Transcript |
Police say
former
inmate
stalked,
killed
p en pals
8AN !'U:MENTh, Culif IAP)An
Indiana ex·convitt wantrd in
conneetion with thE' slayings of
gay men in two a;tnt<'ll alleuedly
preyed on l>f'n pals he made while
in pnson, pohct fi1ud
Kt!tth EuKene Goudmnn,30, and
two compnmonK Wt're arretited
here whil(' visiting another one of
Goodm1m '• pen pals-a l,.1guna
lkal·h colh_·gt· pnifessor, police
Chief Albert (' Ehlow BOid Jan.
16
Goodman, Jon Christopher
Mead, 22, and Trat·y Holland, 21,
all of Anderaon, Ind., wt-r(' arrest·
cd Jan. 14 for invt~t1gation of the
killings of a ~1·w Yurk man and
thret- MiHHi1u1ippi men, Jo:hlow
said.
Police helit•v(' Cnrnc·gie-ME'llon
Univt·rsity profet11;or Pet('r G.
Jones, on Hllbbutical l<•ave, wns a
likely lnrgN.
"If we had not nrrealt>d
Goodman, I bt•lieve Jonf.'tl would
have been the next victim;• said
San Clt-mt·ntt· Police Sw:t Hichard
K Downing.
.. It's very friKhtmmg;' Jones
said in an inlt'r\'ie"" ut his home.
"I l'ee m). Hlf a11 very lucky becauM
the poliH• told mt> I was the
next v1ctim:'
Jonl'S was among an ntimated
20 to 2!°> p(·n paJs Goodman correspondtod
y, ith whilt> scr\'mg time
at an Indiana pnaon for burglary
and sexual assault on an t\0-yt>ar·
old woman, authoritit11 ~mid
Tht• !\ew York \- ICtim ond one
Missit11ippi victim wl'rt> both pen
pals, t:hlow amd. ~1t·unwhile, J><>li<
·t· in (ioodlettli\lllt•. 'frnn., Jan
l"" srud .1oodman and two emn·
ponroml wnt> not 11uspecUI In lhe
killinJ( of lon1l prof1·1umr.
Goodlt•tlsvillt· Pulit·t• Lt. Harry
Jk>ll said his dt·partmenl had bl'<'n
inll'n-skd in tht• t·n11t1 ht'<·nu.-t• thE'
Kun ui-;l-d in 111•mt•oftht·slnyinf(11 iM
simila:- in culitwr of the weupon
u~ed to kill Robert Si™·rt, 11, a bi
olOK.Y proft'8Snr at Volunt('('r State
Community ('ollt'~t·.
~ibert was found dt'ad in his
home on Oct 22. shot om·t· in tht•
forehead with a &l-0-culiher automatic
punol.
Howl'\t•r, Bell Ntid ( 'ahfornin in·
Hstiwators had dt'h·rmint-d the
men were not m T1-nm•llSt't" llt the
time Sih4;·rt was killt>d. Also, they
did nut oht.;1in tht• wt·uptm in question
until !"o\·t·mht.·r, tht·monthllf·
tl'r tht• 11iaying
"Wt•'r('still K11inw tol(el tht·irfin
gerprintH fur comporiHOn, but
right now tlwn!s nothinK thtlt'a
going to lU' tht·m in to hl'intc lf.UKPl'('
Vi in our nu1e;· Bt•ll Haid
.. It M u eon'M con gume:· Eh low
Mnid. "Tht·y wrih• to Pt'oJ)lt• to tell
thl·m how bud olltht·y ort', ill:lking
ti.1r monev to ht·lp tht•m through,
Kt't a twltt>r dt•lt•nst• lnwyer. that
tiort of thing. And 1woplt> ti('nd
them mont·y und ht·lrll'nd thl•m:·
(~omlmun \\-US rt•lt•i\Mt·d in Jan
191'1', hut was 11t>nt to Madi1:10n
Count) 11nd.)Jailin.Jnn.19K9on
adrunkt•n dn\-·inK t·horKt', outhori
tit'8 said. It wua thcrt· he mt'l Mt>ad,
""ho w1lft be-in..:: ht· Id for burfo(lary
Aftl'r 1he1r n•lt•ase, the mt·n )('fl
for ~t·W 'fork on J)ec. Jtl to ml't't
Harold I>. Williama of Wind11or:
N.Y., on(' of (.;oodmnn's pt"n pnl11,
auth11ritws smd
'T ht·y pnihnhly mtt-ndt-d to hit.
him up for nwm·~· nnd rob him
Tht•y t·nth-d up killing h im, 1111id
t :h low.
WilliamM, (.;(), wu11 found Mhot to
death l>t·t·. :>.1 in un upi;itnira lwd·
room of hiM houl'w. lie was lnMt
Mct'll ulin Dt'<', 19. snid Nt·w York
Stall• Polict• ('apt. Corl K Shaver.
Goodmon n nd Mf'ud Y.:Nl' quelj
tiontod in lndiunu hy Andt·rMon polic-
e Dec, W. Andt·non SJ(t. Ritk
Grmn 11uid. But tht• pair was not
arrl'Hh"Ci und they lt'tl town l>t'<'.
29. stayl'tl bnt·fly in h:mtul'ky befort>
K;nnf[ with Ma. Holland to
Mi11si11t•ippi. 11aid Grim•r.
It Wall not (')('nr whl'lher M11.
Holland was in 1\t-w York. author·
1tiee said
MONTROSE VOICE
THE. NEW ~Al :fl IF MONT.AO SEO c(o111m11111t11 lJ11bli•hi119 (ompanv a FR ID Ay January 26. 19900 ISSUE 483 MONTROSE WEATHER FRIDAY NIGHT Clear. cool. low 40 SATURDAY Par"ly cloudy. tugh 12 low 49 SUNDAY & MONDAY Rain Highs abOUt 70 :iws abOut 50
Washington is f!OV' for a day, then heads to D.C.
By HILLIE DUNCAN
1e Montrose Vence
n Friday, Jan. 19, he wa11 u 11tntu
nator in the Texas Legialaturt.>
n Saturday, Jan. 20, he wu tht>
Vovernor of Texa~. On Tu~day,
Jan. 23. he was sworn in as the U.S.
CongreNman from the Hith Con
grea11ional Dii,;trict. Craig Anthony
Washington may not know whelht>r
he's coming or going, but he certain·
ly ia headed straight up.
La•t Saturday's celebration in
Austin for Washington's '"Governor
for a Day"' wu attended by many
Houatonians from the I.Hth, a dia-triCt
that include11 Montrou And
though the day began as cold, wind·
y and dreary, as the congratulations
and the barbecue were disht-d out,
the aky expanded into bright blutand
poured sunshine on theamiling
celebrants
Washington's words in the St:n·
ate C'hamberi. were clearly rt-flectt:d
in the diversity of the crowd. He
said in a voice that Set'med to t.oke
root some place deep in hiK own
soul, "We have hope that what Wl'
see is out beyond ourselves. We havl"
hope. Out beyond ourselves, we ha\'e
J)e<)ple who are old and young Out
bt_.yond ourselves, men and womt-n
working together, rich and pot'lr
working together. Out beyond our·
seh·eH, we can solve our problems as
a aoc1ety.
··~e can see beyond our race, he.
yond our geography, beyond our ec>
numic circumstance, beyond those
in our immediate age group, beyond
thot1e who happen to' be of our M>x.
~yond thoew whose sexual prt"ft-r
ence is left to them, beyond thm<e
who have less education than u .. beyond
thc ... e who han~ more educa·
twn than us, beyond our frail human
f'l•lvet1 we can see God in oumeln'&.
'With all our fault:;, when we M''
each olh('r. whenwelookateacholh·
era faultB, when we look at l"Uch oth
er'a aoula, we can do anything ns a
people."
And for 17 years, 10 in tht> Hou111•
a.nd llif'\'en in the St•nate, \\ aiahinp:
PHOTO BY BILLIE DUNCAN
Cro1R H'aRhinHW" uo .~u,orn in as Texas go1.:errnJr-for a da)
ton ha11 gt•nt·ra lly followed hiM
tilronfo( words with definite action.
Wh1·n ht> aaid that reprff('ntation of
tht· people Mhould rf'nect tht- diverse
compoti1tion of the population. he
follc•wl'd thOt!t.' word11 by fighting for
mun• d1\'enie rl'pretit·ntation on all
boardA, panels and lwnch~, taking
a b1tt> wht'n1·nor pouible out of the
leg of the J(iant Good Old Boy ofTl'x
Suppor11n pomt to him a• a lead·
mK defender of human ria:hts who
has madt· 1t knc•wn that a:a:. riehts
nrt' an mtearral part u( thr nghta of
all peoplt
I ~tractoni aay lhat his"'loner" approaC"
h to 11tanding up for what he
thinks is right amacka of arroeanCC'
and a laek of team apint. Huwc\'t-r
hl' ha11 he1·n purtrnyed. hi• col·
l•BJCul"8 in the Toaa S.·natf> paid
purtkuh1.r tnbutl to him by honor·
mg him 118 Go\·t·rnor for II I )ay when
ht• ahould not havt- IJet"n t'hfo(ihlt! !or
four more y1•nn1. Sm<~· ht·"" a• KOing
on to the U.S. Congr('l't>. his ril·natori
al cohorts ignored thl'rult'tl of.-tnior
ity and placed thl' guht·rnatorial
gavel at his honorary diriposal as a
aC'nd·off to the nation·• capital
··tt'a good to t;et- key peopll' being
t·levatt'd acrusa tht 1;tate:· said
Montr0t;e businl'ssman ('har1cs
Arm8trong afttt \'is1tmg with \\'ash·
tn~un on thC' att-ps ofthe('ap1tal 1n
tt;1ti~k;~~;:;~~~~~; i~i::.~:~~:~i:
~~1~~:~:~e af~at~~:a~~~;I ::
for humanity on a global 11•\t-I.' he
a aid
Ann.strt>nJ{: was 1mpn·ued \\1th
Watihington·a sptteh and (dt that It
wa11 a •ignificant 811{11 of" hat con·
atituf'nt8 could exp<"ct from their
new repr~enLntJ\-e m Washington.
Hf! brought up gay nghl8 8t'H ral
t1ml"S today;• aaid1\rmstrung I wa•
glad 10 t<t>e Jim Mattox. ""ho• run·
ning for the govl"tnor • Bet' on tht
I )l"mocrntlC tickn. w 11 prn•nt
wht·n CrmJ( repNlledly talkl'd about
thl' AIDS l'l1tuution. t<aying we havl'
to help the p<'Oplt· in our (human)
family who've bffn afnicted with
AIJ>S. 1 WH Klad all thoae people
h1·11rd that part olCraigwhit·h he so
paN1ionutely belit•\·es in hi• heart
It'• a J(reut day for Tt·xua.'
('ouni:\.· Trl'WiUl't'r :\1kki Van
H1ghto•·er:. runnmg for •tatt- trl'M·
urer m tht• wukt' o( Ann Richard,."
run for J(O\'t'rnor, waa cautiou11\y opumia111,;
about \\wihinJ(ton"aimpact
u a frt'Shman l'l•ni{l'eNman. "'I
think any time a nt•wcumer comes
mto 11111n11titution like the House of
Ht·pre1w:ntat1\·t'8, tht-y have to make
aome lnenda 11nd get. to kno"" P<"O"ple'
· •ht> aa1d, .. iao I ,,.._ouldn't t'Xpect
anything iriaWntly frllm his 11ffice.
Hut Crai,g ia a drmanding person on
h1m8t'!f, 1110 I Mould thmk he ,,.._ould
prubabl.) mo\.'f a Jot fask'r than
moat pet•plt' would m 1hat poa1twn.'
Stntt• H.1•prt'untuti\-'t- l>t'bra
lhmbufl w ~ mure ~i:tua\vl' in htt
estimation ot'tht· 1mpat·t thllt Wa~h·
inj(lon mifo(hl hu\t' m tht· nation'•
capital. 'Ewn thouJ(h ('roil( a J(I ..
ing up 11.M n frt-~hman and at·nwril)
mat ten. a lot, tht• pt'topll• whoar...-al
ready in Ctmgrffa urt" wt>komml(
him with open arm•." l'lhe •aid
"A lot of thl' members ol (. · ongrt'U
them!Wlvea madt• ~1000 ccontr1b1><
tionit to his ramp81Kn. bttau.ae tht·y
were •O exC1tt-d and 1•nthuHd about
ha\'ing aomoont· who'• a trul' bchn-·
er and an ln11p1rat1on romt'- up
thert"-and not Just Join th• team
but take a leadenh1p roll' from th•
very be1rmmng It• a rral plu1 for
all ol ua:·
Cle-arly, from all that he-hu aa1d,
Washington exJ;l('Cte, to take a le-ad
ttiohip roll' In h1• apctth, 1n fac'! he
t>aid. ·I ha\efnJo)Pd \heopportum·
t\ (toM'f\'t'm lheTl"X.aal.c1t1S1atun~
uch becaual' ""hen )OU ·~ak m
Halls ol J uatice, ~ ou h&\-'t! 1ht-01'''°"
tunity to t·h.11nl(e puhht· opinion,
and I bt'Jieve leadt>n an· thOM who
changl' oubh<· opmion, not mf"rt-ly
follow public 1>pm1<1n
Mam· of hiM atalt·ment11 hm·1· a
ring t~ tht•m 1h11t mdi<·ait- that
Craig Wa~hington 8('('11 himat"ll H"4 a
man ofdei<tiny. and peoplt· who lt•t•J
they ha\'e bttn tom·ht'<l hy th~ hand
of deNtiny ha\'e a tt>ndt·nc) to ex<·i·I
in whalt-ver tht'y dloOM.' to do I .uat
Saturday he tiaid, "I don't know why
Mickey died-thrrt' llrt· a lot of thmi.c
that I dnn't know-but I do know
that, in looking back, I &pl'nt the Inst
17 years of my life preparing mY•t·'
for the adHntun- on whu;h I am
about to t."lllhark
But ju:tt "·hen urrogant't' Rt'lllt-d
to be ~annl( 1u he-ad, hr lwcamf'
gracious nnd e\·f'n·handtd., pauing
out aerolad('& to hie fdlcow Rnators,
bc1th l>fomoctat1c and Rl'pubhcan.
