HerlandVoice-1986-04-v2-no04_ocr.pdf
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- HerlandVoice-1986-04-v2-no04_ocr.pdf
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BERLAND SISTER RESOURCES, INC.
1630 NW 19, OKLAHOMA CITY, OK 73106
VOLUME II, NUMBER 4
APRIL, 1986
WHAT IS HOMOPHOBIA?
HOW ARE WOMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS
FECTED BY HOMOPHOBIA?
AF-
HOW ARE NON-LESBIAN WOMEN AFFECTED BY
HOMOPHOBIA?
HOW ARE
PHOBIA?
LESBIANS
AFFECTED BY HOMO-
WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT HOMOPHOBIA?
These questions, and more, will be addressed in
a series of three workshops facilitated by
Suzanne Pharr, director of the Arkansas Women's
Project.
SESSION I
Saturday, April 12, 1986
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Session I will be devoted to consciousness-raising
about homophobia and its impact on all women,
and the development of strategies for eliminating
personal and institutional homophobia. All women,
both non-lesbian and lesbian, interested in learning more about homophobia and its effects, are
encouraged to attend.
SESSION II
Sunday, April 13, 1986
8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Session II will provide the opportunity for lesbians to examine internalized homophobia and to
discuss the ways homophobia affects their lives.
SESSION III
Sunday, April 13, 1986
1:30 - 5:30 p.m.
In this workshop, participants will develop strategies for improving the lives of lesbians.
SESSIONS II AND III are open to lesbians only.
Name
---------------~
Address
--------------~
City_ _
_ __ __State_ _ Zip_ _ __
I plan to attend: Session I _
Session II__
Session III_
Please mail to:
Berland Sister Resources, Inc.
c/o Pat Reaves
2215 N. Douglas Ave.
Oklahoma City, OK 73106
~All
--------------------~
workshops will be held at the YWCA, 129
N.W. 5, Oklahoma City. For more information,
contact Pat Reaves, 525-8013, or Elaine Barton,
525-5691.
Funded by a grant from the Chicago Resource
Center to the Arkansas Women's Project and
Berland Sister Resources, Inc.
Early registration is encouraged, as space is limited.
CONCERT TO BENEFIT RAPE AWARENESS
Peggy Johnson, Mary Reynolds and Mary Black
will perform a benefit concert for the YWCA
_Crisis Intervention Services, Thursday, April 17,
1986, from 7:30-10:30 p.m., at Oklahoma City's
downtown YWCA, 129 N.W. 5. Parking is available.
Funds raised from the concert will support honoraria and travel for a speaker at the Rape
Awareness Rally, to be held in conjunction with
the Take Back the Night March.
Each year, educational and public awareness
events such as these provide thousands of women
with support and empowerment. Rape and violence is every woman and man's issue and your
involvement is encouraged during Rape Awareness
Week, May 11-17, 1986.
A donation of $3 is requested for the benefit
concert.
We encourage the exchange of information, personal opinions on issues of concern to the Oklahoma . women's community, and your stories and
experiences.
The editor reserves the right to edit and condense letters according to space limitations. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and signed
by the author(s). Include your address and phone
number. If you wish to be published anonymously,
indicate so, but include your name, etc., for our
information, in case the editor has questions.
Mail or deliver your letters to HSR, Inc., 1630
N.W. 19, Okla. City, OK 73106. Deadline is the
15th of each month.
A LBTIBR MS. DIDN'T PRINT
by Annie McCombs
(from Lesbian Bthics, Vol. III)
Dedication
I dedicate my letter to the memory of Cynthia Bnptrom, a
19-year-old Union Square San Francisco prostitute who, on or
about June 17, 1985, was bound, 1raa1ed and droned in a
bathtub onthe-.iob allesedly by a $72,000 a year Marin Coun·
ty, CA, banker named L. Arthur Byrd; Byrd also bad been
cbarsed · lut year with sel[llal harassment by two female bank
employees. The media reported that Bnptrom bad been warned
"not to allow the client to bind her." It also reported that this
·man had been arrested "on suspicion of murderins the prosti·
tote durins a bizarre sex fanta!Y (my empbuis). "• Cynthia Bns·
•trom joins Dorothy Stratton in the otherwise faceless and
namelea body count of our "disappeared"-altholllfh some of us
could add those we knew personally who didn't survive male
aupremacist eel[llal practices.
