Monday, December 27, 2010

Queer News On Campu- 12/22/10

1. ESPN - Belmont players discuss gay coach's departure
2. Inside Higher Ed - Goodbye DADT, Hello ROTC
3. Daily Camera - CU-Boulder grad discharged over 'don't ask, don't tell' wants to re-enlist
4. Austin-American Statesman - Gay ACC student pleased by repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’
5. The Herald-Journal - USU official lauds gay ban repeal
6. Inside Higher Ed - Quick Takes: Tyler Clementi's Parents May Sue Rutgers
7. UPI - Rutgers: No fault in gay student's suicide
8. Global Times - Gay students find acceptance
9. The University of Arizona - Pride Alliance's Queer Film Series questions social norms


1. ESPN, December 19, 2010
545 Middle Street, Bristol, CT 06010
http://espn.go.com/espnw/blog/_/post/5936795/belmont-players-discuss-gay-coach-departure
Belmont players discuss gay coach's departure
By T.J. Quinn


Click link for video.

Late last month, Belmont University women's soccer coach Lisa Howe told her team she was a lesbian, in a committed relationship and that her partner was pregnant. When the players returned to the Nashville campus of the private Christian school after Thanksgiving break, they soon learned Howe was no longer their coach. T.J. Quinn dives deeper into this story for ESPN's "Outside the Lines."

2. Inside Higher Ed, December 21, 2010
1320 18th Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/12/21/end_of_don_t_ask_don_t_tell_to_mean_rebirth_of_rotc
Goodbye DADT, Hello ROTC
By Dan Berrett


Presidents of some of the nation's highest profile colleges and universities, where the Reserve Officers' Training Corps program has been barred for decades, said that the U.S. Senate's vote Saturday to repeal "don't ask, don't tell" will usher the return of the program to their campuses -- though the exact procedure remained unclear.

"This is an historic development for a nation dedicated to fulfilling its core principle of equal rights," Lee C. Bollinger, president of Columbia University, said in a statement following the vote this weekend to end the 17-year-old policy forcing gay and lesbian members of the military to hide their sexual orientation in order to continue serving. It is likely to be signed into law by President Obama on Wednesday.

"It also effectively ends what has been a vexing problem for higher education, including at Columbia -- given our desire to be open to our military, but not wanting to violate our own core principle against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation," continued Bollinger. "We now have the opportunity for a new era in the relationship between universities and our military services."

Though college bans on the ROTC date back to the unrest that roiled campuses (including, notably, Columbia) during the Vietnam War, the military's discrimination against gay people emerged as a key sticking point that blocked the program's return in the years since that war ended. "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" -- the compromise measure put in place in 1993 that allowed gays and lesbians to serve in the military as long as they hid their sexual orientation -- carried particular symbolic weight. The resurgence of ROTC on campuses has been championed by figures from across the political spectrum, with supporters saying it will benefit the military, colleges and students. Advocates have included Defense Secretary Robert Gates and, as a senator and presidential candidate, Barack Obama.

Drew Faust, president of Harvard University, issued a statement casting the Senate's vote over the weekend in historic terms. "It affirms American ideals of equal opportunity and underscores the importance of the right to military service as a fundamental dimension of citizenship," said Faust, an historian of the Civil War and the American South, who said previously that the end of the policy would clear the way for ROTC's return to Harvard. "It was no accident that Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation not only guaranteed freedom to Black Americans but at the same time opened the Union Army to their participation. Because of today's action by the Senate, gay and lesbian Americans will now also have the right to pursue this honorable calling, and we as a nation will have the benefit of their service."

For all the rhetorical celebration, it remains unclear in many cases precisely how ROTC will return to the nation's campuses. Faust said in her statement that she was pleased that "more students will now have the opportunity to serve their country" while being somewhat vague about the way forward. "I look forward to pursuing discussions with military officials and others to achieve Harvard's full and formal recognition of ROTC," she said.

Bollinger said during an April visit to his campus from Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" was a "crucial divide" keeping ROTC from returning. Before the program does return, it must be approved by the university senate, he said, adding, "There has to be faculty and student debate about this." Five years ago, the university's senate overwhelmingly rejected an effort to bring it back, with many faculty members citing anti-gay bias in the military as a reason to maintain the ban. Still, Bollinger predicted that the campus in general would prove to be a much more hospitable place to the military than it was more than four decades ago.

Columbia's Senate on Monday announced the creation of a "task force on military engagement" in light of the end of the military's policies barring openly gay people from serving. The committee plans to hold hearings and conduct a student survey on a possible return of ROTC.

Mullen, during the same visit to Columbia, also cautioned against expecting too much too soon in hoping for ROTC's return, and suggested that not every campus that wants a program will necessarily get one. “There are limits to how many we can actually create," he said. "We are a much smaller force than we were way back when. We can’t just snap our fingers and make it happen.”

Yale University, however, mapped a very clear path forward. President Richard C. Levin said his administration will be discussing the matter with faculty during the spring semester. He added that he had asked General Counsel Dorothy Robinson, Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer and Yale College Dean Mary Miller to consult with officials in Washington early in the new year to determine the military’s interest in establishing an ROTC unit at Yale. "We are very hopeful that these discussions will enable us to begin a new chapter in the long history of Yale’s support of the U.S. Armed Services," Levin said in a statement.

Such a clear map is not yet possible at Stanford University, where the decision rests with the faculty. In March, the faculty senate anticipated changes coming from Washington, and established a committee to look at the issue. Among its first contributors were Stanford professors David Kennedy, the historian, and William Perry, secretary of defense under President Clinton. The faculty will make the decision because it must evaluate the rigor of the military science curriculum that accompanies ROTC, said Lisa Lapin, a spokeswoman for Stanford. "'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' was a hurdle, so this will probably be helpful," she said. "(But) it’s not the only consideration."

Officials at Brown University did not go as far as others in predicting a return of ROTC. Marisa Quinn, vice president of public affairs at Brown University, said via e-mail: "The repeal of Don't-Ask-Don't-Tell will likely stimulate additional conversation about ROTC on the Brown campus, a conversation that has occurred from time to time among the university's alumni, students, faculty and administrators. The university welcomes conversation on this and other important social and political questions." She added, however, that "the university's decision to phase out Air Force ROTC (1971) and Naval ROTC (1972) centered on academic issues, including whether ROTC units should have departmental status and whether courses offered by those units should carry academic credit. Those issues are matters for faculty discussion. Any academic issues raised by a potential return of ROTC instruction at Brown would require a vote of the faculty."

It is also worth noting that the ban of ROTC from campuses has not barred students from joining the program -- though it does make the prospect more difficult. Students can -- and do -- participate in ROTC through nearby host campuses, though the numbers are often small. Four Yale students participate in ROTC through the University of Connecticut. At Harvard, there are 19 such students, who do so through the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Meanwhile, other elite institutions, such as Duke, Cornell and Princeton universities, have kept ROTC on campus without incident.

It will also be some time until the policy is formally eliminated, in practice, from the military. The Pentagon must certify that the groundwork has been laid for troops to be trained and taught to adapt to the change in policy. Obama, Gates and Mullen must write to Congress to assure its members that the new policy will not compromise troop readiness, cohesion, or recruitment and retention. A 60-day review will follow.

3. Daily Camera, December 21, 2010
PO Box 591, Boulder, CO 80306
http://www.dailycamera.com/cu-news/ci_16915474
CU-Boulder grad discharged over 'don't ask, don't tell' wants to re-enlist
By Whitney Bryen


With President Barack Obama set to sign legislation repealing "don't ask, don't tell" today, University of Colorado graduate Mara Boyd -- twice arrested this year for protesting the Clinton-era policy -- is ready to re-enlist in the military, seven years after being discharged from the Air Force for being gay.

"I have every intention of going back," Boyd said. "I would love to be able to serve openly. I would love to help facilitate the transition, to be part of the change. I want to finish something I started."

Boyd was discharged in 2003 after telling her commander that she was gay. Since then, she has been advocating for the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell," and was arrested during protests outside the White House in April and November.

With the Senate having voted Saturday to repeal the policy -- which allowed gays to serve in military, as long as nobody knew they were gay -- Boyd, 29, said she now plans to re-enlist, if she can "negotiate some hurdles," such as getting an age waiver to rejoin the Air Force, which cuts off enlistment at age 28.

While Boyd said she will be working hard to re-enlist after the policy is repealed, military veteran Michael Holiday said he doesn't expect to see a significant increase in overall enlistment once "don't ask, don't tell" is history.

"If you want to go in, you're going to go in," Holiday said. "I don't think the repeal is going to cause any repercussions for recruitment."

Holiday, who was in the Army for 22 years before working with veterans services, said gays and lesbians who truly wanted to serve did so under the constraints of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy. He said he does not expect the number of gay military members to drastically increase.

And while it is unknown how the repeal will affect military recruitment, some believe there will be significant impacts for young members of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community.

Anne Guilfoile, chairwoman for the Boulder Valley School District's Safe Schools Coalition, said the repeal provides an opportunity for students to join Reserve Officers' Training Corps -- or ROTC programs -- without being forced to hide or lie about who they are.

"Lack of inclusion is a form of discrimination, which can cause gay, lesbian or transgender people to feel like they don't fit into society," Guilfoile said. "I think an important consequence of the repeal is that it says, 'Yes, the world does include me' to those students."

During a time when a young GLBT community is struggling with increased bullying and suicides, Guilfoile said there is no better time to pass a repeal and give hope to students who may have little left.

CU senior Kyle Inselman, a member of the GLBT campus community, said the repeal is a big step in the right direction.

"I know quite a few people who had to give up their dreams of being in the military because of the stress of lying to their fellow cadets or service members," Inselman said. "So for people to have the freedom to follow the path that they wish, this is great."

But Inselman said the repeal is not a victory for the transgender community, since "don't ask, don't tell" is only one of the reasons keeping them out of the military.

Being transgender is often considered a medical concern or a mental health condition in the military, according to the Service Members Legal Defense Network website.

"I think that to frame this as a victory for the GLBT community is wrong, because transgender people still cannot serve in the military," Inselman said. "We need to not forget about fighting for (transgender) inclusion in our military as well as gay, lesbian and bisexual people."

4. Austin-American Statesman, December 22, 2010
P.O. Box 670, Austin, TX 78767
http://www.statesman.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/austin/highereducation/entries/2010/12/22/gay_acc_student_pleased_by_rep.html
Gay ACC student pleased by repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’
By Ralph K.M. Haurwitz


A gay student at Austin Community College is gratified that “don’t ask, don’t tell” has been repealed but remains in limbo regarding his own future.
President Barack Obama today signed the repeal of the ban on openly gay service members.
Omar Lopez, 30, said today that he “most likely” will re-enlist in the Navy, which discharged him in 2006 after he disclosed during a medical examination that he was gay.
Lopez tried without success in October to re-enlist during a court challenge to “don’t ask, don’t tell.”
“It’s very exciting,” he said today of the repeal, adding that he plans to look into whether he could sign on as an officer. He had been a culinary specialist second class, cooking and supervising the galley about a frigate.

5. The Herald-Journal, December 23, 2010
75 West 300 North, Logan, UT 84321
http://news.hjnews.com/news/article_057abc1a-0e32-11e0-8db1-001cc4c002e0.html
USU official lauds gay ban repeal
By Kevin Opsahl


Any student, regardless of sexual orientation, will soon be able to sign up for the military through Utah State University's ROTC program and not have to hold back the words, "I am gay."
Although those students aren't on campus to celebrate their victory, those who supported repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" are celebrating. The bill, which creates a path for service members of all sexual orientations to serve openly in the military, was signed into law by President Barack Obama on Wednesday.
That's no exception for Maure Smith-Benanti, who is the program coordinator of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, and Allied. The LGBTQA programs within the Access & Diversity Center to provide outreach to those faculty, staff and students.
The 17-year-old "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy meant that if service members revealed they were gay, they could risk expulsion.
"We've all been very excited today that this passed," Smith-Benanti said. "Anytime there is an advance that is positive towards LGBTQA ... we feel respected and energized."
Obama echoed those same praises at the signing ceremony on Wednesday.
The big vote that was seen as a watershed moment for gay rights was passed during a rare Saturday session of Congress. It was just one of several agenda items the Senate wants to take up before power is handed over to the Republicans on Jan. 3.
Over the years, more than 13,500 people were discharged under the policy.
"The old law gave a little bit of wiggle room for LGBTQA military service personnel to continue to service without have to worry about losing their job," Smith-Benanti said. "But now I believe we were basically asking our servicemen and women to lie about who they love, who they are. I think when we ask people to stand for our country and put on the nation's uniform, we should let them be who they are."
LGBTQA members, she said, thought it was a long shot when Obama came up with the idea to repeal the law. Now that the law is passed, it "really is a surprise to allot of people," she said.
But Smith-Benanti said she's been hearing some "concern and trepidation" about how the new policy is implemented.
Before the policy actually goes into effect, Pentagon officials must first complete implementation plans before lifting the old policy. Moreover, the president, defense secretary and chairman of the joint chiefs of staff must certify to lawmakers that it won't damage combat readiness, as critics charge.
"It seems like this would take forever, although President Obama has indicated he would not like that," Smith-Benanti said. "Hopefully those rollouts ... will be the best for our service members and won't cause any problems."
Tony Flores, USU Veteran Affairs program coordinator, believes that if the implementation is done right "(the policy) will work."
"I don't think the controversy will be widespread like some say it will be," Flores said. "I think it really is a matter of ... looking at timelines, not going in an changing it overnight, saying ‘we're going to implement this slowly over a period of time.'"
Flores also said he believes that combat troops may "have some reluctance" adjusting to the new policy because of the "macho kind of mindframe it entails."
USU has had an ROTC program for many years, but it has been suggested by political pundits and government officials that this law could very well open up the possibility for colleges and universities that don't have an ROTC program to look into having one.

E-mail: kopsahl@hjnews.com
Information from The Associated Press was included in this report.

6. Inside Higher Ed, December 23, 2010
1320 18th Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/12/23/qt#246680
Quick Takes: Tyler Clementi's Parents May Sue Rutgers
Unknown


The parents of Tyler Clementi -- the Rutgers University student who killed himself shortly after he was filmed with another man in his dormitory room -- have filed a notice of intent to sue the university, the Associated Press reported. The notice says that "it appears Rutgers University failed to act, failed to put in place and/or failed to implement, and enforce policies and practices that would have prevented or deterred such acts, and that Rutgers failed to act timely and appropriately." A Rutgers spokesman issued the following statement: "We at the university share the family's sense of loss of their son, who was a member of our community. We also recognize that a grieving family may question whether someone or some institution could somehow have responsibility for their son's death.... While the university understands this reaction, the university is not responsible for Tyler Clementi's suicide."

7. UPI, December 23, 2010
1133 19th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20036
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2010/12/23/Rutgers-No-fault-in-gay-students-suicide/UPI-90561293144329/
Rutgers: No fault in gay student's suicide
United Press International


PISCATAWAY, N.J., Dec. 23 (UPI) -- New Jersey's Rutgers University denied responsibility for the suicide of an 18-year-old freshman secretly taped kissing another man in his dorm room.

It made the denial after being notified by the parents of freshmen Tyler Clementi they may seek damages from the university for their son's suicide, The (Newark, N.J.) Star-Ledger reported.

"We at the university share the family's sense of loss of their son, who was a member of our community," the university said in a statement.

"We also recognize that a grieving family may question whether someone or some institution could somehow have responsibility for their son's death," the statement continued. "While the university understands this reaction, (Rutgers) is not responsible for Tyler Clementi's suicide."

