Thursday, July 26, 2012

Nebraska Watchdog article re: Hate crime


Hate crime a hoax? Neighbor doubts it

By   /   July 25, 2012  /   20 Comments
LINCOLN — If Linda Rappl hadn’t been up late visiting her husband in the nursing home Saturday night, she would have never been sleeping on the couch in her living room early Sunday morning, never would have heard the knocks on her door at about 4 a.m., never would have opened the door to see her neighbor standing there naked, hands bound, dripping blood and sobbing.
Rappl was well acquainted with the 33-year-old Lincoln woman, and quickly threw a blanket over her. The woman’s forehead was slashed and her legs were bleeding.
“She was sobbing, she was shaking. She said ‘Could you call 911?’ ” Rappl said. “She said, ‘I think my house is on fire.’ ”
Rappl didn’t ask her any questions, just called 911 and handed the phone to the woman when the dispatcher started asking questions. Her neighbor told police three masked men came into her house while she was sleeping, overpowered her, carved anti-gay slurs into her skin and tried to set her house on fire. Rappl heard her tell the dispatcher she believed they did it “because she was gay.”
Rappl said the woman had been her neighbor for about six years, and she knew she was a lesbian, even though she wasn’t very brazen about it.
“She was real concerned when she first moved in — she thought I wouldn’t like her because she was a lesbian,” said Rappl, a 68-year-old retired special education paraeducator for Lincoln Public Schools. “I really had to make an effort to let her know I didn’t care.”
Rappl said the woman mowed lawns, shoveled snow and helped carry groceries for neighbors. She took in foster dogs and had three rescue dogs and one foster dog at the time – dogs that Rappl rounded up because they were running loose in the neighborhood after the incident.
The woman is “a tough cookie,” hard worker and good neighbor, Rappl said.
So she was stunned to see reports today that police have not ruled out the possibility that her neighbor staged the whole incident. The woman knew Rappl’s husband was sick with cancer, emphysema and Alzheimer’s disease and she was getting ready to bring him home to die. It’s hard for her to believe her neighbor was acting, staging the whole thing, involving her in a hoax when she knows Rappl is going through a difficult time. In fact, her husband died last night.
“She definitely would have had to have an accomplice,” she said. “It’s hard for me to imagine.”
The woman’s hands were bound tightly with plastic ties, she said. And the woman wasn’t very bold about her sexuality. She lived with one woman for several years before they split up about a year ago.
“I don’t know much about that life of hers but I don’t think she’s a real activist,” Rappl said. “She’s been very low key about her lifestyle and everything. It’s not like she advertises it.”
She said the woman had a job but “got laid off or something” and was working part time while looking for a new job.
“She kind of reminds you of an ol’ farm girl,” she said. “She wouldn’t want people to see a weak side of her.”
Later on Sunday, when the woman got out of the hospital she returned to home to get her dogs and went to Rappl’s house to apologize to her foster son for waking him up so early.
“I just said, ‘I’m so sorry,’ ” Rappl said. “We hugged and she left.”
The woman went to an emergency shelter, Rappl said.
Today police spokeswoman Katie Flood said police are investigating all aspects of the case, including the possibility it was a false report, which is not uncommon and part of a thorough investigation.
“We examine cases on a daily basis with the possibility that details could be embellished or fabricated – not just hate crimes, but also cases such as assaults, robberies and hit and run accidents,” Flood said via email.
The case has Lincolnites puzzled, not sure whether they live in a town where such hatred exists, or such a hoax happened. Gay rights have been in the news a lot lately after the Lincoln City Council approved an ordinance extending civil rights protection based on sexual orientation and gender identity. But residents got enough signatures to refer the issue to voters, likely in November.
Lincoln was the birthplace of Brandon Teena, a transgendered 21-year-old who was among three people killed in 1993 near Humboldt.
Some 500 people attended a candlelight vigil for the victim outside the capitol on Sunday night, and another vigil was held tonight in Lincoln.
The president of a Lincoln gay rights group called Outlinc released a statement today in response to the news that police haven’t ruled out the possibility of a hoax.
Tyler Richard said Lincolnites can only trust in police to investigate every possibility.
“They have my full faith and trust as they move forward,” Richard said. “People are concerned, confused and many are still afraid.”
He added that Outlinc hasn’t accepted any donations on behalf of the victim, saying “Allegations that the support being offered has been taken advantage of are as disturbing to me as the reports we learned of earlier this week.”
“It is my hope that the residents of Lincoln will respect that this is a time when we need facts – not rumors – and that this investigation takes time,” he continued. “I have trust that law enforcement will look into these allegations and when appropriate release their findings.”
Reported by Deena Winter, deena@nebraskawatchdog.org

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Embracing Love Not Hate: A Vigil at First-Plymouth Church


Embrace Love Not Hate


Embracing Love Not Hate: A Vigil

People of all faiths and beliefs are invited to attend a service of healing and hope and a vigil Wednesday, July 25th at 7:00pmstarting in the sanctuary at First-Plymouth Church, 20th & D Streets.

