O R EG O N S LE S B IA N /GAY/B l/TRAN S/Q U E E R NEWSMAGAZINE APRIL 16. 2010 3 ---------------- —------ PAGE 3 b/ Mart/ Davis just out Life Goes On V O L 27. NO. 9 In times o f transition, learn from those w h o ’ve g o ne before uch o f my childhood was spent Aging. Gay and Grey. Senior citizens. El­ in a wide-spot-in-the-road town ders. W hat does any o f this have to do with in northern California. The town, the younger reader that Just Out, like nearly Shasta, was an old mining, city, full of crumbled every other publication in the world, is now buildings, historic designation plaques and courting? Again, if you’re not old(er) now, one .very good museum. If you find yourself you will be one day, hopefully. So I ask our on Hwy 299W, five miles outside of Redding, younger readers to recognize that services and check out the museum. The original jail is in programs being studied, evaluated and put the basement, accompanied by the upstairs into place today will be there for you when neighbor, a solid, sturdy, well-used gallows. it is your time and your turn to face your own Possibly because of the jail and the gal­ aging process. The Gay and Grey seniors o f lows, Shasta is also known for having a wide today are breaking paths for those of you who assortment o f cemeteries. In the 1850s, death, follow. The LGBTQ_ community has seen as well as life, was rife with segregation. There 40-plus years of activism now, activism that was a cemetery for the Protestants and one has brought us to the cusp of civil rights and for the Catholics. The Chinese stayed apart in marriage equality. Now many of these same death as they did in life. The Masons were not leaders, accompanied by friends and allies, content to be buried with the common folk turn down the path o f equality in aging. and laid claim to a spot on a separate hill. As I am now, so will you be. Prepare for aging and follow me. I spent a lot o f time wandering through these cemeteries. They were fascinating places to visit, providing a motherlode of historical year ago Just Out was in dire immedi­ data. I ts been many years since I traipsed ate need o f an art director/graphic through the hot, dusty poison oak-covered designer to rescue us from a perilous trails, but one memory stands Out clearly predicament. In stepped Laura Atkinson, to to me. A verse, a poem on a headstone, has help us out for “a few weeks” while we got remained with me since those long ago ado­ back on our artistic feet. Yes, those few weeks lescent years. I even returned a few years ago turned into months, then into a year and now Laura is ready to return to her regularly to seek out the headstone, but alas, time had taken its toll and I could no longer locate it scheduled life. She will leave behind a grateful among the crumbling toppled stones. Just Out staff, along with an opportunity for Here are the words that have lingered in someone to be the next to provide the artistic my mind these many years: direction for Just Out. Specifics of the job can be found on page Remember; friend, as you pass by, 4. If you’re interested, send me over, quickly, As you are now, so once was I. As I am now, a detailed cover letter and all your pertinent So must you be, resumé facts to marty#justout.com. Prepare fo r death A n d follow me. gain, as I find myself closing this publisher’s letter with news o f life Can you sense what an upbeat child I was? I passages, I offer a reminder that Just probably would have been considered Goth, had Out welcomes, and publishes at no charge, that social clime been invented yet. Black cloth­ ing in blistering Northern California summers nearly all community transitions. This in­ cludes the sadness o f loss o f the death o f a simply would not have worked anyway. W hy am I taking you with me on this little loved one, the shared joy o f a birth or arrival trip down’memory lane? Because if we look at o f a new family member or even the mark­ the above ditty, and substitute the word “aging” ing o f the anniversary o f a relationship. As a for the more final word “death," we can all find community we have years o f weddings and ourselves in a place of commonality. We are all engagements to catch up on, so we encourage aging—some of us are simply arriving ahead of you to share your happy moments with your friends and neighbors. the others. M A A W -1W l Portland lost two of us, both once familiar to many, in the last few weeks. There’s little info found on Damon Woodcock, other than that he died o f colon cancer, at the age o f 50, on March 28. Woodcock was a transgender Portland Police officer who faced struggles and lawsuits over1 his transition process at the beginning o f this decade. Woodcock’s story was well documented in the pages o f Wil­ lamette Week. A Google search and review of his story would be well worth the time spent. My own relationship with Woodcock became strained during that period, and we had long since fallen out o f contact. His story, his life, his struggles merit memory and reflection. Again, the difficulties he encountered on his life path, his transition, did pave the way for easier travel for those who followed. I can speak more personally about the passing of Jim Hernandez, who lost his battle with cancer on April 5 . 1 first met Jim in the late 1990s. About the same time that I took over Just Out, Jim was co-forming the Rose City Softball Association. Specific dates are a blur to me, but I remember being asked to throw out the first ball, and speak at what might have been the first game o f the league. In those days, games were played at the fields in East Moreland. I know I’m making it sound like 1934 or something, but a lot has gone on since then. RCSA grew in leaps and bounds and became what is likely the largest LGBTQ_organization in the area. It started with Jim and his partner o f 27 years, Joey Burgos. This community owes much to Jim Hernandez and the legacy o f good work that he leaves behind. here are five Fridays in April, which means Just Out is on vacation the week of April 19. I’ll be around, though, and on Monday the 19th will be at Gay Skate. That night I’ve got not one, not two, but three local nonprofits coming by to visit with you and answer questions about their organiza­ tions. I f you’d like your group to have this same opportunity, in another month, please get in touch with me. We’ll see you back here in print on May 7, and until then, check in at blogout.justout.com and on the Just Out Facebook fan page J M T APRIL 16. 2010 INSIDE» » FEATURE 20 AFFIRMATIVE AGING Awareness and advocacy are growing for elderly LGBT adults 21 GIMME SHELTER. PLEASE? Portland’s Mauro Hernandez wants to change housing for LGBT seniors » NEWS 5 LETTERS 8 NORTHWEST NEWS IN BRIEF 14 PLANNING AHEAD LGBTQcommunity members give their input for the Portland Plan 16 CAUSES AND EFFECTS Cascade AIDS Project and Basic Rights Oregon gear up for two o f their biggest annual fundraisers 44 OUTREACH IN FOCUS VIEWS and ERA launch elderly LGBTQ] support group » ARTS 8 CULTURE 23 OUT 8 ABOUT 32 FOR THE LOVE OF ROCK N’ ROLL Girl in a Coma pays tribute to icons with Adventures in Coverland 34 NIGHTLIFE: ELEGANTLY WASTED Market 8c Castro classes up drinking on Monday nights 36 ARCADE HIRE A former staffer shares his tales of time spent as booth monitor 37 UNTAPPED GENIUS Collective builds a stage for marginalized artists » ABOUT OUR COVER ARTIST Photo by DEL MULHERN / / fodusthelens.com Del is a queer, poly. FTM. Ph D. student. He is also one of the main organizers of the National Chapter of the Gender Free For All. along with last year's Portland Gender Free For All March. In addition to being a full-time student and volunteer organizer. Del documents his life and surroundings as well as his gender and sexuality through the lens of a camera. Beartown 15. q dog . Latino Pride, P ortland Pride 8 m ore. These upcoming special events bring hundreds, thousands of p eop le to Portland. Just Out will be there - will you? e You will be if you advertise in Just Out. Call the Just Outadvertising departm ent to hear about our upcom ing special issues. 503.236.1253 WE WORK IT FOR YOU. » SPORTS 18 FAIR PLAY: HOW GAY IS GAY SOFTBALL? » COLUMNISTS 28 LADY ABOUT TOWN 30 LIVING OUT LOUD 31 SASSY GARDENER 38 REMEMBER TO BREATHE 43 MS. BEHAVIOR 46 BACKPAGES