~]TA&#13;
¢~AP~E~ ~F ~oF~G&#13;
V’qiTH AR~S THAT ENCIRCLE&#13;
(Being gay in Wichita Video - now&#13;
available for $20)&#13;
SPFJ~KERS ~UREAU&#13;
VIDEOS; BOOKS;PAMPHLETS&#13;
RESOURSE BOOKLET&#13;
STORIES BOOKLET ......&#13;
The&#13;
And&#13;
Dedication Of&#13;
New Building&#13;
Praise&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sago Dec.11 12:00pro Anniv. Banque~&#13;
(Reservations Required)&#13;
Sat. Dec~11 7:30 Rev. Jud7 Horn&#13;
2519 E~LNeoN&#13;
Decol0 7:30pro Rev. Thomas Hirsch&#13;
SATURDAY- DEC. 11&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SUNDAY DEC.12&#13;
S&#13;
0929o95&#13;
Call For Appointment&#13;
(316) 651-0603&#13;
Fundraiser For&#13;
You can ~ave up to 25% offyour long&#13;
distance charges compared to the rat~-~&#13;
of AT&amp;T. MCI or SlaSnL&#13;
N~"ran Swrrc~ Ton,~x 1-800-546-0556&#13;
The Parachu~ Page&#13;
&#13;
FamilY Portriats Available amof--~e CloSet.~I. .-&#13;
WichitaPraise&amp;W0rshipCenterwill " and Onto Th,ePhone be holding a fundraiser by selling professional&#13;
family portraits to be taken&#13;
Saturday-Dec: 11th, and Sunday&#13;
Dec.-12th dudng the mornings. This&#13;
will be at the.new building at 2519E.&#13;
Lincoln. The cost will be $29,95&#13;
which includes 1-8x10, 4-5x7’s and&#13;
10 wallets size photos. - The photos&#13;
will be back in time for Christmas.&#13;
The photographer has said that those&#13;
who have animals may have ,their&#13;
picture taken also. You must make&#13;
an appointment by calling the office&#13;
at 651-0603, a $9.95 deposit is required&#13;
to set apppointment. The&#13;
photography will be taken by L.G.&#13;
Smith Photography, a family owned&#13;
and operated business in Wichita.&#13;
Call \Xfirh Pride. Switch to CommuniwSpirit&#13;
Te cpho ~e Long Dis~uace ~bdas".&#13;
COM3T~J!VITYSPIRIT&#13;
,.Make The Sv:i:ch "Ibdav&#13;
1-800-546-0556&#13;
The Heart&#13;
The Parachute Page tO-A&#13;
IECEMBER for all: You’re&#13;
~robably ready for a little R&amp;R after all&#13;
~e activity of the past few months and&#13;
aow you finally get it. Relax, enjoy,&#13;
md loaf your way through the holidays.&#13;
~II]~S Maz: 21-Apr. 20: Far away&#13;
~eople and places are on your mind. so&#13;
;o ahead and take that trip. Now is the&#13;
:ime toformulate long-range plans for&#13;
,~e future; make your New Year’s&#13;
~solutions early.&#13;
rAURUS Apr. 20-May 21: Your&#13;
ioint finances are in the spotlight now.&#13;
Marital or other partnership assests are&#13;
:asier to handle than usual. You get&#13;
what you want, so go for it.&#13;
GEMINI May 21-Jtme 22: You are&#13;
able to.negotiate successfully with both&#13;
mrtners and competitors because you&#13;
:an balance others’ needs with your&#13;
)wn. Make the deal this month.&#13;
~AHCER June 22-July 23: Work&#13;
akes a turn for the better. You can&#13;
:ount on being busy; if you stay&#13;
rganized and pay attention to details,&#13;
’ou can also count on being successful.&#13;
,EO Joly 23-AUg. 23: You get the&#13;
~un award this month; romance and&#13;
)ther pleas~es are in the scene. You&#13;
mow hOW you lik~e.m sliow off, so go&#13;
d~ad and be the life of the party:. "&#13;
VIRGO Aug. 23Sept. 23:.T~e all&#13;
hat old, emotional garbage to the&#13;
~eeycling center this month. You are&#13;
,,oing to need room for the bigger and&#13;
)ettcr future you’re planning right now.&#13;
Eta~a spr~.e~m 50~-253-5445&#13;
LIBP~ 81)L 23-O¢t.23: A busy&#13;
month of talking, visiting, and running&#13;
hither, thith~ and yon. Relatives and&#13;
neighbors give advice that l~ds to new&#13;
opportunities, so pay attention.&#13;
SCOI~IO OCt. 23-Nov. 23: Finances&#13;
’aren’t much of a problem this month, so&#13;
you arc able to give the gifts you want&#13;
to-you get good stuff too. A new door&#13;
to fumm financial gains opens now.&#13;
SAGITI’ARIUS Nov. 23-Doe. 22:&#13;
You get better looking--new clothes, new&#13;
hair, maybe just a newly cheerful&#13;
expression. If you’re thinking about&#13;
s~arting anything new, this is the best&#13;
month to do it.&#13;
CAPRICORN Dec. 22-Jan. 21:&#13;
You’re in the background this month,&#13;
but you kind of like it there. Support&#13;
comes from hidden and unexpected&#13;
places. Ditch your usual suspicion and&#13;
accept it gracefully.&#13;
AQUARIUS Jan. 21-Feb. 20: You’re&#13;
always a friend to the world and, this&#13;
month, you can have fun with&#13;
community projects and group ventures.&#13;
You meet people who will give a boost&#13;
to your ambitions.&#13;
PISCF_~ Feb. 20-M~. 21: Everybody&#13;
is watching you now, but there’s no need&#13;
to get rattled by all ~ attention. You&#13;
get to achieve the goals you have been&#13;
w~ing on, so revel in the limelight.&#13;
Visit ’~our store in mystical,&#13;
mctaphl~ical l~m’~ka. Springs. We&#13;
downtown at 95 Spring Street; or call&#13;
1Hm’and Jan at 501-253-5445.&#13;
~lle~Ubles, I~ttery, Glassware&#13;
~ntique and Used Furniture&#13;
~praisal, Auction, &amp; Estate&#13;
Ser~ice~ Available&#13;
43O last I~arly&#13;
Wiclfita, I~ansas&#13;
1 pal I~ ~plll&#13;
Always Euyin~! 19rcprietcr CJ. (~han&#13;
Wichita’s. Community Re~dtor®&#13;
"FIGHT THE RIGHT"&#13;
Pl~os~ h~lp ECpUALITY KANSAS defeat the Cornfield&#13;
R~solution. Send~a donation oF anV amounL to:&#13;
1221 N. Waco, Wichita, KS 67203. So much has to&#13;
b~ don~ b~for~ th~ Kansas Hous~ vot~ in January.&#13;
~i~ate Office Office Phone 722-9393&#13;
10300 W. ~nlral, Suite 200 Cellular 648-4944&#13;
Wichit~ ~ 67212 Personal Fax 722-1914&#13;
Equality,&#13;
Justice And&#13;
EQUALITY&#13;
Inclusion For&#13;
All People&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
NEEDS YOU TO HELP!&#13;
For Volunteer Information Call&#13;
Jim Watson 265,7240 OR Doug Glaze 267-7248&#13;
2% ofy~.~ur IOfig distance&#13;
b~is donated to the gay,&#13;
i v-!esbian;, or.~AIDS group&#13;
---.~.- - -~ -~of¥our choice:&#13;
Save up to 25% offyour&#13;
long distance bill compared&#13;
to the rates ofAT&amp;T, MCI&#13;
~cks.&#13;
LI=TT~ 1’0 THE EDITOR&#13;
~ Three~¢~rs to Kevyn Jacobs for&#13;
denouncing NAMBLA.. Just like Mr.&#13;
Jac0bs, I’ 0nce-felt hypocdtloai denouncing&#13;
the right .of a minority group like&#13;
NAMBLAwhile speaking out for the rights&#13;
of the gay community. Buti don’tfeelthat&#13;
way any more. There is a great diversity&#13;
in the gay world I realize. And there’is a&#13;
colorful and pleasant variety of people&#13;
and their tastes in the gay and lesbian&#13;
commun~ too, That’s fine. To each his&#13;
or her own. But in my heart I can no&#13;
longer keep silent about anyone who&#13;
would sexually seduce children. That’s&#13;
sick. And Ys wrong because children,&#13;
young boys or girls, are innocent. Andto&#13;
make matters worse; the fight-winged&#13;
movement uses g~oups like NAMBLA to&#13;
smear and scandalize the gay community.&#13;
We must let society know that we&#13;
are not a bunch of pedophiles. Therefore,&#13;
we must also stand up against&#13;
NAMBLA. If you are a member~of&#13;
NAMBLA, that’s your business but don~&#13;
go using the precious.gay-community for&#13;
your agenda. The gay movement must&#13;
stand up and say thatwe are not a movement&#13;
of pedophiles or into bestiality or&#13;
anything like that. We are honest,&#13;
hardworking, decent people who only&#13;
wish to spend our lives loving someoneanother&#13;
decent adult ~ of the same gender..&#13;
NAMBLA would greaUy damage all&#13;
we have worked for in the gay fights&#13;
movement.&#13;
S~ncereS/,&#13;
D.L&#13;
~I-~EXUAL&#13;
~UPPO~T GI~OUP&#13;
Revolutions Bar&#13;
902 W. 7th, Junction City, Kansas&#13;
8:00pro ~o 2:00am&#13;
$2.00 Cover/ Live DJ&#13;
BRING UNISEX GI~AB BAG GIFT&#13;
For More lnfo Contact Jeff&#13;
(91~) 225-6125&#13;
(913) 238-6374&#13;
l&#13;
AN AN ADULT BAR WHERE&#13;
EVERYBODY KNOWS YOUR NAME&#13;
124S. W. 8TH, TOPEKA ,KS.&#13;
The Parachute Page 11-A&#13;
HELPING PEOPLE WITH&#13;
AIDS&#13;
THE DEFINIATION&#13;
Acquired immune Deficiency&#13;
Syndrome (AIDS) is the most serious&#13;
epidemic to strike the American&#13;
public in the last 50 years. This disease&#13;
has no respect for income,&#13;
color, gender or sexual orientation.&#13;
Expe~ts conservatively estimate that&#13;
approximately 6 to 7 thousand Arkansans&#13;
have been or will become&#13;
infected with AIDS, based on national&#13;
averages.&#13;
With the rising costs of medical&#13;
care and drags for PWAs (Persons&#13;
with Aids), such as AZT, DDI; etc.,&#13;
the need for financial assistance has&#13;
become more and more urgent.&#13;
Many organizations were formed for&#13;
education awareness but none for&#13;
direct financial assistance until the&#13;
birth of HPWA.&#13;
THE HISTORY&#13;
When the AIDS cdsis began to&#13;
extract its t011 on the Arkansas community,&#13;
a group of.concerned indi,&#13;
viduals metin February 1988 determined&#13;
to form an organization dedicated&#13;
to providing =assistance to&#13;
those in need. HPWA is an Arkansas&#13;
non-prot’R charitable corporation&#13;
established to assistindividuals who&#13;
suffer from AIDS. HPWA issues&#13;
direct financi~al .payments for medical&#13;
bills, nursing care, pharmacy bills&#13;
and living expenses and any emergency&#13;
funding necessary. No monies&#13;
are distributed directly to PWAs.&#13;
Through these direct financial payments,&#13;
HPWA strives to allow&#13;
PWAs to continue to live their&#13;
liveswith dignity and self esteem.&#13;
Funding for HPWA is dedved&#13;
from volunteers from all walks of&#13;
life who raise needed monies&#13;
through fundraisers and pledge&#13;
drives. No member of the HPWA&#13;
staff receives compensation for his/&#13;
her services. Ninety percent (90%)&#13;
of funds raised by HPWAare dedicated&#13;
to direct assistance payments.&#13;
The Board of Directors of&#13;
HPWA is composed of professionals&#13;
and lay members from vadous&#13;
fields including education, business,&#13;
medicine, law, health and theology.&#13;
Currently based in Little Rock,&#13;
HPWA offers assistance to all Arkansas&#13;
residents who meet the required&#13;
criteria for funding.&#13;
HPWA is a duly licensed chadtable&#13;
organization and maintains&#13;
complete financial records available&#13;
for public inspection dudng normal&#13;
business hours.&#13;
THE CRITERIA&#13;
HPWAis vitally concerned.with&#13;
the accountability of its fund-raiS-&#13;
2) Each applicant must submit a&#13;
complete ~’mancial disclosure of all&#13;
monthly income or benerds received&#13;
by them.- Mandatory receipt of or&#13;
application for S.S.I. benefits is required.&#13;
3) Each applicant must permit a&#13;
home visit(s)-by HPWArepresentatives.&#13;
HPWwill contact and coordinate&#13;
funding through a social worker&#13;
of the PWA’s choice.&#13;
4) A thorough verification of the&#13;
PWA’s expenses must be provided.&#13;
Following receipt of a written application&#13;
for assistance containing&#13;
the information listed above, representatives&#13;
of HPWA will conduct a&#13;
home visit with the PWA to determine&#13;
the degree of assistance&#13;
needed. A formal recommendation&#13;
for assistance will then bepresented&#13;
to the Board of Directors of HPWA&#13;
forfinal action. Distribution of funds&#13;
is determined on a case-by-case&#13;
basis. Some restrictions as to funding&#13;
requirements exist. All information&#13;
conceming individual cases is&#13;
kept strictly confidential. HPWA&#13;
does-not discriminate on the basis&#13;
of creed, color, gender, or sexual orientation.&#13;
ing and disbursal efforts. To receive ¯ .- ~THE NEED&#13;
assistance from HPWA, the following&#13;
criteda must be mat:&#13;
1) Each applicant must submit a&#13;
written confirmed diagnosis ofAIDS&#13;
from a licensed physician.&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Ozar&#13;
HPWA is constantly in need of&#13;
.Volunteers and funding. HPWA ex~&#13;
tends an open invitation for you to&#13;
become involved in its ongoing effortto&#13;
minimize the burdenthat AIDS&#13;
extracts from oursoclety. YOU CAN&#13;
MAKE A DIFFERENCE.&#13;
THE WAY&#13;
Join HPWA or its branch organizations&#13;
in towns throughout Arkansas.&#13;
Organize pledges and fundraisers&#13;
through HPWA. Inform&#13;
fdends and family about HPWA and&#13;
the dsing AIDS epidemic.&#13;
NOWIS THE TIME&#13;
TO ACT.&#13;
ALL&#13;
CONTRIBUTIONS&#13;
TO HPWA ARE&#13;
TAX&#13;
DEDUCTIBLE.&#13;
HELPING&#13;
PEOPLE WITH&#13;
AIDS&#13;
P.O. BOX 4397&#13;
LITTLE. ROCK,&#13;
AR 72204&#13;
2710 Asher&#13;
Monday- Friday 4pm-lam&#13;
Saturday lpm-Midnight&#13;
501-663-9886&#13;
Little Rock, Arkansas&#13;
B&#13;
Ft.Smith, Arkansa~&#13;
B&#13;
1004 Garrison&#13;
(501)783-9347&#13;
Ope~ Mon-Fri 8am-lam Sat 8am-12am&#13;
The Parachute Page 12-A&#13;
. OZARK PRIMITIVES&#13;
\~,~’75-/_ ,.o. Box 263 ~Eureka Springs, Arkansas 72632&#13;
(501) 253-6148&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Located on&#13;
Hwy 62W&#13;
58 Kingshighway&#13;
Eureka Springs,&#13;
AR. 72632&#13;
Victorian&#13;
Reflections&#13;
Helen .Jeffrey&#13;
¯ TLffany &amp; Fenton Lamps&#13;
....:.~Victoriana.-~l~welryI&#13;
19 Spring.&#13;
HIGH DESIGN&#13;
QUALITY MATERIAL&#13;
FINE CRAFTSMAN:SHIP&#13;
CRAZY BONE G.ALLERY&#13;
;37" SPRINO ~STREET&#13;
EUREKA SP-RINGS&#13;
ARKANSAS-72532&#13;
5i01/’253,&#13;
%OC&amp; ’&#13;
COTTAGE&#13;
J&#13;
N~tled under trees and :iamong&#13;
O~een size beds @ Antique furnishings&#13;
Whirlpool tubs for two&#13;
ComplimentaO, beverag~&#13;
Large gourmet breakfast. ~ Cable TV&#13;
O~street parking @ On the trolley’ route&#13;
Walk to downtown @ Smoke free, pet fi’ee&#13;
Open all year&#13;
1~8oo-624-6646&#13;
10 Eugenia St (on the Historic Loop) Eureka Springs AR 72,632&#13;
"Eurika’s Storybook Inn"&#13;
Antique Furnishings&#13;
Suites for 2-4&#13;
Full Gou=met Breakfast&#13;
Flexible Breakfast Time&#13;
Private Di~ On R.ec~JeSt&#13;
PrSvate ~aths&#13;
o Some Jac~zzis&#13;
* Guest Kitahen-Wethas&#13;
* F!o~e_rs 5Ja Season&#13;
o* TOrfofllSetyreeSttoPparkin~&#13;
~ Cable TV&#13;
BED &amp; BREAKFAST&#13;
VICTORIAN INN&#13;
with downtonw sops and rzanurants on(y s~s away.&#13;
~ot~letely renovatedwith your cort~ort in trlnd, qT~e Atlmurglen stiff&#13;
ratim~ it’s VictorIan charm, elegance andromance.&#13;
Relax andmjoy thepicturesque setting of our tree coveredhollowfor an&#13;
unfo~lemale e~erience.&#13;
#7 Lema St.&#13;
Eureka Springs, AR. 72632-&#13;
1-800-515-GLEN&#13;
WHERE Fm uns&#13;
Sweet Savage&#13;
RON’S’PLACE&#13;
523 W. Poplar Box 367&#13;
Fayetteville, AR. 72702&#13;
501.-442-3052&#13;
Dec. 1 1&#13;
Sweet Savage&#13;
Tommie Ross&#13;
Ginger. ST. ;John&#13;
Arin .Austin "&#13;
10 O’CLOCK&#13;
NEW YEARS EVE&#13;
WITH&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
STJOHN&#13;
PARTY&#13;
COMING IN&#13;
KARL&#13;
NEW COMER&#13;
MORE!&#13;
HLM STAR&#13;
FEB.5TH&#13;
YEAR - FEB 12&#13;
Ginger St. John&#13;
IRANCH &amp; RESORTI&#13;
PO BOX 2281 . Athens. TX78751 ¯ ~903) 338"2288&#13;
December 1993&#13;
DearMichael&#13;
Howdy! Ijust returnedfrom afabulous vacation at&#13;
Meadowood Ranch andResort. The resort was beautiful; it was once&#13;
owned by a wealthy oil baron. It’s located on 650 acres" ofgreen hills’,&#13;
meadows andforests.t I wenthorseback-Hding on Friday andfishing&#13;
(caught a 12lb. largemouth bass) Saturday, following a delicious"&#13;
breakfast on. thedecks overlooking the gorgeous countryside. I tanned&#13;
poolside, played tennis and volleyball, Then I went hiking with some&#13;
friends I met here.~.saw some dee "-.-"~tn one ofthe coolpmeforests.&#13;
pictures.&#13;
Wanted to get&#13;
this letter off to.&#13;
you. Can’t wa#&#13;
to return to&#13;
Meadowood.&#13;
The Parachute Page 15-A&#13;
W@&#13;
Have Moved!&#13;
Wors&#13;
2514 East Lindon&#13;
$ nday&#13;
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PROBLEM!&#13;
Ask for&#13;
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BRING IN THIS AD FOR&#13;
$1OO OFF&#13;
ANY DEAL!&#13;
Going Up ~.&#13;
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Friday, February 4, * 994 at ~:30 pm&#13;
tax included&#13;
Includes: Transportation = Lodging = Ski Rental&#13;
Limited to first 40 people&#13;
Sleeper Bus&#13;
Will need $ 50.00 Deposit Down by December 11, 1993&#13;
Balance Due By January 15, 1994</text>
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periodical</text>
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute, December 1993; Volume 1, Issue 9</text>
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                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5644">
                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
</text>
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            <name>Creator</name>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>Chuck Breckenridge &amp; Wayne D. (assistant publisher)</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5648">
                <text>Orin E. Shank (general manager)&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Stephen Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Michael Camfield&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Scott Curry&#13;
Kim Ridenour&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Kelly Kirby&#13;
Paul Scott&#13;
Danny heinsohn&#13;
Kim Watson&#13;
Ann Marie Lochner (volunteer)&#13;
J.T. Simpson (volunteer)&#13;
Donna Payne (volunteer)&#13;
David Stokes (volunteer)</text>
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United States of America (50 states)</text>
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                <text>The Parachute/Dennis R. Neill Equality Center</text>
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                    <text>aware

