
August 2006 Cover
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Prudence is an under-appreciated virtue. In a
culture that trumpets ideas in sound bites and
allots fame in 15-minute bursts, the careful
attention needed to grow and sustain an endeavor
like
The Guide magazine can be undervalued.
But without wise care, no enterprise reliant upon
not-easy-to-obtain resources (in this case, money)
will survive long, much less the 22-plus years that
The Guide has.
All of us who value The Guide and
its message owe publisher Edward Hougen our
appreciation for his prudent stewardship of the
magazine through these past decades. By carefully
marshaling resources, Ed-- who
retires this month-- has kept a unique voice of gay
liberation alive. Ed has steered clear of an
ideological disdain for money that would limit the
reach of "the message" while at the
same time not dumbing down the magazine's
content for fear of alienating would-be advertisers.
But prudence should not be conflated with
aversion to risk. Ed's life has been marked by a
willingness to confront injustice, to speak out when
others are silent, to take action when others remain
inert. Ed came out as
a gay minister back in 1975, back when such a
move carried enormous personal and professional
risk. When Anita Bryant launched her anti-gay
crusade, Ed helped organize a protest trek across
the panhandle of Florida: for
two weeks and 180 miles, openly gay folks
marched across the most reactionary part of that
state, their courage reminiscent of earlier freedom
marches in the Deep South. And when Ed acquired
The Guide back in 1984, he did so
knowing little about publishing, trusting that his
faith in the message of gay liberation would make
such a bold career leap worthwhile.
Clients, staff, family, and friends of the
magazine also all recognize Ed's remarkable
integrity. In both professional and personal
relationships, Ed's associates have always been able
to depend on his commitment to
fairness and honesty. And prudent tending of
resources has allowed Ed to give a deeper meaning
to this sense of fair play and justice through his
extraordinary generosity. Friends and staff facing
legal woes, illness, hardship, and
death have been able to count on Ed's material, not
just moral, support. Organizations dedicated to
feeding the hungry and treating the sick have
benefited from Ed's generosity, as have groups and
individuals fighting for civil
liberties now under siege. The richness that Ed
enjoys comes not from what he has amassed for
himself, but rather what he has so freely given to
others.
As his final act of stewardship of The
Guide, Ed has sought out new ownership for
the magazine that shares the commitment to the
fundamental message of gay liberation: same-sex
sexual expression is an enlivening
part of life to be celebrated, not feared. As the new
owners at Pink Triangle Press take the helm next
issue, Ed can rest assured that "the
message" he has dedicated so much of his life
to will continue as the on-going mission of
the magazine.
The sage chronicler of gay life Boyd
McDonald once remarked that some people have
gotten a lot out of their homosexuality and thus
have a lot to give back. Boyd was referring to his
"Sex History" correspondents,
but his words apply well to Ed. By embracing his
sexuality as a gift, Ed has shown how love can
triumph over fear, and he has been able to share
this good news with a world still all-too-fearful of
gay sexual expression.
Ed may be retiring, but his example-- and
the magazine he worked so long and hard for-- will
live on. Farewell, Edward!
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