november 3. 2000 tyBWl o u t Fire- Grilled Hanger Steak • ^ Thanks for the memories To the E ditor : to So ro & So I have had a wonderful relationship with Just Out. My first impression was admiration for Renée LaChance and Jay Brown and their courage in the enormous task of publishing a newspaper, much less one for our community. T hat first copy was a joy to read, and that feeling has continued with each edition. My admiration continues for all of you on staff. Just Out is the best! I learned so much from reading your newspaper. You stim ulated my im agination, and at tim es I disagreed with you, but I always was grateful to all o f you on staff for each issue. You all deserve a m edal for doing such a great jo b for all o f us. I know Just Out is the only contact some women and men have with our community. 1 hope and pray you continue for many more years with the quality of reporting you have presented to us in the past. A special thank-you to Oriana Green for all she has done for our 50+ lesbian group. We thank you for your efforts and interest. A fter living happily in Portland since 1978, becom ing an active member o f our com m unity and enjoying our city, the time has com e for me to get to know my children as adults. We have not lived near each other for alm ost 24 years. 1 will he m oving to C olorado Springs, C o lo ., becom ing an active member o f the com m unity, volunteering at the community center, learning the art o f patience with the large com m unity and C hristian right-wing organizations and transfering my membership from the M etropolitan Com m unity Church o f Portland to the M etropolitan Com m unity C h u rch o f Pikes Peak. W ith m uch pride, affection and sadness, 1 leave you. I am taking nothing but fond m em ories. I experienced much joy and am honored to have been a part of our community in Portland. Thank you, Just Out, for the contribution you have made in my life. M ay the universe bless all o f us. I will he back every Jun e for our gay pride celebration; see you then! M ary B rady during the crucial decision-making process on redistricting. H is opponent, Lynn Snodgrass, is acerbic, uninform ed and determ ined to enshrine right-wing Republicanism into our system. Please support Bradbury. Thanks, and please vote. G eorge E ighmey Portland An urgent appeal To the E ditor : I am writing today first and foremost to sup­ port A1 Gore but also, with much respect, to appeal to our friends who are thinking o f sup­ porting Ralph Nader with their vote. From the environment to a woman’s right to choose to basic civil rights, we believe great harm— in fact, severe harm— will come with a George W. Bush presidency. With much respect and humility, we are appealing to Nader voters in Oregon and across the nation to reconsider their vote. We acknowledge that Nader has raised important issues. We also know that more dis­ course is healthy in any democracy. But there hasn’t been a race this close since 1960, when John F. Kennedy won with an average of one vote per precinct. And we stand at the precipice of major set­ backs in so many key areas; we submit that empowering Bush will dash even the most mod­ est dreams of Gore and Nader supporters alike. We are asking with urgent respect that the Nader supporters not deliver the Supreme Court and the nation into the hands of Bush. I head the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest gay advocacy organization. The stakes are profound for every gay person in the United States. I can assure you Mathew Shepard would have known the vast difference between Gore and Bush. People my age in the gay and lesbian com ­ munity lived through a time— the Reagan/Bush years— when in the midst of the most horrific epidemic of our time, our government turned away in stony silence. We do not want to return to that era. Our dreams— the real possibilities we have worked toward— will be put on hold for years to come. Portland E lizabeth B irch Please vote To the E ditor : So ®Q BRID G EPO RT t ALE HOUSE f 3 6 3 2 S E H aw thorne B lvd. www. bridgeportbrew . com T his is, like all elections, a crucial one. It might he more significant than others only because the differences between the major can­ didates are so vast. It should com e as n o surprise to you that I support A1 G ore for president. His vision for the U nited States is based on realistic ideas and achievable goals. I hope all o f you will vote for G ore. I also know Hardy Myers and Kevin Mannix, candidates for Oregon attorney general. Myers has done an outstanding job as our attorney gen­ eral and has earned our support. M annix is a loose cannon waiting to go off. He already has announced he will not move aggressively to uphold Oregon’s Death with Dig­ nity Act. T h is is