March 29, 1985
Dear Bditor of M!,. Mqazine:
1
I wu forced to drop out of hish achoo! because I wu •ay.
The atory is cluaic; the viciousness still stuns me. John Kennedy wu preaident. Aa a consequence, but not the only cost, I
!oat an education I wanted. The IOllll bu been permanent, like
much damqe is.
A ma.ior reason why the IOllll remained permanent is clua-bued
hierarchy. I underetand "poor" to mean that when my family
went on welfare, It wu an improvement. Unlike women published, quoted and ad.mi.red, "workins clus" bu been a coal,
both eluive and disablins. I personally underetand what poverty and lack of education mean for women.
You don't know bow many women who come from my reallty
have been uauainated because they were women; none of us
ever will. I do know that while poverty set them up, beins
bom a woman painted a tarset on them. And, while money or
education can and does help, neither suarantees a woman's
life. Theae alatere were YOWllf, usually teenqere, not always.
Many were not white. Some already bad kids. Some were pros·
titntes. I wu only lucky--1 atayed allve. They weren't so
lucky. Yon know?
If any of these dead women bad been luckier, abe mlsht have
read Mary Kay Blakely's article titled, "Is One Woman's Sexuallty Another Woman'• Pom0trraphy?" in Ms. April, 1985, like I
did. Then qain, some of 118 didn't read. Not atupid, not dlsln·
terested, just llllterate. Also, what we wanted wu somethins
to help us out. She misht lnatead have apent the Sl.75 on a
drink at The Study, a 4 a.m. breakfut at Pam Pam But, or
an ID Faro burrito. None of us were feminiats, then. But our
livea-and their deatha--are tersely why feminiam e:dsta for me
u a political practice. We're all in a lot of trouble if it does·
n't work. Murder and torture are male aupremacist ael[llal practices epidemically forced on women and children. What our
dead elatere tholllfht or hoped, we can't know; there le no record. We can sn- that they would rather be allve. I do know
that /or those women hideously tortured to death "for the
sex," there is no freedom of · apeech. No freedom. No speech.
No life. And, no credibility even in death. Other victims of
political repression are understood politically; it is a deathrisht. I mean, when a man is tortured to death anywhere, people see political pereecution; when the llllllle thins happens to
a "'oman the same people see sex.
Aa editore, you frame 11 make-believe question, puffins it up 1111
important by emblazonins the plain red cover of Ms. with onelnch-hish white letters focusins the word "sel[llality" dead-center. (My alternate title for Blakely'e work: "le One Man's Pornosraphy Another Woman's Life?") You, like the ACLU and
their phony lawsuit in Indianapolis, attempt to erlllle the harm,
the pomosraphy and the pomosraphers entirely. You frame
your question 1111 if to structure an .internecine feminist fisht.
You call it a "Philosophical Debatg." I say that women's risht
to our own lives is not debatable.
You allow the harm to continue unabated while so-called pro·
sex feminists pressure other women into acceptins male supremacist 88l[llal practices. This includes practices such 1111: The
slorification of the Marquis deSade; the protection and pursuit
of male privilese over other women; the exploitation of woll!i
en's personal sel[llal hi.stories complete with details of abuse.
If you think otherwise, your first responsibility is to fisure out
why you think it's OK for you to cost us our sisters (an also
our lives, our eel[llality).
Those of us who know what pomosraphy looks like up close,
know what it took to make It. We know how it's done; how
the editors lay it out cover to cover, reel to reel. We know
what to look for: name a sexual crime qainst a woman or a
child-we will show it back to you in the pom0trraphy sold 1111
aexual entertainment. We know how it works and what it does.