to

o~osed to one that

denie-’"
to serve in
based only on their staCalifor)fia,
tlis: ~ - Sen.
’ Boren

Nickles
oint
1988-89

and Rand reports but that the
Senator’s deci~ionwas also influenced by the testimony of’the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
Staff persons indicated that
Boren’svdtewasinpa~motivated
by the desire to prdt~t Congres~
smnalprerogative toregulate h~tary affairs from the Executive
Branch. They added that the Senate had been involved

fit to

recommend both allowing and rejecting homosexuals in thd n~litavy.
I agree with cun’ent military leaders who overwhelmingly support
the policy as proposed ih the
ate bill which 1S tli~ result of monthS
ofstudy and expert testimony in the
Senate Armed Forces co~ittee.
The~licy is in line with myresponsiNhty to vote in the best interests
ofthd entire state and nation?’
When asked if anyone on
Nickles’ staff actually hadvead the
military fit. ~ess stm
Mr. Schultz
"
refused to answer
that the ~
ment
~ orces
co.tree
s~e

....
most
ghts

.... (who)

AYrican,Amed,

crimes,

wh) !i ~e~

t, ’k
again, given the earlier study (in1978)i:)
and the whole issue of discrimination in;
the Armed Forces which ~ +been so
incredibly prominent lately? ls there

~,

~ that there is discrimination that
only to 6ur ~mploy

commissions,

here

with

the

�Boren &amp; Nickles
cont#medfrom page 1-b
unfairly and he was asked if the
Senator felt that they were fail, Mr.
Schultz refused to say more than
the Senator stands by the statement
above. When asked how the
Senator’s personal religious -views
may imquence his decision in these
issues, Mr. Schultz again stated
that the Senator stands by the statement above. Mr. Schultz did confirm, however, that Nickles is a
self-avowed, practising Roman
Catholic.
Nickles’ staffdid note that staff
persons had meetings with Lesbian
&amp; Gay Oldahomans who were in
D.C. for the March on Washington for Lesbian/Gay/Bi Equal
Rights. There were not any records
of any meetings in Oklahoma. Nor
could they identify any meeting
where Nickles himself met with
Lesbian &amp; Gay community leaders
or citizens.
Portions of the information in
this article were usedwith permission from the Tulsa office of the
Associated Press’.

TULSA
585-3405

171hS Main

Savage Talks
continued from page 1-b.
pretations of them are pretty subjective. I
certainly have not had it pointed Out to me
that we in any way discriminate in either
our recruitment, our employment or our
promotion of people based upon their
sexual orientation ....
TN: Is that something that you would
expect to come internallyfrom city sta~.
Yes, it may come from inside a
department...it may come from a city
councillor, it may come from an interest
group from the outside that brings to our
attention that as they observe it....I have had
just about every issue except for that one
brought to my attention.
TN: I guess I’m kind of curious, do you
think that that would be a reflection of a
not (having) a problem or of people not
feeling protected in order to speak out?
I really couldn’t speculate on that...we
have spent the last couple of years focusing very directly on an individual’s capability....and tmining....(also) the police
department (has) under way diversity
tmining....for all of their officers....they
deal with every segment of the community on a daily basis, they need to be
sensitive to cultural differences ....
TN: Does the in-service training cover
Lesbian &amp; Gay issues?
SS: .... I don’t know the actual curriculum.
I suspect that it is one very much of how
do you interact with people regardless of
who they are....
TN: My reading of the city charter is that
currently the mayor has the power to
issue an executive order banning dis.
crimination on the basis of sexual orientation? Given that power, would you be
willing to ....
Hilary Kitz: (the ad hoc task force of the
Tulsa Human Rights Commission) is sayingthat there’s state protection that doesn’t

include sexual orientation and....what
they’re thinking about doing is looking at
supporting a change in the state law.
TN: It’s talking (the city charter) about
organization of the city, "the mayor may
by executive order...assign newfunctions
or duties to any division or
department..."and clearly one of those
functions could be to respect certain
principles and regulations in terms of
hiring, promotion, etc. the things that you
say already that the city is at least informally doing.
SS: I think that we say that generally in
our personnel policy.
TN: But it’s not in any documentation,
and both the personnel dept. people and
the employees I interviewed understood
that there were no protectionsfor Lesbian
&amp; Gay employees for on the job discrimination or in terms of hiring ....
SS: I don’t think we even through our
hiring practices are allowed to ask questions that would reveal that kind of information.
TN: But sometimes that kind of information is going to be visible or relevant and
certainly the Lesbian &amp; Gay employees I
interviewed as backgroundfor this story
are scared to death of retribution in their
departments.
SS: I try to steer away from generalizations like that...and without the fact that
they, either through their supervisor or to
me have brought any of these concerns
forward (that) is pure speculation as far as
I am concerned....If in fact there is a
review under way with a proposed change
in the state law, we’ll look at what is being
stated..,
TN: You know that the city, and many
have, can go beyond state and federal
regulations?
SS: I tend to look in dealing with policy
initiatives, changes, tend to try to base any

change, any policy direction on what has
been demonstrated as a need....In terms of
whether or not someone is hired or not
hired or promoted because of their sexual
preference, other than being asked the
question (by the reporter) it has not even
come to me as an issue. I do know that
there is this task force which is looking at
it from a community standpoint but in
terms of the City of Tulsa and its employment practices, it has not been raised
even as a problem.
TN: Unfortunately, it’s a catch-22 situation for Lesbian &amp; Gay citizens who
lacking any protection, then (are at) risk
raising a complaint, since that kind of
discrimination is not illegal. What I’m
saying is the lack of complaint is not
necessarily the lack of a problem.
SS: Well I agree with that but there has to
be some way to assess the extent of the
problem also before moving forward. In
terms of using this provision under the
city charter as a guide, I don’t know I
would have to ask for a legal assessment.
TN: If it were possible, would you be
willing to issue an executive order?
SS: I would give it consideration.
TN:...Probably there are about 37,000
Lesbian &amp; Gay citizens in the city of
Tulsa, conservatively estimated. How
would you feel as a candidate in submitting to candidate .screening &amp; con~dering taking donations from the Lesbian &amp;
Gay communities,.openly, not openly?
SS:....I probably received 30 or more
questionnaires to complete on behalf of a
variety of interest groups....to the best of
my ability I completed every one I
received .....I would be just as open to
talking to any organized group ....
TN: So would accept an invitation to a
LesbianlGay town hall meeting?
SS: I try to make myself available.

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aboutthe AIDS Walk. You~
Call (405) 942-2604 and leave amesNew, .Horizons .at-,11amon Sunday~
may call~405,.525-AlDS ~ "
sage formore:inf0rmati0n~ f0i~ mb~e
momigns.~ the add,ress is-3136
information, ?.
~. .- .~ - ..
--Portland, in-OKC... ~-~--..-- ....

General Gay &amp; Lesbian Discussion Groups
Mondays,6:30 at Red Rock - New Group .starting ¯~Thursdays, 6:30 at Red Rock

Couples of Mixed, HIV Status
Contact Jim Carter for details.

YGLA; Young Gay &amp; LesbianAlliance
~uesda.ys, 6:30 at O~is

for individuals

~ ofpanicipants.~o ensure gro~:compatibilityi

their lov_~i~ones and IHV. Prevention Education.

R0ck MHC, 4400No

�AIDSFOR AIDS~

.

IBY :Cookie Arbuckle

..... d~eene..ficiad~es to remain. ~,
~ ~e~,~e~J~;~,n,.. ::,, .:co~.~age :is_~q;~ admini~ered, the-. , there is generallyno .further:coverage
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may be for~90 days~ onb yeari!: or-:,-isame~time:~.-~.he disability extension
planners int~rested,Lin working Jnthis ,~ medical~planand offersCOBF~: The ": ore depending upon thei~cbntract: clause~ysformedicalC0nditionsihat
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market should approach O!her Op. ~: empl0xee~..then;e!e~S COB/~i ,and ~ There is no.,,charge ,fo!~’,~Ove~age_ caused th~disa~bility, while theconver,
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tionsand learn, how-roger involv.~ed...
’applies for:iS0dal~Secu.~ybenefits,~. duringrth~extensidn. Disabilityex~. " sion pays ciai~not~relatedtb~the di~OOI offers a ~ri(shop entitled Fi- " (eitherSSDF,l:~Se~tForSSl~tle.
tensions are different from COBRP, . . :ability. ,Whe~:;thedisabilityextension~
nancia! Planning/c(~unseling for IIXVI). IfS0cial!~e~dtydetermines~. ~: Disabi!ity:-SecondContinuations.
.
ends~ tile conversion:~.poiicycan, be: :
those who are ready to start the pro- i~ the disabilitystarted~onor befOr~lhe
:The -Disability Continuation ~,is-a come the primalsource of coverage.
cess needs to cali,for an appointment.. ~i! COBl~qualifying~ eVantis.the em:~ saparateanddiscreetform~of medi~- .ConversiOnmedical policies rarely con,:
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call~OOI !:andwe iwill: researchand = istrator mum be nOtified of the SSA ~ priorto exercising a. "disability ex,
wdte~he~articie~.......... ..... .-~ ._.,-: disability approval;Within 60 days of- : &lt; tension;, howeveri~ disabi!ity~ e~eln~=."~ :L whether/it, is .affordable--and exactly
COBRA DISABILITY SECrecelpt’~fthe.dete~inationlet~er~) ~.- sionsmay be ava.ilabie~afteP cO~. ~.-what’benefltSWould be provided. You
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WITH NEW GROUP INSURANCE
must be requested-in wdting and
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certain disables employees toconBENEFITS:.;COBRAcoveragemay
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be retained even-afte[ ~z COBRA " . ment for information about how. to .= ~- application must be. obtelnedfromthe
tinue their cOBRA ~.veragdpast the
18-months cut-off, to 29 months. To
participant had¯obtained new grOup
apply for the extens!on. Since the ¯ employer plan administrator.Finally,i it
be ;eligible for’. second continuation
medical insurance coverage if the.-extendedr coverage is only for re- ~ is important.:tO’ note .that- employeesCoverage, the COBRA beneficiary
,~.
newemployees health plan.limits - lated mediCal~expenses caused.by ..~houldnevervoluntadlyquitebecause
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.;mined by-the SocialSecudtyAdmin-.. ing ~nditionsi~
~ ¯
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.- ~;
. :~-.. ~ physician fu!ly-discioseAheeXa~ ~ a medicalordisabilityleaVeofabsenCe
~i ?A~former~COB~participant ::~ cause 0fdi~sabi!ity.. (for examPle:~ should, berequestedT~otherwise
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crease from !02% to 15(P~ dddng the
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extended.11 month pedod of COBRA
.ditionsthat Weredenied as preexist-.:
related, conditions~ included.:.in,. ~the ;;:~;jeopardiZed, ~;~ .-:~. ;- &lt; .&gt;;;~.-~.~
coverage,
ing conditions uoder a new group
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medical plan. While.the.new regula-.~:;, specific~glnessrOrConditiOn..once ............ ;~ _- ~ : ~ .?; ¯.
The intent of the secondco~,
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tinuationjs to.allewdi~sab!ed.:.~BRA~. ;.i. !ions do not explain how retroactive
th~!disabiiity extensio~hasexpired~

with alcohol and other drugs can be all
too ea .
-of . us..dieof.alcoholism.
.
than of HIV.: Play, But play like your
communi is dependin.g on you. Bis. "

Always growing.
Always safe.
O ¯

¯

"

OO0

.

A Service ofth~ Oasis Resource Center. ~0 ~o!Unteer ea!L405:~525-2437 ...... ..... ~
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source."

