ju s t o u t T m arch 1, 1 9 9 6 ▼ 21 FUN TO SPARE Continued from page 19 called Legs Up High, adds, “It was really my only contact with gay men, which was important to me. There was a huge separatist movement in the 1980s which I didn’t want to be a part of. This gave me a chance to get involved with gay women and gay men.” According to Geil, PCBA’s membership has averaged about 35 percent women and 65 percent men. This year, he says, women make up 40 percent of the membership. The league has been a place for mixing genders, and sometimes blending them. At 64, Roni, a former U.S. Air Force service member and retired Tektronix employee, now lives openly and comfortably as a woman "80 to 90 percent o f the time,” and bowling helped get her there. “As a transgendered person, I believe I have a lot in common with gay men and lesbians,” says Roni, an active member of the Northwest Gender Alli­ ance, the Sexual Minority Roundtable, Veterans for Human Rights, and the newly formed Coalition for Community Communication. “First and foremost, we all have closets to come out of.” Roni admits, however, that it took a little while for lesbians and gay men to warm up to her in those early days. “The lesbians were wary because they looked at me and saw a man, and the gay men were wary because they didn ’ t understand why I was dressed in a skirt and makeup,” she says. “It all worked out in the end, though. They learned about transgendered people, while I got to learn more about gays and lesbians.” Roni has also roller-skated, water-skied and snow- skied as a female. “I’ve even taken an Amtrak train trip as a female,” she laughs. “That’s a real gas.” balls. Local dignitaries, including former Portland “W e’re also allowed to bowl in any sanctioned Mayor Bud Clark and retired Portland Police Chief tournament in the country,” adds FITS secretary Tom Potter have rolled the season’s first ball— a Doug Overfield, 26, who joined the league in 1992 special clear bowling ball with a rose in the center. after moving to Portland from Nebraska. “You can’t “W e’re here to have fun, and we do,” says do that unless you’re sanctioned.” Cherry, an engineering coordinator for Northwest In the spring of 1988 Knittle approached Just Natural Gas. She’s been with the company 15 years , Out , which ran a piece about the new league’s and started there “digging ditches.” formation. ‘T e n people showed up at the bowling “One day when we were bowling, someone said alley [Pro 300 Lanes on Southeast Powell Boule­ they needed some firewood,” she says. “So when we vard] that first time,” says Knittle. were finished bowling, we got in my truck, found Two weeks later the group started bowling dur­ some firewood, packed it up and hauled it over to ing W ednesday Mixers [which still bowls during the their house. We just do those kinds of things for each summer]; the Friday night league kicked into gear other.” soon after. According to Geil, there are PCBA bowlers in “For the first two years we had about nine teams. the 80 score range as well as those in the 180s and Then we went to 12, then to 16,” says Knittle. In 190s. 1995, FITS grew to 28 teams, and earlier this year, 36 “You don’t have to be good,” states a PCBA teams “filled the house” on Friday nights, before promotional flyer, “just interested and supportive of dropping down to the current 34 teams. your team!” “Before we got so big, we would share the lanes with other straight leagues,” recounts Overfield, ITS is first and foremost a bowling league, with who works for a Portland temp service and bowls on a few social activities on the side,” says FITS an all-male team called Pacific Princesses. founder and former league secretary Rich Knittle, a “We never had any problems. I never heard of self-employed contractor who lives in Southeast any derogatory remarks or anything like that, though Portland. they definitely knew we were a gay league,” he Knittle, who turns 40 in April, says he got the idea laughs. F ccording to Geil, PCBA’s golden rule is for members to have fun and experience fellow­ ship. PCBA, whose members bowl on Sundays from morning to early afternoon, is more loosely structured than leagues that are sanctioned. PCBA’s league average is 132, which is respectable, but far from impressive. He says many leagues, including the Friday- night, gay-oriented FITS (Fuck It, Tomorrow’s Saturday) are sanctioned, which essentially means they are more costly, more competitive, and have a stricter set of rules and regulations for their mem­ bers to follow. Members of sanctioned leagues also pay sanc­ While pleased with FITS' tion fees to a governing body called the American Bowling Congress and/or the W omen’s Interna­ enormous growth, Knittle tional Bowling Congress. PCBA has consistently admits that Friday night voted against aligning itself with the ABC in order bowling “has lost some o f its to ensure a freer and more social atmosphere. PCBA league bowlers pay $7 per session; FITS league intimacy. In the early days bowlers pay $9. when there were eight teams, PCBA’s season is 16 weeks, running from Janu­ I knew everybody, ” he says. ary until mid-May, as opposed to the more rigorous 30-week season sponsored by many sanctioned “That isn ’t the case anymore. ” leagues, including FITS. “That’s just too much of a commitment for some According to Overfield, men comprise an esti­ people,” says Geil, “We understand that there are mated 75 percent o f FITS’ membership; women many people in our community who belong to other make up the remaining 25 percent. organizations that also require their attention.” W hile pleased with the league’s enormous So PCBA keeps it loose. The league sponsors growth, Knittle admits that Friday night bowling bowling events and raffles where bowlers may wind Tom Geil “has lost some o f its intimacy.” up walking away with a cash jackpot. “ In the early days when there were eight teams, to form a sanctioned gay and lesbian bowling league In the earlier days, when local bar owners were I knew everybody ,” he says. “That isn’t the case several years