ju s t o u t ▼ m ay 3 , 1 0 9 0 ▼ 3 just out since 1983 PUBLISHER AND EDITOR Renée LaChance steppin’ out contents VOL. 13 NO. 13 MAY 3,1996 ASSISTANT PUBLISHER Ten Ventura FEATURES COPY EDITORS Grin and ballot Kelly M. Bryan Jeff Boswell Just O ut’.s endorsements fo r the May 21 primary (P. 17) REPORTERS Inga Sorensen Bob Roehr Rex Wockner Dishing it out Right-wing Christian radio is a mouse that roars CALENDAR EDITOR Kristine Chatwood (p. 21) PHOTOGRAPHER Linda Kliewer DEPARTMENTS ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Meg Grace World news ADVERTISING REPS Iceland legalizes same-sex registered partnerships (P- 4) C. Jay Wilson Jr. Marty Davis National news CREATIVE DIRECTOR E. Ann Hinds GRAPHIC DESIGN Rupert Kinnard FORMATTER Christopher Cuttone TYPESETTER Christopher Cuttone Work has begun to make the home o f Rupert Kinnard, creator o f Cathartic Comics and Just O ut’s graphic designer, accessible fo r wheelchair use. Rupert was injured in an automobile accident on April 7; he is now paralyzed from the waist down. A team o f volunteers is constructing entry ramps and putting in wider doors prior to his return from the hospital. Jack (the activist/radio host formerly known as Linda Shirley) wields the phone while Dan Kahn, Marygail Sullivan, Matt Wverker, Madelyn Elder and Cynthia White take a break. Volunteer building crew members not pictured are Ali Rice and Sumitra Red Wing. DISTRIBUTION Ambling Bear Rachel Ebora Helen Ford CONTRIBUTORS Kristine Chatwood Cathay Che Rachel Ebora Kevin Isom Lee Lynch Richard Shumate Daniel Vaillancourt Just o u t is published on the first and third Friday o f each month. Copyright ©1996 by j u s t o u t. No part of J u s t o u t may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. The submission o f written and graphic materials is welcomed. Written material should be typed and double-spaced. Just o u t 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 Ju st o u t consults the Associated Press Style Book and Libel Manual on editorial decisions. Letters to the editor should be limited to 500 words. 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. The display ad v ertising deadline is the Monday after the first and third Friday for the next issue. Classified ads must be received at the Just o u t office by 3 pm the Monday after the first and third Friday for the next issue, along with payment. Ads will not be taken over the telephone. Ad policy No sexually exploitative advertising will be accepted. Compensation for errors in, or cancellation of, advertising will be made with credit toward future advertising Subscriptions to Just out are available for $17.50 for 12 issues. First Class (in an envelope) is $30 for 12 issues A copy of J u s t o u t is available for $2. Advertising rates are available on request. The mailing address and telephone numbers for J u s t o u t are PO Box 14400. Portland. OR 97293-0400; (503) 236-1252. The phone number for the advertising department is 236-1253. Our fax number is 236-1257. Our e- mail address is JustOut2@aol.com guest editorial Time for Reality The FDA should approve marketing the “female condom ” for use in male -male anal sex 1 by Bob Roehr eality is not just a state of existence, it is also the brand name of a “female condom.” Both have been missing in efforts to halve the spread of HIV. The device, approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1993 for vaginal use, is a poly­ urethane pouch, larger and stronger than a traditional latex condom, which is inserted by receptive partners prior to sex. Reality was developed to empower women with the option of taking their own precautions and not having to rely on male partners to use condoms. This philosophy of protective empowerment applies as well to “bottoms” in male-male anal sex. But an FDA official reportedly told the manufacturer that approval would never be given for marketing the product for anal use by men because sodomy is illegal in some states. In fact, following the logic of that FDA official, no condom of any sort would ever have been approved for use in male-male sex by the agency because they all can be, and in fact are, regularly used illegally in some states. The FDA should be chastised for taking such a bogus stand in opposition to approval of Reality for male-male use. But fault also lies with the manufacturer for not challenging the simplis­ tic denial of the FDA and for not pushing for those trials and subsequent approval. In fact, the manufacturer knew it didn’t have to incur the additional expense because once the product was approved, so- called “off label” use by males could and would occur. Off label use has become an accepted part of life with many drugs, especially those that are AIDS-related. Additionally, the manufacturer should not have shied away from marketing Reality for use by gay men once it gained initial FDA approval. Both “male” and “female” condoms are ap­ proved for prevention of pregnancy and disease, neither is specifically approved for same-sex purposes. But that hasn’t stopped manufacturers from advertising traditional condoms in gay magazines. Reality should have been aggressively marketed to the gay community. But perhaps the saddest players in this tale of Reality are the organizations set up to stop the spread of HIV infection among gay men. They have been absent, woefully ignorant and star­ tlingly silent on this tool, which could be a cornerstone of AIDS prevention within our community. Reality has been available since 1993. Anyone can buy and use it. But our local prevention organizations haven’t seized the opportunity to make it an integral part of stopping the spread of AIDS. Where are the baskets of free “female condoms” at the bars and bathhouses? Or even the vending machines for them? Where is the educational effort to inform “bottoms” how to protect themselves? Is that absence simply the product of massive bureaucratic ineptitude? Or is it a bottom-line decision because “male” condoms are cheaper? Is there some underlying macho psy­ chology that values the insertive, active male, yet has a blind spot for the receptive, passive male? Regardless of what the underlying explanation is, the situ­ ation has to change. Reality must become an immediate and long overdue priority of HIV prevention in the gay men’s community. The Olympic torch will not be run through Cobb County; appeals court says “don 7 ask, don 7 tell" not strong enough (PP- 5-9) Local news K K EYRadio’s Love Makes a Family may go national (PP- 10-13) COLUMNS Family values YWCA’s Family CampOUT spells summer fun ( P - 15) Petal pushers April showers bring a new gardening column (P- 39) Peach buzz Kevin can 7 bear chest-shaving (p. 40) Amazon trail Some lesbians are fine with invisibility (p. 41) ARTS Cinema A peek inside Celluloid Closet; Cats and Dogs reigns (pp. 31-34) Tongue in groove After the show with Tribe 8 (p. 35) Books Explore Frank Browning’s Queer Geography (p. 37)