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- <text id=89TT2994>
- <title>
- Nov. 13, 1989: American Scene
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 13, 1989 Arsenio Hall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 21
- New York City
- A Place to Be Somebody
- </hdr><body>
- <p>At Harvey Milk School, gays and lesbians are the norm
- </p>
- <p>By Kathleen Brady
- </p>
- <p> Health class, Harvey Milk School: a male student in drag is
- talking about his last experience with alcohol. "A drunken
- butch queen was getting on my case, criticizing me and acting
- flamboyant, so I pulled a knife on her." A gay youth interjects,
- "If you consider yourself a woman, you should act like a woman
- 24 hours a day." So the boy in drag appeals to the only avowed
- straight girl in the school: "In this situation, are you going
- to use your knife or not?" She says, "You best believe I'll be
- using my knife."
- </p>
- <p> In most classrooms, such a conversation might be cause for
- suspension. At Harvey Milk, it is typical. This is a high
- school for gays, lesbians, cross-dressers and transsexuals. At
- other schools, their mere presence was often disruptive. Many
- of them were verbally abused by teachers and counselors,
- physically attacked by classmates, thrown out of their homes.
- Unsurprisingly, many dropped out. At Harvey Milk, they fit in.
- </p>
- <p> A fully accredited public high school, Harvey Milk was the
- subject of a short-lived controversy when it began classes four
- years ago. It was founded by the Hetrick-Martin Institute for
- Lesbian and Gay Youth, a ten-year-old organization established
- following the brutal gang rape of a gay teenager in a New York
- City bar. The school is named after Harvey Milk, the gay San
- Francisco supervisor who was murdered with Mayor George Moscone
- by a disgruntled former city official in 1978.
- </p>
- <p> Critics charged that the school was using city funds to
- subsidize homosexuality. Officials replied that they were
- trying to provide an education for young people who might
- otherwise be denied one. The school does not seek to reinforce
- homosexuality, although it stresses the solidarity of minorities
- and the contributions of gay role models. Says A. Damien Martin,
- co-founder of the institute: "At first most help came from
- straight professionals, because the gay and lesbian community
- was afraid that if they reached out to the young they would be
- considered child molesters. The greatest fear of a gay person
- is that they will be considered a perverter of youth."
- </p>
- <p> In some cases, letting students be themselves can mean
- letting them discover that they are straight. Says Martin:
- "Several young men in the school were molested by male relatives
- and thought they must be gay. It was apparent to us that these
- boys were heterosexual, but we had to let them find out for
- themselves."
- </p>
- <p> Located in Greenwich Village, which has a large gay
- community, Harvey Milk has some things in common with a frontier
- school. It has two full-time teachers, Beth Bomze and Fred
- Goldhaber, and two classrooms for 40 students, only a handful
- of whom show up at the three-story waterfront building on a
- given day.
- </p>
- <p> The pupils are often in turmoil when they enroll. Most
- youths who suspect they are gay successfully hide their sexual
- leanings. Harvey Milk students are frequently in such conflict
- that as many as 30% of them have attempted suicide (compared
- with 11% of straight adolescents), according to director Joyce
- Hunter. Some students have suffered humiliating sexual contacts
- in gay bars and on the sordid streets of Times Square. They know
- that although society has grown more tolerant of divergent
- life-styles, homosexuals still endure widespread hostility and
- a marked threat of AIDS and violence. Some young homosexuals go
- to enormous lengths to deny their sexuality. Teenage lesbians
- have been known to become pregnant in order to prove they are
- "normal."
- </p>
- <p> Critics of Harvey Milk suggest that children with special
- needs, particularly homosexuals, should not be segregated but
- should learn to accept themselves in the context of a larger
- society. "Harvey Milk might be a good intermediate approach,
- but I'm not sure these students learn to cope in a school that
- is exclusively homosexual," says Susan Forman, professor of
- psychology at the University of South Carolina.
- </p>
- <p> Counters Hunter: "Our program is designed to mainstream
- them back into society, but some kids refuse to go back to a
- traditional setting. They say this is the first place to tell
- them their career of choice isn't necessarily hairdresser." Adds
- Stephen Phillips, superintendent of New York City's alternative
- schools and programs: "If 100% of the youngsters are to get the
- education they are entitled to, we have to adapt to them -- go
- to the kids rather than expecting them to come to us. Like the
- addicted or the handicapped, Harvey Milk kids couldn't or
- wouldn't fit in with the school system. Are they entitled to an
- education? Yes."
- </p>
- <p> Each term students, most of whom are at a fifth-grade
- reading level, receive a course description and sign a contract
- stipulating that they understand what is expected of them. Most
- have a study plan designed just for them, which means teacher
- Goldhaber instructs five students in as many subjects at once.
- While the method appears old-fashioned, classroom dialogue seems
- drawn from experimental theater. At his right hand, Goldhaber
- pores over pictures with one student, saying, "Yes, this is an
- ion, but is it just an ion or a hydroxide ion? Think about it."
- He asks the student on his left, "Do you really believe 20 times
- 15 is 30,000?" As someone bursts into song, trilling "Don't make
- me over," the school's only heterosexual girl, who stays on
- because she says she likes Harvey Milk, strides to the board and
- writes I'M STRAIGHT in block letters.
- </p>
- <p> Between classes, Goldhaber explains the helter-skelter
- atmosphere: "There is a misconception that order means quiet,
- means sitting in your seat. There is control here under the
- guise of chaos. If someone comes in in a fab outfit or makes a
- guest appearance after weeks of absence, we have to take time
- to make note. But kids don't get away with not learning here."
- </p>
- <p> Like others at Harvey Milk, Goldhaber is angry about what
- public schools do to problem kids. "I had a girl who had been
- told she was stupid at math and refused to study it. I begged
- her. I said, `Please, please, please,' until she agreed. Now
- math is the first thing she wants to do. Other teachers promoted
- them, but subject matter left them behind."
- </p>
- <p> One who is catching up is a 20-year-old wearing a leather
- cross, dangling earrings and a black leather cap angled on a
- head that is shaved but for red tendrils over an ear. He sits
- in his jaunty outfit learning fractions and writing poems. The
- young man's mind is so keen that when a deaf student came to
- class, he learned to sign in half an hour. This makes him think
- he may eventually work with the handicapped, but until this year
- he was not a dedicated student. "I'm quicksilver," he says. "I
- need stability. Everything else has shifted, but this school is
- stabilizing."
- </p>
- <p> Another student, who plans to be a fashion designer,
- observes, "We get along with each other as best we can. At least
- here we can be ourselves." The school clown, he has been at
- Harvey Milk for a year. "At my old school, everyone asked me why
- I didn't do sports. I wouldn't change for anyone, but I went to
- two at-home games. It was great to be with the gang, but it
- didn't really change anything. The kids hit me and pushed me
- around, and finally I stopped going. My parents support my being
- here because they support my being in school. They're handling
- my being gay, so I guess they're handling my being here." So
- far, eight students have graduated from Harvey Milk; a handful
- of others have returned to mainstream schools.
- </p>
- <p> Harvey Milk students want to be accepted, especially the
- 15-year-old with cornrowed red hair, a fashionable rhinestone
- nose stud and doelike eyes outlined in blue. "She" seems to be
- an exquisite young girl but turns out to be a boy. "My cousin
- is a drag queen, and he told me about Harvey Milk," he says. "At
- my other school, some people didn't know I was a guy; others
- called me a faggot." He adds, "I used to fight them, and I hit
- first. At Harvey Milk I can wear what I want." The issue is
- learning, nothing more, nothing less.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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