�Letters to the Editor
I picked u.pthe August edi.tio.n of th.e
Gayly ana nave read the article titlea:
OKC/March on Washington Trip
Filled With Mistakes.
I was one of the passengem.on
that van to D.C.. I find sedous aiscrepancies regarding the accuracy of
all that has been reported’ by
Ms.Hand. I received the last available seat on the van. I didn~ know
how was sponsoring the trip but
didn’t care since for this 37 year old
Okie this was a once in a lifetime
chance to be a part of this histodc
event.
It was Tuesday evening when a
fdend told.me there might be an open
space on once of the vans. They
woul.d call aro.und .to se..e if anyt.hing
was ~eft. Weanes~ay afternoon i re-ceived a phone call from Dale, from
the Tdangle office, telling me.I could
go on their van. I asked what,the fee
would be to. cover my part because I
am on disabi!ity I do have to budget
m.y money. ~ was told. .not to wo.rr~.
aDout thatnow Dutto take care or
when I returned.
I was to contact
John Carter and that we would be
aware that I was coming.
Since I only had about 48 houm.
.to .prepare. for the. tr!p, and still not
De~lewng ~ was actually going, things
were hebtic to say the ]ea~’t. After
the trip had begun and we all st.arted.
to get to know each other is wnen
learned of various fund-misers that
had made it possible for the PWA’s
to make the trip. I was filled with a
tremendous gratitude, and was
minded of the many times I had given
,.m, on..ey at fund reisers for.things just
liKe thiS.

My fdend that told me about the
seat left on the .van informed me at
the time.that all I needed was enough
money for my own use, such .as fo.oki,
entertainment, souvenirs, etc.. Decause everything else would be taken
care of such aslransportation and a
place to stay. I was never t.old that
would receive.any money to_De speno
while in D.C. that would have been a

nice tou.ch but after being, involved
with funo reisers myself I would have
been very su.rprised if that kind of
money would have been left over to
-spendin such a waY. I was so glad
to get to go i would have slept under
the stars on the front lawn of the
White House.
I was not aware of howthe money
was raised for the trip mainly due to
the fact that dudng the pdor year I
had been serious]y ill from AIDS
complicatio.ns .and had been mostly
confined to pea.
But I refuse to be defeated by this
.virus.so. I c~...ntin.ued to fig.hi my.way
Pack to nealtn. !examinea my pnyslcal and mental status anddetermined that I would be able to manage the long mad tdp. If I’d had any
indication that my health would
placed myself at risk or would have
been a burden to the other passengers I would not have gone. I
I take argument with Ms. Hand’s
reporting of-the events surrounding
Jeff~ P_e .n,~o..n.s e.ventu .a.I hospital~atio.n
in u.u. If ! nao any lingenng aoubts
about my own ability to make the tdp
I was doubly concerned that Penson
was making the trip since he appeared to be the one of us who might
need the most looking after. Penson
was on infusions but lie administered
his own treatment. Jefftold me himself that he had ~ends in D.C. that
he would probably be staying with
and that his team of Dr’s ano nurses
were going to be in D.C. for the
March. I remember feeling relieved
that someone familiar with his history and condition would be there if
he nbeded them.
I am also of the opinion that Kem
Wallace even though it Was apparently not her given responsibility to
monitor the condition of those of us
with HIV and AIDS could and would
have administered first aid, and or
alerted the appropriate personnel in
the event of an emergency. I worked
for eight years in the health field spe-

cific..ally in th.e area of emergency
meaicine ana quietly took it upon
myself to keep an eye on everyone.
just in case something came up that
I might be able to help w_ith. Every
so often I would ask how P’enson was
feeling but .he denied having any
problems. /~s a point in fact when
we arrived in D.C. the first .thing
Penson did was to take off at break
neck spe.ed rushing aroun.d the_capitol complex area waving a large t-reedom flag due to his excitement at
being inD.C., again for another rally.
He was told by at least m. yself .and
one other persbn that he snould s~ow
down or he would exhaust himself.
He simply would not listen. Furthermore, lhelieve it would have been
negligence if John Carter had been.
the one to .do all the driving. If it haa
not been for Ms.Wallace and her
stamina we might all have been killed
in an acciden~ I give due creditto
Carter because he was a valuable
part of our group,
t
But,-Ms.Hand, to single ou
and crucify_ Mary Arbuckle for every
single problem that popped up is
surely unjustifiable. It is true there
~here
that
could and
ouldmany.thing.s
have been aone
differently
but
! sa.w no. .one 9o hu. ng.ry, t.h.ere was all
Kinas Ol iooapacKea in the van, we
stopped at about every fast food.
place between here and the east
coast, and stopped_ at .several.ni.c~.
restaurants, we stayea at the Hodday Inn, where everyone had a place
to sleep. I could not keep quiet after
reading what I consider to he a vicious two page attack on a person
that did the best shoe knew how. As
Ms.Arbuck has herself admitted, mistakes were made, she admits she
should do many things differently.
Kenny Lackey
OKC.

To The Editor of The Parachute:
When I read the letters published
in the September issue of The Parachute regarding Paula Hand’s "attack"
and "bashing" of Mary Arbuckle and/
or Kem Wallace over their tdp for
PLWA’s to the MOW, I wondered if
the Gayly Oklahoman published different regional editions. It appeared
some read a different article than I.
After reading these letters I notice
that Mary is a member of the staff of
your publication. ! question, the, if
these letters are not simply a reaction of personal ~ends who feel compelledto defend Mary’s integrity,
something which was never really
questioned. Loyalty to a friend is an
admirable trait. However if a friend
were to tell me he or she had a mistake and wanted to apologize for it, I
think it would be a disservice to my
friend to dismiss the apology by ~ating or implying, "Never mind, you are
perfect and infallible. From my readIng of Paula’s article, Mary agree’s
some mistakes were made. I admire
Mary for that honestly and integrity.
I also admire her for wanting to offer
such a trip and her honest efforts to
make the arrangements.
I ask those who wrote the letters to
The Parachute if they are not, by failing to acknowledge what Mary herself has, denying her things she
asked for. In case any reader wonders, Yes, I am a friend of Paula
Hand’s. i also know Mary as well as
her mother. I admire all three of these
women and respect their contributions to our community. Although I
attended the March, I had not heard
anything about this controversy until
I read the article in the Gayly¯ Thus I
consider myself objective in my appraisal.
John Kalhoefer OKC

OGI~A I~o~jolh~: M~.OGI~A, Todd V,~sd,~, Ms.OGI~A Cobol
Mis~.OGI~A Vi~:to,,io AIII,~n. 1st I~unn¢,,s up w ,’ : I::)ot~. d Wilson,Mo,,tj A,,buckld,
¢,nd D~hjo

�Oklahoma

the[
to move thing
serwce ;:

and Grant

....

forcefull
I~
;could have
iu
but them Were
only two volunteers, Brace Britt and

lu.....
cal factors am ne~ssary for proper
to im
activation of your immune system,
~bn~
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Th~se ~p00nds are produced by
d~ ~
vidu’
various ~ite bloodcells and acti.", ~’=,, ~’~
~
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V,=u~-=o,
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vate other white blood cells to d e,
and in individuals under ~xtreme

Let;tim world know, you are,..

Association D~or. "Oklahoma’s gay.
lesbian, and bisexual communi~ is
producing exceilehtwork, a~dit’s ,~mfk
iahat all Oklahomans should have greater
access to."

printed on the highest qua Ity 100%
heavy cOtton ~ees and Tanksl
Avaitabe in blacL gray and white.
Basebal caps (with st t~h log0) also
available In b ~k&amp; white only.
Shirts: $15.00
Caps: $12.00
(add ,~.00 for s &amp; h.)
Mai/ check or money order to:
Meant To Be Fit
1001 R.W. 18th St.
Qklahoma City, OK 73106-6416
(credit card orders ca/# 1-800-546-8689
Visa, Mastat~ard, Discover, Ame~can
Express accepted.)

Hi-Lo’CIub

DRY CLEANERS
Hendcksen and will be directed by
_Deve_iopment Director _Mic.hae!
Camneld. The Will Rogers L;emer at
4322 N. Western in Oklahoma City is
the performance venue. Curtain time
is set at .8:00p.m. for each showing.
The goa~ of this p_roject is to raise
funds for ACLU/OK and increase
awareness and sensitivity about the
themes covered by the p.]ay. A portion of the proceeds will be donated
to the OL~.r~ting costs of an AIDS hospice in Oklahoma.
The Ho.spice features comedy,
conflict, high camp and deep philosophi .cal undertones in one package.
The cnaracters all share a common

�.... :

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your I-IOm.E :Away [-r6~ homEl.

-A Fine .~dging Establishment

80. Guest Rooms

P0olSide Rooms

Two Pools

Cable T.V.

G USHERS. BAR
ccr busts &amp; Shows ~ Wednesday &amp; Sunday
Male Dancers

ridoy 8, SaturdoG
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West end, Habana Inn Complex
-pool &amp; Darts-

2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY

Cards, Magazines; Leon, T-shirt,Gifts

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Call fort rares a~d i~foamanotvl

(4015) 528-22,21.

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1-800-988-2221 ,

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�Wichita, Kansas (316)

Tulsa, Oklahoma (918).

Bars &amp; Restaurants
Buddies Country, 4000 .S. Broadway

Bars &amp; Restaurants
*Elec~e,Circus,606S. Elgin 587-8677
*Laff’s, .31..I E. 7th
583-5233
*Phoenix; 6328 S. Pegria
743-7062
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S. Sheridan

529-4953
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
South Forty, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494
R &amp; R Brass Rail, 2828 E: 31st
834-4234
T:Room; !507 E. Pawnee " 262=9327"~ -)R~negade; 1649 S. Main
585-3405
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hillside
*Time n’ Time Again, 15i5 S. Memorial
68t’~2746 ~
660-0856
Lassens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market
" *TNT’s_ 2114 S. Memorial
664-8299
263-2777
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd
584-1308
The Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
*Tomfoolery, -1565 S. Sheridan
Service &amp;Retail Busineaea~
Visions &amp; Dreams, 3414-Maple
Kelly Kirby, CPA
663-9399
942-6333
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway
263-3007
Queen Anne’s Lace
73324075
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 700N. Market
267-6522
Roommates
262_844~.
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry 269-4411
Land of Awes Info. Ser. POB 16782 67216
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st
832-1816
Plato’s, 1306 E, Harry St~
269-9036
T~B.~s, t516 S. Oliver
688-5343
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. O1ive68~5343
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 3721 S. Broadway
AduR Entertainm’t Ctr 7805 W. Kellogg
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 2809 N. Broadway.
Adult Entree’ South, 8025S~ Btoadffay
Circle Cinema; 2570 S.- Seneca
Orgsnizat’m.ns
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty., Health Dept.
1900 E. 9th
268-8441
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942q786The Lesbian Celebration
683-7561
P-FLAG, POB 686, 67202
687-4666
Gay Information Line
269-0913

*Elite Goods, 814 &amp;.Sheridan 838-8503
*Whittier Bkstore, 1.N: Lewis ~ 592-0767
*Dreamland,’8807 E.Admiral " 834-1051
*Indian Terr; Coffee ’Cb. 1613 E. 15th
587. 163¯¯.3
*Mohawk Music16157 E 51 PI 664-2951
*Tulsa Central Library, 400 Civic Ctr.
596-7977
*Chapman Student Ctr. TU, 631-0000
Organizations
ACT-UP, POB 532
74101
Names Proj. POB 318 74101 748-3111
P-.FLAG ,POB 52800, 74152
74924901
*TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-I
Gay Line-Info.
74324297
Shanti Hotline
~ 749-7898
*STIR~ Tulsa.:U. student 6rg.:~583-9780
Oklahoma AIDS Hotline. 800,535-2437
Religious Organizations
*Family of Faith MCC~ 509 W. ’A’ Jenks
298-4622
Affirniati0n ~Meth0dis0--’: 742-8213 "
*MCC=Tulsa, l623Maplewood 838-1715
Dignity/Integrity
29824648
*.Canterb,ry Minist~C~.;TU) .583_

Oklahoma City (4o5) Bars &amp; Reatsurants
Angles, 2117 NW 39th
524-3431
Bilnkhouse, 2800 NW 39th
.943-0843
Coyote Club, 2120 NW 39th 521-9533
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill
2200 NW 39 Expwy
525-0730
Hi Lo Club 1221-NW 50th
~3~ 1722
KA’s, 2024 NW 1 lth
52.5=3991
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th
947-5"384 ¯
The Park, 2125 NW 39th
528--4690
The Porthole, 3630 NW 39th
949-9837
.Sneakers, 919 N. Virginia
272-9833
Tramps; 2201 NW 39th
528-9080
Wreck Roam; 2127 NV¢ 39th . 525-7610
The Kitchen, 2124 NW-39th 528-5133
_.La ¯ Roca .¯Mexican Restaurants
" SW.4th/Walker, 409 W. Reno &amp;
~.7550 N. May
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Banana Products .....
341-8965
Exec. Travel, 2113 NW 36th
521-9100
Hahana Inn, 22~10 NW 39th
528-2221
Hedand, 23 t2 NW 39th
521-9696
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733
Lobo’s, 2131 NW 39th
528-5156
Deb Roberts, Entertainer
843-5624
Second Chance Credit
752-2209
Stephen Scott, Masseur
525-8689
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/counselor

8a8-5429
Larry Prater, MD, Psychiatry 232-5453

R@ligiou$ Or0anizslions¯New BeginningsMCC 3136 N. Portland
942 - 63 1 3
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 3604)414
Friends Meetihg 632-7~7~
G.ay Chi’istian EeumTCouneil 528-5635
Light House MCC, 2522 N:-Sha_rtel~

!Emporia,. Kansas (316)

,. Little RoCk, Arka as

Religious Organizations
Wic_hita Prais.e &amp;" WorshipCtr. 651-6903
First Unitarian Church
684-3481
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539=0633

Gay&amp; Lesbian Alliance for Resources &amp;
Education, Box 65, EsU
66801

Bars &amp; Restaurants
....
Backstreet, 1021 Jessie Rd, Q - 666-6900
Micheal’s, 601 Center~.
376-8301
DiscoverylII, 1021 Jessie Rd. 664,4784
Silver Dollar, 2710 Asher Ave.
Organizations
HPWA, POB~4379, 72204, 666-6900
-AIDS Sfipi3ort Group
" 374-3605
RAIN-Arkansas
375-5908
The House374-3758
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605
Womens Project
372-5113
Parents-FLAG
821-4865
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Twisted Entertnmt, 7201Asher 568-4262
Shields-Marley Studios; 117 S. ¥1ctory
372-6148
Travel by Philip
227-7690
Little Rock Connections
227:76~0

Junction City, Kansas

Alternative Lifestyles, POB 2532; 67402
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas

After Dark Video, 1206 Grant

Lawrence, Kansas (913)
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040
Lesbigay Services. 410-KS Union
Box 13. Kansas Univ. 66045
. 864-3091
Freedom Coalition. POB 1991

66044

Manahattan, Kansas (913)
AIDS Project
843-0040
Flint Hills Alliance, POB 2018, 66502
MCC, POB 4776, Topeka
67402
Bisexual &amp; Gay &amp; Lesbian Society
SGA Box 63, Kansas St.. Univ. 66506

Topeka, Kansas (913)
Bars &amp; Clubs
Classics, 124 SW 8th 357-1960
Expressions, 110 SE 8 233-3622
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas
Some Like It Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.
Organizations
Topeka AIDS Project
232-3100
Gay/Les. Task Force, POB 38,’29, 66604
357-8727
Mayors Task Force
234-6699
Gay Rap Line
223-6558
Manhattan Outreach
271-8431
HIV Affected Group
234-8562
Religious Organizations
MCC-Topeka,
POB 4776, 66604
Affirmation (Metho~ist)

232-6196
235-6t01

POB 153; Falun, KS 67442

EUreka Spr’gs, Ark. (501)
Bars &amp; Restaurants
¯Center Street, 10 Center St. 253-8071
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-836I
Ermilio’s, 26 White St.
253~8806Churches
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337
Bed &amp; Breakfast
Rock Cottage, 10 Enenia St.
253-86.99
Dixie Cottage, 2 Prospect
253-7533
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800
Purple Iris. Inn, RR 6
253r8748
Pond Mountain, Rt.-1
253-5877
Maple Leaf Inn, 6Kingshgwy 253-68"/6
Service &amp; Retail Businesses
Satori Arts, 81 Spring St.
253-9820
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St. 253-6600
Corceili Studio, 159 Spring St. 253-7399

Hot Springs, Arkansas
Our House L0unge/Rest. 235 Broadway
624- 6868

Ft. Smith, Arkansas (50~)

525-2437
OK Gay Pol. Caucus POB 61186 73146
OK Gay R~kleo Assoc.
943-0843
OKC Metro. Mens’ Chorus..
424~1753
Pride Network
340-3575

RkIN

232~4372

ACT-UP/Queer Nation
¯ 447-4209-.
OU GaylLesbian/Bisexual Alliance
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 73019
325-4452
Womens’ Resource Ctr.
364~9424
AIDS Mastery
525-3636
AI-Anon (Gay)
947-3834
Alcoholics Anonymous
525-2437
OK AIDS Hotline
800-535-2437
Other Options
728-3222
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39th
843 -8378

Lawton,. Oklahoma (405)
HIV/AIDS Support 248-5890/351-2820
SW AIDS Network, POB 3924, 73505
Great Plains MCC, 1416 W. Gore
357-7899

Enid, O-klahoma (405)
Phillips U. Gay/Lesbian Group 242-0628

Stillwater," Oklahoma (4o5)
Comm. AIDS Actign.Netv~ork 624-2=544
OSU Gay!Lesbian/Bisex Comm. Assoc:
S~nt Uni6n 040]B6x601,~74078"

Helpliiie" (MWTh:’8~ 10pm) 744:5252

Unitarian Church, 600 NW 13 .- 232-9224

Wichita, Kansas (316)

Salina, Kansas (316)

Oklah6nia City (~5)
Organizations .:
ACLU, 1411Classen, Ste318 524-8511
HerlandSis.Res.2313 NW 39 521-9696
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277
OASIS Resource Ctr, 2135 NW 39

Springfield, l~lisso.ri (417)

ACLU
American

Civil Liberties
of Free Speech; :

Religioa.