He said that h1!' oohortM 1n tht· lt'JrW·
Jatur!''.hrlpt'dmrfindm.) ptaCT· Ht•
fl.Bid. ·'They laught m~ that l "a:oin
fighting tho~w fight. alone 11 I had
bt't'n hgh1mg thoa1· (iflhl.9 alont·
tht>tt• wui.:...:::I havt• he en ne \'oh- '
l ontmuf'd f gt' \
David Bryan accepts job as NGRA director
David A. Bryan, former executive
and legal director ofthe Texni< Hu·
man Rights Foundation. moved
into the top legal position of I\n
tional Gay Rights Adrncates on
Monday, Jan. 2'2. !\GRA is the na
tion·s )artiest public intert"8t lnw
firm reprel:ienting gay and lt>Sbian
rights
Bryan. who l.i\'ed in Houston for
se\'eral years before mo\'ing to
AuRtin in 19H9 to head THHf. replacet1
Leonard Graff as legal di
r'E'Ctor. Graff held the potiition for
over seven years. and is curnntly
l:ierving as interim executive din'(.'
tor. Bryan will direct NGRA'M )('gal
program from the organization'ti
Son 1-,rancisco office.
' David Bryan's past SUl'C't'SM'8
in the fight for lesbian and gay C'iv·
ii right8 ha vE' already madt• him a
l<'nd<'r in the mo\'ement;' said
Groff .. "David provides the m·ed·
t•d skills and experience to t1ut1tain
and strengthen r-;GRA'H rec:-ord of
Ci\·il rights advancements into the
rn~ra:·
At tht· quert<'rly board mE"t·ling
Jan. 20, THHI-' tru1tl'e8 at·(·l'pted
Bryan's rt.'8lgnation. Board mt'm·
her Sut- J.o\'ell proJ.IOlled a resolu·
lion adopkd un8nimoutly by thl'
board at the ml'('ting, recognizing
Bryan for thf' )'ea.rs of a(·ni~e: ht'
ga\'e t.o the foundation
Oa\'1d hua bel'n com~itte-d to
lhe atruggle for lf'tlhian and gay
<"I\ ii riKhlS for o\'er ~ix yt'ara on
bt•half of TU HR.~ we) will miu the
hard work and dt·di<"lltion that
werl' hit1. trudt-marks aa our di rt'<"·
tor:' l.ovl'll 11aid
Although Bryon is leavinp: th('
&lllh• he il'I re10ining the TllHF
bot\rd 011 a tru8h'!.•. At thl' Jan. 20
mt·t·t inK. ht• wn111 (•l<·ct<·d to tht'
hourd to n·moin involvt•d with
TH HF progro1m1 a nd cns('i'I begun
durinJ( hi"' tenurt• as dirt-Nor.
Bryan, :14. tcruduahod from the
TexaM T1•ch l'nivenity ~·khool of
Ll'W• in 19.HI and prndil't>d t·orpt>
rate law in Houston for fi\'e Yl'llr8.
He joinl'd THRF rut a mcmht·.,. of
the board of trustees in J~l~t Bry·
an. who ~aid ma rt'<'ent intervlt'w
he considt·red HoW1ton his homt"
mo\-'ed to Austin early last year to
work full time in THH.t a office
there.
While a trU!'itee-, Bryan cunt.ti.~
uted to Che litiitation work chal·
lenging the Texu sodomy atatule.
Bryan also worked on C'Ri'lt'8 in tht·
rl"'(.~lgnition of l~bian and gu~ 11otu
dent organizations at Tt>xa11 A&. M
and Texas Tt'C'h l'ninr~itit>s. In
19K4 and 198..'>. Hryan \\--88 uc1iw
in the Hou8ton campuiJ('n to&R\'t' u
city ordinan.;e prohibitinJ( t'lll
p loyment_ dli.;Crimination on tht•
bnsi11 of sex rnl oril·ntutinn. i'l'ht•
ordinance W•lS owrturned in tht•
SO·Called "KRY rights reft·rt>ndum ·•
of 198.'l).
As lc.•gal dirC'Ctor. Br~·an helpt-d
prost'C'ute a diHcrimination 1'1H'l
plaint with the Tl'Xafl. Stall' Boord
oflnsuram"t-agnin tMidlundl.ih-ln11uranc<
· Company for ':AIDS
zip c-ode red lininK:' Tht• rt"i;ulting
doci.tuon madt• tht· prac1ic-e illegal
for insurance cumpanies doing
husinl'H in the N,talt·. He al~<>
ht·lped pn.>til"'(.'Ult· the foundation's
d1St·1plinary complaint against
llallu ,Judp:1· Jaek Hampton, wa:publidy
cr·n11un'Cl in :\o\'t'mhl'r
for nnt1-Ka~ hulfl.
•·t ha\'e followed ~'GH.As ron·
a1dt·rablt> lt'Kul al·ha•Hmt·nts for
nt·urly a dt'('ftdt>:' Mid Br) On. ~1
look f<1rward to carrying on tht'or·
gunizat1on's prt"('t·dent·st·tting lit·
igution with pride and t·xc-ih'mt'nt
I (Im honun·d by ll<·ing t<f.'!e<:ted as
!\GHAN lt•gal din,·tor."
Hid111rd \\.'hilt', .r-.:GH.A hoard
drnir, !!tud, "Tht•rt· un• many niti·
ml lt·fo(nl i~ut·s fu<"ing tht• h·~biun
und guy t·ommunity. Dovid's h·ud
erMhip will allow ~GHA to mt•l't
th1• <·hallt·njet·11 oht·ad."
i''ounded m 1977 in San Fruncts
c ~ 'llionul C11y Hitchts Advt~
Trxa.s l>a1,, d 8r)an u u•u .\"(i}{A
kRol d1rf'~~or
catt-s hKhts for lhe n.:htit f ga~
men. lt"t'bians and, throuKh tht·
AIDS Ci\'i\ Hi.:hts l'mJ«'l"t pt·r·
sons with HI\ ~iH'tUI(' 1'\(iHA ng
grt·ssivt>ly pun-ut'fi 1mpal'l litiga
tion tn empl11~ mt·nt und hoUl'illK
disniminution, fomily purtrwr
ships, rt·form of sodom~· I.iv.a. un·
11-gay ,. olt·n<'t' und fiTllt anwnd
mt·nt MKhf11
Probe continues in secret as Frank works to restore image
By JOHN DIAMO!'i 0
FOR Hl~r
WASHINGTON tAP>-Amid a
\'eil of &e<"rE'<'y surrounding his
H<ml!le t-thics committee in\'l•l!t11tn
lion, Rep. Hamey Fronk is puttinK
out word that he is confidl·nt hit1
public career can survi\'e int.ad
Rut there may be mor(' lu1•l ndd·
ed when Penth ouse magazine pub·
Jishel! nn intervie\\-- nt>xt month
with prostitute Stephen Gobit'o
who had a relationship with
Frank,
In thE' meantime, Frank. ()
Mass .. has kept up his work pncr
on Capitol Hill. F rank ho" l<·d u
Democratic mov(' to ·cut d('fon11t·
spending and shift the fund8 into
drlicit reduction and domt>Mtic progrom11.
President Bush R1t1Klt-d
Frank out at a rt-cent bill·l!igning
Cl'remony for his work on housmK
legialation
'"If you're being complimentM
by the president you mut1t be doing
acimt·thinK right, 1d He-p. Jo-
8('ph Moaklt•y. I>-Mnsa.
And m hi11 di11trit•t, no wt>ll·
known htcun~ ha\'e t·mt'ril'ed to
chRllt'nKl' Frnnk for r('-t•l('("l.ion
nnd a fundroisinlif effort for them·
t·umhent is Kl'lll'rRtrng n ht'althy
takt>.
"Hnrnt•y Fr1mk h att wenthen·d
th1· fl lo rm:· t1oid I .n rry Htu1ky, n
l>t·mo1:ruti<- t·ontrnltnnt in Boston
"Tht• whult> incidt·n t hoH n lmofll
ht'<·omt' u non ·iMMue."
But M1u111oth U!<t'lls HE'pu hlil'un
Ext•1;Uti\'(': St·c-n•tary Ah·xun d('r
Tt•nnant tioid. 'Bnrnt·y Frank is
hopintc thnt thiM wholt> t1ituot ion
wdl JU11t J(n away"'
Tt·nnnnl tu·knowlt>dJ(t'll tht•
GOP has hnd a h11rd t1m1• cominl(
u11 v.1th \·inhll' opponl'nts for
Fronk hut imnat.a hi1 crrchhthty
hos hf.en irn•p11rnhly damnged:'
With eunw ap11ra, Fronk hu
not commPnkd at h·nKth on Golne
amce th1· tcnndal hnlkt• last. llUm
"I won't disc-uss it, he 11aid n'ct
·ntly when askM ibout tht· C'8a1•
' I'm n<>l going to cont hutt• to n
non·story.'
When the 11tor.,· brukt> in Autru"t
with GobH"'s re\'eolatwm1 m Tht
Washmtcton T1mt·s, Frunk serwuM·
ly considt•n-d t·ndinK his polit1ral
career. lie titill haf'n·L- d1·n1h·d
whether to s£•l•k u 11ixth h·rm, tollY·
ing h(' wanti; to woit until tht• l·th
ics l'Ommitll'e \'t>rdil't iH m
"Thrr('·s ~ome t1enae thut tht'rt·'K
KOinK to bC' anotht•r WH\'t• thut will
t•oincide with the Penth11u11p puhli
cation nnd tht• rt•NUlt~ ol tht• t·thit'll
ht•aring;• Hn~ky anid ·•But nt thi11
pornt, unleBS there·11 aomt'thinJ('
1tartlingly n1·...._ rt-\'f'Rh·d. and I
don't s('f.• any rt·ason toex1~d thnt
then• will. it's JUat womtt to I~
treated more as tht> final tu·t oflu11t
seailOn '• play~·
The t'thic:o; commttlt't' \ 'Oh-d In
Sl'pl('mher to imt'Still&lC' Ooh1e't1
alll' ntwn1 that ht• opernttd a "ex
for·h1n· bu8int'L" out of Frank·s
Cn1ntol Hill apartmt>nt with
Frank'• knuwlt>dgt'
Frank udmiUJ ht· ll&id Gohit· ~
111 l~Jh.i !or at•x and Inter hirt>d
(iuhu• Y.1th J>t>rsonal funds aa a
houlll'kt"(·pn and dri\·er But ht•
says ht• dit1m188('<j Gohil' in Au
l{U!<t l~lK7 wht·n lw lt•nrn1·d Gohie
wu11 UMlnfl hi11 lli>llrlmt•nt for pros
htutmn
hunk hm1 dt•nit•d other sp<'Cifi<'
all1•1(utiunK. Wht•n (;uhie tharged
m unntht·r Wushington Tim<·s :-;to·
ry thot ht and Fronk hod s1•x in
the ll nUfl.t' KYmnaK1um, Fronk
t·alh·d tht• t1tory a •·vicious. crazy
Mt't ol lwa:·
(;ohi1· told his 1tnn: to thet•thit's
t~•mm1th'e lor mo;t' •than four
houra IM·hmd due(>d doon on Dec
5. Horrowintc a hn1• from Shukt>o
"Jwllrt• • ",Julius ('aeaar:• he told
rt·1mrh'n1 allt·rwurd. ( came lo
prmtt1• ( 'onf(rt'8!<m1m Frank today
Oil t• 'Ur~ 11
Frank hmtt'd slrontclY m a. 11
cent inttt\'lt'w thnt ht• has t<-sllfitd
bt·fore tht• ethics cumm1tlt't'
Back m his ditit.l'Wt, Fmnk haa
rnised about $100.000 in rt'C'ent
month11 for hit1rnnipmKn11nd !or u
ll•J;:-al dl'lt·ns(' fund t10tuhli~ht'<I hy
supporlt'rs, nt·<·ordrnK tn lla·k
Mornini;rstnr. il Frnnk pnhtu·ttl
aidt·.
The only dedun·d oppunt•nt
against Frank iM Ht•puhlicnnJohn
:Soto, ·W. Soto's prt·vious hid for
puhlit· offict" w11s u run for 11tntt•
n·pn·st·ntativl' in whi<·h ht• c-np·
turecl less than :Jo pen"t'nt of the
\'Oh'. :\o D4·motrul hu n1m~ for
word to t·hallt>nKl' Fronk. ul
thoul{h aomt·, tnt"ludin)( 1tah• St>n
I.ms l'ml'ili, haH 1nd1c11tt-d tlw~
mny run 1f Frank 1>te1.,. uuh
•·1t depend& on tht• uutcomt" of
thl• eth1ct1 oommitl(>(> It's "":!'Im
pit• aa that," aa~·s ~1ornmtcJ"ttlr.
2 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDAY JANUARY 26. 199C'
Main Street Theater presents an accessible 'Hamlet'
Hout1lon Live by NJo.;JL BAUJ>ERS
Main Strt-tt Theater. con•1•u~nt "'ith
1t11 phil0110phy ofprt'lil'nting dru..ic•
in new and appealing waya, ha11 un
otht:r winnt'r on 1t• hand• "'Ith a
contl'mporizt'd adaptation of Wil
liam Shakl'tlpt'are'a ··11amlt-t''
JudiciouslY trimmed, Ht>ht-cta
Grt.'i'n Udden'11 vt'niion manBJC('• to
n-tain the paHion and fof'hn1ieofthiH
400.year·old play while updating the
bt'ltmg and •ty){'oftht' pll'Ct' Thu11a1
a<:ce1111ible Shakl-aipt'art> with 1ntt•lli
gt·nt direction und natural perform
anct•i.; pt·rft'('t for the novice tht•utl·r
patron
The 1:1tory ol murder, mtrigut• 1md
rev en Re ii; lamiliar. Thr kinK ol l h·n·
mark hati l:lt't'n murdt>rl'<i. h1M broth
er C:laudiuit ha11 not only follow<.'<!
him to the thrunt". but hu marril'd
hi11 widow Gt'rtrude. G(•rtrude'• M>n,
prm<.·e Hamlet, u1 vi111tt-<I by hi• 1·a
tht>r'11 ghot1t who mformM him that
l'laudiu111 i11 ro.pon•ihll' for hi1
death.
Hamlt't Ht• out on a path of diio·
CO\·ery and aubtit:qu<'nt reveni[e.
