[Clipping: Building A Powerhouse: Fund-raising prowess, experienced leadership earn Dallas gays national clout] Part: 1 of 4
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Sunday
Sports Day
KeyWest
Rangers win third straight over Jays, 107
Travel, Section G
Section E
She Dallas illorniug
Texas’ Leading Newspaper
Dallas, Texas, Sunday, July 11, 1993
$1.25
32 Sections
H
© 1993, The Dallas Morning News
Clinton reaffirms U.S
Youthful
messenger
support of South Korea
IB
16A
The Dallas Morning News: Karen Stallwood
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Floods show rivers
are difficult to tame
Billions in damage cited; more rain likely
Building A Powerhouse
Fund'raising prowess, experienced leadership earn Dallas gays national clout
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Tough rules
for clean air
loom for city
Iraq blocks
U»N. action
at missile site
Where visitors may
opt for easy or busy
Patti Wetzel struggles
with reality of HIV
Ozone levels may force
sweeping changes in ’96
U.S. raises possibility
of further use of force
Mostly sunny
High 95, low 75
Details on Page 38A
Associated Press
storms brought 7 inches of rain to the
area, flooding Turkey Creek near the
city’s downtown.
Associated Press
Missouri National Guardsmen team with Amish residents of
Canton, Mo., on Saturday to load up sandbags that will be
shipped to the city’s levee to keep floodwaters at bay.
Movies. . . . 2-5C
National......
political organization, whose various
Dallas fund-raising activities last
year raised $300,000 for different
causes and charities.
The club is nearly as social as it is
Korean soldiers that is surrounded
on three sides by North Korea, and
By Terry Box
Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News
If the Dallas area fails to reduce
air pollution by 1996, new regula-
tions could be imposed on a wide
range of items and activities —
from dry cleaners and house paint
to lawn mowers and outboard boat
motors.
Those regulations would be ac-
companied by a clean-air plan that
would force motorists to have their
vehicles’ emissions systems in-
spected every two years at state-con-
trolled, centralized stations.
The regulations could restrict
when people mow their lawns, re-
quire some emissions controls for
boats and off-road motorcycles and
even force people into car pools, say
officials familiar with the plan.
None of the controls has been ap-
proved. They are being considered
only as options for a contingency
plan that would go into effect auto-
matically if the area doesn’t reduce
its ozone level by 15 percent in the
Please see STRICT on Page 25A.
J
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Editorials. . . 2J
Homes. . . Sec.K
Horoscope. . . 4F
International. . .
. . . 19A, 22A, 23A
Letters. . . . 3-4J
.-SB Iff
J-
Cowboys face many pre-camp questions
Nicklaus takes lead in U.S. Senior Open
Section B
■ Reporter’s notebook.
Ronald Reagan did when he visited
a fortified bunker one-half mile
from the border in November 1983.
■ Flood impact statistics.
■ Heat pummels East.
Gay, lesbian voices In Dallas ____________
A look at Dallas’ gay and lesbian community through some of its leading
voices. Today, Page 1F.
J
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By Delia M. Rios
Stall Writer of The Dallas Morning News
f'| he Dallas-Fort Worth Federal
Club will gather on the 27th
JL floor of the Loews Anatole
hotel this month for a quarterly
meeting.
It will be a typical Dallas affair
with a morning issues program and a
nationally prominent luncheon
speaker.
The club conducts its business
the way most Dallas civic
organizations do. Its 170 members,
savvy and sophisticated, wear
business suits and dresses.
Membership costs $1,200 a year. It is
the major dcnor club for a national
Business owners survey flood damage to
their shops along Southwest Boulevard in
Kansas City, Mo., on Saturday. Overnight
-----------------------------------------------------:-------------------------------
vessel.
In recent years, military inci-
dents have slackened considerably.
The most recent one took place in
May 1992 when three North Korean
soldiers were killed and two South
Koreans were wounded after North
a walk to within just feet of the de- Please see CLINTON on Page 16A.
26A
27A
38 A
this before,” said Mr. Crawford, a
towboat captain who heads a river
commerce industry group. 'T’ve
never heard of anything like this
before.”
The waters of the upper Missis-
sippi and parts of the Missouri are
expected to drown records set in
1973 — that were supposed to stand
for a century. They have poked
holes in the vast water-control sys-
tem engineers spent decades build-
“I’ve never seen anything like Please see SCOPE on Page 26A.
gay Dallas.
The men and women who will
meet at the Anatole have played a
significant part in earning gay
Dallas a national reputation. It is a
political. The members, mostly from reputation built on more than a
Dallas, are Republicans and
Democrats. There are more men
than women. Most members are in
their 30s and 40s. There are doctors,
lawyers, accountants, Realtors and
entrepreneurs among them.
They are a \jrfual Who’s Who of
■ X
By Jeffrey Weiss
Stall Writer of The Dallas Morning News
STE. GENEVIEVE, Mo. — For
hundreds of miles, the upper Missis- ■ Complete weather,
sippi River rolls over farmlands
and living rooms, proving what the
towboat captains never forget: Old
Man River still has a wild heart.
