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MONTROSE VOICE
THENEWSPAPC.~C.FML.N RCSEC.(0111mu111t111J1 •· • ,~((0111pi:111izC FRIDAY February9, 1990CISSUE485
MONTROSE WEATHER FRIDAY NIGHT f-a1r and m11.:t _w 60 SATURDAY ihowera returning. tugh 75 tow 60 SUNDAY & MONDAY Fair and mild. high 70 kiw 50
Cabbies pay respects to slain colleague INSIDE
duntth;nklhm ... d.,,h ....... Backstage at the Tower Uy ~llHU COllEN l>AHBONNh
1'-f1mtro.1w \,/11n• f:d1lor
At uhnut !L)O u m. Morul11y. Ft•h. 11,
th1· rara h·ll tht· l'mtt:d Cah lu•ud
<1unnn:t t1l ii<I~ lrvmtctun ll wuti o
t·unout1 liJIC<:tud1·. o hneor75.$4.H.iur.i
t"llh•, moat n( tht·m Cmttd'a lumil
ar hlue, hut R h·w frclfn otht'!' t·ub
c >mJHm1cs- -'l'llow und l.ilwrt\·, 1111
ol tht>m bound 1n 10lemn p~1on
for tht- IO:OO u.m. \'1 tt-ran • Mt·mon,
funeral ol Hohnt I.. Fullilovt-.
fulhlun· a l·mlfd Cub llnvn
who took mol!it I his n1lla m lhl'
Montrose: attU, wd murdcrt"d on
,Jan ::JO m 1118 cab, >u1M1rl• un llpllrt·
nwnt complex m S.Juth-.ut HoU8·
lon. l.mit fhuraduy, h·h 1 1iv1• 1>u•
f)("ct8 dl'Sct1bt-d hy pulu: 11• lo\\ tr
Weath11mu Hlrt-et k1d11 wt•rt
hart(t'd 111 tbuhoolmg dt:·nth oflhl'
dnvc r. 11lle1tJ dl,y durmtc u plunnt"d
rohl>t y Dltt>mpi
Tht• t•ah dr1\'t r had p1dwd up tht'
f.;lUIJ~ .. ·t• at 11. n•taurant m IOIUO
block of B1&111nttl in for 11outhv.ei.t
Heou11tun ut ahout 1 1.'"1 p.m .. J>olict'
au id_ I It• drcovo'\ lht m lo tlw rumph•x,
m tht· 10400 hlm·k ol South I>ri\'l',
v.hton· hewll:Hhot m lhr li111·k oftht·
ht-lid h:. um· of the a>UsJJt.'<'lil at about
1'(:00 pm
Ht· v.ut talwn to Ht n Taub lfosp1
uet, where ht- du:·d Wt·dnndtty. Jan.
ll
The youth11. arn•tt>d Y...d1wsday
m ~1ontroae. att>r told pohct" tht·y
had planned the "Time, 1ndudang
Lat: nl( ''w 01b, rubbing the dri' er
Pnd 11huotmg him fht• rt"abted. Tht•
111ut1p.:- tsr11111:1dinUM1 fromJ.lto:ll
F11nnal prof'l'ssion for slai.11 cab drwn Hf}ht·rt Fu/111111~1m·tudcd iv 80 cah>i
Fullilo\'t-, [>6. wti one of •everal
United dri,·ers who re"jl'.ularh_.
workt.O Montro&e, the company;e
ongmal and l<iyal customer baee
Hanly IK't·n without hi~ trademark
row hoy hat, hew& a familiar foC't' to
maDy regulllr rider&. his rcllo\\
,\1ontroae-bruit-d cabbih said. The
nt·w• ul hw killing broke a fh·e yt-ar
lull in tuu·ks on t'ah drivers." ho ln
llou11ton Mt' entitled to n>fwie •t , ..
ice v.hen thl'y fet·l th11r aaft y 1s
thrl'atened, 1u11d l 'mkd <ah \1~
pret1uknt J-:lh11 llouati.•n , many
m4j(>r (•lti£'8, au<'h n·fu11al 11ndera1s
not an pl n. I louston aa1d
In "nOllt plm"t'B, the) I yank a
1cnb dn' t'1' •) hcen!u• 1f they tum
down u rider:' llouaoton tJ.&ld. ·H re I
hy whl•n tht·y <dr1ver11) do11°1 rduse
ilomt·onl•" h • h
Thm;•nohm;1onth•n"mlx"of C ar1ty S OW
ridl•riJ a cabbil• can takti on a trip.
llou1,1,ton said. Ac<:ordinl( to polit't'
rt•port,., the five young ridl'n in tht•
Jan. 30 incident all had an "mno
ct·nt;· non-thrt-att-ning appearant't'.
.. FulliloveJ had ~en with tht'
c:>mpany foralongtinw ~1ostol the
driven knew him. \\'hat happem-d
was a shock to all of us,' liuuaton
aa1d.
Attacks on dri' t•ni han• 00.·n un
ommon in How;tun a1m-e Jq&'J,
whtn • tht· lal>lt raah" of auch cnmt'9
had takf'n place hert'. Houaton said.
\tarcu11 Manut>I Trammf'll, 21 th
allE1{(-d gunman. was char~" th •
roptla! rnunlel'. r<<ma Mm u,. Preparing to market the
Pride Week T-shirts
19, who 1aon probatwn f(1rburwlilry ..
"ll8 charged with aggravated rob
l)('J'y. Hoth Wt'rf" held \\llhnut bond
Christophl'r Hradl<·y. IX. nlsu wus
c-harttt-d v.1th aggra\'att-d rohl)l'ty
and is ilf'ing hl'ld in lit·u of ~~J.000
bond
Twojuwnil('s. agt'd 14 and 16.art>
IJf.'ing held by Harris ( "ounty JU\"l•n
ilt• authoritiei;. The 16-vear-old. ar·
n·att.>d at CoHnant lfoU11t•. l{U\"t' JIOlin~
· the namt-:-; of two CJthl'r t1U8peci.8.
Bradlt·y and the c•tht•r ju\.·t-nile wt'rc•
SJ>l)tted C1n lower Wt11tht>1mer and ar·
rl'lltt.'d on the 11trt"('t. Trnmmt>ll and
Byus Wt>te pic·kt"<l up later at a rt11·
tauiant on Westht>imer.
"'hough a few l'mted dnHnJ
•IB)'l'<I on the 11treeta Monda.\ to lnck
up r de s. most parllcipa.tt"d 1n t.he
tunl' al proce8$i11n, Houston •aid
Man arrested in alleged computer-extortion Promise
seen using Dunntc an initial .:outt ppt·ar·
anct", .Joal'ph W Popn, J. a.old l' S
~1•JO•lrnleJ08C'ph W t1artunt>t thal
ht••• undtra pi!yc~mtnst • arf' and
'tt lrul{a for u mt·nta\ c -:id1
t1on
Har~nek 1a1d he would sc1edulc·
~i.nother "Ourt hearing nfitr Popp l1I
evuluatcd by twOJl!IYC'hiatr1ats to Sf(•
v•hether ht· l8 com1iett>nl to face Mt·
tradition procN.·thnga .-\ hear "
d11te "as not M"f. and Popp wiu
dt'red to remain tn thf' Hed!
lfe1ahta 1ail in aul>urban ( lt'-Vl'1
un•rnut>d pall
Cleaning up Montrose: Crime fighting or class wars?
l!) SHFHI ("Ollt-:N UAHBO:'\j~t\
f1mtl'VM' \u Ce F.dltur
In a wt•utht n-d, half.vunmlupart
ment compll·x in un older n11idt·n
tiaJ nt'11othborh1MMI of Montrose, a
po\'erty-h•\tl tt>nunt dt'C1d,•s hes
had Pnough wh1•11he18 aw11kt·1H.'<I
by a mouse cr,twling unoss hts
lon·ht-rad. Although ht• has no
when· t'l!lt' to go, l!I hnng 'tl.t'f'k-hy·
week and u1 curing f'or a mt•nlall)
rt•tardt>d penion m his honw, ht>
rnllws h18 IH 1.:hhors to dt·mand a
mt"Ctintc with tht· lundlords. I It· also
c.·nl\s thec1ty h<'nlth dt·1mr1 mt·nl
and the nt•ighhorho(ld nt·w~pu1wr.
Tlw t·omph•x 11 younfr.( mand•Jr.(t'r
m·rvou1dy trn'8 tu plaC'ah' tlw l'otn
plaininfr.( tt·nurHK. llt· trit•s to t·x
plain that hoth lwJmd tht·owm·rs
huvt• rt'pt>att•dly nalh·d tht• wa.-tt•
c.·mnpnny to t·mpty lhl' dump~h'r
that ha11 sut full !}('hind tlw moin
buildinfr.( f'inn• l'l'ovemher. llt• tt·ll~
thc.·m thry will )Ct'\ rut poi11on for
tht· rrnlt·nt~. and that tht ir hot wo
tt•r \\ hil·h most hun• had to do
without 11im·1• tlw ( 'hristma11 holl
day frt't'1.t'--V. ill anon !)(' n•titon-d.
I It tt·ils the n~·v. f'P 1p1·r n·portt·r
th.at m08t ol hts ll·nants {'1111·1 nt
ford tn l(H nnywhnt• t'INt'. thut tht·y
are cit-an workinl(' proplt• end not
nm1in;1ls, 11nd 1hut 1ftht· <:om))h·x
Wt•rt· to dost• it "ould bt•one murt•
VRl'Unl buildmtc likt• tht> n1wk
how;1· ' Ul"TINJll th(' llln't•l.
,\ fry, hlo('kit 8WO\, o !\tontro~t·
nt.>ighhorhood tll't1vial l(tllht·n!I n'"
ports fn1m f't·vt•rul nrt•a t·1vic t·luhit
to whit·h 11lw lwlonto:s. Tht• lt·ndnM
of tht'fl<' duhs, 11ht• llllYM, art· "juMt
ordinary 1woplt•· who f{nt led up
with ninu-!-!JWdticolly, drug
deulinl{ nnd prmclitution- in thl'ir
own bn('k ynrdM, Sht• 11oyM
MontroH' hmnc.•ownt•rM und tht• po·
lit·e who ))Utrol this d11ttri('\ hon•
known for u long timt• thot 1·rimi
nals opN1ly ply th('ir trndl' "out uf
1wme of tht•flt' 8t-t•dy npc1rtnwntt1'.'
They mt't·t tht•ir •·1rit·k11" or dope
l'UKtomrrl't on the t1lrt'l'I m front of
privlllt• homt'8, or in pt'Oph."s
yards. Often. ahl' say1, tht·y don't
evt-n hotht·r to go ba1·k tothea))ttrt·
ment to compleh• tht." dl'ol. She
wan ta tht• c.·ornplext~ dt•nnt-d upt•r
{'(•mft•mnNi
A l11ndlord who ownl< se\"eral of
tht·st• oldt.>r Montro:>e proper-ti~.
11om1· of \\ hich 1<1he admits how
t:rimt• prubl('ms or code violation~.
.-ay11 tht· C'i\ it· grouJ):!-1 aren"t beintc
t•ntirely fair. ~he insists that a;.he
il'I domg eHrything in hc.·r power
to kt't'P tht• C'riminals out. in t1pitt•
of poor hl"alth and luckoftundsto
invt'f't in ht>t properties. ~he sayH
f'ht· is tryinl( to work with the
Jwighborhood group-. and the polin•
to get rid of the problem, but it
i~n·t easy·. Hoth she and ht·r part
nt·r t1ay tht•y art' wt•ll·intentioned
hut1int•ss people who gotcuught in
llouston"i-. l'<'Onomic downturn
und have not yet been ablt' to rt•·
('O\'(•)"_
Although C'veryont involH'<i
t1ays tlwy know there is o probll
·m, tht•y disa(.::rl'e on how to j(O
ahout solving it. They also difkr
in thl·ir nM;t•ssml·nt of who the re·
ul vit·tims an·. and why
.Jumt'll Kozowyk, a residt'nt of
l.Bto; 8.l1.."l11.- Apartments at 416
Fain·it·Y., •nid ht' ha~ complained
n·1watt-dly to tht' manaj(t•rs and
ownns of hi:-; C'Omph·x about
unsanitary ronditions He said
that althlmgh he lik('l< his apart·
mt·nt and thinks the romplt>x
'could be fixed up easily;' certain
problem!! \\ t're bt."C'oming impo.-.;si·
hie to livt• with. Tht.> apartment~·
rodt•nt problem had bf..,_·n getting
nut of hnnd, and the only garbage
dumpi.h•r had not lx't'n empti<'d
Minn· h1•fure Thanksgiving. ht'
Maid Atlt'r the holidays, extrC'mely
low wotC'r pn-s:-;ure and no hot
wntN in must apartmt·nU! waM
addt'd to the li!-itoftenunt wot'8, llM
the))("('. :n hard fret·ze left M'veral
brnken wnl<'r pipes on th(• proper
ty. On Jan. 9, Kozowyk 8aid he got
tilt' Inst straw
'I woke up this morning and
thiR mou1w wa:-; on my head!" tw
tmid, ''Pt•ople Nhouldn't ha\"e to
Ii\'(" likt· thi11:·
Kuzowyk and other L;.1111 ROHaM
ret1idt•ntA pointed out other mice.
livt> end dead, in Kozowyk's tidy
ont>-bedruom unit. One l('nant
smd •ht- had found a nt'*t of baby
mit't' m a dr('88er drawer.
Kozowyk !'Rid he knew when hf"
nll1·d lht" h1·alth dt•purlmt·nt and Rhonda did move out to live with
city hou.-mi: d1·1111rtmt·nt thut un ht·r motht>r. She said it wuta pnrtb
inn•Nlitu•tion ("C1uld rt'"Ult in the ht."C'aUH' ol the boy'M health tiroh·
upltrlm(•ntM ht•ml( ahu1 down, and lt·mM llnd partly lx><.·ause 1-)f l'ondi
nll of tht• h'lllllltA lwing 1111kt·d to tions at 1he romplexl.
Jenn. ··1 n-ally don"t t·urt· nt thii. Stuart Chapl•l, the on·sitt• mun
point:' lw t1md . "I wus told (!ht• ('it· a)Cer ofthecomplt·x,chor ucterizt•d
y) would lwlp UH findtmnw plut·t•to Kowwyk as a "whinC't" who woM
l(o .. Tm not 11un• wht•n• I IH"nrd nevtr satisfied
thut But no mntlt·r what hoppt·~s, "Some of the l)('()ple ht·re on• no·
I won't mun• into nnotlwr platt• torious whinNs and nier!I. Jumt'8
hkt· thi11 1101•.' iN one of the wor11o1." ('hn1wl Mu id
Hhnndn. nnotlwr rt·sidt·nt of tlw Althoul(h ht' dot'S not rt"<'t·in• n11nl
t•omplt·x, aa1d •he ""15 nlau pre- ory for hit1 dutit'S us mnnn""n.
pun-d to lt·nH• Tht• motht'r of " Chapt·I .said ht• is tcrntl'ful to ht11
new bnhy nnd a hand1t·np1>ed two- .. t•mpluyers, who KU\'f' htm a rt-nt·
year-old aon, ahe amd 11he YOll8 frt't'apartmentondhelptdh1m1tl'l
nlruid of tht• g('rms c1.trrit'd b~ the on his h'f't.
m1t·e and tht· dirty dumpstpt. IOn ''lt'anotpertert., no, butit'sreul,
Jan . 1 S,alttrht•nonwn1ho11p1tal- ly not that bad. lt'a bt-tter thlln
izt'CI for rfl.p1rutorv probl(•mM, what I had ... l>ettt>r then whnt I
would havt· It" ht'ltt"" than nnth·
ing.
All ol tht'lie snmt• pe-11plt• who
art' doinR lht• whwint.c ... mmt of
tht·m v.111 eay tht·y cim t lo{O nny
where t'lse, th(•y cnn'I. uftnrd iL A~
far u111 the ))tobltms, \\r're trying
to tct t them tokt•n con· of I· ,.e
hl't'n .>n the phone('\ try day with
tht• dumpshor pt>oplt' the o"'nt•N
Just changt>d dumpster rompa·
ra1cs, und v.t•.\"t• hct•n hnvmg o lot
of trouble \\Ith t' ('hnJ>f!. said.
Wt• put uul poumn for the mlt'('
qnd w1· 1· lo(omi: to get some rnon·
Pt•o11h· julll 1wed to ht> pat t"nt," ht•
smd
H.t•to:urdint.r n1min11I tu·tl\·ity,
(. 'hn1wl dmms I.us H1,sa11 dot·~n't
han• n prohlt·m '"I thmk moat of
tht·m IC'nrninulM) moHd down tht•
rund," lw 11oid 'I try to ht• n•all:o.
pit·ky ahoul who I to:t•I in ht•n-.
l'ow iu·ross tht· titn·H !in a \;:H·ant
huildinj.Cl tlwy )CO in and out."
·Wt• Utlt'd If• IHl\'t• soml' ot tht·
111n·et huP1tl('re Ji, tnJ: h('tt"' Wt•
don ·t 1111ymure; ( 'hllpl'I said
But LI ~ou thil1k nhout it, t-\'f'n
t•h.t.• y ha\·t' lo hllH' 11omt•whnt• to
Uut, wh1lt• t•iting mone} as l
rt·asonwhymun~ nr-ardo\\nto\\n
aportnwnt d'tl.ellers will lin wnh
"l1!88 thnn perrt-ct' cond1; on:t
( 'h11pel admit.e the rents al hl!uwn
t'Omtih·x aren "t d1r1 chenp.
~\ on~· bedroom W:(•l'8 for ~-;o .a
wt-ek. nn un•ru)(t· monthly rpnt of
~U.> lor nn 11purtmt•nt without nir
<"Cmd1t1011111.r. Tl·nunta nlMn t;upply
lht•ir own h1•1.1tm"' units. ( 'omparn·
hly pnn·d n•n111I propntit'8, and
mnny luwt·r prin•d ii tht• tl'IHlllllol
pay tlu·ir own u111iti1-s, art• ovoila
hit• m or rwnr MontroNt'.
'But wt• dun '1 ask ton many
quu1ti11ns, ('hupt.•l 11nid. l'ros)lt'l'
t1n· tt·1umt:t fill out on applit-ntion
form. hut art" nut suhJN'h'd to
lt•nl(thy 1·n·dit c·ht•fk11 nnd otht rt'"
quin·mt'nts. 'A lot of pffiph., for
110mt·retuw11 or11tht·r. d11n't wunl to
un11'tl.l'r u wholt• lot of qul'!ltiCtns or
1111 out fi\-·e pn6(1'8ol lonn•. So>mt>ol
tht·m would he turnt'ddC>wn tK>me
whert• 1·l11t• It dot>tm 't mean tht'\"r<'
bad pt'Coplt., ht· aaid. ~
( ontmued page 3
malaria
drug on
pneumonia
B.l WOODY BAIRU
MEMPHIS. Tenn (Al')-Tests >n
laboratot) rats md1catt' tha1 a
drug dt:nJopt"d in fo,ngJand to com
bat malaria may cure a fonn of
pneumonia that
0
k1Us man\· ,\IJlS
SUfft'renJ, soy lctenUsl8 at sl Jude
Children's Rt-search HQt;pitak.
If you could pn-nnt lhts pnt·u·
munia m AID~ patients. 1t 'tl.ould
probably incnase thttr hfof!pans
by aJmost doublt.; said Wahtr
Hu1o1:ht•i-.. a ph)"Slc1.an v. ho dirt-eta
tht• hoi-.pital"8 ft'f;t•1u·ch on All JS.
or al·quired immune dPllrit·nc-y
syndromt•.
The lt"!lting with rull-; mdinltt"8
the.• drui.: holh pn•q·nts ttnd l"UreB
Pn('umo<.·y:-;tis pnt•umonia und St
Jude re~t·11rt·hN~ nrt• m tht• lirMt
phu:-;e of trying it on humon hi'
ingh. I I ught·s lolaid.
