Herland Sister Resources : v.1: no.12(1985)
- Title
- Herland Sister Resources : v.1: no.12(1985)
- Description
- The Herland Sister Resources newsletter is the monthly publication of Herland Sister Resources, a womanist organization with a strong lesbian focus based in Oklahoma City.
- Date Issued
- 1985-12
- Rights
- All rights reserved by Herland Sister Resources. Contact UCO Archives & Special Collections for the permission policy on the use, reproduction or distribution of these materials.
- Is Part Of
- Herland Sisters Resources
- Creator
- Herland Sister Resources
- Date
- 2022-01-27T17:56:32Z
- Date Available
- 2022-01-27T17:56:32Z
- Subject
- Oklahoma
- Type
- application/pdf
- extracted text
-
BERLAND SISTER RESOURCES, I C.
1630 N.W. 19, Okla. City, 0 73106
The Oklahoma City chapter of the state Gay Political Caucus met last month and were told by
State Representative Rebecca Hamilton,
at
AIDS is a "disease that can change history."
Hamilton, the chair of the House Public He th
Committee, has .iust returned from a tour of the
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta where
"even the doctors are afraid. They say it could
be right up there with the great plagues of history," Hamilton said.
en asked about new legislation concerning t ·
sensitive sibject, Hamilton reported that altho h
there has been some talk about Rep. Bill Graves'
pushing a bill that would make AIDS tests m d tory for marriage licenses and with pregn cy
tests, she believes that no new legislation is
needed, at least in Oklahoma. "By the time l wa
set passed, they might work against the best · terests of those most concerned," she added.
Hamilton agrees that it is a very serious po lie
health problem but says that the State He th
Department is handling it. Although she believes
in educating the public about AIDS, she says ·
that if the gene~al population realizes the pote tial of the disease, it will become very sc ed.
d the "public is dangerous when scared." "Yo
scare people enough and they'll do anything," s e
remarked, "things 'they wouldn't think of doing if
they weren't scared."
T e best advice she had for swaying legislative
opinions was to make ourselves known as people,
persons to them. "Once they see that you, the
homosexuals, are real people, then maybe they
will be less likely to hurt you."
To have an effect on the Legislature, she ursed
attendees to "get involved with the campaign of
supportive candidates, to become faces, pe
to legislators and to learn the rules and how to
use the rules for one's own purposes."
The Caucus has a very effective lobbyist, Keith
Smith-. Anyo e who would lilc~ more informat io
about the orsanization should write: Oklahoma
Gay Political Caucus, P.O. Box 57
0 73157.
WINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION
AT BERLAND
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1985
10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
• all day stock reduction sale for last
minute holiday shoppers
• hot Wassail and refreshment treats and
foods of the season
Pot luck dinner in evening
• musical entertainment
• jugglers :nay be present; bad puns may
be exchanged
PSYCHI4 FAIR AT ROSE STATE COLLEGE
The Org~tion for Psychic Research Associates
is sponsiring a Psychic Fair, December 8, from
12:0:0 to 7:00 p.m. This Sunday event is a great
opportunity to get a psychic reading, buy Christmas gifts, enjoy some excellent lectures. The
event at the Student Union building at Rose
State is $2.50 admission per person.
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
5:00
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
"Crystals"a by Donna Burham
"Dreams" by Charlie Wright
"Astrology" by Gloria Star
"Graphoanalysis" by Martha Powell
"Basic Meditation" by Wilma Arnold
Readings will be available for astrology, psychic,
numerology, palmistry, reflexology, tarot, past
life, handwriting analysis, psychometry, I-Ching.
Booths will offer natural health products, astrology books and gifts, crystals, jewelry and astrological and metaphysical associations. -Christmas
snacks will be plentiful.
OPRA publishes a monthly newsletter. Write to
them at P.O. Box 30416, Midwest City, OK
_ 73140-3416 for information.
I
LETT
TO THE EDITO
Dear Sisters:
en I returned to Enid after the women's retreat 'at Osage Hills State Park, I felt compelled
to express my impressions of the weekend. I
wrote a poem, which I am now submitting to yo
for possible publication in Herland's newsletter. I
feel a personal need to make my own contri tion to the efforts that leading Okla. lesbians
are currently and courageously putting forth;
ly through such organized efforts can we ppre>ach gaining the human rights that are truly
0
I sincerely hope that you will publish this po
as I feel it will offer encouragement to thee
hr ve women in continuing to take social ris
as a necessary phase of our struggle to be f
I also feel the poem could potentially insp
more women to be honest about and proud
th ir lesbianism.
. Smith acted
e law? I think not. Yet, whe
to protect herself, the full measure of the 1 w
w s brought against her. As District Attorney,
. Macy, you have discretion as to what charges will be filed and who will be prosecuted. It
w s within your capacity to find that Sarah
Saith acted in self-defense and to refuse to file
any charges against her. You knew she had been
severely beaten on that occasion and throughout
r lationship
c
to your statement
e D · 0
, 11-15-85), "She h d a
· bed cap c ty to
derstan th nature
her acts." In spite of this knowledge, you fil
first degree murder charges against Sarah Smith.
en a reduction of the charge can't make your
actions just.
est assured, Mr. Macy, that we will not forget
Sarah Smith and the many other women like her
w
suffer repeated physical abuse. We are waitto see that those who commit violent cri es
ainst their wives (or other intimate partn rs)
arrested and prosecuted for their crimes.
e
also watching to see that women who must
ally use force to protect themselves are treatwith justice.
o
Thank you for your time and consideration
matter; I can hardly express how vital
feel it is for us to write, each contributing
h r own way to the fight against the social,
ues from which we all suffer. My individ
brand of bravery takes form in my willingness to
express my convictions regarding our plight, p
licly identifying myself as a proud Oklahoma lesbi n.
s· cerely,
Judy Palen, Enid
. Macy, the responsibility for the actions of
the prosecutor's office is yours. We are waiting
to see the laws equitably enforced for battered
w men.
r.
'
Pat Reaves, OKC
Dear Ed.tor and Patti Weaver:
apolo~e , to you, Patti, for "making light" of
met~ about which you obviously feel very
trongly ~- I was passing on a very old, private
jo e about fishing, and certainly never meant to
end you .
I
(An Open Letter to Robert Macy, District Att r-
ney of Oklahoma County)
'
November 16, 1985
. Macy:
Once again justice has been poorly served ·
Oklahoma County. On Nov. 15, Sarah Smith w
se tenced to prison for shooting and killing h r
sive husband.
By your own admission (The Daily Oklahomg,
11-15-85), Ms. Smith had been a victim of repe ted brutal attacks from Larry Smith. Police h d
been called repeatedly to the Smith house, yet
they had been unable or unwilling to stop
e
vi lence. Finally, on JUlle 17, after Larry Smi
h d severely beater her and threatened her
e
d the life of her infant child, Sarah Smith
took action to protect herself. Where were y ,
Mr. Macy, while Larry Smith was repeatedly ab ing Sarah Smith? Surely a beating severe eough to cause a miscarriage qualifies as a f elony assault. Did you prosecute Larry Smith fo
the crimes he committed against Sarah?