Otht>r player11 m tht- tale are
Poloniul'I. NUnl'lelor to tht' kmg~ hi11
eon and daughtl'r, Lat"rlt~ and
Ophelia 1llamlet'a 1ll-ratf'd lovt-1; thl·
faithful- tru:nd to llamlt-l. llt1rat10;
t·ourtil"rli Hntlt'n<.Tanu.. Gu1ldt·nMtern
and 011tri(·. !1(1ldu·r• Mart>t•lluto,
Bernardo end Fram·11ico and t\litwrt
ed mt•ml*ra of an acting trouJ)t",
gruvt• di1i:gt'ri> and a 1>r1t•"t
Many of tht> d1rt'Clor and <"ai.t"8
<"ho1ct'8 make the evening fun to
watch. toeldom intt•rf(•rmg "'1th tht•
oriJ(innl mtt·ntion1> of th(' play. Su<"h
moment.t> indudt· the nnnounn·ment
of the marriage ol Claudius und Gt·r
trude, pre11Nlll'<i ns n pr{'Midential
preii.s conference <.·omplete with tt>le·
vii;ion coverage, and thl' de<:ii.ion to
uot' non ·trnditionat em;tingthrough·
out The rol<'io of Bernardo and
Hm;encrantz were pluy1-d bywomt·n,
and it 1;erved thtl4 adaptatmn "ell
The decitsion to pla<.·e a 1><.·l'nl' be
lwh:n c:leudiu11 and Ltwrte8 in a
po11Menm11 match l0<·k1•r room, ttip
ping Pt·rrier while thl")' plot Ham
lt>t"i. demi11e, sound11 more dt-vt•r
than 1t ployed. Thil'I WM the onh
timl' in the e\ening when tht• movf.
to tht' pretient tteemed a bit fon.'t'd
d1£!u·uh ro)(' full of c •ntradict1om
Galt· 8\·01dt'<i the pitfall.s and mor('
than ml't tht' <"hallt·ngt-.
Poloniu111.l!I usu alls presented 88 a
doddt-ring fool. but in Ste\·e
Garfink1·1'a hand~ he ih portrayed
811 a loyal. allx·it mii;guid('d, advi1wr
and latht·r. Garlinkel"s charm and
comit tt1u('h also s«rved to lighten
up what <.·ould easily have Ix-en an
unrt•ll·ntingly j(rim e\·ening
Kt·nt Johnson ati Horatio and
!-lu·vt· Fenley ati Laertes bring a nat
ural upproal'h to their roles "'hich
complem(•nts ttw production. John·
Hon u1 all t•nsy KTR<.'t', and 80 believa
bit· aM tht· t>wr·loyal friend to Ham
l('t Nt·\"t•ron<·edowemissthemean
inte of Sha.k1-.;p<'are's lines a8 spok
t•n by Johni;on. Other actors, take _ c...__.-,
not<'
h·nl('y, as Lat'f"h•s. is like a gun
11hot e\'l"ry hmt• he makes an t'n·
tram't· as tht· loving brother deter
mined to avenge the deaths of his
fatht-r and !li11ter Ent·rgy and pas.
si<>n are Ft·nles's strengths
Main Street's artistic director and
din":tor of this ""HamlN:· H:ebt'<.~a
Gr{'(•ne Udden taketo a rare turn as
at·tor in th1a production. She gives
u11 a Qut-t'n Gertrude of torn loyal
tit11, cunttrntod for her son's lianity
but n1-t·ding Claudiui; to el'!<:ape th.e
void ol ht·r first husband's dt·ath
l 'ddt·n suet·N,..,,fully ouggt•sl.Jl at a
llt'Xual prttt·nce, a lew Ot'dipal
lt·aninw; and a barel;:·contained
•adne&1. Ht·r G<'rtrude ulso has dig
nity, ('ompas,.;ion and beauty
Ai_; Opht·lia. Mycht>lle Abernathy
ii; befit ot convt·ying her character's
stott· of mind through her actiom;.
Sht' jg stunningly effective in a bed
room visitation from Hamlet and
ht·nrthn•aking in her mad scene
without ever saying a word. When
she dOE's speak, she's for some rea·
son l(•i-s convincing.
CharlN Tanner looks nght as
Claudius. who in this adaptation i11
pre,;t·nttod as a conniving chief exec·
utive. but he Jacks a grace with
Sh8k~peare"is language which is
mon· appart-nt due to the skills or
thot0l' around him He is good at por·
traying tvil and certain))· is an appropriatt'
foil for Gale's Hamlet, but
hiM st•liloquy was awkward and
£alst'.
The Montrose
Voice
_ TON TEXA
-l>UE 4t
fRIO.t.Y JA~ JAA'f 26 1990
Pubhshed Fridays
•LAGSfo(Jt>
(ommunitu
lfublie.l~in~ Q11m~:i11u
408 Avondale
Houston. TX 77006
Phone (713) 529 8490
COl•tent1 copyrigl 1900
Oll1ce hours 9am·6pm
HlklryMi.:C.1urg
Sroerro Cohen Darb nr
BETTER
LAUJTIS &
GARDETIS
Total Lawn
Maintenance
Commercial
Residential
-Landscape
-Lawn Care
- Tree Service
l\et-pmg tht' aud1entt •pellbound
for three and a hall hourtJ wa1a1al·
enu_.d crunol 14 ledbyJaml">!Gah·aio
Hamlet ma cart"fully d('tailed, pow
erful perlormanct•. Gale skillfully
uutlined a man bordt>ring on tht'
edge or madnt .... initially to mit;
lead. but ('ventually t1u«·umbmg to
t-IK:ape the awful IK"Ol)t' ofhii. reality
The quirks that Gal(' broui;cht to hiio
Hamlet wt-re fat;cinating to watth.
but w1th~1ut <"rw;MinK ovt•r tht• lint• in
to a;elr-<'<m•cmu• mnnn«r1"m" Jt'11 a
Tht· remt1inder of the company,
Penny Walzel. Joe Kirkendall.
Mark McGriH, Albert Linton,
Wt-ndy Ebnlt', Chris Fowler and
Michael Wonio broughtthesupport
ing characters to life with vigor and
affoction. Vt'ry strong work by the
<.·n,.<'mblt' and production staff of
Kath!e{'n Lipfiromb Jircik, set detiign;
C'rn;tum<'s of Patrick Collin11,
lighting of Bob Dover and sound of
Fr('(•man WilliamM 1s lo be vif'wed
llamlt>t 1Janu·s liald plays madnt'Bs to Ophl'i1a .,\f:yehelle Abt·rnalhJ1 in .\lam St rt l'l 1'h('(Jtf'r"to MamtotaJ:t' cont em
porar)· li>ok at J/am/f•t"
Free Estimates
Best Prices
nightly throuah Fi·b. ll, p1•rhnp11 This ifomkt" ii n-romnwnd1'<1 tr.1)wdy, 1"1•rlurm{·d h) 1.1 tikilli'<l ('on1 523.-LAWn longt•r for itH uniquf'" approu<·h to 11 gr1 at puny o( 1fotu1ton 1ctor11.
Leaflet distributor's charges dropped
DEi\ VER !AP>- Fht·ri; l·an l1t· d1:.
tributt'<I without n 1~:rm1t ii th('y nn·
political material. a I >t•nvt•r JUdg1•
ruled in the ca11e of a man who wa ..
handing out lea11et" uri[tnK a boy·
l"Olt of an AID:-i drua manufa<·turer
Uen\·t'r Coun1y Judgt: Jacquehne
St. Joan d1smi1M>t'd chu.rtet·• filed
aaainst Hoto(l"r Ht.-ltrami. 40, ll<·kett'd
while d11>tributmg 01er11 urging a
boycutt ol producu produCE'd by the
manufacturer of the AIUl:d1ghtmg
drug AZT
Beltrami u1 a membt'rol the AIDS
Coalition to Unleaah Power. or A(.T
t:P He was U<·kt-tt'd by poli<·e a" he
handt'<i out Oien Ot·t. 6 on 1ht lbth
Stn-et Mall that encouragt'<I a boy·
l"Ott of tht• Burroughs \\ellcome Co.
of Hl',.Nm:h Triangle Park. N .C
Hurrouteh!< Welkome makes AZT,
which can prolong th~ life of AIDS
patient:< and delay symptoms ofthtdifl('
Ost' among tho:;e inle<:ted with
tht• HI\' \·iruti. believed to be a precuriaor
to AIOS
Beltrami said the drug's costabout
~.000 a year per patient-is
"outrageouH.' !--O the company's oth·
('f productM t1hould be boycotted.
Ht wai. charged with two \'iola·
t1on8ol city ord1nanceR. distributing
leaflets without a lia-nseand faihng
to obt'y a lawlul order by a polict> of·
f1et"r.
Jn di,.mi!lsmg the charges. St.
Joan not<-'<i thnt nit·r: nm ht· di11tribuu.-<
t without n 1wrmit ifth1·y an· "1><>-litical
mntt·ruil"
St. ,Juan tiaid lk-hrami'111 lt·nfll"t~
wen• "polit1l·al matt>riel'" and u
empt from tht' urdinanct· Sht" ahm
found lhat bt-c8U11t' Ht.>ltrami'a f1it':-distributinn
wa11 prutt't't<--d, lhe police
offiC't'r'• order to 11tt1p w8JI not I~
gal. Hid Huth Buechler, Beltrami'•
attorney
Buechlu, whu rt>pret1t-ntt'd
Beltrami for free in ht>r<"epa<·1ty aa a
member of the :"iationel Lawyers
Guild, .aid ahe waa plt>a•ed that St
Joan dii.miHsed tht" C&at' but duoap.
j>(•inted that the JUdKt' didn"t declart'"
the leaflt>t·di11tnhution ordmant·tunron~
tituti(..-nal.
Ibrahim Garcia, M.D.
! 1 !I (•cf i 011.1· f) i 1·ea.1·e S11eci a I isl
• Con ridc nt ial HIV Testing
• Pcrsona li1,cd Attention
• Prol'cssional Medi cal Care
• AZT Counseling
• 24 1 lour Answe ring Service
To schedule a conridenti al
heal th assessment call
863-0492
For the Very 1st
Time in Houston
Metropolitan Community
Churchof the Resurrecti on
is Pleased to Welcome
vere
Lee Carlt
Datesa O
Saturday, January 2''1.",.111.:""'
6:30pm-Pot Lurk a --v
would be apprec 1te<t
B:OOpm· -LoneStarSymphc
Concert ·SS donati.. n
Sunday, January 28, 1990
10.45am· -Worship :signed for th
Hearing lmpa1 er,
7·1Spm· ·Wor~ntp
Monday, January 29, 1990
1·1Spm Worsh1r
Tuesday, January 30, 1990
7·15pm- -Worship
vr h oats
FAIOAV. JANUARY 26. 1990 MONTAO IE VOICE
~tl Rlrnwry of Memorial service, band concert & Valentine dance
-CURTIS EUGENE
POPE
Curll E, "It •1e Pope 'Who departed
this re ··n Jan 13 1990 was born
Sept 2 1948 on Atlanta Hu spent
most ot his adult 1110 in Houston He
was very active in commumly acl1\11
l•es in h1s1pare time and proteas10~
ally. he nanaged sevurat Montrose
businesses He w<11 he mussed by all
who knew him A memonat aerv1ce
w1!1 be held at 7 10 pm on 1 hursday.
Feb ' at Houston M1ss1on Church
,2 7 Fannin upstairs
'l"ne AlDb 11 it.erfl.i.lth Alll&ru:le w1ll
bold 1ts fourth annual interC<.h
memor18l eervioe on Feb. 10 at St
Anne's Cal.hollc Church, 2410
WtJ&theUner: The eerv1Ce w1ll begtn
&t 7 30 p.m and wlll be followed
wtth a reoept.lon.
Specl&l music wUl be featured. by
chotre from 98V8ral oongregations
A homU,y wUl be gtven by Dr WUl1am
M. 'l\lrner, seruor pastor or
South Ma1n Baptlst Church
ci 18 ext.et \jjed to the comm
most heavily atft1et.ed by AJOO,and
to t.helr loved one1. For more tntormauon
about the eervioe, contiwt.
Pat MetsUtr 1r DI P.&rl &. Shelp at
e67·5627
-Band concert
The U:me Illar flfmphoruc Band
w1ll perform a beneflt concert &t
8.00 pm. B&t.urd&.y.Jan. 27atMet
ropolltan O:mununity Ch.W'Ch,
This serv1ce also 19&t.ures a
ltghung of 1ndMdu&1 e&n·
dles to oommemora.te t.hoee
who have dled of AlDB
The AIDS Int.erfa.ith
CouncU was est.abllshed to
educate people about the
AlDS epldemic, generate a
oomp688tonate response to
XontroH
Jlel&hborhood
1919 Decatur Prooeecls
wtll support
MOCR Tlckets are '5
and will be avaUeble
at t.he door All prooeed.
8 go to MCCR For
more information
I vents ca.11 862-5068 or 622·
people touched by AIDS, and ad
drees the ep1r!tual and other needs
of the UlOusands of people 1n the
Houston area who are directly a!·
feet.ad by AIOO, representatives
88.1d. Attendance at the memorial
eervtoe increases yearly, they S&1d.
A q>eetal tnvttaUon t:rom the ooun-
4282
-Valentina
dance
Worn,ynspaoe will present. t.he &n·
nual ''ValentJn&Danoe-an Extravaganza
ror SJngles and Couplee:
rrom 800 p.m. to 12:00&.m. Saturc1Ay.
Feb. 17 at. Bert.ng Memorl&l
Unlted Methodist Church In tho
h >WBhlp Hall The chemically
tree, women on\y event w1ll fe.lture
DJ Cherry Wolf. Ad.m.1ss1on ts $e at
the door
Bering Church IB looeted al. 1440
Harold Street (at the oorner of Mui·
berry) For more tntormauon on
the danoe, call 621-0670.
-Lou and change
A 81X week ser188 on ·oopi.ng wtth
the st.ress ofl088 and change" w1ll
be led by Dr. LAnnett.e Jones begtn·
rung 'l\Jesday, Jan. 30 trom 6 ()().
7 30 p.m. at the Cent.er for Cotmael·
ing and Sp1rttua.l Growth. In t.h1s
series. part.iclpant.s will be helped
to understand more about. the grief
prooeea, Jones said. Group mem·
bers will pract.1ce f&m111a.r ooptng
skills and develop new onee, she
eaid
:A.IDS has taken the lives ofm&n·
y of our frlends and loved ones. In
order to deal w1th t.he st.re88 or
these 106eee we more learn more
about ourselves:· Jones said.
1bere ts no fee for the aeriee. but
donauons a.re aooepted. The Center
!or Counseling and Sp1r1tual
Bead.er asks 'No power any more?'
rroa LU UUDftO•
In 1985, Randall's Food Markets
Inc. forced Steven Ltt.tle to restgn.
because rwnor had it that he ..