1105, 1105 E. Commercial
.
"
"
.
831--9043.
Down Beat, 219 WI Olive 846-4572

American Civil Liberties
Guarantee you Equality-and

Boliva: News,
.4030 Bolivar
Joplin,
Missouri
(417)833-3354

Support tho ACLU
Member or Making a Con~~tribution.

Club

Billy Jack’s, 720 S. Main 781-6453
2G’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S. Main
78U9313

-to:

ACLU,- 132

West

. Court Garden. 305 Garrison 7~3-9822
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Gitrrison 783~9347

Fayetteville,.Arkansas
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052
Wash. Cty~ AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS
~Q_ray/Lesbian Act’n Delegations 52124509
MCC of the Ozarks
443-4278:,
Parents-FLAG
756:84

7

�for yo.ung,cT., forsafe ~. Bottoms
a a plush.but versatile,~-scnd-photo
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drugs~ social dtiak~r only. ] lookiag masculine
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from;you. Box 141
.

GAY DOLLARS
Wanted: Locations. where gays
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GWM..late 20’s s~vking gwm for
m-an,.mvestm~nt dub following " by ~ funand~friendshiP" Box 105-.

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TO RESPOND TO A
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��</text>
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              <text>o~osed to one that&#13;
denie-’"&#13;
to serve in&#13;
based only on their statli&#13;
~ ’&#13;
Califor)fia, s: - Sen. Boren&#13;
to&#13;
Nickles&#13;
oint&#13;
1988-89&#13;
aware&#13;
recommend both allowing and rejecting&#13;
homosexuals in thd n~litavy.&#13;
I agree with cun’ent military leaders&#13;
who overwhelmingly support&#13;
the policy as proposed ih the&#13;
ate bill which 1S tli~ result ofmonthS&#13;
and Rand reports but that the ofstudy and expert testimony in the&#13;
Senator’s deci~ionwas also influ- Senate Armed Forces co~ittee.&#13;
enced by the testimony of’the Joint The~licy is in line with myrespon-&#13;
Chiefs of Staff. siNhty to vote in the best interests&#13;
Staff persons indicated that ofthd entire state and nation?’&#13;
Boren’svdtewasinpa~motivated When asked if anyone on&#13;
by the desire to prdt~t Congres~ Nickles’ staff actually hadvead the&#13;
smnalprerogative toregulate h~- military fit. ~ess stm Mr. Schultz&#13;
tary affairs from the Executive refused to answer "&#13;
Branch. They added that the Sen- that the ~&#13;
ate had been involved ment&#13;
fit to&#13;
~orces&#13;
co.tree&#13;
s~e&#13;
....(who)&#13;
AYrican,Amed,&#13;
commissions,&#13;
.... wh) !i ~e~ t, ’k&#13;
most again, given the earlier study (in1978)i:)&#13;
ghts and the whole issue of discrimination in;&#13;
the Armed Forces which ~+been so&#13;
crimes, incredibly prominent lately? ls there&#13;
~, ~ that there is discrimination that&#13;
only to 6ur~mploy&#13;
here with the&#13;
Boren &amp; Nickles&#13;
cont#medfrom page 1-b&#13;
unfairly and he was asked if the&#13;
Senator felt that they were fail, Mr.&#13;
Schultz refused to say more than&#13;
the Senator stands by the statement&#13;
above. When asked how the&#13;
Senator’s personal religious -views&#13;
may imquence his decision in these&#13;
issues, Mr. Schultz again stated&#13;
that the Senator stands by the statement&#13;
above. Mr. Schultz did confirm,&#13;
however, that Nickles is a&#13;
self-avowed, practising Roman&#13;
Catholic.&#13;
Nickles’ staffdid note that staff&#13;
persons had meetings with Lesbian&#13;
&amp; Gay Oldahomans who were in&#13;
D.C. for the March on Washington&#13;
for Lesbian/Gay/Bi Equal&#13;
Rights. There were not any records&#13;
ofany meetings in Oklahoma. Nor&#13;
could they identify any meeting&#13;
where Nickles himself met with&#13;
Lesbian &amp; Gay community leaders&#13;
or citizens.&#13;
Portions ofthe information in&#13;
this article were usedwithpermission&#13;
from the Tulsa office of the&#13;
Associated Press’.&#13;
585-3405&#13;
TULSA&#13;
171hS Main&#13;
Savage Talks&#13;
continuedfrom page 1-b.&#13;
pretations ofthem are pretty subjective. I&#13;
certainly have not had it pointed Out tome&#13;
that we in any way discriminate in either&#13;
our recruitment, our employment or our&#13;
promotion of people based upon their&#13;
sexual orientation....&#13;
TN: Is that something that you would&#13;
expect to come internallyfrom city sta~.&#13;
Yes, it may come from inside a&#13;
department...it may come from a city&#13;
councillor, it may come from an interest&#13;
group from the outside that brings to our&#13;
attention thatas theyobserveit....I have had&#13;
just about every issue except for that one&#13;
brought to my attention.&#13;
TN: I guess I’m kind of curious, do you&#13;
think that that would be a reflection ofa&#13;
not (having) a problem or ofpeople not&#13;
feeling protected in order to speak out?&#13;
I really couldn’t speculate on that...we&#13;
have spent the last couple of years focusing&#13;
very directly on an individual’s capability....&#13;
and tmining....(also) the police&#13;
department (has) under way diversity&#13;
tmining....for all of their officers....they&#13;
deal with every segment of the community&#13;
on a daily basis, they need to be&#13;
sensitive to cultural differences....&#13;
TN: Does the in-service training cover&#13;
Lesbian &amp; Gay issues?&#13;
SS: ....I don’tknow the actual curriculum.&#13;
I suspect that it is one very much of how&#13;
do you interact with people regardless of&#13;
who they are....&#13;
TN: My reading ofthe city charter is that&#13;
currently the mayor has the power to&#13;
issue an executive order banning dis.&#13;
crimination on the basis ofsexual orientation?&#13;
Given that power, would you be&#13;
willing to....&#13;
Hilary Kitz: (the ad hoc task force of the&#13;
TulsaHumanRights Commission) is sayingthat&#13;
there’s stateprotection thatdoesn’t&#13;
1565 South Sheridan, Tulsa&#13;
918-834-4234&#13;
The Silver Star Saloon Proudly Presents&#13;
Live from Nashville&#13;
Friday, October 15, 10:30 pm, $3-&#13;
O A Major Event Benefiting R.A.I.N.&#13;
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include sexual orientation and....what&#13;
they’re thinking about doing is looking at&#13;
supporting a change in the state law.&#13;
TN: It’s talking (the city charter) about&#13;
organization ofthe city, "the mayor may&#13;
by executive order...assign newfunctions&#13;
or duties to any division or&#13;
department..."and clearly one of those&#13;
functions could be to respect certain&#13;
principles and regulations in terms of&#13;
hiring, promotion, etc. the things thatyou&#13;
say already that the city is at least informally&#13;
doing.&#13;
SS: I think that we say that generally in&#13;
our personnel policy.&#13;
TN: But it’s not in any documentation,&#13;
and both the personnel dept. people and&#13;
the employees I interviewed understood&#13;
that there werenoprotectionsforLesbian&#13;
&amp; Gay employees for on the job discrimination&#13;
or in terms of hiring....&#13;
SS: I don’t think we even through our&#13;
hiring practices are allowed to ask questions&#13;
that would reveal that kind of information.&#13;
TN: But sometimes that kind of information&#13;
is going to be visible or relevant and&#13;
certainly the Lesbian &amp; Gay employees I&#13;
interviewed as backgroundfor this story&#13;
are scared to death ofretribution in their&#13;
departments.&#13;
SS: I try to steer away from generalizations&#13;
like that...and without the fact that&#13;
they, either through their supervisor or to&#13;
me have brought any of these concerns&#13;
forward (that) is pure speculation as far as&#13;
I am concerned....If in fact there is a&#13;
review underway with a proposedchange&#13;
in the state law, we’ll look at what is being&#13;
stated..,&#13;
TN: You know that the city, and many&#13;
have, can go beyond state and federal&#13;
regulations?&#13;
SS: I tend to look in dealing with policy&#13;
initiatives, changes, tend to try tobaseany&#13;
change, any policy direction on what has&#13;
been demonstrated as a need....In terms of&#13;
whether or not someone is hired or not&#13;
hired or promoted because of their sexual&#13;
preference, other than being asked the&#13;
question (by the reporter) it has not even&#13;
come to me as an issue. I do know that&#13;
there is this task force which is looking at&#13;
it from a community standpoint but in&#13;
terms of the City of Tulsa and its employment&#13;
practices, it has not been raised&#13;
even as a problem.&#13;
TN: Unfortunately, it’s a catch-22 situation&#13;
for Lesbian &amp; Gay citizens who&#13;
lacking any protection, then (are at) risk&#13;
raising a complaint, since that kind of&#13;
discrimination is not illegal. What I’m&#13;
saying is the lack of complaint is not&#13;
necessarily the lack ofa problem.&#13;
SS: Well I agree with that but there has to&#13;
be some way to assess the extent of the&#13;
problem also before moving forward. In&#13;
terms of using this provision under the&#13;
city charter as a guide, I don’t know I&#13;
would have to ask for a legal assessment.&#13;
TN: If it were possible, would you be&#13;
willing to issue an executive order?&#13;
SS: I would give it consideration.&#13;
TN:...Probably there are about 37,000&#13;
Lesbian &amp; Gay citizens in the city of&#13;
Tulsa, conservatively estimated. How&#13;
would youfeel as a candidate in submitting&#13;
to candidate .screening &amp; con~dering&#13;
taking donationsfrom the Lesbian &amp;&#13;
Gay communities,.openly, not openly?&#13;
SS:....I probably received 30 or more&#13;
questionnaires to complete on behalf of a&#13;
variety of interest groups....to the best of&#13;
my ability I completed every one I&#13;
received.....I would be just as open to&#13;
talking to any organized group....&#13;
TN: So would accept an invitation to a&#13;
LesbianlGay town hall meeting?&#13;
SS: I try to make myself available.&#13;
FABULOUS SHOWFEATURING REGIONS BEST&#13;
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tlike.you h’ave :i:,~i ....&#13;
)eratofs ~: .&#13;
.. drawwinnersform the .Mr. Oklahoma Weekend Packaoe and Contestant Ok: Gay Rodeo Assoc,&#13;
~ [i ~itY. an.d.,M,r. ~u!sa .cont~.sts; ~on.t.es- ,, .~:informati~n. and ~pplications ~n be OSDH Certified HIVCounselor/Tester:&#13;
.ra..n.ts wm oe juagea on tnew " learner obtained from most" Oklahoma C’~ty and Educator, Simply Equal, Prid.e " . ~= :~ ~,,,,~,,~,=.~o, ..&#13;
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person. amy, .ano comm,u.nny tnv~.ot.v.e,.. -angle Association.~a.nd.th.e.HIV Re, .iLeather, FetishContingent~L0gistics ¯ ment. Specm/guests tn¢ludeLenny ~.: ~urce Consortium Or wdte to MR&#13;
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packages are z~ "&#13;
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~ purchased with a weekend package, noma Learner ~me no=her, =s a mem.&#13;
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THE ECUMEI~IICAL&#13;
;CATHOLICCHURCH" ~ ; ~~ :-~ ~ ~ :." ~- ..... .,~:-~&#13;
The Ecomeni~i C=h~ic~hur~:-~ The~ le.~emhip and ~ngr~ation; 0f The OASISFoU~a60~. ~Sfi~y&#13;
is.an independent~ and J~iuSiQe d~-~..: ~,~~E~~I~.~; againto~he p[omoterofthe send&#13;
n0min~ionte~ingtheCatholic;fa~h.. ~;~~=~’~:~~,;~ an~uai.~laho~a~.AIDS.Walk. This&#13;
~th a.s~cial ~i~i~Wt0 I~sUans and ~.. ~;~;~~:. ~’~;’;:~n~ eventis a5K toUrof:d~ntown OKC:&#13;
gay.men~, b~t jS.0~ent0~l[.~0p~.e.. :_;~~:~;~a~:~~s~ Walkers.:are cha!lenged ~ to ~aise&#13;
.~;.~-~: ..~.lfy0u ar~re-~pi~p~mn~ . vitedto a~e~d andbdng~~ 0f.any~ ’ $20.00 or more ~rkilometer:&#13;
Lutheren~ Orthodox; :o~Roman /kind t0re~i~.a ~al.ble~ng 0n~ It is time. to..m~gnize that AIDS is&#13;
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is un~nditionaL - given,.and:animals will be.available. - discdmin~e. By.pa~ici~ting in the&#13;
The.sacrame~s are:avail’ for adop~0n~ Anyone intere~ed in .. walk; :people,demOn~te their con,&#13;
able’to.all ba~iz~:~Chd~ians~.:and - having.a..~0th.or dippl~y.~t the car: . ~ms-for this:~ly;disease. The.&#13;
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cluding homo~xuals (no vow of~li..... O~. O~ober’24,-a~shop ~aste~ ~ho~ALMS.~(~Ii~n¯&#13;
bacy required) women and .men, on Finan~al Planni~; ~lls and: E~ ¯LOVe Ministering. ~up~n),~.Loaves&#13;
singleor ma~ed. The .E.C:C is not - t~es.~ll ~ held,at New Horizons. and.Fishe~, the NamesProje~,. Oa:&#13;
pro-a~ion,, b~ is. p~oi~ Vol- Gue~..s~akem O~ald Han~ and - sis:Re~ur~ Center, ~er O~ions,.&#13;
unta~ e~ha~asia ~o~ ~ons~ffer- - A~ates~ll-~ on hand to pm~nt.- - Inc..;- Oklah0maCi~Ama HIVIAIDS&#13;
~,, e~_ ~......N= az=,=’-’~= ~ ,~ = : much.ne~ info~at~n o~ the Coalition; Oklahoma ~ Hemophilia¯&#13;
,,,u--,~...............-....-........ - ..... -~ "- "....... -uesti0ns"A. =in Our Iovinn G~ does n~ eni0v .mp~._a~ zo_-pn~er q z~ ~: :. foundation; .Planned,~renthood 0f&#13;
~a~chin,.~o~e su~~ . ~ , ~oinner,.~innin~ ~1 :~m; Central Oklahoma, R~ ~Ro~ Men,&#13;
.~ne ~:p.u is pg~a~~. ~ll~in ~2:~pm. The Oklahoma&#13;
nominmion, ~n newcnu~o~n= CRy ~mmun~y is inv~ to ~end.&#13;
inga~the n~on. There am now CODA, a re~vew~ group for AIU~ Ne~om (UWAN),&#13;
churches~ in several ~ates... If you c~ependent people, is cu~ently ~ci~ion, and The ~nds Hour.&#13;
haver.a !~u~i~l church background, ¯ meeting. ~ N~..Ho~ons. on Tue~~ If~you ~11 not ~. able to.~end&#13;
you ~!1 feel ~ home in the E~m~ni; - --days at 7:00~: Anyone inte~- this year,- ~twould like tO help in the&#13;
calCatholic Church; Holy Trinity: in attending this 12step meeting is.&#13;
E.C.C is Iocated. at 2328 .N: very welcome tojoing the.group~.&#13;
*~=,.,~*h.r =,, *h= Uo,,A,*h., Z~ar~ NewHOdzons is interested in pmvid,&#13;
,.,~,~L,~,.~, ,,, -...........~.-,,~ "inn m~.~.tinn ~nRP.R for~ Woman’s&#13;
~hepping Oen_ter, pk~,h.o_m.~, city. ~;~r~-u-~" C~l~i~-an’~- ~ (~rt~m .and l&#13;
Massesa~ on.¯~unoayaz ~u:~u.a~..:. bugle corp. Anone interest,edinstarand~&#13;
Wed_nesoay~at!7:0Op~m,~, uap ~,. ~ing and organzinO thebe~ groups&#13;
(405)-942~,2604.~and~, leave.,-a-.pleasecallg~42-6313,: ’ . ~&#13;
messageand Wednesday at 7:00,pm. :-Regularchurch service ,are- lend at&#13;
Call (405) 942-2604 and leave ames- New, .Horizons .at-,11amon Sunday~&#13;
sage formore:inf0rmati0n~ f0i~ mb~e momigns.~ the add,ress is-3136&#13;
information, ?. ~. .- .~ - .. --Portland, in-OKC... ~-~--..-- ....&#13;
fight against A!DS, other oppor~unities&#13;
are-open to you. Please send.:&#13;
yourtax-deductible donation-to AIDS&#13;
Walk Oklahoma, P.O. Box 60958,&#13;
OKC&lt; OK. 73146~0958. Also these&#13;
organizations are constant!y in need.&#13;
of volunteers., ~ If~you -areinterested&#13;
in volunteering, or wishadditional information&#13;
aboutthe AIDS Walk. You~&#13;
may call~405,.525-AlDS ~ "&#13;
forMen &amp; Women~. ?&#13;
Eur Tan Beds .~.~.&#13;
50cents off T~s&#13;
$1.00 off Styles&#13;
with this ad.&#13;
General Gay &amp; Lesbian Discussion Groups&#13;
Mondays,6:30 at Red Rock - New Group .starting ¯~Thursdays, 6:30 at Red Rock&#13;
Couples of Mixed, HIV Status&#13;
Contact Jim Carter for details.&#13;
YGLA; Young Gay &amp; LesbianAlliance&#13;
~uesda.ys, 6:30 at O~is&#13;
for individuals&#13;
~ ofpanicipants.~o ensure gro~:compatibilityi&#13;
theirlov_~i~ones and IHV. Prevention Education.&#13;
R0ckMHC, 4400No&#13;
er znelr.-former empi0yer~sgroup ~".. participant:snoul~l-requeszreinstate~;. .... availabieunderthe policy!unlessac0n-&#13;
..... d~eene..ficiad~es to remain. ~~,~e~~,e~J~;~,n,.. ::,, .:co~.~age :is_~q;~ admini~ered, the-. , there is generallyno .further:coverage&#13;
AIDSFOR AIDS- ~ m.~e~l.~i.c~al plan until th_ey:becon~e e!i-, ment,-pay all, unpaid~OBF~pre- versionhad been&#13;
~ . IBY :Cookie Arbuckle gible for Medicare undertheage of. ~,ciaims. " " " ~: ’ ’ ConverSions-: . - ° ~&#13;
;, ,: leaming!aboutyour personai~finahces.: ’-- -tot_ a total=of 29 months., Theref0rei= ;. pmns include an option,toexteno~,!. group;planT~);~ere~:am no heaith~sta~:~::’-~:&#13;
¯ ;- ~,~ ~, ~,an l~-very empowedhgff~i~o.u~a-re!-!-~ ; :the, ~11,month se~ond continuation ::, ~ , group ~edical:be,e~for.a~jjmitedi; ~ mentSreq~estbd~zi~litheymust be ap..&#13;
-, ~,.,,; ~:,~..ing~care states,~,~tli~people in ¯ :i ?ciary ~who~:was ndt-.disabled when , ployee disabled, ~Whe~n~ their" :termination:Because~,~h#converSion&#13;
~~.: .iiir0nically they d,o not tal,k about.,-: corn,eSdisabiedandis una~etOcon,- :--direct]yrel~e~,~ to the:caU~;L0f~Ji~:;; ~ ~have both a disabilityeXtensi~Oft~h~=Tt&#13;
&gt;~7~money and :money is Ihe. ultimate :~ tinue wotldng~ The employer termi, " " ability, are. cO~iered:.;The e~e~i~n ~ =efits and Conversion coverage at, the&#13;
, i ,’~form-of ernpowerment:,~ Financial¯ i hates!hem ,fi~om-the. a~ive group may be for~90 days~ onb yeari!: or-:,-isame~time:~.-~.he disability extension&#13;
¯ :,-~ -= planners int~rested,Lin working Jnthis ,~ medical~planand offersCOBF~: The ": ore depending upon thei~cbntract: clause~ysformedicalC0nditionsihat&#13;
:,~! market should approach O!her Op. ~: empl0xee~..then;e!e~S COB/~i ,and ~ There is no.,,charge ,fo!~’,~Ove~age_ caused th~disa~bility, while theconver,&#13;
- - ¯ tionsand learn, how-roger involv.~ed... ’applies for:iS0dal~Secu.~ybenefits,~. duringrth~extensidn. Disabilityex~. " sion pays ciai~not~relatedtb~the di~-&#13;
OOI offers a ~ri(shop entitled Fi- " (eitherSSDF,l:~Se~tForSSl~tle. tensions are different fromCOBRP, . . :ability. ,Whe~:;thedisabilityextension~&#13;
. nancia! Planning/c(~unseling for IIXVI). IfS0cial!~e~dtydetermines~. ~: Disabi!ity:-SecondContinuations. ends~ tile conversion:~.poiicycan, be: :&#13;
those who are ready to start the pro- i~ the disabilitystarted~onor befOr~lhe :The -Disability Continuation ~,is-a come the primalsource of coverage.&#13;
., cess needs to cali,for an appointment.. ~i! COBl~qualifying~ eVantis.the em:~ saparateanddiscreetform~of medi~- .ConversiOnmedical policies rarely con,:&#13;
We~,will be offering-sh,o~t articles in- ,,i~ pioyeewould be entitlediocontinue cal insurance-portability, : ’i rain the.same level,lof benefits ,that&#13;
the Parachute,lfo~the next several ~COBI~ coverage ,foran additional Afewwordsofwamingare :~ ¯were pro~ided ¯under the-group~plan&#13;
months.!fyou have a topicofchOice, 11 months..~e COBI~ planadmin: necessary. COBI~ must be elected . and,rtheycan be; expensive. - I~view&#13;
call~OOI !:andwe iwill: researchand = istratormum be nOtified of the SSA ~ priorto exercising a. "disability ex’ , 5.~: all conversion ~options to determine-"&#13;
wdte~he~articie~.......... ..... .-~ ._.,-: disability approval;Within 60 days of- : &lt; tension;, howeveri~ disabi!ity~ e~eln~=."~ :L whether/it, is .affordable--and exactly&#13;
COBRA DISABILITY SEC- recelpt’~fthe.dete~inationlet~er~) ~.- sionsmay be ava.ilabie~afteP cO~. ~.-what’benefltSWould be provided. You&#13;
OND CONTINUATION (ELEVEN .-....¯- COBRA: ;.-’OVERLAPPI.NG --;. BRAends; The disability-extensi.on:., .may have~coveragegaps=.’ -.W.hlc.h-.yo.u’.ll~&#13;
ADDITIONAL MONTHS) Cobra allow WITH NEW GROUP INSURANCE must be requested-in wdting and needto-coverinSome~otheiPWay,¯ :=;~.~.&#13;
certain disables employees tocon- BENEFITS:.;COBRAcoveragemay you Should-ask the, claims depart~~. Toconvert group-medical insura~i~&#13;
tinue theircOBRA ~.veragdpast the be retained even-afte[ ~z COBRA " . ment for information about how. to .= ~- application must be. obtelnedfromthe&#13;
18-months cut-off, to 29 months. To participant had¯obtained new grOup apply for the extens!on. Since the ¯ employer plan administrator.Finally,i it&#13;
.-- be ;eligible for’. second continuation medical insurance coverage if the- extendedr coverage is only for re- ~ is important.:tO’ note .that- employees-&#13;
,~. Coverage, the COBRA beneficiary newemployees health plan.limits - lated mediCal~expenses caused.by ..~houldnevervoluntadlyquitebecause&#13;
. ~must have.-been~disables as.-deter- ~ coverage with respect-to pre-exists: .. ¯ the d’.Bability, it isimpe~ivethatthe~ .{they havebecomedisabled,~-Instead;&#13;
¯: -. .;mined by-the SocialSecudtyAdmin-.. ing ~nditionsi~ ~ ¯ .- ~; . :~-.. ~ physician fu!ly-discioseAheeXa~ ~ a medicalordisabilityleaVeofabsenCe&#13;
~ .~. -,~istration~SSA)atthetime0fthequali- ~i ?A~former~COB~participant ::~ cause 0fdi~sabi!ity.. (for examPle:~ should, berequestedT~otherwise&#13;
.fying event. COBRA ,premiums in~ may~request;~reinstatement of? co;.... :-AIDS, ~mcer or!heartdisease),.lt ~. employee,s dgM:.tolong:term¯disabii=~:&#13;
crease from !02% to 15(P~ dddng the BRA. coverage to cover healthcon- is important to have .all- disability_5:-~ity benefits and lifeoinsurarice m~ybe&#13;
extended.11 month pedod ofCOBRA .ditionsthat Weredenied as preexist-.: related, conditions~ included.:.in,. ~the ;;:~;jeopardiZed, ~;~ .-:~. ;- - &lt; .&gt;;;~.-~.~&#13;
cover¯age, ing conditions uoder a new group physici.an~s diagnoSis~nc~tjUSt;0ne-~.... . ~ ; ~ + i ....: ~;i/ ~ .~_&#13;
The intent ofthe secondco~, medical plan. While.the.new regula-.~:;, specific~glnessrOrConditiOn..once............;~ _- ~ : ~ .?; ¯.&#13;
tinuationjs to.allewdi~sab!ed.:.~BRA~. ;.i. !ions do not explain how retroactive th~!disabiiity extensio~hasexpired~ ¯&#13;
with alcohol and other drugs can be all&#13;
too ea . -of .. us..dieof.alcoh. olism.&#13;
than of HIV.: Play, But play like your&#13;
communi is dependin.g on you. Bis. "&#13;
Always growing. ¯ O ¯&#13;
Always safe. " OO0 .&#13;
A Service ofth~ Oasis Resource Center. ~0 ~o!Unteer ea!L405:~525-2437...... ..... ~&#13;
"Oklahoma’s Gay and Lesbian Information Source."&#13;
I picked u.pthe August edi.tio.n of th.e&#13;
Gayly ana nave read the article titlea:&#13;
OKC/March on Washington Trip&#13;
Filled With Mistakes.&#13;
I was one of the passengem.on&#13;
that van to D.C.. I find sedous aiscrepancies&#13;
regarding the accuracy of&#13;
all that has been reported’ by&#13;
Ms.Hand. I received the last available&#13;
seat on the van. I didn~ know&#13;
how was sponsoring the trip but&#13;
didn’t care since for this 37 year old&#13;
Okie this was a once in a lifetime&#13;
chance to be a part of this histodc&#13;
event.&#13;
It was Tuesday evening when a&#13;
fdend told.me there might be an open&#13;
space on once of the vans. They&#13;
woul.d call aro.und .to se..e if anyt.hing&#13;
was ~eft. Weanes~ay afternoon i re--&#13;
ceived a phone call from Dale, from&#13;
the Tdangle office, telling me.I could&#13;
go on their van. I asked what,the fee&#13;
would be to. cover my part because I&#13;
am on disabi!ity I do have to budget&#13;
m.y money. ~ was told. .not to wo.rr~.&#13;
aDout thatnow Dutto take care or&#13;
when I returned. I was to contact&#13;
John Carter and that we would be&#13;
aware that I was coming.&#13;
Since I only had about 48 houm.&#13;
.to .prepare. for the. tr!p, and still not&#13;
De~lewng ~ was actually going, things&#13;
were hebtic to say the ]ea~’t. After&#13;
the trip had begun and we all st.arted.&#13;
to get to know each other is wnen&#13;
learned of various fund-misers that&#13;
had made it possible for the PWA’s&#13;
to make the trip. I was filled with a&#13;
tremendous gratitude, and was&#13;
minded of the many times I had given&#13;
,.m,on..ey at fund reisers for.things just&#13;
liKe thiS.&#13;
My fdend that told me about the&#13;
seat left on the .van informed me at&#13;
the time.that all I needed was enough&#13;
money for my own use, such .as fo.oki,&#13;
entertainment, souvenirs, etc.. Decause&#13;
everything else would be taken&#13;
care of such aslransportation and a&#13;
place to stay. I was never t.old that&#13;
would receive.any money to_De speno&#13;
while in D.C. that would have been a&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
nice tou.ch but after being, involved&#13;
with funo reisers myself I would have&#13;
been very su.rprised if that kind of&#13;
money would have been left over to&#13;
-spendin such a waY. I was so glad&#13;
to get to go i would have slept under&#13;
the stars on the front lawn of the&#13;
White House.&#13;
I was not aware of howthe money&#13;
was raised for the trip mainly due to&#13;
the fact that dudng the pdor year I&#13;
had been serious]y ill from AIDS&#13;
complicatio.ns .and had been mostly&#13;
confined to pea.&#13;
But I refuse to be defeated by this&#13;
.virus.so. I c~...ntin.ued to fig.hi my.way&#13;
Pack to nealtn. !examinea my pnyslcal&#13;
and mental status anddetermined&#13;
that I would be able to manage&#13;
the long mad tdp. If I’d had any&#13;
indication that my health would&#13;
placed myself at risk or would have&#13;
been a burden to the other passengers&#13;
I would not have gone. I&#13;
I take argument with Ms. Hand’s&#13;
reporting of-the events surrounding&#13;
Jeff~ P_e.n,~o..n.s e.ventu.a.I hospital~atio.n&#13;
in u.u. If ! nao any lingenng aoubts&#13;
about my own ability to make the tdp&#13;
I was doubly concerned that Penson&#13;
was making the trip since he appeared&#13;
to be the one of us who might&#13;
need the most looking after. Penson&#13;
was on infusions but lie administered&#13;
his own treatment. Jefftold me himself&#13;
that he had ~ends in D.C. that&#13;
he would probably be staying with&#13;
