Minister’s secret surprises church k u c ! •: n k (Al') The minister of a p ro m i n o n t !•; u g e n e • hurch led a secret Iifir as a Imexual who tried to seduce clergymen and others before he suc.i :umljed to AIDS, church loaders say The Rev William () Walker, (>0. asked friends to tell others that he was dying of lymphoma before he passed aw.iy from complications related to AIDS on July t The disease also was blamed for the 1'1'MI death of Walker's wife, Carol, al age f>H The truth has left many First United Methodist Church mem bers hurt and angry, including members of a Corvallis congre gation where be had served from 1‘IIIH to He had been at the l-lugene t hurch sine e 1982 Church leaders said that mote than .1 dozen men, in eluding at least six ministers, told them that Walker had made sexual advances toward them The information was not shared with the Lugenc emigre gallon for more than a year while (hurch leaders wrestled with the problem Hut on Nov -I, too parishion its were 1 ailed to an unprei e dented meeting to learn the r ir cumstaiu.es surrounding their minister's death First came a reading of a lei let from Hill and < and Walker's four children, who relut lantly confirmed that their parents had died from AIDS related ill nesses The Walkers had kept their illness .1 secret, the children said, beta use of their "great love for the church and their desire to avoid perhaps hurtful controversy" A second statement was read by Tom Whitehead, superin tendent for the church's south ern-Oregon district, on behalf of Bishop William Dew The statement said VV.ilknr had re cently been accused of making sexual advances loward two main teen-agers at a Methodist church ramp 17 years earlier Siniii Walker's death, more allegations about Walker's past have surfaced Hut Whitehead emphasized that "we have no allegations of behavior that would plat e another person at risk for tin- transmission of AIDS from Bill." Whitehead admitted that Walker's secret sex life was 'clearly outside the boundaries of Christian ethical behavior Hut tie defended Walker's long career "We must be honest with the whole of who Dill Walker was," Whitehead said "We must also remember the posi tive influence Bill had upon thousand* >>f people," Walker previously served churr hes In Dillard Winston. North Bend and Salem He was elei ted an unprer e denied six times to attend the national t hurt h's quadrennial (ieneral (amlen-nce Three times a i andldate lor bishop. Walker also w>ai pi,use lor Ills work on behalf ol guvs and lesbians, and bis (ommit menl to the church's African Methodist University in Zim babwe. The Key Tim Stover, a fami ly friend, dftscrilred Walker as a man who was warm and gener ous with people hut dilfu nil to know " There are prubuhiv hun dreds ol people who would de scribe Bill Walker as a close friend, even though Bill probe hlv wouldn't have described them that way." Stover said Jim lluletl. pastor at Lake Os wego United Methodist ( liurch, worked with Walker when Hulett served two Port land churches and Walker was a district superintendent Hu lett said lie believes Walker was devoted to his career and ins sexuality was kept in < her k For the forests w Prmio by Pal Adam Hanawergjr of Cascaclia Earth First' and about 30 other people gathered in the EMU Courtyard Monday to protest the proposed salvage of timber in the Warner Creek fire area Speakers at the rally condemned the salvage operation, saying it would reward arson JL Nutritional info to appear on ale YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) — Bert Grant wants to take the guilt out of drinking boor His Yaklina Brewing and Malting (io. Is go ing to offer nutritional information on six packs of its Grant's Scottish Ale. Grant said Monday, about a week after the federal govern ment announced that now food-labeling rules to make it enslor for consumers to evaluate products. Grant plans to list the fat and cholesterol content, as well as vitamins and othur nutri ents in 12-ounce bottles of the ale. which is sold in much of ihe West and in major cities from coasi to roust "While (ho data on our beers indicate that none of them is a complete meal in a bottle, one or two Unties a day would make a signifi cant contribution to the udull diet," Grant said. The move is part of a crusade against what he culls "neo-prohibitionists," who oppose all consumption of alcohol. The U S. Food and Drug Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms have no problem wiih Grant's labeling plans as long us there is no reference to alcohol con tent, which is prohibited by law for tieer. Les Stanford of ATP said the bureau will take a close look at the label "Wo would look with some skepticism at anything that might l>o related to a health claim." Stanford said from Washington, D.C He said be can think of no other brewery with such labels, though so-called light beet is required to tarry a luliel showing Information on ca lor I os, fal and carbohydrates. Mothers Against Drunk Driving, based in Ir vington. Texas, supports warning labels noting that alcohol nan impair one's motor skills and can cause birth defects. The group has no post (ion on nutritional labeling, said spokeswoman Ann Russell Grant claims that his Grant's Rub is the na tion's first brew pub — combination brewery and pub — since Prohibition. Ho has been making and soiling beer in this central- Wash ington City for 10 years and helped launch the Northwest's microbrewery fad. Most of the nation's hops, used in beer fla voring, are grown in the Yakima Valley. The nutrition label for Scottish Ale says a 12-ounce serving contains 145 calories, no fat or cholesterol, 2.24 grams of protein and 12 7 grams of carhohydratus. The label says each bottlo provides 4 percent of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance of protein, as well as 4.6 percent of the vitamin B-2, 14.6 percent of Niacin, 62.5 percent of Folacin and 170 percent of vitamin B-12. The labels cannot appear on the tKittles be cause of federal regulations, but they will Ik; printed on the cardboard containers of six packs and on store signs and displays. Sherry Grant, the brewer's wife, said the goal is to counter negative publicity about alcohol. “There is a group of neo-prohibitionists at work out there, and they confuse alcohol use and alcohol abuse," she said. Snow and ice lead to trouble throughout state PORTLAND (AP) — The morning rush hour was more of a (TawI for some Portland com muters Monday as snow foil atop already icy roads U S highway 26, the main route through Portland's west hills, resembled a parking lot early in the morning commute The highway finally closed af ter numerous (airs spun out of control on the steep Sylvan Hill Slippery roads also slowed the rush hour in Salem and liu gene, where many fender-bend ers — but no major accidents — were reported. In Corvallis, |>olicc broke up un early morning snowball fight that left two people injured near the Oregon Stale Universi ty campus Police said 200 to 250 people were involved In the melee in front of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. Two people wore hospitalized after being hit by snowballs packed with rocks and tomatoes Ten windows were broken at the fraternity house. freezing rain coated roads with ice Sunday in the Portland area, and up to 2 inches of snow fell on top of that early Monday. Schools opened late or not ut all. '"I guess I'll go outside and go sledding and have snowball fights,'' said Adam Kauh, 10, whose school was closed in the suburbs west of Portland. In the Cascade Range, ski area operators hoped the snow would bring them a txman/.u of fresh powder. "It sounds worse down there than it is up here," said Lea Stance I, spokeswoman for Tim berline, a ski resort on Mount Hood. A winter storm watch was in effect for the Cascade Range and Siskiyous, with heavy snow expected above 3,000 feet. Snow is expected to spread today across La stern Oregon, where a winter storm watch is also in effect. However, temperatures were expected to remain above freez ing Monday night in the val leys, turning the precipitation to rain