-THOMAS ALLIN had a roommate (w1th) AIDS'.' On
PEACOCK 14s,y 16, 1986.lnaswornt.rlBlclop-
M. rcr 1 1 •. 't· Dec 24, 1989 ostt.1on, Ra.ndall's admitted "... it.
Onstead finally eaid that the Little
incident. was a mtstake mad8
during 1965 AIDS l\ysterta but,
remarkably, he 1S still unwilll.flg: to
alter his written employee policy
tomatchJamall'eonShepherd.t.hB
Kroger Compe.ey, Apple Tree Mar-
)m ·, ball, w1lh AIDS endPd on was decided that. Steven ket.a a.nd others.
Chustmas Eve mormng 81 the v A Llt.tlewouldeithervolun·
~~:~:v!:ieg~:~~;::h~~~~~~~~~1~ :d ~~~~ ~attars
sonAllmandmanyfr1ends He1ssur- S1.noet.heoutofoourt.aet- t th
~I~~ ~~n~!!~~n:I ~~~~!~~~~~: tlement.,Randall'shasr&- 0 a
anuncle Ph1llpAllinolLataye1te La tuMdallattempiabythe Editor
Tom a Houston native and army Gay and Lesbian Polltjcal
veteran had ')eoo 8Cllve tor years n CAUCUS to revise their
politics and w,13 a &uccesstul exh1b,. employee pol1cy
AIDS s.nd P,YdlBcrlm·
lnaUon ls reported, ciljy·
wide, daUy Just reoentr
ly, R&nd;y Ovenden. wea.k.
and near death. wast.old
t.hat. he oould not tn0\18
from a one bed.rOom to a.
t.wo bedroom ape.rt.
~~~~=~~;~a~~t~e!~8!'0~',:k11'~:"hC: At the grand opening of
lal day$ at heme w th h 1 pets possi· Randall's newest. 24~hour PlagBh1p
ble store tn Montrose, A<::r UP·Housment..
ao a tnend could
move in to help him. Ma.nagement.
said,. well.no:we'dhavetofUm.1·
gate and repaint and everything'.'
Now. R&ndall'a, rtght on our own
turf For roe, it.'a the last straw, an
ton took the lead all weekend 1n
p1Cket.lng the food gl&ll~ Picket.Ing affront wol'91 t.h&t. Councilman
will continue, at least on Sat\ll'- P'r&nlt Mann's 1979 "oddwads and
d&,yB
Because of GI.PC's attempts &nd
ACT UP dr&mat.1e&lly m&ITlng the
elegant. grand operu.n.g, Ran.dall
queers'" or former Mayor LoWe
Weleh's .. shoot. the queers" atat.ements.
I t.h1nk l.h1a one 1S gomg to
rally t.he t.roops like we haven't.
eeenSlnOe. It'saeoc1alandmed1cal
tssue, we need the sport.a groups
s.nd all
A very broad b8sed ooalltJ.on of
( non·gay) s.nd g..y groupe s.nd bust·
nesses met Wednesday at The Women's
Center tD determine strategy.
Pl.ease call 713-523-9000 to report.
all diacrtminatJ.on lru::tdents you
know about a.nd to gtve graphics,
prtnUng and promotJ.onal 1t.ems to
help with a planned rally and more
p1Cket.lng
Aren't.you fed upwtthemployers
and landlordS humll!.aUng and
k1ck1ng our S1Ck. huddles while
their down. and gays at random?
Are we goi.n,g to allow low eel!.-.
tsem and bei.ng worn out to d1c:tat.e
toler&Uon o!tt tn the90's?\Vcya.re
our elected ofrlC1als notoons18tentr
ly making statemente before the
med1a t.o set a. d.ltftlrent tone in our
city? rm reacb' to march again, but.
they say lesbians and gays and
Roust.on have no troops or power
an,yrnDre.
Let's Ju8t. see.
Growth ls located at. Cent.ral Presbytertan
Church pe.rlor, 3786 R1ch·
mend at Cumm1na Lane. For more
ln!onnat. on >r to rett 1Utrcall 624-
6562
-Corporate donatiom
C<1rpora.t.e undeirwn.ters have
pledged '460.000 In support of
Houston,s Feb. 3 production of
"Heart Btrlngs· The NaUOnal Tout.'
organizers oft.he beneOt. have announoed.
Tile Houston stop oft.he national
tour or t.he musical tund ra18er is
co-sponsored by tll8 Destgn. Indust.
rles Foundation for AI OS ( DIFFA/
Houston) and Bering Community
Servloe Foundation, which share
respons1bUlty for organizing the
event.. Eight.y·nve percent. of the
prooeeds will be used locally by
these groups for thetr eervioe and
grant making programs, while the
other 16peroent.w1ll bedlreetedto
a n&Uonal grant pool, avauahle to
nauonal groups and oomrmm1ty
ba8ed orga.n1zatJons 1.n ctuee not
ll'lCluded 1n the tour
-Wellnesa program
AIOO Foundauon Houston Ino
(AFH) oontJ.nuee u.a January
Wellne88 program schedule w1th
the monthly introductory cla88 in
Kwid&llnl Yoga l.hls ~.Jan
30 &rut a d1acu881on or eelf-hypnos1S
on Wednesday, Jan 31.
The yoga class, taught by Bacy&
Khalsa, ls int.ended. to help bring
people in touch with their bodies
and m1nd8 to enoourege st.rees reduction
through deep breathing,
meditation and exerciBe. Khalsa 1S
an inBt.ructor w1th Yoga for Llfe.
She teaches the AFH class month·
ly, usually on the third ~ of
the month.
T.C. IsNormand, dlrector or Behavioral
Dynamics, will lead the
talk on self-l\YJ)nosis. leNormand
wm d1SCuSS the benef\t.a orself.hypnos1S
to reduce st.rees and "eelf.act.
uaU.zaUon" and1ts effect1venees in
modJ.1YinBbehaV1ors. The class wW
dispel eome of the oonunon mis
oonoept10ns about eelt-l\YJ)nos1B as
well as focusing on the prooeeees
lnvolved in ach1evlng poe1ttve results
Regents expected to
consider kicking
ROTC off campus
MAl)ISON, Wis. CAP)-The Uni·
vertoity of WiM<·on1o1in Hoard of ReKl
·ntJI is l'Xpt'<"lt•d lo debate this
<·oming wt•t·k whNhl'r HOTC: progrnm.
11 should ht- kit·ked off the
Modu40n <.·ampus, UW Svi;tem
Prersidt·nt Kenm;th 8haw s8ys
"I would say· it.ti highly likely
tht1t"ll be on the agenda;· Shaw
1'aid Monday of the- re-gents" riiet!t·
ing Feb. l ·2.
Shaw •wd he and CW-!\fadison
t'hanct'llur Donna Shalala pion to
annountt their n.'<:ummendations
on tht- HOTC controversv earlv
next wt-ek - •
The UW-Madison fot·ult~- voted
in Dect·mber to tmpport kicking
ROTC programs tiff campu1s becautH.'
oftht•ir politit•s against gay
mtn and lt"8biams. Theo faculty
t1a1d HOT(' pro~am1111>hould be removt'd
from umpu~ by 1993 if
such ROTC policiC'H urt• not.
changC'd
University policy ond i;tntt• luw
prohibit discriminatmn on the ba
sis of sexual preferem-..•. Hut. ol
though gay men and 1£-')(bian" Cttn
take ROTC classes at the Mndi~on
campus. they are not allowt-d to
enlist or be commii-i1ioned into thC'
srmed forces under federal mili
tary policy and are prohibitt-d
from recei,·ing ROTC BC'holar
~hips.
UW·Madison's Acadt.-mit• Staff
Asoembly, which represents a<:a·
der:nic i1taff member.-;_ ca11t-d upon
university official~ Jut Wl1"k to
work with celleagues at other
land-gr~nt unin~iti('ti; to _chantce
the m1h1ar:y·~ pohcy banning aay
men and leiibiun" from ,t;t·rvi<:t>.
UW Madii1on. us a land-grant
school, ii. required to pro\'idt• mili
tary traininK for its 1>ludent8.
-RON BILBO
Aon 81lb I mer advert111ng d•rec·
tor }f it- M· -ntrose Voice. died on
Jan 1c. frvm '"omphcations or an 1ntest1nal
bypass operation According
to his lolm1Jy. he had the surgery sev·
etat years before in order to iose
weigh! BecaU1e of !he 101uns released
1n his system he suffered massive
Iver damage which led lo his
death
Washington is gov' for a day, then off to D.C. Our classifieds
are growing. To
advertise your
B1lbowasbornRonrlleJoe81 bo'Jf'I
Oct 1 ~947 1n Pa$8dena Texaa,
and was raised 1n Galena Park by tus
aunt betty McWhorter cAun11e Betry)
and his grandmother He played m the
band n h gh ICtiOol and regularly 11-
1ended chureh teadmg hss family to
believe that he woukt one day be a
preacher
He went to h'lle with his mcither
(now deceased) and stepfather •or a
whlle but his steplather took him
back to his Auntie Beny when he
lound out that Ron was gay From
then on. Aon was his Auntie Beuy·s
child. and &he 10ved him and cared !or
him until he dted She said. Wasn't
nobody loved him hke rne and htS
grandma did H11 mama never
washed a diaper lor h•m
Belore moving to Montrose Bilbo
drove an ambulance and worked tor
Houslon Memorial Funeral Home
Wheo he 1e1t the employ of the funeral
htune and moved 10 Mor1tr01e his 111e
changed When h•$ Auntie Betty went
10 h11 house to get the su111n which 10
have him buried she •ound a collin
cr.ank in the pocket
In Monlrose, he was an owner of
T msC.otleeShopon Westhe1mer before
'Wo1k1ng lor the Montrose Voice
Alter he lell the Voice he started the
Houston Forum n('wspapef !hen
went into iemt-rehremefll aller leavtng
there Hewa5 weu knciwn !or havmg
a btg heart and IOf part1c1pat•ng on
many fund raisers 1n the community
Services 101 Bilbo we-rel! Memorial
Funeral Home on Monday Jan 22
with bunal foltow1ng al forest Park
Cemetery He 1SSU/'\'1vc<I by h 1 aunts.
Betty McWhorter and Dons Fuller h1S
son. Charles Scoll. h11 cousins
Mildred Payne, Willy Brown, David
Brown and S<1m fuller <1nd. his
friend. Carolyn Scon
He 11 a1so survr'tled by a lamlly of
fr1ends1nth8Montroso Ashewasdy~
1ng. someone broke 1n10 his apart•
men1 and stole all his valuables.
which lhe family had intended lo sell
to pay tor the lunera1 Several don•
hons have already been made to the
family lo help delray lhe cost. and anyone
who 'W1She$ to contnbute may
send donations In care ct Joe Porro.
Box 66414. Hoo11on. TX 77006. Make
checks or money orders oul to Betty
M~Whorter II any money 11 leH atter
funeral e"pense Mrs McWhortftf
said she w•ll donato 11 lo the Bering
Foundatt0n because Flonnle hked to
raise money !or them 11 woukt be a
good lh1ng to :io
J."rom page J
Ho«'t't:f'r. there- u·as a small cloud
m tht• day's blue-sky m the form of
a fight that Craig \t.'ashmgton did
not e"Xf>«l: tu·o conteompt of court
chargt'l:i that supporteors quickly
d110m1.,st'd as ··a teomJX>st m a tea
put. Whether the ;udgel:i u·1ll du;
miss the charge1> or not is arwthu
matter. But. la.st Saturday, 1t u·a.s
not bt>lu•n•d a ··proper"' topic for
di10tU£t;1on. An aide of the rongn•
si;man ·s hou·et•er, told tht•
Montroi:;e Vou·e t~re u·ould be
nt'u.~ soon of importance to the
rt'ader10 of thl' Voiee.
~
PHOTO BY BILLIE DUNCAN
Vt·sp1te that grl'J blur on the horizon.
thl' l(l'nl'ral mood of staff
and fnends u·o.s extremely pos1-
ta·e. At Wa1>hington 's side u·as
tht• "First lady of Tf'Xas" for the
Craig "'ai.hinRton and family an all smiles at the statehouse m Austm last
Soturday
day, lJr. Desmar Walkes. u·ho said "/ th111k my cum·et1trat1.on's go·
1>he u·as /ooki11g foru·ard to settmg mg to be Ofl the abortwn nghts i.s
up a family med1c111e practice m 1;ut·s that are llCJU' m the Con
\\"ashington D.C. and plat1t1ed to gress," sht• said, ··as u·ell as em·1
bf.· acth·t· 111 set·nal areas. r<mmental issues and health
care-which 1s a natural for m<'.
I'm co11cemed most about the at·
ce:>s to health care for all thr l'lll•
uns in this countr.}'. and thrOuJlh
my practice (of medicmeJ It's be-rome
l'<·ry appaf(·nt that somethrng
nr<·dH to 1>4.· dom• to make it
readily acc1·.ss1bl<· to nerybody 110
maft('r u·hat the sltuatwn."
Whatt·t·<·rimpa('t that l\.'111Jhmg
ton hai. on tht• Uith Cu11gresi;1011al
VIHtrict, hi.~ lieti.H' of drstwy u·1/I
1mdoubtf'dl) lead hm1 on. Ht·
clo11ed ho; 1>/J('ech b_\ ~a)'m/l. "'I
hoJX> m) Mt'rt'ICt' 111 tht• Cm1jlre.ss
of th(' L'nilt•d States u di bt.· 11uch
that a., thn· nuu· look at mt• to .'i('f'
u·hu is thil> pt•ri-on u·ho fullou10
,\11ckt•)' /.('/a11d-a1i thty looked a
M1ckeJ· lf'la11d tu 1>('f' tht• mea.surt·
of that prr11u11 u·hu u-as then /olJou-
ml{ Barbara Jordan-om· day
u·hn1l11tepduu·11frum that olf1cl'
and the bnwkr d1·ar,., thedu.~t 11et
ti<'S, 1( I do m)' ;ob tht• u·ay that
you pra)' I hat I do my ;ob-tht•)' 'II
lvok back to Iii'(', u·ho 1s th1.~ person
who follou:.~ Craig \'r"ashmNton to
thl' Congrl'.~!J of thl' Vnikd
Statr11!'"
seNice, garage
sale, house for
rent, or just
about
anything, call
529-8490.
The
Montrose
Voice
AZT dose recommendation split in half by FDA
By DEBORAH MESCE
":>A Hf. '-'C"'TRO&Ev e
WASHl1'GTO!\ tAP1-T~e Food
and Drug Adminiotration on Tues·
day cut in half the recommended
do"e of the anti-AIDS drug AZ'I:
redudng the cost and likely ~1de ef·
f('("t1' of AZT therapy.
