[Clipping: Building A Powerhouse: Fund-raising prowess, experienced leadership earn Dallas gays national clout] Part: 2 of 4
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Dillard’s
Your non-surgical line-minimizing, skin-firming facial includes:
• deep pore cleansing
• light line peel
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• eye area line smoothing treatment
• Lip and Laugh Line Peel application
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Irving Mall: 258-4968
Valley View Center: 386-1595
Vista Ridge Mall: 315-3333
Town East Mall: 681-9231
• Cosmetics
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Reg. $70 for service and product
LINE MINIMIZING FACIAL
One-hour non-surgical facial lift, hand
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*35
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Dillard’s welcomes your Dillard’s charge, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover or Diners Club card.
SHOP VALLEY VIEW MON.-SAT., 10 AM TO 9:30 PM; TOWN EAST, RICHARDSON SQUARE, COLLIN CREEK, IRVING MALL, PRESTONWOOD, NORTHPARK, VISTA RIDGE & RED BIRD, 10 AM TO 9 PM; SUNDAY, 12:30 PM TO 6 PM.
• Prestonwood • NorthPark • Red Bird • Town East • Collin Creek • Valley View • Irving Mall • Richardson Square • Vista Ridge • The Parks at Arlington • Six Flags Mall • North East • Ridgmar • Fort Worth Town Center • Golden Triangle, Denton
■ 1
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2 A
Qlje/Ballad Corning
Sunday, July 11, 1993 H
NEWS SUMMARY
NATIONAL
HIGH PROFILE
PEOPLE
to that very unique way with words.” Mr. Daniels
— Complied by Kim Pierce and Manuel Franco
E Overnight.
37A
TV NEWS SHOWS
From Wire Reports
CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT: Miss Northeast Texas, -
BaShara Chandler of Garland, was crowned Miss
Texas on Saturday night in Fort Worth. The first
runner-up was LaDonna DePriest, Miss Hurst-Euless-
Bedford, followed by Angie Mabry, Miss Woodlands;
Anna Villalobos, Miss Lufkin; and Darcey Rushing,
Miss Dallas. Ms. Chandler, active in the fight against
AIDS, won a $10,000 scholarship and a trip to the Miss
America Pageant in September in Atlantic City, N.J.
The graduate of Lakeview Centennial High School
and the University of Texas said she plans to finish
law school and become an environmental lawyer.
WARM WELCOME: British expatriates cheered and a
choir of 15 handicapped children sang Saturday as
Britain’s Princess Diana arrived in Harare,
Zimbabwe, for four days of charity work. Diana went
directly to see President Robert Mugabe, who had tea
with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace last
month to discuss the tour. A hectic schedule has the
princess visiting handicapped children and homes
for the elderly, lepers, refugees and AIDS victims.
THE KINSHIP OF BOBBY AND WILL: Fiddler Charlie
Daniels believes Bob Dylan and William Shakespeare
have a lot in common. Mr. Daniels, in the July issue of
the Country Music Association’s Close Up magazine,
says he admires Shakespeare “for the way he used the
English language and put the words together. ... I
kind of compare Dylan in his time and his vernacular
BUT FOR THE GRACE OF GOD: Country singer K.T.
Oslin feels some kinship with the late Janis Joplin:
Both started out as rather unsuccessful folk singers
before finding the music they were meant to sing.
They met in the early 1960s in the Texas folk-music
scene. “Janis was not happening yet,” Ms. Oslin said
recently, recalling a time Ms. Joplin was booed off a
stage in a Houston folk club. “And I heard something
in there that I thought, ‘Oh, you people are gonna be
sorry about this if she ever finds what it is that she’s
supposed to sing. This woman has the goods.’
ITS A GUY THING: On this date in 1533, Pope Clement
VII excommunicated England’s King Henry vm. In
1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounded
former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton in a
pistol duel near Weehawken, N. J.
■
RALLY ’ROUND THE CAKE: Actor Tab Hunter is 62
today. Singer Bonnie Pointer is 42. Boxer Leon Spinks
is 40.
played on Mr. Dylan’s Nashville Skyline album before
going on to his own career.
p.m.): Topic: Effect of the Japan summit on job
growth. Guest: Labor Secretary Robert Reich.
■ It’s the rousing music and singing in Jubilee The-
ater’s Blacula, Brother of the Night that makes the
show fun. 37A
TEXAS & SOUTHWEST
■ From movies to recordings, ratings are a very hot
Issue. 1C
Meet the Press (Channel 5 at 9 a.m.): Guests: Vice
President Al Gore and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
D-N.Y.
This Week With David Brinkley (Channel 8 at 9:30
a.m.): Topic: The great flood of ’93. Guests: Agricul-
ture Secretary Mike Espy, Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad
and Bill Dieffenbach, Missouri Department of Conver-
vation.