'Tht> animal t1tudu•a t1hm'" thut
this drug kilh1 Ith<' J>nt·umuniu)
nnd then::-; het·n no toxit·1ty O!IN(~
c ntt.-d with it; ht·amd Wt"<in.t'ldlly,
,Jan. JI
A rt'port m the rt'Benrch "111 be
published 111 th1· Fehruorv iSllUt> uf
Antimicrobial Agton.ts and
l'ht motht·rapy. a puhhcnt1on of
thto AmnicaQ Socu•ty o(
Mu·robiology
'Wl''re talkinK pun·ly of a111mal
a;.tudit·s, but the animal model Wit-d
to 81Ud~- dtUK8 or Pnt"Umocy1tiH
pnt>umonia have al\\R\'I!; ht-.en rf'"
markably pn-dicti\·t• of .thl' human
di.-eust·;' H UK hes Mid
He snid hilt .-tall hPs llt"C·n 11tudv·
mg th(' nt•w muluriu drug, kno......:n
as hydroxynaphth0<1umont• or
f>(*iCHO, for about o YNlr and n
half. The drug wu8 synthl'Hizt'<I by
\\.'elkome Rt·seorch l.ahorutorit•ll
of England. and St. ,Judt• said illl
studies have bN.·n suppurtt>d by
oth(•r lt'sts tht·re.
If the humnn tt>t1t11 with .}bl)('h()
are 8Uct't>Ssful. the- drug ('uuld he
available for g1·nt'fttl Ull(' hy AIDS
~ufferns in 8 year or two, llu)Ch"9
1'aid
Two common drUt(I uAed now for
cancer pet1ent1 with
Pneumocyli!is pneumonia are on·
ly moderatdy efft.'('llve with AIDS
~uffert. he eaid
Man
arrested Judge finds N.J. borough violated patient's privacy
in
computer
extortion
Case
from page l
Popp, of Willowick, about IO milea
etuJt of Cleveland, was arrested
Thursday, Ft>b. I
Popp'• attorney, John P. Kilroy of
Euclid, Oh1u. had aeked that Popp
ht kept in a h0t>pital becaube of his
m.:ntal cond1t1on, rather than be
held J&il
'Ht•• an internationally respect
td researcher:· Kilroy said. "I don't
think ht''d poi.t_• any nok to flee:·
Kilroy ba1d Popp is an anthropologist
and until Uecember had a con
truct with tht· Geneva·based World
Health Organization, working
somcllm<·H in England but mainly in
Geneva and Africa
By MELANIE BURNEY
fOfl THI ~Ol'llTf.< - >E VC
CAMDEN, N.J. CAP>-A fodernl
Judgt''B ruling that holds amuni<:i
pahty re1:1pon~ible because a poli<:e
offic<'r disclosed that a rt.'ti1dent
had AIDS <:ould have far-reaching
impact on confidentiality t·~
around tht' country, some obsl'rv·
t'r• say
U.S. Di1:1trict Judge Stanley S
Brotman ruled that. the Borough of
Runnemt•d<' and one of its offi<:ers
are liable for damages for di11d08·
ing to a r<'isident that her nt·ighbor
had acquired immune deficil'n<·}·
syndrome
.. This cai1e would conform and
expand where I think the law ia
ht'ading-that ii; a duty to main·
tain confidentiality and that it can
only be bn·ached where then•'a a
clear and present danger to a third
party;· said Larry Gostin, ext"<.:u
t1ve dir(>Ctor of the American Soci
ety of Low and Medicine.
'l'hl' rulinK marks the fin;t dl'c:i
sion addressing the need for pa
t1ent t·onfidentiality outsidt• an in·
Mtitution und establishNI th<• pri·
vm·y rights of not only tht> Al DS
victim, but ah10 tht'ir fomiliea,
Hid Tht'Odore M. Lieverman. tht•
plumtiff11 attorney.
.. The panic sparked by AIDS
wa111 widt"h· known ' Brotman
wrok in ~ 36-page opinion Ht'
11a1d in his ruling Monday, Jan. :l9.
thot it 1s "obvious" polil'l' nt't.·d
training to understand about tht•
confidt•ntiality of AIDS vic:timH.
An t'arlier settlement among
otht·r partied in the Mame CBM'
call11 for the borough of Barring
ton to implt-ment by Feb. 2'2 on
AIDS confidt'ntiality polic:y. It
muHt alHo pro\'ide training for iLN
polict·, medical and emergency
ix·nionnel on the transmission of
AIDS and how to protect them·
selves and private citizen11,
Lit•\-'(•rman said
The judge said that lx"<'DUMe
such a policy was not. in place in
Runn(•m(•de, the borough is Habit•
for dumagt·s. A jury will dt•ter·
mint• later the amount. of damages
thl' municipality will ht> aKf!l•1111<·d
and wht•ther another df'fendunt m
tht' ca11e 11hould be held liablt"
GoMlln isaid some ca11t11 han
bt't•n filed around the country
<:harging police departmt-nU with
brt>a<.·hing the privacy of AIJ)S pa·
tit-nts. He said Brotman'srulingis
belil·Vt·d to be the firat of it"' kind
involving a municipality.
"It 11eems to me that a c:nMe like
this when• there'& liability should
wnkt• municipalitieH up;' said
Gostin. an asi;oc-iate profo~umr at
Harvard's School of Public
Ht>alth
In l't>w Jen;ey, public schools
are required by law to have AIDS
polic:ie:., but local police d("part·
ments and municipalitie11 are ex·
('mpt from that requirtmt·nt
The ruling i;tem11 from a 1988
civil complaint filed on l.x•half of
thl' wife of an AIDS patient and
th(•ir four children. The family
was humiliated and ostrnciZ£·d in
iu1 rommunity after the husband's
condition was disc108ed by a bor·
ough police officer, the suit
charged
The woman's husband had tee·
ted positive for the HIV \-·iru11, ac-cording
to Llevennan. He died in
Stpt. 1988, said the attorney, who
did not know the cauMe of the
man's death
The plaintifrs husband told
Barrington police in Morch 19H7
he was infected with the AIDS vi·
rus. He had been arrested on an
outstanding fugitive warrant. The
warrant was dropped and the hu~
band was released
Later that same day, the man'11
wife was im·olved in a car acci·
dent as she left her Runnemedt>
home, according to the complaint
When Barrington Detective
George Preen and Runnem(·de Pa·
trolman Russell Smith arrived nt
the scene, Smith a1legedly told the
woman's neighbor that the worn·
an's husband had AIDS, the suit
contended.
The neighbor, Rita OiAngelo, nl
so named in thl' tompluint, waK an
t-mployee of tht• lol·ul ff<'hool dis·
trict. Ms. DiAnKt·lo diHdim•d the
information totht>port:ntaofothl'r
~chool children and allt·Kt>dly told
thl'm that thl• woman·• childrt-n
also had AIDS, tht' auit alh·gt"ll
"There WM no informnlion,
medical or otht·rw111t" to 11uggebt
that (the c-hildn·n) ha\"(• AIDS or
are infected with tht• Al l>S virus;·
the suit said.
Attornevti invoh·~·d in tht• case
declint'd ~omnu-nt 'l\Jt.'11duy, Jan
30.
The llorough of Barrington and
its polit1-' c-hii'f. Thoma11 Page,
were namf'd in tht· original tiuit
Brotman appro\·KI out-of-court
isettlements with buth ltltit month.
There'i; no qul'Stion that ronfi·
dentiahty, edunuiun and non-coercive
outn·ach are tht· kt'YK to
curbing the AIDS t'pidt·mic 11hort
of some typt• of t·ure;' 11aid l':rnn
Wolfson, an attorm•y with the r-.:ew
York-based Lumhda IA.·Kul De·
fen1:;e and l':ducotion Jo'und, a no·
tionol AIU~ ad\'OCllO-' KWUp
Gary U. Arbt-mik, assistant U.S
attorney •n Clt'\-eland. said an arrett
,.,arrant wa• 1:-:rned in London on
Jan. I~ c·ontf'nding Popp mailed
about 20,000diskettei. from that city
ahout Dec. 11
The U.S. attorney's office in <.:le\'eland
!!>aid the di111kHtcs had informa
lion on acquirf'd immune deficiency
1yndrome for hotipitnls, rebearchers
and l(OVt·rnment agencies
Lesbian-Gay Pride Week co-chairperson resigns post
At the timt• the diskette began
cauiJmf( problems in early December,
authorities in London said it had
het·n nce1ved by users in Norway,
Sweden, Belgium. Denmark and
California as well as Britain.
Scotland Yard said at least IO
Brititih computers ...,ere affected
Later in the mCJnth, a company in
Bahrain, in the Middle East. also reported
getting one of the disks but
said it waa discovered before it did
any damage
Tho.e who used the AIDS infor·
mation program later found that
their hard-disk data were destroyed.
By SH EHi COHE!\ DARBO!\!\E
Montro...· \.imT f:ditor
Ken Wilson, the male co-chair of
l...esbian, Gay Pride \\'E'(>k 1900,
beeame the 8econd co-chair o.· thl'
event to resign. He did iso Wedncs·
day, Jen. 31. Jo~emale co-chair Vt ..
roni<.·n Diai' read Wilson ·s Jetter of
resignation at the planning bod·
y's January meeting and 1'&id
that ~If.nominations would ht.>
accepted and a co-chair elected at
the next mt"eting tFeb. 2h1.
In the INter. \\-.ilson btaled that
a Nituation roncerning his immt ..
diate family hod arisen, requiring
his full attention. Becau!<(" of thl•
responsibility involved in chair·
ing the pride week event. Wilson
said he preferred to resign 80
someone else could devote hiH full
efforts to the project. .. I feel I must
now dedicate my time and energy
in a different direction:· Wi180n
ta id
Arbeznik said the diakette pack·
•ties included a message warning
tb:at if the diskette were inserted into
a computer. a leasing fee would be
clw,rged. Diaz said delayingtheselect1on
1~}t.!:e':!e~ ':~ -~~ecl~::~aS:::• of a replacement until the nut
K1iroy aaid;n a telephone interview ~~~';! ~-~~1~0~'";;~~~mmuni·
aher Popp'• court appearance. "The Marion Coleman, originally
!~c:~•,:~:li~h:;uh:: .. actions were not electt'd ft.male <.'O-cha1r of thi21
At the end of the program, the };;~~8 w::~!~tede~!~h!ir e:~'~h~
di1kette asked the computer userfor Nov 30 meeting
:Jc:~1r:.. .i :;f;h~0!3i:~~!napCi~;: D~ring the mee~ing, Diaz an·
P•nama, address of a company nounced that the pnde week ex<"<:uc-.
lled. PC CYBORG. saying that tlVe .comromee had developed a
wa.s where the money should besent. mission statement and _.. master
federal prwecutont said. action plan" for Lesbian Gay
\.!pon payment of the money, the Pride Wttk. 1990 at a two day
rit1p1ent wuuld receive a "decon· "team buildmg workshop" m Gal·
tamination di.;k"' that would stop veston. The plan. a time table giv·
the computer \-·irus, authoriliM said. ing deadlinea for completing plan·
Plannn• t'Olrd llJ ~I/ow m11wr adap/a/,t)n of Le11hlan Ga.>· PNdt" nt,.,+ lot/O
for 1 11Jhirt marketing purp<nt•s
ning of various details of the
t'Vt'nt, was on display in front of
the room.
Tht> mi11sion statement dedares
that .. Houston Lesbian Gay
Pride Week '90 is a non.profit
5011C)3 organization wh~e pur·
post> is to promote and coordinate
eveni.i:; whichcelebratethediventi·
ty. unity and history of tht- lt>Rbian
and gay community, in ordt>r to
cn•atea path towards a positive fu.
ture for all humanity, including
people of color. women. the physi·
cally challenged and our child·
ren:'
In other action, a set ofproi><»ed
rules and guidelinee for the 1990
1..eebian Gay Pride Parade was
BC<'epted by the group. Mi Ming
from the draft of this year's rules.
prepared by parade co-chair&
Debbie Holmes and "Lady Victoria
Lust;' was the controvt·rsial
language regarding the "image"
and dress code of the pride parade
included in the 1989 rules. Last
year's rules called cross·dressing
by men with facial hair "demean·
ing;· discouraged "negative" J»
litical displays and encouraged
participants to promote a "potii·
tive and favorable image." Some
people had complained when that
document. was accepted that the
guidelines violated their right to
freedom of expression
The rules approved this year al·
so emphasize the importance of a
positive image, but the dress code
is less restrictive, barring only
clothing that might be deeml-d in
violation of state obscenity stat·
utes and city ordinancee. The references
to cross-dressing with fa·
cial hair were removed completely
from the code.
A ban on roller skates, skate
boards and bicycles in the parade
waA included this year for insur·
anctt and safety r~ason•.
A minor flap arOtle over procedural
technicahtiee regarding tht'
development. of merchandise fea·
turing the pride week logo. Mar·
keting committee representatives
Claire Koepsel and Leslie Perez
displayed a sample tank top and
T-shirt with the IOKO in two color
combinations.
Jim Vilven, co-chair of the public
relations graphics committee,
said there had been some problems
with reproduction of the art·
work for mt'n·hand f", pnrti<-ular
ly when th(> logo Y.Usrt•dU("l•d. The
print al tht• bottc1m of lht· lof{O
(which reads ''Houston (..(·sbiun
Gay Pride Wt'<'k IH9(J") t·onnot. be
read when the logo is reduced, he
said.
But Bar Wil~on l'taid tht> plan·
ning body had voted at the !\ov. JO
meeting that tht• executive t'Om·
mittee would nnt he alfowt-d to
change tht• logo, and had al&0 vot·
ed toaccr•pt the colnr8 in oneofthe
artist'i; rendt·ringK t1hown at the
l'o\'ember met:ting us the official
logo color:.
Further. Wilson not('d thot thoa;e
votes were not mdudt-d in the copy
of theminuU•i:> ol'tht• f'ov. :lO meet·
ing, which were nt·ct·pt('d by the
planning body ot its met'ling on
Dec. 27.
Members vott"d fiflit ton·vi8E'the
mi nut~ of the ~o\-·t·mber met'ting,
then to allo"" the cummitt('(> to
adapt the lol('.o to rt'BOl\"t' tht• rt'production
prohll'ms for markt'ting
PUrpo8f's
The tank tC>p and T-shirt Y.(•rc
later auctiont-d off w n Mymbolic
"fir&t&aleofufflcitilmcrrhtmd111tt."
Jac"k Vahn.,,\n tt\1ort..ed on th~
publications ('omm1ttt't•'t1 Jlhms for
the 1990 lt•sbiun-KRY pridt· week
guide, which will change to a mag·
azine format thii-; year CM l 2 by 11
inchesl. The committ('(' hupeai to
distribute at lt>wit 20,000 copies
and mail out about 10,000.
Vatin?->ki said.
The next g.-nera1 bueinese meet
ing will be held at 7:30 p.m. on
Wedna.day. Feb. 21' at Oignity
Center. 'J217 Fannin.
The art of change in Montrose: 'Fe Fi Faux' The
Ay JEl>'F BRAY
fhf' Muntro•t· \.'oi«
4amee Bo.well. owner of Fe Fi Faux
tpron_ounced Fee Fye Foe). preseni.
a 11tnking figure in Montroee. H11
itrawberry blonde hair haa the fly
•way ttxture or straw, combining
•••ith the well trimmed beard to
inake him look like a nineteenth
~ntury tcholar-one of Freud's col·
kagu<'li. perhapK
Instead, James is a child of the
~01n war Baby Boom, raised in a
snddle claii8 home m Ft. Lauder
~ale. Shunnini' the regular nine to
five routine, likf' 110 many of his con·
temportmet1. he has settled in Hou,._
~on, and livH a8urprisingly flexible
lite. Nu doubt, there are sky11craper
txt-cutn·ee who "-OU Id envy hi1 frttiom
of movement and creat1\'1ty,
but 1t wait not an e&11y thing for him
to matt-rialize.
: Hi• studio it1 on the second floor of
11 11tark white Artigiani complex on
f'hepht'rd, onoi:;M from St. Anm•1
t?atholic School. Sunshine pourR in
Jhrough the Mouth windows, gleam
'1~K oft the m1rror·hke black pointed
flooni.
1 .. Tlwre uMed to be a building next
)t•10r that blocked the light." heHys.
waving out at val·ant space. Look
lna down, thrrf' 11 a rectangular lot If brown dirt, lrrtihly graded. Beond
that ill the Exxon car waith,
u.Ullllif with a<1i\·1ty. The mter,;e<:·
ion uf We.theim<'r and Sheph<'rd
uokt1 fr.-nell<·. and a.bov.eitall, in th. '
rilhont ha1(' looms the massive
t-W Randall'• flagship store, 111
retn roof rising hke some pagon
cmple-tht• Forbidden City on
Wet1the1m<'r. l ·Rumor haM it Exxon is going to
xpand the car wash and make a
on\-·enient·e •tore,'' h. e. ••y.·a.with a
1gh. lie would prefer that lo 1<>me
razy narrow h1ghrase that would
n~ again block the sunhght.
llf' ahow• off h11 umque works of
rt. a product of Fe F1 Faux
•·J had picked the name, and
thought it wa11 a little too cle\'t>r
whrn the Pot1t <.'ame out. the same
week with an article about. faux fin
Mhmg;' he1ay1 ruefully. "The title of
their article waa the exact same 81
-~
PHOTO BY JEFF BRAY
/"'''of pt,,pfe say tht•;.· hupe I U'lm "t pamt that pl{'C(' of fi..rmturt• '
tht' namt of my company
Iruny llffmi. to be a <"UMlc•mary
thing in hi11 life.
It had nothinf{todowith me. hut
that'• all right,' he 1Sa}'M. Tho11t' lit
tie quirky things can work for you."
JamNI haa b<-en in busint•u for
thrt't' year11, finding unique pi<.-ct·11 ol
fum1turf' anrl painting them in t·xot•
it· colors and textureai. He ft'<'hl tht•
ttrm "faux·• does not do him juHti1·(',
bt-c.·auHt> hf' ui.ualh-· shie1 awtw from
tht cu•tomary m8rble and ~ranitt•
.f.tn..i ahes 110 many of hill compd1ton
1Waut1rul pi('("t'!I offurniturt'adurn
the mom, painted in aumptuouM
1frtt"n11, luMh red•, and andf'nt
li(rt"f'ns. Some tables, which, m tht·1r
previous life would be ordinary aC'
t'f'Horit"ll to a li\'ing room or h11ll
way, now look amazingly dramat1(':
and old-almost fosRilizl'<i. Ev(•n in
the brightly lit room. their fimshts
ha\-"t' a tiht'fn and a depth that only
hint at the beauty tht•y would puKM'P
under atrategic lighlinK
'I don't really k('f•p up with otht·r
art11111 in th.- CJty:· Jamt·s 11aysconfi
dt·ntly I like to kt·ep to my own Ill
11t1ncts,"
B1·fon• ht· moved to llou11ton,
Jamt1' livt-d in New York. wlwrn he
nwt 11rt1M~ who taught him the art of
fnux fini11hinl('.. Whill' t·njoying tht·
t·ulturnl atip('(.·ta of the l"ity. ht· aoun
n·111izt-d that ~f' .... York v.a1 not 1m
t'llti~ plac. in which to llH
•·1 wafln"t really pn·partd for N""'
\'11rk."he1ay1,f<milinK I li\"f'dw1th
my employt>r for awhilt'. th1·n paid
aom('(me to find me an aparlmt·nt It
wa11 on Fir11t and Hou"'ton. and thut
wn11 more than ten yt>ani al(o. l>t"lon·
1t w1:u1 a nit·e place to livl'! I waR
younl(. Ewrything I had W8M11tolt·n
within a wl'ek. l slept in n RIN·ping
bftK on the noor. You had to chip
away the tubtoseeifthere waaany
por(.'l"lain underneath. 1 t'\'entually
mon-d into the b&Memt>nt ufth<· an·
taque 11tore where I worked."
He says he never appreciated how
well he had fo·ed in Florida. and
wa11 thinking of movinK hack tht>rt'
wh<·n hit1 mother cunW<1t-d him
from Houtiton. wht·re 11he had JUlll
mo\-·ed. At finot. he wouldn·1 think of
living here, but 11-he informt-d him
thnt Hhe was dyingofcanc:t'r, and he
ru11-ht·d to Texal'I to be with ht•r.
"'I thought Hou!'lton would ht> all
tumble weed11. I didn't think it wa11 s
renl <:itv. I really didn't want to KO
batk tO Ft. Lauderdalt'. eatht't. I
didn·t want todotr~lli11 bamboo pat·
tt·rrwd wallpaper bark tht·re. which
wait about all thf"l'e ,.,·as to do hatk
tht•n. Houi;ton WU \"f.'l'Y acood for
mt""
Jumt'tl waH ~hocktd at tht> 1in of
thf' tlly, and immt-duttf'IY 11·t about
finding work to help aupport him·
tit'lf and his ailing motht·r. I IE- ht·ld
down four jobs until altt·rhndt·nth,
thl'n t1t•ttll•d down into a routine,
workinK cons(•('Uti\"t'ly thmul{h tht'
rt'C.'t'Sllion of th('- mid i!ll'l(l'a.