Some phyflician experts in treating
AIDS already are prelK'"ribing
lowt•r doHeS. The aKency's a<·lion
will Mend the message to other doc·
tors that th(' low dose is 01:1 ('[ft'<'·
tivt• as the high dose and cauMC'S
few1·r side ('ffects.
The FDA ordered changes in the
lnb<'IM on AZT, also known as
zidovudine, to recommend 600 milligram11
a day afU>r one month at
1.200 milligromR a day, the previ
ous rf'COmmendallon for a daily
dost".
The C'hanace ·meanA thut ft·wer
patients may have to di8("(Jntinue
AZT therapy becau8e of Merious
11id(' effecta;' Henlth and Human
Service!'! St>cretary LouiM ~Ulli\'an
said in a Mtatement.
Dr. Jame'B MaAOn, aasi"tant s.ecretary
for heuhh, snid the- lower
dm1e al80 would reduce treoatment
COf;lli for All>S patit·ntA n-c.·eoiving
AZT.
A y('ar'• treutm<·nt with AZT at
th(• C'urn•nt re<.·ommt•nded do!'e
COt4l.A about $K,OOU or more. 'I\leadoy'a
r<'<'ommt>nclution would
mNtn nnnual C'OMtH of ahoutS·1,300
or more.
Mark Harrinw:ton, rt>presenting
tht- AIDS activiMt l{roup A(,l trP.
said the FDA'a action waa ·•great
newa'' and important b<'(·uu .. t• it
will jeel the word to ''(·on11ervutive
dot·ton" who prt·•cribt• ~lrit·tly ac·
c-ord1na to a dru)(t1 latwl.
The dt'<'itiion alt10 i11 important
l>KnUM(" h1ah dot1t'8 or AZT havf'
ht-en kE't'plnlf All>S patient.II out of
dinical drul{ tnah1, in which the
drug is compared with other them
pies. In these trials AZT u; administered
at the previously roct1mmended
high dose. hf' 8aid
•·Partly because of c08t and purl·
ly because of toxicity, we need W
find out what the lowt"f't J><H111ible
dc1~e is,"' he said.
Harrington said the FDA rec:om
mendation was long ovt•rdue Ht"
noted that preliminary findinl{A of
the study on which the action is
bat>ed were released la"t July
On the bm;is oft host' initial find·
ings by the government'8 Nation·
al Institute of Allergy and Info<>
tious Diseases, many physic1u11K
began prescribing the lowt•r dtise.
Dol'e recommt-ndation& on thl" la
btl do not prtvenl doC'tors from
prt>scribing higher or lower dose•
of the drug ii they believe il i11 wur·
rantl"d
The FDA said chmC'al data from
the study became "11utflti('ntly col·
lected and analyzed" in No\'emher
and were Huhmitted to the FDA by
thC' monurecturt-r. Burroughs
WellCt.1me Co., on Dt·c. It\.
Whill" producing fewer advt-r:oe
reu<·t1onJt, tht• half·dot<t• regimen
waa n11 eflt't."ltv(' 011 o higher te&t
drn.11 in prolonl(ing &urvi\"81 and
rtdutmg th1· fr('<IU(·nn: of opportu
niHtiC' inf<•fllonH that often kill
AIDS patif'nlll, a(·cordmg to the
nwenc~;'K unulyHiM
The totudy. how<•vt·r. did not del(•
rmin<' whNht•r thC' lowt·r dose is
88 t•ffC'ctivt• in uiding nt·urological
prohlem8 in AJJ>S patients, offi<'
inls amd.
AZT 111 thl" only anti-Al D8 drug
uppru\'1•d by th(' FDA thot dir('Ct!y
«ombnt& thr virus that couti('M the
lntul di111·ui;<·. whiC'h dt·stroys the
body't1 ah11ity lo rt-')(lMt infections
and other d1"t'RJ.1<'8.
I low1•\'t'r. the highly toxic drug
can inhibit tht- produ<·tion of red
blood <.'t'lha, r:RU!"inlC S('\"f'rf' anemia.
It con nlao reduce the numbt·rof
infection·fightinl( white blood
cells Lo dangerously low levelK. n. ..
quiring the patient to dil'COnlinue
use ol the drug.
In the clinical i;tudy, 262 Pll
t1ents wen: given l.=}00 milligramH
of AZT a day fortwoyeurs, toM'<'lf
higher-than·r<'C'Ommf'nd(-d doi-t·K
produce an:i.· hen('fit. Anoth('r
group of the Mame Kilt' WRK givc·n
1,200 milligrami; a day for u
month and then 600 milligrams a
day for the rc•!ll of the period, Kaid
Kathy Bartlett, napokt·Hpenum for
Burroughs Wt•lkome.
PatiC'nUI in the low-dosl' group
were found to hnvl' frwc·r s ide ('f
fecl!I than th0t1e 111 th1· high·dOMI'
f(roup without any appur('nl dif·
ference in benefit. Among thOlif' rtp.
cC'iving the high do11t·0 nt.·orly half
hod serious advenie rC'OCt10nM thnt
required them to du1rnnlinul' AZT
treatment, whilt· only a quarter of
the low·do~e pouenl.M had to Mlop
treatment.
4 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDAY JANUARY 2f:. 1990
Montrose Classifieds
To advertise. all
Montrose Classifieds
529-8490 TOPIC INDEX
Monday 1hrough Friday. 9am 10 6pm.
RATE -4 ,., ... ne o4 Advertise! It'll Be Good For You! woros s.-., e
Sf>t" Al. """•11 M&aft\ead not!Ur>ges 1Qr4..,eos en.-.ay34Cperw :
ana S2 ~5 per l'lc•d ne r;e1 .... ee~
SPECIAL Aavtn .. Hll'll Ml ct!• .. fol 13 V.Hlr.S tnen pey JC P'I'
woo•n S-t2 perl'INO,,. pei .... Hi.
ffi(E.)Pf AJ.. m- l'&g •n II free1a1ciutl1'11•e1F1tllr1c1ru1n Y(
- tr 'Jy'"' M< "ll'f rn· A( ·· II.Pl 11n •lit< .,.
1 or •t , pt1r1
i•ya1 Pl'f
Just call. We can handle It all over
the phone and blll you later.
• " HELP WANTt:D Motorcycles .:. .. =.-=
----~0~1~4;::.2 ~ r~=-wandeo:;~
ADVERTISE FREE ~~I P,',': 1;,~~~
NEXT ISSUE • ll'IC c.11 Warren
Pl wvro rRAN~ -- ...Al'lt()n tor •PP 529-
P Ai A )N M010R 5006
~~~~~~~~Z:·!E~ y~~'e:o~~.!!0n~.oe
:=.~~~~ .... Yc.~1 Y529·84~ :!~s g·~~;u ,";yan~~
~---·--- & I• I Flag
Auto Repair Art 0710
___ ...::0..1:.;9:.:0:. -,,-,,.-,, -_;:_:_m=,
"4• Ir• .. '11.- "'>. r J!Om'f
'f. ·-...we..Thur-
Mon /rOSe Mc y t'~~'m ~1•- ~i.ur~•
Auto
Repair
100 PmfK
c...
526-3723
Computers
0726
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NUT ISSUE
~·•l;-'*Qfd
lN'i'Rlh..TIONS CO~·
PuTERS .er (4 words Ha
bot! heaclllllel at NC.
-iARGE lot tl'le ne•t 4
wukt C1111 529·8"<
MC'tl4C'"Y "-l
Fashion 0738
WE BUY HOUSE
CONTENTS
Al P41" Top cath tor
V• 1t•g4t !vf!'l1tUre' S•tlfetl
Cnui•' C<>1tume 1ewe1ry1
M11cellaneous' Ev•tY·
~~·~~:. ·~zi'.~-J~:t
ate L•Qu•d1t0ts
ApiJTiaiices
1004
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APPLIAN·
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"-<> 1nel •I NO CHARGE
IOf lMI tle•t 4 Weeki C.l.I
..1~9CIMONDAY
ONLY.Jan 29.9wn-r>eon
Arts&"' crafts
1005
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NEXT ISSUE
Ptac:e a 25-\llrOl'd MER·
CHAN01SE ARTS 4
CRAFTS eO (4 words as a
bold he•dline) ti NO
CHARGE tOf the next 4
weeks C•ll 529·3490
MONDAY ONLY. Jan 29
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aO <4 WOf0S as t !>old
heaOhne) II NO CHARGE
tor the nex1 4 weells c.u
53-8-490 MONDAY
Gourmet Foods
1039
10 CAJUN RECIPES
uous L...u1-na ta.,,,
11< 1 Send SJ Cl'l«:lr.
m. ney cwdrr 10'. Ree-...
Box 6644~ H< If< ........
Jeweiry 1044
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P :e a 25-word MERCH.
t.NDISE JEWELRY ed
[4 w ,,,. ts. bol<t tie.O-
0100-TRANSPORTATION
'1!.);2 c
1 · 1·\ib'I
12·Trutks
OlZO.Veh1<:1e1W•nteo
0142-Moto1tye1e1
OH ·AvtoAep
0300-BUS.
OPPORTUNITIE.
S.
0600-EM·
PLOYMENT
AVAILABLE
0700-INSTRUCTIONS
0800-WORK
WANTED
08:.0-Ger ra1Y,or1r.
Wanted
1000-MERCHANDISE
1003 5·Art1 & Cr1i11
IUU4-App11anc;H
llJ05..Ar1t&Crat11
1006-Auc:tu)fll
1007-B•llOON
ICIQ&.8"r&L.qc#
1006.5-B•nk•ts
l~Bll'ldl
CllO.Boo-s
lllHloota
n1~c1ingM •
) '6-Condomo
1011-Comput .. S
t»Oraper ...
1024-0•esses
1026-EytQMllMI
•o:trfences
031..ftrt"ood
1031 Jurn1tu1e
03&-Fu>nl
•0.,3-Gounnel fOOda
(141- ..... lthfOO(I
04N·tobt>y$upplles
104J-l!emstor )tlo
tOU·Jewe1ry
1G4&-LN1ne1Gooos
1050-Lost & foun<l
Mer1ht"°1se
1062-M 111ary Clolhel
~-Mo1.ac:&V1(1eo
OM-Neon
.G..$..6..-.N..e. w1p~
"'"~· Pat10Fu1n1lu1e
060-J>ientl
..C.J.6.4. .Pfoteu>0nal
068-Aec)l'dl & Tepet
lCU-Reuie~
10 0-~UQS & Carpell
12 pat
ll 76-Sport•wHI
76 $-$!111eo1 R•d101
1077•Tt1..,,•11on. l/CRs
10&4·T1opn•n
1068·1ild90
10!il0·Wlnted To Bvy
IOil·YteMI
109~ ·Y••" & Garaoe
S11•1
1100-ANlMALS
Pets
f>4·P• C1r•. 801rd-~
H "it let
HI 11& Fou l<3 .. 1400-RENTALS
14U:>-Ape1tment1
1410-Apert,,,.,.,ll
\.\al't9d
1440-TC>•'1"°"1>•4
eo-
1-460-Aoommatn
Wanted
1600-REAL
ESTATE
1601-HornntorSai•
1602·AHIE11ateln-
1pect1on1
1650-Commereial
Prcpttrty
1700-NOTICES
172f·L9Q•INotoeet
P'~ -Commerc.••I An-
1900-SPIRlTUAL
1!/2\·Cr 'Mil
2000-MORTUARY
""'f , H<Mlll
2100-SERVICES
21( ·A< lhn<
8c kkff>lrog
...... Aow :11ng
llll-A11 Cond•l•ormg
2..1.1 2-A\leiat•ons Sew
2113-Appl•aneeRepa•r
211S-Anorney&L9Qal
2tl7-Bad8o""9
2118-Carpenlry
2119·CaleflflQ
'1lti&-Chirot:1ract<~
2120-CIHMfl
!Ckltr-n)
2.1.2 1·Clearti"9 Ja t( ;tl2Tt..CotnJMil•
.... < ..
2122.con..gnrnlf'!l
V.•nleO
l. _23,-,C onllN<lJOl'I &
2~24-Co.,i11Mtu"9
2124H•e<111
212~·0a\• IQ
2125S-Denli5try
21257·0o11Aepair
212&-0ometl•C
2127·EteClfOl~S1S
21:.?15·E•ett<seP10-
gram1
2128-flOflSll
2129-furn•ture
Rel1n1th1ng
2130-Geneeiog.,.
2131-GymS. Hlillth
Ct rs
2132-Ha11Cere
2133-HairLossTre.a!·
m<0•
2134·Hau11ng
2135--HOtOICOPff
2136+1ncome Tax
213&-lnsv•ance
2140-La.,..nCare
LtndKtl)l"'O)
214;2-LOCkSn"l•lh
2145·Massege {ltcente01
215,5-Me01t11 Care
21eo-Mover1
2161-lllvlr.tlOl"I
2162-0p1orne11•S1s
2163-Ptint•ng
216"·ForhmeTe111ng
2165·P•per Ha"'O)•"'Ol
2166-Parl•H
2167-P•t Con1101
2170.PhOlO F1n•shmg
217S-Pho1ography
2176·P1an0Tunmg
218().PietureFrammg
2181·PlantCare
;2182·P•umb1ng
2183-Portre•ts
21&4-PotUil Bo•es
2185·Pnnt•ng
2188·F"sych1CS
2189·F"syChOIOg•C&I
Care
2188 5--R-•reh ~
21897·Rniavr1nt1
21to.Reaumes
2191·Securoty
i191 3-Storege
2191 S-Tan.rung
2192-lex•
2193--Teiephone &
P191t1g
219:3~Toc11.e1Selff
2194·lravel
lll5--Tli & \110eoR.po"
2196·Typettltuig
2197•Typ1ng
21!"18·Up/"10lslery
2:l!lol·li1d9Ql•P•n<;1
21'19~-~h!LOM
2200-THE
PERSONALS
ll:l< 1lnd•vidu•I Per-
141na1
2"40-(Commerci •• ,
P...-CYll
2260-Body Rubs
2: ~·- ·Moael, Eso irt~
2300-SEASONAL
2 ... eo _ ....,-
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'"'- Cant find your cat·
egory? Call 529-
8490. We can s1art
one for you
i:tebu It
flee;;. alRep• rs•1
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14' MONDAY ONLY
lar 29. 9ao°"l·"OOfl
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tu1e. rugs. kn•lr. k,,.clu
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t>efwMn Al•bamt; W•·
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apartment quiet loc.ltt•on
nice k•lc/"len end bell\ prtveie
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The
Montrose
Voice.