Sarah Smith afforded the full protection
f
I would like for you to consider this, though-it
s ms to me that, in your quest for a world in
·ch meat, fish or fowl is not eaten, let alone
"taken" by violence, that you have failed to give
me the very basic right to fish and to eat s ·d
fi h, meat and fowl, if I so choose. I resp ct
Y' ur beliefs in this area, but I think that it is
vital that my beliefs and practices be respected,
r at least tolerated. There seems to be a de pr philosophical question here than meat eat"
or fishing. I, too, am doing everything I can to
• ke the world less violent. I spend many hours
a month, working to make things happen for Berland, this newsletter being just one example.
c I don't want you to give up your beliefs, but
please don't put me down as a person because
mine happen to differ from yours. There's room
for us both, and we need all the help we can
aet.
ari
Hulsey, OKC
IB BNCHANT
CITY FANS
Gayle Marie's classical piano and voice training
are ·still evident in her marvelous piano accompaniments, which closely approximate the instrumentals that back her up on the record.
Gayle Marie made her fourth appearance in Oklahoma City Friday, November 22, 1985, and lived
p to all the claims that her fans had m de
bout her talents.
Oklahoma City's own Mary Reynolds opened for
Gayle Marie, and Mary and Elyse Angelo pro. ed guitar, vocal and bongo _additions for
several of her songs.
The distance between that first City perform
in 1980 at the Nightlife to 1985 at the
U itarian Church was reflected in the growth h r
vocal and composition skills have made. She
of the church's auditorium, "This is the type
place I have hoped to perform in here in
homa City." Later we laughed over the lack of
the varoom-varoom that was her backgro d
croup at the Fairgrounds.
s·
This was the first- concert for the Berland Colce,
its success h
it
since 0 C
•-n•""'"ing the Cola
rec ,
wll
lective that, indeed, there is an audience out
re t t will support our br ·
live women's
m ic to the area.
..
ging songs from her new album, "Double T
· t released on the lcebergg label, as well u
a ny favorites from "Night Rainbow," G
Marie seemed more relaxed, especially during
moments of reflection and sharing between so
S e did say that her giving up all sugar has
elped her health tremendously and that may
reflected in her general demeanor, which is 1
tense.
S e had a lot to say about her recent trip to
Burope, where she attended a women's music
tival in Holland. "There was every type of m
· represented at the festival, from opera to
' ' roll, but the most amazing thing was t t
ALL the women shared a dressing room. Th re
were no stars, everyone was treated as an equal,
"ch is what I thought women's music was
ed to do for us all," she said.
Going to Europe and recording another al
were two dreams she has had for a long time
d they have both come true in the past few
months.
S e shared a song-in-progress, written just th
morning of the concert, about the modern- ay
tr edy of bag ladies. It was a thrill to hear it
even more of a thrill to realize that
appears on a future album, all of this
ie ce can say, "We heard it when it was
ours old!"
e ever-popular "Hummingbird" from her
m has taken on new performance status,
accompanying story about a P.E. teach r's
ing
it for calesthenic
music for her fo
I
•
sr de class in Tuba City, Arizona. The Na U>
Id
loved it so much that they made her a ta e
of their rendition of it. "It came at a time
e
I was really low and it picked me up so that I
started to write them a thank you note, but, · stead, a song came out," she related. That s
w ·ch she now sings right after the hummmincbird song, is a beautiful companion piece. · S e
·d · s e receiv
such cute lett n fro
t ·
cl
d from other kids in the school.
1-~nitN~;~
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A group for Lesbian and gay Catholics
and their friends
MASS CELEBRATED TWICE MONTHLY
i"
i -·
___
for information call
Mary Ann
~
943-8249
,......i
1
iiERRY COCON, Representative
A.LWIWAMS
2401 N.W. 39 Expwy.
tf108
Okla. City, OK 73112
405-524-9716
A.L. •ILLIAMS IS A CO-OP Of INDEPE NDENT B~SINESIMEN AND "OMEH
MARUTINC LIFE INSURANCE AND OTHER FINANCIAL PR ODUCH
RrpreM"nt1n1 M&t.i.1ch.u1rtlt. IN!emnLIP' &: lde Comp.uly
Re11on.aJ Oft1C"H, Atlanta (dor 11•
405/848-5429
SHIR LEY M. HUNTER. M.A.
COUNSELING
PENN PARK OFFICE COMPLEX• SUITE 301
5001 N PENNSYLVANIA• OKLAHOMA CITY, OK 73112
LOCAL NBWS
••The Norman Women's Political Caucus will ho
elections for officers and at-large members t
7:30 p.m., Dec. 9, at 734 Westridge Terrace,
Norman. They invite any interested person to run
for one of 12 positions which comprise the steering committee. NWPC leaders advise that 1986 is
likely to be the most important legislative el ction year to occur for some time. Call Dixie
Jackson, 360-2903, Betty or Jerri Culpepper, 3214829, or Vickie White, 364-9847 for additio
information.
•snie Norman Chapter of the Association for
omen in Science promotes better employme t
opportunities for professional women.
onnan Network News is the · official newsletter
of the chapter. For copies or to submit articlee,
co tact Dr. Patricia A. Gilman, Editor, Dept. of
t
ogy;, OU, 455 W. Lindsey, Rm. 521,
73019, 405-325-3261.
•• e OU women's volleyball te
clinc
second place in the regular season and
second seed in the Big Eight Volley
Championship. The Sooners are 22-12 for the
se son, 7-2 in Big Eight play.
••A Christmas Carnival will benefit Oasis Gay
Comaunity Center and
one other ne
oraanization yet to be decided. The Carnival
be Dec. 16, from 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m., at Angles,
2117 N.W. 39, OKC. The cost is $3 for dr
sh ws, music, booths; also included are d r
raffles~
a
bake
sale and
prizes,
entertainment.
O is: The Community Center, is located at 21
. . 39, OKC, 405-525-2437. Hours are Mon.
urs., 7:00-11:00 p.m., and 7:00 p.m.-1:00 a.a.,
· ay and Saturday.
1985-86 OU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Creighton, 7:00 p.m.•
Texas A&M, 7:00 p.m.•
at New Mexico, 7:30 p.m.
Tulsa, 7:00 p.m.•
at Arkansas, 2:00 p.m.
at West Texas, 7:00 p.m.
at Miami New Year's Classic
Oral Roberts, 1:30 p.m. •
at Colorado, 5:45 p.m.
Iowa State, TBA•
at Kansas State, 7:30 p.m.
Nebraska, 5:30 p.m. •
at Kansas, TBA
Oklahoma State, 5:30 p.m. •
at Iowa State, TBA
Kansas State, 5:30 p.m. •
Colorado, 1:30 p.m. •
at Nebraska, 7:30 p.m.
Missouri, TBA•
Kansas, 7:00 p.m.•
at Oklahoma State, 2:00 p.m.
Big Eight First Round, Campus Sites
Big Eight Semifinals and Finals
Kansas City, Missouri
Dee.
Dee.
Dee.
Dee.
Dec.
Dec.
J
J
J
J
J
J
2
6
9
11
21
30
3-5
11
15
. 18
. 22
29
F
1
F b. 5
Feb. 8
eb. 11
Feb. 15
Feb. · 18
Feb. 22
Feb. 26
ch 2
ch 4
ch 6-8
•
me games
t Lloyd
oble Center,
oraan
Ir=:-;,:==l~-:==:-t
I
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to Psychi•try
,
'
1
LARRY M. PRATER, M. D.
I'
\
Office Hnurs
By Appointment
318 Chssrn Prnfrssinn•I Bldg.
1110 N . Cl•ssen Blvd.
Oklabom• City, Ok . 73106-6808
~---------
The Oasis Crisis Relief Fund provides emergency
ti
· g for OKC gay m
fun
women in crisis 'tuations.