The claim notice, sent to the university Friday and first reported by The Star-Ledger, preserves the family's right to sue Rutgers for failing to act against two students who allegedly used a Web cam to secretly view Clementi kissing the man.

Clementi's roommate, Dharun Ravi, and Rutgers student Molly Wei allegedly spied on Clementi with a Web cam Sept. 19, and Ravi then sent a message on the Twitter microblogging service that he had seen Clementi "making out with a dude."

Clementi later jumped off the George Washington Bridge spanning the Hudson River between New Jersey and New York City.

Ravi and Wei, both 18, were charged with invasion of privacy. They later left the university.

"Subject to further investigation, it appears that Rutgers University failed to act, failed to put in place, and/or failed to implement, and enforce policies and practices that would have prevented or deterred such acts, and that Rutgers University failed to act timely and appropriately," the claim notice said.

No lawsuit has been filed and "a decision as to whether to file suit against Rutgers University in the future has not been made," Clementi family lawyer Paul Mainardi said in a statement.

By law, the family has six months after filing the tort notice to decide whether to file lawsuit, the Rutgers statement acknowledging receipt of the notice said.

8. Global Times, December 24, 2010
Add. 4/F Topnew Tower, 15 Guanghua Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China, PC. 100026
http://life.globaltimes.cn/life/2010-12/603979.html
Gay students find acceptance
By Wen Ya


Last week was a bittersweet memory to Hu Jun, a 21-year-old junior at Sichuan University in Chengdu, Sichuan Province (SUC). As one of the three heads of Homoscu, a homosexual student association, Hu helped celebrate the association's seventh anniversary.

But despite its seven years and about 300 members, Homoscu is not been formally registered by the university. Thus Homoscu can't publicly recruit members and receive SUC financial assistance like other student associations, Hu said.

"Though there's no precedent for a homosexual organization to be registered in our university, it is tolerant to us and allows us to exist," Hu told the Global Times.

Homoscu's mission is to help gays and lesbians to make friends, HIV-AIDS education and prevention, help them feel safe and release pressure and to reduce discrimination, according to him.

"We are not different from others expect for our sexual orientation. Sex is a normal personal choice," he said.

Among the association's 300 members, about 80 percent are gays and the rest are lesbians and heterosexuals. Usually, they communicate with each other through seven QQ online chat tools.

Their offline activities include singing, watching films, all kinds of sports and engaging in HIV-AIDs prevention and education through peer education. Their funding comes mainly from donations from members and some NGOs, according to Hu.

Coming out

"It's difficult for our association to get recognition from others outside campus. Before joining Homoscu, some members didn't dare to accept their sex orientation, " Hu said.

Another SUC student surnamed Wang, outed himself during a public activity after joining Homoscu.

"After my public announcement, most classmates and teachers support me. I'm not as depressed as before," he told the Global Times. "Homoscu is really like my home."

However, not all the homosexual members are willing to come out of the closet. Few members told their families and most haven't made it public, according to Hu who has done so.

Among them, lesbians usually keep a lower profile. None of them are willing to accept an interview with the Global Times.

"We don't encourage or discourage them to come out because it's a personal choice. But that choice is closely related to the society's attitude to homosexuals," he said.

No longer a 'disorder'

Homosexuality was defined as a "mental disorder" until April 2001, when it was deleted from the Chinese Classification of Mental Disorders.

Chen Zhouchao, a 20-year-old computer sophomore at SUC, is straight and working for Homoscu.

"Homoscu is significant to me. Most of the members are very capable and their personalities are good," he told the Global Times.

But some of his close friends criticize him for being so close to gays but he dismisses it.

"After all, my sexual orientation won't be influenced by others," he said.

Gay-friendly Chengdu

Homoscu is not the only homosexual society among Chengdu college students. There are three other similar organizations: Chengdu Gay College Student Alliance, Sunny Sky Group and Longquan Sunny Group.

The existence of the organizations owes to the city's tolerance towards gays and lesbians. Chengdu is even nicknamed "a city of gays" by some.

There are about 40,000 homosexuals in Chengdu and 40 percent of them are college students, according to Zheng Que, 23, a member of the Chengdu Gay Care Organization, which works frequently with the college gay groups.

Liao Wancheng, 20, a broadcasting and hosting arts sophomore from Chengdu University of Technology, is a gay and one of the heads of the Chengdu Gay College Students' Alliance.

Self-acceptance needed

As closeted individuals, some homosexuals are afraid of discrimination and some even look down upon themselves, Liao said.

"Many homosexuals live in a closed space. If they join homosexual associations, they will easily find friends and happiness," he told the Global Times. "What we need is not others' help, but others' understanding. I hope they accept us as common people. "

Though social organizations provide support for college homosexual students, universities should do more for them, sex sociologists said.

"Almost all Western universities have their own public and legal students' homosexual associations. China universities should do the same," said Li Yinhe, a socialist at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

At individual basis, homosexual students should be more tolerant of themselves and accept themselves for who they are, she added.

9. The University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
http://www.arizona.edu/features/pride-alliances-queer-film-series-questions-social-norms
Pride Alliance's Queer Film Series questions social norms
Unknown


Blockbusters? Yes! Sneak previews? Of course! The Union’s Gallagher Theater has these in abundance, as any good Wildcat knows. But many Wildcats may not know that Gallagher also showcases films and presentations that raise awareness about a number of issues for campus organizations.

A perfect example is right around the corner: from January 26-March 30, the Pride Alliance is sponsoring a Queer Film Series. Mark your calendars for these films, which may just challenge you to think some different thoughts. Do we do provocative? Yes, we do – it’s a college campus. You’re supposed to think.

Outrage
January 26, 7pm
A documentary about the closeted lives of secretly gay politicians who vote against pro-gay legislation, told through the eyes of Michael Rogers, a gay rights activist. “Outrage” exposes the secrets and hypocrisy of “individuals who are working against the community that they then expect to protect them.”

Pageant
February 16, 7pm
The topic is Miss Gay America in this documentary that highlights the similarities and differences between the pageantry that mainstream America knows, and the Drag culture that Miss Gay America glorifies.

Training Rules
February 23, 7pm
The training policies of Penn State University’s women’s basketball coach, Rene Portland, are examined here. Portland is famous for three rules- no drinking, no drugs, and no lesbians. Basketball player Jen Harris experienced the discrimination imposed on lesbian athletes at Penn State and ultimately decided to take action with the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

Fabulous! The Story of Queer Cinema
March 30, 7pm
This film is a close examination of the LGBTQ community’s various triumphs: experimental films, indie films, sex scenes, the transition to mainstream Hollywood drama, and more.

The film series is done in partnership with LGTBQ Affairs, ASUA, the Women’s Resource Center, and the Dean of Students Office.

For more information on this or any cultural events around campus, always keep an eye on the Student Union Calendar!

______________________________
_________________________________
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 regarding fair use of copyrighted work, this material is distributed without profit for information, research, and educational purposes. The Consortium has no affiliation whatsoever with the originators of these articles nor is the Consortium endorsed or sponsored by the originators.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Queer News on Campus December 20

1. The Harvard Crimson - LGBT Books Vandalized With Urine in Lamont Library
2. The Harvard Crimson - Damaged LGBT Books in Lamont Not Result of Hate Crime, Dean Says
3. Inside Higher Ed - Calling Gay Leaders
4. The Daily Illini - Gay community, allies had busy year of activism in C-U
5. University of Wyoming News - University of Wyoming Rainbow Resource Center Receives Donation
6. The Salt Lake Tribune - MBA students at U. launch gay club
7. Inside Higher Ed - NCAA Considers Transgender Policy
8. The Harvard Crimson - Harvard LGBT Community Upset By Lamont Incident
9. The New York Times - Lesbian Coach’s Exit From Belmont U. Has Nashville Talking
10. The Chronicle of Higher Education - Gay and Lesbian College Presidents Go Public With Web Video
11. The Tennessean - Belmont faculty wants sexual orientation added to nondiscrimination policy


1. The Harvard Crimson, December 12, 2010
14 Plympton Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2010/12/12/books-library-incident-community/
LGBT Books Vandalized With Urine in Lamont Library
By Sirui Li


Approximately 40 books dealing with LGBT issues were vandalized with what appeared to be urine in Lamont Library on November 24, according to a report filed Friday by the library security staff to the Harvard University Police Department.

HUPD spokesman Steven G. Catalano wrote in an e-mail that the vandalized books' subject matters included lesbian and gay issues and same-sex marriage. Due to the nature of books, HUPD is currently investigating the incident as a bias crime.

"The HUPD has zero tolerance for any bias-related incidents or crimes," Catalano said.

"Harvard College will not tolerate acts of vandalism, especially those that appear to be motivated by hate or bias," Harvard College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds wrote in an e-mail to The Crimson. "[As] a community, we will continue to affirm our shared values of dignity and respect for everyone in our community."

The library staff members found an empty bottle next to the vandalized books that may have contained the urine, according to Harvard College Library spokeswoman Beth S. Brainard. The staff initially responded to the incident as a health hazard, quickly removing the bottle and relocating the damaged books to the Collections Conservation Lab on Level D of Widener Library.

Brainard said that the library staff assessed the value of the vandalized books before reporting the incident, accounting for the space of two weeks between the incident and the  report to HUPD. The books—which Brainard estimated to be worth a few thousand dollars—will be discarded due to the severity of the damage.

"Once the urine is poured, they can’t really fix [the books]," she said.

It remains unclear whether Lamont will replace the books, since Widener usually has copies of the books in Lamont, according to Brainard.

Marco Chan '11, co-chair of the Harvard College Queer Students and Allies, called the incident "extremely frustrating" and "disconcerting," and said that it represents a concern not only for the LGBT community, but for the Harvard community at large.

"I am very outraged. It is hard to conceive this as a coincidence when there are 40 books on the same subject," Chan said. "The message that this incident sent to me is that we need more resources not only for the LGBT community but also targeted towards other people."

Chan suggested workshops on homosexual, bisexual, and transsexual issues—similar to the mandatory freshman orientation event Sex Signals—as one possible way to respond to the bias evidenced by the incident.

"Everyone in our community should know that they play an important role in adjusting homophobia," Chan said.

Books about LGBT issues are located on Level B of Lamont Library.

Staff Writer Sirui Li can be reached at sli@college.harvard.edu.

2. The Harvard Crimson, December 13, 2010
14 Plympton Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2010/12/13/lamont-hammonds-LGBT-harvard/
Damaged LGBT Books in Lamont Not Result of Hate Crime, Dean Says
By Alice E.M. Underwood


UPDATED 9:51 p.m.

After conducting an investigation in response to a recent police report that 36 books treating LGBT topics had been damaged with what appeared to be urine in Lamont Library last month, the University determined Monday morning that the incident was an accident and will no longer be treated as a hate crime, according to a statement sent from College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds to the Harvard community on Monday.

On November 24, library staff at Lamont discovered the damaged books—on subjects including lesbian and gay issues and same-sex marriage—along with a bottle assumed to have contained what investigators believed to be urine. This past Friday, library personnel reported the incident to the College and Harvard University Police Department as vandalism, and the affair was subsequently investigated as a hate crime for the "focused nature and related topics" of the affected books, according to Hammonds.

But upon an investigation by HUPD, it was revealed Monday morning that "our own library personnel" had accidentally spilled a bottle, containing what was reported to be urine, that had been found on the shelf, according to Hammonds. Harvard College Library plans to replace all 36 damaged books as soon as possible, she added.

"I believe this is an important new fact in the investigation and warrants my sharing it with you immediately. While we should not minimize the seriousness of this incident, HUPD is no longer classifying this incident as a hate crime," Hammonds wrote in her statement. "This nuance in the facts in the case also explains why library personnel did not immediately report the incident and treated it instead as a prank."

Faculty of Arts and Sciences spokesman Jeff Neal wrote in an e-mail that it remains unclear why a bottle of urine was stowed in the library, adding that the spill was reported by the library employee—the same person who caused the spill, according to his understanding—and cleaned up the same day that it occurred.

In response to the initial appearance of the incident as an act of homophobia, Neal reiterated the significance of an inclusive and diverse community as highlighted in Hammonds’ statement.

“Dean Hammonds has repeatedly emphasized the importance of creating a welcoming environment for all students and all affiliates of all backgrounds throughout the Harvard community,” Neal wrote, adding that sexual orientation and gender identity are included in Harvard’s non-discrimination statement.

Harvard College Library spokeswoman Beth S. Brainard declined to comment, referring all questions regarding the incident to Neal.

Though Harvard College Queer Students and Allies Co-Chair Marco Chan '11 expressed relief that the damage was the result of an accident and not a targeted act of homophobia, he said that he remained concerned by facts of the incident that remain unexplained.

"On the one hand, I feel relieved by the news—but on the other hand, I’m still holding breath on questions that are still unresolved," Chan said. "Why was there a bottle of urine on the shelf? Why did it take two weeks for library or HUPD to figure out that this was just an accident? Did someone suddenly come forward?"

QSA Co-Chair Emma Q. Wang ’12 said she was disappointed that Hammonds is only now speaking out about LGBT issues, and that her statement does not address problems faced by the community beyond the incident at Lamont. Wang described Hammonds' e-mail regarding the books as "poor timing," considering the series of LGBT suicides across the nation and the two hate crimes—one an assault on an undergraduate by people shouting homophobic slurs, and the other anti-gay graffiti in a graduate dorm—that occurred at Harvard earlier this semester.

"I don’t think this issue was handled with the degree of sensitivity and care it could have been," Wang said, noting that while the incident is no longer being characterized as a hate crime, it still had an impact on the LGBT community. "It is the College’s responsibility to treat everyone in the community as an equal and to shoulder equal responsibility for incidents that affect that community."

While Hammonds did not release a statement in response to the incidents affecting the LGBT community earlier in the semester, today’s statement does stress ongoing attempts to foster inclusion and diversity on campus. She wrote that these attempts reflect the College’s desire "to uphold important community values of civil engagement on moral and ethical questions in a diverse world," naming both the ongoing BGLTQ Working Group and the Sustained Dialogue Program as striving to fulfill these missions.

Hammonds convened the BGLTQ Working Group in October with the purpose of evaluating the needs and resources of LGBT students and allies. She wrote in the statement that she has asked the Working Group to consider the Lamont incident in formulating their recommendations to the Dean, to be delivered in March, regarding LGBT needs at Harvard. The Sustained Dialogue Program is part of a nationwide network with the aim of creating venues for discussions on issues of diversity and was also adopted at Harvard at the start of the fall semester.

With this emphasis on encouraging conversations within the campus community, Hammonds concluded her statement on a positive note: "In the end, I am heartened by the chorus of support that this incident has elicited for all students, faculty, and staff within the Harvard College community, and value the important conversations it has prompted."

In the e-mail containing the link to Hammonds’ official statement, the Dean addressed students at the College with the hope that the incident would reaffirm the integrity of the College’s diverse community.

“This is an important moment to reiterate our shared values and to note that Harvard College mandates that everyone show respect to all members of our community," Hammonds wrote. "I hope you will join me in espousing and practicing these shared principles."

Staff writer Alice E.M. Underwood can be reached at aeunderw@fas.harvard.edu.

3. Inside Higher Ed, December 13, 2010
1320 18th Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036
http://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2010/12/13/roggow
Calling Gay Leaders
By Michael Roggow


Competition among colleges has forced boards to beat the bushes in search of the best leaders. Fewer provosts are drawn to the presidency. More talent is needed, and the performance bar continues to be raised. Who has emerged in this competition? The answer: many, and many more than in the past who are openly gay.

