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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ames!pacbell.com!rjwill6
- From: rjwill6@pbsdts.sdcrc.pacbell.com (Rod Williams)
- Subject: Hispanic Journalists to Meet in Colorado
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.215328.23278@PacBell.COM>
- Originator: rjwill6@pbsdts.sdcrc.pacbell.com
- Sender: news@PacBell.COM (Pacific Bell Netnews)
- Organization: Pacific * Bell, San Ramon, California
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 21:53:28 GMT
- Lines: 106
-
-
- A story in the Business section of today's (12/28/92) New
- York Times...
-
- -----------------------------------------------
-
- An angry dispute between two groups of journalists about the
- boycott of Colorado is threatening to present the nation's
- major news organizations a choice between insulting Hispanic
- people or homosexuals.
-
- The battle erupted because the board of the National
- Association of Hispanic Journalists voted in mid-November to
- proceed with a spring convention in Denver, despite a
- widening national boycott protesting the passage of an anti-
- homosexual-rights measure in Colorado. The measure, approved
- by voters in a referendum, prohibits the state Legislature
- and Colorado cities from approving anti-discrimination
- protection for homosexuals and voided existing ordinances.
- Association board members said the cost of canceling the
- meeting would devastate the association.
-
- That decision has split the organization, which has 1,400
- members. Some members have assailed others as homophobic,
- and some have defended the decision by saying that the
- homosexual-rights cause is not a prime concern of Hispanic
- people.
-
- Caught in the middle are news organizations nationwide, which
- traditionally send corporate executives to the conventions of
- all minority journalists to show support.
-
- They are being pressured not to send representatives to, or
- to recruit at, this convention. The battle presents a
- particularly awkward situation for news executives because
- many in the industry have been saying it is a business
- necessity to diversify news staffs by hiring both more racial
- and ethnic minorities and more homosexuals.
-
- Some news organizations have already heard from homosexual-
- rights advocates, who say they will begin a campaign to
- discourage news organizations from attending.
-
- "It would be uncomfortable to go," said Linda Picone, a
- deputy managing editor at The Star Tribune in Minneapolis.
- "On the other hand, we want to recruit ethnic minorities, and
- I would feel uncomfortable about boycotting the National
- Association of Hispanic Journalists."
-
- Inside the news profession, the debate has turned colleagues
- into adversaries and exposed a number of divisions.
-
- Patricia E. Duarte, a member of the board of the Hispanic
- journalists' association, said she resents what she said are
- "pressure-group tactics" being used against the organization.
- She said the convention does not have to be moved to show
- that Hispanics are sympathetic to homosexuals. "We should
- not be pressured into taking a political stance," Ms. Duarte
- said. "I don't think I have ever recalled gays taking a
- stand on Hispanic issues."
-
- Ms. Duarte, editor of La Familia de Hoy, a Whittle
- Communications magazine, said she thought the issue arose
- partly because sexuality in general is viewed as more
- "natural" by Hispanic people. That, she said, may have made
- board members less aware of discrimination against
- homosexuals than some of the board's critics. "The fact that
- 'gay' is a movement is to me a white Anglo thing," she said.
-
- Some members of the National Association of Hispanic
- Journalists said they were distressed by the board's action
- and were organizing a campaign within the association to get
- the convention moved out of Colorado. "This is active
- discrimination against a group," said Maria Hinojosa, a staff
- reporter at National Public Radio in New York. "We have been
- victims of discrimination and could have been victims of this."
-
- Some homosexual journalists said they were stung by the
- decision not to move the convention and would urge people not
- to attend. Deb Price, a columnist who writes about her life
- as a lesbian in a regular column in the Detroit News, said
- she turned down an invitation to address the convention in a
- special session that will deal with homosexual issues.
-
- "The point is: Do you support bigotry or not?" Ms. Price said.
- "For a Hispanic group to hold this convention there sends a
- message."
-
- Juan R. Palomo, a columnist at The Houston Post, said he was
- particularly hurt by the battle because he is both homosexual
- and Hispanic.
-
- Mr. Palomo said Hispanic people remained the victims of
- discrimination in newsrooms nationwide. But he said news
- organizations were changing and now sought to recruit
- Hispanic journalists.
-
- Homosexual journalists, he said, may face the greatest
- obstacles of any group in the news industry, because attitudes
- about sexual orientation have changed slowly.
-
- ----------------------- end of article -------------------
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- rod williams -=- pacific bell -=- san ramon, ca -=- rjwill6@pacbell.com
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