and that his team of Dr’s ano nurses&#13;
were going to be in D.C. for the&#13;
March. I remember feeling relieved&#13;
that someone familiar with his history&#13;
and condition would be there if&#13;
he nbeded them.&#13;
I am also of the opinion that Kem&#13;
Wallace even though it Was apparently&#13;
not her given responsibility to&#13;
monitor the condition of those of us&#13;
with HIV and AIDS could and would&#13;
have administered first aid, and or&#13;
alerted the appropriate personnel in&#13;
the event of an emergency. I worked&#13;
for eight years in the health field specific..&#13;
ally in th.e area of emergency&#13;
meaicine ana quietly took it upon&#13;
myself to keep an eye on everyone.&#13;
just in case something came up that&#13;
I might be able to help w_ith. Every&#13;
so often I would ask how P’enson was&#13;
feeling but .he denied having any&#13;
problems. /~s a point in fact when&#13;
we arrived in D.C. the first .thing&#13;
Penson did was to take off at break&#13;
neck spe.ed rushing aroun.d the_capitol&#13;
complex area waving a large t-reedom&#13;
flag due to his excitement at&#13;
being inD.C., again for another rally.&#13;
He was told by at least m.yself .and&#13;
one other persbn that he snould s~ow&#13;
down or he would exhaust himself.&#13;
He simply would not listen. Furthermore,&#13;
lhelieve it would have been&#13;
negligence if John Carter had been.&#13;
the one to .do all the driving. If it haa&#13;
not been for Ms.Wallace and her&#13;
stamina we might all have been killed&#13;
in an acciden~ I give due creditto&#13;
Carter because he was a valuable&#13;
part of our group, t&#13;
But,-Ms.Hand, to single ou&#13;
and crucify_ Mary Arbuckle for every&#13;
single problem that popped up is&#13;
surely unjustifiable. It is true there&#13;
~heorueldmhaanvey.btheienng.asontheadtiffceoreunldtlyabnudt&#13;
! sa.w no. .one 9o hu.ng.ry, t.h.ere was all&#13;
Kinas Ol iooapacKea in the van, we&#13;
stopped at about every fast food.&#13;
place between here and the east&#13;
coast, and stopped_ at .several.ni.c~.&#13;
restaurants, we stayea at the Hodday&#13;
Inn, where everyone had a place&#13;
to sleep. I could not keep quiet after&#13;
reading what I consider to he a vicious&#13;
two page attack on a person&#13;
that did the best shoe knew how. As&#13;
Ms.Arbuck has herself admitted, mistakes&#13;
were made, she admits she&#13;
should do many things differently.&#13;
Kenny Lackey&#13;
OKC.&#13;
To The Editor of The Parachute:&#13;
When I read the letters published&#13;
in the September issue of The Parachute&#13;
regarding Paula Hand’s "attack"&#13;
and "bashing" of Mary Arbuckle and/&#13;
or Kem Wallace over their tdp for&#13;
PLWA’s to the MOW, I wondered if&#13;
the Gayly Oklahoman published different&#13;
regional editions. It appeared&#13;
some read a different article than I.&#13;
After reading these letters I notice&#13;
that Mary is a member of the staff of&#13;
your publication. ! question, the, if&#13;
these letters are not simply a reaction&#13;
of personal ~ends who feel compelledto&#13;
defend Mary’s integrity,&#13;
something which was never really&#13;
questioned. Loyalty to a friend is an&#13;
admirable trait. However if a friend&#13;
were to tell me he or she had a mistake&#13;
and wanted to apologize for it, I&#13;
think it would be a disservice to my&#13;
friend to dismiss the apology by ~ating&#13;
or implying, "Never mind, you are&#13;
perfect and infallible. From my read-&#13;
Ing of Paula’s article, Mary agree’s&#13;
some mistakes were made. I admire&#13;
Mary for that honestly and integrity.&#13;
I also admire her for wanting to offer&#13;
such a trip and her honest efforts to&#13;
make the arrangements.&#13;
I ask those who wrote the letters to&#13;
The Parachute if they are not, by failing&#13;
to acknowledge what Mary herself&#13;
has, denying her things she&#13;
asked for. In case any reader wonders,&#13;
Yes, I am a friend of Paula&#13;
Hand’s. i also know Mary as well as&#13;
her mother. I admire all three of these&#13;
women and respect their contributions&#13;
to our community. Although I&#13;
attended the March, I had not heard&#13;
anything about this controversy until&#13;
I read the article in the Gayly¯ Thus I&#13;
consider myself objective in my appraisal.&#13;
John Kalhoefer OKC&#13;
OGI~A I~o~jolh~: M~.OGI~A, Todd V,~sd,~, Ms.OGI~A Cobol&#13;
Mis~.OGI~A Vi~:to,,io AIII,~n. 1st I~unn¢,,s up w,’: I::)ot~.d Wilson,Mo,,tj A,,buckld,&#13;
¢,nd D~hjo&#13;
the[&#13;
to move thing&#13;
serwce ;: forcefull&#13;
Oklahoma&#13;
and Grant ....&#13;
I~ ;could have&#13;
iu but them Were&#13;
only two volunteers, Brace Britt and&#13;
and in&#13;
lu..... AssociationD~or. "Oklahoma’s gay.&#13;
to im cal factors am ne~ssary for proper&#13;
i i ~ ~bn~ activation of your immune system, lesbian, and bisexual communi~ is&#13;
d~ ~ vidu’ Th~se ~p00nds are produced by producing exceilehtwork, a~dit’s ,~mfk&#13;
." ~’, ~’ ^,r~ .~,~..~ various ~ite bloodcells and acti- iahat all Oklahomans should have greater&#13;
, =, ~ ~, ~,.~ V,=u~-=o, ...... e individuals under ~xtreme vate other white blood cells to d , access to."&#13;
Let;tim world know, you are,.. printed on the highest qua Ity 100%&#13;
heavy cOtton ~ees and Tanksl&#13;
Avaitabe in blacL gray and white.&#13;
Basebal caps (with st t~h log0) also&#13;
available In b ~k&amp; white only.&#13;
Shirts: $15.00&#13;
Caps: $12.00&#13;
(add ,~.00 for s &amp; h.)&#13;
Mai/ check or money order to:&#13;
Meant To Be Fit&#13;
1001 R.W. 18th St.&#13;
Qklahoma City, OK 73106-6416&#13;
(credit card orders ca/# 1-800-546-8689&#13;
Visa, Mastat~ard, Discover, Ame~can&#13;
Express accepted.)&#13;
DRY CLEANERS&#13;
Hendcksen and will be directed by&#13;
_Deve_iopment Director _Mic.hae!&#13;
Camneld. The Will Rogers L;emer at&#13;
4322 N. Western in Oklahoma City is&#13;
the performance venue. Curtain time&#13;
is set at .8:00p.m. for each showing.&#13;
The goa~ of this p_roject is to raise&#13;
funds for ACLU/OK and increase&#13;
awareness and sensitivity about the&#13;
themes covered by the p.]ay. A portion&#13;
of the proceeds will be donated&#13;
to the OL~.r~ting costs of an AIDS hospice&#13;
in Oklahoma.&#13;
The Ho.spice features comedy,&#13;
conflict, high camp and deep philosophi.&#13;
cal undertones in one package.&#13;
The cnaracters all share a common&#13;
Hi-Lo’CIub&#13;
.... : " your I-IOm.E :Away [-r6~ homEl.&#13;
-AFine .~dging Establishment&#13;
80. Guest Rooms&#13;
Two Pools&#13;
P0olSideRooms&#13;
Cable T.V.&#13;
GUSHERS. BAR&#13;
ccr busts &amp; Shows ~ Wednesday &amp; Sunday&#13;
Male Dancers ridoy 8, SaturdoG&#13;
, " "HI°sh H~&#13;
.Live DJ, country dancing, beer b.t’|sts&#13;
West end, Habana Inn Complex&#13;
-pool &amp; Darts-&#13;
2200 NW 39th EXPRESSWAY&#13;
Cards, Magazines; Leon, T-shirt,Gifts&#13;
’ Call fort rares a~d i~foamanotvl&#13;
(4015) 528-22,21.&#13;
Reservations Only&#13;
1-800-988-2221 ,&#13;
¯ .and&#13;
Proudly Present..... -&#13;
2800 N.W. 39th-&#13;
. . :, ,’ : + - - . +-" , i! -+.. , ~, . .: + L&#13;
Wichita, Kansas (316)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
Buddies Country, 4000 .S. Broadway&#13;
529-4953&#13;
Our Fantasy, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
South Forty, 3201 So. Hillside 682-5494&#13;
R &amp; RBrass Rail, 2828 E: 31st&#13;
T:Room; !507 E. Pawnee " 262=9327"~&#13;
Harbor Restaurant, 3201 S. Hillside&#13;
68t’~2746 ~&#13;
Lassens Bar &amp; Grill, 155 N. Market&#13;
263-2777&#13;
The Upper Crust, 7038 E. Lincoln&#13;
Service &amp;Retail Busineaea~&#13;
Visions &amp; Dreams, 3414-Maple&#13;
942-6333&#13;
Watermark Books, 149 N. Broadway&#13;
263-3007&#13;
Queen Anne’s Lace 73324075&#13;
Dr. Laura Shook, D.C. 700N. Market&#13;
267-6522&#13;
Roommates 262_844~.&#13;
Paradise Antiq. 430 E. Harry 269-4411&#13;
Land of Awes Info. Ser. POB 16782 67216&#13;
Adult Entree, 220 E. 21st 832-1816&#13;
Plato’s, 1306 E, Harry St~ 269-9036&#13;
T~B.~s, t516 S. Oliver 688-5343&#13;
Camelot Cinema, 1516 S. O1ive68~5343&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 3721 S. Broadway&#13;
AduR Entertainm’t Ctr 7805 W. Kellogg&#13;
Adult Entertainm’t Ctr 2809 N. Broadway.&#13;
Adult Entree’ South, 8025S~ Btoadffay&#13;
Circle Cinema; 2570 S.- Seneca&#13;
Orgsnizat’m.ns&#13;
Wichita/Sedgwick Cty., Health Dept.&#13;
1900 E. 9th 268-8441&#13;
Wichita Gay/Lesbian Alliance 942q786-&#13;
The Lesbian Celebration 683-7561&#13;
P-FLAG, POB 686, 67202 687-4666&#13;
Gay Information Line 269-0913&#13;
Wichita, Kansas (316)&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
Wic_hita Prais.e &amp;" WorshipCtr. 651-6903&#13;
First Unitarian Church 684-3481&#13;
Mission of Faith Fellowship 539=0633&#13;
Junction City, Kansas&#13;
After Dark Video, 1206 Grant&#13;
Lawrence, Kansas (913)&#13;
Douglas County AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Lesbigay Services. 410-KS Union&#13;
Box 13. Kansas Univ. 66045&#13;
. 864-3091&#13;
Freedom Coalition. POB 1991 66044&#13;
Manahattan, Kansas (913)&#13;
AIDS Project 843-0040&#13;
Flint Hills Alliance, POB 2018, 66502&#13;
MCC, POB 4776, Topeka 67402&#13;
Bisexual &amp; Gay &amp; Lesbian Society&#13;
SGA Box 63, Kansas St.. Univ. 66506&#13;
Topeka, Kansas (913)&#13;
Bars &amp; Clubs&#13;
Classics, 124 SW 8th 357-1960&#13;
Expressions, 110 SE 8 233-3622&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Adult Entertainment Ctr. 903 N. Kansas&#13;
Some Like It Hot 4732 S. Topeka Ave.&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Topeka AIDS Project 232-3100&#13;
Gay/Les. Task Force, POB 38,’29, 66604&#13;
357-8727&#13;
Mayors Task Force 234-6699&#13;
Gay Rap Line 223-6558&#13;
Manhattan Outreach 271-8431&#13;
HIV Affected Group 234-8562&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
MCC-Topeka, POB&#13;
Affirmation (Metho~ist)&#13;
4776, 66604&#13;
232-6196&#13;
235-6t01&#13;
Tulsa, Oklahoma (918).&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
*Elec~e,Circus,606S. Elgin 587-8677&#13;
*Laff’s, .31..I E. 7th 583-5233&#13;
*Phoenix; 6328 S. Pegria 743-7062&#13;
*Silver Star Saloon, 1565 S. Sheridan&#13;
834-4234&#13;
-)R~negade; 1649 S. Main 585-3405&#13;
*Time n’ Time Again, 15i5 S. Memorial&#13;
660-0856&#13;
" *TNT’s_ 2114 S. Memorial 664-8299&#13;
*Tool Box, 1338 E. 3rd 584-1308&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
*Tomfoolery, -1565 S. Sheridan&#13;
Kelly Kirby, CPA 663-9399&#13;
*Elite Goods, 814 &amp;.Sheridan 838-8503&#13;
*Whittier Bkstore, 1.N: Lewis ~ 592-0767&#13;
*Dreamland,’8807 E.Admiral " 834-1051&#13;
*Indian Terr; Coffee ’Cb. 1613 E. 15th&#13;
587. 163¯¯.3&#13;
*Mohawk Music16157 E 51 PI 664-2951&#13;
*Tulsa Central Library, 400 Civic Ctr.&#13;
596-7977&#13;
*Chapman Student Ctr. TU, 631-0000&#13;
Organizations&#13;
ACT-UP, POB 532 74101&#13;
Names Proj. POB 318 74101 748-3111&#13;
P-.FLAG ,POB 52800, 74152 74924901&#13;
*TOHR, 4154 S. Harvard, Ste. H-I&#13;
Gay Line-Info. 74324297&#13;
Shanti Hotline ~ 749-7898&#13;
*STIR~ Tulsa.:U. student 6rg.:~583-9780&#13;
Oklahoma AIDS Hotline. 800,535-2437&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
*Family of Faith MCC~ 509 W. ’A’ Jenks&#13;
298-4622&#13;
Affirniati0n ~Meth0dis0--’: 742-8213 "&#13;
*MCC=Tulsa,l623Maplewood 838-1715&#13;
Dignity/Integrity 29824648&#13;
*.Canterb,ry Minist~C~.;TU) .583_&#13;
!Emporia,. Kansas (316)&#13;
Gay&amp; Lesbian Alliance for Resources &amp;&#13;
Education, Box 65, EsU 66801&#13;
Salina, Kansas (316)&#13;
Alternative Lifestyles, POB 2532; 67402&#13;
Pink Triangle Parents of Kansas&#13;
POB 153; Falun, KS 67442&#13;
EUrekaSpr’gs, Ark. (501)&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants&#13;
¯Center Street, 10 Center St. 253-8071&#13;
The HOP, 19 1/2 Spring St. 253-836I&#13;
Ermilio’s, 26 White St. 253~8806-&#13;
Churches&#13;
MCC of the Living Springs 253-9337&#13;
Bed &amp; Breakfast&#13;
Rock Cottage, 10 Enenia St. 253-86.99&#13;
Dixie Cottage, 2 Prospect 253-7533&#13;
Southern Rose, 9 Benton St. 253-5800&#13;
Purple Iris. Inn, RR 6 253r8748&#13;
Pond Mountain, Rt.-1 253-5877&#13;
Maple Leaf Inn, 6Kingshgwy 253-68"/6&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Satori Arts, 81 Spring St. 253-9820&#13;
Crazy Bone, 37 Spring St. 253-6600&#13;
Corceili Studio, 159 Spring St. 253-7399&#13;
Hot Springs, Arkansas&#13;
Our House L0unge/Rest. 235 Broadway&#13;
624- 6868&#13;
Ft. Smith, Arkansas (50~)&#13;
. Court Garden. 305 Garrison 7~3-9822&#13;
B &amp; B Lounge, 1004 Gitrrison 783~9347&#13;
Fayetteville,.Arkansas&#13;
Ron’s Place, 523 W. Poplar 442-3052&#13;
Wash. Cty~ AIDS Task Force 443-AIDS&#13;
~Q_ray/Lesbian Act’n Delegations 52124509&#13;
MCC of the Ozarks 443-4278:,&#13;
Parents-FLAG 756:84&#13;
Oklahoma City (4o5) -&#13;
Bars &amp; Reatsurants&#13;
Angles, 2117 NW 39th 524-3431&#13;
Bilnkhouse, 2800 NW39th .943-0843&#13;
Coyote Club, 2120NW39th 521-9533&#13;
Finish Line &amp; Gushers Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
2200 NW 39 Expwy 525-0730&#13;
Hi Lo Club 1221-NW 50th&#13;
KA’s, 2024 NW 1 lth&#13;
Levi’s 2807 NW 36th&#13;
The Park, 2125 NW 39th&#13;
The Porthole, 3630NW39th&#13;
.Sneakers, 919 N. Virginia&#13;
Tramps; 2201 NW 39th&#13;
Wreck Roam; 2127 NV¢ 39th .&#13;
The Kitchen, 2124 NW-39th&#13;
_.La ¯ Roca .¯Mexican Restaurants&#13;
" SW.4th/Walker, 409 W. Reno &amp;&#13;
~.7550 N. May&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Banana Products..... 341-8965&#13;
Exec. Travel, 2113 NW36th 521-9100&#13;
Hahana Inn, 22~10NW39th 528-2221&#13;
Hedand, 23 t2 NW 39th 521-9696&#13;
Jungle Red, 2200 NW 39th 524-5733&#13;
Lobo’s, 2131 NW 39th 528-5156&#13;
Deb Roberts, Entertainer 843-5624&#13;
Second Chance Credit 752-2209&#13;
Stephen Scott, Masseur 525-8689&#13;
Shirley Hunter, M.Ed/counselor&#13;
8a8-5429&#13;
Larry Prater, MD, Psychiatry 232-5453&#13;
R@ligiou$ Or0anizslions¯-&#13;
New BeginningsMCC 3136 N. Portland&#13;
942 - 63 1 3&#13;
Dignity/Integrity, POB 25473 3604)414&#13;
Friends Meetihg - 632-7~7~&#13;
G.ay Chi’istian EeumTCouneil 528-5635&#13;
Light House MCC, 2522 N:-Sha_rtel~&#13;
Unitarian Church, 600 NW 13 .- 232-9224&#13;
~3~1722&#13;
52.5=3991&#13;
947-5"384 ¯&#13;
528--4690&#13;
949-9837&#13;
272-9833&#13;
528-9080&#13;
525-7610&#13;
528-5133&#13;
,. Little RoCk, Arka as&#13;
Bars &amp; Restaurants ....&#13;
Backstreet, 1021 Jessie Rd, Q - 666-6900&#13;
Micheal’s, 601 Center~. 376-8301&#13;
DiscoverylII, 1021 Jessie Rd. 664,4784&#13;
Silver Dollar, 2710 Asher Ave.&#13;
Organizations&#13;
HPWA, POB~4379, 72204, 666-6900&#13;
-AIDS Sfipi3ort Group " 374-3605&#13;
RAIN-Arkansas 375-5908&#13;
The House- 374-3758&#13;
PALS, People of Alter. Lifestls 374-3605&#13;
Womens Project 372-5113&#13;
Parents-FLAG 821-4865&#13;
Service &amp; Retail Businesses&#13;
Twisted Entertnmt, 7201Asher 568-4262&#13;
Shields-Marley Studios; 117 S. ¥1ctory&#13;
372-6148&#13;
Travel by Philip 227-7690&#13;
Little Rock Connections 227:76~0&#13;
Springfield, l~lisso.ri (417)&#13;
Club 1105, 1105 E. Commercial&#13;
. " " . 831--9043.&#13;
Down Beat, 219 WI Olive 846-4572&#13;
JBoolpivlai:nN,eMws,i.s4s03o0uBroili(v4a1r78)33-3354&#13;
Billy Jack’s, 720 S. Main 781-6453&#13;
2G’s Cha Cha Palace 722 S. Main&#13;
78U9313&#13;
Oklah6niaCity (~5)&#13;
Organizations .:&#13;
ACLU, 1411Classen, Ste318 524-8511&#13;
HerlandSis.Res.2313 NW 39 521-9696&#13;
Names Project, POB 12185 625-6277&#13;
OASIS Resource Ctr, 2135 NW 39&#13;
525-2437&#13;
OKGay Pol. Caucus POB61186 73146&#13;
OK Gay R~kleo Assoc. 943-0843&#13;
OKC Metro. Mens’ Chorus..&#13;
424~1753&#13;
Pride Network 340-3575&#13;
RkIN 232~4372&#13;
ACT-UP/Queer Nation ¯ 447-4209-.&#13;
OU GaylLesbian/Bisexual Alliance&#13;
303 Ellison Hall, 633 Elm, Norman 73019&#13;
325-4452&#13;
Womens’ Resource Ctr. 364~9424&#13;
AIDS Mastery 525-3636&#13;
AI-Anon (Gay) 947-3834&#13;
Alcoholics Anonymous 525-2437&#13;
OK AIDS Hotline 800-535-2437&#13;
Other Options 728-3222&#13;
Testing the Limits, 2136 NW 39th&#13;
843-8378&#13;
Lawton,. Oklahoma (405)&#13;
HIV/AIDS Support 248-5890/351-2820&#13;
SW AIDS Network, POB 3924, 73505&#13;
Great Plains MCC, 1416 W. Gore&#13;
357-7899&#13;
Enid, O-klahoma (405)&#13;
Phillips U. Gay/Lesbian Group 242-0628&#13;
Stillwater," Oklahoma (4o5)&#13;
Comm. AIDS Actign.Netv~ork 624-2=544&#13;
OSU Gay!Lesbian/Bisex Comm. Assoc:&#13;
S~nt Uni6n 040]B6x601,~74078"&#13;
Helpliiie" (MWTh:’8~10pm) 744:5252&#13;
ACLU&#13;
American Civil Liberties&#13;
of Free Speech; :&#13;
Religioa.&#13;
American Civil Liberties&#13;
Guarantee you Equality-and&#13;
Support tho ACLU&#13;
Member or Making a Con~~tribution.&#13;
-to: ACLU,- 132 West&#13;
7&#13;
for&#13;
a&#13;
yo.ung,cT., forsafe ~. Bottoms&#13;
a plush.but versatile,~-scnd-photo&#13;
:&#13;
Bi N~M, 44, 5andsome, 5calthy,,&#13;
Vrec nersonal ads W0rldwide~ piano-pZayer,~i to . rela ~ i . . . social: feminine sissy GM/TV/TS in&#13;
~~r~--ea~ ~r free " to - play byear. ~!! :~t. .~~,.]only. i~"~]0y sports, NW Ark. for. fun,-friendship,&#13;
. ¯ --~ ~ . -...."~;~.,,.~.~,~:.~ ",~.......:~"~-~-~.~,~:--.~ - ........’. -- - ¯ monogmy.lsmokc; Box 142&#13;
.... i~IV+¯AID.qlnAi~i~lnal~ ~ireet reward tmmt:. 316~’6~1~03~;&#13;
- --’-" " .... ~OR RENT&#13;
¯ . . ~.y~USA&#13;
GwF, 30’s professional s~ks .Youa ranch band? Hwr rid~ tl~&#13;
same for stable z~lafionship. No ~d~o? If so, this’ late¯&#13;
drugs~ social dtiak~r only. ] lookiag masculine&#13;
~njoy spml~, -sharing .qni~t -. A~ustin,.~ Texas .wants to he~r&#13;
from;you. Box 141 .&#13;
~OWOM,-:#110~ 116. Tustin,&#13;
Anah~m~CA~:92807 Roommgtes smaring Wichita&#13;
for 5.-y~m~,:~:i~dlords can&#13;
"Dave" ~ aceountant:: Call,-regist~ without.any advance&#13;
Todd ~~OklahomaI City ASAP "fee. Tenantsmy register: as&#13;
~please. I m,ss you and ~d to&#13;
GAY DOLLARS Wanted: Locations. where gays&#13;
,.~Work .hard~r.oa-Wall S~trcet mayshare houging in Wichita, GWM..late 20’s s~vking gwm for&#13;
m-an,.mvestm~nt dubfollowing - " by ~ funand~friendshiP" Box 105-.&#13;
5% Gay/Lesbian Discount. 648. loyali.:: Slim -buildl~king ~ i&#13;
W. Diekson St. Fayettville~r~ -~e 25"47...Lct’s.gct togcflicr;&#13;
" Box i27 ’ ."&#13;
ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES&#13;
Amazingly aceurate,&#13;
compu~,terizcd compili’ty report&#13;
for fri~ds "&amp; ~vers only&#13;
$25.00 or 6 mo.’s personal&#13;
Horoscope $29.95&#13;
Call today 1-800.460-STAR&#13;
.... FOR SALE&#13;
SNEAKERS, Women’s bar, in&#13;
OKC, 2024N.W. 1 lth, speak to&#13;
Janlce or lVlichele at&#13;
405-272-9833&#13;
DEADLINE FOR NOVEMBER&#13;
Wichita&#13;
GWM, 25 HIV+. sceks~ GWM&#13;
21-35 for friends.hip and&#13;
possible, .relationship. Serious&#13;
replies only. Send photo,phone.&#13;
Penpals welcome. Box 122&#13;
~WMmid20~s, .seeks, same for&#13;
~ ~ and. frien~p,&#13;
.Shy bottom GWM,~ 29,&#13;
bln/blu~, S~.king top 21 to 40&#13;
fora¯ relationship to builda life&#13;
together. Are you the one?&#13;
write .to: Box !35 .&#13;
Oklahoma City, OK:&#13;
Have’ home, need mate, country u g, oKc, s0,&#13;
s/p hair~ m~okex, trim ori~aI&#13;
equipment, top, levi,s-camping&#13;
canoing, gardening. Sceks.long&#13;
term paitncr. Box 117&#13;
Gay-malc,÷sceking male couples&#13;
for fun, mid 20’s. Send Photo’s&#13;
Box 109.&#13;
GWM 44 Professional very&#13;
hairy~ ~l~e smooth man lS:30-to&#13;
.traVel~d bemy sugar ~Y, ~’S&#13;
snmmcr-and beyond~I iPl~&#13;
send photo and phone. 0KC&#13;
area.please: Box 125.-&#13;
’&#13;
.If yOu were Rich,&#13;
whatw0uld you buy?&#13;
SUBMISSIONS TO&#13;
PARACHUTE&#13;
OCTOBER 21st.&#13;
TOPLACE A PERSON~¯&#13;
AD:&#13;
Ad~ss .. ......&#13;
P.O. Box. 11347&#13;
your re~p0nses Wm be&#13;
you wl~nthey are, re~ivcd.&#13;
TO RESPOND TOA&#13;
PERSONAL_&#13;
1. Writ. your response, please it&#13;
in an envelope,, and.seal the&#13;
envelope. Be sureto.includza&#13;
way for the advertiser to get in&#13;
contact,with you.&#13;
2. On the scaled envelope, Write&#13;
the :-advertisers box number in&#13;
lower comer andaffix postage.&#13;
3. Place the -scaled envelope and&#13;
$2.00 inside a 2ndenv~lope,&#13;
seal, and address to "&#13;
Parachute P.O. ~x&#13;
11347,Wichita, Ks. 67202&#13;
Important Informatioh:&#13;
Ad: will Run only for the number of&#13;
insertions .paid! for, unless:renewed.. You&#13;
must.be !Syears ofage or older to use this&#13;
service.: .All-addresses / phone numbers.&#13;
received are confidential and are not&#13;
released to anyone.&#13;
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                <text>[1993] The Parachute of Oklahoma, 1993; Volume 1, Issue ?</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="5656">
                <text>Politics, education, and social conversation toward Tulsa’s Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual communities.</text>
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                <text>The Parachute of Oklahoma was a monthly newspaper; the only publications available are August 1993-December 1993.&#13;
&#13;
The newspaper brings up important, evolving topics of marriage, Pride, TOHR, HIV/AIDs, events, advice, and politics all at the local and national level. &#13;
&#13;
This document is available in searchable PDF attached. It is also available to be seen at the Dennis R. Neill Equality Center with permission. &#13;
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                <text>Orin E. Shank (general manager)&#13;
Cookie Arbuckle&#13;
Stephen Scott&#13;
Babby&#13;
Michael Camfield&#13;
Kevyn Jacobs&#13;
Scott Curry&#13;
Kim Ridenour&#13;
Tom Neal&#13;
Kelly Kirby&#13;
Paul Scott&#13;
Danny Heinsohn&#13;
Kim Watson&#13;
Ann Marie Lochner (volunteer)&#13;
J.T. Simpson (volunteer)&#13;
Donna Payne (volunteer)&#13;
David Stokes (volunteer)</text>
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Oklahoma---Tulsa&#13;
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                <text>Chuck Breckenridge &amp; Wayne D. (assistant publisher)</text>
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                    <text>____________________________________________________________
Flash From The Past
by Tim Turner
And help from others...
When you look at some of the photos from the Playroom Club era, 1978 to 1986, it almost
seems as though everyone was happy and gay during that period in time. From what I
remember, we were. We worked hard and we played hard, like most Americans at that period in
history. The end of the Free Love Era certainly was not evident in the gay club scene in the late
70's. AIDS was pretty much unknown, at least in our part of the world, life was good...spirits
were high, there was uncharted territory.
Around 1970, I got to hear great stories of the first known gay bars in the Tulsa area. Tropical
Gardens, as far back as the Early 40s, operated by two sisters in an old filling station; The Blue
Note Lounge located on North Denver during the 40s and 50s; The Blue Haven opened
November, 1948 by the 'much loved' Producer, Activist and Entrepreneur, the late M.C. Parker.
M.C. Parker and Tim Warren would later cultivate and produce the largest, most spectacular
Oklahoma Gay Event in history, the Miss Gay Oklahoma Pageant at the Camelot Inn. (Tim
Warren, his life partner forty years his younger, was later murdered and his body discovered in
Mohawk Park. The murder was never solved, as well as most gay murders in our city as I recall.
) M.C. was a promoter, he contracted sponsorship by major brand names such as Phillip Morris
and Halston and achieved an estimated attendance of over 2000, and that's not including the
number of baptist protesters outside the hotel. The Camelot was sold out for this event for one
of the few times in it's history, it was said, and was never the same afterwards. The entire event
was, to say the least, amazing... especially for it's time in history. We could talk about it for hours
over cocktails sometime.
The Milwaukee Tavern, a 40s and 50s lesbian bar located at about 15th and Cincinnati; Bishops
Bar, 40s and 50s located downtown with a mixed crowd, but a popular gay hangout; The St.
Moritz 40's and 50s located on South Main which was THE place to go and was closed down
after a move, in anticipation of Liquor by the Drink... which didn't pass. Little Mexico, late 50s,
owned by Thurman Glynn. The Doghouse, owned by Bob Johnson. The famous Skoo-Bee-Do
Club owned by Paul Scott who, rumor has it, met with a curious and untimely death in Hawaii.
Then there were the clubs I have personal memories of. At 20 years old I actually had no idea
there were nightspots that were frequented by crowds of gays. I actually thought that there
might be at least ten other gay people in the whole State of Oklahoma. That was, until I
ventured into Friends Lounge at 3rd and Utica, owned by Tracy McLaughlin, aka Tony. Tracy
has always been somewhat of my mentor as far as the club business. He ran a tight ship and a
good bar. He worked hard and loved giving the kids a safe place off the streets. Friends Lounge
was famous for it's Friday night drag shows and was a coming out place for hundreds over the
years. Unfortunately, much of the potential profits went for court costs and attorney fees over
time. Frequent police raids and obvious, blatant incidents of harassment were much too