Historically, the gay college president is not so rare. Yet who could name one from previous generations who was open about his or her orientation? I cannot recall one, and for good reason: the out college president or presidential candidate probably would have paid a heavy price. However, times are changing. There now are at least 25 openly gay presidents, and they are nothing short of pioneers. Their stories forever grab my attention. So two years ago, I set out to interview them for a long-term research project. To date, I’ve met 13, but hope to meet more.

All are remarkable, but there are a few who made a lasting impression: among them, Charles Middleton, from Roosevelt University; Theodora Kalikow, from the University of Maine at Farmington; and David Wain Coon, from Evergreen Valley College in California. They spoke about many topics, and they offered up plenty of career advice for other gay people who hope to become presidents. As gays often make good managers, they say, search committees and boards of trustees would be wise to recognize their promise in advancing institutions. And as a gay man who continues to reach for leadership positions, I got my share of good advice, too. I’m most likely not bound for a presidency, but their words still hold great value for me. Here, I will share what I heard, with hope that others will also learn, regardless of where they happen to be in their careers at the moment.

You may be surprised to learn that most of these presidents waffled about coming out to search consultants, committees and boards. Yet without gay presidential mentors, they were left to their own devices. They found ways to be out and land presidencies, though it was hardly smooth. What I’ve learned from them is that we can be out. But that’s secondary. The first priority is performance, as an administrator or professor, and leading with integrity.

Authenticity: the Cornerstone for Gay Leaders in Academe

Honesty and openness will never fail us. Being out is being authentic.

Hire a gay president and you often get someone who is thoroughly committed to diversity, says Charles Middleton. A gay candidate knows what it means to struggle. You will also certainly get a role model for members of the community, both LGBT and others. This authenticity encourages other people to relax, feel safe and be more open.

Faculty and students will benefit. Presidents who offer the role model of authenticity send a message that others are free to be themselves. It is symbolic and powerful. The president is a public figure and it’s as important for him to be out as it is for a public official like a state senator or governor.

Yet, might authenticity get in the way of fund-raising? Also, how have alumni reacted? "The alumni don’t care if the president is gay," says Theodora Kalikow. "They care that you’re a good president. They care about how you ask them for money. They care about how you follow through after they donate. They don’t care that you’re gay. If they do, you don’t want their money."

Another who oversees a selective liberal arts college agreed: "If the alumni had problems with the fact that there’s a gay president, then they probably wouldn’t return for alumni events. What’s important is bringing energy to campus and running it well."

Advice for Gays Who Seek a Presidency

"Presidential searches work best when the common focus becomes mission-driven, and race, gender, sexual orientation and other factors go by the wayside," says Nancy Martin, an executive search consultant.

To be successful, your search and selection process must be open. If we are at ease with who we are, boards will be as well. Angela Provart, a consultant who helps identify candidates for senior positions at community colleges, said that more and more candidates are out, and they often want assistance with finding a comfortable place to work. In fact, many search consultants agree that it is now more common to meet candidates who are openly gay. Some consultants work comfortably with them. Still, others do not. Some well-meaning but homophobic professionals suggest not coming out at all. Others don’t respond to gay candidates, period.

But it is important to let the search committee know you’re gay. Don’t surprise them, most presidents and consultants warn. A search and selection process must be open. Unless you want to live and work in the closet, everyone involved should be aware of your orientation, and a job offer should be made only with this knowledge.

When you are ready to work with a search firm, express that you are gay or lesbian early on. The consultant can then be prepared to find the most effective ways of including this information in a conversation with the chair of the search committee (without necessarily identifying you). They can often judge whether it is likely to be an issue in the search process.

Determine as accurately as possible whether you will be a match with a particular institution. Get as much information as you can. As David Wain Coon advises, be sure it’s a safe place to be out. "Don’t put yourself at personal or professional risk," he says. "It’s about reading your environment. If I feel a bad vibe after an interview, I won’t work there."

For Search Committees and Boards of Trustees

Board membership carries with it a moral and fiduciary responsibility. Boards must seek out excellence, and voices for the future. Leaders in education must come from the broadest spectrum of our treasure chest of possibilities. If they limit the possible candidates, our nation is diminished and board members will not have fulfilled their trust to their institutions, says consultant Nancy Martin.

Middleton adds that if boards are to attract more talent, they are going to have to focus on accomplishments more than personal characteristics. When they advertise presidential positions, they should state that LGBT candidates are encouraged to apply. They need to make it very clear as early as possible in the search process that sexual orientation per se is not an issue to the board, and they should say that explicitly by including sexual orientation in a list of qualities under which the institution does not discriminate.

When it comes time to invite candidates to campus, the domestic partner should be invited, as well, several presidents agree. "The board should put them through the same process as a heterosexual candidate," Middleton says. "If an institution doesn’t do this, then fine. But the institution should then make it clear that it doesn’t do it for anyone. The more explicit the institution is, the better."

To Gay Leaders Who Want to Advance

"It is important to prove yourself — as a scholar, in administrative roles, as department chair and as a committee chair," says Kalikow. “People need to see how you perform in these positions."

She adds, “It’s also important to have good friends. You need a network of supportive professional persons at your institution. You develop friends in the wider communities that you work in. As a scholar and administrator, those friendship networks are important."

Middleton adds that we need to be very effective and professional in our jobs, and especially reliable. Opportunity is enhanced if we do all these things — and while nothing is guaranteed, our careers are more likely to prosper by making these a priority.

Finally, David Coon reminds us never to hide. “If you hide, people may wonder what else you’re hiding,” he says. “By being out, you’re saying: This is who I am. I’m comfortable and I’m humble.” People may find you more approachable and more trustworthy.

Tips for Gay Presidential Candidates

-Focus on your accomplishments. Your sexuality is important, but it's not the most important feature you bring to the table.
-Make certain the values of an institution are consistent with your own. Take the institution's tolerance temperature.
-Be upfront with the search consultant and with the board. Your search must be open. Candidates who are gay should say so, when the time is right.
-Those campuses that welcome gay leaders are not always obviously welcoming. Some rural or suburban colleges may be more welcoming to gays than colleges located in urban centers with large gay populations.
-If you are comfortable with yourself, the board will be as well.

How Search Committees and Boards of Trustees Can Signal That They Welcome Gay Candidates

-When advertising presidential positions, state that LGBT candidates are encouraged to apply.
-Make it clear as early as possible in the search process that your institution welcomes diversity with regard to sexual orientation.
-When inviting candidates to campus, invite the candidate’s partner as well.
-If your institution provides benefits to same-sex partners, advertise it on your institution’s human resources web page.
-Communicate your institution's values when you advertise professional positions. If you value social justice and challenging the status quo, say so.

Michael Roggow has conducted interviews with many gay college presidents over the last two years. He works for the Office for Academic Affairs and is an adjunct assistant professor of psychology at City University of New York’s Bronx Community College. He can be reached at mjroggow@aol.com.

4. The Daily Illini, December 13, 2010
12 E. Green St., Champaign, IL 61820
http://www.dailyillini.com/news/campus/2010/12/13/gay-community-allies-had-busy-year-of-activism-in-c-u
Gay community, allies had busy year of activism in C-U
By Joseph Ward


Whether it was to get out the vote locally or honor victims of a sad, national trend, members of the University’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community and its allies had a busy year.

Editors note: This article is part of The Daily Illini's semester in review edition. These articles are meant to round-up the most important news of the Fall 2010 semester.

Kicking off their season of political and social activism, the LGBT community celebrated National Coming Out Day on Oct. 11. Support groups such as PRIDE, BI-PRIDE and the Women’s Resource Center helped the LGBT Resource Center have a continual presence on the Quad that Monday in order to campaign for equal rights and acceptance of gay students.

The annual event had significant added weight this year according to event organizers, because of the highly publicized string of gay suicides on college and high school campuses across the country this fall.

To remember those who had taken their lives, LGBT members and their allies held a candlelight vigil by the Alma Mater on Oct. 20.

“There’s a lot of bullying going on, and some people think it’s harmless. Words are powerful and they can hurt. They can attack,” said Leslie Morrow, director of the LGBT Resource Center.

Students at the event said they hoped their actions, along with similar vigils nationwide, would help usher in a new found acceptance of young gay individuals.

“Hopefully it promotes a call to action,” said Kevin Ng, sophomore in AHS. “I had to honor those who committed suicide.”

And while the gay community sought social change, they also made efforts to influence local, state and national politics and policies. On Oct. 26, the LGBT community and its supporters staged a rally to encourage political activism at the Canopy Club.

“I think there is some resentment within the LGBT community towards the government,” said Nathan Fredrickson, graduate student. “I realize there may be more important things to deal with, like the economy and wars, but it’s frustrating when we get all stirred up with hope when nothing really happens, like with the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ repeal being overturned. But I believe we should still keep working even though things are disappointing.”

LGBT issues were of great political concern, particularly in the race for Illinois Governor. Whereas Republican candidate Bill Brady supported constitutional amendments banning gay marriage, Gov. Pat Quinn — the eventual winner — supported, and eventually signed into law, a bill legalizing civil unions.

5. University of Wyoming News, December 13, 2010
http://www.uwyo.edu/uw/news/2010/12/university-of-wyoming-rainbow-resource-center-receives-donation.html
University of Wyoming Rainbow Resource Center Receives Donation
Unknown


The University of Wyoming's Rainbow Resource Center (RRC) is expanding its library.

During its recent ASPIRE (Association of Special Programs in Region Eight) conference, TRiO, an educational assistance program at UW, designated the RRC to receive funding through its Bring-A Book Community Service Project.

The library offers materials on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, queer identity, health, politics, spirituality and history, as well as fiction, poetry and memoirs. The library is used extensively for research purposes.

The RRC serves more than 3,000 UW students, faculty, staff and community members.

"It provides a safe and supportive environment for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, questioning and queer individuals, their families and other allies," says Sandy Straley, UW Student Support Services project coordinator and Wyoming ASPIRE president.  "We are thrilled to support this important and unique collection of LGBTQ literature."

More than 240 TRiO professionals and other educational opportunity personnel attended the recent conference.  These professionals represent TRiO programs that provide services to increase access to higher education for low-income, first-generation (neither parent holds a college degree), minority students and students with disabilities.

For more information about the RRC, call Dolores Cardona at (307) 766-6228 or Emily Hart at (307) 766-3478.

6. The Salt Lake Tribune, December 14, 2010
90 S. 400 West, Suite 700, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/50873312-76/students-business-gay-glbt.html.csp
MBA students at U. launch gay club
By Rosemary Winters


Student clubs for gay and transgender students have become commonplace at Utah’s colleges and universities. But the University of Utah is believed to be the first in the state to have such a club specifically for business students.

Marc Stillman and J.J. Oliver, two gay students working on their MBAs at the U.’s David Eccles School of Business, have founded the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Students and Allies in Business, also known as GLBT Alliance. Such clubs already exist at business schools at Stanford, Columbia and elsewhere.

"We hope to be a catalyst to help businesses in the state to create vibrant work environments that will be magnets for diversity," Oliver said in a statement. Many job candidates now look to the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index, which rates companies on their treatment of GLBT employees, to judge an employer’s workplace climate, Oliver noted.

The new club, which has about a dozen members, including many straight students, hopes to boost awareness of academic and professional issues faced by GLBT students and professionals. Some employers offer health insurance benefits to employees’ same-sex partners and some don’t. Nine Utah cities and counties, including Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County, have adopted ordinances that make it illegal to fire someone for being gay or transgender, but those protections are not offered statewide.

"We know that fair treatment for gay and transgender employees is key to overall respect for diversity in the workplace," Brandie Balken, executive director of Equality Utah, said in an interview. "For the school of business to endorse inclusion of all employees makes sense."

The GLBT Alliance wants to host networking events to connect undergraduate and graduate students with Utah employers. In October, members of the group attended the 2010 Reaching Out MBA Conference in Los Angeles. This month, the alliance held a forum on the experiences of GLBT employees and managers in a variety of workplace situations.

"We want to be known as a place that can be an excellent educational home for people from all backgrounds," said Scott Schaefer, associate dean of the David Eccles business school. "We want people to know that if you’re GLBT, we’d love to have you at our school. If you’re LDS, we’d love to have you at our school."

rwinters@sltrib.com

7. Inside Higher Ed, December 15, 2010
1320 18th Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/12/15/transgender_ncaa
NCAA Considers Transgender Policy
By David Moltz


A working group of the National Collegiate Athletic Association has proposed an interpretation of existing policies to create paths for transgender athletes to compete on teams. This is the first time that the NCAA, in any capacity, has offered advice on this issue.

The interpretation endorsed by the NCAA’s Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports is nearly identical to a set of recommendations issued in a report earlier this year by the National Center on Lesbian Rights and the Women’s Sports Foundation. The NCAA’s national office staff are “reviewing the interpretation to determine if it sufficiently addresses the issue or if there is a need for further legislation.” If any legislation is needed, then it would be considered by the NCAA’s membership during its upcoming 2011-12 legislative cycle.

Under the proposed interpretation, a male athlete transitioning to female would be permitted to play on a women’s team if "that athlete has undergone testosterone suppression treatment for at least one year.” The member institution would have to provide the NCAA with “written documentation of testosterone suppression for the year of treatment” and “documentation of ongoing monitoring” to be eligible to play on a women’s team.

In the instance of a female athlete transitioning to male, the athlete would be permitted to play on a men’s team at any time. If the athlete wants hormone treatment, however, then the athlete “must get a medical exception for the use of testosterone before being eligible to participate in intercollegiate athletics” because the substance is on the NCAA’s banned drug list.

Athletes who transition socially, but do not seek hormone treatment, also have the option to compete for their “birth-gender team.”

NCAA officials did not return requests for comment about the proposed interpretation. The announcement was posted on the NCAA's website Tuesday, but was removed, and an NCAA official said it had been placed there before it was scheduled to be released. The article said that the association “acknowledged the need to clarify existing guidance, which recommends a student-athlete compete in the gender recognized on his or her state documentation, such as a driver’s license.”

Last month, Kye Allums, a George Washington University junior and player on its women’s basketball team, publicly came out as a transgender man. Allums is believed by many to be the first openly transgender person to play Division I college basketball, though not the first to play on an intercollegiate team.

Transgender advocates believe Allums’s coming out spurred the need for a formal clarification from the NCAA as to how these athletes should be treated. Some experts, however, have been urging action on the issue for years.

“Kye put a face on this,” said Helen J. Carroll, director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights’ sports project. “It’s not just another issue now.

“I’m very encouraged that the NCAA is moving forward in a positive way including transgendered student-athletes in a way that’s practical and works. It’s a very exciting time for the entire transgendered community.”

Carroll added that this move by the NCAA may make it easier for transgender athletes to publicly come out about their status now that they know how they can maintain their eligibility to play sports.

Nancy Hogshead-Makar, senior director of advocacy for the Women’s Sports Foundation and professor at Florida Coastal School of Law, echoed Carroll’s praise. Given the NCAA’s work with her organization, she noted that she was not surprised by the association’s move.

“This is very consistent with all of the other things that they’ve done recently,” Hogshead-Makar said. “This is not inconsistent with work the NCAA has done on drug and alcohol abuse, eating disorders, pregnant athletes, etc. This is consistent with making sure that the most number of people can share in the educational experience called sports. It’s about breaking down barriers.”