~enseryreod
Pi.It Ofl00"1
M trosee1Y
,., '1cY
FRIDAY. JANUARY 26. 1990 MONTROSE VOICE 5
Richard Strauss' 'Der Rosenkavalier' sparkles for HGO Patty's
B> L, TOl>U ( iAH KETS()~ Pool Parlor
Tht> .\1 •• mt",..' \a1<T
The wmter rt·pt>rtory t1t'1\~m i• un
dt·r way for llm.111ton GrRnd Opna
with a rf'vivul ot Richard
Strau11s'a oft-rf'peated J)er
Rw.enkavalin. Originally pre-
1u.•nt.t.-d h<-re in 1975, tht· produc·
tion retain• itst:harm ond st rva-t•ability,
while offoring nt·w and
11triking portrayal• from a \'try
11trong ca•t
Thia production hnM to IK' C'Ount·
t'<i UH om• of tlw major rN·C'nt tlU<'·
ct·sst·a !or I WO, wt•ll up on a li11t
thut inducli-lf 1>t·rformon<"t·& of
Tht• Mikndo, Tnnnhnu1H•r,
'l'urandot and Horis Godunov.
llnppi~t nt'w.!I of all iM that two of
the pnm·1pal roles art' o~umt•d b).
rec:tnl graduath of the- llou!lton
Opt.·ra ~tudio
~
PHOTO BY JIM CALOWELL
tht< thralls of romunet' with ht'r
young lo\·er. In all, Mi111 Bar11to"
ga\'t' a perfomlBnt't'that f8JK·inat·
t.-d ond t.•un\'mt.·ed. but did not
t-omplt'tt'ly »tlti11fy.
The Kontroee AcuVll\Y Cent.er held a
8\.iOCle8Bt\ll r.elebrauon '90-n.m
Houston Juckofl' oampaJCn at R1ch'1
t.h18 past Sunoay They .,.. t.rytnC "'
help support Houstonian8 who want.
to go to the g~ g&mes t.h18 summer
D
nirose
ithborhood
Sports
in Va.noouver wtt.h
n.md rai81ng a&l!Btr
&nee, team un1-
fonns, T-8h1rt8 and
but.t.ons &nd so on
With t.heit help,
'l9am Houst.on will
be & de1\n1t.e hit
Well, tlledogftght
oontimJb.:t. For the week ending J'&n
19. the top t.en tea.ms b&ttlloC it. out
were: l) Past Tl.me, 2) B&ochua I, 3)
Brt&r Pat.ch, 4) Ll.pstJck, 8) Ra.lnlxlw
Ranchers. 6) CM N ··:uen." 7) Happy
H&z.a.rds, 8 J Chicken Ranch. 9) Feeuve
Flve and 10) Bwlkhouse 6
Su<tanne l\frntur 81'1 the titular
<ktavmn has 11lrt•ady de\'elopt'(i
an intt'rnatmnal t.•11.rei:·r in thf' fl....,
yen~ smft> ahe 111tudwd and pt·r·
torml"d ht·n- with the 11tudio. Reoturning
triumphantly to the par
t·nt t."(•mpany sht• rnntributes ht<rt'
a J*rformant."t" that estahlishee
~wr in tht• front rank uf mt•no IK>'
pranoe t·urrt·ntly l~:fort the public.
Althoutch tht- vou:t· t:lllt'M:Ory of
'fo lcun' is rwt uftt-n l'itt·d in con
t.t.•mporury parlom·t'. it is within
lhiH tradition thJt ht·r inMtrumt·nt
could ht'!ll lw dt"l'lt·rillt•d (Patti and
Malibran nre tht• lx·2-1t hu.;toricnl
cxamplt'M). Tht• lowt•r rtl•:-i"krti ure
fully t'Quulizcd with an em1y and
~il\'t-ry upper t'xh•nlfion, and tht•
husitally lyric tmund tan bt>
opent"<I up with rt·iil powt·r hl'ld in
re11ervt·. Tht• vom• is firmly under
control. ~upple tllld pliant. indud·
ing thl' ladlity to Mhudt" and Color
at any volumt• lt·Vt>I Shf' ha11 alH-O
that ral"t"llt of rommodillt•s UHually
<·allffi un(• lannE- dans a voix ( a
tear in tht• voi<"t•I.
$usannf' Mentur a1> Octat·1an and Janice Gm11wm a1 Soph11•'" HG0'1> produetll)n of Ru:hard Straus.\' ·v,.,
Rusenltadin'
Tht· rult• of Baron Ochs was as·
Mu med bv dt>but artiatArtur Korn,
w hofit· ~<)re than t>t·rv iceable bai;s
wa11 rl'Monant throuKhout the entire
:l O<"l8\'t· range rt.'Quired for
this part. Given thut a somt'what
bl ol'k twund rt·miniscent of
Golllit•b 1-'ri<·k pnvoiled through·
out, tht• hight.·r nolhl wtre produt
·<•d with a 11urprising bright·
nt•ss nnd doritv. And ht• was able
t•vt·n tc1 MU!ltain.thut notorious lo"
E llt tht• t•nd of At.·t 'IWo. His ap·
pnllH'h to tht· t.·harut:tt•r wm; more
nit a <·ountrified hon vivant let
lm>Ht· on on unl'iUlipt'ding Vienna
thun att the hopdt"Ss buffoon of.
lt'n urwatured in more tradition·
al prudut1ionK. I'ot to say that he
wa11n't the romplete boor; ju8t
thut ht• y, as more likt>oble than
u11unl 4Kratt'fully aol. belie\·ably
obit· to lorgi\'e- and forgt't hi8 beintc
ht'8tt'<i by tht• youni(t'rl'8\ alier
for thl" hund of Sophit•.
'!be next league meet.Ul418 Feb. 11
at aoo p.m at the Ranch For the
t.h1rd OOnaecut.lve meet.tng. we wUI
d18CUS8 the opuona for the summer
campaign. Unsubsta.nuat.ed rumen
have been spread &bout the board
wanung t.o char'lge th1n'9 It. l8 unpon..
ant for all t.o attend eo the !&ct.a
can be presented. A1\.er the <IJ.8cua-
Mu~icall)' and dramatically
MiRS Mentzt'r ha!' gotten to the es-
11ent't' of this tmu1<er role and t>he
proJl'<·t1t thl' mo,..t bt-lievablt> l i
year old ca\.·alie-r in re<.-ent memory.
So much so that the implied,
but ohvious. physical r('latiom;hip
with the older MarsC'hallin is p(·r·
C'('ivt-d with rt·sonances that hor·
d<·ron the immoral. Moreover, his
her s<·enei:> as the ch am lx>rmaid
Muriandt•l t•merge unduttl'red
with implications of "double
drag" oftt'n enoountl'red with less
t.•onvincing portrayals. Although
rdntively nt:w to thiR most demanding
and belovt.·d of operoti<·
impt>n;onations, Mentzer hru; luid
daim to the role with a very personal
and satisfying stamp of her
own. Wekome hClme, diva. and
many happy returni-;~
Making her debut in a major
roll' with 1-HIO i• th<-111tudio'11 mort"
rt"<'f'nl grnduntt- Junit"t· GrillSom.
a.M the innoct·nt and linitiallyl nn
i\·e Sophit•. Ont t·Xpt'C.11'1 uny p<·r·
fonnt"r who 8K8Uml'1l thi11 rolt• to
haVf• the mon<•y not('S-thoi-;e
abo\'f" tht• stuff and ht:yond. Miss
Grisnom"11 tHh·nt indudt·Y th<·nt• in
abundance, UK wt·ll UN n tourpris·
ingly full-thronkd ond rounded
sound in the middlf' und bottom.
Many lyric NOpranot1, including
tiome V("ry fumouH namt·B, nt·gle<"l
tht' dt·vl'lopmt'nt of the entin
rnngt• by cnm·t•ntrnting l'xdu11iv€'ly
on the top, with u re14ultant un·
bet.·oming hootint'Slt. In addition to
lht· l'lt'l'urity of tont· prvduction aln:
ady in t•vidt·nce. Mit>a Grissom's
voice at this !1l8Kt' giv<'" promise
that it may grow, with careful
hu11banding. into a trut' :-;pinto.
JOtlephmt" HnrKtow's appear-once
ai; the Mar8challin was
aomewhat puzzling. Her sound 1s
1dightly veiled. with a burniHht..J
Nht'l·n that sati1'fit'!"ienormously in
the quieter passoges, Owing pt>rhaps
to a slight indibpoKiticm,
howeve~ she did not produl't' tht·
nqui8ite \'olume in the biJU(l'r
8«'nes, and the final trio purlieu
larly. to match her on-stagt· t•nl
leagues. While she portrayed tht'
feminine ond worldly ntspt·<.·tM ol
her character with ripe conviction
in the opening scenets. the> closing
monologue of Acl one went be
yond mere introspection to a kind
of self·absorption. And, although
not graciously ~tumM or coiffed
for her appearance in the cunclud·
ing scene of the opera. she played
the Marschallin a1:1 much toongal
and world weary for a woman who
had only two days earlier lx'<'n in
Mut·h wois lo ht· admirt-d in the
ancillary rol('11. In particular Ernst
Gut,,.tt•in was titrong of voice, ca pi·
talizing on the <·xaggerated
hour.ct'Ciist'rit' of \'On Faninal.
while Adria FireHtone nnd Joseph
Frank wt•rt• juHt right as the
oleaginou11 Italian ftycophants
Annino and Valzocchi. The con·
du<'ling of John Dt•Main was his
u1:1ual journeymnn output, carefully
t·ontrolll'<I with good coordino
tion hl.'lween the pit and the stnge.
Om.• wiMhea ht> t:ould learn to
br<•ath<• morP with the singers and
find more pcll.·try in tht:' 11core.
Performant·~ rontinue in the
Brown Auditorium of the
Wortham Ct"nl.E'r tomorrow, next
'l'u('Sday and Friday e\'enings at
7:00 p.m
ston a vote will be taken
On beh.&lf of the entlre league, J
want t.o Wish Roger as~ recovery
He has been hospU<zed wtt.h a
long stand1ng hereditary 1llneaa &nd
we all hope he's back on t.hebea.tvery
eoon. Here's t.o -P&t
We cover the
News of
Montrose
Interior designers sell work to benefit AIDS The
l-JA.\1MO~IJ. Ind. AP lntt" •r dl lmoY.! on~ JM-'rrnnally with 8C·
•~ntte m nur1hwl"9l lndulna and llh quired 1mm10n(' d('fiC'it·nc·y Byndrom~.
nois will dc1natt• proreed• from tht'1r hutthcdu1e~prumptedhertolaunch
work totht- Jncl1unu All)S FoundatuJn lntmor l>etii((nen1 l'nittod
M11rlu. l>u·k uf Jlnmmond .a.y11 11h~ •·Aftt'r rt'a.dinjC abou1 it. 1t'• really
****************************
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** Wide Area Coverage. Call Today for **
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[11joy n11 eve11i11g of
rf 11zzl;11g e11 tertn i11111e11 t
for t!te l1enli11g of AIDS.
I• ·
Snt1mlny, felminry 3
Jo11es llnll
8 JI. Ill ,
/ 1£,
For ticket i11for111ntio11
cnl/TICKETRON
526-1709
111'.AN.1 STN.ISCS"' pr<"l•'4..l of Dllh\
I:\· ii::,n lnJu.,tnM Foundo1L1on l'or ~IDS
C1) rrucJuo·J tn 11,,u.,t"n l•y n,_.nng Commun11y S.·r\-1(<' Found•U•'f'I
, \'1 taunt{ b< a1 \k~ nothing
.-1.t-. So I Y.untwl lo start aomething
that Y.ould brinA: peoplt· to((t-ther to
hi·n('lit the t'RH~,' 11h1· amd
The grou11 1• op"·n to t1nyom· who 1s
in tht• ctt·11t1H• hdd. art18llt, p11mh'?'a,
dt«iimeri or wntt'l"tl •h• ,aid
Dick ~aid that11heand the woupw1ll
be workin(( on diff~r.-nt projed11 auch
ai; a 11hoY. houM" or t·raft flho,,., •·
Dit·k'a fin;t proJl'<:t will IM:' un opt·n
Locker Special
house m llammond "" Mart:h :H and
April I Montrose
· Tht• t·harl(t' for tht' (•1~n houi.t: t"ur
will Ill!' 1u·oct•t'Cl11 on\~·. and all th~ proM'l'(
lll "ill w:o t<traii{ht to thl· AIDS
Fuund11t1on:· 11h1· 11;1.id
8am-4pm Dai ly
Thursdays:
Voice
1 / 2 Price Rooms ~
Lockers
12 Noon-12 Mid n ig ht
Tuesd a ys:
12 Noon-12 Mid nig t
1 / 2 Price Rooms &
Lockers
6 MONTROSE VOICE FRIDAY. JANUARY 26 lgqr"
~ons)ruclion & ~onstruclion & Security 2191
epa1r 2123 epair 2123 ADVERTISEFREE
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Comp~e18 A.-. - ;d;,,7,;i Rem0d.c1ng
"P•l1men1 M•(ntenance Spec,•hll F•M l 11""11f11
Paul Komestat Scott Stewaq
P • _,.._crd 'JlRVI
;E SECURITY ad 14
,.._ l)rda " a bold ~adl n111
a t NO CltARGE 10" th•
l'le•I ~ """ k$ ~ b29
t.40NDAY !'114
3330 Whitney Houston. TX 77006
(7 13) 524·0499 ( 713) 524·2692 Message) Storage 21 91.3
DON WHITE
General
Contractor
Commercial &
Res1den11a1
fAE
...
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( 1M.6.1 E
591-8940
Parties 2166
DREW SERYICES
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AIDS fight needs more Washington cash, hearing told
By ,JACK 8CHHhlBMAN
SA?\ FHAr-.iCIS('O 1Al'J-Ovt·1
tht· nul four yl'll)'l(, tht" Al C>s t·p1·
dt·Mi<' wiJl·c·ost .tht' l't1Untr\· ~l hil·
lion a yt-ar. an t·xpt>rt on the inc.·ur
ablt' dist'&Sf' prl'dit-tt.<f at a run·
grt•saional oommitlt'(' ht·nrinl(.