�frequent and it was my first personal experience of bigotry, political and social intolerance. I was
amazed to realize that at the same time I had discovered a multitude of others of the same
sexual orientation, I was also unknowingly transcending from a safe, accepted majority into that
of an often misunderstood and shunned minority. The battle, for me, had begun.
Tracy did a lot toward gay acceptance in Tulsa and for Oklahoma. Most of which today's
generation will never realize. But Tracy never wanted the spot light, he only wanted to be left
alone and given an opportunity to make a living and provide a place for gay people to go. Equal
treatment to straight bars. I will never forget, with amusement, one time when Tracy was to
appear in court on a trumped up charge of some kind, I asked him if he had a good attorney and
he told me he didn't need one. When I asked why not, he told me to show up in court and see
for myself. Tracy showed up in court with five stunning, outlandish, drag queens and the case
was thrown out before they had a chance to parade to the witness stand. The Judge didn't want
his court room turned into a circus, although the police had already taken the first step towards
that end. Friends lounge would later move West down third street to be called Tracy's, then The
New Edition and later sold to Jimmy and Roy and became the new location for the Tool Box,
which moved from downtown where Renegades is still located.
Around the same era, things were hopping downtown. (The Fruit Loop as it was called.) Friends
Lounge was less than 5 minutes from the famous pink pool table in the Zebra Lounge on Main
Street, owned by Tom Oliver, which was just around the corner from the Taj Mahal, owned by
Norma Peterson and later purchased by the late Pete Longenbaugh and Robert Kowalski (aka
Sugar). Sugar was the victim of a brutal knifing inside the Taj Mahal after hours....also unsolved.
The Fruit Loop was notorious for hustlers and parking lot parties for 'after clubbers' and those
too young to make it past the I.D. check at the clubs. The police seemed to just allow it for a
period of time then would randomly decide to clamp down... but the revelers would return and
the cycle would continue.
About the only dance club, The Gala at 11th and Lewis, (Just under the Meadow Gold Milk
Sign), eventually to be re-opened as Tim's Playroom Club, (Yours Truely) had been closed for
about 5 years, and that left Mary and Jody's The Club" on Memorial which had a very strict door
policy and was a good distance from the downtown action. "The Club" was probably one of the
most versatile gay/lesbian mixes next to the Gala of all times. We all partied together, both
inside and out.
I saw the vacancy for a dance club and had the itch to get into the gay club business myself. I
eventually met a new acquaintance who's uncle (uh huh) purchased a huge brick 13,500 sq. ft.
masonry building at 911 S. Main, which was very close to the action and would fill the void in the
club scene. With a lot of ambition, sweat, learning experiences and a little borrowed money,
Tulsa's grandest, most beautiful Art Deco Disco to date (one of the first) opened with a frenzy.
I'm thinking that it was about 1974. Bright red walls and bar lined with metal flake padding,
mirrors out the ying yang and a beautiful Art Deco stage with Silver Lamé curtains, The Queen
of Hearts Club and Cafe would be short lived, but it introduced Tulsa to a new era of national
advertising, dance clubs with professional sound and light shows, DJ's, pageants, national
entertainers like the Laughing Kahunas from Hawaii and Sami Joe Cole known for her hits, "Tell
me a Lie" and "It Could Have Been Me", and brought hundreds more out of the closet in Tulsa
and OKC. It also began to draw more attention from the city fathers which meant more media
coverage, more cops....more lawyers.