"Embracing love not hate" will be the theme in response to the attack this weekend on a member of the LGBT community. The community is invited to attend the service and vigil, to come together to support each other, to heal, and to move forward with love and determination.  A poster will be available in the sanctuary for people to write words of love and hope to the victim.

Following the service, people are invited to participate in a silent prayer walk together around the Near South Neighborhood. The vigil will end in the church's courtyard.

Pastors Jim Keck, Nancy Erickson, Barb Smisek, Greg Stewart and Kim Morrow Hinrichs will be leading the service. Dr. Karen Becker, Cello Professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and TomTrenney, First-Plymouth's Minister of Music will be playing the musical piece "Song without Words," by Craig Phillips.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Understanding K & the Red Balloon


Only TWO shows remaining!!
OmniArts nebraska's
UNDERSTANDING K & the RED BALLOON
Today, Saturday, July 21 at 2pm and 7:30pm
Johnny Carson Theatre at the Lied Center for Performing Arts
Come see what the Lincoln Journal Star has described as, "imaginative staging and an array of talent in voice, dance and acting ..." 

Boy Scouts petition


Started by: Zach, Iowa City, Iowa
I am a proud Eagle Scout. I'm also the proud son of two lesbian moms. It's time for those two things to stop being contradictory.
The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) have announced that a "secret committee" has confirmed the Scouts' long-standing policy barring openly LGBT individuals from involvement in its organization, either as youth participants or adult leaders. This shocking "announcement" comes on the heels of a three-month campaign against that policy by various groups -- including Scouts for Equality, of which I am a co-founder -- and people like Jennifer Tyrrell, a gay den mother ousted from the Boy Scouts in April.
Secret committees do not speak for three million Scouts.
Last month, I delivered nearly 300,000 petition signatures to the Boy Scouts' annual convention, and days later, a resolution was introduced that could allow openly gay scouts and leaders for the first time in the history of the BSA. But instead of allowing that resolution to be voted on by the executive board, the BSA instead decided to maintain their anti-gay ban without a vote. Because a secret committee said so.
Above all, what's most disappointing is the secretive nature surrounding how this “decision” was reached. The very first value of the Scout Law is that a Scout is trustworthy. There is absolutely nothing trustworthy about unelected and unnamed committee members who are unwilling to take responsibility for their actions.
In June, an Associated Press story said that BSA spokesperson Deron Smith indicated that "the process would likely be completed by May 2013" at the next annual BSA convention. But that was before two prominent BSA executive board members -- Ernst & Young CEO Jim Turley and AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson -- announced that they would oppose the ban and work to overturn it. 
Something here doesn't add up.
We need transparency. We need accountability. More than 3 million individuals deserve more than the one-off musings of a subcommittee that has supposedly existed for more than two years but has not published a single report, has published no minutes and has, as far as anyone can tell, no official documentation.
That's why I've started this petition demanding that the Boy Scouts of America allow the resolution to allow openly gay scouts and leaders to come to a vote at the next BSA convention, in May of 2013.
A secret committee should not silence the voices of hundreds of thousands of Americans. Let the BSA Executive Committee decide--let the resolution come to a vote in May 2013.

PFLAG July Potluck Picnic Tuesday July 24 at 6 pm!!

