Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013, September 01, 2000, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    September 1. 2000
ïm iT T M Jn e w s
Your fresh flower professionals
JACKSON’S FLOW ERS
3804 N. E. Sandy Blvd. Portland, OR 97232
282-0657 • 1 (800) 303-0657
pòiTiivt «ÏÏ7 -V
?.
_ ,
Our Hands
Hanc
P À B A w w w .Jack son sF low ers.com Move Hearts TM
gfcJI M b
_____
Phone
5 0 3 274-9936
KAREN M. S WEIGERT, MD
cm
O bstetrics and Gynecology
Fâx
5 0 3 274-2660
1130 N.W. 22nd, Suite 320, Portland, OR 97210
We make the impossible possible.
KpslA 1
While we can't promise to save you every time a deadline
changes, we can usually find a solution - like digital printing.
With digital printing, you can have a finished four color
printed piece - in no time at all. Use it for rush reprints of
your product sheets or a quick run of your brochures. With
digital printing, you can afford to print without huge
runs or long lead times.
So the next time you need anything from copies to full-color
printing, come to the experts at PIP Printing.
424 NE Broadway * Portland, OR 97232
503.281.8666 * Fax 503.249.1440 • sales@pippdx.com • www.pippdx.com
PRINTING
The Right Printer. The Right People.®
»Vf S
I nglish I i rr p l . K es
lie ti ut i I ul hitit,
ii it bn ut e l e c t r i c i t y . ..
s in e *
2729 NE BROADWAY
PORTLAND
503-282-3615
360-256-2465
HOMESTEADSTOVE.COM
In-Home Estimates
Full Installation by
Hearth Experts
•
Gas, Wood & Pellet
Stoves & Fireplaces
Custom Mantles to
Complement Your Home
•
Barbecues, Hearth
Accessories & Gitts
^
4 ./ a o o r it &
r ^
C(\
tor over j U years
Try one... you’ll know why!
1 )6
S«-
N A TIO N A L
I T hat’s a charitable company to do when
the Boy Scouts of Americas gay ban flies
in the face of its own nondiscrimination policy?
Be prepared.
A nationwide cam­
paign against the anti-gay
rule already is starting to
take effect. During the
past several weeks, Chase BOY SCOUTS
Manhattan Corp., Knight OF AMERICA
Ridder Inc., Levi Strauss
(Si Co. and Wells Fargo cut financial support for
the Scouts, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Sources say Merrill Lynch & Co. also is like­
ly to pull funding. An official with the Scouts’
New York chapter says several other companies
have contacted it and are reviewing their op­
tions, hut he declined to name them.
And some leaders fear the protest will snow­
ball after opponents held rallies in at least 36
cities Aug. 21. Demonstrators were turned away
from the national headquarters in Irving, Texas,
after presenting a 55,000-signature petition
protesting the organization’s ban on gay troop
leaders, according to The Associated Press.
Meanwhile, the Broward County, Fla.,
school district is reconsidering its longtime part­
nership with the Boy Scouts, according to the
Miami Herald. For decades, troops have met in
auditoriums, sponsored character education
lessons and recruited members at campuses
across the region.
But Broward education leaders now question
whether those dealings violate their nondis­
crimination rules. Gay and lesbian community
activists praised the district for analyzing
its commitment to the Boy Scouts.
“This is precisely what school
boards are for, which is to edu­
cate the young people in our
society that it is wrong to
discriminate against other
people in our society,"
said Dean Trantalis, a gay
rights leader in Wilton
Manors. It would he a
gixxl lesson for the Scouts,
he said, to “feel the sting of
discrimination by being
denied such a basic thing as
access to their meeting room.”
National spokesman Gregg Shields
said the group simply is abiding by membership
standards that barely have changed in its 90-
year history. “The Boy Scouts have always
taught traditional American family values, and
a homosexual would not be a valid role model
for those values.”
The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in June that
homosexuals can be barred from serving as troop
\ V
leaders. The ruling also might permit the 6.2
million-member organization to reject gay
members.
T
he Mary-Helen Mautner Project for Les­
bians with Cancer announced Aug. 14 it
will present Healing Works: The First National
Conference on Lesbians and Cancer from
Sept. 21 to 23 in Washington, D.C.
“Healing Works is an unprecedented
advance in the field of lesbian health,” Execu­
tive Director Kathleen DeBold says. “For the
first time ever, we are bringing together the
many constituencies who share a common
vision of increasing care, services, research, pro­
gramming and organizations for lesbians with
cancer, their partners and caregivers.”
The conference will convene scores of pan­
els, round tables and workshops enabling can­
cer survivors, health care providers, re­
searchers, activists, public policy advocates and
government officials from around the country'
to share their information and experience. To
register, call (2 0 2 ) 332-5536, send e-mail to
mautner@mautnerproject.org or visit www.
mautnerproject.org.
C A L IF O R N IA
he Los Angeles Dodgers apologized
i l Aug. 23 after ejecting two lesbian fans from
the stadium Aug. 8 for kissing during a game
against the Chicago Cubs, the City News Serv­
ice reports.
Meredith Kott and Danielle Goldey were
summoned from their seats and ordered to leave
because security personnel had heard a
report of lewd conduct. The women
claimed heterosexual couples
being equally affectionate
weren’t approached.
“Meredith and Dan­
ielle, I’m sorry that you
weren’t allowed to return
to your seats,” Team
President Bob Graziano
said during a ceremony
in West Hollywood. “It’s
troubled me a lot. And 1
have to tell you it means a
lot to me that you guys are
Dodger fans and will be returning
to Dodger Stadium soon, because I
know how I feel about the Dodgers. I know how
you feel about the Dodgers. And that’s a com­
mon bc^nd that we have and everybody in Los
Angeles who loves the Dodgers has, and we’ll
keep that.”
The women showed that all was forgiven by
kissing for photographers during the news con­
ference and donning Dodger caps. The team
W idœ r tbat's guaranteed outdoors!
LEFT CLICK FOR SUBARU
The Nation's #1 Subaru dealer, Carr Subaru NW is j\ now at your fingertips. Take advantage of the easiest,
most convenient way to buy a new or u s e d v e h i c l e - right from your computer in the
comfort of your own home (and we won't ^ C A R R — even know if you're still in your pajamas).
• Over 300 New Subarus in stock
• Over 600 Pre-owned cars and trucks in stock
"A smile, a handshake and the coffee's on us."
11635 SW Canyon Road., Beaverton, OR 97005
• Fleet-based pricing (less cost = lower price)
• One person handles the entire transaction
(5 0 3 ) 7 0 r - 9 8 1 1 o r (5 0 3 ) 4 6 9 - 2 4 7 4 FAX