Tht·hurinf{Jan lti.mttndt·dto
ht•lp product' a projt'<'tiun lor tht·
lt·dt•ral 1991 budgl'l. was ka·kt·doff
with San Franc.-iMt·u Min:or Art
AKnos pll'ading for mort• .go\.·l'rn·
mt•nl hl'lp.
Tht• San FrnnciMc.·o plan. or mod
t•I, to t'O!>e with the dt·ntMlntion ol
ot·<1uired immune dt•ficll'nry 11yn·
drome, •·is near collapsl':• tht• mny·
or tt·t.:tifil'd. dl'spite tht' admiration
of the world for the nty'1 cumpas·
11ion and ('ffec·tivenf'n.
. ~ow , for the linit time. tht·re
iK reason to belieH that \H can
stave off death with ('arh intt·r·
vl'nt1on treatments and
0
yl't the
hope that oci('ncc and rt'11eorch
hm; bought comN1 ut o prict• thttt
governmc.·nt won't puy;' AKno11
told the federal building hl'Oring.
Agnos found extrt•me irony in
hu.; observation thot tht• ff'dl'rttl
wonrnment will pay for AIDS
hm;pitalization c.·ot1tt1 only if tht'
vit·tim ih hit by pnt·umonia and
nut for earlier inlt•rnntion ht-fore
insidious symptoms f!Urfan'.
"Th('re il'i 1o;omNhinw M•riouHly
wrong with a ftdt·ral polit:y· that
r('Quirl's people to go to death'11
door before thl'y find a welroml'
mat: · addt•d the mayor b1tinwly.
It was estimated thot iO pt•n·ent
of A IDS care CoHts go for drugs,
principally AZT; I~ pt·rn•nt for
dinical visits; and I~ pt•rct•nt for
lnboratory tC'tiU.. It wa11 tt·1o1tified
that AZT cosb S6,000 a year per
potient for I 200 milhl{ram den•"'·
but that recommt!ndt>d reduC't.'d
doses could bring that down to
~J.500 a year.
Rep. Barbara Boxer, D·Calif.,
chair of the Human Resour<'f's
Task Force of the House Hudg("t
Committee, said it ii; paradoxical
that while the government inve"t·
ed millions to develop und tl'f1t an·
ti·AIDS drugs .. "'the ndmini~tra
tion stops at the point of mo king
these drugs availoble to all who
Drl' unable to t1<'<"Urt.• lilfo 1mving
treatmt·nts through tht•ir own
means"
San 1-'rancisco has had more
than iOOO case11 of AIDS Hmce the
l'pidemic bt·gan, tht' third largest
incidence of a U.S. major metropolitan
art.•a, ac.·c.-ording to thf' Cen·
tN·s For Di8ea8e Control in Allan
ta
Agno8 said f>OOO P<'<>ple have
died of AIDS in Son Froncisco
since the start of the t·pid<·mic, and
that probably f>OOO will dit' of it in
the nex:t three yeant, whilt' another
5000 will be diagn<M1ed with the
disease
Dr. George W. Rutherford. direc·
tor of the San Francisco AIDS office,
said the c.-ombined public·pri·
vate cost of AIDS will bl-$:} billion·
plus for the nation ov<'r the next
four years. and $100 million for
San Vrancisco alone. He <•stimat·
edabouta third of both fiJ{urNl will
be financed by the public
His chilling statistics through
1993 for San f<'ranci1o1t·o, bt•hind on·
ly New York nnd Lo11 Angel<>S in
HIV incidt·n«•, indud<• ~0.000 vie·
tims avE>raginK ~40,000 vi11it.8 a
year and rt."quiring JOO hMlth care
workerl'i und Klaff
"Tht'8<· ("Ofrll11 are tn·mendoui;.
both in the puhlk M't'tor and in the
prirnll' st'<.·tor;· aaid Hutht·rford
.. However, tht· puyoff11 art> trt·men·
dou~ aM wl'll-a «hllnt'<' to pnvent
premature dt•ath, n ('hnnt·e to pre--vent
sul ft·rinK and po1o1Mi bly a
C'ham·<· to Mtop lurther trnnsmit1·
sion ol HIV''
Te~timony thnt drew lavish
prai!ie from Bc1xt•r camt· from Lee
C. Smith. pr~1dt·nl of Lt•\"I Straui;
Internationlll. a t'timpany ~mith
said providt>S AZT to employees diagn08l.<
f with HI\'
''Thl' bui<inesa community must
improvE"" health btonf'fits and acCetiS
to dt.'C"ent. aflordable health
care for its t·mployt'(>8:• hl' said . ..
The privatto tol't'tor mu1o1t carry its
fair share of th<• health C"Ore bur·
den without inshtutin~oroondoning
unfair di1o1triminatory practic·
es in private im1uronc.·t· c.-ovt·rage."
Medical experts slam 'racist' AIDS pamphlets
JOHANNESBUHG, South Afrira
IAP)-Pamphlets daiming white11
will be wiped out by AIDS unless
tht•y isolate them1:1elvt'tl from
blacks have been condemned by
medic.-al experts as a rii<ht·wmg
plot to create public hysteria
Hundred.t> of the ·•Facts on
AIDS"' pamphlets have be-t'n di~tributed
in areas around Johan·
neRburg rt.'Cently by a j(roup urg·
ing whitl'S to "sa"\·e thl' whitt• ran·
from extinction_" AIDS l'Xp<·rtg
say the pamphlets are compll'U·ly
misll'ading and are intendt•d to
cn·ate fear and racial tl'nl'lion.
Police said Tuesday· th<' pnm·
phleto had not cau1n-d any problemio
and they could not a c.·t
againi;it the unknown author• ht-cause
no public complaints hnd
hf.en rt'<:~h"ed.
' \\..l' could not do anything until
thf'rt> was evidence it Wiliji suhn•rt
intc publit· moral~ 1 polict·
1;pokesperson said group called the AIDS lnforma-
The pamphll'ta claim that AIDS tion Oil:itribullng Society claim
can be spread by ca8ual contact, many South African blacks have
including via toilet seats, 8wim- acquired immune deficiency syn
ming pools, multiracial churchei;, drome and whites must protect
multiracial hoteli; nnd distribu themselves from infection
tion of communion wafers during White!> are urged to avoid areas
church i:;ervices. where the races mingle. such as in-
The pamphlets appeared as the ~~=~~b~:::1:e~!nc!i:~e:·e::~
South African governml'nt is moving
to desegregate ~ome public fa·
c.·ilities as part of ita stated aim of
ending apartheid. Many whites
strongly oppose the attempts to
l'nd deoegregation in publit· focili·
ties.
Dr. Dennnis Sifris, a senior
AIDS specialist at Johannc1:1burg
Hospital, said the pamphlet was
'ridiculous" and completely misleading.
month to ensure th<'Y do not have
AIDS.
The South African government
used to claim that the African National
Congress, the main black
political movement, was bringing
A IDS into the country when it!oi in·
fected guerrillas infiltrated acrofls
the border. The claims have been
dropped as the governmt·nt has
taken a more moderate pot;ition on
dealing with the MC.
.. It's ob\-iou1o1ly put out by an ex· Prof~or Ruben Sher. head of
trt-me lunatic fringe groupwhoare the South African Medical Retrying
to scare everyon~ :· he fl.aid. gearch Council's Aids Ct·nh'r, said
The three-pagt> pamphlt•t.a pro- lht> pamphJt·ts mnkt· errunt'()U.s
duC('d by u previously unknown claims, includinK a101t·rtiunH that
AIDS is preud by C."''1 ual rontact
and through m<>t4quito bitea.
Sher also ("r1t1c1zed the pamphlets'
1o1ugge,.tion that white"
make their black ~l(·r\'ants take
regular monthly tesl.8 to ensure
they do not han AIDS. ·•This is a
blatant ra<"ial slur:· Slwr said
Johannesburg nt•wl'ipapen; 8aid
nothing was kno~n about the
group behind the pnmphleti.i.
South Africa ha"' n·ported about
300 AIDS caSl'tl among whitt'b.
with an unknown number of people
afflicted by the human immunodeficiency
v1ruH, or HIV.
Although nu firm statisti('S are
available, AIDS is thought to be
more widt·spread among blackl:i,
reflecting the major spread of lhe
dise&e among hetero~exuals in
some other African natiom .
Scientists aay AIDSisApreadby
SE""Xual int<'rt"OUf'Se, throul{h runlaminlltE""
d blood or syrmg("
n('(.<fle8, and 1hr11uJCh infected
motherft to unhorn rhildrrn
Fla. county approves law banning housing discrimination
WEST PALM BEA( II. Flu
{AP>-Gay peoplr and unmarrit-d.
couplt·I'"> will be protn:lt-d frum
houMing di.!<crimination under un
ordinan('(> pru-sl'd by tht· Palm
Bl'ach County Commission and
hnilt>d as a major vit:tory for l(ay
riJ:hlH in the statto.
The passage oftht• 11rdinanet• by
the Palm Bea('h Commi:•uiion
makes it the only county in Flori
dn with a civil rights law that cov
l'r8 J>l'Ople of '"·aryinK M.·xuol orit•n
tatrnns
In addition to hommH'xuals and
bisexuals, tht· Inv. protecta pe'(Jplt•
on tht• basis of age and marital ata
tua. Thl' protttt1ons paM&t-d b} &.he
C"Ommission go beyond whnt 18
mnodated by slate and h•dl'ral
laws, which CO\.'l'r rUl"t'. t1t·x, t·olor.
n·ligion. national orijlin and
hundicap
(~ounty rommissiont•r11 vott-d ·l·l
Jnn. 16 to approve tht• ordin1mc.'C.'.
It will protect gays, unmorrit·d
couph·s and young pt·o plt• from
di11c.-rimination in housing and
public.- accommodationit, inc.·lud
mg hotels, thl'iltera and n·stau
rnnta.
-·-
lt'h sad that we have to go
through a situation like this when
we have to lii;t peopll' not to di.._q.
criminate agrunst:• said the Re\"
Julia Seward. pru1tor of the Metropolitan
Community Church of the
Palm Beache1:1 in West Palm
Beach, which gerves a pn-domi·
nantly gay congregation
Opponent8 of the ordinanC(',
though. weren't happy with the
panel's decision
' With the legitimate status this
gives to these groups, they will
come out of tht' ci08f't and into tht'
titret'b» much like ~an Franci:ico
and our own l'"ort Laudl'rdate;•
l'md Allen King, a Lakl' Worth
landlord.
'·Legal isi.ues and morality ar('
lft•parate i~ues:· County (~<>mmiA·
1ioner Carol Hoht•rt11: said. "We
had a re:1olution toduy declaring
Broth<'rhood Week. \Vt''re trying to
do uway with dis('riminotion:·
Commissioner Ron Howord, a
Ht·publican running for state agri·
rultural commissioner. cost the
di!'Rt:·nting volt'. He •nid the ordi·
nance goes beyond h•df'ral stan·
o ....... _......._ ... _.....,_
darcls, which require addmg only
the mentally handicapp('d and
families with children tothooe prt>"
tected by the count)··a fair housing
law
The hou8ing law. expec.·led to
take efft.'Ct thret' weeks after it is
filed with the state, will beenfon·e--able
county widt• unle&H a munici·
pality has its own regulations,
said Assistant County Attorney
Tammy FiPldH
The county JOinc>d at least 45
other governmental juri.t>dictions
in the nation that ban housing dis
crimination b88t'<l on 1uual ori('n·
talion. said Allan Teri. chairperson
of the AmE""rican Bar Afa&oda
tion ·s Commitke on the Ril(hts of
Gay People.
The only 8imilar law in Florida,
in Dadl' County, wa11 repealed by
county voters in 1977 in a rrferen
dum led by singer and former or
ange juice 111><1kt'Hpt·r11011 Anita
Bryant.
~ffort.s an· undt·r way in
Broward County to reviHe that
county"s human rights law to in·
elude protection for gay men and
But bt:c:au Broward County's
Jay. wa." adoptt.<f throul(h the state
Legislaturl' the rt•\ isiun must get
lawmakers· approval and be ratified
in a public rt•ft>rt'ndum , Teri
i:;aid
At thr- public.· h('nring to adopt
the Palm Bt•i1t·h ( 'ounty ordi·
nancl', propont·nltl wort• purple
buttons Htomix>d in pink saying
"Housing i~ a right, not a privi·
lege."'
But othl'nl toaid tht• ordinance
wasn "t fair lo propnty owners.
" It gi \.·es oil thf." ria:hts to those
seeking housintt: and takes away
all tht· righu of thotlt' nntmg and
selling:' said Tht rf'tl;a Timmst·n. a
Bellt· Glndt• rt>t;idml
Fields 1:1aid th" nl'w ordinance
d0t.>t; not apply tu homeowners
who live on tht·1r pro11erty of four
or fewer unitH and rt•nt tht• rest. Al,
i:;o exempt Hrt' n·ligious organiza·
tions and " Mnnwhirch1" who rent
thl'ir homt':!I for part of the yl'ar.
All othl'r propt:rt1u ad\.'l'rtii:;ed
for sale or n·nt must tom ply. Viola·
tors fat·t• fint'8 rantcinl{ from
$10,000 to ~.)0,ll()O.
Montrose Voice
Phone Fun - Amanda - Horoscope:; - Soap - Personals
For the Montrose Voice
C.C.PYR C.I
Aries
At last, some of the knowledge that you've gained
away from home can be used on the domestic front.
That's where you'll see some practical application of
your ideas. And if you know there's more to them
than that, you may be right. Further expansion is in
the offing.
Taurus
Trust your hunches. Though that's not always the
best idea, your thoughts have become ingrained in
your subconscious, and your mind is working full
time on all levels. Be cautious about neglecting
home base, and expand from there.
Gemini
books. Home-loving Cancer is unhappy with his surroundings.
Sure of his expertise in this field, he's
about to create an earthly paradise. We'll be looking
for the results in Architectural Digest.
Leo
This should be a time of revelation for you. If anyone
can see the truth of relationships, you can, and you
should let the rest of the world hear it. Be careful
about specifics with specific friends. Give your truth
gently.
Virgo
Light is about to dawn on a series of changes that you
know are necessary. Though the drive of those
changes is to affect your immediate circumstances,
the results will be long-term. Alter familiar situations.
Don't discard them completely.
Libra
You have some advice to give some friends, and it's
good advice, for sure. The problem is that you'll
have to break it to them gently, and you're not too
sure about the ways of diplomacy. Don't hurt them,
ideas across. The future looks bright w ith the help of l some Scorpio intensity to get you what you need.
Sagittarius
Do you believe in magic? You should. Change is in the
air, and that ought to keep your hopes high. Be par·
ticularly practical in financial matters, but let hunch·
es and dreams come into play when you deal in rela·
tionships of other kinds.