Ont' deliKht£ul NUrpril'lt' WUM find
mK th~ arts Oouri11hinK'. 1111 well m
tht'cit,·. He hecamt·a dreun tor the
theate·r,, and continues tu t'll.JUY
thi1 JHtrl time function
'I haven·t itottt·n tu drt'fi an)
B1Kf0es:· he tiay1, "'but l"v1· drt• .. <-d
nt'xt to the Hil{giee, hkt> Pa,·or11tu
I \·t> .. wrted bt·ing reque11ted for tho·
ruH and dressing rooms he<-Au11t· I
M·t·m to have th<' personahty to han·
dh• thn11e big kids."
During The King und I, hf' hod to
drt·IUI 16 mt'n. Each COM(Ullll' IM hiM·
tori<·ally corrt'Ct. from the <.'fm11·t• to
tht> '?-apes. Every button is txac-t, and
1c•mt' costumes art tnormou1ly
hravy and ornate. One rf'C'<"nt tihnw
had n\'t'r ·100 C08tume <·hangt'I in 20
mmutea. and an at·tor may hll\-'t' to
luK around in U\'er 60 pounds of
dothing whilt" trymlf to pt·rfonn
Whih· thi11 i11 all very intf'rt11tmg,
howt \'er. Jame11- find"' hi11 w1·8lt .. t
1nti11faction and fulfillmt·nt in his
art. Ht u11ed to lov<• huntinl{ for an·
tiquts, but finds thot moKt PH"<"~ ol
furniture he really likl'I do not nf'('d
to be painted. He refor1 to the11e
pieces of fumitutt aa 'forms."
'Occasionally J find a nt'w form to
paint. It'• very difficult, he-cause
when I see something I like, I ui.ual·
Jy want to keep it lik~ it la."
He likes workmg for a dl!tiigner
who has very strong ideu about
why a piece should be painted. If the
de"'igner has a good reaMOn for such
an application, JameR fl'f'18 good
about holding the mt('grity of the
furniture.
"Lots of people say they hope I
won't paint that piec1' of furniture. I
wouldn't."
He works often with chemicalH,
where corrosive material• ar~ put on
metals and wood11 to create an aae<l
and pocked look He pndt"8 h1mM"lf
in that he can tum a new pit'«· of
bronze into an archaoological find
He ah10 paints floor meu in t•xotic
colon;, as well 81'1 whole floors with
glazed finishee and intricate sten·
Montrose
Voice is
the First
Choice!
cih1 L----------
"I don'l advertiee at all," he says
Perhaps it i8 becautlt' ht• is MO soft
spoken and shy. "I don't like to ex r------- ----,
potJemyselflikethut. I lt-t tht,mccimt•
m tome.
..You have to be careful. You can't
do a Job ju11t for the mon<'y. Somf'o!lne
may have a \-·iaion for a p1f'<:'t, bul it
will end up being fort"ed. Thet'awhy
I had to learn to run a businf'lll an·
11tead ofbeini' JUl'll th~ cAsual 11rti11t
l"ve maintained it •lowly and d1dn"t
force the iuue. I h·t it ell huppt'n nat
urally, which i11 the 1Uff'tlt for me,
JWr!tOnally."
The traffic has reacht-d illl fever
pitch for lunch, and thtre i• a poli<.'e
car being sent through the car wash
.. They probably thmk 1 "m c-razy
because J'm always looking out the
windows." JamH aay1, laug-hing
'They don·t know wh~t I do up here.
Uo I live here? Do I work ht·re'! They
don't knov.
Ht> looks owr his latest projt'C.1-
gold leaf on canvaa-very txpt.>n
11vf'. Very unu1ual and pamstoking.
Very exclusive.
"Maybe it"e a fear of aucc<. .. a;· he
wonders. ''At least I'm finally docu
menting my work"
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FRIDAY FEBRUARY 9 1990 MONTROSE VOICE 3
Cleaning up Montrose: Crime fighting or class wars? We're working !,
to bring you o Fru Jl<lj(l• I
Sarnh Brunon onJ Juhn Z1ppril·h
ot lht> ,\t'nrto""n Auonutwn, •<'oil
litton ol cw1c acroup•, think th~
v.t>tld) rt·nll.lls and t'llMY M<·reenmg
of 1ppli,·untJ1 ultrat·t JJt,•oplt> ""hollrt'
d1t-hont'Ht Hrunon. prt".A>1drnt of
1't arwwn in 198~. and Z1ppril·h,
ht•ad ul tht> ori(11mzahon"• 1u»1.ually
urit-ntt·d hu1un~u <'ommitt('t', 11aid
l'\vartuwn i(Ot im·o)1;ed with the
n.·ntal prop<'rtiee wht.'n mt'mben1 of
the SOB cummitl<'4.' rl'aliu-d many
urea prc»>t1tutt'll wt·rr opt.'ratmg out
of apurtmt•ntK
Hrunon timd :-.;1•artown th<>n at
tt·mpu·d to ('ommuni<.·att• with the
'ub~1·1Ht•t• hrndlordH" of the "problt
·m" pro1n·rti1·a. Tht' fir11t 11t<>p, she
tiuid. WUH tu n•nlirm tlu· problem of
illt-l(al 1U"t1nty ul t1usped lo<'utmns,
Ul'lllK poli<.·t• rnll reJ)(Jrtll. l'\enrtown
""ould tht•n rom11ih• t1U1ti11tic. fin tht'
!0(·11tion und do tht• titlt• rt'tit•arch to
determme who the o"" nt>r• wrrf!. Tht
la11t l!llt·p ol tht• prl)('t'aM would ~to
t1tnd u lttter totht· landlord, inlorm
ma him ht her of what v.ait happen
ml{ at thl' addreu and rt'QUt'tlUng a
l't'a;J""'"e •h1:s1ud
'Almo5t al""·ay$, thty wuuld M""nd
ba<·k u pos1t1,·t· rt'tlponst': Brunon
... 1d l auully tht•y would 11ay tht'y
d1dn t knov. and that tht·}"rl' j{oing
to muke t·hanJCl'8:'
llo""t\"t'f', Brunun da1mt'd, the
<·hanl(t .. u1oually didn ·t happt'n. and
tht· t·ommun1cation tolt•ppt-d with the
fin-t ltitt-r
Thi• Jl'ln't alwa)~ trut':· she not
t·tl ·t rnn tt·IJ you ont· 11tory ... th('rt•
WUI' 0111 \landlord' who hud MOmt' re·
nl problt•mi; at om· tinH' ... ht> tooptr·
utl'Cl ""ith Ul'I nnd wound up Joming
Oldtr propnties l1ke this one, 110"1t' in dt·tt-noratm11 c~md1tum, are hom1• to
many 111 Mont ruse who arp <'011N1dnt-d ''at ru;k for ho1111'11·111oi1 u
the r-.;eartown A:iSOCiation. lie
workt'd with Uh and dt·aned up h111
properties. and tht'y're not a probll'm
nnymore
"If these people ""ould JUMt \"uiit
their pro~rtil's more. if they'd pay
att.t>ntion to what waM happeninK
tht-rf!. it ""ould help a lot. I think
some property oY.nt'r.1 dt-lihl.'ratt·ly
d1r.tanc..· thl'mi;eh-e11 from tht·ir pro1>ert1es;:
Brunon rtontinued
Hrunon rt'Jl'Cted the notion thut
the driw by home oY.nerto to "dt'an
up'' Montroll.e U; a d1sguU.t>d war on
the poor. or any rl'i<id1·nt group
''That ·s jutot ridiculou~. l'ot all poor
prople commit crim('s." 11hto 11a1d
···rn('rl' an· ways to scrt't'n appli
t·ant11. Wt>"ve made i;uggestionH to
tht·~e landlords."
I rould g i\'e .several t-xamplt,. of
S>t'<1ph· who Mt• ;..;l'<lrtown 1m·ml1t•r11
who own r1·nt11I propt>rly The.-t· an·
also low rtlll 1>r11pertit'll, and tht•y
kl'4.·p tht·m up. Thn go tu tht· troubh·
of rtontinK to pt>t•plt· who an• not in·
vulnd m l1T1mt-) a.nd thry don't
ha\ l' th1• probh ms, Hrunon 11uid.
Z1ppm·h Mnid his comm1tttt•'a 1n
\"t>Sti5{t1tmns rne11lt-d ff\l'l'al prop.
vrt1es .... 1th n1m1 problem• altm hud
hn· nnd ht•alth t't>de \·1olut1c11ui. .. Ai
thou~h tht• 1·1ty as uauplly t'UOpera·
t1H•, m1tmtrnK nn m\ t1111gation ol
11uch ,·1olat1ons 111 a lt·ngthy proce-...
ht· tuiid. For th111 rt uM>n. the gn1ups
hll\'t' tried u \ 11rit1y ti! utht•r ways to
fCt'l tht· hmdlordH' 11t1t·nllu11, mdud
11\K pi1·k1111 of somt' ol tht· propt·rt.1111.
A rt•,·urrmM nonw in hoth
Hrunon'11o 1md Z1pprith'a filt'8, ttl'l
wt'll ll!I thot<t• ol tht· ~urth Montro8t'
('iv11· A> r1dut10n·K ,Jody Hoh. ir.
Lynn Ill: qu('t. who1 t· rum11any, I
1md Y ProJ)t'rlit"8, opt-ntlt•t1 91x
Montrou ap.artmvnt oomplt·Xt'll, m·
duding I.a~ Ho1•a• Bousqul'l Sllld
•he f~l11 11ht' and othl'r IRndlnnbi
hmt> bl.-t·n unluirly utta1-kt'(l for
thmKs that un· not tht>ir htult
l'\"t' really ht't•n trying hurd to
Kt t tht' right kind of pt'i>plt> into my
prop(•rtit•;· Bout1.qu<•l 11u1d "l\·t·
trwd to 1mprt'sl!I it on the mana6(1•rl!l,
that ii thl:'y have bad \·ibt.·,. about
anyont', or iftht·re's u qut'l•tion tht'.\
might bl.' involved in Noml'lhinK illt ..
gal. don "t lt·t them in
"Sometimes tht·re's JUtot no wuy
IOr tht• mnnngt·rs to know Wht·n
l>l'Oplt· ('Omt• in lO rent an apart
nwnt, u~uolly thl.'y'n· l&ll snublw:d
up und looking good .. tht·n. ullf•r
th<._,. movt· in, they IN tht·1r h1ur
do""n and 1t ull l'i>m<'tl out. You cnn
on!;.· do:;omurh whenyou·rt'M'rt'i.'ll
ing an applicant."
Bousquet ~;aid :;ht' <lJ('l'et't4 thut ht·r
li('rt't·ning application may not 00
filrid enough. "In foct. yt"S, I do
think that"ti one ol tht' thing• Wt'
nt'i..-d to do .. we need to 11:et mort• in·
d1·pth information.'
She stood by her wttkly n·ntalt1,
howt·vtt. ''lfl' nlwaya be-t·n my In·
tention to providt· clean. d~n·nt
houbing for people who don't hnn•
much money."· Bou!<qut•t aa1d '"Moiot
ol m\· tt'nants are blu(' t"Ollar work·
t-rs ~ho get paid by the wl't'k. and
rim only rent that .... ay.' Mhe said.
Ht>pairs ha,·e bt.'t'n blow. t<hl' •aid.
brt·auMt· the company i.imply hul'ln "t
hud tht• mom·y to inn•fit in the im
provem<·nt11. ··We're J<l'ttmg it dorll',
but slowly.' lih<' soid. ''Peoplt• don't
;t·t·m to realize that tht•f't' 1>robh·m
AFH presents HIV-AIDS treatment workshop
AIDS Foundation Houston will
sponsor an HIV/AlDS tre&trnent
workshop on 'fuesday,
Feb. 13 at Bering Memorial
Unlted Methodlst Church, 1440
Harold. 1n the Fellowship Hall.
The three hour workshop will
begin prompt.(y at NXl
p.m.
Dr Gathe will address current
medlca.l ISSues regarding
HIV infection and AIDS, includ
ing various tre&tmente a.nd the
direction of current research
Dr Rios will cover many of the
psycholog!ca.l Issues asaociated
A panel of medlca.l
experts will discuss
many of the current
medlca.l IBsues in HIV
illness to overview the
direction &nd tren<IB 1n
t.rea.unents for HIV ln·
Montrose
Neighbor·
hood
with HIV, 1ncludlng
depression. den1al,
fear, anger and stress,
and will also d!acusa
coping skills
Houston's topic
will be the pharmacolog!
ca.l aspects of HIV !vents
fecUon and related Ulnesses
The panel will include Dr, Joseph
Oat.he Jr., &n .tnfect1ous
dieee.ee e-pecla.llet w\.t.h Health
Associates of Houston; Dr.
Arturo Rios, director of Heights
Psychiatric Clfn!c; Edna HOUB·
ton, Kroger's head pharmacist
and Jack Kerr, director of the
Houston Clfn!ca.l Rese&rch Net-work.
treatment, such as
drug Interaction a.nd side sf·
feet.a, and Kerr will introduce
m&OJ' of the current and upcoming
testing protocols avail·
able in the Houston area.
Refreshments w1ll be served,
donated by Kroger Dell, 3300
Montrose. The presentation
will be offered at no charge and
destgnecl to be informal, with
time devoted to questions and
answers. For more 1nforma.·
tion, please call the AFH education
department at 623-6796.
-Band membership
The Lone Star Symphonic Band
ts currently seeking new mem·
bers. The drive, with the U&eme
'Get your tnstruments out of
the closet." will be gotng on un·
Ul Ma.rch 31, members said
Pllrsons Interested 1n pls,ytng
a.n lnstrumont with the band
are urged to come to the rehearsals,
held Monda,y ewntngs
at 7:30 &t Metropolitan
Communlt;y ChW'Ch, 1919 De·
e&tur. All levels of pls,ytng Bllill·
'<¥ ..,,. enoour"lfod.
The band 1B pla.nntng many
events thls year, but 1s most ex·
cited about the trip this August
to Vancouver, Canad.a for c.e1a.
br&tion '90: Ge,y Ga.mes III a.nd
CUlrural Festival, the members
S&!d. The band will be joined
there by other members on.es-bian
and Gay Bands of Amarlca.
(WBA) a.nd will perform during
the opening and closing oerernorues
of the games.
Other events planned for this
year tnclude a trip to Denver 1n
March for the lGBAconference
a.nd to pa.rtlcipate in the Denver
St. Patrick's DeyP&nWe,&trodl·
tional lesbian Ge,y Pride Week
ooncert, SPrin8 and fall con~
oerts a.nd &yea.NOnd Christmas
event with other oommWlitqr
performtng groupe. The band
will also be holding several
fund ra.tsers to raise the money
necessary to send the group to
C&nada. in the sununer.
For more information on
jolnlng Lone Star Symphonic
Band or corning band events,
call Connie Moore at 522-4282
-Meals grant
Chr!St.!an Communlt;y Service
Center (CCSC), & coalltion of 31
churches and Human Services..
recipients.addect
Montrose resident wins national script contest
MontrOlle rt'l'lident Richard
Grei;cory Roach 18 one of three
winn('n; ot tht tenth annual
Mid"est Radio Theater Work
shop l'cript ronteaJt. a national
radio script ~earch. The contest
wa!< funded with support from
the !"' ational Endowment for
the Art.s. the MitJSouri Art.a
Council and the Art.8 Commis
sion of Columbia, Mo., where
the competition ia bl&sed.
The winning script, a radio
play titled "Horse Arms;· is
Hol&ch's finit attempt at broad·
cast script writing. The play. tht play dt·vote t<in id< .. ablt0 at·
based loosel}· on a factual news n.•· t('ntion to the charactt•r a trial.
port., is about an American Indian H11nch 11aid h(' did not folio .... up m
described by Roach as deaf. dumb the trial of the.• man in tht· actual
and retarded, who is caught chw; report.
ing a Union Pacific locomotive on Roach, alt4o working on a stagt·
horseback and shooting at the play. t'aid "Hors<' Arms" is his
train with a bow and arrow. firl't finisht'd work a... . a full-time
Roach said the inspiration for writt'r. He has bttn involved in
the acriptcame from a news clip he ist•veral local theiltrical produc:heard
on the radio about a similar tions a" an actor and dirN·tor.
incident. "I decided it. would be in· MoHt r('(.'t•ntly, ht• Rt>J>t·im•d in the
t.eresting to explore his motiva- Tower ThNlll'r'8 production ot
tion, what. would make him do "Hhear Madne!!s'' as antiqut• dt·al·
such a thing;· said Roach. Though er Eddie Lawrent·t•
Tht> Midwest Radio 11water
Workshop. a project of KOP:\
community radio in Columbia.
began in 1980asthefin;tradio
drama conference in O\'er thrti.>
decades. Each year. the work
shop toponsors conferen<.~ and
training events, provides tech·
niral assistance servicl'8, produces
educational materials
and sponsors the national
script search.
Other winners of the compe·
tition thiB year are Linda Kant'.'
of Sonoma, Calif. and Aaron
Mermelstein of St. Louis.
AIDS legislation wins Miss. Senate approval
Uy ROBEHT NAYLOR JR.
JACKSON, M1 iAPl-A bill
that would set up a state wide
AIDS education program hus ~n
approved by the state Senate, but
the mea&ure includes no funding
There was no debate and no dis·
aentmg votes.
"'I was shocked:· Hid Sen. Robert.
Huggins, chairperson of the
Senate Public Health and Welfare
Commiltl'('. He handled t.he bill on
the floor. It. now goee to tht.' House.
"We took tht'.' heinous at.uffoutof
the bill undjustcamewith theedu·
cation package to get our foot in
the door;· the Grt'enwood lawmak
er said.
The bill would give the state Department
of Health 90 days ofter
the ml'aioure'1 July 1 effective date
to •t-l up a titate wide information
and education program on AIDS
and llepaliti1 B. a viral infection
of the liver.
The program would have to
at~s sexual abstinence before
marriage, fidelity during mar·
riage, and homosexuality as an
unacceptable lifestyle.
The department also would establish
workplace guidelines for
employers to disseminate AIDS
information to workers and for
dealing with employees infectc.'tl
with the virus that causes the di!'·
eaMe. The guidelines would ht- vol·
untary.
T he department's efforts would
pay particular attention to "peo·
pll' with behavior conducive" u,
transmission of the virus, minori·
ty groups and people under 18
years of age.
AIDS-acquired immunl' defi
C'iency syndrome-robs the body
of ita abilit.y to fight off opportu·
nistic infections that almost al·
ways re.ult in death t.o the VIC't1m
The human immunodt!fic1ency
virus, or HIV, which cauMee the
di ellMl' it p1u t>d through the exchuni;
i:e of body lluids. Its viC'lims
have mo8t ollt'n hfl•n homot1-exunl
mE'n. intravenou~ druK UMt'rM p,nd
hemophili.a('S, ulthoui;ch the dis·
ease has not bt•t>n <.'Onfined to
th~e groups
~·ationwidl', more than a fourth
of the AID~ \"ktim111 hun bet·n
from rl&cial minontit•ti
The hill would ullnw tht> 1h·part
mE'nt of llt•nlth to c·ontrol't with
privott·, non-profit groups to hl'lp
di11Kt'minote information, but at
leust one c·ontrllC't th<> agt·nr·y l'Ur·
rl.'ntly Juu1 would bt· vnidt'<I under
the menKUrt'.
Th<> dtpnrtm(·nt c·ontrat"tM with
tht• Mia"itu1ippi (;uy Allinm·t· to
ht•l1> t'pread information to !ht' ho·
m<M4<'xual community. But tht• hill
says l·ontrat·U. could nut he m11dt•
with group1 thut "advocntt· or pn>mot<>
tondu<·t that \'1olnh>t1 titatelaw."'
llornotit'Xual art• llrt 1llf'gal un·
der Mississippi !av.
Huggins said, howe\"er. that the
Department of Health would have
to design programs to get informa·
tion to the gay community.
The bill includes no funding for
the programs. but Huggins said
about SI70,000 in granU) already
is a,·ailable. He said the progrum11
would cost about S400,000.
The state dO<'!> not have the mon
ey to spend. he said.
