Ohio appellate court considers second-parent adoption case ALL DRINKS HALF PRICE dj edward kirkland = hi-nrg dance music plus: sexy hott box dancers | $5 / $7 ■ /g december 2nd- r/ LfTI ''''' ^V/K/ to attend a very ^ special installtrient pf triythos’ most luxurious evenint) -/C^ednesday \ it's survival of'the hippest, so slip into something deCiident and quench you/lust for life with our , / $1 premium vodkii ^ then diyrS into the t)elly of the beast celebrating the rriaiden voyage of y the VIP basement lounge / /andy k.istanas spins in mam room / while edward kirklcjnd turns out the / disco trash jiim in the oracle bring this ad to enjoy a $2 reduction , upon entrance by Peg Byron Special to Q-Notes CHICAGO—^An Ohio appellate court is considering its first lesbian second-parent adop tion case which could provide better protec tions for an eight-year-old girl and eventually for children of many other lesbian and gay par ents, Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund said. On November 10, the Ohio Court of Ap peals heard arguments for In re Adoption of Jane Doe. Patricia Logue, managing attorney of Lambdas Midwest Regional Office argued on behalf of the mothers, “Trlsh Smith” and “Marcia Jones.” “The child will benefit from the added se curity that legal recognition of a parental rela tionship provides, including both mothers hav ing full authority to make medical decisions and giving their daughter many other legal, finan cial and health protections,” she added. Trish, Marcia and Jane Doe are the names the moth ers and daughter are using in the case. Second-parent adoptions allow a person to adopt the biological or adoptive children of his or her partner without terminating the first parent’s legal status as a parent. Such adoptions are available to non-gay stepparents, and in an increasing number of states, to lesbian, gay and other unmarried couples as well. In 1995, Lambda won similar second-parent adoption cases in courts in Illinois and New York. Trish and Marcia, who have been in a com mitted relationship since 1981, jointly planned to bring their daughter Jane into the world via alternative insemination. Responsibility for rais ing Jane, now eight, has been shared by both women since her birth. In 1996, Trish and Marcia filed a petition to adopt and brought a declaratory judgment action in the Summit County Court of Com mon Pleas asking that Trish be able to adopt Jane while allowing Marcia, the biological mother, to remain a legal parent as well. A court- appointed representative for the child told the court that Jane would benefit from the adop tion and her home appeared stable, but argued against the adoption because she thought the law did not allow it. The trial court agreed with the representa tive and denied the requested relief, saying that the Ohio Adoption Act requires termination of Marcia’s parental status before Trish could adopt. Lambda’s brief on the appeal argues that the court does have the power under many pre viously decided cases to grant a second-parent adoption without disturbing the ongoing par ent-child relationship between Marcia and Jane. “We hope the appeals court rules in our fa vor so that children of lesbian and gay couples in Ohio can receive the same protections for their families that other children take for granted,” said Logue. “The court can protect Jane’s family and we hope it does.” Lambda’s co-counsel in the appeal, Peter T. Calhoon, of Buckingham, Doolittle and Burroughs, and Ohio attorney James B. Chapman, represented Trish and Marcia in the trial court. Susan Becker of Cleveland is coun sel for amici National Association of Social Workers, American Academy of Adolescent and Child Psychiatry, Ohio Human Rights Bar As sociation, Ohio Psychological Association, and the Lesbian/Gay Community Service Center of Greater Cleveland, who filed a brief in sup port of the adoption. ▼ Ad opposes animal HIV experiments by Wanda Pico Special to Q-Notes LOS ANGELES, CA—British gay rights and AIDS activist Peter Tatchell joined Linda Blair and other celebrities at a recent Holly wood gala for the launch of a new advertising campaign denouncing health organizations that fund animal experiments. At the event, Tatchell charged that animal- based research is “scientifically flawed” and “hindering the fight against AIDS.” The ad campaign is sponsored by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and features a green-eyed, head-spinning Linda Blair along with the caption: “Animal Experiments Make My Head Spin” — a reference to her Oscar-nominated role in The Exorcist vAiicti is being re-released to coincide with the 25th an niversary of its original launch in 1973. The advertisement was unveiled at a pre- Halloween PETA gala screening of The Exor cist at the world famous Mann’s Chinese The atre on Hollywood Blvd. Blair and Tatchell were joined at the unveil- ing by gothic horror queen Elvira and Joaquin Phoenix — brother of the late River Phoenix and one of Hollywood’s hottest new stars. Tatchell asserted, “Animal experiments are undermining — not helping — the fight against AIDS. Protease inhibitor drugs have prolonged the lives of many people with HIV. The availability, however, of these life-saving treatments was delayed for four years after test trials resulted in the death of laboratory ani mals. During this four-year delay, tens of thou sands of people with HIV — who could have benefited from protease inhibitors — died. Many might be alive now if researchers had not made the mistaken assumption that data taken from animal studies can be applied to humans.” Animal-rights advocates claim that “HIV is a uniquely human disease” and “all the key breakthroughs in AIDS treatment have been based on the interaaion of HIV with human cells, not the cells of other species.” They argue that some of the nation’s top AIDS researchers now concede that animal studies have little or no relevance to the understanding of HIV in people. “Animal experimentation is bad science. Research findings with other species cannot be generalized to humans, because animals and people are very different biologically, as evi denced by the way protease inhibitors can kill dogs and rats, but save the lives of people with AIDS,” said Tatchell. T Calhoun Hiouse your ^ome in Charleston s historic 'OistrCct Close to fine restaurants, great shopping and exciting nightlife. 273 Calhoun Street Charleston, SC 29401 (843) 722-7341 chs65@aol.com