Dear all, PFLAG-Cornhusker holds an annual potluck picnic each July. The picnic starts at 6 pm and is at the Unitarian Church in Lincoln at 63 & A Street. PFLAG will provide some fried chicken and bbq beef, water, lemonade and ice tea. We will also have paper plates and plastic ware. You bring some food to share! DJ Lady Ice will be playing music for us starting at 6:30 pm. A good time to eat in doors in the cool air, with some great people and have some social time. Anyone who wants to stay after for support, just let us know! Pat Pat Tetreault, Ph.D. Director, LGBTQA Resource Center Assistant Director, Student Involvement 346 Nebraska Union Lincoln, NE 68588-0453 Ptetreault1@unl.edu 402.472.1752 http://Involved.unl.edu/lgbtqa https://nufoundation.org/sslpage.aspx?pid=9038

Friday, July 20, 2012

Please help spread the word of a gay friendly petition

Hi, About a month ago, I started a petition to allow gay men the right to donate blood. I am emailing you to ask you to please sign the petition I have created, and pass it around to as many people and friends (and other local LGBT organizations within the university and surrounding area) as you can? You can find this petition at:http://www.change.org/petitions/u-s-food-and-drug-administration-allow-gay-men-to-donate-blood Thank you for your time, consideration, and help, --Mike Hernández

Same-sex Relationship Development Study

Hello, The Today's Couples and Families Research Program at the University of Cincinnati Psychology Department, under the direction of Sarah Whitton, Ph.D., is recruiting participants for a new study that focuses on how same-sex relationships develop, how same-sex partners symbolize their commitment to one another, and how different relationship formation processes are related to relationship stability and emotional wellbeing. The important information gathered from this survey will be used to inform policy and relationship education programs designed to help same-sex attracted individuals initiate and maintain healthy relationships. I would be thankful if you would be willing to spread the word through your organization. We are looking for 1,000 participants to take our online survey. The recruitment advertisement is provided at the end of this email. Please distribute this advertisement through your organization's listserv. A pdf copy of a flyer is available if you would be willing to post it in your building. Please feel free to take a look at our research lab's website. http://homepages.uc.edu/~whittosh/TCF/SSRDS.html Thank you for your time, Today's Couples and Families Research Program University of Cincinnati Psychology Department

[BiNet USA] Call for Submissions: Queer webzine with a focus towards bisexuals and pansexual

Hi, I'm a 22 year old queer male who goes by radiantDirtt on the internet and I'm trying to start a webzine called Pantos Mag (pantosmag.tumblr.com <-- check us out!). I'm looking for submissions and thought you all might be interested in the magazine, in general. Pantos Mag is a multiple media publication that will juxtapose thoughtful op-ed articles with other writings and graphic art Who can submit? Published pieces will be created by and/or relate to the LGBTQ community, especially bisexual and pansexual identifying individuals. Pantos Mag will provide a space for the discussion of LGBTQ interests and issues as well as a space for artists and writers to showcase their work. Bisexual and pansexual people are specifically encouraged to submit, but any member of the LGBTQ community or ally is welcome to submit as well. So, what is Pantos Mag looking for? We are looking for essays and op-ed pieces, poems, short stories, photographs, drawings/illustrations, and any other 2-D art. Are there guidelines? Yes! Pantos Mag will be digital but structured somewhat like a print magazine. Op-ed pieces and essays should be around 500 to 1000 words. Short stories should try to stay below 2500 words, but can be longer if they are especially compelling. 2-D artwork should fit on a single 8 ½ by 11 inch page, although exceptions can certainly be discussed. What isn't Pantos Mag looking for? We will not publish anything racist, classist, sexist, cissexist, homophobic, biphobic, body negative, appropriating, or otherwise alienating and oppressive. However, the discussion of any of these issues is absolutely encouraged and Pantos Mag is very interested in publishing pieces addressing intersectionality from a diversity of viewpoints. How do I submit? Send all your submissions to pantosmag@gmail.com! We'll review them and contact you regarding edits and information we need to publish, like what name you want to use. If you're interested in writing essays or op-ed pieces we suggest you email us with a brief pitch so we can talk it out before you write it. Will I still own my work? Pantos Mag is here for you, not for profit. You will retain all the rights to any work you submit and anyone who contacts us looking to use something you've created will be directed to you. You should be aware, that some publications may decline to publish something that has already been published even though you still have the rights to it. The images and design of the magazine that we create will be licensed under the creative commons noncommercial-sharealike license and we encourage our submitters to to embrace sharing their creativity and use creative commons licenses as well. Got more questions? pantosmag@gmail.com pantosmag.tumblr.com twitter.com/PantosMag Help us spread the word to LGBTQ artists and writers!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Transgender Studies Quarterly: Announcement and CFP

TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly Announcement of Publication and First Call for Submissions Announcement of Publication General Editors Paisley Currah and Susan Stryker are pleased to announce that TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly will be published by Duke University Press, currently planned for launch in the first quarter of 2014. TSQ aims to be the journal of record for the interdisciplinary field of transgender studies, and to promote the widest possible range of perspectives on transgender phenomena broadly defined. Every issue of TSQ will be a specially themed issue that also contains regularly recurring features such as reviews, interviews, and opinion pieces. The first four themes have been selected to highlight the scope and diversity of the field: • TSQ 1:1 will be a collection of short essays on key concepts in transgender studies, “Postposttransexual: Terms for a 21st Century Transgender Studies.” • TSQ 1:2, “Decolonizing the Transgender Imaginary,” will explore cross-cultural analysis of sex/gender variation, and bring transgender studies into critical engagement with ethnography and anthropology. • TSQ 1:3, “Making Transgender Count,” co-edited with the Williams Institute’s GENIUSS group (Gender Identity in U.S. Surveillance), will tackle such issues as population studies, demography, epidemiology, and quantitative methods. • TSQ 1:4 “Trans Cultural Production,” will be devoted to the arts, film, literature, and performance. CFPs for TSQ 1:2-4 will be issued in the months ahead. Proposals for issues starting with TSQ 2:1 (2015) are welcome at any time, and will be reviewed on an on-going basis. Please send inquiries to tsqjournal@gmail.com. Call for Submissions for TSQ 1:1 (2014) We invite submissions of short pieces (250-1500 words) for the inaugural issue of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, “Postposttransexual: Terms for a 21st Century Transgender Studies,” to be published by Duke University Press and planned for launch in the first quarter of 2014. Our intention is to showcase a wide range of viewpoints on the present state of the field by bringing together fresh thoughts and informed opinion about current concepts, key terms, recurring themes, familiar problems, and hot topics in the field. Each piece should have a title consisting of a single word or short phrase describing its content; the volume will be organized alphabetically by that title. Articles may be written in the style of a mini-essay, as in Raymond Williams’ classic Keywords; as a factual encyclopedia-style article such as might be found on Wikipedia; as a capsule review of transgender-related developments in a particular field (archeology, musicology), geographical location (Iran, Taiwan), or a topic (pornography, psychoanalysis). Creative interpretations of the required form are also welcome. However, each article must address the topic under discussion in relation to some aspect of transgender studies or transgender phenomena. Contributors are free to propose topics of their own, or to choose from the following suggestions of key terms and concepts: ability, abject, activism, administration, aesthetics, agency, aging, affect, anarchy, animal, anti-heteronormativity, architectonic, archive, asexual, assemblage, authentic, becoming, bureaucracy, binary, biology, biopolitics, biotechnology, bisexual, body, body part, border, built environment, burlesque, capital, castration, children, choice, class, clinic, colonization, color, commodity, commons, community, condition, construction, cosmetic, cross-dressing, cut, dance, death drive, decadence, decolonize, deconstruction, degenerate, desire, deterritorialization, diagnosis, diaspora, difference, digital, disability, discipline, discrimination, diversity, drugs, embodiment, empire, employment, epistemology, erotic, error, essence, ethics, ethnology, ethnic, ethology, etiology, eugenics, exception, exotic, experiment, fake, fantasy, fashion, feeling, feminist, fetish, film, forensics, freedom, fundamentalism, futurity, gay, gender, gender-variant, genderqueer, genetic, genitals, gesture, global, habit, haptic, hate crime, haunting, health, HIV/AIDS, homophobia, homosexuality, hormones, hybrid, hygiene, ICD, identity, indigeneity, information, incarceration, institutionalization, interdisciplinary, intersex, jouissance, joy, justice, LGBT, labor, lack, language, law, lesbian, liberation, man, Man, marriage, materiality, media, medicine, memory, migration, misogyny, modernity, monster, morphogenesis, movement, murder, mutilate, necropolitics, network, NGO, non-Western, normal, object, objectification, occupy, ontology, open, organ, origin, original, originary, paradigm, pathology, pedagogy, performativity, performance, pharmaceutical, phenomena, phenomenon, posthuman, policy, political economy, popular culture, population, pornography, poverty, power, practice, premodern, progress, privilege, prostitution, psychiatry, psychoanalysis, psychosis, public, queer, race, racialization, reality, reform, religion, resistance, revolt, revolution, representation, reproduction, reterritorialization, rhizome, rights, riot, ritual, sacrality, science, science fiction, segregation, sense, sensorium, separatism, sex, sexuality, smell, somatechnics, sound, space, state, sterilization, subaltern, subject, surgery, surveillance, swarm, taste, technique, temporality, terror, third, toilet, touch, trafficking, trans-, transgender, translation, transphobia, transnational, transspecies, transsexual, transversal, transvestite, underground, victim, virtual, vitality, visuality, violence, voice, WPATH, whiteness, will, woman, work, X, xenotransplantation, youth, zoontology. To be considered for publication, please submit a one-paragraph proposal to tsqjournal@gmail.com, stating the term or concept you’d like to write on, the estimated length of the article, a brief indication of your approach or main idea, and a brief identification of yourself and your qualifications for addressing the topic. Inquiries are due by Tuesday September 4, 2012; submissions will be due by December 3, 2012, and final revisions will be due by March 4, 2013. -- Renee Wells Assistant Director Center for Diversity and Inclusion Michigan Tech University 1400 Townsend Drive Hamar House, Bldg 13 Houghton, MI 49931 Work (906) 487-1829 Fax (906) 487-3101 Cell (906) 281-7930 Women's Programming Page Women's Programming Calendar Michigan Tech Women on Campus Facebook page GLBTQ Programming Page GLBTQ Programming Calendar Keweenaw Pride Facebook page Safe Place Website Safe Place Facebook page Center for Diversity and Inclusion Facebook page Center for Diversity and Inclusion upcoming events