We know real names of real women in it and what they really
say about it. Some of 118 are those women.
You quote F.A.C.T.5 member Barbara Kerr, who Willi also quoted in the N.y. Native, Jan. 14-27, 1985, fanltins anti-pomosraphy activists because we "always talk about the body count.•
8y that, I 1r11ther, dead bodies don't count. Not mutilated or
brutalized ones either. Those alaters are the "disappeared" of
the women's movement. I will call out their names until the
day comes when sex means aomethlns et.e besides women's
dead bodies. I live for that day. On that day, I will be silent.
I will remember those sisters who have been permanently silenced. Then, I will thank those who chansed the world.
Notes
•0n fantasy: Andrea Dworkin'• AMICUS CURIAB brief filed in
aupport of the law qainst pomosraphy (co-authored with Cath·
arine A. MacKinnon, 7th Court of Appeals 1184-3147, Feb. 28,
1985, pp. 3-4): "The vocabulary of sexual fantasy often applied
to pom0trr11phy llll 11 •enre, le in fact the llllllfUase of prostitution where the act that a man wants done and pays to set
done le consistently referred to llll his 'fantasy,' 1111 if it never
happens in the real world. He soes to a prostitute and pays
her money so that •he will do what be tells her to do, and it
la this act that le called 'fantasy.'"
1
"say" then; "dyke" now; "lesbian" to you.
2
Henry Lee Lucllll likes to say that he did It "for the sex"
about his 360+ victhu, which include his 63-year-old ex-prostitute mother, who le now beins blamed for what he did to her
and the others (S.F. R111miner 10-28-34).
3
Materially, your editorial aidebar policy allowed you to sive
your aide of the pom0trr11phy qneeiion 6l inches more copy;
the parenthetical reference polntere refer to your side 30%
aore often; the number of eidebar voices run 2-1 in your favor in 3 out of 5 cues. Only Blakely knows what you did to
her article.
4
This practice became undeniable in 11 clus on lesbian-feminiAI; one atndent's roal Willi to deatroy aerious Inquiry while
creatiq 11 false conacionm--raieins eituation wherein she
could conaume live pomOlfl'llphy, i.e., U.teni.ns to "sexual hi.stories.•
5
F.A.C.T. le 11 irmall, elite croup of leftiat-profeaional types
orsanized only to obatruct other women's attempts to have an
anti-porn0trr11phy civil ria'hts law llll written by Dworkin/MacKinnon. (Your editorial sambit turnins this tiny croup into
half of the women's movement is 11 fraud.)
NEWS SHORTS
Using United Way's own 1984 statistics on nationwide allocations for Girl's Clubs, Boy's Clubs,
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts, Margaret Gates,
executive director of Girl's Clubs of America,
pointed out that boys' programs received $2.38
for every $1 for ·girls. The growth of Women's
Funds, from four to 27 in the past six years, ·has
raised consciousness at local United Ways. A
check of their recent allocations shows that battered women's shelters are finally beginning to
receive funding.
--excerpts, Marge Wyngaarden, New Directions
for Women, Vol. 15, No. 1, p. 8
Despite advances, "women remain concentrated in
'female intensive' occupations--jobs that have 60%
or more · women," according to a recent report
froin the Census Bureau. The leading occupation
for women was still that of secretary, followed
by elementary school teacher, bookkeeper, cashier and office clerk, most of which are relatively
low-paying jobs. The report showed that there is
still a large gap in income between men and
women holding the same jobs. Among men in professional speciality jobs, medium earnings were
$29,550 in 1983, compared with $19,200 for women in the same positions. For production craft
and repair occupations, the medium pay for men
was $21,520 compared with $13,250 for women.
In.. all ·ma.ior job groups, the earnings of women
working full-time were only about 2/3 of men's
earnings.