Newsmaker Sunday (CNN at 9:30 a.m. and 4:30
■ The Texas Rangers improve to 8-2 on their current
road trip with a 10-7 victory over the Blue Jays at
Toronto. 1B
■ Many questions face the Dallas Cowboys as they
prepare to open training camp Thursday in Austin. 1B
THE ARTS
■ Patti Wetzel is dealing with HIV as a doctor and a
patient. 1E
TODAY
■ Delia Rios profiles the Dallas gay and lesbian com-
munity through some of its leading voices. 1F
TRAVEL
■ Key West, Fla., may be the end of the world, but it’s
the beginning of paradise. 1G
■ A disability is no reason for ecotourists to stay
home. And it’s no reason to settle for a junior-class
journey. 1G
BUSINESS
■ Compared with other presidents, Clinton hasn’t
had a honeymoon. 1J
EDITORIALS
■ Dallas County must reform its juvenile detention
policies. 2J
LETTERS
■ Readers defend the usefulness of the city’s movie
review board. 3J
■ A Corsicana reader takes exception to a recent
column by William Murchison. 4J
VIEWPOINTS
■ Two legislators offer different views on the space
station. 5J
BOOKS
■ Sometimes writing history borders on fiction,
writes columnist Olin Chism. 8J
■ Author Gita Mehta’s Tales of Mystical India is a sort
of Canterbury Tales of modern India. 8J
DALLAS LIFE MAGAZINE
■ Cyberspace is a digital underground — at your
fingertips. 8
PARADE
■ Both the accused and the accuser face high stakes
when harassment suits go to court. 1H
■ Issues that U.S. businesses face in Japan go be-
yond market access agreements and government reg-
ulations. 1H
SUNDAY READER
■ Longview is rallying behind a 12-year-old boy
needing donations for a lung transplant. 39A
SPORTS DAY
I
■ Although floods are not unusual along the Missis-
sippi River, residents say the latest deluge is a real
eye-opener. 1A
■ With each fresh eruption of terrorism in the United
States this year, the nation’s major airports have gone
on security alert. 8A
■ More than 650 undocumented Chinese wait at sea
as the United States and Mexico discuss their fate. 9A
■ A survey of boys shows that many of them gain
popularity with other boys by abusing or showing dis-
respect to girls. 10A
INTERNATIONAL_________________
■ President Clinton reaffirms the “undiminished”
U.S. commitment to South Korean security during a
visit to the country. 1A
■ A U.N. team apparently fails to win Iraqi coopera-
tion with its mission of sealing missile equipment at
test sites near Baghdad. 1A
■ Somali snipers wound three French U.N. peace-
keepers and the world body offers a $25,000 reward
for military leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid. 19A
■ The leaders of Bosnia-Herzegovina tell Western
mediators that they will not buckle under pressure for
an ethnic partitioning of their country. 19A
■ Israel sends artillery reinforcements into south Leb-
anon after a wave of guerrilla attacks kill five of its
soldiers. 22A
METROPOLITAN
■ One group of Americans jumps at the chance to
spend six months in the darkness at temperatures 70
F to 100 F below zero. 4
TV MAGAZINE_________________
■ Showtime cable takes a look Saturday at the high-
stakes business of American sports. 5
-
4
HER OWN SPACE: When Dr. Mae Jemison went into
space in September 1992, she took a few items for
different organizations: an Alvin Ailey dance poster,
a flag for the Organization for African Unity, a
Spelman College flag. But for herself, she tells
Interview magazine, she took a voodoo statue she got
in Sierra Leone and a Michael Jordan jersey from the
Chicago Bulls. Plus, “I had all kinds of music in space
—Stevie Wonder, Olatunji, Hiroshima, Aretha
Franklin and Nancy Wilson. ... I was jammin.’ ”
u - - i
Face the Nation (Channel 4 at 10:30 a.m.): Topic:
The floods. Guests: Elbert “Joe” Friday Jr., National
Weather Service director; Federal Emergency Man-
agement Agency Director James Lee Witt; Sen. Bar-
bara Mlkulskl, D-Md.; conservative consultant Ed Rol-
lins; and Alan Murray of the Wall Street Journal.
530HL
J
I I
BaShara Chandler K.T. Oslin
■ If Dallas fails to reduce its air pollution by 1996,
new regulations could affect everything from lawn
mowers to boat motors. 1A
■ Fund-raising prowess and leadership earns the
Dallas gay community national clout. 1A
■ A street in West Dallas looks more like a neighbor-
hood since a Dallas drug raid 18 months ago. 29A
OVERNIGHT
11
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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/m1/2/?q=%221993%22: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.