“The Mississippi was never a
tame river,” said Buddy Crawford,
whose life on the Mississippi started
24 years ago as a deckhand.
Although floods are an accepted,
if unwelcome, fact of life for many
on the river, this flood of the upper
Mississippi and Missouri rivers is
an eye-opener.
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73
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INSIDE_________
Heavy costs_______
Both the accuser and the
accused face high stakes when
sexual harassment suits go to
court. Business, Page 1H.
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Sunset cruise in Key West
By Nora Boustany
Washington Post
BAGHDAD, Iraq — A U.N. team
sought Iraqi cooperation Saturday
night with its mission of sealing
missile equipment at test sites near
Baghdad but apparently failed to
win an immediate go-ahead.
The sealing was ordered by U.N.
officials in New York as an interim
measure in the face of Baghdad’s re-
sistance to having camera monitors
installed at the test sites to guaran-
tee they are not used.
The Clinton administration has
warned that, should Iraq fail to co-
operate, the United Nations may
again resort to force against Presi-
dent Saddam Hussein’s govern-
ment.
U.N. inspectors, who had pre-
dicted that Baghdad would comply,
came out grim-faced from a meeting
with their Iraqi counterparts and
said they would consult with their
decade of skillful organizing,
leadership and filnd raising that has
produced one of the most vibrant
gay communities in the country.
Gay Dallas boasts its own
community center, credit union,
counseling service, AIDS Resource
Center, business district, newspaper
and the nation’s largest gay and
lesbian church. Gay leaders from
San Francisco to New York look to
Dallas as a model.
But it is the gay community’s
money that has bought it influence,
and with influence, power.
When David Mixner, a senior
adviser to Bill Clinton’s campaign on
gay and lesbian issues, needed a
receptive audience for a speech
orchestrated to take the heat off the
White House for appearing to waver
on the gay military ban, it was set up
in Dallas.
When William Waybourn, a
Please see FUND RAISING on Page 18A.
1 —
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........8-13A
Obituaries. 34-35A
Overnight. . 37A
Scrabble Grams 4F
Crosswords. 4-5F Sports. . . Sec. B
DearAbby. . . 4F Sunday Reader . .
.......Sec. J
Television.....
. . . TV Magazine
Texas &S’west . .
. . 24A, 36A, 39-42A
Texas Watch 11A
Lotto picks . 30A Today . . . Sec.F
Metropolitan . . . Travel. . . Sec.G
....... 29-36A Viewpoints . 5-7J
5
( | Please see IRAQ on Pap^ 25A.
• J, I
... ‘
iiiS' ............. “
11-yearold preacher conducts ■
traveling ministry across U.S. I
By Stacey Freedenthal
Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News
Michael Shaun Walters first quoted Scripture
when he was 3 years old. At 6, standing outside a k '
McDonald’s in Ohio, he exhorted a crowd of 50 long-
haired bikers in leather to give their lives to Jesus.
But that was when he was young.
Shaun is a little man now, an U-year-old ordained
preacher with his own Assembly of God traveling
ministry, seven double-breasted suits, a half-dozen
clip-on ties and a teased hairdo that his father hair-
sprays for him.
He loves to skate, play Nintendo and swim — that
is, when he’s not grounded for forgetting to take out
the trash. But preaching at revivals is his favorite
Please see 11-YEAR-OLD on Page 16A.
1
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Ann Landers . 2F
The Arts. . Sec.C
Books .... 8-10J
Business. . Sec.H
Classified.....
.......1-112D
..... |gg. .
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By Carl P. Leubsdorf
Washingion Bureau of The Dallas Morning News
DEMILITARIZED ZONE, Korea —
President Clinton went to the last
frontier of the Cold War on Sunday
after renewing the “undiminished”
U.S. commitment to South Korean
security and warning North Korea
that he will take all necessary steps
to prevent it from developing a nu-
clear weapons program.
In the final stop of his Asian
tour, Mr. Clinton became the sec-
ond president to visit this lush but Observation Post Ouelette, an ad-
deserted three-mile strip that has vanced position manned by South
divided the Koreas for 40 years. But
he was going closer to North Ko-
rean territory than President
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marcation line on the so-called
Bridge of No Return.
That’s the 10-foot-wide concrete
bridge where thousands of South
and North Korean prisoners were
Driving monsoon rains forced freed when the Korean War ended
the president’s party to abandon in 1953. It was last used a quarter
plans to fly by helicopter from the century ago when North Korea re-
capital city of Seoul, nearly 30 miles turned the crew of the USS Pueblo
to the south. The group drove by after seizing the American naval
motorcade instead.
The schedule for Mr. Clinton’s
90-minute tour included a visit to
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Dr. Patti Wetzel
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Michael
j Shaun
I Walters
preaches
Friday
I evening at the
West Side
Assembly of
God in Oak
Cliff, where
_ J his World
ft' Harvest
Outreach
ministry is
holding a
revival this
■iSII weekend.
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Rios, Delia M. [Clipping: Building A Powerhouse: Fund-raising prowess, experienced leadership earn Dallas gays national clout], clipping, July 11, 1993; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1730030/m1/1/?q=%221993%22: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.