Capricorn
Are you sure you're getting the whole picture?
Something you're asked to act on may be lacking an
essential bit of information. A friend knows what
you need to know, but for some strange reason
hasn't shared the information. Check it out.
Aquarius
Yes, beautiful Aquarius, you are still attractive. But
your chief allure this week is mostly in the realm of
your mental powers, and business will call to more
than romance. You may have to do some important
calling yourself. Invite someone over.
Pisces
Bugged by a weird little notion that won't let you
alone? It may be weird, but it's not little. Run it by a
couple of friends of both sexes and see what they
think. You may have a profitable venture in the making
and only you can make sense of it.
or you'll get hurt yourself. Your mental processes may be slower than usual
Cancer
5 • now, largely because you've been burning the can-
COrplO die at both ends. Cut back on the fun, fun, fun a little.
Be absolutely realistic and practical with yourself. There are many important things to be working on,
Time to get out the fabric swatches an_d_ w_a_l...:lpa_,p_e_r __W_ it_h_o_th_e_r_s;,. ._u_s_e_a n_e_m_o_t i_o_n_a_l_a_p,__,p__r_o_a_c_h_ to.;g::.e_t..y.:_o_u__r _a_ n_d~y_o_u_need t co:_s:.t_a_,y,__s_h_a_r_,p__. __________~
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Much confusion still permeates the
issue surrounding the HGLPC boycott
of Randall's Food Stores. The issue,
however, is quite simple:
Randall's refuses to add "sexual orientation"
to its company policy on
non-discrimination. It is that simple.
Other food chains and major national
corporations, often without any
prodding, have incorporated such
language.
In last week's Montrose Voice,
Sheri Cohen Darbonne, in an excel-:
lent interview with Randall's retired
president, Robert R. Onstead, elicited
several interesting responses.
Onstead conceded that the 1985 /iring
of Steven Little was a "mistake"
explained by AIDS hysteria at the
time. Perhaps Randall's would do well
to i~nore right-wing hysteria today
and reasonably and officially extend
its non-discrimination policy to gays
in light of Onstead's declared attitude
that "we try to be a part of the community
everywhere we put in a store:'
Just as with the black civil rights
movement Onstead uses the tactic of
divide and conquer- he refers to the
"activists" on the picket line as separate
from the gay employees he alleg-
•es exist in all their stores (and how
· U.Vas this ascertained).
In a recent movie version bf "Driving
Miss Daisy" there is a telling scene
in which Miss Daisy, an elderly Southern
Jewish lady, attends a dinner being
addressed by Rev. Martin Luther
King, Jr. And over this telling scene
with Miss Daisy's driver sitting in the
car listening on the radio, King points
out that the biggest threat to civil
rights is not the bigots on the front
lines but the silence of the oppressed
and those who would otherwise support
that movement.
You may not sympathize with the
tactic of picketing or even the idea of
openly fighting for gay rights, but your
silence or worse, your patronage of
Randall's, casts a resounding vote
against the struggle for gay rights.
We challenge Onstead to live up to
his language when he says, "I feel I
have an obligation to be /air to all people:'
We demand so little but Randall's
feels safe to ignore even that.
The fight for gay rights is just, and
this boycott is crucial to those rights.
If you can~ot picket, join the HGLPC
and do not shop Randall's and-most
important-write a letter to Randall's
expressing your displeasure.
Randall's must discover there are
other voices out there. Letters can be
written in the privacy and security of
any closet as well as the openness of
being "out:', and it still carries the
same weight.
If yQu have ever wanted to have a
say in the future of the gay community,
this is the right time, the right
cause and the right method. And victory
can be oh so sweet.
• • •
The gay community may suffer a resounding
defeat in Dallas soon. After
rallying the community statewide
over homophobic language and views
of Judge Hampton in a now infamous
murder case, the Dallas Gay Alliance
pledged to defeat Hampton's re-election
and even picketed a political rally
for Hampton.
Now there is a very good chance
Hampton will win re-election by de-i
l~I r-:;::i.SHEER INSANITY t.
~ DAOUIRI FACTORY
fault-no opponent. Ponder the message
that goes out from such a result.
He briefly had an opponent in the person
of Judge Breshear, a black county
jullge yearly picked as the worst on
the bench by Dallas County attorneys.
Breshear began as a Democrat,
switched to the Republicans and
faithfully did their bidding and, in return,
was guaranteed re-election.
Now Breshear is a Democrat again,
not by conversion to a just cause but
because Governor Clements refused
to appoint him to a state judgeship.
So Breshear picked up his marbles
and rejoined the Democrats.
Breshear withdrew from the race
with Hampton when a federal judge
enjoined the holding of judicial elections.
Now with those races back on
Breshear is trying to get back in the
race.
Ascribing to the theory of "anyone
but Hampton:' Breshear's election
could be seen as a victory, albeit hollow
considering Breshear's judicial
limitations.
Perhaps the DGA needs some lessons
from Houston in the value of alliances
with the county Democratic
structure (i.e., the Brad Wright case).
We cannot help but think that had Al
Calkin, the Dallas gay community's
political conscience (worth half of
one of Molly lvin's columns), still been
alive the situation would have a di//
erent conclusion.
(In light of the recent HGLPC elections
we must reiterate that all opinions
expressed in LOBO's ads are
those of LOBO and do not necessarily
reflect the views of persons or organizations
to which LOBO's owners
are affiliated.)
WESTHEIMER 1424-C Westheimer (at Windsor) 522-5156
Video Sales llr Rentals • SWimwear • T-Shirts • Magazines • Cards • Books • Leather • Accec;sor:es • Necessities
T
--------------------------~~~----,0~
I 022 WESTHEIMER 527-9669
The Bartender's Bar ...
Break a Pepsi bottle ove ~
her head Blanche and
let's headtowards Westheimer & Waugh-I need a drink!! ... naturaJly
AND NOW A WORD ABOUT OTHER THINGS at MARY'S
Hangers! I never SHINE FOR AIDS by CHRIS
touched the child! Sunday, 28th Jan. 2pm t il
But I'm comi.nT to Midnight-50% of all
see you Chris. proceeds donated
SUNDANCE
CATTLE COMPANY
HOUSTON, TEXAS
~ AFTER HOURS
2am to closing Friday thru Sunday
(coffee, juices, sodas & Artesia)
Plus-Live D.J. During After Hours
Afternoon: ~ $I Schnapps * 5-9pm
$1.75 Well, $1.50 Domestic Beer, Always
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BRAZOS RIVER BAND and
LITTLE BIT of TEXAS
Steak f\Jight begins 5pm
Happy Hour til 6pm
Coming Sunday,
Feb. 11: Lone Stars &
Colt 45's present
Whorehouse
Girls and
Friends
WWW WWW
!; BRAZOS
. ~ ~ B:\CK ~ ~ t
\ l'OC'!\.ET ;
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Coming Friday &
Saturday Feb. 16 & 17
Fiddlin
Frenchie Burke
Two Shows Each Night
10pm & Midnight
------------------------------------------------------------.~
2517 Ralph ,.. at Westheimer •
527-9071 WfSTHEIMCr,
Tuesdays
Talent Contest
lOpm
Singers, Dancers, Actors,
Instrumentalists, ComediansAnything
You Want!!
1st Place-$75
2nd Place-$25 bar tab
Friday llpm
Brittany Paige
presents
Showtime
(A Variety Show)
With: Stevie Nicks and Muriel Reeves
Plus: Jerry Morin, Special Guest
Jennifer West (Austin) & Tuesday Talent
Winner-Contessa
Saturday: Male Jock
Strap llpnt
Contestants sign up
prior to 11 pm, $100 1st
prize, $50 2nd prize,
$25 bar tab 3rd prize
MCRainbo
deKlown
0 Miss Dee presents a Saturday e )> Morning Beer Bust 9am-Noon ~
JJ
Liquor Bust $1 Well, Sat. & Sun. ~
4-7pm
Beer Bust Sat. 4-1 Opm
Mondays: $1 Margaritas, Dart Tournament 9pm
Wednesdays: Dirty Butt Night
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We Support
That's What Friends Are
For ...
at The Tower Theatre January 29, 1990,
Doors Open at 7pm, $10 donation
Hosted By: Larry Garrett,
Brucella Du'Vall, Melanie Ashcraft
This Sunday
January 28th
Texas Renegade's
l's
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Gumbo
Cook-Off 4pm
PLUS Volleyball
Tournament 2pm
PLUS Show & Auction 6pm
COMMERCIAL MEMBER
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A Mntl!TROSE VOICE BAA-ZAAA I FRIDAY, JANUARY 26. 1990
Saturdays
MALE STRIP FRIDAYS
$100-lst place $25-2nd place $25 bar tab-3rd place
PARTY WITH PICKLES Monday-Saturday 7am·2pm
$1 Well 7am-noon, $1.50 well noon-Opm
SUNDAYS MONDAYS TUESDAYS
Beer Bust New Dart Welcome the
Machine new Pool
WEDNESDAYS
Steak Night
16oz T-bone. potato salad
DASH FOR
CASH
$300.00 Noon-llpm Tournaments League Oldies Night with Marcus
Landa 8pm-2am
10-2am
DJ Marcus Landa 8-2am
Buffet 5:30-6:30pm Liquor Bust 8-Midnight Liquor Bust Liquor Bust
Live DJ Marcus Landa BEER BUST 3-llpm 8·Midnight 8-midnight
Party With Eddie BEER BUST 3-1 lpm BEER BUST 3-llpm
4-Midnight FREE POOL Party with Rick Party with Rick
COMING EVENTS 4th Annual Rich Texas Grab Bag Every 30 Texas
Herrera 8c: Riders Let Minutes Riders 7th
Bruce Ila Us Entertain You and a guest are cordially invited to our Annual DeVall's
You Fourth Anniversary
Birthday Slave
Weekend Celebration Variety Show hosted by Chutes and Texas Riders Auction,
Hosted by Mr 8c Miss March 2-3-4 Saturday, January 27, 1 Opm-2am TGRA candidates B.J. April 14th,
$10 registration in Buffet and Complimentary Champagne
FRIDAY. JANUARY 26, 1990 / MONTROSE VOICE BAR-ZAAR 7
1732 Wesr!':eimer 523-2213
THURSDAYS
New Dart Machine
Tournaments
liquor Bust 8-Midnight
BEER BUST 3-llpm
Party with Eddie
Live DJ Richard Sumrall
Summers, Mark at Midnight Coleman 8c Rita Charles town. free to out-of- IOpmSharp!
D.J:s Marcus Landa & Richard Sumrall
Special Guest towners. Fun, food. 1732 Westheirner- 523-2213
Cassandra Landa prizes. ? . cocktail GiveaWa Drawin
Applications now
Feb. 3rd, l lpm parties s available at the bar
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Qr•S The Party
Is Here!
THE POTPIE
Pasta & Pizza Place
• I· U: Ol:L VUW L Iv• T E:D Al 1:1
I <'!> l/vt_~ I HtlME.R <'1 4J:JU
PARADISE NEWS
& VIDEO
14029 Eastex Fwy 449-0710
OPEN 24HRS
25C Token Arcade Private Viewing Rooms
$6--1 Video Video Rentals & Sales
Full Line of Novelties
Magazines & Paperbacks
Visa MC cash Check
~~~·i{'~::yone ~l<0me \, l Singles & couples
Laude< Rd I f--
Ald•M Moil RI
PAST(§TlltE
"A COCKTAIL LOUNGE"
617 Fairview Houston
529-4669
Relax In A Quiet and
Friendly Atmosphere
Limited Time Only
12 Noon-6pm
$1 Well & Beer
OPEN NOON TO 2AM
RESTAURANTS
Since 1917
~! ~~
~
61'eat Seafood Ju$f
Al'ound the Col'nel'
3512 South Main
522-5041
. H 0 UST 0 N
1419 Richmond 528-8903
Our classifieds are growing. To advertise your service,
garage sale, house for rent, or just about anything, call
529-B490.
fRfNCtt U~RTfR
527-0782 3201 LOUISIANA HOUSTON
All Male Cinema
/ --- -~
presents / "
1
1 PLUS \\
Midnight
Matinee
Special
Sunday thru
Thursday Midnight
till Closing
Admission $4
with membership
I SECOND \
\ FEATURE I
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/ ' ......... / /
Friday & Saturday llam-3am
Monday-Thursday llam-lam
Sunday lpm-lam
Thursday
Matinee
$4Al/Day
with
membership
1/iz.1 N KS fipnr IOp111
~)') vR.tNKS
11 '% JO-It I
~~
Buddies 'n' Pals ~~·n· Partners
.,,,. 11 Gay Dating SeNIC• for the 90's
Buddies'n'Pals'n'Partners was established in 1986.
Our goal is to help you meet someone compatible, both
socially and sexually, as a friend or a lover.
CALL FOR FREE APPLICATION
1-800-344· PALS (24 Hours)
MAKE THE TEXAS CONNECTION!
NE""1
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DALLAS • FT. WORTH • HOUSTON
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• Over 25 Gay Categories
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DIAL-AH·
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Now you can buy PIN
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week or $50 for a full
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DIAL (713) 778-6675 FREE TO HOOK INTO
THE NETWORK.
IF IT'S BUSY SOMEONE IS WAITING TO TALK
TO YOU! IMMEDIATELY CALL (713) 976-0690.
TWO SIZZLING HOURS FOR $3
NOW IN SAN ANTO~llO-WE NOW OFFEQ OUR
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INTRODUCING FOR MAN-TO-MAN 1-800-662-0690
HAVE YOUR VISA/MASTERCARD READY
FOR MORE FO CALL 778-6689
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"Where are you goin'? I may as well be talkin' to a toaster!"
Sunday Jan. 28th
Instead of the Not-So-Super Bowl,
Come to
Greater Tuna
The Movie ...
Come as Your Favorite Character!
Free Burgs and Dawgs at 3pm ...
(Donation to Colt 45s Trouble Fund Appreciated)
Free Beenie-Weenies, Biscuits and M & M's
From 5pm
$1 Draft and $2.50 Cuervo All the Time!
(Booze/Beer Bust Available 4-10pm)
Coming Up: Feb. 4th-Lancer's MC, Guest
Bartenders!
Feb. 11 th-Aquarian Celebration!
Feb. 17th-TRUST: Red Hanky Party!
2923 Main e 522-0000
NEVER a Cover, UNLIMITED Private Parking Across
the Street and ALWAYS Good Vibes ...
|