''Since we don't have themunt·y,
we've got to got. the grant routl.', .. ht•
odd ed.
Thi.' bill doesn't go nc•arly UM for
lUJ it was introduced by Sen. Mar·
garet Tate of Picayune or as far as
a proposal 1:1ponsored by St·n. Bar·
hara Blanton of Brandon
The provisions included by
those lawmakers included widt ..
spread ~esting. including
Blanton ·s plan for adminiKterin)t
AIDS tl'fiL'" to marriage lict•ntse np·
plicanl.8.
11 n111 raullt' ua quite a ft-w pmblt-
11111 too Pf'Olll~ mo'\it' m they look
uka~ tht•n tht\ JU8t moH• vut ""1thout
pu)mJZ rf'nt.. They trash lhtnpannu
·nt und r11ut1t• qiroh·
11 m11) Hnd v.t• dou t Jft l unvtlung."
real
newspaper
The
....
'To lit· J't rh-ctly hum•1>t. I don "t
think tht• n11~hhorhood tcruu11s Ml'
p111ntm.c a hur picture.· 1111d
Bou11qut t, ""hu addt'cl that tlw 1ll'l"U·
•Utmn!I hurt hn pnllolHtll~·. ··1 don't
wunt to be ll>lfiO('lllhd Y.llh drUK~
und 1mM1t1tutiun ... I don't Y.ttnt to
n·nt to that kmcl ol du·ntt'it•, .-ht•
t1Uid
' :
Montrose .~.
'I h1w~·n't h1·1·n ahlt· lo gl'l out to
my pro1wrtit·• lut1·l.\· us mud1 us I
Uio('d tu. I ju11t hud luKk i;urgl ry, nnd
I don't i(t•t ,u·uuml us mut·h. But I do
MO to th1·m;· r;Jw snid
I thmk th1• pruhlun nU\ only ht•
1wln·d 1J Wt• nm 1111 work to6(tiht•r m
a po111tiH ""II.\' :-.001 by hghu, not b~
atturkmll oth~ra. I'm nO\ a llght1'1K
v~·non
Hy th1· end ol January, tht•
dumptih'r ilt l.1111 Ho1ma ""a!t Cint11ly
1 mpt1t>d, but hrn tr·nanla had mo\ t>d
out h.ozoY.yk If.Bid ht• .1h10 pl.armed
to mo\ t' m Apni, ftl thl' t'nd til his
h"RlH'
Voice.
The Montrose
Voice
N
SSI '85
fRIOAY fltlRUARYi WO
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hy tht· homro .... n~r groupaii to hu,eo
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HAIR LOSS: New
Developments
Peter H. Proctor, PhD, MD
Balding e'llentually affects most men and many women.
Balding begins when male hormones cause your follicles to
"miniaturize'.' A subsequent immune reaction further interferes
with hair growth. Agents which block the local action of male
hormones often stimulate hair growth, as does the immune
suppressing drug cyclosporin. Likewise, calcium and
compounds called "free radicals" seem to figure.
Recently, the FDA approved the topical agent minoxidil or
Rogame to treat hair loss. Drugs often work by mimicking
nnural body chemicals. Or:i the basis of similar chemical
structure and act1\lity, a chemical called EDRF is probably your
body's "natural minoxidil:' Not surprisingly. agents which
increase EDRF levels stimulate hair growth.
Are you a candidate for medical treatment of hair loss! Using
combmed treatment, we can generally stop progression of
balding. thicken what you have, and replace at least some of
your recent loss, often better. On the other hand, "slick" bald
areas rarely grow much new hair: Most persons end up
somewhere in between.
Dr. Proctor 1s the author of over thirty scientific articlesmost
recently in the August AMA Archi'lles of Dermatology on
how minoxidil works. For a copy and more information call
Twelve Oaks Medic3rl Tower
4126 Southwest Freeway, Suite 1616
Houston, Texas
(713) 960-1616
or Fax# 960-9307
4 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDA V. FEBRUARY 9. 1990
New treatment
designed to boost
immune system
Study: Positive test doesn't increase suicide ideas
PlTl'SBURGH (AP>-H(' t:archerai
at. t.he P1ttaburgh Cancer ln• Utute
ae.id they a re hopeful un experimt-n·
tel AIDS treatment will enable pa
tienl8' own cell11 to mhiblt replica·
lion of the deadly HIV virus and
fight other inkct1om1 that plague
AIDS vict1m11.
'l'he Univer11ity ol Pituiburteh hos
bf:11un clinical trialai of u new there
py designed to ~t the immune
aystem of AIDS patient•. rei;earch
er~ aaid Jan 25. The treatment m
velvu removing the viru1·killing
white blood et-II• from AIDS pa
tienta, then activatinw tht· cell• and
reLuming tht·m to the patit-nt.¥.
'1'h11 111 a completely novel approach
to tht· treatment of HIV in
fect1on and AIDS. and to that extent
i• tocientafically n ·ry exciting;• eaid
tJi: Monto Ho. chturJ)t'riJon of mfec-tioua
diseases and microbiology at
the University of Pittsburgh
Pitt.aburgh is the only site for tht:
trials, which will involve six pa
tients with AIDS or AIDS-related
complex. They will receive six doses
of their own activated cells ov('r IJ
weeks, followed by 11 weeks of test&.
AIDS disarms the body's natural
immune aystem by crippling helper
'l'·cella, which normally direct tht' vi
rus·kilhng cells, known as killt'r T
cel111, to multiply to disease-fighting
levels. The new therapy selectively
removes and amplifies killer T·cells
through the use of interleukin·2
The six-month study. which bea-an
in December, is sponsored by Appli~
Immune Sciences Inc. of San
Franci11co and the National IMt1
tute of Allergy and Infectious l)O..
('Hlt'AGO IAP.t-Doctont m't'd
not b<- unrly ronc-.rnt'd about doinK
AII>S-v1rut1o tt'tltinK for fear
that patu:nt• miKht commit eui
C'idt' 11 thl'y learn they art-inlt•ctt-d,
Bl'COrdinK to the author of a nt·w
1:1tudy
'Givt-n thl'1mpro\'l'd t-arly treat
mt-ntti tor 111\'-relatt·d illnt.-1st·"·
neither physicianK nor patientH
should avoid t1t·t•king tht· t('tlt for
fear th(•y won"t beubletodt•ol with
the rt'MUlts;• t1Uid Dr. :jamu(•l Perry,
proft·1o11:1or of clinical J)Kychiatry at
Cornt•ll Uninrt1ity t<rh>dkal Col
lege in New York
"lt 11:1 not an imminent death
11entent't'. as mony p("Ople lx•lievt'."
With propt"r coum1eling, people
who learn tht>y tlrl' mft·t·ted with
the AIDS virus are no more likelv
to think about killing themi-elve:
than th011e who learn tht·y are vi·
ru11·frN•, Pt·rry end other researC'h·
ers reportt-d in a study publh1hed
in today's J ournal of tht' Amt-ri
can Medknl A, IO(;ation
Hut regardle .of tf'St result&,
tht- ratt• of 11u1C'1da.l thought.
among people who han• tra.118
that pu, them at higher r111k of gt-t
Ung the infection i111ign1fic;antly
higher 1han the rate in tht" gt-nt-rnl
population. the 11tudy found
Suicidal ideas p•:rsiAtt>d in alx1ut
15 percent of 11ubjecl8 at high risk
for AIDS. whetht•r they y.·ert•
found to ht' infoctl'd or not, rt·
roearcht·rs said
The Htudy r('portE'd on :lH mt•n
und 57 women who <.·omplett'<l
i\o gauge depret;sion
at intervals two week8 l>t:fort'. and
one week and two months ofter notification
of results of their AII>S·
virus tests, r~earchen; said.
"'Then/~ both a reassuring port
of the study and a more worrisome
pan of the !'tudy.' said Perry, th('
lead author o f the 11tud)·
"The rea,i.suring part 111 that if
people at risk for infection an· gl' ·
en adequate pre-and post·tt't1t
Report: Infections decline, risk lessens for heterosexuals
By DEBORAH Mfo:S("E when 1.4 million will be infected. Control
f( '" THE MO,.H• VOICE Also, the number of new AIDS The CDC, which l-t>timat('8 that
WASHINGTOI\'. (AP>-A new re.
port says the number of Ameri·
cans becoming infected annually
with the virus that.cau1:wt> AIDS is
declining. although the number of
new AIDS coses will continue rising
until 1995.
cases will continue to rise until alxiul I million people in tht' Unit·
1995 and then begin to decline, ed State11 are HIV·inft'<·ted now, is
and the number of AIDS deaths revising it.II projl'<'tionK for future
will peak at around l 10,000 in 11prt'ad of the diHeOioit'
1997, Plumley's projections show. A draft report rt•leuHt•d E·arlit·r
Years can elapse between the thito month predicted that projectime
of infection with HIV and the lions for the numbers of cases will
The report's author, Peter onset of AIDS. No one is known to
Plumley, a consulting actuary in have recovered from AlDS
Chicago, also 88YS the chances He predicted that by the year
that a heten~exual not u8ing 2000 there will have been a total of
dn.1gs intravenously will ~·ome l.J million AIDS cases and about
infected are remote and that AIDS 1.1 million AIDS deaths.
prfvention effon11 f()('US too much His figures do not include HI\'
on this group. infections and AIDS cases among
Plumley writee in the January- blood transfusion recipients,
February iseue of Contingencies hemophiliacs and children. which
magazine that the number of new account for about 5 percent of the
annual infections with th<' human total infections.
immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, As of Dec. :n. 1989. AIDS had
peaked in 19b6 and is going down. been diagnosed in 117,781 Ameri·
However, he say11 the total num- cans. Sixty percent. or 70,313. had
bet of HIV-infected Americans died since June 1, 1981, according
will continue to ri1:H• until 1991, to the federal Centers for Disease
be about 15pt>rcent lower than previoull
CDC estimates.
ClX' l'pokt·i;perKon Gayle Uoyd
said until the agency i11.11ut·a new
proJt'<'tions, •·no ont• here ill inter·
eitted in talking about anyone
else's pro1edion11:•
Pluml('y aa1d. "One of the moet
disturbing asp«ts of the AIDS epidemic-
is tht- number of pt'ople who
haq• become eonet-rned unnec:t'S·
11arily about the l'pidemic"
Tht.- \.'irus is spread mainly
through contact with bodily
fluids, includintc suual intt-r·
course, parti<:ularly anal 1<ex, and
sharing ol nt-(·dlt'fll. lt111 chief vie-
Pittsburgh to host Softball World Series
The 1990 aoft.b&ll aeaeon for pl~rs
&nd omcta11 of the North.American
Gay Aml.teur Athlei.u:. Aa8oe1at1on
(N.AGAAA) wW kick off 1n m1d·Fet>.
nl8J'y In Pltt.sburgh. host. 1eriee for
th1a yee.r's N.Af'JAAA GfV' world Serleo
The St.eel CU;y Softl)oll i_..,
will weloome delefl&t.ee to the aseoc1·
at.10n'1 annual aprtng meet.1ng8
At t.he meat.1J:l48, delegwte wW d18-
CU88 sever&l ~ecta. 1'1'lg·
As p&rt.ofa t.radit.1on&l gesture,del·
eg&teS trom Atlanta.. host city for the
1969 Gay Softb&ll World Serie&. &re
expectec1 to formally present. ''The
NAO.AM. GfV' Softb&ll World Sertee~
to members oft.he Pit.tsburgh deleg&uon
1n separate oeremoniee
Seuon pl>,y 18 expoctod to beg1n In
moat. NAOAAA-atrlli&t.ed le&«U91 tn
t.he last few weeks of April andculm1-
n&te 1n theN.r'lyp&l'\of
1ng from rule chanC• fort.he
1990 eoftblJl eeriee to & routJ.
ne rev1aw of the CWTent. by·
laws. The deleg&tM wtll alao
t&ke &guided tour of the faoll1·
uee to be uaed 1n PlttSl::rurgh
during world eeriee P1'Y
Xonirosil
Rel&Jlborhoo4
B11on1
August.. The -.eon
will oont.1nue as member
lee.gue& send team8
to PittSburgb 1n l&te
August to compete 1n
the l990G'1WOrld8&rleo
Thia year'• event 18 expeoted to be
the largest ga,y world sertee. as well
as the f1ret to be sponeored by one of
the sm&ller NAGA.AA-atf'U1ated
188(\.11!11. M.embert of the Steel Clty
Soft.b&ll 1'16gU9. under the a.usptoes of
N&ncy Prib1Ch. haven't let that fact.
hinder them. u t.bey have l1ned up
such·~ u Btroha beer l the of·
f1c1al beer &poneor ), USAlr ( the c:d!'l·
c18l a.i.rllne) and Amertcan E:xprees
Travel (the o:ncial travel r.gent).
NU are alao'otng on wtth other po~
nual large oorporate &poll80rl,
PribiCh 8Jd. Sponeorshlp ta alao bemg
a.uiment.ed by .aorta or Pitt.aburgh
Tavern Guild and the I.&mbd&
Pound&Uon. org&ruzere l81d-
Violence in Oregon prompts meeting
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-A new The violence spread downtown
wave of violence against homo- on Dec. 14 when two women were
eexuals has leader• of the city'• attacked and beaten by three men
gay commun ity concerned in a parking lot.
The latest targeta have been The violence prompted a neigh-men
who have gone alone to borhood meeting in t he area
Laurelhurst Park, a meeting •pot around Laurelhurst Park
for gay men on the city'1 aoutheast "My main concern is people's
aide. welfare a nd safety:· said Mike
A group of four men attacked a Knowles, a neighborhood r~ident
man with a broken bottle and a who organized the meeting
knife on Jan. 20, cau1ine injuries
thet required 40 atitches.
Lesbian TMk Force, t1aid the Oregon
report• were part of a growing
nationwidt' trE'nd
"Vil!libility ha11 allowed us to or·
gani1.e, educate and C'hallf'nge big·
otry;' Berrill Kaid. ''However. it has
al110 madt• ue more of a target."'
Georgia Owen11, a 11taff as8i11t·
ant to the Metropolitan Human
Ril{hta Comm1uion. said the num·
berof orficial reportA of violence do
not reveal the real frequency of vi·
olence against leebians and ga)'
men in Portland.
tims have been homof'exual malt-s
and intravenouR drug userai.
A homosexual mnle'a risk of
contracting AIDS is about I in
500. according to Plumley. Hut the
risk for a heteroi;exual engaging
in vaginal sex is less than one in 8
million, providing their ot'X part·
ners are not from a high·ri};k
group.
Prevention efforts within the homo,.;
exual, bisexual and intravenous
drug u~er communities
should continue, but .. valid rea·
sons exist to attempt to temper
warnings U.sued to pt<1ple whOHt'
riski; are iuo remote as one in a mil·
lion or lt"l>.!i>
•·Hyperbole could diven the fo.
cu"' from the truly 1erious areas of
rilik. damage credibility of lhe preventmn
effort.sand create paranoi·
a among those who don't und<':--
1;tand and jeopardize their C'hanc
es of forming the kinds ofrelallon
ship.i; nece11sary to health and
WE-11-being: he wrote.
' 1
J r
g'
C'ounrwling, notifyin them of inf('(:
tion d0('8n't mC"rt-8.llt' their risk
of »uindal fidt·ft.11),' he snid in a tel·
t-phonl' intt-t\ it y.; Thunidny, Feb.
I
'J\t lt•ast not if tht·y are
asymptomatic (1ymptom·frt't'J
and ovt·r n 11hor t time;• ht' added
" Tht> !t'fJK reoKHuring part ii! that
J>t"oplt- at ril-1k tt<•t·m to han a high
rah• of dt·prt•11t1ivr illnt'81 indt·pen·
dt"llt of wht•tht·r th(·y·r~ infected
with tht• virus;· he tiaid. "'When
peoplt• coml• in st•eking n tt·st, it
may ht• nn opportunity to idE>ntitY
dt•Jm'BMion and moke an appropri·
ate rt•lt>rral.''
lluc:tor11 han• bt•en over!)· con·
c:ernf'<i about doing AIDS-virus
tet1ting •·for feor pati('nt!l are going
to go totally out thE- window" if
they learn the)· are infected, Perry
110id. ""W<' JUllt didn't find that to be
A prn:iou1 study found thf' nlle
of 11uic1dt· in 1<.1K;1 among men agES
2U to 59 who had All>S n ot JU8t
the infection, whil'h may tuke
years to cau.e 11ymptom.e, but the
actual di1Je&ae--wa• 36 t1mt11 the
rate of men without All>S
And another study, or 19"'6 Cali
fornia death Cl'rtificatee found the
relatiH suicide rate of men nges ~
to :39 who had AIDS W8JI it t1m<'»
that of men without AlllS. tht• rt•·
searchers said
In the new study, umona- the 19
subJect11 who were found to he in
fected, ralt'll of thinking nhout tlUI·
cide were 28.6 p<>rtent ut t•ntry und
:>.7.1 pertt'nt and 16.:J p<·r<.'t'nt at
the follow·ups, the rt·tu.·arc:hers rt'"
ported
l\o subject reported increatied
suicidal ideas at two month11.
Among tht" 252 subjects m·
formed they were virus· free. IPIUin
dal ideas decreased from ,JO.Ii ptor·
cent at entry to 17 I p('rct•nt und
15~4 perc_-ent at one w("(•k and two
months after notifkatwn, the
study found
Attorney general
files suit against
'ripoff' charity
CHICAGO (AP>-State authoritit.-
a art• 1:1uing to st()p what they
say is a "ripoff" charity. preying
()0 people'i; »ympathy for children
with AIDS
Tht· lawsuit, filed Jan. 25, ac·
c:u1ed the t..;ational AIDS Preven
tion lnatitutt• orCulpepe~ \'a.; Apple
Marketing of Hou11ton; and
three Cook County, llL, busint.'68·
mt·n of "fraudulE-nt aolidtallon of
chantnblE- donatwn11 for private
profit.'
AC'C'Ordmg to the lawsuit, for
~6.000, Apple'" Marketing St'lll yel·
low pla1tlc funnels C'alled wishing
"dis t1) individuals. Th<Mie indi·
vidual1 tht'n pay S2.60 a month to
the Children With AIDS Founda·
lion to UM(' thl' foundation ·11 name,
while any remaining money gOt:s
to the- '"well OJ'>t'rator11:• the lawsuit
all1·1(<'1.
Edward Rowe. prt'Mtdmt or the
National AIDS Prevention lnsli·
tute, said Jan. :l6 in att'lephonein·
terview that his organization we.fl
"in tht' ~ition now of arranKinK
coun~el" and that any furtht•r
comment would ht- inappropriate.
Rowe said, howe\'l'r. •·thert.'a a
lot of falsehood" in the lawso1t
lllinois Attorne\: General :\t-il
Hartigan. who filed the lawiaun.
taid the .. ripoff' panil'ipant• had
"preyed on the 8)·mpathy of the
public for the plight of children
";th AIDS.
'What they failed to tell contril>uton.
waa that only nine- ct'nlJI a
day would go to thl' C'harit> ;·
Hanigan said. '"Tht• nst of th~
money put in the ·wishing wE-11'
went dirf'ctly mto the pockrta of
thel:lt' promotens:'
.......... __ .__ _.,..._ 1 e
And a Ponland State Univeni·
ty student suffered injuries requtr·
ing 35 stitchee in a beating on
Christmas Day at the park
"No matter what a person's sex·
ual orientation is, he doesn't deserve
to be severely beaten up or
killed;' he said.
A national gay leader, Kevin
Berrill of the National Gay and
She 11aid many victim• are
afraid to report violence because \.!~:...::'::::;....::::::::;;;:::~t:?:!..J
the notoriety might cBUlll• them to
le e their ho ing or jobt
Heart Strings raises $691,000
The Hou11ton production or "Heart
S trings: The National Tour" rai1ed
at lea11 $691,000, makina the •how
the larae•t AIDS fund raiaina event
in the city to date, according to
Randall Shield11, a member of the
• leering committee. The muaical
montage, 1pon1ored by the Deaign
l nduatriea Foundation for AIDS
(DlFFA Hou1ton) and Serina: Com·
munity Service Foundation for the
local preBentat1on. opened for a •in·
gle performance Saturday, Feb. :J at
Jones Hall
Billed H "Evtnmg1 of Hope for
the Healin1of AIDS," HeartStnng1,
a national tour1n1 ahow which •pol·
hght11 local talent 1n eech 1top on it.a
30·city tou~ was designed to educate
audiences about AIDS a nd in1pire
community involvement. The local
1how featured former Houatonian
Tommy Tune aa announcer. Local
performer• in the caet included
Alexandra Ha88, June Terry. lllu·
dents from the Humphrey School of
Mu1ic the Bering United Methodi11t
Church Choir and the Montrote
Singers.