Minnesotans United Vacation Program

My name is Gaby and I am working for Minnesotans United for All Families, the official campaign which will defeat the constitutional amendment that would ban marriage for same-sex couples. I am contacting you today because we are offering the opportunity to be part of the first state of 30 to defeat the amendment. Please join us in our fight for marriage equality! Minnesotans United is now the largest grassroots campaign that Minnesota has ever seen - using a unique hybrid of community and electoral organizing. Programs such as, "Let Your Friends Know," are run all over the state and focus on having educational discussions with family, coworkers, and friends, to emphasize the importance of voting 'no.' We need to have over a million conversations to persuade, motivate, and keep Minnesotans with us until election day in November. In order to reach that goal, we need 1000 experienced volunteers. Almost all polling thus far has shown us below the 50% +1 majority that we need in order to defeat this amendment – that means if the election were held today, we would lose. We're beginning a professional fellowship program with our campaign and are looking to partner with various colleges and universities to give students an opportunity for personal, professional and academic development. We're offering either fall internships lasting until the election day or shorter term opportunities that could align with a student's service-learning component or research project for a course by coming here for 1 weekend - 2 weeks or a fall break. Students would receive a thorough training on our innovative strategies and work side by side with our organizers and regional organizing directors. They will receive free supporter housing but travel and other living costs will be covered by them or the partnering organization/university. In order to move forward to the application process, do not hesitate to contact Anya Svanoe at anya@mnunited.org or at 612-412-7262 with any questions or concerns you may have. Feel free to read the attached flyer. Thanks in advance for your reply. Sincerely, Gaby Fabre

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Undergraduate Internship Opportunity - ACLU's LGBT & AIDS Project


Hello,
I am writing to inform you of an undergraduate internship opportunity at the ACLU’s LGBT & AIDS Project in New York this fall. I would greatly appreciate you passing this information along to any students in your organization who might be interested in applying. More information can be found below, and at this link:http://www.aclu.org/node/35535.

I was also wondering if your organization has a permanent group email that we could keep for our records, and use to send out information and opportunities like this in the future.

Thank you, and best regards,
Anna


Anna Ziering
Paralegal, LGBT & AIDS Project
American Civil Liberties Union
125 Broad St., New York, NY 10004


FALL 2012 INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY
NOTICE TO UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation
LGBT & AIDS Project, NY


The American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (ACLU), founded in 1920, is a nationwide, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, with more than 500,000 members and is dedicated to the principles of liberty and equality embodied in the U.S. Constitution. The ACLU’s Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) and AIDS Project of the ACLU’s National Office in New York City invites applications for theUndergraduate Fall Internship which will begin in September 2012.

OVERVIEW

The LGBT & AIDS Project brings impact lawsuits in state and federal courts throughout the country—cases designed to have a significant effect on the lives of LGBT people and those with HIV/AIDS. In coalition with other civil rights groups, we also lobby in Congress and support grassroots advocacy, from local school boards to state legislatures. Our legal strategies are built on the idea that fighting for civil rights means not just persuading judges but ultimately changing the way people think. As we litigate for change, we use targeted media, online and outreach campaigns to change public attitudes, as well as provide advocacy tools to help citizens take action in their community. As part of the broad civil liberties mission of the ACLU, the Project brings together the LGBT and HIV/AIDS communities with other social change movements to achieve a just society for all.  For more information visit aclu.org/lgbt and aclu.org/HIV-AIDS.