8. The Harvard Crimson, December 15, 2010
14 Plympton Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2010/12/15/incident-lgbt-community-hate/
Harvard LGBT Community Upset By Lamont Incident
By Alice E.M. Underwood


Though the damage of 36 LGBT-related books in Lamont Library is no longer being characterized as a hate crime, the incident has brought to light the issue of homophobia on campus and left the LGBT community at Harvard feeling confused and frustrated.

The University’s response to the Lamont incident initially disappointed many members of the Harvard College Queer Students and Allies because of the lack of information, seemingly contradictory facts, and failure to explicitly address the problem of homophobia on campus, according to Co-Chair Emma Q. Wang ’12.

“We first felt on the alert because it was reported as a hate crime, and the LGBTQ community remains sensitive, as issues of homophobia must be comprehensively reported and commented on, especially by those in positions with the most information and influence,” said Wang, who participates in the BGLTQ Working Group that currently explores LGBT life and needs at Harvard.

Upon an investigation in response to a police report that 36 books treating LGBT topics had been damaged with what appeared to be urine in Lamont last month, the University determined Monday morning that the incident was an accident. A library staffer had spilled a bottle of what was reported to be urine on the shelf, according to a statement made by College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds.

Wang, who received several e-mails from strangers expressing their support for the LGBT community in light of the recent incident, said that the College must be forthcoming with clear information to prevent future incidents of this nature, as consistent information is crucial in dealing with sensitive issues. Wang added that the administration is taking steps to further address the lingering concerns of the LGBT community, but she was unable to provide details.

History and Literature Lecturer Timothy P. McCarthy ’93 expressed concern about the handling of the Lamont affair and its effects on the LGBT community.

“At this point, this peculiar incident has produced many more questions than answers, especially in the LGBT community. Until that changes, I think it’s premature to downgrade this from a ‘hate crime’ to an ‘accident,’” McCarthy wrote in an e-mail. “I’m no expert on bodily fluids, but it takes an awful lot of urine to destroy 36 books. Are the bathrooms not working in Lamont?”

QSA Political Co-Chair Sam J. Bakkila ’11-’12 echoed the frustration with the hazy explanation of the incident. He said that the accidental urine spill may be plausible, but wondered why it took over two weeks for the issue to be brought to public attention, why the story changed, and why the initial police report interpreted the issue as vandalism. As a member of the Harvard LGBT community, he said he felt put off to have found out about the issue from the press and not the administration.

“It’s quite unfortunate that so much attention has been given to this incident that was likely an accident, when there were two confirmed anti-LGBT hate crimes on campus earlier this semester,” he said. “Even if this incident was an accident, the fact is that homophobia is an issue that many LGBT students struggle with, even here at Harvard.”

Though pleased with the dedicated LGBT-friendly administrators on campus, Bakkila said that the Lamont occurrence, whether a hate crime or an accident, reflects the rift in communication between the College administration and the queer community and highlights the need for an LGBT center or office with professional support—resources enjoyed by other Ivy League schools.

Some of the media coverage of the story—though highlighting the issues faced by the LGBT community—has “gotten out of hand” since several news sources have expressed skepticism about the accidental nature of the urine spill in Lamont instead of accepting Hammonds’ explanation of the incident.

“Dean Hammonds has been a strong advocate for the LGBTQ community, particularly this year with the BGLTQ working group, and I fully trust her analysis of the incident,” he said.

Though most of the suspicions of a hate crime have been dispelled, the incident has shed light on the ongoing concerns facing the LGBT community, according to QSA Co-Chair Marco Chan ’11, who participates in the BGLTQ Working Group.

“At the end of the day, the incident does bring to mind that we too can be vulnerable to homophobia,” he said. “Going beyond relationships between LGBT students and the rest of the community, I believe that in thinking about inclusion and support, we need to think about how we’re actively supporting each other.”

On Nov. 24, library staff at Lamont discovered a group of damaged books that covered subjects including lesbian and gay issues and same-sex marriage, along with a bottle assumed to have contained urine. On Friday, library personnel reported the incident to the College and Harvard University Police Department as vandalism, and the affair was subsequently investigated as a hate crime due to the subject matter of the affected books.

Hammonds revealed on Monday morning that given the accidental nature of the incident, it will no longer be treated as a hate crime. She added that Harvard College Library plans to replace all 36 damaged books as soon as possible.

“I believe this is an important new fact in the investigation and warrants my sharing it with you immediately. While we should not minimize the seriousness of this incident, HUPD is no longer classifying this incident as a hate crime,” Hammonds wrote in her statement.

In a written statement to The Crimson, Hammonds elaborated saying that the library personnel only reported the incident to the police for insurance purposes.

“As a result, the filing did not need to be immediate,” Hammonds wrote on the two-week delay.

Staff writer Alice E.M. Underwood can be reached at aeunderw@fas.harvard.edu.

9. The New York Times, December 17, 2010
620 Eighth Avenue, New York, NY 10018
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/education/18belmont.html?_r=1&src=twrhp
Lesbian Coach’s Exit From Belmont U. Has Nashville Talking
By Campbell Robertson


NASHVILLE - The day before Thanksgiving break, the members of the Belmont University women’s soccer team gathered in the locker room after a strength training session. Their coach, Lisa Howe, had something to say.

She told them that she was a lesbian, and that she and her partner of eight years, the team’s former assistant coach, had decided to have a baby.

“She said she wanted to talk about her personal life one time only and there would never be a discussion again,” recalled Erica Carter, a senior on the team.

But the topic was far from finished. It continued the next week when the players learned that their coach was leaving her job. And it has swelled into a full-blown existential debate at this fast-growing private university.

Belmont, once a small Baptist university whose students were mostly commuters, has had a remarkable decade. Student enrollment has roughly doubled since 2000, and 10 new buildings have gone up. A college of entertainment and music business, the university’s showpiece, was established in 2003, and next year Belmont will open a law school. The university has rapidly risen in national rankings, and scored a high profile coup in 2008 as host of one of the presidential debates.

But the growth has not come without growing pains.

Three years ago, the university severed its 56-year-old ties with the state Baptist convention after a debate about whether the board could include non-Baptist trustees. But the university promised to remain Christian, if nondenominational.

Still, some see a continuing identity crisis — on the one hand, the university has a long reputation as conservative and Christian, a reputation safeguarded by the board of trustees, which includes several Baptist ministers; on the other hand, Belmont has aggressively earned a reputation as a progressive, artsy place to study the music business.

“What are we trying to do?” asked Cassidy Hodges, a senior. “It’s kind of back and forth, push and pull, between what we want at the university.”

That identity crisis is now in full public view.

The university will not comment on the circumstances of Ms. Howe’s departure, nor will Ms. Howe, citing contractual reasons. They refer to her departure as a “mutual agreement.”

Ms. Howe did say in an interview that her decision to become a mother is what prompted her to talk to the players, many of whom knew she was a lesbian anyway. Ms. Howe’s partner, Wendy Holleman, left Belmont in 2008 to coach at a private high school; she is due with the couple’s first child in May.

“By continuing to hide, I felt like that was the wrong message to send,” said Ms. Howe, 41, who describes herself as a churchgoing Christian. “I thought maybe they assumed I was ashamed or that I was doing something wrong because it wasn’t coming straight from me.”

Ms. Carter said most of the players were excited about the baby. But the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, Ms. Howe called Ms. Carter and told her that the father of one player had complained over the weekend. Ms. Howe also said that she had been told by the athletic director that morning that if she did not resign, she would be fired, Ms. Carter said.

Ms. Howe had led the team to two conference championships, but the 2010 season was a disappointment, and on Dec. 1, Sari Lin, the team captain, asked the athletic director, Mike Strickland, if that was the cause for Ms. Howe’s departure.

Mr. Strickland told her that team performance was not the issue, Ms. Lin said, but that the baby “was going to be a problem” and would conflict with the university’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” approach.

The story has dominated headlines in Nashville, though the facts remain unclear. Students staged protests on campus. Members of the faculty passed a resolution of support for gay faculty members and students. Nashville metro council members introduced a bill to rescind an agreement that allowed Belmont to use a city park for a soccer field. The state Baptist convention commended Belmont officials for appearing to take a stand that “respected their Christian mission as well as their heritage.”

Nothing resonated quite like the surprise statement by Mike Curb, a trustee emeritus of the university and the deep-pocketed donor for whom the college of music business is named.

“It’s time for Belmont to change,” Mr. Curb, a prominent record executive and successful Nascar owner and sponsor, told The Tennessean newspaper. “Belmont has to decide whether they want to be a national, recognized university, particularly with their school of music business, or they want to be a church.”

A day later, Robert Fisher, the university’s president, made his first public comments, declaring that sexual orientation was not a consideration in hiring, promotion, salary or dismissal decisions at Belmont.

While many welcomed this statement, others said that the issue seemed to be whether gay faculty members could openly be in relationships and start families.

“We’ve always had gay faculty as long as I’ve been here,” said Michael Awalt, a professor of philosophy who has been at Belmont since 1970. But, he said, “it’s been a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ kind of mentality.”

In 2001, after a business instructor named Michael Burcham was outed by a student, he was told he would need to defend himself in front of the board. Mr. Burcham, who now teaches at Vanderbilt University, said that he did not feel that the faculty, students or even the administration had a problem with his sexual orientation, but that he sensed the board would not approve. He resigned.

In a joint interview, Dr. Fisher, who has been the engine behind the university’s decade of rapid growth, and Marty Dickens, the chairman of the board, said the Belmont community needed to have a serious discussion before making any official changes or clarifications of its policy.

Dr. Fisher has met with some of the faculty and with a gay Christian student group whose requests for recognition have been denied.

He said he welcomed the discussion. But, he added: “I would have envisioned this kind of discussion being a lot more measured and taking a lot longer and probably producing a lot less heat in a typical, structured university approach. But we’ve got what we’ve got.”

Asked if having openly gay faculty and staff members could create a conflict with the university’s Christian character, Mr. Dickens said, “there could be.”

“But everything needs to be taken in a proper context, and we are continuing as a university to dialogue on all of these issues,” he said.

Mr. Dickens also said that this controversy had little to do with the university’s recent growth.

But others said that a debate like this was bound to arrive at some point.

“We feel at Belmont that we’ve moved academically to a very different place,” Mr. Awalt said. “I’m not sure a lot of other things at the university have fully caught up.”

10. The Chronicle of Higher Education, December 17, 2010
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037
http://chronicle.com/article/GayLesbian-College/125741/
Gay and Lesbian College Presidents Go Public With Web Video
By Paul Fain


Click link for video.

A small but growing group of openly gay and lesbian college presidents will make its official debut at a March meeting of the American Council on Education. But the group publicly introduced itself on Friday with a Web video, which features several of its members and their partners.

"I'm black, and I'm a woman. But what you don't see is that I am a very proud lesbian president of a university," says Charlita L. Shelton, president of the University of the Rockies. "And my coming-out process could not have been better because I had someone who supported me, who's sitting right next to me."

Lynne Schumal, Ms. Shelton's partner, then says: "And most importantly, we're an out and proud lesbian couple."

The group, LGBTQ Presidents in Higher Education, was created at an August meeting in Chicago, and now includes about 25 member presidents. Its founders say they hope to provide professional support for members, as well as a possible platform for future advocacy. Leadership is needed on rights, scholarship, and advocacy, according to the group.

During the four-minute video, which was filmed during a second meeting of the group, held in November in Los Angeles, members give advice to other gay and lesbian leaders in higher education.

"Get and keep a sense of humor - it will serve you well," says Charles R. Middleton, president of Roosevelt University and a founder. "I did, and I became an out, bearded, bald, gay president. Who knew?"

While there are many openly gay and lesbian administrators at the vice-president and dean levels, progress has been slow at the top. The group hopes to change that.

"We're making this video for you, so that you know who we are, what we're doing, and as we proudly assume our rightful leadership role in United States higher education," says Neal King, president of Antioch University-Los Angeles. "We're here to stay. We want to get to know you. Join us."

11. The Tennessean, December 18, 2010
1100 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20101218/NEWS04/12180318/Belmont-faculty-wants-sexual-orientation-added-to-nondiscrimination-policy
Belmont faculty wants sexual orientation added to nondiscrimination policy
By Jennifer Brooks


Belmont University faculty members are calling on the school to adopt an official policy that would protect gay students, teachers and staff from discrimination.

In a closed-door session Friday, the faculty Senate passed two resolutions, one calling for sexual orientation to be added to the campus's nondiscrimination policy; another calling for the faculty, student and staff handbooks to include language that prohibits harassment.

The vote comes after soccer coach Lisa Howe left the university shortly after telling her players that she and her partner, former assistant Belmont soccer coach Wendy Holleman, are expecting a baby in May.

The faculty Senate unanimously approved a resolution in support of gay members of their community. A copy of the resolution language won't be made available until Jan. 10, when the Senate returns to approve the minutes of Friday's meeting. Howe's departure sparked campus protests, national headlines and a pledge from Belmont President Bob Fisher that the university does not base hiring and firing decisions on sexual orientation.

______________________________
_________________________________
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 regarding fair use of copyrighted work, this material is distributed without profit for information, research, and educational purposes. The Consortium has no affiliation whatsoever with the originators of these articles nor is the Consortium endorsed or sponsored by the originators.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

NCAA Considers Transgender Policy

NCAA Considers Transgender Policy
December 15, 2010

A working group of the National Collegiate Athletic Association has proposed an interpretation of existing policies to create paths for transgender athletes to compete on teams. This is the first time that the NCAA, in any capacity, has offered advice on this issue.

The interpretation endorsed by the NCAA's Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports is nearly identical to a set of recommendations issued in a report earlier this year by the National Center on Lesbian Rights and the Women's Sports Foundation. The NCAA's national office staff are "reviewing the interpretation to determine if it sufficiently addresses the issue or if there is a need for further legislation." If any legislation is needed, then it would be considered by the NCAA's membership during its upcoming 2011-12 legislative cycle.

Under the proposed interpretation, a male athlete transitioning to female would be permitted to play on a women's team if "that athlete has undergone testosterone suppression treatment for at least one year." The member institution would have to provide the NCAA with "written documentation of testosterone suppression for the year of treatment" and "documentation of ongoing monitoring" to be eligible to play on a women's team.

In the instance of a female athlete transitioning to male, the athlete would be permitted to play on a men's team at any time. If the athlete wants hormone treatment, however, then the athlete "must get a medical exception for the use of testosterone before being eligible to participate in intercollegiate athletics" because the substance is on the NCAA's banned drug list.

Athletes who transition socially, but do not seek hormone treatment, also have the option to compete for their "birth-gender team."

NCAA officials did not return requests for comment about the proposed interpretation. The announcement was posted on the NCAA's website Tuesday, but was removed, and an NCAA official said it had been placed there before it was scheduled to be released. The article said that the association "acknowledged the need to clarify existing guidance, which recommends a student-athlete compete in the gender recognized on his or her state documentation, such as a driver's license."

Last month, Kye Allums, a George Washington University junior and player on its women's basketball team, publicly came out as a transgender man. Allums is believed by many to be the first openly transgender person to play Division I college basketball, though not the first to play on an intercollegiate team.

Transgender advocates believe Allums's coming out spurred the need for a formal clarification from the NCAA as to how these athletes should be treated. Some experts, however, have been urging action on the issue for years.

"Kye put a face on this," said Helen J. Carroll, director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights' sports project. "It's not just another issue now.

"I'm very encouraged that the NCAA is moving forward in a positive way including transgendered student-athletes in a way that's practical and works. It's a very exciting time for the entire transgendered community."

Carroll added that this move by the NCAA may make it easier for transgender athletes to publicly come out about their status now that they know how they can maintain their eligibility to play sports.