P.O. BOX 10472
MIDWEST CITY, OK 73140
405-737-7 487
anno ces
the next meeting of the Collective
Open to the Public
Sunday, December 15, 1985, 6:30 p.a.
163U N.W. 19
blisher:
itor:
Typesetter:
A vertising:
Circulation:
Berland Sister Resources, Inc.
Elaine Barton
Marian Hulsey
Marian Hulsey, 521-8434
600
NATIONAL NBWS
Mter a two-month delay caused by pressure from
ri•ht-wing thinktanks and conservative lawmakers,
the Justice Department finally approved a
581,621 grant to the National Coalition Against
Domestic Violence. Patrick McGuigan of the Free
Congress Foundation, which had complained to Bel
Meese that NCADV was "pro-Lesbian, hard-core
feminists," called the decision to okay the f ding "a great disappointment." The award, originally set at $625,000, is earmarked for develo
m terials about domestic violence, creating
information and referral clearinghouse and pro "din technical assistance to organizations developing domestic violence programs. The reduction ·
due to the elimination of a proposed Speaker's
, ureau and some other revisions. The materi
preduced will now be distributed by the govemment rather than the Coalition, and the trai ·
programs have been shifted to the Federal
w
Bnforcement Training Center in Glynco, Geor · .
Sharon Parker, Executive Director of NCA V,
noted that the effort by conservative activists
to stop the award had helped to point out
w
much key segments of society need to be better
informed about the seriousness of domestic ·ole ce.
-- ashington Post
It seems that there will be no close encounters
of the Lesbian kind in the movie version of __..!!
Co or Purple. Syndicated entertainment columnist
Marilyn Beck revealed that the relationship
tween battered wife Celie and blues singer S
Avery will be presented as a "very strong frie dship with only the suggestion it could have b e
more, leaving it up to the audience to decide."
So, Steven Spielberg, the man who made a mo ·
about a relationship between a boy and an extraterrestrial, shies away from a story of two
women!
ternational military maps, and, say members of
the Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace
and Justice, "confirms what we have known all
along."
--Her Sa.y
Tile hour is growing late for the people of Big
untain. The Hopi and Navajo (who call themselves Din6)
ed the Joint Use Area in
northe tern
a for h dreds of years. In
1974, Conere"8 pueed
vajo-Hopi Land Setle•ent Act (Public Law 93-531), which authorized a 50-50 split of the land. 'Fhe law also ordered a 90% reduction of livestock herds, upon
ch the people depend for sustenance, and ordered an end to all building and land improveAccording to Mae Banally in an
me ts.
esasne Notes interview, in order to justify
livestock reduction, chemicals were sprayed over
the area during the 1960s to kill the vegetation,
a ing the land appear as if it were overgrazed.
Between 1979 and 1983, 100% of the uranium
mined in the United States came from Indian
1 s, according to Big Mountain News. In July,
1 ' , U.S. marshalls, followed by the military,
will go onto the ancestral homelands of 14-20,000
Din' (Navajo) people, to remove them forcibly.
M t of these traditional people have no desire
relocate. lfhe multinational corporations want
the uranium a~d the coal. To .ioin a letter-writi
paign or make contributions, contact Big
untain ' Legal Defense/Offense Committee, 124
S
Frari'cisco, Flagstaff, Arizona 86001, 602-74423.
1
--Pe
f'
.\
-Off Our Backs
(NOTH: Posted at Berland is a copy of rema s
made to Holly Near and Amy Bank by Alice
Walker on the movie of her book, printed in
Vo"ces, The Newsletter of Redwood Records Oultural & Educational Fund, No. 5, Fall 1985)
A new book is supporting what members of a
women's peace camp have said for almost two
years, namely that an army depot in upstate New
York does indeed hold nuclear warheads. The
book, Nuclear Battlefields: Global Links in · e
Arms Race, estimates that the Seneca Army Depot houses 1265 weapons, making it the sin le
largest site in the entire world. Written by two
members of the well-known Institue for Policy
Studies, the book is b ed on decl sified doc •
aents, Conere8sional hearing transcripts and . in-
KRISTINA S. MAREK
Attorney and Counselor at Law
•CONTRACTS
•INCORPORATIONS
•TITLE EXAMINATIONS
•WILLS/PROBATE
•FAMILY LAW
1137 N.W. 31st Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73118
405-521-8434, after 5:00 P.M.
••The Women's Studies Program at OU has announced its sprine semester course listings:
3023-1
1213-3
1213-5
3023-1
2120-1
3673-1
3840-1
4120-1
2613-1
5603-1
5603-1
4120-1
5120-1
2120-1
3733-1
5733-900
CLC
BNG
BNG
BNG
HIST
HIST
HIST
HIST
I
IFD
IFD
HR
soc
soc
soc
Roman Wome -Bmpke
Women Writers-20th C
Women in Literature
Feminist Lit in 20th C
Intro to Women's Studies
Women & Work in America
Gender-Modern China
Hist of Feminist Thought
Human Sexuality
Family Crises
Adv Family Development
Cont Feminist Thought
Berrie
Wallace
G. Davis
Wall ce
Affleck
Griswold
Ng
Lewis
Hayes
Walker
Walker
B. Davis
Intro to Women's Studies
Sociology of Women
Semin -Sex oles
Affleck
Affleck
e
are taught 'Y embers of
f c ty and include W.S.
t e
schol
HIST
IFD
IFD
4013-1
3430-1
1603-1
4603-900
Al't Since 1 50
Mod Amer Social History
orary Marriage
C
Altem te IJfe Styles
C w I
, Griswold
Lewis
Hayes
GIVB YOURSELF A PRBSBNT
THIS CHRISTMAS
MAKB A TAX-DBDUCTIBLB
DONATION TO
WB'RB HBRB FOR YOU!
end of the tax year is ap roaching. If you
e books, other items, cash, now is the time
to make your tax-deductible donation to Berland.
, readers, customers, ~pporters for yo
e erous contributions during 1985!
T
Impressions of a
etreat
I've just passed a time with a group at Osage;
These strong, leading women have written a page
Toi be added th thriving, reviving new book,
Layed open, bravely, to welcome a look
From a woman . who's ready to leave her own cage.
following course, a1...n~1JUK
's Stu ·es co 1!,
t e area.
ST
A
One impr~ssed
value for physical care;
;,:
Another $bowed methods to loosen the snare
Of our fWes' fear, as it's filtered inside;
One spoke out, boldly, from judicial side,
Advising us of legal strategy dares.
r--------------------~
One wed our races, conducting a flow
Of our group awareness, while one sister dared show
Us her soul-deep despak from a sisterless strife;•
Another, too, knew pain of a different life;
er golden tones urged gently not to say no.
o en's Stu es r·ea1mml!lll 18 er "t
courses officially listed by the Program
u
omen's Stu "es coursl!B.
mor-e information, contact them t 325-3481,
. 530 PbSC.
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27110 ~~
9tL.
(1105)
<9~. ~. <9~. 73120
842-6851
--------------------- ..
HER LAND SISTER RESOURCES. I NC.
.. . a specialty center for women
Resource Librar y
Monthly Newsletter
Educational Public Programs
Books. Music. Art Sales
Cultural Events
Referrals
Al ough few in number, these women comprise
All the courage required to forfeit disguise
'ich we lesbians are taught to dutifully don);
.Aa these women help us to refuse to be pawns,
Thek leading edge grants us permission to rise.