�After the Queen of Hearts closed, it became New York, New York for a while and then was
purchased by Evelyn White who named it The Fountain of Youth, then The 911 Club, then
Papillon. After Evelyn sold it to Bill Oliver, who closed the Zebra after some 20 years, it became
Caruso's. People loved the club, as did I, and didn't want to let it go. Carusso's was later
demolished for parking space along with Mary's, our favorite wino bar which was snuggled
between Queen of Hearts and the Tiffany Club at 915 S. Main, owned by the late Jim Smith,
Robert Wilson and some other idiot. Anyway, at least my first 'dream club' became established
in the minds of many.
I then dabbled with Tim's Anything Goes Club, a plush conversation cocktail lounge at 58th and
Peoria in the rear of the center and gave it up as "too quiet" after a short time for the opportunity
to manage the New Plantation Club with some guys from Dallas, at 51st and Yale.
Eventually, through trial and error and with a tip from a well known and much appreciated Tulsa
Newspaper sports writer, I opened the type of bar that I was most comfortable in.(Trashy Classy,
as some called it, very much like Tramps is today!) He pointed me to a location that had been a
well known gay hang-out for close to twenty five years (Including the next seven) and had been
closed for the previous five years. Thus, becoming one of Tulsa's most controversial yet fun,
notorious and nationally known gay clubs ever, Tim's Playroom Club. Eventually we joined in
with the OHR Blueboys and helped gay softball achieve fame in Oklahoma. We had national
invitational tournaments in Tulsa as well as traveled to Houston, Dallas, Kansas City , OKC and
Wichita. It really helped put Tulsa on the gay map. We once played in one of the nations largest
invitational gay tournaments in Houston among a field of twenty two teams from places such as
New York, San Francisco, Atlanta and won the Most Spirited Team (Miss congeniality) award. I
still think it's because we had the best-looking team there and we made more friends in the
bars. Team Photo