Shield. said the production i11 •till
recei,·1ng checkl from peoplt'whot'l·
ther did not make it to 8f't the show
or wanted to 1ive more money. The
fia-ures are ··changing e\.'er)· day:'
but a final total will be known b~·
Feb. 15, he aaid
Tht• 1huw did paMH up the lo<:al or·
ganiurii' goal of rai1inK $300,000
here, Shield• aa1d. Eighty J>l•rcent of
the money will 1tay in Houston to
help loC'nl Aills program111, while 15
perct>nl will go into a national pool
to bt>nefit cities not includt>d in the
tour. 1'ht' national Jeoal of 'Ht'a.rt
StrinM•' i11 ·~q rmllion
Hrnrt Strmp" Wl'UI ori10nally
produced in Athmta in 19.'ili Thena·
tionnl tour hegii.n in ~t·ptemhf'r.
l!l8.4
Wh1lr the- lluuaton ahow did not
play to a full houst', Sht 1ld111&1d the
audll'nct'" c11mf' w11hin 300 Hal• of
Jont·• llR.\l's l"llPR.("lty.
FRI IA Y FEBRUARY 9. 1" Ml INTRO iE VOICE 5
~Jn J,iicmort,t of Openly gay candidates: Refugees from the 'crab bucket'
- JOHN J. MACHUGA
>h M 1a 18~1ve) er1d4 d h1.:.
.1r ll91 w11t AtO~ !he earty
hours ol Jan 30, 1990 when he de-p.
ar!ed in1s 11le at 34 years 01 age
The memory of his warm lnenosh1p.
excellent deeds and lovable
humor wtll remain m our mmds and
in our hear':s lor ever WtJ IO\le you
John Miguel (your hfema1e). your
brothers. a1&tef'. relallves and many
friends
GuP11tComment•ry by RAY HILL
(Editor's note: Ray Hill lt'rved ai1
pre•ident of the Houston Gay and
Lfotlbian Political Caucu11 m 1%9
Dtnni1 Spencer was elected 1990
prt'8ident of the caucu• on Jan. 17.
Hill ia a candidate for Harri•
County Jutitice of the Peace. Pncinct
1).
One can put more crab& in a
bucket 1han you think, Anyone
who haa spent much time crabbing
on the Gulf Coast will tell you
that RIJ the bucket gN nearly full,
any crab that gets its legs on tht•
outside will be pulled back into the
bucket by those inside. And so it i.i
with minority politicians, includ·
ing lesbian and ga)· ones. Anyone
who tries to get out of the political
tnvironment of intra-community
organizations is held back by the
lack of !oiUpport from !heir peers
Jim Wntmore-land, I enjoyed con
••derable •upport from people hv·
ina in Montr08t- But on clOHtr ex·
ammat1on tmy camprugn) learned
that non·gay ruidenu of
Mon1roae were more likely to vote
for me than many gay and let bi an
voters! The rea110n8 were quett·
tion• about my qualification11. It
fl(•(•med strange that our non-gay
neighbore wert> more confident of
my quohfic-otions than membeno
of our own community.
Many of you did vote for me, and
1 upprt-<:iute (•Och vote I got. We
would hovt• won, had
(Westmoreland) been aa outspo·
ken then a.11 he was last year. I
come in lleeond in a roce of thret>,
and urried every Montrot1e pre-cmct.
In 191'\9, Bruce Reevett ran
84(aim1t Christin Hartung for city
council Dittt. G. 1 watched that
rac£' clo8E!ly, and w&11 surpnKed the
community did not take Bruce seriouAly.
HE" wo11 clearly a.. quah·
fied aa tht.•1ncumbent, whoiamore
of a 1ocialitt• than a public official
And j llartungl haK been hotitile to
our community on many is11ue#.
Sht• hati spom1ored all the propott
ah1 forwardt"d by the Vire Squad,
most of which are aimed at ha·
A memonal will be held from 1 00
pm to 3 00 p m on Saturday. Feb
10 at 01gn1ty Center. 3217 Fannin
Memorials may be made 1n John's
name 10 any AIDS support orgamzat1ons
Gory Van Ooteghem attempted
to be Harrii;(;ounty Treasurer. and
would have bet>n had enough of UK
choat'n to vote for him in the RepubliC'an
primary. But most of Ul'i
were too intt-ret>led in the non·gay
politicians running in the Uemo·
Cratic primary for Gary to gain
t'nough votes to become the Republican
candidate in the r-;ovembtr
general election, which he could
have won. rassing our community busine!i&·
In my race for city council two ea. Sht voted against the equal
years ago against the since-fallen employment rights ordinance
Pa. official supports
limiting disclosure
of AIDS test results
ll) TERRl '\1lJH HI.ER
HAHHISBCRG, Pu. IAP~
people who rallied at the Capitol
on Tuesday. Jan. 30, to !>UJ>
port the meai;ure, which ii; in
the Houtie Appropriations
C-Ommittee.
Tht· etatt· health secretary &upport.
Ba hill dl'8ll{ned to enrour·
aw:(> AIDS tt"sting by hm1ling
disclosure of the retiult•.
The bill would ban health or
euc1al f;er\.·ice worken; from dia·
clw;ing tbt resulUs to anyone
Health N'<·rttury X ~1ark othl'r than an AIUS patitnt or
Hwhards Watl onE' of about 70 authorized medical pel"'f'lonnel
Reagan claims he's
learned about Al OS
LO:; A!\(a:I.ES 1AP~Ronald posed to the virus through a blood
Rt-agan, critic-1i.ed during his ad·
ministrahon for his reeponse to
the AIDS t>pidt·mic, says he·s now
Jearned that AIDS is a trightening
diseaN' and I hat pt.'Ople with AIDS
deM>rve undentand1ng.
'We all grow and learn in our
li\'es; ReaKan .aya in a public
service announcement for the Pe·
diatric AIDS Foundation. ':And
I've learned that all kinds of people
can ~et AIDS. Even children~·
The JO.at'(-ond televiaion spot
was dire<:ted by former .. Storaky
and Huu·h" &tar Paul Michael
Glaser, whose wife and son have
t(•stt>d positive for the AIDS viru8
and whol:ll' 7·year·old daughter
died of the di~ease.
Elizabt·th Gla8er. one of the
foundation's founden, waa ex
transfusion. In June 19bh, she met
with then·President Reagan and
hi!i wife !\ancy to discu!"s the
AIDS epidemic.
When an anicle on the Gluer
family's battle with AIDS ap.
peared in the Los Angeles Times.
the Reagans offered their 8.1:18iNt·
ance. The public senice an·
nouncement, filmed last Decem·
her, is to be aired in February.
In the announcement, Reagan
says the disease of AIDS is fright·
ening and ··not the people who
have it:· He notes, "You can't
catch AIDS from hugging some-one:
·
.. I'm not asking you to send
money;• he says. 'Tm asking for
something more important. Your
understanding. Maybe it·s time we
all learned something new."
Lip tricks for
Valentine's Day
r-;1-;W YORK <APJ-If your lipe
are too thin, too full or uneven,
follow theae easy 111tep1 with lip
color for a perfect pucker for
Valentine'• Day
A lightc.•r color in the center
of the lip will give the illuaion
of fullne.1. So for thin hpe,
.aye Clairon, maker of cosmR
ics, dot lipa with concealer,
then gently rub with loose or
presKed powder to blend. Jo"ill in
entire lip area with a hp pencil
in a shade alightly lighter than
your natural lip color. With a
lip brush, acTt'nt the cornera
with a darker t·olor, then
amud~wtheedgeetolQften. Remt>
mbt-r. a lighter rolor in the
center of the lip will give the ii·
luaion of fullness
l''or uneven lips gently
aponge foundation around the
lipline, then correct your lip's
imperfection with a lip pencil
outline. Fill in with lipstick the
eame shade as the pencil.
Dot full lips with concealer
and outline with a pencil that
matches your lipstick. Fill in
with a matte color since glosAy
hpeticka make full lipa look
larger.
You can make glosay lip color
look matte by peeling back one
layer of tit1sue and Kently
prC88ing it against your lipe af·
ter applying color. Brush IC>OtJe
powder over the tiseue and remove
the tiAAue.
She haa friend~ in 1he c )mm11n1ty
but l'vtn they admit tht'ycan·t rd~
on her vol.'? in council.
Hruce, on the other hand, la lt.'<'h·
nically ~killed. obviou11Jy t.-oura·
tct'OUK and able. I suspect he did
not gain gupport within th(' ('(Im·
munity because of argumt'n\3 ht•
has had about the dirt-ction tht·
community tthould take. in intf'r
nal debates within gay and lt·11b1·
an organizations. He has always
argued for opennes11. Brut·t' wound
up with about H l)t•rt'l'nt of tht>
vote in that distrirt.
In my last rat·e, I knew l WPM go·
ing to lose wht·n I annount·t'd. Hut
I ran to ~ee what kind of re11pons('
an openly gay candidott' would
have in a city wide rate atcaini>t a
conservative (on our i!oo.-.ut'S) op~
nent. What I found wa8 that a gay
or lenbian candidate with a politt·
cal identifiC'ation rould run credi·
bly in any ditotrict oH•rlapping
Montrc'""
Steve Shiml'r ran in tht• Dist (
race against Cathy Mmcberg,
\"ince Ryan and Harhara
Goldfield. Steve'" rc.·1;ultt1 wt•ren"t
aa suC<.·essful in the 1<ame pn
C'im·t-". but Stt'\·e had not bt-t·n po
litically active previously in lht"
community. and hii; opponenta
were all courting the lf.>Mbian and
gay vote.
There seems to be a problt.•m
"' 1th ~ p re 'I' ll f tt qui lif,
CflUon1of KUY vt. nus non·l(aycan
d1dutt'8 eet•kinl( tht• snmt· ulfice. 1
find u a.lurnung that aomt" 1c-l.,·
atyled eaden of our c..·ommunity
"'111 dt ny aupport for ont1 of our
own t.o '."it ad\.·tmtageufadu·noth·
1"K pohtidun ho•til..- to uur com-mumt\.
Tlwn• wua a tim(' whl'n tht11eKelf.
hntinl(, Kt·lf dt.·prt"c..·ntinK typ<-8
Kh•wt•d m1Nt.>rably in tht•ir closet1'1.
0t·c1u110ntilly writinu uni;ignOO h·t·
tt·n to tht• Nlitor in <.·ommunity
puhlil'ntionK. Hut, n·infor<.·l·d by
tht.• c:urnu){t.' of AIDS, tht•
hntt·tulnl'H of tho 19l'i.; n·ft>rt·n·
dum and ninf!' yt-11.ri; ol
hl>mophoh1u in Washintcton, the)
tlt.'t.'m to havt• t·mt>rtct-d to ortcanii.e
and dt11truy 211 )'t.'flrtl of hard work
and achu•\·t·mt>nt by tht" rt'at of us.
Tht>1r obJ('ct ia to drag all ot U!>
down mto the crab buckt•tof clrnJet
m1sny. Our wont t'ncmy is tht·
aclf-hult withm ua.
Whut wt• aa a communuy mul!lt
do to prt11t'rw tht" gains we hnv
8C'1."omphMhtod 19 l'lt·vatt" somt' of
our ltudt·nhip into public office.
We muat n-cogruzt· thot gay and
1csbui.n i:undiduh~ an· OH quali·
fitod for thl· offke tht>y 8ttk as
tho1-1e who art.' not gay or IE'Kbian.
Rt·mt·mht:"r the llarvt•y .!\lilk l'X~··
rit•m·c ~o community group in
Son Franditco, not 1•v1·n thE' om.•
th""1 nov. l m h namt>, •upport·
eel his (:andidac\· until after he
won. Your Gay a~d l..e3hian Politi•
cal ( aucus haa a bt·tu.•r record. We
mdonwd Gary \'an Oott>ghem,
•<·veral well·qualifit-d Judicial can•
didatt•s 1cloaeted and non), Bruce
R~·H•s and t>nn Ray Hill. Sooner
or later Wt' will win if we kttp try·
ing. The key is to t>ncourage qua Ii·
fied candidatt.11 und to support
them with all the 8lrength the
communtty cnn muster.
T'rut•, tht.·re art• sonw im·umbent
politidnns who .ihould not be c:hnl·
lt>nged ht><.·aust.• of tht• loyulty tht·~
huve i:;.hown to our c..·ummunity.
But if thl'y cunnot produce a clear
rewrd of aupport for Mt'Vt'rol yec.nl,
they h11.H earned opposition fnim
our community. l.oyalty to polio
cal partit'S und other entities
doesn't count. Loyal Mupport of
i;tay and lt>sbian u1suee doeti, but
johnny-come-lately friend1o1hip ii
pure political <·xμedil.'nc:y. Politinans
han a habit of telling yoQ
want to hf•ar al t'lection time.
Ele<:tinK cloet'led pohticiana
over those who nreoutof thecl0t-t'l
also will gain us nothinf{. If )'0\1
can't J:;l"t" it. it doesn't count. Har
vey Milk "aid, ""'We will gain more
suppurt by being openly gay (or
le~bianl public officialM with com
passion for otht•ni thnn by fight
ing for our own C'Ouse'
6 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDAY FEBRUARY 199<
Montrose residents say they fear 'over-development'
~- o. JIVUD' . ... mason• attracts people to the Mi lt.i'OIJe
We are oonoerned about ch&ng:ea to
ont.roee as tt 1S "'revttall.Zed:'
ea m-.v be t.M very th1ntB that ww
be drat loet or deSLroyed.
For us. the ch&rmS of Montrose
are f1rmly b&8ed m ttB
small houses, &1.dewalks.
green lawns and
grassy st.rtps. and its
trees. These are some or
the rea.aons why we
oonUnue to ltve here
even though we work at
jobs that. ha.ve been
[
Letters
to the
Editor
moved out to the suburbs,
necessitating a long commuU>
"Development" 1B destroying
puy1 it- m One very
uov1U\lS example 18 the a1tA!I or the
new shopping center gomg 1n at.
Dunlavy &nd West o""' Any t.reea
and green "'"8S growmg there
have been bulldo%ed and leveled to
the ground. replaoed by ooncrete
And we're not partJcula.rly excited
about t.M n6W movte complex that
will be a pa.rt oft.hi& &hopping oen·
tee We don't welcome th1S threat to
the River Oaks Theater;
Less obvtoua are the effects or
condo-iZa.Uon a phenomenon 1n·
creaalngly apparent in Montrose
Condos, built as they are to every
square inch of their lots. do aw93
w1th lawns and grassy ;t. IJ>l and
treee. Some have been built four
stortee high, dwa.rllng netghborlng
hOuses and ch&nglng t.he local
&lcyltne Clr oontour.
Traffic 18 also 1ncreaaingly hea.v·
y Crossing Dunlavy on foot any
where between the 11.ght at West
Ort\Y a.nd south to the bli.n.lunS
118ht at Fa1rvtew IS at present very
dl1!lcult. The shoppt.ng oenter w1ll
ma.ke t.h1s 81tua.tton much worse
The sa.me ts true for Shepherd
Sq\l&l'8 on Weatheimer_
'lb these examples a few more
may be easily added: Richmond Avenue
(an ugly speedw93 through
t.M a.r. &n.:1 the recent otr-et.reet
pe.rkmg requirement for new bu81·
neeees. More paVing over (One
thing eome of t.h688 "bad development"
moves have 1n common I.a
the aooommoda.Uon of automobiles
needS over human needs. Why not
Close the •Museum D1Btrtct'" to all
veh1cular tramc )'?
We would like to see Montroee
come allve once again, but not 1n
eome ofthew'YS we see happening
around. us. we are eorry to see so
m&r\Y clvto asaoctattonsjump-appe.
rentJ.y with Utt.le hee1tat.J.on.and.
much gusto-on the "'growth"
b&ndwagon
t ower Theater variety show raises $2820
''That"s What Frit·nds are For;· a
community·Y+ ldl' l>t·nl'tit ht-Id
Monday. Jnn. 29. et th1• Town
Theall'r, raiHt'<i a total of $:lh20,
oncanizt·r11 ot tht t'\'t•nt .-wd th11;
week. !\et profiiH, atiltt•r nmain·
ing catering OO&l.11 of ~no. totaled
::O:.W90. which .... ill bt dii;tribuu.-d
to four Montro.-e charitil't.. P(·nd
ing final paym('nt of nt'<ilt rnrd
chargeis. the Muntrotot• Clinic,
Bering Community &·rvicl's
Foundation, Montroi;e Activity
Center and th<' Omega Hoos(•
Building Fund t·nch will rt'Cl'ive
$!">97.50, said Lnrr;y GarrNt tMr.
TGHA 1900), <·0·111)(msur of tlw
colorful fund rai~er.
Bruc<'lla D<'·vall and M<'lanit• month mt·mht·n;hips to Olympia
Ashcroft (Mi:.;s and MM. TGH.A Health and Haqut•tball Club wmt
1990, respt'Ctively. also co-hoi;u-d for $X(J eaeh.
the event. which ft·nturt.'d a long P('rformerti who donatt>d their
list of popular hx:al t'ntertaineri; time and talt'nt.-. to aplJ("ur m the
and a silent aul·tion ot itl'mH do- show were Alicia, Alto (featunng
rj.ted by community busmes.ses 'I'Tanae Chard1.rn !, •·cher:· H1Ihe
und individuals Duncan. Hru('('lla De"\"aU, Larry
The auction rait>t'<i almoet ::;fl{)() Garn·tt, K.C Gla!':-e, \\'s.yne
Qt the evt•nint(H proc:·(-edit, Garrett Grab(·in. Cassandra Landa.
~id. A framed print ol' the HoU!I· Sht·ila Lennon, Marcil', Dyan M1
ton tikyllne. donated by ('haelt<,TeresaMoaney.HobMoon,
Besiwlman Gullt.'rieto, wai- pur· Jt•rry ~1orin, Rikki O'Shea, Pickchased
by attornl·y Frank Luccia lei; and Wilhemina. Dt·lx- Powell,
!Or $:.HO; Caryn I>"An~l·lu of the Kathy Riser, Dan Wibel and Hill
ty>lt 4!">'s paid $.;JOO tor th(, :ltl-inch l>a\.·idson
gold Herringbon(• n('(:kloc-i• <·on· Oth(·r businesst·s and individutribu1{'(_
t by PNc Mortint•z_ 'J\o.·osix uls who made ('OnlributionH to th1·
\ an1·ty show. au(·tion or pre-show
n ·1·pt1on mduch• Appearanceis
,Jt•1an11 and Sportl;\4t•ar. L:ynn
Ru hurl! E ,J ·s, (furdt·n ProJ><•r
ties. Halph ( l.811her; J)avid IA•W·
l8: ~lary e, the Montn-.;t· \"oit'e;
PaC't' ~fon&J(t•m("nt. l>u\"id Anderson
J!!t >f theatt·~ H\luffi at
$1800) Pnnto l'lu11, H.andall"s
l'lol{1>h1p. Shephf-. :t Square: Say
Chc1.1w; Southwest Kwik Kopy
l'nnUng, ~larv Gmzt"I and John
(;aJeY.sk1; Arlhur Talk; This Wet>k
n Tt'xa11 Magazm1-. Thl• Tower
Tht·ahr, Jim \'au~h1m; Vicki
\ int-s (Aue .oru"t'. ), t'alla Lily
Flvriat, !\118tiouri Strt'd Pont•ry.
,Jim Wulk1 rend ;\1nry llough1.
··ctwr
u:a1> amorig the local 1StOrli «·hu ht•lp1•d th~ bt.·n1f1t ra11<1e almo"'t S2.5fJt.J fur
cvmmun1ty orgaf11zat1r111i;
Case of Texas judge helps prompt change in judicial code
U8llas Judgt' Jack Hampton, re·
cently publicly censured by tht•
Texas judicial commission on eth·
i<t wat; a figurt• in the American
Bar Association ·s decision to include
a ban againi;t onti-gay discrimination
in it." Model Codto of
Jildicial Conduct, according tu the
?'ttfttional I..e11b1an and Gay La ....