J
ch woman I spoke with showed me, in her way
The price she was paying to influence sway
Of the unthinking sheep who bleat, glibly, "Conform";
These masses who outline society's form
Cannot, with mere fetters, keep women at bay.
My hope is renewed by these folks at Osage;
These strong, leading women have written a page
To be added to thriving, reviving new book,
Layed open, bravely, to welcome a look
m a woman who's ready to leave her own cage.
-Judy Palen
SELECTED TITLES AVAILABLE FROM HERLAND
The Absence of the Dead. Trautmann. $8.95
Acainst Our Will. Brownmiller. $4.95
Against the Season. Rule. $7.95
Ai 't I a Woman. Hooks. $8.00
All True Lovers. Aldridge. $6.95
ateur City. Forrest. $7 .95
A bitious Women. Wilson. $7.95
A ons Women. Bernikow. $4.95
Ancient Mirrors of Womanhood. Stone. $10.95
Are You a Tarset? Fein. $8.95
Ariadne's Thread. Lifshind $6.95
Autobiography of Alice B. TO'klas. Stein. $3.95
Battered Wives; Martin. $3.95
Beebo Brinker. Bannon. $3.95
The Bell Jar. Plath. $3.95
Between Mothers & Daughters. Koppleman. $8.95
Between Ourselves. Payne. $8.95
Beyond God the Father. Daly. $6.95
The Birth Proiect. Chicago. $17.95
The Black and White of It. Shockley. $5.95
Bl ck Lesbians in White America. Cornwell. $7 .50
Black Lesbians: Annotated Bib. Roberts. $5.95
Th Black Unicorn. Lorde. $5.95
Bl d Sisters. Miner. $6.95
Bo es and Kim. Strongin. $5.50
·ded Lives. Piercy. $3.95
8reast Cancer: A Woman's Handbook. Dewar. $8.95
B wn Girl. Brownstones. Marshall. $7.95
B ning. Chambers. $6.95
The Burning Bed. McNulty. $3.95
The Burnton Widows. McConnell. $7 .95
But Some of Us Are Brave. Hull, ed. $9.95
Calyx: Bearing Witness Spr. 84. $4.50
The Cancer Journals. Lorde. $5.00
The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader. Lane. $5.95
Choices: A Novel About Lesbian Love. Toder. $6.95
Chosen Poems Old and New. Lorde. $5.95
c· cles on the Water. Piercy. $8.95
The Color Purple. Walker. $6.95
Conspiracy of Silence. Butler. $10.00
Contract with the World. Rule. $7 .95
C ·mes Against Women. Russell. $7.95
Cuentos: Stories by Latinas. Gomez. $7 .95
C ious Wine. Forrest. $7 .50
Crtherea's Breath. Aldridge. $6.95
D ce the Eagle to Sleep. Piercy. $2095
Daughter of Earth. Smedley. $6.95
Daughters of a Coral Dawn. Forrest. $7 .95
Daughters of Copper Woman. Cameron. $7.95
ert of the Heart. Rule. $3.95
Diving Deep and Surfacing. Christ. $6.25
Drawing Down the Moon. Alder. $10.95
The Dream of a Common Language. Rich. $4.95
Dreaming the Dark. Starhawk. $8.95
An Emergence of Green. Forrest. $7 .95
The Eye of the Child. Mueller. $7.95
B.ve to Eye: Portraits of Lesbians. JEB. $8.95
Fact of a Doorframe. Rich. $9.95
Fa ltline. Taylor. 16.95
Females Fight Back Acainst Rape! Henderson. S .95
e inity. Browmniller. 17.95
Feminist Theorists. Spender. $10.95
Feminist Theory. Hooks. $8.00
Fight Back! Delacoste. $13.95
Fighting Sexual Harassment. A.A.S.H. $3.95
Foltv. A Novel. Brady. $7.95
For Colored Girls.... Shange. $2.95
For Her Own Good. Ehrenreich. $5.95
For Nights Like This One. Birtha. $4. 75
Froa the Center: Feminist Bsy,ys. Lippard. $11.50
G . '• G "d .
.50
Gathering
riting. Cochran. S6.95
Getting Free.
· C hy. S'l.95
The Girl. Lesueur. $4.50
Give Me Your Good Ear. Brady. $4.50
Goddesses, Whores, Wives, Slaves. Pomeroy. $7 .95
Jonestown and Other Madness. Parker. $5.95
Journey to a Woman. Bannon. $3.95
Joy. of Lesbian Sex. Sisley. $12.95
Last Summer at Bluefish Cove. Chambers. $6.95
Latecomer. Aldridge. $5.00
Law of Return. Bloch. $7.95
Learning Our WaY. Bunch. $10.95
The Lesbian Community. Wolf. $4.95
Lesbian Crossroads. Baetz. $10.95
Lesbian Fiction. Bulkin. $8.95
Lesbian Health Matters! S.C.W.H.C. $4.75
l!.esbian Images. Rule. $6.95
The L·e sbian in Literature. Brier. $7.95
Lesbian Nation. Johnston. $9.95
Lesbian Nuns. ' Curb. $9.95
Lesbian Poetry. Bulkin. $10.95
The Lesbian Reader. covina. $7.95
Lesbian :Sex. Loulan. $9.95
Lesbian Studies. Cruikshank. $7 .95
LesbianAWoman. Martin. $3.95
Lesbian ''Writer: Claudia Scott. Scott. $4.50
Lesbiana. Grier. S5.00
Lifetime Guarantee. Bloch. $6.95
Long Wav Home. Jullion. $8.95
vers in the Present Afternoon. Fleming. $8.58
ving in the War Years. Moraga. $7.00
ving Women. Nomadic Sisters. $7 .95
a, Can I Be a Feminist? Hollander. $4.95
Madame Aurora. Aldridge. $7 .95
Magic Mommas, Trembling Sisters... Russ. $6.95
e Maimie Papers. Rosen. $7 .95
The Marquise & the Novice. Ramstetter. $4.95
Medicine Woman. Andrews. $6.95
The Mermaid and the Minotaur. Dinnerstein. $5.95
Misfortune's Friend. Aldridge. $7.95
Mohawk Trail. Brant. $5.95
Moll Cutpurse. Galford. $7 .95
Momma. Alta. $2.50
he Moon and the Virgin. Hall. $7 .50
he Moon is Always Female. Piercy. $5.95
Mother, Sister. Daughter. Lover. Clausen. $5.95
Mother Wit. Mariechild. $8.95
Motherpeace. Noble. $12.95
o
t,
vel. Miner. $5.95
Movement in Black. Parker. 15.95
. Dallowv. Woolf. S3.95
Mrs. Porter's Letter. McConnell. $6.95
Murder in the Collective. Wilson. $7 .95
Muse of the Violets. Vivien. $4.00
My Blue Heaven. Chambers. $4.95
M.y Mother's Body. Piercy. $7.95
The Nesting Place. Aldridge. $6.95
New Lesbian Writing. Cruikshank. $7 .95
New Lesbians. Galana. $4.95
New Our Bodies, Ourselves. Boston WHBC. $12.95
New Plays by Women. Latempa. $3.95
New Views of a Woman's Body. Gage. $9.95
Nice Jewish Girls. Beck. $8.95
o Fairy Godmothers. Katz. $8.95
Notebooks of Leni Clare... Boucher. $6.95
The Obsession. Chernin. $4.95
Odd Girl Out. Bannon. $3.95
Of Woman Born. Rich. $3.95
01 Dyke Tales. Lynch. $7 .95
On Being a Jewish Feminist. Heschel. $9.95
On Lies, Secrets and Silence. Rich. $5.95
S i
AKainst. God. R . S5.95
Orlando. Woolf. 14."
