E3 ^ The Carolinas’ Most Comprehensive Gay & Lesbian Newspaper Published Every Two Weeks On Recycled Paper • Volume 12, Number 11 • October 18, 1997 • FREE LC/Charlotte marks 10 years of service Page 4 Sears brings South’s gay history to life Page 3 Gay man sues Raleigh newspaper by David Stout Q-Notes Staff EDNEYVILLE, NC—Charles Merrill is determined to have his efforts to fight the anti gay climate in NC taken seriously. As such, on September 17 he filed a $60 million defama^ tion suit against a Raleigh newspaper and its parent corporation, claiming that they libeled him and his organization. Citizens Against Dis crimination Association (CADA), in a feature article about the group’s campaign to initiate a film industry boycott of NC. In a press release issued after the suit’s filing in US District Court in Sacramento, CA, Merrill said that in printing its story, the Ra leigh News and Observer “calculated to strip [himself] and CADA of all the credibility and respectability they have worked so hard to earn.” The batde began on July 28 when the News and Observer followed up on a story that had appeared the previous week in the entertain ment trade publication The Hollywood Reporter. The Reporters story focused on CADA and its call for filmmakers to stay out of NC due to the passage of a spate of anti-gay county reso lutions and the Mecklenburg County Commission’s decision to cut arts funding. The Reporter evidendy picked up the story firom an Internet press release Merrill had is sued previously, stating he had “organized the boycott and contacted top members of the en tertainment industry, Barry Diller, Rupert Murdoch and Michael Eisner” for their sup- ■ port in establishing the embargo. In its follow-up, the News and Observer seemed to take the position that The Hollywood Reporter had grossly overstated the importance of Merrill, his group and the status of its film blockade. Staff writer Made Carpenter asserted, “...Citizens Against Discrimination is a 63- year-old retired man named Charles E. Merrill, sitting at home in the Henderson County com munity of Edneyville with a computer and an agenda.... Regional film commissioners have never heard of him. Polidcians have never heard of him. Area gay activists have never heard of him.” In addition to the article’s appearance in print, it was published on the newspaper’s website. From there, it was widely distributed on an Internet mailing list for gay-related news items, further angering Merrill. In his complaint against the News and Ob server and McClatchy Newspapers, Inc. of Sac ramento, Merrill stated that because of the ar ticle, both he and CADA, which he maintains is incorporated in Delaware as a non-profit or ganization with 412 members, have been “held up to ridicule, hatred and contempt, and have suffered injury to their reputations, personal humiliation, emotional distress and mental anguish.” He is seeking compensatory and pu- nidve damages. Merrill commented that he hopes his law suit “puts McClatchy and other media organi zations on notice that they cannot continue to distort the impact of gay rights in America and on the World Wide Web.” At press time, neither of the defendants had responded to the suit. ▼ Bishops call for acceptance of gays by David Stout Q-Notes Staff WASHINGTON, DC—^An ecumenical treatise released by the US Catholic Confer ence that encourages Emilies to accept their gay loved ones and calls for non-discrimina tion against them, drew positive responses from gay and lesbian leaders and members of a na tional organization for gay Catholics. However, their reactions were tempered by the bishops’ reiteration that homosexuals must remain celi bate to avoid sin. The open letter, entitled “Always Our Chil dren: A Pastoral Message to Parents of Homo sexual Children and Suggestions for Pastoral Ministers,” contains sev- eral important messages. One of its most powerful pronouncements is a call for non-discrimination. “The teaching of the church makes it clear that the fundamental human rights of homosexual per sons must be defended and that all of us must strive to eliminate any form of injustice, oppres- sion, or violence a^nst them.” It also states, “Nothing in the Bible or in Catholic r^rhing can be used to justify prejudicial or discrimi natory attitudes and behaviors.” The message reaffirms an earlier call for all Christians to work to end discrimination against gay people; recognizes the mounting evidence that a person’s sexual orientation is not a matter of choice; and encourages families to be accepting and supportive of their gay loved ones even as they are working through areas of confusion and disagreement over the difficult issues that arise when gay people come out to their families. The letter also reminds parents that gay people often face violence and discrimination and emphasizes how crucial it is for parents to This is another milestone on America's journey toward common ground." accept their gay children. In addition, the let ter encourages pastors to welcome gay people within communities of fiuth and encourages both parents and children to be patient, fair and honest with each other and rise above the temptation to rejea each other when challeng ing issues arise. “This is another milestone on America’s journey toward common ground where faith, family and feirness go together,” said Human Rights Campaign Executive Direaor Elizabeth Birch. “The letter is a much-needed reminder to American femilies that people of faith can disagree without being disagreeable — and that