INTERNSHIP OVERVIEW

Our Fall internship requires a 12-16 week commitment.  This position is part-time with negotiable weekly hours. The number of interns accepted varies. Interns are highly encouraged to obtain funding from outside sources, as the internship is unpaid.  Arrangements can be made for work/study or course credit.

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

Our undergraduate internship program is designed to provide interns with the opportunity to learn about public interest work.  Interns will be under the direct supervision of the Project's Paralegal and will have the opportunity to learn and interact with other staff members of the Project.  Interns will gain experience by working on the following:

∙             Assisting with legal intakes and tracking requests for assistance.
∙             Assisting in the maintenance of case files and compiling of press files.
∙             Conducting general, legal and policy research.
∙             Supporting the Project in outreach to potential clients.
∙             Other projects as assigned.

DESIRED EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS

Applicants must possess:

∙             An interest in a legal, organizing, legislative or public interest career.
∙             Excellent research, writing and communication skills.
∙             Proficiency in Microsoft Office, including Word and Excel.
∙             Strong organizational skills.
∙             Familiarity with issues surrounding LGBT rights, HIV/AIDS and other civil liberties issues is desirable; commitment to these issues is essential.

HOW TO APPLY

Please send a cover letter, resume and a brief writing sample of no more than five pages in length to hrjobsLGBTintern@aclu.org  [Re: Fall 2012 LGBT Undergraduate Internship Application] in the subject line – or by mail to:

American Civil Liberties Union
Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender & AIDS Project
RE: Fall 2012 LGBT Undergraduate Internship
125 Broad Street, 18th Floor
New York, New York 10004-2400

Please indicate in your cover letter where you learned of this internship opportunity.

Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis until the position(s) are filled. 

The ACLU is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer and encourages applications from all qualified individuals including women, people of color, persons with disabilities, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals.

The ACLU comprises two separate corporate entities, the American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU Foundation. Both the American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU Foundation are national organizations with the same overall mission, and share office space and employees. The ACLU has two separate corporate entities in order to do a broad range of work to protect civil liberties. This job posting refers collectively to the two organizations under the name “ACLU”.

[BiNet USA] [GLAAD]: Study Shows Stereotypes about Bisexuality are Harmful


Researchers publishing in the The Journal of Bisexuality say a variety of unfounded assumptions often driven by the media contribute to a culture of Biphobia that affects all bisexual people. The studies show that the Bisexual community is diverse and subject to discrimination from gay/lesbian and straight people alike, which negatively impacts the health and social lives of people who identify as bisexual.

Denise Penn, a director with the American Institute of Bisexuality (AIB), spoke with GLAAD (Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) about her thoughts on these recent studies, and how to end stereotypes about bi people in the media.

Penn, who says that bisexuality "is sometimes forgotten" by the public, is very pleased with the increasing diversity of LGBT characters in the media, but notes "there's still a lot of progress to be made." Often when a character is portrayed as bisexual, "the stereotype lingers that it's a person who is confused, or someone who has a man and a woman on the side, or who has a woman and a man on the side."

Read Full Article Here:
http://www.glaad.org/blog/study-shows-stereotypes-about-bisexuality-are-harmful

Pat Tetreault, Ph.D.
Director, LGBTQA Resource Center at UNL
346 Nebraska Union
Lincoln, NE 68588-0453
402.472.1752

Consortium: Gay or bisexual males 18 - 25 - Research Participants Needed


From: Abel Jr, Robert [mailto:RAbelJr@devry.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 12:11 PM
To: practitioner@lgbtcampus.org
Subject: Consortium: Research Participants Needed

Good afternoon everyone. I am conducting my dissertation research on the relationship between family acceptance, internalized sexual stigma (ISS) and substance abuse in sexual minority males 18-25. This research has been approved by the Northcentral University’s Institutional Review Board (IRB# 2012-04-18-097).
In order to participate, participants must identify as a gay or bisexual male between the ages of 18-25. If you or someone you know would like to participate in this study, please use the link below and you will be directed to the online survey:

Thank you very much in advance for your time!  
Please feel free to forward the link to other people who might be eligible. If you have any question about this study, please direct all questions to psychapteacher@hotmail.com orDr. Jeanette Shutay, Dissertation Chair at, jshutay@my.ncu.edu.



Robert Abel, Jr.
Academic Affairs Specialist
DeVry University