e Other Wom .
oppl81l81l. 18.95
Our Mothers'
utrhters· Arcana. $4.95
Right to Love. Vica. Sll.95
Ourselves and Our Children. Boston WHBC. Sll.95
Out from Under. Swallow. $8.95
Outlander. Rule. $6.95
Outrageous Acts & Everyday Rebellions/ Steinem. $7. 5
P.M.S. Norris. $3.95
Patience and Sarah. Miller. $2.50
Pioneer Woman. Stratton. $9.95
Pl ces of Interest to Women. Ferrari. $6.50
The Politics of Reality. Frye. $8.95
PornographY and Silence. Griffin. $6.50
Portrait of the Artist As a Young Woman. Hut. $13.50
The Price of Salt. Morgan. $7 .95
Pr. m. Taylor. $6.95
Prospering Woman. Ross. $3.95
e Lust. Daly. Sll.95
The Queen of Wands. Grahn. $5.95
Rape Survivor's Handbook. Ledray. $7.95
Raee: The Price of Coercive Sexuality. Clark. $7 .95
R na and Other Stories. Marshalla. $8.95
Re um to Lesbos. Taylor. $3.95
Reweaving the Web of Life. McAlister. $10.95
Ripening. Lesueur. $8.95
Rocking the Cradle. Hanscombe. $5.95
A oom of One's Own. Woolf. $2.95
Ru rlruit Jungle. Brown. $3.95
S
of the Earth. Wilson. $5.95
Sapphistry. Califia. $7 .95
The Second Sex. deBeauvoir. $5.95
Sex and Destiny. Greer. $8.95
Sex Variant Women in Literature. Foster. $8.95
Sexism and God-Talk. Ruether. $9.95
Sexual Politics. Millett. $3.95
Shadow on a Tightrope. Schoenfielder. $8.95
She Who: Graphic Book of Poems. Grahn. $6.00
Slaoppinc Bu Ladies. Rousseau. 19.95
Sinking/Stealing. Clausen. S7 .95
Sister Outsider. Lorde. S7.95
Sisterhood Is Global. Morgan. $12.95
Sisterhood Is Powerful. Morgan. $6.95
Sita. Millett. $2.95
Six of One. Brown. $3.95
Small Changes. Piercy. $3.50
The Sophie Horowitz Story. Schulman. $7 .95
Southern Discomfort. Brown. $3.95
The Spiral Dance. Starhawk. $10.95
Stepping Out of Line. Hughes. $12.95
Stone, Paper, Knife. Piercy. $5.95
A Studio of One's Own. Stokes. $7.95
Sudden Death. Brown. $3.95
Sunday's Women. Lewis. $3.95
Surfacing. Atwood. $3.50
Surviving Sexual Assault. Astin. $4.95
The Swashbuckler. Lynch. $7.95
This Bridge Called My Back. Moraga. $8.95
To the Cleveland Station. Douglas. ·$6.95
To the Lighthouse. Woolf. $4.95
Toothpick House. Lynch. $7 .95
Tottie. Aldridge. $6.95
Toward a Black Feminist Criticism. Smith. $2:50
Tosard a New Psychology of Women. Miller. $5.95
Toward a Recognition of .Androgyny.. Heilbrun. $4.95
True Life Adventure Stories I. Grahn. $6.95
True Life Adventure Storiesll. Grahn. $6.95
Union Sisters. Briskin. $12.95
Uses of the Erotic. Lorde. $2.00
Valley · of the Amazons. Roertge. $6.95
Vinrinia Woolf': Reader. Leaska. $10.95
Voices from the Shadows. Matthews. $8.95
Voices in the · t . McNaron. $6.95
Th Wandemouad. Ge art.
.95
Are
lll"t of One Another. Deming. $10.95
We Didn,t Have Much. Thomaws. $5.95
When Gdd Was a Woman. Stone. $6.95
Who Was That Masked Woman? Koertge. $6.95
Winter Passage. McDaniel. $6.95
With the Power of Each Breath. Connors. $9.95
A Woman. Aleramo. $6.95
Woman and Nature. Griffin. $6.50
A Woman Appeared to Me. Vivien. $5.00
oman Hating. Dworkin. $7.95
Woman in Sexist Society. Gornick. $4.95
A Woman is Talking to Death. Grahn. $2.50
Woman on the Edge of Time. Piercy. $2.95
Woman Warrior. Kingston. $3.95
Weman Who Owned the Shadows. Allen. $8.95
Womanspirit Rising. Christ. $8.50
W men and Madness. Chesler. $4.9,5
men and Male Violence. Schechter. $8.00
W men in the Shadows. Bannon. $3.95
men Who Kill. Jones. $7 .95
Women Who Loved Women. Corinne. $7.95
Th.e Women's Room. French. $4.50
The Work of a Common Woman. Grahn. $6.95
A World Without Men. Taylor. $3.95
The Yellow Wallpaper. Gilman. $3.95
The Young in One Another's Arms. Rule. $7.95
Y
in Struule.
lkin. 17.95
Zami: A New Spelling of M.y Name. Lorde. S7 .95
tll ·
This list represents only a portion of the books
we can order for you. If the book you want is
in stock at our distributor's, we can usually get
it in approximately two weeks.
BOOK ORDER FORM
Name.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Address~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
City_ _ _ _ _ _ __
State_ _ Zip_ __
HOLIDAY GIFTS: 1986 CALENDARS
Dressing Up: Photographs by Women, ed. by Kathy
Morris. Part feminist critique, part anthropological
survey, part photographic tour de force. $7.95
The Women Writers Desk Calendar, ed. by e. Goldman
Gill, M. Gilliland. Includes Ursula LeGuin, Joanna
Russ, Maya Angelou, Audre Lorde, Meridel LeSueur,
Annie Dillard, and more. $7 .95
Telephone~_,_~-z..~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In Praise of Women Artists, wall calendar.
Quan.
Contemporary Women Artists, datebook.
Title
Price
We'Moon Almanac, lunar, planetary guide.
$7.95
$6.95
$6.89
Everywoman's Almanac, features women and
reproductive choices, from the Women's Press, . 208
pages. $8.95
Sl.50 + .25 each addtl.
5.25% sales tax
TOTAL
Mail to:
Alice Walker Calendar, ed. by Alice Walker, $8.95
Sylvia Book of Days, Nicole Hollander, $7 .95
Mailorder
Berland Sister Resources, lnc.
1630 N.W. 19
Oklahoma City, OK 73106
Oeverly K. Evans, M.5.W.
527 N.W 23rd Streer
Oklahoma Ciry, OK 7310.3
(405) 521 · 8241
Woman's Daybook.
$9.95
Carry It On Peace
Workers. $6.95
Calendar,
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Cultural
These calendars are currently in stock at Berland.