families have a moral obligation to treat all people. Including their gay loved ones, with fair ness, respect and dig nity.” The statement, how ever, makes a clear sepa ration between sexual orientation and sexual behavior. While con demning discrimination against individuals on the basis of their sexual ori entation, the statement reasserts the Church’s belief that homosexual behavior is “objectively immoral.” It reiterates that sexual relations are exclusively reserved for a married man and woman for the purpose of creating a new human life. Leaders of Dignity/USA, the nation’s larg est organization for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Catholics and their families and friends, were guardedly optimistic about the message. “This pastoral letter is a positive step and we commend the bishops for their im proved sensitivity to the issues which confront parents and their lesbian and gay children, but all is not perfect,” noted Executive Director Charles Cox. Robert Miailovich, president of Dignity/ See BISHOPS on page 24 V A Is Year-long lesbian health study already yielding important facts by Bob Roehr Special to Q-Notes WASHINGTON, DC—The Instimte of Medicine conducted a workshop on lesbian health research priorities in the District of Co lumbia on October 6-7. It was part of a first ever $200,000 study which should wrap up with a report next summer. “The big news is that they are even funding this study,” said Marj Plumb, policy director with the Gay and Les bian Medical Association. Donna Futterman, MD, is a researcher at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “We know that coping skills, self-care behavior, and health seeking behavior are estabUshcd early and have an impaa on a lifetime of interactions with the health care system. It should be no surprise that delay in health seeking and lack of preven tive services and gynecologic care is a consis tent finding in research of lesbians of all age groups.” But she cautioned, “We have only begun to scratch the surfree and much of the informa tion we have obtained may not remain relevant because the social and cultural environment continues to change.” One of the major problems facing research ers is the very definition of who is a lesbian. Is it a question of self-identity, sexual acts, or a combination of the two? Social stigma in both study and delivery of care remains a major im pediment. And the average age of awareness of same-sex feelings has dropped from about 16 to nine or ten. Sorting out sex “Lesbians don’t have sex as often as do het erosexual cohabiting couples, gay male couples, and married heterosexual couples,” said Esther Rothblum, a researcher at the University of Vermont. “But on the other hand, lesbians of ten define sex more broadly. So how do you count that? What about people who live to- See STUDY on page 5 Court declines militaiy ban case by Julia Adams Special to Q-Notes WASHINGTON, DC—^The US Supreme Court declined to review the case of Richenberg V. Cohen earlier this month, leaving in place a decision by the Eighth Circuit Court of Ap peals upholding the constitutionality of the Clinton Administration’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Don’t Pursue” policy and the dismissal of Captain Richard Richenberg from the US Air Force for acknowledging that he is gay. Michelle Benecke, co-executive direaor of Servicemembers Legal Defense Network (SLDN), an independent legal aid and watch dog organization for those harmed by the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Don’t Pursue” policy, stated, “By the Court’s action, our nation has needlessly lost the service of a combat-proven elearonics warfare officer.” Richenberg entered the Air Force in 1985. After he served in the GulfWar, he began train ing for special service in Saudi Arabia. While in training, Richenberg disclosed his homosexu ality to his commanding officer. The Air Force canceled his Saudi Arabian mission and reas signed him to Offim Air Force Base in Ne braska, where discharge proceedings were be gun. Richenberg was given an honorable dis charge in 1995. He sued the Air Force, but a federal trial judge and the Eighth US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against him. “No other federal, state or local law man dates that our government terminate the ca reers of gay people,” Benecke stated. “For the thousands of gay, lesbian and bisexual servicemembers who are defending our coun try today, the Supreme Court’s decision means that, for the time being, they will have to con tinue to hide to avoid the ongoing witch hunts. The decision means that they still cannot tell their parents, doctors or best friends that they are gay without fear of losing their jobs or even potentially going to jail.” Richenberg’s case also challenges the military’s assertion that gays disrupt morale among enlistees, Benecke charged. “Captain Richenberg’s discharge brings the frilings of the gay policy into sharp focus: the Air Force has dismissed an officer decorated in the Persian GulfWar despite the objections of his military colleagues who supported him even after they learned his sexual orientation and despite his having met the criteria for retention under ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.’ This case, once again, disproves the rationale offered by the military that straight troops will not work with openly gay servicemembers and highlights the utter waste of scarce resources inherent in discharg ing military members simply because they are not heterosexual.” ▼