~ocialion1t.;LGLAl. Hampton's
cai;e w& citl'd as an "outrageous
n.ample" of ditocrimination bat>ed
~Jl ~1~xeu~~gc;:;:~~~~7nb~~~~:;\s~:
ABA fur the mdusion.
In 1988. Hompt<>n told n(•w8pa·
~'r reporters in DollaK that he had
givt-n a lighter 8entence to an 18- v1st'<i 1udit·m1 rndt'. whkh hnnne<i
yt·or-old convicted murdl'rer lw discrimmution bused on race, sex.
cause the killer's victims werl' Jell)'. rt'l1gion and nntwnu.I origin. After
He went on to say that somt· \"ic n'Ceivmg oral .ind wnth·n tt-stimotims
were more ·innocent" than "IY from :'\Ull.A. tht> draft was
otht>rs. and that if the qctims hod changed V trt<lh, 'A judge shall
not bttn ··cruising tht• streets to not, n the performanct of judicial
pick up tttnage boys and 'iut1es. b) words or "Onduct mani
··spreading AIDS around., tht•) fest bias or i::-t•JudiC"t', induding
Y+ould not haH' been kille<i. Tht' but nOI hm1ted prejudice bused upct-
nsure came after a d11><·iplmnry on 1 1. s('x, rl'ilKJOn, 1;1at1onal ori
("(>mplaint against Hampton b_y gm,dl8nb11tl)· age sexualorienta·
the Tt'Xa~ Human Righta Founda· tion . aoc1ottunom1c status, and
tion ffHHF). shall not :>erm1t. staff court ofti-ln
May. 9h9.theAHAComm1t- c or othtn suhJt'Cl to the
t('(> on Et hies and Professwnal Ht· JUd~e s :htPC"tit•n m rontrol to do
spuni;ibility issued a druft ofits re- so.
The ABA House of Delegatt.-s i11
expected to give final approval of
the revised code, which will bl.' presented
at its 1-~ebruary meetinK in
Los Angeles, !'iLGLA membensaid
on Jan. 16.
Suzanne Bryant, one of Wa.-;hington's
two regional board mt'm
hers for i\LGLA who appeared before
the ABA committee there.
said, ··Be<.-ause lesbian:-. and gay
men have rea>ived unfair lrt·ntment
in the court system, many
have not availed themMeln-s of t'X
ii;ting legal protections. Finally,
we can expect and dt·mand equal
treatment under the low"
Hon Alht>r. NL.GI.A co-chair,
who tt~tified in Son Francisco,
t1aid ht• was ''thrilled <the group"s1
lobbying had c-onvinced the ABA
to hlkl' appropriatt- steps and cor·
rt'<'t an on·niacht in thl' original
draft Albers and Bryanfi- te:.ti
moniee wt>rl' instrumental in con
vincing thr ABA to change the
draft
Tbe Judicial rodea1>pJie,. tojudi;t·
f'S throughout tht· countl")·. and
11ubJt'Cl8 them to disciplinary ac·
tiona if they v1ulatA· it.ii t>thical canons.
~ lArry Bagneris in runoff for New Orleans City Council
c
- By SHEHI t'Oll .. :N
UAHBONNI-:
• Munl f'C#!t' \!u1u Editor
',. F.ormer long time Hom1ton ac-
1 •i. tivi1n Larry Batcnerii; WH ont·
of two candidotl'8 to win a
plate in an t'Xpe<.'tt-d runolf for
l\ew OrleanM City Coun('il
(~~~~i~~~:e ::~~~'~w~~cht~:
general election Saturday, Feb.
J, will be decided on ~larch 3
' calt10 a Saturdttyl. Hatcnt>ris
face~ Ja<·quelyn Hrt'Chtd
ClarkP1on m that election.
B{'(·oust• of the number of rnndi
dotes in the open field ell'\·tiunl', a
runoll hod bet·n expt't:ted in t>(·veral
raC't·i-.. and hy Monday tht' dat1·
for thl· el('c:tion had be('n 8l't. A
Bagn('rts campaign worker said
thl• camp had fully expected to
continue inlU the runoff and WR!I
working on stratt'gies for the ·cru
ctal'" coming month.
Bagneri11, a former pn•tndc-it of
Houston·~ Gay Pulitic:aJ ( aucu
!no" HGLPl , left his home Lown
of :\t·w Orlean~ in H~70 •o mo\.e
ht•rt-. It wa11 ofh'r the mon• that~t·
~'("lUlW :ll'li\'(• in tht• KOY rights
mov1·mt·n~ on a lo<·al and nmional
Int• , althoul{h ht· dmmit his in\"
1...-lvement m t·i\11 right.a Bctivitiel'i
KQ1•s back mu1·h fortht•t, to th(· age
of 1a. lie rnu\·td hack to ~tw Orlf'o
ans D 1986
BaKnerts, l ( rt'Ole with a hi8to-r)
of • ,, 3\ t ment m anh-racu;m
C'.\mp.u~ns lrt .:'\t'" Orlt'nns, s
c _1mmtc much ot tb£· minorit~
support ii. ~.h election, t'llpedally
m the black rommumty The EaMt
Bank-\\esL Bank i;l'Olfl"&phical
boundar1eto stud tod1\"ldt· t-verv local
election an• not as clear am.ong
minority voters. Bngnl'ris said
"I think my coalition it-1 i;trong
enough a8 it is .. Wl' JUSt m•ed to
work on buildintc tht' numlwrs;
said Bagneris. "Wt> hove tt1upport
lrom) the black community, tht•
gay and lei;bian community, lht•
French Quarter pre11ervotionists.
and tht' neighborhood tcruupa~'
''I've ali:;o be<>n fortunate ~,thin
the (gay) community, as rve had
the support of all of tht> groups, the
bars and businesses and tht· com·
munity organizations,' Bal(nt>r1s
addl'd.
'I'm hopinK I'll h<• calling
dluustonl whih• you all art• in
th<• middlt> of IA.·t Ui; Entertain
You W(1•kt·nd .to i(l\"t' you tht•
good nt·ws. that th<· south ha~
t•lt"<frdlita) firstopt·nly gay cit·
y count·1l pt•raon:· Batcnerii;
smd. addinl( that he would
Y+ nnt h111 \. ktory to s1·nd a po11i
ll\"l' mt'Bt!Ugt• to lt'Shiun and
gay pohtit nl hope·fuls here.
• Tht· mt>Pa(Ct' I want to st·nd
18 that if you ctm see it in your
mind and believe It in your
heart. no mnttt•r what it is, 11
cun he achiend:' ht> said.
Instructor
on Japanese
campus
alleges
firing over
AIDS test
HEf',;(), f',;t•\·. t.Al'I ·A tt·ad\
t•r on tlw l"nh·N1Hlv ol !'it·
vndn. l{t·no's nmlp~11 in ,fa
pan daim11 ht• Y.tls fin•d tor
rt·fusinj{ to tnkl• un ,\JJ)S"
ll-st. hut an ol linal in lfrno
said thl' lt'aChl'T w:ls lm·d
bt.'<-·au~t· ht· al·ked thl' prop•
er crt-dt•ntmh1.
Pt-dro Pastrano, .,... ho hus
tauJ{ht n·udmK und .,... rit1ni:
at l"~H • intematlonul d1·
vision m -Japotn H1nn· April
said ht- rt>fUtwd to lx· 11"1!.led
for thC' ,\ID~ \lruai Ill\ bi.
cautot• 11 t nrournged d111
criminahon a).!":nni;;t tor
eignt•n and reprt>$C'nlt'Cl nn
in\9.lli(in ofpn\at'Y
Paslrano 11.lso dmmH hr
wai-. told llf the tntm)C policy
on l)et'. I i.onC'd.ay helurt
he t·omplt·h'«f his lhtrd
thn't.'-month cuntraM nt tlw
l':\H ("i.lffipUM 111 T k\• .
In Rt·no, .Jani· Hu-umun
the acad1·mi1· t·oordinatur
for tht· .Japant'lll' eampu14,
t;<\id ~ht• st•nt lnternntinnal
Program:-; and Snvkf's 111
rt•<1or Lt·<· ThumaH u mt'Tllo
:.;a~· ing Pa1>trnnu s t"Ontrtu-t
ishould not he rf'n(•wed for
thn·<· r~a.~uns.
Sht• :-;aid he Jm·kt d tht•
propt'r cn'licntrnlt1 for the
job he had nt>t'lied a ra1<h
ad\·ant'(> bt-!"t>t·n tht· t'Ao
rontrat111 and ht rr{ust-d to
lPkt' rh.t· 111\ lt'tit
approve
drug that
could help
fight AlDS
GH.OTO~. ('1inn. fAl'J- l-'1•1!('rol
regulators ha\."t• .apprc•\ 1-d u new
anti-fungal agt·nt that m1·d1rnl t·x
perL-. say has apphcations for pu
tientt-t with AIDS, l'ancer and uth·
t'r dis<lrdtts and will ulso J.ietp w11h
heart traru;plants.
Fluconazolc-. or D10ucan. w 1s
dt-v('loped. by Phzt r Inc m Groton
and will be munufactund tht'rt'!
Doctor:.; aa~ 1t is d1ffcrt nt from oth·
er anti-fungal druga becau~t·ttcan
be taken orally 1s non WxK und
ha" ft•w !'Ide effects.
'"Tht• ex pent·m't" or Pfflp)C' "'ho
have failed m all otht>r formM of
tht·rapy hru. hf-t•n quite good with
Diflu<·an. said I >c. Frunk Bia. un
infectious disertSC' 11p1·cu1hst ut
YaleSew Havt·n Huspitul Y+ho
has been conducting dimnd tri
ak ··St>veral of our pati(•nh1 hll\"t'
been turned around by th111 drug:•
Acquired immun1• ch·lidt•n<·v
syndrom(' tiUpprt•sf!t'M tlu- immur; ••
system, milking thost· who havt• it
vulnerable toinh·ctionM, inrludinK
fungal infection:! ;\tun\ c unc·l'r
therapie.s also t"C•mprc•rniiw tht· im·
mum• i,;yslt-m, and after un organ
transplant. the tmmuru- &\'Stt•m is
supprt.'Bst-d w1th :iru6(11 so ihe body
does not reJect the orgon.
Amphott>racin H one of th1•
main ant1-fungaJ drugs now m
us<'~ has gamed a mcknamt·
among those who must wie it as
·•ampho-terribh•" because of 1t.s
toxic t'ffects. IT also makes roam·
patlt'nts sick, dol1.ors 11md .
Ur. Patrkk A Hobmaon, semor
a"sociate dirl'C"tor at Phzn C1•n·
._,.-----------------------------------------------------__, tral Rl-f;t·anh, sa1dAmphottrarin
New group forms for women against violence
Hy LISETTA LAVY
1·~Mmllrt.J1'r\.'111n
Women Against Vioh·ncl.' Every·
where (WAVEl, 8 new orgoniw·
tif.1 aimed at innt>Rl'ing 1mhlic
~t::~.l~~1d>~ts \\~~tnl~~~g~gg~11~:~
ml't'tingJan. 17 at Firl!lt l'niturian
Cl\urch. Approxim&tf'ly Jt1 pt·oplt',
mOHtly woml'n, met to bt.·Kin or•
'fnizing a frist1vol rally to be ht'ld
o July 7, 1990. Tht• loc;atwnuftht·
efent haM not yet het·n docult·d
iJacaun Shah. one ofthC' Kroup·a
fqundt·r. began th_e mt't.'llnl( by rt'-_
ct_unt.mg the <mgms of tht> tlroup
The original idea for a prol~ st
agaim;t \'iolen<·e ugains1 womt·n
was i;purred on by tlw (ktuh<·1
11hooting of Ida Dt•lane\' h.,_- an oft
duty police oflict•r. Sha.h s~1id
Shuh rl'ad WAVE·s statl'nwnt ot
purpost', which t·on!'ists of lour
pomts: tu prot<•fit \·inlenrr toward
womt·n. to t't'lehrah• womt>n-s
riuht to snft·ty and Y+t•ll·l>l'mJC, to
t'dunltt' women to rt·su;t prt\nte
and puhlit' violenC't'. and to change
tht· prevmlintc att1tud<' .~at toltr
alt>S nolenn• toward "'omen.
WA\"i':'s progress to-:late~ll.JS n·
countt'd by Cindy Hec"Jt·r. who
1dt ntll t•d rJL ICWUlJ whkh
ha\ fft·rt'<I t8!.i11tuncl' induding
llnu11ton ,\n•a Women'M {"(•ntl'r,
l\111ntro1w {"ounst'lin~ ('t•nt('r,
llouiston An·n :'\()\\' und tlw Worn·
1·n's (;roup ol Fir81 llnitarian
C'hun·h. lleelfr 1·mphll8ll.t'd tht·rt•
111 much "'ork to bl' d11n1• ond ('ll·
c )UrllKl.'d thotW pn-sl'nt to t·ont1u·t
otht'r •ntt Ull'«I groups. Sht' said
thut WA\ t. would hkt to uttrm·t a
Wldt• var t y of l(l>Up8 and mdi
v1dunls cone r 1f'd with thl· problem
f, 1olenc agarnst .... >nwn
\um fl.pt'&lunK lo the .croup wus
( nssandra Thomas, dm'Ctor of
th(' rape crisii. program ol tht·
Houston Area Womt•n 's ( 't·ntn.
who providt-d some l!tntiHticH on
violence against women. Slw 11tot·
t-d that one out ol four womt·n will
be roped and that onC' out of two
marri('d womt-n are ahust•d. Tht·
answer to what to do with thiiJ in·
formation is ·•taking actuin. Tho·
mas 111uid. Wnmt'n mu"t rt"<fatm
their power and th<·ir riuht to ht
aafe. she said
Some WA\"E member8sa1d 1.hnt
pt•raonaJ l'XJ>f'rienc:e or\ tolt•nce or
rape had lt-d them to tht d1'C'1s1on
to act. while others l'lmkt• or tht•
morn HU hth t·onHt"<!Ul'nn·i-. ut ft•ltr
ol viult'llt"(', l'Ut·h aH tht•inuhility to
uo out alorw nfu•r dark. WAVE
nwmh1:rM t•xprt1Ult'<I hopt• that th<'
plunnt'<I ft•toti\"UI will h~: the first
stt·p to t·hnnging nttttudt~ about
\'mlt•n<'t' ugoinMt womt•n
Mt>t·tinJ(s .,...jlJ ht· ht·ld t•ach Wed
1wMclny ut 7:00 p.m. in thf' Womt>n's
Huom of lht• Finit l "nitnrian
<"hun-h, 5:llU Fannin at
Southmon• To volun«>t·r or to rt'"
t·1·1\'e furthl'r mformatwn cull
.Jacsun Shah, 6~1 7.r.lH or tht·
Hou(lt••n ,\n·n \\-(lnwn"s Ct•nh·r.
·•21">-hi9h
hru; httn in ust• neurly two dt-<-.
adt':-.. hut a suhstitutc haM Jong
bl:en sou~ht
\\"hen I was doing m:v triumng
in inft>ctious dis1•u1JeS I wus 1ul·
ministNing Amphotn11c·111-H, nnd
I said, 'Thne'eJ(ut tu heMomt·lhing
bettt'r;" Rohimo1on snid. ''I\ow, lf1
yt•ors lutn. J"m invol\'<•d with
bringing it along. It's u prt·tly
good f(>{'linK."
Amphoterucin mu11t tw tnkt·n
intravenouMly. hut Diflucnn cun be
taken eilht·r rnlrn\'t•noush· or oral
ly. One of tht• t·harnctrrh1tiar of lht•
drug is that it t·un pnu tlw blood
brain h11rrit•r and dct P\ t·n nn c-entral
nt>rvnus •Y•lt111 nfl'Ct1t1n11.
Bnnn Mc<;l} nn, o 8polwsper11<•n
for Pfizer, siud the ('ompany will
not n·lt-ase t'OSt dntu on th1• drug
for at lt•ll!ll a Y.1-ek.
Montrose Classlfleds
To ad~rtlse. call
529-8490
Monday throogh F~day. 9om 10 6pm.
e S per ne
"'Ql'dspt1 Ml
SPECIAL A0vef1•MNll'M9d no ~ '°'"wffkl llenP9yJ.tcp.tr ....
•nd U ~per h .. dhne pet "'"11.
$P£CIAL AO••rt•SI 1ame ed no cnanges 101 13 w•k'I 1nen pay~ per
Y,t)1'dan<l$22!opet"-dll'le pef ....... k
FRlE SPECIAL SorneUlllgOllft 0!191' I••• Id$ OU! the•• ••• IUICI rut es You
mu.a al... .... by tr Mt·'"dayiilm-n
'
Ad .. .i~~ n1\thecatenn•y
'''"d I dperp! r
'' le{l<<y Otha•• tr t< IY·11'11Y
Just call. We can handle It all over
the phone and blll you later.
-Ca-rs- --01-02 Books 1010 occuit 1056.5 , .. M
Runs .;1••
a_ll ,0,1_"1,1'!"\I
eea1 Pl
.:,i..m. 110.ui.
.. ,,,
H
LOBO
Gourmet Foods
1039
10 CAJUN RECIPES
O.rie.ous.,.
lll"S' Send $3 cne:
rnortey Ofder R•
.. 6A••~ 1ou
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
p • • • . ,..1.·..: M
•NOISE .:>CCVI. T
... orm • • bOtd hN
•I /lh CHARGE
'Nl•:• ... eie-t<s •
MO,..OAY Of'.l
""'
Patio
Furniture 1057
Auto Repair
__ ____;:_;,01=90 Hobby
Supplies 1042
Montrose
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
... 2~- ... ~ ·..: ,....
- IA.NOISE. PATIC.. •UR.
NI JHE M11• "'orcls •
J t1eadhn•1 •t Nl
tARGE !or IM t1ex1 4
... L •• C•ll !;29-84
MONDAY ONLY. fet> l;I
• no)n
Auto
Repair
F E
V.o•ku.N•• 1
100 Pacific
526-3723
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
',, ~ a 2', ""'urd MER
CHANOISE HOBBY
SUPPLIES ad (4 WOfdt H
a bold h .. dlme} at NO
CHARGE for the next 4
wull1 Cat. '!129-8490
M )NUAY JNLY Ii'
Jewelry 1044
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
-·" ._. . ..,..,u M
11ANOISE .:EV...ELF
.. •Ot'Ot.H•D0'3 rte_,.
ine1 •1 ""O C11ARGE lor
""'••••-...sC..1529-
M >Nl)A1 )NLY
Leather Goods
Tr-.etr: '51
n en •• y·rE .....
,:.._b cot n
Plants 1060
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
. _,,,·.;ML
~.ANT) lld
OMheaO•
t NO ;-v.RGE lo:
O•l'"'ffkSC.15,29.
J.l 'N, ONLY
'-----....J 1048 Professional
General Help Equip. 1064
Wanted 0650
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
iAN~1s? * L(uATMF ADVERTISE FREE
)S 9d , ... •ora NEXT ISSUE
he•dl ne1 .11 NI.< - -·"'<..·.; ML
1ARQE to• !'Ml fte•I 4 Ct'IAlllDISE PROfE_..
9f- Mr.; , F ~"~l.lAYC~~.)29-1"90 ~~~"iuE~U~P"-::n~'
Cheri ea. ' 2 NO CHARGE tor tl'le
~ntt•met •I .i wffkl Cilll S29-
MonllON- , iJual M{)NOA.Y t'1NLY
::~.:=".". .". :'~~, Lost & Found '" "
::,~:~m·~~.r'~ , Merchandise -.T-.----
10
-
8 -
~"'. . ~'"""'00c "" _____1 '"'0"0"'5""0 -'-"1r'"'e"s----'-'0~ ~~~ C• Ros ry
EMPLOYEE·
INVESTOR WANTED
New I•'"' ·~•t 1erv•t•
tiu&r'lffl .....els
employ ... ""rtt CleflC.al
'k IS •ncl $2$0() IQ "'Vftl
Mini have llO er na1
record .,,d t>ondaDJ4
~re~eua.
nu1 All emp101e11
muat own a pmn bl.II•""' Nq E>cepl
Ce !121 IGJ6
STUDZ NEWS
NHOs r .... o• eno
~:::,d·~~= -:.-·
~O.m-3pfn
E•peflenc9CI O.rtel"tder•
ano DatbM'~• Appr~ on
peraon •I OT • eoe v.n
!he.met 3""PI"'
B<.1sineu pa.rlner w•n _..