the sam e m an who introduced legis­ lation to prohibit women from receiving sperm insem ination. We can ’t risk electing M annix. Myers fought the tobacco com panies, defended all o f our laws and is a fair and impar­ tial attorney general. Please vote for him. Bill Bradbury also has been outstanding since his appointm ent as secretary of state. He will serve us well in the next four years, especially Human Rights Campaign executive director No on 3 To the E ditor : I am an attorney with the Anim al Legal Defense Fund (www.aldf.org), a national non­ profit organization com m itted to improving the lives of anim als through the legal system. I was unaware that Just O ut made election endorse­ ments and was disappointed to discover our community paper had com e out in favor of the so-called Property Protection A ct [Oct. 20]. Measure 3 is a constitutional amendment that might sound appealing on the first read. However, upon closer inspection it reveals itself as a poorly drafted solution to a problem that does not exist here in Oregon. In addition, it brings with it a host of unin­ tended consequences, namely its detrimental impact on thousands o f abused and neglected animals across our state. For these reasons, almost every newspaper and humane society across the state, together with a host of national animal protection organizations, have come out in opposition to it. T h e problem ignored by M easure 3 is that under today’s laws, the an im als who live with us are classified as property, just like a televi­ sion, chair or car. T h e act would prohibit forfeitures o f any property before a criminal conviction. A lthough most o f us realize anim als are dif­ ferent from other kinds o f “property," the peo­ ple who wrote M easure 3 did not consider this fact or just did not care. Because it fails to dis­ tinguish anim als from other types o f property, it would prohibit anim als who are removed from abusers from being placed into permanent, lov­ ing hom es until after the anim al cruelty case is over— a process that can take many months or even years to conclude— even when a court finds sufficient evidence o f mistreatment. Tragically, cruelty cases o ften involve hundreds o f an im als, an d providing their necessary care is e xp en siv e. W ithout the ability to find p erm an en t h om es for these an im als until after e ach crim in al case is over, these costs easily cou ld bankrupt m any o f our shelters an d h u m an e societies. Measure 3 has some other drastic and absurd results when applied to animals. For instance, it might force shelters into auctioning off rescued animals to the highest bidder, instead of being able to place them in the best new homes, then direct that 75 percent o f these auction proceeds go to drug treatment facilities. Regrettably, the most likely result if Measure 3 passes is shelters might be forced into reconsider­ ing rescuing abused animals at all because of the large financial costs of providing their necessary care throughout a protracted criminal case and the uncertainty of whether any of these costs ever will be reimbursed later by the defendant. These three Web sites further discuss why Measure 3 is bad for our state in general and for anim als in particular. Please take a few moments to review this important information: • www.voteanimal.com (a W eb site devoted n o ta b le s Robert Maxwell, 1969-2000 R obert Jam es Maxwell, aka Lovey Howell aka A nnell Storm , Princess 21 o f the Raintree Empire, died of A ID S com plications O ct. 18 at Southwest W ashington M edical Center. He was 31. He was bom Jan. 29, 1969, in Salt Lake City. He moved to Vancouver more than a decade ago. He enjoyed performing, sewing and crafts but most of all loved to entertain friends in his home. G ina Hoggan, Imperial Sovereign Court of the Raintree Empire Ixiard treasurer, said he was a kind and sensitive person who will be missed by many for his bright smile. M axw ell also will be remembeted for his radiant spirit and his great talent for m aking people feel good about themselves. He loved the beauty o f life. He was preceded in death by his longtime com panion, David William Howell. He is survived b his brother, Richard; sister, Claire Walker; parent« Claude and Jane; the family he made with David Gretchen Gonzales and Judith, Henery, Steven Gery and Karen Gillispie; and Robert and David' only adopted child, Miss Margaret, their dog. A memorial service was held O ct. 20 at Ever green Memorial Gardens. A brunch potluck wa held Oct. 21 at the Northbank Tavern. In lieu of flowers, his family is seeking dona tions to help cover the cost o f the memoria service. To contribute, send e-mail to Jsphsethi cs.com or write to Joseph Daniel, 1516 Kaufmat Ave., Vancouver, WA 98660.