IMAGE: Little Jims – Gay Chicago March 6, 1980
About 35 members of ACT UP protested the U.S. Senate Subcommittee's failure to appropriate the $875 million that Congress recently authorized for AIDS-related services. This was a part of a nationwide protest. In Chicago they laid gravestones at the Tribune Building and held a die-in at Water Tower Place.
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Zebra Crossing Theatre perform Claudia Allen's "Movie Queen" at the Edgewater Theater Center, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr.
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Artist Karen Finley, one of four artists who were recently denied funding by the National Endowment for the Arts due to the "controversial" nature of their work, presents her one-woman performance, "We Keep Our Victims Ready," at the Beacon Street Gallery, 4520 N. Beacon. In a series of vignettes, Finley voices the pain of society's victims–victims of sexism, racism, homophobia, AIDS, incest, alcoholism and censorship.
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The AIDS Pastoral Care Network of DuPage hosts a weekly gathering of its Grief Support Group at Edwards Hospital, 801 S. Washington, in the first floor Quiet Room.
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In the bars and clubs, it's Rudy de la Mor's "Pajama Party" at Gentry, 712 N. Rush St.; come celebrate the Grand Opening of the Clubhouse, 440 N. Halsted; Roscoe's and Nightlines present "The Newlywed Game" on Mondays at Roscoe's, 3354-56 N. Halsted; and cover boy, David Burrill, appears at Vortex, 3631 N. Halsted. Burrill has been on the cover of Advocate Men, Jock, Torso, Edge, and numerous other magazines. Tonight he sings songs from his upcoming album, "Do It With Me."
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This week's Gay Chicago obituaries are David J, Perkins, stage director and co-artistic director of Blind Parrot Productions, and Peter Thompson, founder of the United Republicans for Equality and Privacy. Both these beautiful men succumbed to AIDS.