~
Dr. Susan M. Andrew
CHl"Ol"lltACTIC l"HY51CIAN
ACUl"UNCTUlltE
';
I'
1
7717 E . 21ST ST .. SUITE B
TULSA. Oltl..AHOMA 7•129
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!.•t•> ••5·7077
.,ilurr
Phone 631 · 1546
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COMPREHENSIVE DENTISTRY
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OKLAHOMA CITY . OKLAHOMA 73109
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OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
MON THRU THUR. 6:00 PM· 12:00 MIDNIGHT
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS:
Rates: 1-20 words $2.50
21-30 words $3.50
[rnt~rr
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1307N.111. 2Bt~ !!>trrrt
@kla~oma
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THIS SPACE FOR RENT
1 time
1 time
FEMINIST HOUSEMATE WANTED to share home
in Norman near Lions Park. Prefer mid-life or
older womon. Call Phoenix at 360-2585.
ROOMATE(S) DESIRED to share near N.W. OKC
home. Leave message at 525-5691.
$10
write:
BERLAND SISTER RESOURCES, INC.
1630 N.W. 19th Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73106
-
BERLAND SISTER RESOURCES, I C.
1630 N.W. 19, Okla. City, 0 73106
The Oklahoma City chapter of the state Gay Political Caucus met last month and were told by
State Representative Rebecca Hamilton,
at
AIDS is a "disease that can change history."
Hamilton, the chair of the House Public He th
Committee, has .iust returned from a tour of the
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta where
"even the doctors are afraid. They say it could
be right up there with the great plagues of history," Hamilton said.
en asked about new legislation concerning t ·
sensitive sibject, Hamilton reported that altho h
there has been some talk about Rep. Bill Graves'
pushing a bill that would make AIDS tests m d tory for marriage licenses and with pregn cy
tests, she believes that no new legislation is
needed, at least in Oklahoma. "By the time l wa
set passed, they might work against the best · terests of those most concerned," she added.
Hamilton agrees that it is a very serious po lie
health problem but says that the State He th
Department is handling it. Although she believes
in educating the public about AIDS, she says ·
that if the gene~al population realizes the pote tial of the disease, it will become very sc ed.
d the "public is dangerous when scared." "Yo
scare people enough and they'll do anything," s e
remarked, "things 'they wouldn't think of doing if
they weren't scared."
T e best advice she had for swaying legislative
opinions was to make ourselves known as people,
persons to them. "Once they see that you, the
homosexuals, are real people, then maybe they
will be less likely to hurt you."
To have an effect on the Legislature, she ursed
attendees to "get involved with the campaign of
supportive candidates, to become faces, pe
to legislators and to learn the rules and how to
use the rules for one's own purposes."
The Caucus has a very effective lobbyist, Keith
Smith-. Anyo e who would lilc~ more informat io
about the orsanization should write: Oklahoma
Gay Political Caucus, P.O. Box 57
0 73157.
WINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION
AT BERLAND
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1985
10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
• all day stock reduction sale for last
minute holiday shoppers
• hot Wassail and refreshment treats and
foods of the season
Pot luck dinner in evening
• musical entertainment
• jugglers :nay be present; bad puns may
be exchanged
PSYCHI4 FAIR AT ROSE STATE COLLEGE
The Org~tion for Psychic Research Associates
is sponsiring a Psychic Fair, December 8, from
12:0:0 to 7:00 p.m. This Sunday event is a great
opportunity to get a psychic reading, buy Christmas gifts, enjoy some excellent lectures. The
event at the Student Union building at Rose
State is $2.50 admission per person.
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
5:00
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
"Crystals"a by Donna Burham
"Dreams" by Charlie Wright
"Astrology" by Gloria Star
"Graphoanalysis" by Martha Powell
"Basic Meditation" by Wilma Arnold
Readings will be available for astrology, psychic,
numerology, palmistry, reflexology, tarot, past
life, handwriting analysis, psychometry, I-Ching.
Booths will offer natural health products, astrology books and gifts, crystals, jewelry and astrological and metaphysical associations. -Christmas
snacks will be plentiful.
OPRA publishes a monthly newsletter. Write to
them at P.O. Box 30416, Midwest City, OK
_ 73140-3416 for information.
I
LETT
TO THE EDITO
Dear Sisters:
en I returned to Enid after the women's retreat 'at Osage Hills State Park, I felt compelled
to express my impressions of the weekend. I
wrote a poem, which I am now submitting to yo
for possible publication in Herland's newsletter. I
feel a personal need to make my own contri tion to the efforts that leading Okla. lesbians
are currently and courageously putting forth;
ly through such organized efforts can we ppre>ach gaining the human rights that are truly
0
I sincerely hope that you will publish this po
as I feel it will offer encouragement to thee
hr ve women in continuing to take social ris
as a necessary phase of our struggle to be f
I also feel the poem could potentially insp
more women to be honest about and proud
th ir lesbianism.
. Smith acted
e law? I think not. Yet, whe
to protect herself, the full measure of the 1 w
w s brought against her. As District Attorney,
. Macy, you have discretion as to what charges will be filed and who will be prosecuted. It
w s within your capacity to find that Sarah
Saith acted in self-defense and to refuse to file
any charges against her. You knew she had been
severely beaten on that occasion and throughout
r lationship
c
to your statement
e D · 0
, 11-15-85), "She h d a
· bed cap c ty to
derstan th nature
her acts." In spite of this knowledge, you fil
first degree murder charges against Sarah Smith.
en a reduction of the charge can't make your
actions just.
est assured, Mr. Macy, that we will not forget
Sarah Smith and the many other women like her
w
suffer repeated physical abuse. We are waitto see that those who commit violent cri es
ainst their wives (or other intimate partn rs)
arrested and prosecuted for their crimes.
e
also watching to see that women who must
ally use force to protect themselves are treatwith justice.
o
Thank you for your time and consideration
matter; I can hardly express how vital
feel it is for us to write, each contributing
h r own way to the fight against the social,
ues from which we all suffer. My individ
brand of bravery takes form in my willingness to
express my convictions regarding our plight, p
licly identifying myself as a proud Oklahoma lesbi n.
s· cerely,
Judy Palen, Enid
. Macy, the responsibility for the actions of
the prosecutor's office is yours. We are waiting
to see the laws equitably enforced for battered
w men.
r.
'
Pat Reaves, OKC
Dear Ed.tor and Patti Weaver:
apolo~e , to you, Patti, for "making light" of
met~ about which you obviously feel very
trongly ~- I was passing on a very old, private
jo e about fishing, and certainly never meant to
end you .
I
(An Open Letter to Robert Macy, District Att r-
ney of Oklahoma County)
'
November 16, 1985
. Macy:
Once again justice has been poorly served ·
Oklahoma County. On Nov. 15, Sarah Smith w
se tenced to prison for shooting and killing h r
sive husband.
By your own admission (The Daily Oklahomg,
11-15-85), Ms. Smith had been a victim of repe ted brutal attacks from Larry Smith. Police h d
been called repeatedly to the Smith house, yet
they had been unable or unwilling to stop
e
vi lence. Finally, on JUlle 17, after Larry Smi
h d severely beater her and threatened her
e
d the life of her infant child, Sarah Smith
took action to protect herself. Where were y ,
Mr. Macy, while Larry Smith was repeatedly ab ing Sarah Smith? Surely a beating severe eough to cause a miscarriage qualifies as a f elony assault. Did you prosecute Larry Smith fo
the crimes he committed against Sarah?