SOl50 1wo opera
mY1I I011e bQltlaftl; I
ADVERTISE FRf.E
NU T ISSUE
Pee• • 2:..-... c·· MER·
CHAND•SE LOST &
FOUl>ID MERCt-IAl'\jOlSE
lld i' wo•O• u • boP'le.
dh,,.) •I ,,.0 CHARGE
kw P'I• f'le•I 4 •ffllS C
. e-- MON[)AY
:NLY Feto 12
·Mmiiirv
Clothes 1052
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
... ., • 2~-"'""·.: ME
CHAlllO SE MlllT ARY
CLOTHES•d '' ... o _
• bOkl l'INdl ne •• ""'CkARGE
IOt tne n •I '
••••• c.11 529--!,,..
MC"Nl A~ llll1 Y Fej 12,
•• 529-1414
~~o
THEtltU
PLACE •
Wanted To
Buy 1090
WE BUY HOUSE
Montrose Classifieds
TOPIC INDEX
Advertise! It'll Be Good For You!
0100-TRANSPORTATION
0300-BUS.
OPPORTUNITIES
•
'""'
0600-EMPLOYMENT
AVAILA.B..L..E
0700-INSTRUCTIONS
0800-WORK
WANTED
1000-MERCHANDISE
1Jo4·APP &ncH
>-Artl& .iflfll
""""'""' IOl·B•lloona
IOI-Beel & L.quo
l086-81e1 ketl
~B1noa
Oit>.:3ook1
01 1 8" 11
01t!HkR1¢;gM
"'" 012-Gott ..
101~
10t~
1;l0-?r&l)el'•
1024-0,.....
1026-Eyegtauea
102&-Fencet
1031•flle'WOOCI
IQ37•fr,.mi 'I.II•
IOJ&-F1.:•ons
t39-G<X"rme1F0011
''·Health FOOd
142-Hobt>ykpph ..
W4l-lltm11or Sa1e
""4•-ltWelry
"'-8·LHU'ler Gooe11
'50-LOll 6 Found
"°'erthanclse
1052-M 1!flry Ck!tl'lel
105'-Ml.lllC & Video
M1056-N-e"'
te:i&P9FS ·~&-occuh
1057-P.tio Furniture
050-PIWll•
.0.6..- '·Pto·~ 06&-Recorot & T~
~ReMl•Sho1>•
0 ~&C&rpetl
1076-$PQrt$WNf
1076 5·Slereos Radios
101f Tel .... ·•ron VCR•
l0$0-lt1H
10&4 T•opnoff
108l·V•deo
lOiO·W•t>l&d To Buy
lOQT·Y1chtt
111 -Y••d& Gar•..,.
1100-ANlMALS
....
1400-RENTALS
l'Ul)-"PolrtfNtlll
141()-Aperlments
W•nt.O
1'40-Tc· ... l\l'!Omes&
w. 100
1600-REAL
ESTATE
16.11-H f(r5.a1a
16V2·RNI E llte r
P•:t1 n1
16, -Cc11 r<.
r rty
1700-NOTICES
1900-SPIRlTUAL
2000-MORTUARY
2100-SERVICES
~ ·"'1 •I
B< •kt ng
il!U..-ACIYl!:ll rn9
1111-A•rec,.,a,l'Of '9
2112-Allerll>or>l.Sew "• 2113-Appli•nte Rep1or
2115-Attomey & Leger
2117·B•o1Bond1
2118·C1rpenlry
211•C•t9'f1ng
2119S-Cl'loroj)f•CIOll
2120-Quners
(CIOtl'les)
212l·CIHn°"Q.J1°•to-
'"' 2121$-Compt.ler
Serv•Cft
2122-Con.>gnments
Wanted
.21.2_3-,C on1tr11t:!•On &
2124·Coun&ehfl9
z12•K1ed11
212 ·O•tooO
21255-0enloStry
2125 7·0o11 Aep11r
2126-0omesllc
2127-EletlrOlyStS
21275·E•ercoseProgr•
ms
2128-Floutts
2129-Fumoture
Refoni1hmg
2130-GenNlogy
2131-Gyms.He<h
Ct rs
2132-H••rCue
2133-H .. r LON Treat·
2134·H•ut09
213$-Horotccpn
213&-lncome T ..
2138·•ns.ur•f}C•
.2.1....IO...-.l• •iCar• ~.,.
2U2-lot~smtl'I
.2.1.4.5.-.~.. , .., ...
2155-MeoiUI C•rO
2160·Mowtlf"I
2161-N.,.1rition
2162-0ptomet•t$11
2163-Pionting
211M·Fortu~Te!ltng
2165-P•pef H•ngo~
2166-P•rt•H
2167-Pnt Control
2170-Ptlo10Fm1sh1n9
2175-Photogrephy
2176·P1an0Tun1n9
2180·P1c1ureFrem1ng
2181-Pl•ntCue
2182·P1umbong
2183-Po<1r11ts
218'-Poltll Boxes
21S8-Plych1c•
2189-PlyChol()QoUI
C•••
21895-A-rchSenr-
21897-Rn11ur•nts
2190--Reau~
2191-S.Curoty
21913-SIOt'~
21915-l•Nllfl9
2192·1 ... ,
2193-Tei.phone &
Pegong
21936-T!Cket S•~
219S-TV6V1deoRe"''
2Hl6· typneti.ng
2197·lyptf19
219fl·Uphols!ery
2199-Vodeo Taping
2199.5-W.ignt Lon
2200-THE
PERSONALS
2220-tlridov1d.,.1I) Peraon•
I•
2240-(Commerco11,
Per.on•IS
2260-BodyRubs
2280-Mode11 Elcort•
2300-SEASONAL
233V-Cnnstm.u Tr-
2335-Hailow"" Cos.-
Can't ftnd your cat·
egory? Call 529-
8490. We can start
one for you
... Ork ~4-36$5
SPORTS RE.PORTE.A
"' MontrOM VOi
1t.1k1ngtor ••he.•p ... rit9'f
"''t" m..-nilflandkr>o"'
edge OI ne19hD01•·ood
IPQrtl.,.....,,s•ndCOl'hPI
M-ona Some monetery
comptollNt.on plu• e•p
Music & Video
1054
CONTENTS
~1 ,or pmr1, Toe
Ct on Cc•h te"'try' ~.~., ~.----- ~,,.,,,.-.,.---- ------
M:~·~:",:.•~:;.,~• _' Pet Care, Lpost & Found Apartments
1ure 1n • lon1 c1 ........... .
r e.r. C
General Work
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
P • 2'..>·,..ud MER
CHA.NOi~[ '-'USIC &
VIDEO ad 1• •llllda ...
bOIO nHdL ne1 •t NO
CHARGE lor the r -•I '
w•t>ks Call b21t .ir
Mflf'llDAY JM Y Fet 1.<
;~, l•Q• :o lOf! E$I· Boarding 1164 ets 1190 1405
vaici"& Garage
Sales 1095
A.strodome arn Fi ff
lure. rug kn1kkr <
Cl• , bee. ,;peciker$ e ... c ~-2f
ADVERTISE FREI!
NEXT ISSUE
ce • 2~· ... ord ANIMAL~
PET CARE, BO.ARD·
ING ad<' word1 H •bold
I lldhfleJ al NO CHARGE
111 tri.nex1• ...... k• Cai
)490 MONOAY
ONLY.Fl'O 12 91rn-noon
ADVERTISE ,RH MONTROSE/
p :e ~E~I.~!~EANlM- 2301 COMMONWEALTH
ALS LOST & FOUND AttflChYe. well·
PETS Id ~· wordl H • m1ontaoneo pro1ect Poo1
~:R~·1~·,n~~e ·~.11~~ ~~~~~ii.;.~sn~~.~;;:,
weeks C•ll 529·8'490 522-0650
'-'~N:'A~ ONLY Fet> 12 Ne~~~~,~~.:prbd Wanted 0850 ~" ~-~. --
' ~ N_eo_n_ _1"" 05"'"5 -----
" •o•••,,•• ,... 'cremation Cremation cremation
$275 • e1ec1 & gas. mo
blonds . ce.1on9 l•n•
peromeier len~ Cal lor
pp 526-7~')3
=-"'=-,...--- -~·exr ~id: M• Services 2025 Services 2025 Services 2025
Boats 1009.5 • ,,, <~~·~r.:
- ----- ' • ~• C•· ~,,.
ADVERTISE FRH
NEXT ISSUf.
.W MONDAY OlllLY
~ 2 9mtn·l'OC)n
Pt- ....... J.ll -
MONTROSE.
2301 COMMONWEALTH
.A1111cl0Ye, wel m•on
t1u'lt'dpto1ec1 Pool.w•lk
1ri CIOMtt $2"4 month
.R.~. .lo.i detlt manager 522·
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 9. 1990, MONTROSE VOICE 7
Attorney & Attorney & Attorney & A'titr'rev ,= Legal 2115 Legal 2115 Legal 2115 Lega 2115
Jim Walke~ Lawyer
1770 St. James Place, Suite 400
55~-1117'
Car'Wrecks,
; .« "'" Workers ~ompe:itsation,
Criminal Law
CleaninJI Cleanin.ll cieaninJI cieanln.11
Janitorial 2121 Janitorial 2121 Janitorial 2121 Janitorial 2121
I ~,, ~!~,:.~!,~.-;,°', ~ t (713) 864-MAID
• Residfmtial • Commercial • References • Bonde
• Weekly • Biweekly • Monthly
•General & Spring Cleanings • Windows • 1111a1eereadies
•After Construction
We Also Supply Uniformed Party Staff, Call For Free Estimate!
Celebrating 2nd Year In Business!
"We'll Clean Up Your Act"
c .,
Accountin9,
Bookkeeprn!I
21105
Chiropractors Deniistry
---'2'-11-"9-.'5- 2125.5
Roommates
Wanted 1460 ~--~
Small Business
~'~·1·t;:-1, Professional
<>-2 .iopt·,.--, .. ,, Bookkeeping &
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
P. • ~•O•d SERVICc.~
CHIROPRACTORS
Ml 1• words as • bold
;e.oJ.rlf' .1 llNOCHARGE
IOI' thene•l ••ee«s Ca11
·- °'9'iMONDAY
lNLY.Feb 12.9.lf'l'l-r"IOOl'l
ADVERTIH FRll
NU TIH UI.
P1ke a ~•Old SERVI·
CES DENTISTRY ad 14
worm u 1 bold hee<U•ne)
•l NO CHARGE lor the
ne•t ' ..... , C•ll 521-
8'90 MONDAY ONLY.
Feo 12 9•rn-noon ~c~':!"~,!~!,"':!~ Tax Servtces
re!l'I'~ C•HR1ct1e1dat Doyle Baugn
5-~I,. • ...; )i!1"'~ L__._ .. _.• . _.s _ __J Cleaners Eiecirolysls
(Clothes) 2120 2127
vacation
Rentals 1480 Alterations,
'"''"'"'" 0 , ... .,,, .. Sewing 2112
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
~..... • 2>-wo'd SERVI·
CES ClEANEAS
!CLOTHES) ad (4 words
ADVERTIH FRH
NEXT lllUI
P1ac.e I 2!>·WOrd SERVICES
ELECTROLYSIS .0
I' wordt "1 bOld "'* lln•l a1 NO CHARGE lor
lheM•l4w11k1C1U52t-
8490 MONDAY ONl Y,
Feb 12. i•m-noon
d1y . ........ ot weekend to
t>ffut1I~ Lak•llvongsl(.
2 be<lroom. i.~oo0 •r••
p1t10. eQuopped k •1the1
~d~:nd ~~1:.a~.~~.':f~
tude •no beautllul
aunMta C•I ~" '7:U
Churches 1920
Kln&dom
Community
Church
Guo Kn~ ' "'' You
Goy
Do Y(uKnvw Y
G<
Cc .• E xi r•~ ~·
Worship
krYlce•
9u.a .. 711am
614E IHn
·~ ....
ADVERTISE FREE ••• bold hHdhne) •t NO
NEXT ISSUE CHARGE tor the neal 4
Pll.ICe a 2!)-... ord SERVI· ..... ks Call 529-8•90
CES AL'EAATIONS MONO.AV ONLY. Feb 12
~~IN~:~11~1~or:i•-,:~ _.. m _·"~"°"====
~~:~.GEJ~i1 '"5~Q-~~'96 C0ns"ignments
M~~n"o"v "" "· Wanted 2122
ADVERTISE FREE
NUT ISSUE
'fAV•CU l
Exercise
Programs
2127.5
ADVERTllE '""
NUTINUI
Piece a 25-worO SEAVt•
CES EXERCISE PROGRAMS
.0 I' worcll aa a
bold tMldhn•) at N()
CHARGE tor the neal 4
WHkl Cell 52t·e•90
MONOAY ONLY. Feb 12
9mm·noron
P\ai::• • 2!>--,.,utd ;.,t:RVI .::,y ;t
~~°'c~~P~:!; 14 Dating 2125 - ~v
:!"~~ c;;.:..'!."~, ;: ADVERnsE FREE Genealogy
Mnt..OAY mLY NEXT ISSUE 2130
Fe« P1 : ~ " 25-word SERVI
------ ,t.S DATING ed ~4wordl ADVERTISIE FRf:f.
CHAND E BOATS.01•
•0tdl•aboldl'lemditfle)
al 1'.10 CHARGE. kM' tne
">e>f •-~I Ca '°29·
Werew'1rk~tu
br "lQYOU•riral -- . DIRECT CREMATIONS
$495.00
C0t..ou1n
RICHMONO-All b1ll1
pao0 1 1 <n $ma.II II! Ufl•I
propeony ne ... cet1tral••r ~----- E
..._ • botd t-o•me) •I NO NEXT lllut arpet -HAAGE lor the' next ' Plate a 2~•ord SERVI· ,
weeks C•ll 529-8490
leanl,n~ M~~OAY 0NlY . Feb 12. CwoErd' sG .E.N al AboLtOd GtMV. O.ahM I)'
~(N(' "-II The Mo:itrose
Voice.
=Ba=llo"o"n"-s' "'--1-0'-0'=1 Balloons 1007 Southwest Memorial
Cremation Service
Prtvnlc Chapel
24 Ilour Personal Service
Full Service Funeral Ilome
AU Bwia1 Pollcie8 Ilonored
Worldwide Int.e.rmeot/Jhu>Bportatlon
(713) 528-3900
MC & VISA
A ccq>tcd
•Pttoacy and dignity ln tttnu of .-. •
heal POOi choose Y°"'
U•pet color Gold Of
Chrome '" blt!1 Ba11c
c•t>I• pa•d $350.mo·
$350 .. , ... ,,,y oeposo1
CO'-'MUNITY MANAGE
~----- 118.55 --. - --- '1 .~ ';,';::'.0~~::'i:.1::.
MENT COMPANY 623-
~~.$
MONTROSE
WESTHEIMEA-Ne.r everylh•
ng ' 111 otrilf•I eor
l'le1t. <101hwuher frost
l•ee lng d•nmg room.
iM~~t~~s~~~:fet:
MENT COMPANY 523-
033'
~ ._,.,......_..c -..·.. c,.n,. , .._ ... .,
Houston.
Mission
Church
3217F.ANNINll
ELGIN
52"·6225
su...i.y """fur
Scvict.t I O:JQ:un
Non-Oenom1n•toon11
ADVERTISI FREE Construction & r.:o 12~~."'m~~ ONL y
Piece ~E::!~~~~EHv1 Repair 2123 "·•""-·-·,"·' ---~
~d' .. ~~~<;;J,;.'.~' ------ Hair Care 2132
hHdl N) 111 NO CHA.AGE
tor th• ne•I' •Mk• C•I
'N'lt-8'90 MONDAY
ONLY.Feti 12.
Catering 2119
AD\IERTISI FREE
NUT ISSUE
Pliace 1 2!.>·.,.ord SERVI·
DON WHITE
General
Contractor
Commercial &
AOVl!RTllE FRU
NEXT IHUI
Pl•ce • 25·word SERVI·
CES HAIR CARE •O t•
:;0~b ~~~~r,~~11~l ''
ne11.1 • week• C•ll 5H-
8•90 MONDAY ONLY
Feb 12. 9•rn-noon
fl'!eM'"o"n"t rose L...:=====..l ~~~dS ~~ ~:~~. .~ ~,~~
Residential
e 1ns Restor111nn
• Remodel mg
• Room Add•hon•
eG-ral Repe1r1 construcuon &
Vole• Repair 2123 .
ciimmercia1 Afr . .
Property 1650 Condition~~ 11
ADVERTISE FREE
NEXT ISSUE
P - • 2!>·•'.JfO REAL
ESTATE COJ.i~ERCtAL
PROPERTY Id i' •Of(.
H • bold hNclt "91 II NO
CHARGE lor the ne•t '
WHkl C•ll 529·8•90
.M..O..N..D..A.Y.. ONLY. Feb 12
ADVERTISE FAl!I
NEXT ISSUE
Pl•ce a 1>,..Qro oEAv•
CES A.IA CONDITION
1,,.G Id~· "'Ofdl n •bot
tlHdllne) •I NO CHARGE.
fOf th• ne•t ' •ee•s C1
529-f'g() MONDAY
ONLY. F~ 12 hm-l'IOOI .
It NO CHARGE for !he
ne•t 'w .. •• C11t 529·
8490 M(.JNDAY ONLY
Fet> 12hm•JIOOfl
r
To odvortlso or
subscribe to tile
Newipaper of
MontroJe, coll
529-8490
FREE
ESTIMATE
591-8940 Mr Repm•lm&f!-P11n11n;,
carp.,ury. root leek• ape.
t••lat. B•ll66f-0991
.Apert~~~:~;::.::-;::.:~r:':111rne• 1 ~
Paul Komestat Scott Stewart
3330 Whitney Houston. TX 77008
1
·•
(713) 524--0499 (713) 524·2692 Mesuge)
8 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDA V. FEBRUARY 9. 1990
Domestic 2126 Movers 2160 Postal Boxes
... CLEAN
-Re•~•e• Exoe1oenc9d h..)uMClu1
Q I019flOI' Pfil(ll 'IQ Q•I
den• 'G Oh•d 7 Q•m , ..... ,
Income Tax
2136
PROFESSIONAL
INCOME
TAX PREPARA""ION
Person.I ti..iameu • 1
state<i• QJ .... alT\4
Ot l)fl.SI due' Erv..
P.,..l•,C U-Ce belOfe the '
Lawn Care.