Nancy Hogshead-Makar, senior director of advocacy for the Women's Sports Foundation and professor at Florida Coastal School of Law, echoed Carroll's praise. Given the NCAA's work with her organization, she noted that she was not surprised by the association's move.

"This is very consistent with all of the other things that they've done recently," Hogshead-Makar said. "This is not inconsistent with work the NCAA has done on drug and alcohol abuse, eating disorders, pregnant athletes, etc. This is consistent with making sure that the most number of people can share in the educational experience called sports. It's about breaking down barriers."

Monday, December 13, 2010

Queer News on Campus- December 12

1. The Tennessean - Belmont policy that led to gay coach's ouster is not unique: Christian universities often oust gay faculty
2. The Providence Journal - For gay and lesbian students, bullying knows no bounds
3. The Michigan Daily - The next chapter: MSA president Chris Armstrong works to re-define his presidency after Andrew Shirvell
4. The Washington Post - Belmont under scrutiny for firing gay soccer coach
5. The Campus Chronicle (Des Moines Area Community College, Ankeny IA) - Open minds, open hearts, open doors at DMACC
6. NBC 2 News Online - Donor wants Tenn. university to rehire gay coach
7. Inside Higher Ed - Defending a Lesbian Coach
8. Omaha.com/World-Herald Bureau - Gay marriage backed at UNL
9. The Towerlight (Towson University) - Response on transgender rights
10. The Chronicle of Higher Education - Life’s Queer Unfairness
11. The Badger Herald (University of Wisconsin-Madison) - ASM endorses LGBT anti-bullying program
12. TwinCities.com/Pioneer Press - AD Joel Maturi's Gophers golf program accused of discrimination, nepotism


1. The Tennessean, December 5, 2010
1100 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20101205/NEWS01/12050355/Belmont-policy-that-led-to-gay-coach-s-ouster-is-not-unique
Belmont policy that led to gay coach's ouster is not unique: Christian universities often oust gay faculty
By Bob Smietana


Belmont University may not be Baptist-affiliated anymore, but it's still Christian.

So faculty and staff must do what the Good Book tells them to do. And at Belmont, it's telling them no sex outside of marriage.

"We do adhere to our values as Christ-centered, and we don't want to make apologies for that," said Marty Dickens, chairman of Belmont's board of trustees.

That stance became clear last week, when the university parted ways with a women's soccer coach who outed herself as gay, several team members said, because she and her partner are expecting a baby. The school initially said she resigned but reversed itself Friday, saying the school and coach Lisa Howe reached a "mutual agreement" for her to leave.

That's not an unusual move for Christian universities, and not the first time it happened at Belmont, but it left gay students concerned about their status at Belmont.

Dorian McQuaid, a Belmont sophomore, said the school has insisted in the past that gay students are welcome.

"As a queer student, I am afraid to be at Belmont right now," McQuaid said.

Erica Carter, one of Howe's former players, said she was hurt and confused by the decision.

"This changes my perception of Belmont as a Christian university that could accept everyone," Carter said.

The school severed financial and other ties to the Tennessee Baptist Convention in 2007 and sought to redefine itself as a diverse Christian community. It retained a written policy for students, faculty and staff that forbids any sexual relations outside of marriage.

Dickens said the expectations for faculty are clear.

Belmont won't apologize for its Christian values, he said.

"We expect people to commit themselves to high moral and ethical standards within a Christian context," he said. "That includes members of the board, faculty and administration."

Christian schools often require faculty and staff to refrain from sex outside of marriage, said Karin Maag, professor of history and vice president of the faculty senate at Calvin College, a Christian school in Grand Rapids, Mich. Gay relationships are often specifically banned.

Calvin faculty and the board of trustees clashed last year over a trustee-imposed ban on speaking in favor of gay marriage.

Maag said that Christian professors are expected to be good teachers and good examples of the faith. "We are supposed to be modeling virtues as well," she said.

Faculty members at Union University, a Tennessee Baptist school in Jackson, Tenn., are banned from drinking alcohol, having homosexual relations or any sex outside of marriage.

"All Union University faculty are expected to live an exemplary Christian life both on and off campus," reads a standards of conduct statement on Union's employment application.

A former Belmont professor said he understands why schools set those boundaries. Mike Burcham, a clinical professor of entrepreneurship at Vanderbilt University and president of the Nashville Entrepreneur Center, taught at Belmont from 1997 to 2001. He left voluntarily after a student outed him.

Burcham said that it is no surprise that Belmont as a Christian school has a Christian culture. "You are either part of that or you are not," The former Belmont professor said he has no ill will against the school and believes it is moving toward being more accepting of gays. That may take years, he said, something that is hard for Belmont students to understand.

Schools Challenged

Others call Belmont's actions un-Christian. The Rev. Cindi Love, executive director of Soulforce, holds so-called Equality Rides to Christian schools, asking them to change how they treat gays. They've identified about 200 schools nationwide that specifically ban gay faculty, staff and students, but it was unclear late Friday whether Belmont was on the list.

Love said many Christian schools have a don't ask, don't tell approach to homosexuality. Having a baby with a gay partner would cross a line, she said, making someone's sexuality public.

"That pushes the envelope for a lot of people," Love said.

For staff members such as Howe, the end typically comes when someone off campus — such as a parent or donor — finds out about them. "It rarely comes from inside the academic community," she said.

Metro Nashville Councilwoman Megan Barry, who sponsored a nondiscrimination bill for Metro employees approved last year, said gay employees deserve protection. While she wouldn't comment on the Belmont case specifically, she reiterated the stance she took on her Metro bill.

"I believe that any discrimination in the workplace, including discrimination based on one's sexual orientation, is wrong, regardless of whether it occurs in the public or private sector," she said.

McQuaid and a group of about 20 other Belmont students are part of Bridge Builders, which is trying to build ties between gay and straight students. They've been trying to become an official student organization but have been turned down by the school. Organizers say they have collected 1,000 signatures in support of the group.

"We are not asking Belmont to hang up a sign saying gay sex and gay people are awesome," she said. "We are asking to form a student group where we can gather on campus. I don't understand why that is so difficult."

CLARIFICATION: An earlier version of this article should have made more clear statements attributed to Marty Dickens, chairman of the board of trustees for Belmont University. Dickens has defended the school's right to expect board, faculty and administration to adhere to high moral and ethical standards within a Christian context. He has not commented on why soccer coach Lisa Howe left the school or whether her departure was related to any of those standards. The Tennessean regrets any misunderstanding.

2. The Providence Journal, December 6, 2010
75 Fountain St., Providence, RI 02902
http://www.projo.com/news/content/LGBT_BULLYING_12-06-10_4NL8U73_v36.3272aba.html
For gay and lesbian students, bullying knows no bounds
By Gina Macris


SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I. - The setting: the bucolic campus of the University of Rhode Island in the summer of 2010.

The action: Kevin Cruz and Justin Willner walk along holding hands. One of them also joins hands with a young woman, Riley Davis. Brian Stack, the president of URI’s undergraduate Gay-Straight Alliance, walks along with the other three.

A car drives by with the occupants shouting, “Faggots!”

Lesbian or gay students at URI do not take their physical safety for granted.

Of the summertime incident, Andrew Winters, point man on gender issues for the URI administration, says, “These kinds of thing happen all the time.”

The drive-by slurs prompted URI President David Dooley to hold a meeting to address anti-gay bias even before the fall semester began.

A 2009 survey of public high school students by the Rhode Island Departments of Health and Elementary and Secondary Education indicated that about 9 percent, or nearly 1 in 10, identified themselves as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or questioning.

Almost 8 out of 10 in those categories had been bullied, according to a separate Education Department survey during the 2009-2010 academic year.

Those types of figures say “to me that we’ve got a giant problem,” says Winters, whose official title is assistant to the vice president for Student Affairs, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Programs and Services.

The death of Tyler Clementi of Rutgers University this fall has intensified concerns on college campuses and in elementary and secondary schools about bullying students who have identified themselves as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or questioning.

At URI, the anti-gay climate — including the shouting of epithets in close quarters and the appearance of swastikas in the university’s Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Center — is not a new problem.

In the late fall of 2009, URI invited a conciliation specialist from the U.S. Department of Justice to campus to try help defuse the situation.

Last spring, two female students reported that used condoms and a pile of garbage had been left outside the door of their dorm room.

More recently, President Dooley said students have helped the university “sharpen our vision of what we need to do” to create an environment in which diversity “is a quality of excellence in education.”

Gay students — led by Brian Stack, Kevin Cruz, Justin Willner, Riley Davis and others — say the day-to-day climate has not changed. Stack said Friday the university has taken some positive organizational steps.

About a dozen others occupied the 24-hour room of the university library for eight straight days in September to raise awareness of safety and other issues, including the lack of an appropriate space for the GLBT Center.

Willner said, “It was over in a week, but it was not an easy thing to do.”

Cruz said the sit-in brought out numerous unexpected expressions of support, including pizzas sent over by the URI Multicultural Center and other food delivered by university dining services. All of those who sent “care packages” got thank-you notes, Cruz said.

There also were some tense moments during the protest. Someone left a greeting card under a door at the LGBTQ Center. The message inside was, “Shut Up, Faggots. We know where you live.”

After Stack was taunted in front of witnesses, the URI police provided escorts to students going to and from the library.

The students ended the protest when the university agreed to six demands, including the renovation of Ruggles House for a new center and the hiring of a high-level administrator to oversee diversity initiatives. Bullying-prevention training for resident assistants in dormitories and the first round of diversity training for faculty and staff is scheduled for January.

Dooley on Thursday promised to add a graduate student to the GLBT Centers, but Stack says the operation needs a full-time professional to assist Winters.

While Stack and other students on the receiving end of anti-gay slurs and threats may take little comfort from statistics, James Robinson, executive director of Youth Pride, said research shows that schools with gay-straight alliances are generally safer places for everyone.

There are about 40 gay-straight alliances in high schools and colleges throughout Rhode Island, said Robinson, whose organization provides services for young people grappling with issues of sexuality.

Brown University has a Safe Zone Program organized by its LGBTQ Resource Center. Members of the Brown community can wear ribbons or buttons to identify themselves as allies of those outside the heterosexual mainstream, and use stickers to signal their spaces on campus as havens for anyone in need of a secure place.

Meanwhile, young people are coming out at earlier ages, says Michelle Duso, a former Youth Pride director and Rhode Island-based consultant with InFOCUS who helps schools establish inclusive and protective climates.

Philip Rutter, a psychologist at Widener University outside Philadelphia, said the average age for coming out has dropped from 17 to 14 for men, and from 19 to 16 for women in the last several years.

But this can also mean that they encounter homophobia at an earlier age, he said.

At the same time, their teachers are often ill-prepared to talk to children and adolescents about gender in appropriate ways, says Duso.

“It’s not about having conversation about sex, but conversation about families and relationships,” Duso said.

In West Warwick, a third grader named Joseph once came to the principal, Donna Peluso of the Horgan Elementary School, and asked her to call him “Kim.”

Peluso responded by talking to the boy about relationships in and out of school.

“I would be honored to call you Kim. I think Kim is a beautiful name,” she said. “Outside of school, or with your parents, I’d be happy to call you Kim.

“But Joseph is your legal name. Is it OK if in school I call you by your legal name?”

“That’s OK,” he said.

About a third of Rhode Island communities provide counselors who are specifically assigned to shepherd the social and emotional well-being of elementary school children.

At the Gordon School, a private elementary and middle school in East Providence, third-grade students have put a poster in the hall outside their room, inviting adults and children to write personal comments to help define who they are. One side was for girls and women and the other side was for men and boys. The poster was entitled: “Gender Bender”.

A man wrote: “I teach preschool, and most people think only girls teach kids that young.”

A woman wrote: “At home, I am the person who mows the lawn and does house repairs and painting, outside on the extension ladder. Fun!”

One boy wrote that he loved the color pink.

A girl said she loved playing baseball.

The books for the youngest children at Gordon include a story about two male penguins who want to adopt a baby, as well as depictions of families that include a mom of one color and a dad of another color.

Teachers have been trained in ways to handle little children’s questions about the two moms or two dads who drop off their child at school in the morning.

Gordon is not utopia, says Ralph Wales, the head of school, but the kinds of cruelty that children can bring to the classroom or recess should not be ignored.

Educators who say their only purview is the academic realm are not doing their job, particularly in middle school, he said.

“An excellent middle school education saves children,” he said.

Resources:
Youth Pride Inc.
171 Chestnut St., Providence, R.I. 02903
(401) 421-5626
info@youthprideri.org

Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG)
South Central Rhode Island
Ed and Ann Bonetti,
(401)499-3278
info@pflagscri.org

gmacris@projo.com

3. The Michigan Daily, December 6, 2010
420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109
http://www.michigandaily.com/content/chris-armstrong-profile?page=0,0
The next chapter: MSA president Chris Armstrong works to re-define his presidency after Andrew Shirvell
By Emily Orley


When Michigan Student Assembly President Chris Armstrong first applied to college, he had visions of becoming a video game engineer. His college essay was about the artistic merits of his favorite video game, and he only applied to colleges with excellent video game design programs.

But when this self-proclaimed nerd eventually came to the University of Michigan, he decided to take a different path. Armstrong immediately joined the University’s LGBT commission when he arrived on campus. He later became chair of the commission, and then ran for MSA president last spring.

Armstrong’s term as MSA president is halfway over, but his presidency has already received more publicity than most who serve in college student governments. Last fall, Armstrong gained national attention for the attacks he received from now former Michigan Assistant Attorney General Andrew Shirvell. The incident has been front and center in Armstrong’s presidency, but he hopes to change that in the four months he has left.

Armstrong joined MSA as a freshman and quickly rose through the assembly ranks as a representative on the assembly’s LGBT Commission.

“I immediately wanted to get involved with LGBT groups on campus because I wanted to meet other gay people,” Armstrong said last week in the offices of The Michigan Daily.

Armstrong made a lot of progress on the commission. He helped plan a launch event for National Coming Out Week in fall 2009 and was integral in helping the University become the host of the 2011 Midwest Bisexual, Lesbian, Gay, Transgender, Ally College Conference.

“I started getting involved and it just sort of spiraled and spiraled,” he said.

That same year, Armstrong met Jason Raymond, a fellow MSA representative, and the two became good friends. Two-and-a-half years later, the pair decided to run for office together.

Both were interested in the top position, but it was ultimately decided that Armstrong would run for the presidential spot. Raymond explained that putting Armstrong in that position was viewed as an excellent opportunity to represent his issues and break down a lot of barriers within MSA, since Armstrong would be the first openly gay MSA president at the University.

“We’re very much a team and we didn’t really care about the titles,” Raymond said, “but we decided it would be a great victory for Chris’s community for him to be MSA president.”

Freshman year, Armstrong and Raymond also met Alex Serwer, who helped build their campaign when they decided to run. Once elected, Armstrong appointed Serwer his chief of staff. Like Raymond, Serwer said putting Armstrong in such a distinguished position sent a powerful message.

“It’s a big moment for LGBT individuals.” Serwer said. “Seeing another (LGBT) student in such a prominent position is a really big deal for that incoming freshman that doesn’t really know what the LGBT community is like on campus,” he said.

Armstrong and Raymond ran with the organization MForward — a party that stands on the platform of representing a diverse group of students on the assembly, which they founded.

MForward viewed Armstrong’s future legacy as the first openly gay MSA president as an important milestone, and the party’s platform focused on LGBT issues. However, the party didn’t try to use Armstrong’s personal story to their advantage, and the issue of his sexuality wasn’t brought up by either party during the election.