Sarah Smith afforded the full protection
f
I would like for you to consider this, though-it
s ms to me that, in your quest for a world in
·ch meat, fish or fowl is not eaten, let alone
"taken" by violence, that you have failed to give
me the very basic right to fish and to eat s ·d
fi h, meat and fowl, if I so choose. I resp ct
Y' ur beliefs in this area, but I think that it is
vital that my beliefs and practices be respected,
r at least tolerated. There seems to be a de pr philosophical question here than meat eat"
or fishing. I, too, am doing everything I can to
• ke the world less violent. I spend many hours
a month, working to make things happen for Berland, this newsletter being just one example.
c I don't want you to give up your beliefs, but
please don't put me down as a person because
mine happen to differ from yours. There's room
for us both, and we need all the help we can
aet.
ari
Hulsey, OKC
IB BNCHANT
CITY FANS
Gayle Marie's classical piano and voice training
are ·still evident in her marvelous piano accompaniments, which closely approximate the instrumentals that back her up on the record.
Gayle Marie made her fourth appearance in Oklahoma City Friday, November 22, 1985, and lived
p to all the claims that her fans had m de
bout her talents.
Oklahoma City's own Mary Reynolds opened for
Gayle Marie, and Mary and Elyse Angelo pro. ed guitar, vocal and bongo _additions for
several of her songs.
The distance between that first City perform
in 1980 at the Nightlife to 1985 at the
U itarian Church was reflected in the growth h r
vocal and composition skills have made. She
of the church's auditorium, "This is the type
place I have hoped to perform in here in
homa City." Later we laughed over the lack of
the varoom-varoom that was her backgro d
croup at the Fairgrounds.
s·
This was the first- concert for the Berland Colce,
its success h
it
since 0 C
•-n•""'"ing the Cola
rec ,
wll
lective that, indeed, there is an audience out
re t t will support our br ·
live women's
m ic to the area.
..
ging songs from her new album, "Double T
· t released on the lcebergg label, as well u
a ny favorites from "Night Rainbow," G
Marie seemed more relaxed, especially during
moments of reflection and sharing between so
S e did say that her giving up all sugar has
elped her health tremendously and that may
reflected in her general demeanor, which is 1
tense.
S e had a lot to say about her recent trip to
Burope, where she attended a women's music
tival in Holland. "There was every type of m
· represented at the festival, from opera to
' ' roll, but the most amazing thing was t t
ALL the women shared a dressing room. Th re
were no stars, everyone was treated as an equal,
"ch is what I thought women's music was
ed to do for us all," she said.
Going to Europe and recording another al
were two dreams she has had for a long time
d they have both come true in the past few
months.
S e shared a song-in-progress, written just th
morning of the concert, about the modern- ay
tr edy of bag ladies. It was a thrill to hear it
even more of a thrill to realize that
appears on a future album, all of this
ie ce can say, "We heard it when it was
ours old!"
e ever-popular "Hummingbird" from her
m has taken on new performance status,
accompanying story about a P.E. teach r's
ing
it for calesthenic
music for her fo
I
•
sr de class in Tuba City, Arizona. The Na U>
Id
loved it so much that they made her a ta e
of their rendition of it. "It came at a time
e
I was really low and it picked me up so that I
started to write them a thank you note, but, · stead, a song came out," she related. That s
w ·ch she now sings right after the hummmincbird song, is a beautiful companion piece. · S e
·d · s e receiv
such cute lett n fro
t ·
cl
d from other kids in the school.
1-~nitN~;~
i
I
I
I
I
A group for Lesbian and gay Catholics
and their friends
MASS CELEBRATED TWICE MONTHLY
i"
i -·
___
for information call
Mary Ann
~
943-8249
,......i
1
iiERRY COCON, Representative
A.LWIWAMS
2401 N.W. 39 Expwy.
tf108
Okla. City, OK 73112
405-524-9716
A.L. •ILLIAMS IS A CO-OP Of INDEPE NDENT B~SINESIMEN AND "OMEH
MARUTINC LIFE INSURANCE AND OTHER FINANCIAL PR ODUCH
RrpreM"nt1n1 M&t.i.1ch.u1rtlt. IN!emnLIP' &: lde Comp.uly
Re11on.aJ Oft1C"H, Atlanta (dor 11•
405/848-5429
SHIR LEY M. HUNTER. M.A.
COUNSELING
PENN PARK OFFICE COMPLEX• SUITE 301
5001 N PENNSYLVANIA• OKLAHOMA CITY, OK 73112
LOCAL NBWS
••The Norman Women's Political Caucus will ho
elections for officers and at-large members t
7:30 p.m., Dec. 9, at 734 Westridge Terrace,
Norman. They invite any interested person to run
for one of 12 positions which comprise the steering committee. NWPC leaders advise that 1986 is
likely to be the most important legislative el ction year to occur for some time. Call Dixie
Jackson, 360-2903, Betty or Jerri Culpepper, 3214829, or Vickie White, 364-9847 for additio
information.
•snie Norman Chapter of the Association for
omen in Science promotes better employme t
opportunities for professional women.
onnan Network News is the · official newsletter
of the chapter. For copies or to submit articlee,
co tact Dr. Patricia A. Gilman, Editor, Dept. of
t
ogy;, OU, 455 W. Lindsey, Rm. 521,
73019, 405-325-3261.
•• e OU women's volleyball te
clinc
second place in the regular season and
second seed in the Big Eight Volley
Championship. The Sooners are 22-12 for the
se son, 7-2 in Big Eight play.
••A Christmas Carnival will benefit Oasis Gay
Comaunity Center and
one other ne
oraanization yet to be decided. The Carnival
be Dec. 16, from 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m., at Angles,
2117 N.W. 39, OKC. The cost is $3 for dr
sh ws, music, booths; also included are d r
raffles~
a
bake
sale and
prizes,
entertainment.
O is: The Community Center, is located at 21
. . 39, OKC, 405-525-2437. Hours are Mon.
urs., 7:00-11:00 p.m., and 7:00 p.m.-1:00 a.a.,
· ay and Saturday.
1985-86 OU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Creighton, 7:00 p.m.•
Texas A&M, 7:00 p.m.•
at New Mexico, 7:30 p.m.
Tulsa, 7:00 p.m.•
at Arkansas, 2:00 p.m.
at West Texas, 7:00 p.m.
at Miami New Year's Classic
Oral Roberts, 1:30 p.m. •
at Colorado, 5:45 p.m.
Iowa State, TBA•
at Kansas State, 7:30 p.m.
Nebraska, 5:30 p.m. •
at Kansas, TBA
Oklahoma State, 5:30 p.m. •
at Iowa State, TBA
Kansas State, 5:30 p.m. •
Colorado, 1:30 p.m. •
at Nebraska, 7:30 p.m.
Missouri, TBA•
Kansas, 7:00 p.m.•
at Oklahoma State, 2:00 p.m.
Big Eight First Round, Campus Sites
Big Eight Semifinals and Finals
Kansas City, Missouri
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ch 2
ch 4
ch 6-8
•
me games
t Lloyd
oble Center,
oraan
Ir=:-;,:==l~-:==:-t
I
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to Psychi•try
,
'
1
LARRY M. PRATER, M. D.
I'
\
Office Hnurs
By Appointment
318 Chssrn Prnfrssinn•I Bldg.
1110 N . Cl•ssen Blvd.
Oklabom• City, Ok . 73106-6808
~---------
The Oasis Crisis Relief Fund provides emergency
ti
· g for OKC gay m
fun
women in crisis 'tuations.
P.O. BOX 10472
MIDWEST CITY, OK 73140
405-737-7 487
anno ces
the next meeting of the Collective
Open to the Public
Sunday, December 15, 1985, 6:30 p.a.
163U N.W. 19
blisher:
itor:
Typesetter:
A vertising:
Circulation:
Berland Sister Resources, Inc.
