just out ▼ may 10. 1005 T 3 just out sin c e 1 9 8 3 PUBLISHER AND EDITOR Renée LaChance steppin’ out contents VOL 12 NO. 14 MAY 19,1995 EDITOR IN SPIRIT Ariel Waterwoman FEATURE REPORTER Inga Sorensen The dope on cannabis CALENDAR EDITOR Aaron Bong A Portland man has form ed a buyers' club to get medicinal marijuana to people who need it (PP- 17-19) PHOTOGRAPHER Linda Kliewer ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Meg Grace ADVERTISING REPS E. Ann Hinds C. Jay Wilson Jr. DEPARTMENTS World news CREATIVE DIRECTOR E. Ann Hinds CO PY EDITOR Kelly M. Bryan A right-wing group disrupts the Australian National Gaymes; Slovene queers go on the Internet (PP- 6-7) TYPESETTER Jann Gilbert National news GRAPHIC DESIGN Rupert Kinnard A coalition o f progressives dogs N ew t’s every> move; the militant fa r right has homophobia on its agenda (pp. 8-11) DISTRIBUTION Ambling Bear OFFICE MANAGERS Aaron Bong Teri Ventura CONTRIBUTORS Kristine Chatwood Al Kielwasser Matthew Nelson Richard Shumate C. Jay Wilson Jr. Rex Wockner guest editorial A ffirm ative action 101 ju st out is published on the first and third Friday of each month. C opyright ©1995 by Just OUt No part of ju st out may be reproduced without w ritten per­ mission from the publisher. The submission of written and graphic materials is welcomed. W ritten material should be typed and double-spaced Just out reserves the right to edit for grammar, punctuation, style, liability concerns and length. W e will reject or edit articles or advertisements that are offensive, demeaning or may result in legal action Ju st out consults the Associated Press Style 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 next issue. Views expressed in letters to the editor, columns and features are not necessarily those of the publisher. 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We need to discuss how to improve affirmative action, not how to dismantle it by K ath le e n H e rro n Local news Gay and lesbian elected officials are invited to the White House; Greg Jackson leaves Right To Privacy; civil rights fo r sexual minorities take a beating in Salem (PP- 13-15) COLUMNS Spirituality Lutheran youth group votes to include lesbian, gay and bisexual youth (p. 12) any of us don’t understand the history of or the reasons behind affirmative action. Without understanding it, we can’t educate anyone about it or defend it. We need to prepare ourselves, since the same groups that refuse to grant basic civil rights to gay men, lesbians and determined to end affirmative action through various state and federal bills or initiatives. Affirmative action includes all measures necessary to make equal opportunity a reality for currently and historically ex­ cluded groups of people in the United States. Attacks against affirmative action assume that equal opportunity for women and people of color is already a reality. It’s not. Begun in 1964, affirmative action efforts are only 30 years old. For most of that 30-year period, affirmative action has been under attack from Republican administrations. For ex­ ample, during the Reagan administration, the Justice Depart­ ment sued 50 cities to stop their successful programs. Discrimination, segregation, prejudice and violence to­ ward women and people of color began with the founding of this country and continue today. Affirmative action exists as a partial remedy to these problems. Some people resent the assistance provided by these pro­ grams, claiming that individuals must now make it on their own merits. The truth is, no one in this country makes it on his or her own. Many of us (white, male, heterosexual, able- M bodied, wealthy) receive privileges we are totally unaware of. Bom on third base, we are sure to hit a triple and can’t understand the complaints of those without baseball equipment or training. We get all kinds of help. We get educational help from parents with resources. (In 1993, black men made 74 bisexuals percent of are what white men made, and their unemployment rate was twice as high [The Oregonian, Feb. 17,1995].) We rely on the goodwill of those around us—teachers, customers, employ­ ers. (A nationwide survey in 1991 showed that 55 percent of non-Hispanic people thought Hispanic people were less intel­ ligent; 56 percent thought they were more lazy [National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago].) We rely on fair business practices. (In 1993 a Chicago study showed that black couples applying for bank loans with the same financial assets as white couples were denied more often.) We need to broaden our discussion of affirmative action to address our joint responsibility for solving these complex long- range problems. Since affirmative action currently benefits over 50 percent of our citizens (all women, all people of color), we should be discussing how to improve it, not how to dis­ mantle it. Kathleen Herron is an adjunct professorfor the Northwest­ ern School of Law at Lewis A Clark College and a consultant for Tools for Diversity. ARTS Theater Wendy Westerwelle and Karen Roettcher-Tate delight theatergoers in The Kathy and M o Show (p. 26) Books Packw ood follows the Oregon U.S. senator's campaign trail to outrage (p. 29) Media Babylon 5 may boldly go where no sci-fi TV show has gone before (p. 30)