--from New Directions for Women
HERLAND COFFEEHOUSE
presents
LADONNA
OSBORN
.· · for your entertainment
Friday, April 25, 1986
8:00 p.m.
Herland Sister Resources, Inc.
1630 N.W. 19, OKC
At Greenham Common, there are rumors of a sinister kind of crowd control. A Canadian Broadcasting Corporation TV documentary about the
peace camp at the base suggested that the women there are being "zapped" by microwave radiation. Many of them have experiencd symptoms
associated with such radiation, including drowsiness, headaches and ringing of . the ears, as well
as sev.ere menstrual disorders, vomiting and sunburn. The women were initially reluctant to publicize these effects, since the British media seizes on every opportunity to portray them as "hysterical." But, though there is no proof that they
are being deliberately "zapped"--a military base
puts out all kinds of radio emissions--there is
some evidence that the · base's disc cone antennas may be · so aligned that they beam energy at
the women~
--Maria Margaronis, Nuclear Times, March/ April,
1986
"Torch Song Trilogy" opened to great critical
acclaim in London last fall, but, because of the
customs crackdown, copies of the play cannot be
imported into the country. The ban is so strict
that customs officers seized 16 autographed play
scripts which author Harvey Fierstein sent to the
London cast and stage crew as opening night
gifts.
In February, 1985, the shipment to Benton Ross,
New Zealand's largest importer of lesbian and
gay books, was impounded. Thirteen Naiad Press
titles were seized, as well as Lesbian Sex from
Spinster's Ink.
In Canada, The Joy of Gay Sex recently joined
hundreds of other books and magazines on the
"customs banned books list." So far, The Joy of
Lesbian Sex and The Joy of Sex are not on the
list, but the former appears to be threatened. A
women's bookstore in Vancouver has reported
that copies of the book have mysteriously not
arrived when ordered. The threat is especially
worrying in Canada, where approximately 80% of
all gay and lesbian publications are imported
from the U.S.
--excerpts, June Thomas, Off Our Backs, Vol.
XVI, No. 2, p. 5
I i 11.".ppoinlmrnt OOnl11'
1403' 325·832 .J
1301
~.
m. :!Hth ~trrrt
«lklahoma U: il!J, (llklahoma i31D6
405/848-5429
SH IRL EY M. HUNTER, M.A.
COUNSELING
PENN PARK OFFICE COMPLEX• SUITE 301
, 5001 N PENNSYLVANIA• OKLAHOMA CITY, OK 73112
NAT'L WOMEN'S MUSIC FESTIVAL COMING UP
FAMILY VIOLENCE & CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY
The National Women's Music Festival will be
held May 30-June l, in Bloomington, Indiana.
Featuring main stage performers Pat Parker,
Debbie Fier, Linda Moakes, Chris Williamson &
Band, the Wallflower Order, Alix Dobkin, Sue
Fink, Deidre McCalla, the Robin Flower Band and
the NWMF Chamber Ensemble, this year's festival promises all the exhiliration of the tradition
it has established.
Bright Sky will present the first statewide conference on Family Violence and Chemical Dependency, April 17-19, 1986, at the Excelsior Hotel,
616 W. 17, Tulsa.
Other programs include spirituality, writers and
music industry conferences, series for children,
older women and on women's classical music. In
addition, festival favorites, the performer showcases, coffeehouses/open mikes, general workshops and visual arts exhibits, tradeswomen's
area, and the traditional dance will fill every
minute of the weekend.
Write Bright Sky, 1508 S. Denver, Tulsa, OK
74119, for additional information.
Preregistration must be postmarked by April 30,
1986, for reduced rates. A full pass is $67. For
specific programming and registration information,
write
NWMF/WIA,
Inc.,
P.O.
Box 5217,
Bloomington, IN 47402.
SOUTHERN WOMEN'S MUSIC & COMEDY FEST.