“We always had the same issues that we wanted to work on, and that was never something that we had to make special arrangements for or consider in a different light,” Raymond said.

Serwer emphasized that the platform of the campaign was built around issues, and not Chris’s personal decisions.

“We made sure that whatever we were preaching to the students as they were voting was what we stood for, rather than Chris’s sexual orientation,” Serwer said.

Armstrong grew up in a small town in Connecticut with a population of about 25,000. While he came out to his parents when he was 15 years old, he had only told a couple of close friends in his hometown, and was not openly gay until he came to the University. Armstrong said hiding that secret in high school made him want to do things differently when he went to college.

“My goal when I came to the University of Michigan was to live openly, to be out and to really see how my life could be being myself,” Armstrong said.

While he was not ashamed of his sexuality, he said he always knew running as an openly gay man would create obstacles. He explained that a lot of insecurities about how he was dressing and acting surfaced when he assumed the presidency.

“To a certain extent, I’ve had to try to project more of a sense of authority just because there’s always that sense people won’t take you seriously,” Armstrong said. “I think those insecurities are universal, but when it comes from a minority or a minority group sometimes it’s more augmented.”

The obstacles Armstrong predicted were particularly challenging to overcome last April, when Shirvell, a University alum, began harassing Armstrong and his friends and family. Shirvell launched Chris Armstrong Watch — a blog Shirvell ran in order to monitor Armstrong and to accuse him of promoting a “radical homosexual agenda” on campus.

Shirvell posted pictures of Armstrong on the blog and drew offensive symbols over his face, like a swastika on top of a gay pride flag. On another picture, he wrote “racist, elitist liar” across Armstrong’s face.

Shirvell first approached Armstrong at a counter rally to a protest hosted by the West Borough Baptist church over a production of “The Laramie Project” in May 2010. Armstrong was speaking at the event in defense of the production, and said he had never once spoken to Shirvell prior to the rally.

As news of Shirvell’s blog began spreading across campus and the nation, Armstrong tried to abstain from reading it and to remain unaffected by it. But he “wasn’t surprised” when he found out about it.

“When I was running for president, knowing the background I had and knowing I wasn’t going to be closeted — I was going to be out with who I was — I wasn’t surprised because I was waiting for it,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong said the accusations didn’t concern him until Shirvell began attacking his friends and family.

“It was certainly upsetting the things he was saying, but it hurt more when he would say things about the people around me because to a certain extent I signed up for this. I signed up to be criticized,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong remained publicly silent through most of the Shirvell incident, refusing to dignify the attacks with a response. And even when Armstrong did finally speak out, it was not a direct result of Shirvell’s actions.

Armstrong spoke out on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” — the first national media outlet to report the incident — after multiple gay adolescents committed suicide across the nation as a result of bullying.

“The only reason he went on Anderson Cooper was purely because during the week the Andrew Shirvell incident blew up in the media there had been a number of suicides across the nation with teens that were criticized by their classmates because they were gay or had been outed,” Raymond said.

Raymond said that no matter how hard Shirvell pushed him, Armstrong maintained a grounded perspective of the incident and refused to allow the blogger to prevent him from doing his job on the assembly.

“He could have engaged in a fight with this guy,” Raymond said. “He had many opportunities to do so over national media outlets. But instead Chris wanted to focus on the issues. He wanted to focus on his work on the assembly.”

Armstrong tried to serve as best he could during the controversy, using the position he had earned to push the improvements to campus he thought most necessary. But the episode did distract him from focusing entirely on MSA issues, which he says was the most upsetting aspect of the incident.

“I felt to a certain extent I was letting things get to me and had trouble refocusing,” Armstrong said.

Serwer also commented on the effects of the distraction, noting that many members of the assembly turned their attention away from the MSA issues they had wanted to focus on in order to deal with Shirvell’s attacks. But he said the distraction didn’t detract from the assembly’s overall goals.

“There were times when we were more focused on the incident at hand than we were with the latest MSA project and making sure whatever it was got done in the absolute strictest timeline,” Serwer said. “But it didn’t detract from our goals to any insurmountable point.”

In fact, many of the people that surround Armstrong on the assembly found the incident did the exact opposite. Raymond said Shirvell’s unjustified comments made the assembly want to pass more legislation dealing with LGBT issues.

“If anything, (the incident) gave us a little more fire when it comes to issues like open housing - issues that Andrew Shirvell targeted as a part of Chris’s ‘gay militant homosexual agenda,’ ” Raymond said. “I think it really empowered a lot of people on the assembly and really made us want to work harder.”

In recent months, MSA has been focusing their efforts on the issue of Open Housing which would allow students to choose to room in the dorms with students of the opposite sex.

Vice President for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper, who consults with Armstrong about student issues on a weekly basis, said she was impressed by his level of commitment to the assembly in the height of Shirvell’s attacks.

“Most of the time when I would meet with Chris during that period he would say, ‘I want to focus on what we need to get done on MSA,’ ” Harper said. “He would be the one that would make it clear that we needed to have a conversation related to MSA. And really, I’m not sure many people could have done that.”

But the rest of the student body wasn’t able to overlook the situation as easily. Students created a Facebook group in support of Armstrong and there were many pleas to the attorney general’s office to fire Shirvell for his actions. As of 8 p.m. on December 7, 19,469 people “like” the group on Facebook and have posted messages of encouragement and support of Armstrong.

Despite Shirvell’s bullying, Armstrong said that, in certain ways, the student body’s response to the situation made it worth enduring.

“It was really difficult to deal with all that, but I think at the end of it there have been so many reaffirmations about what this campus is, how we feel when someone outside our campus attacks someone inside our campus and that sense that we will respect each other no matter what,” Armstrong said.

As Armstrong tried to remain unaffected by the attacks, he said he was humbled by the student body’s outrage. Many students and organizations on campus took it upon themselves to rally for Armstrong and cry out against Shirvell.

“Seeing campus rally around bullying and LGBT issues the way that they did in reaction to the situation really showed how strong this campus is and showed how strong our values are,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong acknowledges that he was simply the focal point of a much larger issue.

He says he found the campus’s attitude regarding bullying toward the LGBT community a testament to the University’s commitment to diversity and acceptance.

“In a lot of ways, despite some of the issues that became national, I think for this campus, the pros have outweighed the cons,” Armstrong said.

While the Shirvell incident raised awareness for LGBT issues on campus, Armstrong said he doesn’t want that to be the only aspects of campus his administration improves.

“I wouldn’t say promoting LGBT issues is my main goal. That’s my background,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong said that his favorite part of the job is not furthering his own issues, but rather being able to help all types of groups on campus further their own goals.

“This University is so much bigger than you and the community you associate with. There’s a Michigan nation and there are so many different sects and parts of that,” Armstrong said. “Really the big challenge I’ve faced, and really enjoyed, is being able to be that face for as many of those issues as possible.”

Harper said Armstrong has intentions of making sure his sexual orientation doesn’t define himself, his agenda or his leadership.

“He could lead in such a way that one would think the only thing that matters are those things related to LGBT students but that has not been his leadership at all,” Harper said.

In fact, Armstrong said he hopes he is not just remembered for his work on LGBT issues. Armstrong laughed as he said the most impressive accomplishment that came to mind was the progress his administration made with the MSA website. Last March, MSA was heavily criticized for spending more than $9,000 on a website that didn’t function properly.

“The fact that we were able to revise the website after the whole debacle was such a motivating experience,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong has implemented a lot of changes during his 3-and-a-half years on campus — many of which have been overshadowed by the Shirvell incident.

In January 2009, Armstrong was integral in creating a task force that oversees organizations on campus and offers recommendations on how they can improve.

In February 2010, Armstrong was also the driving force on the assembly behind getting the University an offer to host the 2011 Midwest Bisexual Lesbian Gay Transgender and Ally College Conference, that it had been denied the previous year.

In October 2009, Armstrong helped plan a large event on the Diag to kick off National Coming Out Week. The event had a makeshift closet on the steps of Hatcher Graduate Library and people that attended the event were able to come out of the closet — literally and figuratively — and speak about their personal experiences.

This past March, Armstrong helped push through a resolution supporting Saturday night dinner in the dining halls on campus. He also helped to plan a trial run in three dining halls to demonstrate its effectiveness and spread awareness about the proposal.

But Armstrong and his staff’s biggest project to date has been working to get University Housing to adopt a gender-neutral housing option for students. The proposal, which was re-named the Open Housing Initiative, has made progress in recent months. The resolution was passed by MSA in December 2009. The Residence Hall Association passed a resolution in support of the option in April 2010.

“I’d say we’re right on our timeline. We set up goals that we would complete the proposal by a certain deadline and we met that deadline and now it’s being considered by administrators,” Serwer said.

Last week, the Open Housing Initiative submitted a proposal to several relevant administrators to be reviewed. According to Serwer’s understanding, there are many administrators, in addition to housing officials, who have jurisdiction on the issue.

The Open Housing Initiative won’t know any more details until they sit down with these representatives next week.

“The Open Housing Initiative and administrators have told us that students have done everything that possibly could have been done to show that there’s support behind this issue and logically argue for the implementation of open housing,” Serwer said. “The responsibility fully lies within the administration to implement this policy.”

So while it remains unclear if the option will be ready to implement this coming fall, Armstrong is working diligently to ensure it is put into effect as soon as possible.

“I have been devoting a lot of my time to open housing and it’s certainly been a struggle. And I want people to recognize that that issue made a lot of strides this year and emerged from some small conversations with housing to a large campus debate,” Armstrong said.

And Armstrong is working hard to ensure that these debates are not overshadowed by the Shirvell incident. Armstrong said that he hopes to take what he has learned from the incident and apply it to his life and the assembly.

“It’s certainly unfortunate that (the Shirvell incident) is the only thing that will be highlighted in some people’s eyes,” Armstrong said. “But I also think even though it was an unfortunate situation, I don’t think the outcomes were unfortunate.”

4. The Washington Post, December 8, 2010
1150 15th St. NW, Washington, DC 20071
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/08/AR2010120805829.html
Belmont under scrutiny for firing gay soccer coach
By Teresa M. Walker


Students at Belmont University protested the departure of the women's soccer coach again on Wednesday, calling on the school to make amends after her players say she was let go for telling them she is expecting a child with her same-sex partner.

A crowd that included some of Lisa Howe's former players held a three-hour protest Wednesday afternoon pushing for a change allowing for freedom of sexual orientation. Mike Curb, a music industry executive and major donor to the private Christian school, wants Belmont to rehire Howe and "act like Christians."

In a statement from her attorney, Howe told The Associated Press she misses her team and thanks Curb for his "powerful statement." She had not talked with Belmont officials directly and said her head is spinning.

"Coaching is my passion and my life's work," Howe said. "I do know that policies and attitudes would have to change for me to come back to Belmont and feel safe and welcome and for me to feel like my family would be safe and welcome."

Neither Howe nor Belmont have said why the coach left Dec. 2. Belmont issued a statement Friday calling her departure a "mutual decision." Asked Wednesday if she was pushed out for telling her players about her personal life, Howe declined comment through her attorney.

That hasn't stopped Howe's players from talking, or gay and lesbian students from objecting to her departure. About 50 students protested the decision on Sunday, a sit-in was held Monday outside the office of the university president and Curb made his statement Tuesday. Curb is a major donor whose name is on several buildings, including Belmont's basketball arena.

Sophomore Brandi Phillips said what happened to Howe is "really heartbreaking."

Her teammate, Laura Harris, also a sophomore, said the controversy has brought the soccer team closer together.

"There's nothing more we can do. We've got it all out there. All we can do now is hope for change," Harris said.

Belmont is seen as a progressive university that had been affiliated with Southern Baptists until it broke away in 2007, wanting to bring greater Christian diversity to its board of trustees. The university has thrived on its connections with Nashville's music industry and even hosted one of the 2008 presidential debates.

Curb made what students called a "game-changer" of a statement Tuesday.

"Belmont has to decide whether they want to be a national recognized university - particularly with their school of music business - or they want to be a church," Curb said.

A trustee emeritus, Curb issued a new statement Wednesday saying he spoke out because another board member spoke out on Belmont's behalf and that he had heard nothing from university officials for six days.

"President (Bob) Fisher has asked me as a member of the Board, now that I've made my statement completely, to hold off making any further statements to give him an opportunity to resolve these issues so that this type of injustice can never happen again," Curb said in his statement. "I promise you if the matter is not resolved, I will continue speaking out about this the rest of my life."

Fisher held a short news conference late Wednesday where he took no questions and said gay and lesbian students and faculty are welcome. He also said Belmont does not consider sexual orientation in its hiring or dismissals.

Howe had been coaching at Belmont the past six seasons, going 52-48-16 and winning the Atlantic Sun Conference regular-season title last year. Her players want her judged on her record and performance with her program.

Senior Erica Carter, days from graduation, wants state laws to provide protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation. She said coaches should be judged on their success and Howe's resume - which includes two championship rings in three years and an NCAA tournament bid - speaks for itself.

"Do they treat their players well?" Carter said of coaches. "Do they demand the best from them? Are they excellent at their jobs should be the only thing they're judged on."

Even though Howe hadn't shared details of her private life with her team before, players said they knew because it's impossible for details not to slip out. They said they never felt uncomfortable around Howe.

"She was, throughout her years, very professional," Harris said. "Completely kept her personal life to herself. Never showed anything to us."

Carter has taken the lead, along with her teammates, in sharing the news of what happened to their coach. More than 130 people took part in Wednesday's protest where students walked across campus before stopping at the main street in front of Belmont. Protesters came and went with passing cars honking in support.

One of the many signs read, "Is this what you wanted?"

5. The Campus Chronicle (Des Moines Area Community College, Ankeny IA), December 8, 2010
Building 3W, Room 2, 2006 S. Ankeny Blvd., Ankeny , IA 50021
http://media.www.campuschronicle.net/media/storage/paper1001/news/2010/12/08/Opinion/Open-Minds.Open.Hearts.Open.Doors.At.Dmacc-3965991.shtml
Open minds, open hearts, open doors at DMACC
By Allison Buckalew


Taylor Williams is now completely comfortable in her own skin. She is not afraid to be who she really is anymore.

Williams, a DMACC student studying science in the Liberal Arts program, finds the Ankeny campus to be much more accepting to LGBT students than high school was. LGBT stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender. "It's like a fresh start. And now I am really comfortable with being open in all of my classes."

Things have gotten a lot better in college, Williams said. In high school, everyone knows everything about you. In college, no one really knows you until you start getting to know them in return, she said.

Williams said that she is one of the lucky ones. "Anyone that I've told here basically reacts like, OK, no big deal, or it's cool with people."

So far, DMACC does not have any support group or club that would help students who are afraid to come out, or those who have come out and need that extra support from people going through the same situations and feelings.

As far as recognition goes, Williams said she feels that DMACC is not very good at recognizing LGBT students, she said. However, she feels as though DMACC has been pretty open and accepting of her so far.

Williams had someone ask her in one of her science classes here at DMACC why she thought she was the way she was. "I don't believe being gay is a choice, especially when it's sometimes apparent from a young age. I also don't like when people call it a 'lifestyle.' Why would someone choose to live a life with adversity?" Williams asked.

So far, Williams has only had one serious relationship during college since being out. However, the girl she was dating wasn't comfortable with acting like a couple in public. "I kind of feel cheated out of the dating experience so far because we had to hide who we are. I really just want the kind of relationship my parents have."