Landscaping
21140
BETTER LAWNS I
-GARDENS
Massage
(licensed] 2145
Adsmth11co1e;1ry1m
_,.gu1 a1e mte· .1. "'.to b
ffom 111;ero1eo m11:.1ev11
1na m1nevscs U ni
cen aed m1uevrt •nd
m1 s1eu1e1 are 1111e
un~r Body Av bl
B1t·ZM1tab-.,.o
supp1emen1
NURTURE YOURSELF
TO HEALTH
M H11ge the rapy tor
11reaa •eduction a.e
t•uue woo on prob•en
ar•• •21i12 Joe bW-
''°' THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE
R•I .. Swed11h 'Tia
wi th rei.exotogy •
tiat•ncing Save
• .,233 HCJward 621
SPORT MASSAGE
THERAPIST
J I/ Pouo er>OAISOC
cotonlC co )fl mg
!.28-3010
Profeu+onal qu.11 y mn·
uge c.an reouce 11rn 1
c a ll Cl'lua b2 83'
LicenM • JOa:.:
Tooave rt " •
SvbSCl•belO!lle
NewJPOpet .if
Mo1lrcte.ccf
529-8490
MOVEMASTERSW<
It " .. M .... ,;.
welcOIT'e 6J0-6
AMERICAN MOVERS
Pror .... t0111 rnov · og
v 0 1Qfy,o.u rl1l'l9furn
Pest Control
2167
ONI!: TIME PEST
CONTROL
Succnsru Qr,. I•
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Demonstrators again demand more AIDS money
SA!\ FHAXCISC'OtAP Dtm u1
8trator11 with tht" •amt· mt~ttlU' u11
a yt'ftr ago, thot tht·n· ,a.;hould lw
mon· 6(0\ t·rnm1·n1 •pt·ndmi( in tht·
fight 86(Uim1l AIDS, t"UUl'l"<I t<1r
lt'SB trouhh• tor (ioldt·n (i1.Ht·
Bridut· rommutn~ thiK 1imt·
uround
··wl• rnuld hlotk tht• hridJ(t>
u6(oin ii wt· wnntt·d 10:· orw "'J}(·ak
er i;uid Wt·dnt·tidoy,,Jun. a1,dunng
n mid·11p1.m rolly nl'tlwdt·monNtfil
torti orgonizt·d by tht• Stop AIDS
Now or f<:h1t• 1SANOEJ J(roup
Somt' 100 t·hunlinJ(', wfo11th•
blnwinl( murdwr11 nu~t;t•d tht•
hridl(t>, usinJ( tht· 1·ni.t ti.idt·wnlk. h1.'hind
n bunnn no.uhnJ(. 'AIDS
t 1unl Gt·nodde
On tht• s.aml' datt· la.st H'M. d1·m·
onl'trators wt-nt onto tht• ruudy.·u\"
arnd litup1:i..-d traltit- for -th minuu~
during the morning C'ummutt•
Tht·rt· were "27 arn:l'l!'> and south·
hound trnffic was baC'hd up for
nhout IO milea-i
Tht·rt• were no arn•E>tN Wt-dm'8·
duy, Jon. :H. and tht• only l'Vidt•nt
disruption to bridgt• wutint· WOH
1rnfft'n•d by bicyclists used to rid·
ing tht• span in the morninJ(
Bridgt• police kept tht• bikerM oft
thE' bridge durinj( the protetit to
ovoid complications
Motorists experient('d delayM ol
up to :lV rninuh m~ 1tly ht rnu it'
dnvt·r• wn1• slowing down to look
at tht• dt·monstrntora. Tht·y \1.t•rt'
on tht· hrulw1 from 7::1011 m. toX:,JO
om
'I hoH• AIDS and I'm fi~htinK
lor my lih·:· aaiddt·mom•tratorJt·r
ry Althott, -Ii, of San FrnndH<'o ... I
f('(•I thiK iH n way lO ht·iKhHm ('Oil·
Kt·ioUl'll1t'tUI to n dt·t·udt· of Anwri·
n1"K apmhy und ru<·i1-<m"'
"Tlw govt"rnmt·nt ih ..:uilty ol
lltHoundinJ(IY inndt•quatt> 1m•dirnl
t•ommitn1t'nl to thiK diht'nHt·:·
'Wt• hu.,,·1· to Y.:Ukt• pt•oplt' up;'
l'lilld unotht·r dt·mnnKtrutor. Chaya
(iordon. 'Tiw gowrnmt·nt i1:m·t
doin_g enough and proplt· urt• dy
'""A s thl' nowd milled about at tlw
(·enu.·r of tht• iipan, aumt• in tht·1r
midM spray·pa111tl;'d graflit111n tlw
sidewalk in red and yt-lloY.. Tht• ht
vored phrase wall, ··tiJ(ht hut'k'
Thf' demonstrators drnnlt·d UM
thc>y walkt-d. undt·r a t·lpur hlut•
sky: .. Womt·n lovinK womt•n, mt·n
loving mm. wt• blork('(I tht• hrid1.u·
and we'll do it OJ(tun:' und' FiKht
back, fight AIDS, t;lly no."'
SAI\OE takt•ll tlw Htund 1h111
more fl('(•ds to ht•dont• for AlllS pa
tit•nts and to find a eun· for tlw tu
tal illntss, whit·h damagt'A tht•
body·!-. immunl" tt;.·a;h'm
Regents reject proposal to kick ROTC off campus
Hy JU.IE .\l(_"HFH
""' MAl>ISO:-.. w ·K. 1AP1-l1ninnll\
of W u1t·(1n11tm r1,::1·n1.11 today rf'Jf'rlt.d
a lut·uhy hat·kt"(I prop1.Mu1I tu kiC'k
the Huw·rn- Ollwt·rti Training
('orps from nm1pus to prott"llt the
military a ban un It eluana und KUY
mm
The bourd vutt.J 13-:i mtilt>ad to
atn·pt tht· rt•('11mmt·ndat1on ol l W
SyKtt·m Pn"81dt·nt Kt•nm·th Shay.
that tht> unin·nity 11tn·n1etht·n illll·f
fort to lobby ( 'oilJ[rt-.S tot·hnnj!'.e tht·
military·a pulwy
In Dt"(.·t·mlx•r, tht> FuC'uhv St·nnlt'
flt UW-Madi1-1on, tht· KYt1lt·~'t1 lurg·
e1:1t n1mput1. 011ptovt'd a n·1wlution
ask in~ tht' uni' 1·n1ity to t'X}lel
HOT(' from c11mpu11 in rn9:J it the
military continul"<I to proh1h1t KR.\'8
v.nd le11h1an11. Sl·\.·t'rul otht·r c-ampui;
icrouin followl'<I with 11imilar rt"8olu
t10n11.
But Sha .... rt· .. pondt·d this w11·k by
saying hl' did nut htolil•\'fl M'\'t'ring
th<• uniHri;uy"• tll"S to the military
Y.ould efh"(.11\'t'ly t·m-ourOKt' the mil·
itary to C'hOnKt' 1tt1 polit·y Furtht•rmott,
('(iminauon ol tht> m1litat)'
prugrum.11 would hurt those students
who lll·1wli1 from tht·m. ht· smd.
Then· arl' uhuut HO 11tudenu m
Ann;.-. :\a ... ·y und Air Forre HUT(."
pru1Cfama lit l'W-\lild111on, whi'-·h
has an enrullmt•nt ol 42.CXMI, 1md u
total ol about 1.100 HOT<.· atudt·nt8
in thl' cnt1n• l'\\ Sy1<tt:m. which hlHI
IJ.'l.OOU t11udt•nt8 ut J;s maJor cam·
pui-t·" and 11t•\t•ral 11mallt·r n•ntt>r11.
The rt'gt·nta lUitt•nt-d to tt-stimony
lrom l!li 1ieopll' helort• \'otinJ( for
Shm·.,·8 rt"""Olution. wh1d1 ('tlllt•d c•n
tlwuni\·t·r 1tyto tt·1lu11l'fltrl ith1.
AP LASERPHOTO
Cadt>t Dand Danholuro/ th1· Air Forr:t• HO'JC at th1· l '"11·1·r•1ty of H.'1sconsin·Mad1.rnn aslu; tht• rt"Rt>nt1; tu allou
tht' m1btary proJlranl!• to l!ta.\- on campuit
gan in l~+~I to 1Ubby ConjO"eu and
the military
"'I think ll Y.as theappropriatern·
oluticin to pai-i<." said Rett:t'nt Erroll
Da\'is Jr. of Madison. ~ 1 think we
ha'(' to work a little hardn than in
tht> past. Thii> rt.~c1lution kttps tht• iH
»Ut' in the front line and will for<.Y WI
to dl'al with it
y"a polic-y .
Tht· 19h7 r1.-aolutmn. which statt'<I
the Ulll\eTBll;t Y.1.>Uld attk lo lobb)'
the- m11itnry . ..,, aa cntitllt'<I n-cC"ntly
for hie-mg too hrood and int'Htdin•
Tht> maJonty of rl'gt'nU said thl·y
11grt't'd "1th Shaw that kicltinw: thl'
military oft cftmpWI would not t'll°e<.'l
thf'changt•1oought 10 an.illional poli
The resolution pa~ed today dif. <'Y
ft•u from one approved by the rt-- 'lh optinK out W<' will ha\·t· noth
J[t'nt111n 191i'7 becaui-;C'it noquin·s CW 1ng to any ubout thi11 iMSut·:' Shu ....
administrators to n·port annually to told th1· rt'Kl nh1. •·1t '• an 111Sut· that
!ht• board on tht• prt•KJ"t''""' uf ""'!oh moHf fJt• <·hnnJCt·d lrl(i1datin·ly"
h)o·init ('fforti> to chanKt" tht• m11itnr· An ulhnul ~t lht· ATmy'11. HOTl' of.
fi~at UW Madison,whodt-chnedto
triw his name, iutid HUT( ofhcaah1
Y.ould decline to rommt'nt until M..ing
a copy of the reKt•nta d1.aa1on
Jordan Manh. ol tht• \\18(Umun
~tudent As!K)('jati<•n. aa1d hl' Y.811
disappointed by tht' re1u·nt.' \.nfr
but was enCl>uraged h) aumt· of tht·
mt·mbt-rs' comment& ~ome rt'j(t'ntti
said they would.,.. ant ROT(' banned
if the lobhying tu t·hani:t• m1ht.i1ry
poli<:}' fail,.,
•·Jt i-ohuw1 lht'~- an· tn·noua about
th1 ond wanl lht• dia1 r1mmalHJn
!'lopp.•d: h<' said
Substance cripples AIDS virus growth in test tube
lly MALC'OU! nrrn-:u
AP Sc1t·nn· n·r1trr
F A Tl1f. uON"I (\ <..l
1' t:W YORK <AP>---Sl"ientiht~ i-aid
Feb. l that a nt·w dllllS of cht•mi·
calK can cripplt' the AIDS viruit in
the h"8t tube ut (•xtn·nwlv low dos·
es. but othl.'r ret1(·an·ht·;1:1 said its
pot('ntlal for tht>rapy iM not yt't
known.
Tht neY. 111ubt1W.m·t"8 appettr to
ht• the m118t poH·nt yet a.tudit•d for
i;topping tht· viruJJ from n·prudu<"'
inJ(. snt'ntitits 11aid in tht• Hritish
Journal 1'nture
Human lt"Slll lor l'llt"(.·tivt'nl118
wen· ~lill ht•intc planm-d. hut ix
healthy men tol(·rah'd ont· of the
sub~tanft's without mv.jor i,;idl' ef·
lt"(.'ls, according to rt·!learche~
from the Rega lni-titute for Mt'di
cal R(•search in L.Ruven, lk·lgium;
tht·Jani-,..en Research Foundation
in Bt"erse, Belgium. and in Sprintc
House, Penn.
They conducted laboratory
litudif'i-o of compouncL-. callt"d TIHO
derivv.tivt':-. In theirtt·st.s, the com·
poundi; inhibited reprodut·tion of
thf' All>S virus at conet:•ntration~
that Wt're 10.000 to 100,000 timt11
lowt"r than what is net'ded to kill
Ct'lls
That compart's to C'on('t•ntru
tiom of I 00 timt·t1 to 10.000 tim~
lowt•r thun a ct•ll·killinJ( do!'(' requm-
d for Az·1: tht· only approvt"CI
drug for treating ltt"Quinod immune
defkit·ncy 1yndnlmt• and for the
experime-ntal dru){s
dideox\.'<.'\"tidinl" and
dide<1xym~in~·. the rt>ll('archt•~:-.
said.
Th18 1(-St·tuhf' pott•nt·y of the
nt·w ('(•mpounds mas bode wl'll for
11\01ding tiidt· t'Ot"(.18, but nohod~
knows what w11uld hnppen in hu
mans, cnutiont'<I AIDS rt'~t'archer
Jay l.t.·vy of tht' l·ninnutyol Cali·
fornia ut San Frnnnst·o.
Mtm)' drug~ thut look promising
in tht' test tulw turn out to ha\"f'
unpn:-dictt'<I 11idt· dlt'(18. ht• suid m
a telephone inll'rvit·w. And h1)(h(•r
potency in tht· tt'l't tuht· do(-9 nol
necessarily mean gn·nter effC"Ctin:
nt',..s in prople he anid
Jt'ffrey Laun·net' of tht· ~1·w
'i'ork Ho:;pital-CorneU '-t1·dirnl
Ct·nt.er said he was C'Ont'f'rm-d that
the compound h11o?hlightf'd in th('
study did not work Blo?<lllltlt dust•
rl'iati,·e1; oftht· AIDS virus. mdud·
in~ Hl\'·2 and a monkt·y·canit>rl
,·ersion of the AIDS '\'lrU!I.
That su1o::e-t.t- tht• All>S nru11
mii::ht he<·omt• re~1!'.'t.mt to it h)
mutatinto: only lightly, h1• 1m1d
Leaders of Mass. gay groups vow to fight Silber candidacy
By DANIEL IU-: 1-:(:AN
t UH f.IE MONTFIOSl VU
BOSTON (APJ- ·l..t.·nd1·rsof1enr
al gay and lt•!'bion J(roups have
pledtct'd to dt•fNll Bm1ton l! nivt·rt1i
ty Prl'11idt·nt.John Silht<r in hiH hid
for tht• Dt·m11("rt1tk t(uht.•rnatorittl
n<1m1nOt1UO
"John Silbt·r 111 on(' of th<· mu~t
untllrinl(. inhuman pt'Oplt· I hu\'l•
t•ver had tht• di11pleat1ur1· of lwing
a._stlC'IBtt.-d with:· soid ,Jeff :\kkt•l
pni<idt·nlofth<· Hoston l'nivt>n>ity
l..t>Shian and Gay Allinnce.
:\ic.'kt>I criticizt'd ~ilht·r on
Thurt1duy. Ft>b. l , for n•lu1un~ to
indud<' sexuul pn•fon·nn.• in Bos·
ton Cninrsity'1 onti·di8t·rimina·
tion U&tt·mt·nl and for M9yiny he
did not ronsidtr homost•xunlity to
ht• ··normative."'
David Lal<"ontaine. lobhying di·
rt"(.1.0r of the Coalition for l..eMhian
and Gay Civil Hights, i:;aid ac·tiv·
ist:; would work a1eaini.t ~illw.·r OM
sl'riously ai- tht•y worked to pass a
bill lai-t year outlawing di11t·rim1·
nation against gay peoplt' in hou&ing,
employmt'nt and cn·dit.
r\uting that Sillwr hM cnti<:iit-d
reporter~ and opponenttl for tak
ing remarks out of rontext,
l.nFontain<' said, ' We are- ht're to
put hi11 remark~ into context, in
the context of the tradition ol bij(·
otry and prejudict·'.'
C1 lin Riley, a spokt· p •rwn for
tht• Sillx·r campnign. 1mid Silht•r
would not c-<1mm(·nt on tlw 1ww:;
conlt·n•nl·t•.
In an intt·rvu·w \\'t•dnt·i.du\·.
,Jon. 31. with tht• Boston Ht'rnld;s
echtorial hoard. Sill)(•r said hf' r('o
llil'ltl'd indudinK iit·xual orienta
lion in th(• Bll 1mti·dil4t'rimination
policy bi'('UUMt· tht• lon..:uagl' was
too imprt'C'l"l'·
•·1 f'l1unlt•th1• formula they want
mt• to UtTt·pt. namt·ly no dil'l'-'rimination
Ut'COrding tn 1t·xunl prt·frr·
enl'(•, with 11uc-h a hrond <'OOl1.'pl
thnt it would appron any kind or
atxual nhu1onship imaginable:'
Silbt.·r 8aid
Silbt·r Kaid hi11 .. ·it·w of homosex·
uolity ii no d1ltt·rt·nt from thot of
the LegislatUrt'. whil'h pll!>i'1t·d tilt"
law prohibitinj( dil'tr1mmutwn
against J(RYl'I while nt tht· 11ttmt·
timt• includinK hlnl(UUJ!:l.' dn•nvo"
ing any endor~('m(·nt ol tht• homo-
11exual lifestyle
He said he would not work to rt
peal that law.
But Jean l\frCra\". t·o-t·ha1r nf
the MaSt1uchu8('lts. IA"llhian und
Gay Har A:JSo<·iation. Miutl, ··11 h<!
had been govt·rnnr laat yt>ar, tht'rf'
would he no lt'flbian and gay Cl'- ii
rights hill.'
~1cCray also qut"Ktinned wht'lh
t'r Silber would})(' "lihng lo pro·
vide the money in hl.8 budg'et. 1f
cl('('tt.-d govt·rnor. to 1·n fort·t· thl'
la"
Students protest ROTC ban on gay people
E\ANSTON, Ill. cAPJ St·vNnl
NorthY.:t·Htt-rn lininrsitv Ktudt·nt
groupM thot oppo"'e on 1-io-rc ban
on homol't·xualM ure nMking th<•
s<·hool to l•liminot(' th<• traininJ(
corpM proJ(Tum lrom tnmpui.,
Tht> l'!tudt•nts ullt•g1• thut Penta·
goo ruh'll ~·xdudinK humo..cxuals
from HOT(' progrums violate
f':orthwc11tt•rn"1 1tnti·dit1nimino·
tum polic-y. Thf'ir M'll1Mt1m 18 port
of a nationwide mnvf'm('nt to
chant(<• thf' mihtnry"M polit·y.
'Tht> 1asut' is thnt Ow urn,·t·f'llitv
hnll a policy und that it 1Sn ·1 t~·
forcintc its own polky;· 11tid Karin
Norrintcton, IMtUdt'nt j(OV<'rnment
president
The Associnted Student Govl'rn
mmt at. Northwe1;tt'rn hm1 coiled
for the withdrawal of univen:iity
t.upport for the ROTC program un·
lt>ss military ru!('s ore ('hOn(Ced.
The iKi.ue will be taken to the uni
versity"s board of trustt"f's m·>.t
month. l\ls. r\orrington 11.aid
' ':\'orthw('l!t('rn lJniHnity has
a nry progressivt• policy wht•n it
<'Omf'B to dealing with dit1C'rimma
lion:· said Sean Maher. a mt-mbt·r
of tht' Coalition for Equal Oppor·
tunity 11tudent group. "'It's pretty
hypotriticaJ to not apply it to cer
tam groups~·
'(Ouy11 tmd lt·Hhinns ore JX•rfo<:t
tnndidlllt"H for HOT(·;· tm1d David
Munar. n 1unic1r Y.:ho iH pn14ident of
Northwl'Ktt•rn'11 Guy ond Lesbian
Allio.ntt•.
The cumpu14 jutit north of Chica·
KO ha11 olft·n•d HOT(' proJ(Tams
tiinC't.• 19"1.l:i.
('mdr. SttVl" Turnbull. tXt"(.'Utivt•
dirt"(.·tor of ?\orthWf'Mtern"s naval
8<'itm't' dt·partmt•nt, •nid tht• proKrllms
muflt folloY. Dt•partml'nt of
IJ1·ft•nfl1• n•gulllt11>08.
Turnbull dedint'<i to commt'nl
on tht i1111ut• and a cnmpue cadl't
•nid ROTC 11tudmll!I havl' heen
told not to tnlk about it.
Banning h·11hianM ond gny mt•n
from all hruncht·H of tlw militnry
dotes back to tht• I !l:lUM, Mid 1'('11
t.agon spokesperi;on David SupN
Defense Department poli<.·y MUYM
their pre1;ence "odvt'oit•ly ufh·t·t1
the ability to mai ntain ditmpline,
(Cood order, morale .. and dt·ploy
ml'nl of memberM who mu11t livt'
and work undt'r rlohe mnditinne. '
The policy hue promph'<I pr~
tt'"'ts at 11everal otht•r Khools, in
duding the- l.'niV("r8ity 11! \\.'i11mn
l'in m Madison, wht'rf' !ht' faculty
voted in Dt"l-emlll'r to uk rl'Jt:t•nt.
to tnd thl' 11chool'11 aflil111t1on with
HOTC progrnma.
Montrose Voice
Phone Fun - Amanda - Horoscopes - Soap - Personals
For the Montrose Voice
Aries
Someone who knows exactly what he or she wants
(and exactly how to get it) looms large in your life's
picture. Since you're feeling calm, enjoying a peace
that comes from having done what needed doing,
your joint forces should be quite-forceful!
Taurus
Your period of doing too much for too many is drawing
to a close. You're learning very quickly where
your true commitments are: emotional, intellectual,
and otherwise. "Otherwise" is probably spiritual,
since that part of your being is demanding your attention.
Gemini
Something at work could push you over the brink,
bringing either a sudden change in that job or pushing
you into an altogether new career. After the big
moment of confrontation or realization takes place,
you' ll feel lighter, better able to present yourself in
a positive way.
Cancer
Cupid's arrows make no sound. Th~y fl_y softly ~2
gently. The joy you and your lover gain from this pe·
riod will bring strength and understanding to your
relationship; Browning's words ring clear- "I love
thee to the depth and breadth and height my soul
can reach!'
Leo
You've made proper preparations; you continue to
do what has to be done. Everything is in its proper
place. Now, you're waiting, waiting, waiting. How
you handle the anticipation is a kind of final test. Expect
the unexpected and you'll triumph.
Virgo
Valentine's Day might pass you by with no notice.
You're so busy meeting and greeting that you may
not have time for a lover's holiday! That's o.k. if you
lover is also a Virgo, but if not, take a break in the
action, by all means. What's it all for, anyway?
Libra
Everybody loves a lover, especially one with your
devotion. Your love is the kind that reach |