The Southern Women's Music & Comedy Festival
will be held May 23-26, Memorial Day weekend,
in the northeast Georgia mountains, 80 miles
north of Atlanta. Performers include Holly Near,
Teresa Trull, Alix Dobkin, Mary Watkins, Beth
York, Deidre McCalla, Karen McCay, Gayle
Marie, Melissa, Hunter Davis, The Washington
Sisters and Adrienne Torf.
Others on the program are comics Linda Moaks,
Lori Noelle, Pici, Lynn Lavner, Jan Oxenberg and
Robin Tyler; speakers Eleanor Smeal, Kate
Millett, Rosemary Curb, Susan McGreivy and
Margaret Sloan-Hunter. A film festival, dances,
crafts and games are also planned.
Write SWMCF, 13514 Hart St., Van Nuys, CA
91405, with SASE, or call 818-904-9495 for information.
WOMEN
LOVE
Conference topics include the relationship between family violence and chemical dependency,
profiles of the abuser and the chemically dependent, and treatment approaches/ community solutions.
CHILD SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION
The Women's Resource Center of Norman is
sponsoring a Prevention of Child Sexual Assault
workshop on April 11, 1986. The main presenter,
Steve Kreidler, executive director of Big
Brothers/Big Sisters of Cleveland County, has
helped the agency develop a national reputation
for interviewing and screening of potential volunteers.
Dr. Terri Gallmeier, director of the Office of
Child Abuse Prevention, Oklahoma State Department of Health Guidance Services, will provide
the keynote address.
For more information, contact Karen Carlson at
364-9424.
announces
the next meeting of the Collective
Open to the Public
Sunday, April 6, 1986, 6:30 p.m.
1630 N.W. 19
HAPPY HOUR
M-F, 4-6, Sat. 10-2
2 for 1 Cash & Carry
tissue wrapped
WHO
"TC>C>
Be!.'Yc:>~d.
c::.t. i -v-~
R.~ 1 C3.. t. i C>~S h i : P S
Ad.ct i
new group forming for Lesbian women
Call Kay Killgore
524·1062
t. kreppf i
MUCH
floral de1ign 1tudio
528-8580
2426 clossen boulevard •oklohomo city oklohocno 73106
Publisher:
Editor:
Typesetter:
Advertising:
Circulation:
fj
P,
Berland Sister Resources, Inc.
Elaine Barton
Marian Hulsey
Marian Hulsey, 521-8434
600
IT'S AVAILABLE
••The Oklahoma Religious Coalition for Abortion
Rights publishes a bi-monthly newsletter full of
national and local news, updates on clinic violence, legislative reports and vote summaries,
and programming activities.
Mary McAnally, state coordinator fo ORCAR,
writes, "1986 promises to be full of more attempts tQ limit our religious and reproductive
freedoms, sometimes using economics as a scapegoat." Fqr more information, write ORCAR, P.O.
Box 50193, Tulsa, OK 74150, 918-587-1626.
••Lesbian Friendship Club for women over 50 and
women interested in older women. A warm, reliable and caring service. Nationwide. IDs and
unmarked envelopes assure confidentiality. Send
SASE to Golden Threads, P.O. Box 2416, Quincy,
MA 02139
--from Broomstick
••UP & COMING newsletter for women. Subscriptions are $4.50 for six months. Write them at
P.O. Box 718, Fayetteville, · Arkansas 72702 . .
••The Older Women's League (OWL) has launched
a national women's pension literacy campaign to
help women understand basic pension concepts
and urge them to plan for the future. A free
OWL publication, Special Edition on Women and
Pensions, explains basic planning, various aspects
of coverage, as well as important pitalls. Write
OWL, Pension Project, 1325 G. St., N.W., Lower
Level, Washington, D.C. 20005.
••If you are planning to come near the glllf
coast this next year or so, you may wish to stay
at the Naiad Press house at the Gulf of Mexico.