ago after visiting Atlanta, Ga. said to be concerned that the then-fledgling PCBA “There were 14 bowling leagues there— four­ anymore.” might cut into their business, the league held “ Bar teen," he says. “I thought that was great and felt that Due in part to FITS’ evolution, Knittle has Appreciation” gatherings— after bowling, members Portland could conceivably support m ultiple pulled back from the league a bit, and no longer would head over to a designated bar for drinks and leagues.” handles administrative duties. finger foods, darts or Bingo. It was a way of saying, Back in the mid-1980s Knittle also managed a “ I just bowl,” he says, adding, “I think the “W e’ re not here to undermine your business. We are local shoe store, “and the retail schedule didn’t allow growth proves that there is a great deal of interest in here to help it.” For many years, in fact, bars have our community for this, and I believe it proves that me to bowl on Sundays.” sponsored PCBA teams. we can have even more leagues in the future. Per­ “So I decided to start up a league,” he says. “From PCBA gives each league member a certificate of sonally, however, it’s time for me to step back. I’m the beginning I wanted it to be sanctioned, because participation and a special league pin, and encour­ a happily married man, and my work schedule I like the structure o f a sanctioned league.... Let’s ages new bowlers to come to the lanes. makes it tough to put as much time into [FITS] as I face it, if you are a competitive bowler, you want to ‘Team s are always looking for substitutes,” says did in the past.” know that if you shoot a 300 you will get national Geil. “It’s a good way to see if you like it.” recognition.” PCBA also sponsors special events including a ver the years PCBA has experienced ebbs and Knittle, who has reached that persistently elusive “Weird Bowl,” where people do, well, weird things, flov*s,fU membership. . pinnacle— the 3QQ game— hasi averaged 205 in a , like bowl with a balloon between their knees or try Geil ’say’s ‘currently there are 80 regulars [20 tri get the -lowe^t-scor#— throwing 'gutter * j . season. His.avcragc now hovers in the 190s.» * * ,' A O teams], which is down dramatically from the mid- 1980s. He cites the establishment of other gay and lesbian organizations, as well as the founding of FITS as factors contributing to the dip in member­ ship. Additionally, an estimated 60 PCBA members have died of AIDS complications over the years. “ I’ve had four teammates die of AIDS,” says Cherry. “ It’s been painful to watch, but I try to be there for them. I tell them they have to come back again next year.” “ I never knew anyone with AIDS before getting involved in the [queer] bowling leagues,” says 31- year-old Lauren Pike, coordinator of the 1996 Rosebowl Classic. “1 now have good friends who are HIV positive, and it’s been very, very hard, because I know 1 will eventually lose them. I fear the moment when that happens.” As a younger person. Pike, a pharmaceutical technician who lives in Aloha, was being primed for the professional bowlers’ circuit. She burned out, however, and took several years off. Later she learned of PCBA by reading an alter­ native publication and decided to check it out. “At that point in my life, I was also trying to find the gay community, which I had not been involved with. So it was perfect. It’s really renewed my interest in bowling, and I got to meet other gay people. I now have a community,” says Legs Up High’s Pike, whose average ranges from the 180s to the 190s (translation: she’s dam good). Pike currently bowls for both PCBA and FITS, as does Buliavac, whose average is consistent with Pike’s. “Sunday is looser and more social. It’s a little more serious on Fridays. I think the leagues really do complement each other,” says Buliavac, whose FITS and PCBA teams are composed o f Bears— that is, furry gay men and their admirers. His FITS team is aptly named “Bear It,” while his PCBA team is dubbed “Bears R Us.” Buliavac, a lifelong Oregonian, grew up bowl­ ing with his dad, who lives in the area. “ He keeps saying he’ll come watch. He hasn’t made it yet,” he says. “He might be confused if he did show up, after all, I’m still trying to explain to him what a Bear is.” F 'or me, this was never about bowling,” says Geil, “it has always been about community. I’m proud of what we’ve been able to do.” Over the years, PCBA has raised money for several gay and AIDS organizations, including Cascade AIDS Project, Esther’s Pantry, the No on 9 Campaign, the Pride of the Rose Scholarship Fund, and Equity Foundation. “You know, I’ve learned a lot about myself [from queer bowling],” adds Cherry. “Many years ago when we were at an out-of-town tournament, Tom asked me to talk in front o f this crowd o f 350 to 400 people. We were at a reception, and he had to leave. “Well, I had never done that before,” she re­ counts. “And here are all these people in front of me. I got up there and just started cracking joke after joke. I never knew I had it in me until then. I brought down the house. I’ve been emceeing our tournament events nearly every year since then.” For Overfield, FITS has led to a sense o f com­ munity. “I didn’t know anyone when I first moved to Portland,” he says. "[FITS] really opened the door for me in terms of meeting other people in the gay community.” FITS bowling, meanwhile, is getting Pike back into her competitive mode. “ Before I’m 35 I’d like to go semi-pro for a couple of years,” she says. “I’m trying to hone my skills.” Roni, meanwhile, has tested herself via PCBA. “I remember in those early days when I asked Tom if I could sell ads for the [Rosebowl Classic] program,” says Roni. “I’m sure he was wondering what people would think when this cross-dressing guy came walking into their business in his skirt and high heels. BeingTom, however, he said. ‘G o fo rit.’ I put on my five-inch heels and went for it— and did great. I’ve been selling those ads ever since.” . . .. . \ Toj-pKOfe.iofptmajion afiopt,PC^A- call 293-0438. To contact FITS, call 771-2345.