Doubling in size in just a few years, The Playroom would offer a diverse crowd a variety of
entertainment and events. From a Cruise Bar at noon to a wild, thumping Dance bar at night
Tulsa got it's first feel of Cerwin Vega Earthquake speakers in a bar that pounded away at the
fifty year old brick walls causing them to crumble. It also got a close up look at dozens of Tulsa's
Police Officers who constantly toured with flashlights in their hands and disgust and smirks in
their faces. It was an ongoing battle. We had it set up so that whichever of the staff went to jail
for whatever trivial or trumped up reason, Team B would contact the attorney to bail out Team A
and reopen immediately. During the seven years of operation there were more than fifty arrests
of myself or staff members and resulted in NO CONVICTIONS. Imagine that. Eventually, with
the help of KOTV Channel Six who did a thirty minute segment on Tulsa gays, most of which
was filmed in my bar and called "Strangers In The Night" (of which they no longer recall or can
find a copy of in their archives), and aired it during prime time, a face to face discussion with
then Tulsa Police Chief Jack Purdy and a meeting with a nationally recognized attorney who
could not represent us because of conflicting interests, but made a strong recommendation to
the Police Department Internal Affairs that they cease the harassment and change their policy
and treatment toward gays or face another Stonewall or worse, a lawsuit.
Things got much better for a few years. Some policy changes were eventually made and the
attitudes seems to have improved somewhat over time. Although there were still questions,
such as the tragic and unbelievable unsolved multiple murder of manager Robert Kowalski (aka
Sugar)and another, which inadvertently closed the downtown version of the Taj Mahal. There

�were several other unsolved gay murders in Tulsa before and after that incident. (another story)
Pete tried moving the Taj to 11th &amp; Lewis behind the Playroom, in the old Zebra Club, but I don't
recall that it lasted too long.
It surprises most to hear that there were as many as thirteen active, open gay bars in Tulsa
during this time frame and most were successful. Great clubs with another complete history
behind them, such as Zippers at 33rd and Yale owned by the late John Willis and of course the
legendary Bamboo Lounge on Pine Street which has reopened a couple of times since the
infamous late Gene Curnigan.Tulsa Mining Company, Seekers Choice, Over the Rainbow and
Dante's, just to name a few, but none bring back the memories of the early days like the old
downtown scene as seen in many other larger cities.
Due to the eventual adoption of the much misunderstood at the time, and misconstrued by the
public, Liquor by the Drink, I realized that the end of the club business, as I knew it, had come.
Gone were the back-door bottle club days. The bulk of the profits would now be re-directed from
the owners and investors to the government coffuers, using a common method known as overtaxation and regulations.....or progress, as some would call it. But that is yet, another story all
together.

�</text>
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                  <text>[Collection] Oklahoma LGBT+ History</text>
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                  <text>&lt;strong&gt;Physical Media:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Digital Media:&lt;/strong&gt;</text>
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              <text>____________________________________________________________&#13;
Flash From The Past&#13;
by Tim Turner&#13;
And help from others...&#13;
When you look at some of the photos from the Playroom Club era, 1978 to 1986, it almost&#13;
seems as though everyone was happy and gay during that period in time. From what I&#13;
remember, we were. We worked hard and we played hard, like most Americans at that period in&#13;
history. The end of the Free Love Era certainly was not evident in the gay club scene in the late&#13;
70's. AIDS was pretty much unknown, at least in our part of the world, life was good...spirits&#13;
were high, there was uncharted territory.&#13;
Around 1970, I got to hear great stories of the first known gay bars in the Tulsa area. Tropical&#13;
Gardens, as far back as the Early 40s, operated by two sisters in an old filling station; The Blue&#13;
Note Lounge located on North Denver during the 40s and 50s; The Blue Haven opened&#13;
November, 1948 by the 'much loved' Producer, Activist and Entrepreneur, the late M.C. Parker.&#13;
M.C. Parker and Tim Warren would later cultivate and produce the largest, most spectacular&#13;
Oklahoma Gay Event in history, the Miss Gay Oklahoma Pageant at the Camelot Inn. (Tim&#13;
Warren, his life partner forty years his younger, was later murdered and his body discovered in&#13;
Mohawk Park. The murder was never solved, as well as most gay murders in our city as I recall.&#13;
) M.C. was a promoter, he contracted sponsorship by major brand names such as Phillip Morris&#13;
and Halston and achieved an estimated attendance of over 2000, and that's not including the&#13;
number of baptist protesters outside the hotel. The Camelot was sold out for this event for one&#13;
of the few times in it's history, it was said, and was never the same afterwards. The entire event&#13;
was, to say the least, amazing... especially for it's time in history. We could talk about it for hours&#13;
over cocktails sometime.&#13;
The Milwaukee Tavern, a 40s and 50s lesbian bar located at about 15th and Cincinnati; Bishops&#13;
Bar, 40s and 50s located downtown with a mixed crowd, but a popular gay hangout; The St.&#13;
Moritz 40's and 50s located on South Main which was THE place to go and was closed down&#13;
after a move, in anticipation of Liquor by the Drink... which didn't pass. Little Mexico, late 50s,&#13;
owned by Thurman Glynn. The Doghouse, owned by Bob Johnson. The famous Skoo-Bee-Do&#13;
Club owned by Paul Scott who, rumor has it, met with a curious and untimely death in Hawaii.&#13;
Then there were the clubs I have personal memories of. At 20 years old I actually had no idea&#13;
there were nightspots that were frequented by crowds of gays. I actually thought that there&#13;
might be at least ten other gay people in the whole State of Oklahoma. That was, until I&#13;
ventured into Friends Lounge at 3rd and Utica, owned by Tracy McLaughlin, aka Tony. Tracy&#13;
has always been somewhat of my mentor as far as the club business. He ran a tight ship and a&#13;
good bar. He worked hard and loved giving the kids a safe place off the streets. Friends Lounge&#13;
was famous for it's Friday night drag shows and was a coming out place for hundreds over the&#13;
years. Unfortunately, much of the potential profits went for court costs and attorney fees over&#13;
time. Frequent police raids and obvious, blatant incidents of harassment were much too&#13;
frequent and it was my first personal experience of bigotry, political and social intolerance. I was&#13;
amazed to realize that at the same time I had discovered a multitude of others of the same&#13;
sexual orientation, I was also unknowingly transcending from a safe, accepted majority into that&#13;
of an often misunderstood and shunned minority. The battle, for me, had begun.&#13;
Tracy did a lot toward gay acceptance in Tulsa and for Oklahoma. Most of which today's&#13;
generation will never realize. But Tracy never wanted the spot light, he only wanted to be left&#13;
alone and given an opportunity to make a living and provide a place for gay people to go. Equal&#13;
treatment to straight bars. I will never forget, with amusement, one time when Tracy was to&#13;
appear in court on a trumped up charge of some kind, I asked him if he had a good attorney and&#13;
he told me he didn't need one. When I asked why not, he told me to show up in court and see&#13;
for myself. Tracy showed up in court with five stunning, outlandish, drag queens and the case&#13;
was thrown out before they had a chance to parade to the witness stand. The Judge didn't want&#13;
his court room turned into a circus, although the police had already taken the first step towards&#13;
that end. Friends lounge would later move West down third street to be called Tracy's, then The&#13;
New Edition and later sold to Jimmy and Roy and became the new location for the Tool Box,&#13;
which moved from downtown where Renegades is still located.&#13;
Around the same era, things were hopping downtown. (The Fruit Loop as it was called.) Friends&#13;
Lounge was less than 5 minutes from the famous pink pool table in the Zebra Lounge on Main&#13;
Street, owned by Tom Oliver, which was just around the corner from the Taj Mahal, owned by&#13;
Norma Peterson and later purchased by the late Pete Longenbaugh and Robert Kowalski (aka&#13;
Sugar). Sugar was the victim of a brutal knifing inside the Taj Mahal after hours....also unsolved.&#13;
The Fruit Loop was notorious for hustlers and parking lot parties for 'after clubbers' and those&#13;
too young to make it past the I.D. check at the clubs. The police seemed to just allow it for a&#13;
period of time then would randomly decide to clamp down... but the revelers would return and&#13;
the cycle would continue.&#13;
About the only dance club, The Gala at 11th and Lewis, (Just under the Meadow Gold Milk&#13;
Sign), eventually to be re-opened as Tim's Playroom Club, (Yours Truely) had been closed for&#13;
about 5 years, and that left Mary and Jody's The Club" on Memorial which had a very strict door&#13;
policy and was a good distance from the downtown action. "The Club" was probably one of the&#13;
most versatile gay/lesbian mixes next to the Gala of all times. We all partied together, both&#13;
inside and out.&#13;
I saw the vacancy for a dance club and had the itch to get into the gay club business myself. I&#13;
eventually met a new acquaintance who's uncle (uh huh) purchased a huge brick 13,500 sq. ft.&#13;
masonry building at 911 S. Main, which was very close to the action and would fill the void in the&#13;
club scene. With a lot of ambition, sweat, learning experiences and a little borrowed money,&#13;
Tulsa's grandest, most beautiful Art Deco Disco to date (one of the first) opened with a frenzy.&#13;
I'm thinking that it was about 1974. Bright red walls and bar lined with metal flake padding,&#13;
mirrors out the ying yang and a beautiful Art Deco stage with Silver Lamé curtains, The Queen&#13;
of Hearts Club and Cafe would be short lived, but it introduced Tulsa to a new era of national&#13;
advertising, dance clubs with professional sound and light shows, DJ's, pageants, national&#13;
entertainers like the Laughing Kahunas from Hawaii and Sami Joe Cole known for her hits, "Tell&#13;
me a Lie" and "It Could Have Been Me", and brought hundreds more out of the closet in Tulsa&#13;
and OKC. It also began to draw more attention from the city fathers which meant more media&#13;
coverage, more cops....more lawyers.&#13;
After the Queen of Hearts closed, it became New York, New York for a while and then was&#13;
purchased by Evelyn White who named it The Fountain of Youth, then The 911 Club, then&#13;
Papillon. After Evelyn sold it to Bill Oliver, who closed the Zebra after some 20 years, it became&#13;
Caruso's. People loved the club, as did I, and didn't want to let it go. Carusso's was later&#13;
demolished for parking space along with Mary's, our favorite wino bar which was snuggled&#13;
between Queen of Hearts and the Tiffany Club at 915 S. Main, owned by the late Jim Smith,&#13;
Robert Wilson and some other idiot. Anyway, at least my first 'dream club' became established&#13;
in the minds of many.&#13;
I then dabbled with Tim's Anything Goes Club, a plush conversation cocktail lounge at 58th and&#13;
Peoria in the rear of the center and gave it up as "too quiet" after a short time for the opportunity&#13;
to manage the New Plantation Club with some guys from Dallas, at 51st and Yale.&#13;
Eventually, through trial and error and with a tip from a well known and much appreciated Tulsa&#13;
Newspaper sports writer, I opened the type of bar that I was most comfortable in.(Trashy Classy,&#13;
as some called it, very much like Tramps is today!) He pointed me to a location that had been a&#13;
well known gay hang-out for close to twenty five years (Including the next seven) and had been&#13;
closed for the previous five years. Thus, becoming one of Tulsa's most controversial yet fun,&#13;
notorious and nationally known gay clubs ever, Tim's Playroom Club. Eventually we joined in&#13;
with the OHR Blueboys and helped gay softball achieve fame in Oklahoma. We had national&#13;
invitational tournaments in Tulsa as well as traveled to Houston, Dallas, Kansas City , OKC and&#13;
Wichita. It really helped put Tulsa on the gay map. We once played in one of the nations largest&#13;
invitational gay tournaments in Houston among a field of twenty two teams from places such as&#13;
New York, San Francisco, Atlanta and won the Most Spirited Team (Miss congeniality) award. I&#13;
still think it's because we had the best-looking team there and we made more friends in the&#13;
bars. Team Photo&#13;
Doubling in size in just a few years, The Playroom would offer a diverse crowd a variety of&#13;
entertainment and events. From a Cruise Bar at noon to a wild, thumping Dance bar at night&#13;
Tulsa got it's first feel of Cerwin Vega Earthquake speakers in a bar that pounded away at the&#13;
fifty year old brick walls causing them to crumble. It also got a close up look at dozens of Tulsa's&#13;
Police Officers who constantly toured with flashlights in their hands and disgust and smirks in&#13;
their faces. It was an ongoing battle. We had it set up so that whichever of the staff went to jail&#13;
for whatever trivial or trumped up reason, Team B would contact the attorney to bail out Team A&#13;
and reopen immediately. During the seven years of operation there were more than fifty arrests&#13;
of myself or staff members and resulted in NO CONVICTIONS. Imagine that. Eventually, with&#13;
the help of KOTV Channel Six who did a thirty minute segment on Tulsa gays, most of which&#13;
was filmed in my bar and called "Strangers In The Night" (of which they no longer recall or can&#13;
find a copy of in their archives), and aired it during prime time, a face to face discussion with&#13;
then Tulsa Police Chief Jack Purdy and a meeting with a nationally recognized attorney who&#13;
could not represent us because of conflicting interests, but made a strong recommendation to&#13;
the Police Department Internal Affairs that they cease the harassment and change their policy&#13;
and treatment toward gays or face another Stonewall or worse, a lawsuit.&#13;
Things got much better for a few years. Some policy changes were eventually made and the&#13;
attitudes seems to have improved somewhat over time. Although there were still questions,&#13;
such as the tragic and unbelievable unsolved multiple murder of manager Robert Kowalski (aka&#13;
Sugar)and another, which inadvertently closed the downtown version of the Taj Mahal. There&#13;
were several other unsolved gay murders in Tulsa before and after that incident. (another story)&#13;
Pete tried moving the Taj to 11th &amp; Lewis behind the Playroom, in the old Zebra Club, but I don't&#13;
recall that it lasted too long.&#13;
It surprises most to hear that there were as many as thirteen active, open gay bars in Tulsa&#13;
during this time frame and most were successful. Great clubs with another complete history&#13;
behind them, such as Zippers at 33rd and Yale owned by the late John Willis and of course the&#13;
legendary Bamboo Lounge on Pine Street which has reopened a couple of times since the&#13;
infamous late Gene Curnigan.Tulsa Mining Company, Seekers Choice, Over the Rainbow and&#13;
Dante's, just to name a few, but none bring back the memories of the early days like the old&#13;
downtown scene as seen in many other larger cities.&#13;
Due to the eventual adoption of the much misunderstood at the time, and misconstrued by the&#13;
public, Liquor by the Drink, I realized that the end of the club business, as I knew it, had come.&#13;
Gone were the back-door bottle club days. The bulk of the profits would now be re-directed from&#13;
the owners and investors to the government coffuers, using a common method known as overtaxation&#13;
and regulations.....or progress, as some would call it. But that is yet, another story all&#13;
together.</text>
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                <text>[c. 1990] Tulsa Gay Bar History by Tim Turner</text>
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                <text>Tim Turner</text>
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