Through the generosity of one of their supporters, they are able to have this place and · to
make it available to any and all of the people
they work with in any capac;ity--bookstore person. nel, writers of future books they may publish,
artists, illustrators, distributors, other publishers
with like publishing programs, etc. What this will
involve is a free place to stay without any rental or utility costs, so that the expense for staying is iust food, transportation (if you fly, you
will need a rental vehicle as this is very rural
north Florida with nothing resembling public
transportation). Availability is simply a matter of
applying by writing or telephoning and giving the
long weekend or one-week period you would like
to spend at the beach house. There is a detailed
list of information about the place, plus a list of
things that cannot be done there. The house sits
facing the Gulf of Mexico, a few moment's
casual stroll to the water, with the activities
most highly recommended going shelling, walking
the beach, fishing, watching the sunrise and
sunset, sitting on the screened-in porch.
For
company, there are sea birds and shore life, plus
whoever you bring with you. Up to four women
may stay comfortably. Write Barbara Grier and
Donna McBride, Naiad Press, P.O. Box 10543,
Tallahassee, FL 32302, or call 904-539-9322 for
more information.
.. "Everylesbian's Guide to Colleges and Universities." If you are interested in contributing or
helping organize a guide for lesbian students to
help them find out where they might find supportive f acuity, lesbian courses, an accepting environment, even Lesbian Studies, contact Clare
Bright, Box 64, Mankao State University,
Mankato, MN 56001.
--from Matrices
••Applications are being accepted for the 3rd
National Festival of ·Women's Theatre in Santa
Crµz, CA, , September 18, 1986. Performances,
films, lectures, discussion groups, workshops, play .
readings, cabaret, stand-up comedy and poetry
reading will be a part of the festival. Works
written by women and with casts in which at
least half the actors are women will be considered. Requests must be made in writing and received by. May 1. Deadline for completed applications is May 15. Write NFWT, P.O. Box 1222,
Santa Cruz, CA 95061.
..Harpies Monthly, a woman's newsletter, is currently seeking submissions for a spring issue.
Articles and short stories should not exceed 3500
words. Open to topic suggestions. Poetry should
not exceed 40 lines. Send SASE for free copy to
Harpies Monthly, 701 A. Shotwell, .San Francisco,
CA 94110-2611. Payment in contributors copies.
.."Coming Out to Your Parents," a 16-page booklet for those considering coming out to parents,
is published by Philadelphia Parents of Gays. It
identifies six stages most parents go through
when they learn of their child's sexual orientation. For free single copy, send SASE to Parents
of Gays, P.O. Box 15711, Philadelphia, PA 19103,.
(Additional copies are 25¢ each. $20 per 100, includes postage.)
--from Matrices
KRISTINA S. MAREK
Attorney
and
Counselor at Law
11.37 N.W • .31st Street
Oklahoma City, OK 731l8
405-.521-8434, after .5:00 P.M.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
BERLAND SISTER RESOURCES, INC.
December 31, 1985
ASSETS
Current Assets:
Cash on hand and in bank
Inventories
$937 .00
874.00
$1811.00
r--------,
I
I
I
II
Oeverly K. Evans, M.5.W.
I
IL.::_________ Ij
1010 NW 45
Oklahoma City
521-8241
LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE
Current Liabilities:
Sales tax payable
$148.00
Fund Balance
1663.00
$1811.00
STATEMENT OF SUPPORT, REVENUE AND
EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE
SUPPORT
$1197.00
Grants and contributions
Donated services, matls.
2979.00
$4176.00
REVENUES
Dues, memberships
Service programs
Gross profit from sales
Sale, adv., newsltr.
EXPENSES
Administrative, gen.
Program services
Operating exp., center
Newsletter, publcs.
$1425.00
1655.00
1741.00
743.00
$9740.00
Loral C. Reeves, C.P.A.