Elaine Barton
Marian Hulsey
Marian Hulsey, 521-8434
600
NATIONAL NBWS
Mter a two-month delay caused by pressure from
ri•ht-wing thinktanks and conservative lawmakers,
the Justice Department finally approved a
581,621 grant to the National Coalition Against
Domestic Violence. Patrick McGuigan of the Free
Congress Foundation, which had complained to Bel
Meese that NCADV was "pro-Lesbian, hard-core
feminists," called the decision to okay the f ding "a great disappointment." The award, originally set at $625,000, is earmarked for develo
m terials about domestic violence, creating
information and referral clearinghouse and pro "din technical assistance to organizations developing domestic violence programs. The reduction ·
due to the elimination of a proposed Speaker's
, ureau and some other revisions. The materi
preduced will now be distributed by the govemment rather than the Coalition, and the trai ·
programs have been shifted to the Federal
w
Bnforcement Training Center in Glynco, Geor · .
Sharon Parker, Executive Director of NCA V,
noted that the effort by conservative activists
to stop the award had helped to point out
w
much key segments of society need to be better
informed about the seriousness of domestic ·ole ce.
-- ashington Post
It seems that there will be no close encounters
of the Lesbian kind in the movie version of __..!!
Co or Purple. Syndicated entertainment columnist
Marilyn Beck revealed that the relationship
tween battered wife Celie and blues singer S
Avery will be presented as a "very strong frie dship with only the suggestion it could have b e
more, leaving it up to the audience to decide."
So, Steven Spielberg, the man who made a mo ·
about a relationship between a boy and an extraterrestrial, shies away from a story of two
women!
ternational military maps, and, say members of
the Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace
and Justice, "confirms what we have known all
along."
--Her Sa.y
Tile hour is growing late for the people of Big
untain. The Hopi and Navajo (who call themselves Din6)
ed the Joint Use Area in
northe tern
a for h dreds of years. In
1974, Conere"8 pueed
vajo-Hopi Land Setle•ent Act (Public Law 93-531), which authorized a 50-50 split of the land. 'Fhe law also ordered a 90% reduction of livestock herds, upon
ch the people depend for sustenance, and ordered an end to all building and land improveAccording to Mae Banally in an
me ts.
esasne Notes interview, in order to justify
livestock reduction, chemicals were sprayed over
the area during the 1960s to kill the vegetation,
a ing the land appear as if it were overgrazed.
Between 1979 and 1983, 100% of the uranium
mined in the United States came from Indian
1 s, according to Big Mountain News. In July,
1 ' , U.S. marshalls, followed by the military,
will go onto the ancestral homelands of 14-20,000
Din' (Navajo) people, to remove them forcibly.
M t of these traditional people have no desire
relocate. lfhe multinational corporations want
the uranium a~d the coal. To .ioin a letter-writi
paign or make contributions, contact Big
untain ' Legal Defense/Offense Committee, 124
S
Frari'cisco, Flagstaff, Arizona 86001, 602-74423.
1
--Pe
f'
.\
-Off Our Backs
(NOTH: Posted at Berland is a copy of rema s
made to Holly Near and Amy Bank by Alice
Walker on the movie of her book, printed in
Vo"ces, The Newsletter of Redwood Records Oultural & Educational Fund, No. 5, Fall 1985)
A new book is supporting what members of a
women's peace camp have said for almost two
years, namely that an army depot in upstate New
York does indeed hold nuclear warheads. The
book, Nuclear Battlefields: Global Links in · e
Arms Race, estimates that the Seneca Army Depot houses 1265 weapons, making it the sin le
largest site in the entire world. Written by two
members of the well-known Institue for Policy
Studies, the book is b ed on decl sified doc •
aents, Conere8sional hearing transcripts and . in-
KRISTINA S. MAREK
Attorney and Counselor at Law
•CONTRACTS
•INCORPORATIONS
•TITLE EXAMINATIONS
•WILLS/PROBATE
•FAMILY LAW
1137 N.W. 31st Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73118
405-521-8434, after 5:00 P.M.
••The Women's Studies Program at OU has announced its sprine semester course listings:
3023-1
1213-3
1213-5
3023-1
2120-1
3673-1
3840-1
4120-1
2613-1
5603-1
5603-1
4120-1
5120-1
2120-1
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CLC
BNG
BNG
BNG
HIST
HIST
HIST
HIST
I
IFD
IFD
HR
soc
soc
soc
Roman Wome -Bmpke
Women Writers-20th C
Women in Literature
Feminist Lit in 20th C
Intro to Women's Studies
Women & Work in America
Gender-Modern China
Hist of Feminist Thought
Human Sexuality
Family Crises
Adv Family Development
Cont Feminist Thought
Berrie
Wallace
G. Davis
Wall ce
Affleck
Griswold
Ng
Lewis
Hayes
Walker
Walker
B. Davis
Intro to Women's Studies
Sociology of Women
Semin -Sex oles
Affleck
Affleck
e
are taught 'Y embers of
f c ty and include W.S.
t e
schol
HIST
IFD
IFD
4013-1
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Al't Since 1 50
Mod Amer Social History
orary Marriage
C
Altem te IJfe Styles
C w I
, Griswold
Lewis
Hayes
GIVB YOURSELF A PRBSBNT
THIS CHRISTMAS
MAKB A TAX-DBDUCTIBLB
DONATION TO
WB'RB HBRB FOR YOU!
end of the tax year is ap roaching. If you
e books, other items, cash, now is the time
to make your tax-deductible donation to Berland.
, readers, customers, ~pporters for yo
e erous contributions during 1985!
T
Impressions of a
etreat
I've just passed a time with a group at Osage;
These strong, leading women have written a page
Toi be added th thriving, reviving new book,
Layed open, bravely, to welcome a look
From a woman . who's ready to leave her own cage.
following course, a1...n~1JUK
's Stu ·es co 1!,
t e area.
ST
A
One impr~ssed
value for physical care;
;,:
Another $bowed methods to loosen the snare
Of our fWes' fear, as it's filtered inside;
One spoke out, boldly, from judicial side,
Advising us of legal strategy dares.
r--------------------~
One wed our races, conducting a flow
Of our group awareness, while one sister dared show
Us her soul-deep despak from a sisterless strife;•
Another, too, knew pain of a different life;
er golden tones urged gently not to say no.
o en's Stu es r·ea1mml!lll 18 er "t
courses officially listed by the Program
u
omen's Stu "es coursl!B.
mor-e information, contact them t 325-3481,
. 530 PbSC.
I
I
I
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27110 ~~
9tL.
(1105)
<9~. ~. <9~. 73120
842-6851
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HER LAND SISTER RESOURCES. I NC.
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Resource Librar y
Monthly Newsletter
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Books. Music. Art Sales
Cultural Events
Referrals
Al ough few in number, these women comprise
All the courage required to forfeit disguise
'ich we lesbians are taught to dutifully don);
.Aa these women help us to refuse to be pawns,
Thek leading edge grants us permission to rise.
J
ch woman I spoke with showed me, in her way
The price she was paying to influence sway
Of the unthinking sheep who bleat, glibly, "Conform";
These masses who outline society's form
Cannot, with mere fetters, keep women at bay.
My hope is renewed by these folks at Osage;
These strong, leading women have written a page
To be added to thriving, reviving new book,
Layed open, bravely, to welcome a look
m a woman who's ready to leave her own cage.
-Judy Palen
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