Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013, February 17, 1995, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 ▼ february 17. I M S
Just out
just out
since 1983
PUBLISHER AND EDITOR
steppin’ out
contents
VOL 12 NO. 8 FEBRUARY 17,1995
Renée LaChance
EDITOR IN SPIRIT
Ariel Waterwoman
FEATURE
REPORTER
Dancing through
a century
of screen images
Inga Sorensen
CALENDAR EDITOR
Jann Gilbert
While there have been
lesbian and gay filmmakers
as long as there
have been films, most
have been hidden in the
closets of history
(pp. 13-15)
PHOTOGRAPHER
Linda Kliewer
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Meg Grace
ADVERTISING REPS
E. Ann Hinds
CREATIVE DIRECTOR
E. Ann Hinds
DEPARTMENTS
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Rupert Kinnard
National news
COPY EDITOR
A teenager is convicted in the
slayings o f two gay
Mississippi men;
Allstate agrees to issue
a joint liability policy to
a gay couple
(pp. 4-6)
Kelly M. Bryan
TYPESETTER
Jann Gilbert
DISTRIBUTION
Ambling Bear
OFFICE M ANAGER
Aaron Bong
Local news
CONTRIBUTORS
Olivia Alvarez
Kelly M. Bryan
Kristine Chatwood
Rupert Kinnard
Marvin Liebman
Margaret Deirdre O ’Hartigan
Richard Shumate
Steve Warren
Just Mat is published on the first and
third Friday of each month. Copyright
©1995 by Just sad No part of Just salt
may be reproduced without w ritten per­
mission from the publisher
The submission of written and graphic
materials is welcom ed. W ritten material
should be typed and double-spaced Just salt
reserves the right to edit for grammar,
punctuation, style, liability concerns and
length. We will reject or edit articles or
advertisements that are offensive, demeaning
or may result in legal action Just su t
consults the Associated Press Sty le Book and
Libel Manual on editorial decisions.
Letters to the editor should be limited to two
double-spaced typed pages. Deadline for
submissions to the editorial department and for
the Calendar is the Thursday before the first and
third Friday for the nest issue Views expressed
in letters to the editor, columns and features are
not necessarily those of the publisher
The display advertising deadline is the
Monday after the fust and thud Friday for the
next issue.
Classified ads must be received at the office
of Just o ut by the Monday after the fust and
third Friday for the next issue, along with
payment Ads will not be taken over the
telephone
Ad policy No sexually exploitive
advertising will be accepted Compensation for
errors in. or cancellation of. advertising will be
made with credit toward future advertising
Subscriptions to Ju s t o u t are available
for $17.50 for 12 issues First Class (in an
envelope) is $30 for 12 issues
A copy of Ju s t o u t is available for $1
and/or advertising rates are available on
request
The mailing address and telephone number
for Just out are PO Box 14400. Portland. OR
97214-0100; (503) 236-1252 Our fax number is
236-1257.
*
editorial
Whomped by
flu and snow
You can *t keep a good staff down, and our staff battled an epidemic and
a blizzard to get this issue to you in a timely manner
▼
by Renée LaChance
e have had issues in the past 12 years that
have been difficult to get to press for a
variety of reasons. Lack of staff, financial
crisis, inclement weather, attempted break-
ins, crashed computers, and other barriers
come to mind. This issue marked a first for
Our office became ground zero for the flu epidemic in
Portland. Or so it seemed. No sooner than the Feb. 3 issue
had gone to press, all but one of us got flattened by a killer
flu that put us out of commission.
The paper was delivered on time, but the mailing to out
of town readers got out several days late because no one
could get out of bed and down to the office to get it to the
post office.
We checked in with one another by phone and com­
pared symptoms. Fever, dry cough, exhaustion, clogged
sinuses, general fuzzy-headedness. Mudhead, I called it.
By the time we could crawl out of bed our production
schedule was off by two or three days, and none of us was
moving very fast or thinking very clearly. We were the
walking dead. It was almost comical as we trickled into the
office one by one, sluggish and exhausted, exchanging
stories of how we had to nap after simply getting dressed
and comparing how far we could get on five-minute bursts
of energy.
For me, it brought into focus the challenges people in
our community face daily with immune deficiencies and
W
* M 4
r «¡“r tf *
life-threatening illness. No matter how bad I felt, I knew
1 was going to get better. Yet, for too many others of us,
such physical debilitation is a way of life.
Then, as if the flu wasn’t enough to throw us com­
pletely off schedule, Mother Nature walloped us with a
us.
foot of snow, making it difficult to get to the office to do
the work that we were finally well enough to do.
We began to think this was a doomed issue, and maybe
we should give it up for Lent. But less-muddied heads
prevailed, and since you are reading this, we must have
finally gotten this restless baby to bed.
In the history of Just Out I can think of only one or two
times when the paper did not come out when it was
supposed to. For a queer newsmagazine that has published
since 1983, that is a phenomenal record.
I applaud the tireless effort and dedication the staff of
Just Out puts into each issue so you can get the news of our
communities. I hope you will, too.
A Bend group seeks to get
communities working
together; CAP’s director
draws criticism for
discriminatory remark;
Snickers LaBarr takes a ride
on Tri-Met
(pp. 7-11)
COLUMNS
Independently
speaking
Marvin Liebman finds it too
hot in the conservative
Christian Republican kitchen
(p. 3)
ARTS
Cinema
Boys On the Side has
Whoopi, but suffers from
overexposure;
the 18th Portland
International Film Festival
unreels Feb. 17
(p. 22-23)
▼ ▼ T
Correction: In the Feb. 3, 1995, issue of Just Out we
referred to the owner of It’s My Pleasure in our story
“Valentine Vignettes’’ as Holly Hart, when in fact her
name is Holly Mulcahey. Holly Hart is the owner of the
restaurant Old Wives’ Tales. We apologize for any confu­
sion this may have caused.
Books
A new anthology offers teens
a grounding in queer history
(p . 2 4 )