10 I 4 Cedardale Drive
Oklahoma City, OK 7.3127
$ 989.00
3767.00
1631.00
1690.00
$8077.00
405 / 495· l 094
- - - - - -individuals • couples • groups Net excess of revenue over
expenses
$1633.00
Helen Holgate
Fund Balance • Jan. l, 1985
Fund Balance, Dec. 31, 1985
Certified Alcoholism & Drug Abuse
Intervention
Counselor
Crisis Counseling
Families
Adult Children of Alcoholics
$1663.00
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN FINANCIAL
POSITION
SOURCES OF FUNDS
Funds from operations:
Excess of revenues over
expenses
$1663.00
APPLICATION OF FUNDS
Increase in working cap. $1663.00
·--------.
I
I
Telephone 40' 232·'4') or 272 ·715)
I
t
Puctice limited
to Psychbtry
'
LARRY M. PRATER,M.D.
t
Continued on Page 7
405/ 366-0923-
Office Hnurs
By Appointment
SIS Classen Prnfessinn•I Bids
1110 N. Cl21sen Blvd.
.
Oklahoma City, Ok . 7H06·6808
~---------
J
ANALYSIS OF CHANGES IN WORKING CAPITAL
12-31-85
Current assets:
Cash
Inventories
$ 937
874
$1811
Current liabilities:
· Sales tax payable
. ; i ~~ :;_
Working Capital
Inc.LDec.
1-1-85
$ 937
874
$1811
'~
..
j·
.,.
Working capital
148
148
$1663
$16.~3
<
''
Books
Music
Posters
$3354
$1162
$27
Cost of
Sales
2352
736
Gross
profit
$1002
$ 426
Sales
f '
Consignment
$27
Other
Adm. &
Gen.
~
Performers fees
Accounting
Supplies
Postage, shipping
Rent
'. Insurance
Printing
Utilities
Miscellaneous
Program
Services
Total
$380
$369
$5292
190
273
3551
$190
$ 96
$1741
SCHEDULE OF EXPENSES
~-
'
•· SCHEDULE OF GROSS PROFIT FROM BOOKSTORE SALES
" ,.
I.
Bkstr. Op.
Exp.
Nwsltr.
Pubis.
Total
$1043
$270
285
170
2323
65
. 366
$1043
270
2608
953
1836
158
1072
131
$ 718
$1500
158
100
131
6
$989 ·
6
$3767
,--;;~i;(Y~;c-l
I
i
i
I
I
I
A eroup for L~sbian and 18Y Catholics
and their friends
MASS CELEBRATED TWICE MONTHLY
$1631
$1690
$8077
·'
CASSIA
MEALOR,
524-3017
1820 N.W. 30
M.S.
COUPLES
LESBIAN ISSUES
Sliding Fee Scale
Oklahoma City
for information call
Mary Ann
i · ~ ......----·~9·4-3-M8N24_9_
~
1-..._..~
--~~
THIS SP ACE FOR ,RENT·
· $10
CENTER HOURS:
s ·aturda,Ys 10:00 a.m. . 6:00 p.m.
Sundays,
1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
write:
~ '.
HERL.AND SISTER RBSOURCBS, INC.
1630 N.W. 19th Street
Oklahoa• City, OK '13106
MAY
ROBBERS
2.-4,
CAVE
1986
STATE
PARK
HAWKINS & DELEAR DOING WHAT THEY DO BEST!!
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Assure yourself a seat at the Robbers Cave
concert, as well as a place at the exciting
weekend retreat by sending in your
non-refundable S15 registration fee TODAY. The
camp has limited facilities, so get your spot
reserved early.
SPRING FESTIVAL RETREAT FOR WOMEN
REGISTRATION
Name(s)
Address
City
State_Zip
Telephone(s)
Send me scholarship information.
=Send me information about sponsorship.
Deadline. for preregistration: April 15, 1986.
(Preregistration fee is nonrefundable.)
Mail this form and your check for $15 per
person to:
I;ferland Sister Resources, Inc.
c/o Kris Marek
1137 N.W. 31
Oklahoma City. OK 73118
.
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