When she needs support, Williams goes to her friends first. She knows she can talk to her mom because she says she is a great listener and supports her, but it isn't something her mom can really identify with.

"It's very liberating to be out," Williams said, "but it also takes a lot of courage to come out, especially to your parents and family." Williams urges other students to establish a good support system beforehand. "It makes all the difference in the world."

Jonathan Krueger, another gay student on the DMACC campus, recalled what it was like for him before he came out in high school. He knew as early as seventh grade that he was gay, but wasn't comfortable with it until about junior year. "I was bullied some. When people are staring or snickering, you know you are being talked about," Krueger said.

One day, in the middle of one of Krueger's classes, another guy stood up and in front of everyone asked him if he was dating a boy. Krueger felt bad because a few of his friends were in that same class and he hadn't told them yet. "I felt outted before I was ready."

Coming out to his parents was hard. Krueger remembered being scared to tell his mom, but afterwards, felt relief. When his dad first found out, his first words were, "How do you think Jeff (Krueger's brother) is going to be treated at school now?" The words stung, but after the initial shock wore off, Krueger's dad became supportive and is now very protective of him, Krueger said.

Krueger said that, if possible, it is better to talk with someone when you know. The stress of holding in that big of a secret definitely took its toll. "I developed anger issues, anxiety and problems with depression. It's just better to tell someone. It helps your relationships with other people and yourself," Krueger said.

Krueger has definitely seen improvement in college, though. He's been pleasantly surprised at how open people are. People are much more accepting. "DMACC has been amazing," Krueger said.

"Most university campuses around the country have developed support groups for LGBT students…where is ours?" asked Julie Simanski, a speech teacher on the Ankeny DMACC campus.

Simanski has been an advocate for gay rights for years now, especially because she has a personal connection to someone who is gay, her brother. "We came from a very small community and so he couldn't really identify with anyone else. It wasn't until he was a sophomore in college that he finally came out, even though he probably knew long before that, that he was gay," Simanski said.

In 2004, Simanski used a DMACC grant to hold a pride week for all of the DMACC campuses combined. She was able to get a portion of the AIDS quilt on campus, which is an enormous quilt made as a memorial to, and celebration of, the lives of people who have died of AIDS-related causes.

Simanski was also able to contact Matthew Shepard's mother, who did a reading and a question and answer session with the community. Matthew Shepard was a University of Wyoming student who was tortured and murdered because he was homosexual. Ever since then, his mother Judy has been an advocate for LGBT youth and helps run the Matthew Shepard Foundation, which supports diversity and tolerance in youth organizations.

In addition, during pride week, tables were set up by different organizations that support LGBT students, such as Wells Fargo and Principal, which handed out information to students interested in learning more about tolerance.

Simanski described the whole event as successful for LGBT students and allies alike. The reception for Shepard's mother and her Q&A were very well received, Simanski said. Judy Shepard wasn't the type of person to push her opinions on you, Simanski said, she just felt strongly about equality and treating everyone with respect.

Simanski says that having a personal connection to someone that is gay, or knowing someone who is, helps to defy stereotypes. "When teaching, I try to be inclusive with relationship definitions." Recently, faculty has had some LGBT support training, but Simanski thinks there is much more that can be done. "There needs to be a group, or a place for resources dealing with bullying, or brochures or any kind of literature, really," she said.

Other LGBT students on the Ankeny DMACC campus may not be quite as well received as Taylor Williams and Jonathan Krueger, and feel like they are alone in their struggles. According to the PFLAG organization, Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays,"nearly a fifth of students are physically assaulted because of their sexual orientation and over a tenth because of their gender expression."

Laurie Wolf, the executive dean of Student Services, explained that it would be beneficial if students would want to create a club or support group for LGBT students. If so, they should go to faculty and find an advisor to help run it. "Most student-run organizations that are active are such because they have worked hard to be recognized." Wolf has found that students are less responsive to faculty organized groups than to ones they have created themselves. "We would be more than accepting if the idea of a club or support group would be brought to us," she said, adding that she is surprised that it hasn't happened on this campus yet.

According to Wolf, DMACC has a strong anti-discrimination policy that they adhere to no matter what kind of discrimination it involves. "We take any kind of discrimination very seriously, and we have absolutely no tolerance for it," Wolf said. She said she would hope that if any incidents were to occur, students would feel comfortable enough to come to her or any faculty members so they could put a stop to it immediately.

Faculty members have all had to take equal rights, discrimination and safety program training sessions, which includes anti-bullying. "I hope that we are an open enough community that we won't have to deal with any incidents like that," Wolf said.

For LGBT students dealing with a harsh environment on campus, a good place to start is with a counselor. Also, several instructors now have a pink triangle on their door, symbolizing they are a safe person to come to with any troubles or concerns. Simanski hopes that we can do more for this campus in particular. "Let's make this a place that's comfortable for everyone."

anyone else. It wasn't until he was a sophomore in college that he finally came out, even though he probably knew long before that, that he was gay," Simanski said.

In 2004, Simanski used a DMACC grant to hold a pride week for all of the DMACC campuses combined. She was able to get a portion of the AIDS quilt on campus, which is an enormous quilt made as a memorial to, and celebration of, the lives of people who have died of AIDS-related causes.

Simanski was also able to contact Matthew Shepard's mother, who did a reading and a question and answer session with the community. Matthew Shepard was a University of Wyoming student who was tortured and murdered because he was homosexual. Ever since then, his mother Judy has been an advocate for LGBT youth and helps run the Matthew Shepard Foundation, which supports diversity and tolerance in youth organizations.

In addition, during pride week, tables were set up by different organizations that support LGBT students, such as Wells Fargo and Principal, which handed out information to students interested in learning more about tolerance.

Simanski described the whole event as successful for LGBT students and allies alike. The reception for Shepard's mother and her Q&A were very well received, Simanski said. Judy Shepard wasn't the type of person to push her opinions on you, Simanski said, she just felt strongly about equality and treating everyone with respect.

Simanski says that having a personal connection to someone that is gay, or knowing someone who is, helps to defy stereotypes. "When teaching, I try to be inclusive with relationship definitions." Recently, faculty has had some LGBT support training, but Simanski thinks there is much more that can be done. "There needs to be a group, or a place for resources dealing with bullying, or brochures or any kind of literature, really," she said.

Other LGBT students on the Ankeny DMACC campus may not be quite as well received as Taylor Williams and Jonathan Krueger, and feel like they are alone in their struggles. According to the PFLAG organization, Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays,"nearly a fifth of students are physically assaulted because of their sexual orientation and over a tenth because of their gender expression."

Laurie Wolf, the executive dean of Student Services, explained that it would be beneficial if students would want to create a club or support group for LGBT students. If so, they should go to faculty and find an advisor to help run it. "Most student-run organizations that are active are such because they have worked hard to be recognized." Wolf has found that students are less responsive to faculty organized groups than to ones they have created themselves. "We would be more than accepting if the idea of a club or support group would be brought to us," she said, adding that she is surprised that it hasn't happened on this campus yet.

According to Wolf, DMACC has a strong anti-discrimination policy that they adhere to no matter what kind of discrimination it involves. "We take any kind of discrimination very seriously, and we have absolutely no tolerance for it," Wolf said. She said she would hope that if any incidents were to occur, students would feel comfortable enough to come to her or any faculty members so they could put a stop to it immediately.

Faculty members have all had to take equal rights, discrimination and safety program training sessions, which includes anti-bullying. "I hope that we are an open enough community that we won't have to deal with any incidents like that," Wolf said.

For LGBT students dealing with a harsh environment on campus, a good place to start is with a counselor. Also, several instructors now have a pink triangle on their door, symbolizing they are a safe person to come to with any troubles or concerns. Simanski hopes that we can do more for this campus in particular. "Let's make this a place that's comfortable for everyone."

6. NBC 2 News Online, December 8, 2010
WBBH-TV, 3719 Central Avenue, Fort Myers, FL 33901
http://www.nbc-2.com/Global/story.asp?S=13639027
Donor wants Tenn. university to rehire gay coach
Associated Press


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A major donor to Belmont University in Nashville wants the Baptist-affiliated school to rehire a coach who resigned shortly after revealing she is gay.

Mike Curb is a prominent Nashville music executive and former Belmont trustee who gave the university $10 million for an event center bearing his name.

Belmont officials deny that former women's soccer coach Lisa Howe was forced to resign, but several team members and Curb said she was.

Curb told The Tennessean newspaper that "Belmont has to decide whether they want to be a national recognized university - particularly with their school of music business - or they want to be a church."

Howe didn't say in a statement if she felt forced out, but she hopes gay issues at the school will now be openly discussed.

7. Inside Higher Ed, December 9, 2010
1320 18th Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/12/09/belmont
Defending a Lesbian Coach
By Allie Grasgreen and Scott Jaschik


The departure of Belmont University women’s soccer coach Lisa Howe — who was reportedly pushed out after revealing that she is a lesbian and her partner is having a baby — has been anything but quiet, even though Howe has not been speaking out.

In a single week, on a campus not known for its protests, students have organized multiple rallies, the Faculty Senate has passed a resolution supporting gay university employees, and a major donor has condemned the way Howe was treated. Many critics charge that Belmont, a Christian institution, has acted in ways that have left gay students and employees fearful for their ability to remain at the university.

Responding to the growing criticism, Robert Fisher, the president, called a press briefing late Wednesday in which he said that the university has "done a poor job of communicating" in recent days, and that he was sorry for "the pain, the hurt and the fear this has created among some of our students and the rest of our community."

Fisher cited standard practice of not discussing personnel matters in noting that he would not say anything about Howe (a point he reinforced by not even naming her). He said that Belmont is "a safe and welcoming place for all," and that there are "many gay and lesbian students" enrolled as well as gay faculty and staff members. In 10 years as president, he said, repeating himself for emphasis, sexual orientation has never been considered with regard to hiring, promotion, salary or dismissal decisions involving employees or "in any manner" with regard to students. Fisher did not take any questions at the event — and Belmont declined a series of requests Wednesday to make an official available for an interview about the disputes there.

The statement that Belmont does not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation appears to contradict a statement made several days ago by Marty Dickens, chair of the board of the university, who told The Tennessean that Howe had to leave because she violated clearly stated expectations requiring conduct consistent with the university's values. "We expect people to commit themselves to high moral and ethical standards within a Christian context," he told the newspaper. "We do adhere to our values as Christ-centered, and we don't want to make apologies for that."

Belmont's code of conduct for everyone on the campus states that persons who commit sexual misconduct are subject to disciplinary proceedings — and the code's first example of sexual misconduct is "sexual behavior outside of marriage." (Tennessee law does not allow same-sex marriage.) Belmont's anti-discrimination policy bars bias based on race, color, gender, national origin, age or disability but does not mention sexual orientation.

Accusations of hypocrisy were rampant on the campus this week — with many arguing that their view of Christianity is offended by Howe's ouster, not her presence. One sign at a protest Wednesday said: "Jesus Had Two Dads And He Turned Out OK.”

For Belmont, Howe's departure was the second incident this fall forcing discussion of how gay people there should be treated. Last month, the university defended a decision not to recognize a group of gay students and allies (and to instead sponsor discussions on the topic of sexuality). At that time, the university again stated that it does not discriminate, issuing a statement that said: "Mistreatment or harassment of anyone because of a personal characteristic or belief is contrary to the mission and values of the university and will not be tolerated.”

Members of the group Bridge Builders were angry at being rejected for recognition — and the treatment of Howe now has many more people questioning Belmont's policies.

“No matter what your beliefs are, no matter what your beliefs aren’t, people should be treated fairly and justly, and in this situation that wasn’t demonstrated,” Belmont senior Erica Carter said in an interview. A four-year veteran of the women’s soccer team, Carter worked closely with Howe and said she is an ideal coach for Belmont because of her caring nature and emphasis on academic performance. “[Administrators] are not acting the way that Christ says that we should act…. All Christians should try to treat each other with respect and decency because that’s what the Bible teaches us.”

Bridge Builders organized some of the campus protests this week, which have thus far included a sit-in at the Belmont president’s office and two outdoor protests – the second of which drew more than double the previous crowd, with 100 people marching across campus Wednesday. Some of those students have Facebook profile pictures declaring their support for Bridge Builders; others have pictures with “Christians don’t discriminate” stamped over the Belmont Bruins logo.

Max Ellis, a Belmont freshman and social chair of Bridge Builders, said Wednesday that the group is protesting the administration, not the university. "I'm convinced that this is no more than a few powerful people with this ideal in their head of what Belmont is and they're trying to force that sort of morality on us. They're trying to tell us what our morals are and what our ethics should be," he said. "The administration is making decisions that are not representative of the student population. And it's not representative of the vast majority of what we believe to be Christian morals. We're protesting against them on the basis of Christian morality."

In 2007, Belmont had a tense separation from the Tennessee Baptist Convention to gain more autonomy — and its students clearly take seriously the idea that it remains a Christian university.

“Prior to this I thought that all Christianity was one and the same, and it’s not really seeming like that right now,” Carter said. “It has made me just question what type of Christianity Belmont practices.”

At a Monday meeting, the Faculty Senate unanimously approved a resolution recommending that “the sexual identity of individuals should not impact that person’s standing on campus,” and urging the university to lead an open dialogue around Belmont and homosexuality. The resolution also noted the necessity for Belmont to act “in a moral and legal manner.” (Tennessee has no state law barring discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.)

The senate also tabled a second resolution asking the university to define its policy on gay employees.

Nathan Griffith, associate professor of political science at Belmont, voted on the first resolution and sponsored the second one. He said the Senate ultimately decided — "rightly so" — to postpone calling for policy change in order to allow time for a more thoughtful discussion with administrators. He also said the meeting drew a larger crowd than usual, with more non-Senate faculty attending.

Interim Provost Pat Raines issued a subsequent statement on Tuesday that essentially acknowledged the Faculty Senate’s right to make such recommendations. “As an ecumenical Christian university, we value and affirm the worth of every member of our community,” the statement said. “Members of the Belmont community — our students, employees, administration and board — represent a wide array of diverse perspectives on this issue, and we welcome hearing their voices in this ongoing dialogue.”

Mike Curb, a Belmont trustee who donated $10 million for the university to help build the Curb Event Center, sent a congratulatory letter to the Faculty Senate president after the resolution passed. In it, he said he hopes Belmont will offer to re-hire Lisa Howe. “Even though it’s been reported that the board has backed this, I can tell you that no one from Belmont or the board has contacted me regarding this issue,” he wrote. “I will do everything I can to try to get the Board of Trustees to reconsider their position based on the fact that this is a basic civil rights issue.”

The board backing Curb refers to alludes to the controversial comments of Dickens, the board chair.

Howe’s only public statement was in response to Dickens; she said, “This is an educational experience for all of us — including Belmont University. I respectfully ask members of the media to turn their attention away from me and toward the broader issues at stake that affect so many people in the Belmont community — such as what it means to be a diverse Christian community and how we can support and respect each other despite our differences.”

8. Omaha.com/World-Herald Bureau, December 9, 2010
604 Fort Crook Rd N, Bellevue, NE 68005
http://www.omaha.com/article/20101209/NEWS01/712099844
Gay marriage backed at UNL
By Robynn Tysver


LINCOLN - Parents and many others in Nebraska might oppose gay marriage, but their college-age children appear to embrace the idea.
Students at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln also overwhelmingly support a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants, according to a political survey by UNL students.
About 58 percent of the 2,500 students who responded to the e-mail survey said they supported gay marriage. By comparison, about 48 percent of likely voters nationwide said they supported same-sex marriage in an October Pew Research Center poll.
Even more UNL students — 73 percent — said they supported the idea of giving illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. By comparison, 63 percent of likely voters in a national Pew poll in April said they supported providing illegal immigrants with a way to earn citizenship.
The student survey was conducted in early November by a second-year elections class taught by professor Michael Wagner. It was the first survey of its kind undertaken at UNL by a political science class, he said.
The students surveyed were not randomly selected, which is the procedure used in professional political polls to ensure a representative sample. Instead, students chose whether to respond to a campus-wide e-mail survey request.
The idea was to learn more about students’ political opinions and their attitudes toward issues facing the nation and the state, Wagner said.
About 10 percent of the student body — graduate and undergraduate students — responded to the survey.
Sophomore Riley Johnson, 20, of Ellsworth, Wis., helped conduct the survey. He said he found the results on gay marriage and immigration “surprising.” He also said he thinks many students are attuned to both issues based on news coverage.
In Nebraska, Republicans and others have campaigned against policies that they say would grant amnesty to illegal immigrants. In addition, Fremont, Neb., voters have passed an ordinance — which is on hold — prohibiting property owners from renting to illegal immigrants.
The students’ opinions on immigration stand in sharp contrast to what others in Nebraska might be expected to think, Johnson said. “We’re in Nebraska, and immigration is obviously an issue that’s kind of hot right now.”
Not surprising in a GOP-leaning state, a majority of students identified themselves as Republicans — 37 percent.
Thirty-two percent identified themselves as Democrats, and 25 percent said they were independents. About 6 percent listed their affiliation as “other.”
Other findings in the survey:
>>About 58 percent of the students said they believed that the government was run by a few big interests. Seventeen percent said it was run to benefit all people.
>>Students identified health care, the economy, immigration, taxes and gay marriage as the top five issues facing the United States.
>>Students appeared to be divided on legalizing marijuana: 43 percent opposed it, 41 percent were in favor, and 15 percent were neutral.
>>A majority of students — 51 percent — opposed lowering the drinking age. Thirty-two percent favored the idea.
>>Christians, CNN newsman Anderson Cooper and President Barack Obama scored the highest in favorability ratings among the students surveyed. The lowest? TV and radio commentator Glenn Beck, GOP superstar Sarah Palin and reality television star Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi.
Contact the writer:
402-444-1309, robynn.tysver@owh.com

9. The Towerlight (Towson University), December 9, 2010
8000 York Road, University Union, Room 309, Towson, MD 21252-0001
http://www.thetowerlight.com/2010/12/response-on-transgender-rights/
Response on transgender rights
By Art King and Debbie Seeberger


In response to the letter to the editor dated Nov. 29, 2010, entitled “Calling out administration for transgender student rights,” please note that Towson University is committed to providing a supportive campus environment that fosters the successful development of all of our students.

To this end, the university has established the diversity coordinating council, led by Provost and vice president of academic affairs, Marcia Welsh; with membership that includes Deb Moriarty, vice president of student affairs; Jim Sheehan, vice president of administration and finance; Art King, assistant vice president of student affairs for diversity; and Debbie Seeberger, special assistant to the president for diversity.

This body of representatives is responsible for establishing and maintaining an inclusive campus environment.

Additionally, the diversity action committee and its six work groups, with membership that spans a cross- section of the campus community (including three student representatives), is responsible for promoting awareness and acceptance of diversity and making recommendations for the success of institution-wide initiatives to the diversity coordinating council.

Members of the diversity coordinating council and the diversity action committee, including its six work groups, remain steadfast to the goal of identifying and implementing initiatives to ensure the successful completion of their respective charges.

In 2007, Towson University secured resources and hired the university’s first director of LGBT student development. TU’s Center for Student Diversity is one of only two such centers in Maryland with a full-time LGBT professional. Under the leadership of the director of LGBT student development, TU has heightened awareness levels and improved support and protection for members of the university’s LGBT community.

Thus, the university remains committed to the continuous identification and implementation of measures that will foster the enhancement of its campus climate.

To that end and in support of this goal, the university is revisiting the possibility of including gender identity and expression as protected categories in its non-discrimination policy.

In conclusion, we want to thank you for expressing your concern regarding this issue. Please note that the institution is making every effort to address your concern in an expedient manner.

10. The Chronicle of Higher Education, December 9, 2010
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037
http://chronicle.com/blogs/brainstorm/lifes-not-fair/29648
Life’s Queer Unfairness
By Laurie Essig


Life’s not fair.

Isn’t that the ugliest lesson we have to teach our children?   It’s one thing when it’s about the size of their ice cream cone; it’s quite another when it’s about how institutions will reward or punish them. And yet this lesson is one I find myself explaining again and again to the odd gang of queer-identified teenagers who tend to congregate at my house.

“But we’re not treated fairly at school,” they point out. They’re probably right. Like all non-heterosexual youth in the U.S., the queer teens in my life are probably unfairly targeted by their high school and other institutions of social control.   Like Black and Latino men, nonheterosexual youth are 40 percent more likely to be punished by schools and courts than their straight peers. And queer girls are even more likely to be punished than queer boys.

These appalling and yet not surprising facts come from a study based on the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The study tracked students across time to show that nonheterosexual youth were far more likely to be stopped by the police, be arrested, face sanctions as adults, and be expelled from school than their heterosexual peers.

In other words, life is unfair, which is exactly what I say when the queer teens tell me about a teacher who insisted that punishment in the U.S. has nothing to do with race. When one of the queer kids raised her hand and pointed out how many more black and Latino Americans are in jail than whites, her teacher, a white woman, blithely told her that “race has nothing to do with it” and that “the criminal justice system is fair.”  Then this incredibly optimistic teacher said she was “sick of your attitude” and sent the queer girl out of the room. A trip to the guidance counselor’s office didn’t really resolve the problem. Because,  after all, life is unfair and this loud, obnoxious, and yes in many ways dykey young woman is not going to be embraced by the very institutions that systematically discriminate against her.

Female students are expected to be docile, which by definition means easily taught.  This is why within the current disciplinary regimes known as public schools, girls tend to be more successful than boys. But when girls act in an unruly manner, when they question, think critically, or otherwise refuse to submit, they become hyper-visible as unruly bodies.  Not that differently from black and Latino men in this country. They require stricter sanctions and increased control.

In some ways this entanglement of black and Latino men with queer women of whatever race makes sense. Within the cultural logic we have inherited from Victorian times, certain bodies are too masculine and therefore excessively sexual, violent, and aggressive. Women who desired other women were imagined by the early sexologists as gender inverts, as really men. Black (and later Latino) men were imagined as overly sexual and aggressive and therefore in need of excess force from without to control their bodies. Lesbians and black men were always suspected of wanting to rape “innocent” white women.

The Lesbian Menace and the Black Rapist got twisted together in a way that can only be described as perverse. Unruly bodies and desires in need of excessive control. So the fact that these bodies get treated unfairly and are subjected to increased levels of institutional force should not really surprise us. Life may not be fair, but sadly life does play out in the most overly rehearsed ways.

11. The Badger Herald (University of Wisconsin-Madison), December 9, 2010
326 W. Gorham St., Madison, WI  53703-2017
http://badgerherald.com/news/2010/12/09/asm_endorses_lgbt_an.php
ASM endorses LGBT anti-bullying program
By Julia Birkinbine


The student government endorsed a new Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender anti-bullying action plan Thursday night.

Associated Students of Madison Shared Governance Committee Chair Kyle VandenLangenberg said the campus-wide action plan was developed and revised by students over the past few meetings to support the LGBT anti-bullying campaign.

The plan outlines actions, suggestions and agenda items that the Shared Governance Committee hopes the 14 ASM committees around campus will work on, VandenLangenberg said.

The action plan also outlines the group’s hope that the participating committees will include the LGBT anti-bullying campaign in their discussions as they do with other minority groups.

“This is a historic change for the way student Shared Governance operates on this campus,” VandenLangenberg said.

ASM Shared Governance Director Melissa Hanley said the action plan came as a result of a meeting among shared government leadership to discuss the committee’s semester plans.

The committee developed the anti-bullying action plan to support Dean of Student Lori Berquam’s campaign, as well as the national campaign against LGBT bullying, Hanley said.

“The development of this action plan has showed us just how eager students are to get involved in campus-wide issues,” Hanley said.

VandenLangenberg said the ASM committee chairs would continue work over winter break to encourage different student organizations on campus to adopt the anti-bullying action plan.

He added the campaign will also continue in the spring semester.

On Jan. 27, the LGBT Campus Center will be holding a presentation on its anti-bullying efforts featuring students offering personal accounts and statistics of bullying prevalence.

“The vote to pass this action plan shows just how much unprecedented student support this committee has. So many students who are active and involved on this campus really want to see a culture change,” Hanley said.

The meeting also featured a presentation by the University of Wisconsin Registrar’s Office teaching students about the new course guide feature of the UW student website.

Coordinators from the Student Advisory Board also held discussions with students on several other topics, including the effectiveness of the UW Student Center and the new UW iPhone application that launched earlier this week.

12. TwinCities.com/Pioneer Press, December 10, 2010
345 Cedar Street, St. Paul, MN 55101
http://www.twincities.com/ci_16821676?nclick_check=1
AD Joel Maturi's Gophers golf program accused of discrimination, nepotism
By Brian Murphy


University of Minnesota athletics director Joel Maturi, already under attack for his choices to coach the Gophers football team, now has a scandal brewing in his golf program. A former women's coach claims discrimination and nepotism prevented her from doing her job because of the high-profile leader Maturi hired to manage a low-profile sport.

Katie Brenny alleges first-year director of golf John Harris, a professional seniors tour player and former Gopher, would not let her instruct players or travel with the team this fall because she is a lesbian.

Moreover, Brenny claims Harris circumvented university hiring practices by creating a token position for his son-in-law Ernie Rose to perform her duties despite not having at least a bachelor's degree as required to be a head coach at Minnesota.

Brenny, the 1998 Minnesota state high school champion out of Little Falls, resigned in October after only two months on her "dream job," initially because it was not what she had signed up for. She later charged the university with violating her employment rights based on her sexual preference.

Settlement negotiations that began last month have stalled this week, according to Brenny's attorney, Donald Mark Jr. If a deal cannot be reached, Mark said, his client is prepared to sue the university in Hennepin County for allegedly creating a hostile work environment when Harris learned she was gay, which led to Brenny quitting.

"We think it's related to discrimination," Mark said. "Our hope is to resolve this matter without litigation and that our client is fully and fairly compensated for what she has had to go through these past several months — a person who was hired for one position and then not given that position.
"From our investigation," Mark continued, "the discrimination began in the golf program, but as we continue to learn things, the facts may well lead beyond the golf program and into the athletic department."

Harris, whom Maturi hired July 30, did not respond to requests for comment, nor did the athletics director. Maturi was asked Monday after introducing new football coach Jerry Kill whether he had any response to Brenny's allegations.

"No, not at this time," he said.

Asked whether he still had confidence in Harris hiring Brenny's replacement, Maturi said, "Certainly."

University spokesman Daniel Wolter acknowledged the settlement talks Thursday but declined further comment.

"University lawyers are in discussions with Ms. Brenny's lawyers about the matter. We're hopeful a lawsuit can be avoided," Wolter wrote in an e-mail. "Should a lawsuit be filed, we would likely have more comment at that time."

Brenny's resignation and allegations have roiled the Gophers golf community, including several prominent alumni who criticized Harris' hiring from the start.

In August, Phil Ebner resigned as president of the Minnesota Golf Booster Club, frustrated that Maturi did not heed his pleas and those from several members of the 2002 NCAA championship men's team to hire longtime associate coach Andrew Tank, who left to become head coach at Iowa State.

"The way that he handled the hiring of a new coach said one of two things: He didn't give a rat's you-know-what about the golf team, or he's an idiot," Ebner said this week.

During the search last summer to replace outgoing golf director Brad James, Ebner warned Maturi in a series of e-mails that Harris, who has earned $3 million on the Champions Tour since 2002 and has no coaching or recruiting experience, had ulterior motives for returning to Minnesota, where he played hockey under Herb Brooks and was a two-time All-America golfer from 1971-74.

Harris, 58, is under contract for $110,000 at Minnesota.

"John has donated little or no money to the golf team and has shown very little interest in the team," Ebner wrote Maturi on July 12. "His main objective is to hire his son-in-law (Ernie Rose) as men's coach, and eventually have Ernie take over.

"Although Ernie is a good guy, he has very LITTLE experience in recruiting and coaching Division I college golf. I might add that John has no experience in it as well. Why does someone almost 60 and very wealthy, that has never showed interest in college golf (except that he played for the Gophers in the '70s), want to become coach now?"

According to the e-mail chain Ebner provided, Maturi responded: "Phil, appreciate your e-mail. John Harris is a candidate and many believe a very viable one. If hired he will getvtodetermine (sic) his staff but not his successor."

Rose, an instructor at Windsong Farm Golf Club in Independence, Minn., spent the 2009-10 season as an assistant coach on James' staff. He caddied for Harris on the Champions Tour after playing professionally on the PGA Tour of Australasia starting in 2001.

Ebner, a former Gophers assistant coach who captained the 1994 men's team, believes Maturi ignored boosters because he was star-struck by Harris' cachet as a former Gopher, three-time Minnesota State Amateur champion and renowned professional who would be a boon for fundraising.

"It's not just John Harris, it's Maturi, Harris and the way it's been handled," Ebner said. "Every alum is frustrated. I know of at least 10 people who won't donate anymore."

To be fair, the Gophers women's team under Harris' stewardship recorded four of the lowest 54-hole scores in the program's history this fall, and the squad finished no worse than eighth in any tournament.

Maturi hired Harris after learning he planned to scale back on competing on the Champions Tour.

"John had expressed interest in the position, and it became clear to us that it was a great match," Maturi said in a statement released when Harris was hired. "John understands Minnesota and is committed to achieving success with both of our golf programs."

One of Harris' first tasks was hiring a replacement for associate women's coach Kristine Wessinger, who left to start the women's program at St. Catherine University in St. Paul.

Brenny, 30, played collegiately at Wake Forest before winning the 2007 Minnesota State Amateur championship. She was an instructor in North Carolina when she applied for the associate head coach's job, assuming she would teach and lead the entire 10-woman roster.

Instead, according to a person close to Brenny, she was allowed to work only with the freshmen, prohibited from talking about golf with upperclassmen and spent the majority of her time running early-morning conditioning drills and doing paperwork.

Brenny, a coaching novice who was hired at a salary of $44,000, did not travel with the team on their four outstate trips. But Rose did accompany the team on the road after being moved into the newly created position of director of instruction. Harris, whose contract allows him to compete on the Champions Tour, played three tournaments in the fall and did not travel with the teams.

Rose is earning $49,500 as an independent contractor not subject to the university's hiring standards, Ebner said.

In September, Brenny wrote a letter to associate athletics director Liz Eull complaining about her vague status, which led to a contentious meeting with Harris, Eull and associate athletics director David Crum, according to a person close to Brenny.

That led to Brenny being reassigned to a sales job at TCF Bank Stadium, that person said.

After tendering her resignation in late October, Brenny allegedly was told by a team member that she had been prevented from coaching because of her sexual preference, according to a person close to Brenny. And she decided to retain a lawyer.

Brenny hired Mark, whose Eden Prairie firm in May won a $1.25 million judgment in Hennepin County for Jimmy Williams after Gophers coach Tubby Smith misrepresented a job offer to the longtime assistant coach.