pdf format - Community Link
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pdf format - Community Link
NEWS LINK Project of Community Link, Inc. GAY, LESBIAN, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER COMMUNITY SERVICE ORGANIZATION January 21, 2011 Issue V, Volume XVI, Number 185 FREE monthly GLBT publication * Since 1995 * www.CommunityLinkFresno.com “Legally Proud” Fresno Rainbow Pride 2011 LOGO CONTEST! Community Link has chosen the theme for this year’s Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Parade and Festival. “LEGALLY PROUD,” was selected as a result of our legislative repeal victory in the 17 year old Don’t Ask Don’t Tell law and the court victories we have won as of late. Does this mean our fight and struggles are over for full dignity and our civil rights as Gay Americans? That would be a big no! We are not done and we will not stop until we have reached the summit. But let us celebrate these triumphs with pride, as we refocus on the battles ahead. Fresno Rainbow Pride announces a a logo contest that will incorporate our theme “LEGALLY PROUD” with a $100 prize for the winner. Deadline: February 11th, 2011 Submissions must be RECEIVED by Friday, February 11th, 2011 (NOT postmarked...received!), so we suggest using e-mail to get them to us! The winning Logo will be chosen on Saturday, February 12, 2011 and will be revealed in the February edition of the News Link. The designer of the chosen logo will receive a $100 prize, an official Pride tshirt, and their name credited in the Pride Program. Artwork will not be returned to the artists and Fresno Rainbow Pride will retain the right to use ALL logo submissions for additional promotional materials as it sees fit. You may incorporate these phrases in GLEE & Chris take Golden Globes The Golden Globe Awards are presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Chris Colfer despite being up against some rather difficult competition, the "Glee" star walked away with an award for Best Supporting Actor in TV. continued on page 13 We offer free condoms and LGBT Community Center & HIV/AIDS information, courtesy of the Office Now Open Fresno County Department of Health. Gay Central Valley is thrilled to We have a lounge area to relax in, announce that we have opened an LGBT Community Center & Office in socialize, read or work. We have also the Tower District. We are located at started a collection of books and maga1055 N Van Ness Avenue, Suite C, zines to stock our LGBT Community Fresno, CA 93728. Our 24 hour phone Library. We currently have several number is 559-325-4429 or 559-325- LGBT classic novels (Dancer From The Dance, Rubyfruit Jungle, etc.) some 4GAY. As we are just starting out we are anthologies, nonfiction titles, and back unable to be open every day. Our current issues of The Advocate, OUT Magazine and Instinct, as well as other titles. schedule is... While we will eventually have a WEDNESDAYS - 12PM-6PM community computer available, currentFRIDAYS - 12PM-5PM ly we have two computers available in SATURDAYS - 12PM-6PM our office, with one typically free during SUNDAYS - 9AM-12PM open office hours. We also have a conDuring open hours, we are open to the public, and offer access to informa- ference table with 8 chairs available to tion and LGBT resources both local and local groups and organizations for meetnational, including local publications ings. Meetings must be pre-scheduled such as News Link and the CCA with our office and are open even on Newsletter. We have reference materials days when our office is not open, relating to the LGBT civil rights move- depending on availability. The Gay In The Central Valley Art ment as well as print outs of recent court decisions effecting the LGBT communi- Project which we started last year is displayed and we have the materials necesty. your design: “21st Annual GLBT Pride Parade & Festival”, ”Fresno Rainbow Pride 2011” or “Fresno 2011”. We reserve the right to add those, or similar, phrases to submitted designs. Please e-mail your designs to: CLinkInc@aol.com or mail to: “Community Link, Pride Logo Contest, PO Box 4959, Fresno CA 93744.” The file format requirements: JPG, BMP, TIFF, PDF or PSD (flattened layers) at 300dpi resolution. If you design freehand, the drawing's quality needs to be good enough to scan clearly! Max. 6 colors + shades of grey + black and white. If the logo has more than 6 colors, we will also need an alternate, simplified version limited to 6 colors. The logo's details should look good on anything between an 8-foot banner and a 150x150 pixel button on a website. If you have questions, call us (559) 486-3464 or e-mail CLinkInc@aol.com Pride Applications Applications are now available online Sponsorship Info Sponsorship benefits packets are also available online Get Involved Become a member of the Pride Team. Call 486-3464 or email CLinkInc@aol.com Check Out Everything Pride @ www.fresnorainbowpride.com. Our First Meeting of 2011 Wednesday, January 26th at 7pm at 1055 N. Van Ness Avenue, Room D. All interested parties are invited. DON’T ASK DON’T TELL REPEALED WITH THE SIGNATURE OF THE PRESIDENT Go to page 9 for more sary for anyone to create their own addition to this creative project. The Art Project shines a light on what it's like to grow up in the Central Valley as a member of the LGBT Community, as well as those who support us. On Sundays we provide coffee and donuts or other treats from 9AM-Noon. Also on Sundays Kate Henry of Gay Central Valley is happy to provide assistance to anyone regarding social justice advocacy and grant writing. On Sunday, February 13th from 2PM-5PM we will be hosting an Open House at the Community Center with complimentary food and drink, as well as a rainbow ribbon cutting ceremony. You can find a promotional flier in this edition of News Link with all the details. Any groups wishing to have business cards, fliers, pamphlets, etc, available at the Community Center are welcome to do so. Items can be mailed to us at the above address, or dropped off during open office hours. We also have a large mail slot in our office door through which items can be left 24 hours a day. If there is anything you would like us to pick up for you please leave a message and we'll do our best to do so. We will also be regularly accepting donations. In another article in this edition of News Link you can read about our request for books, magazines, etc. We are also in need of LGBT art pieces, large stuffed pillows and/or bean bag furniture, shelving, brochure racks, office supplies including computer hardware and software, etc. If you would like to donate anything please let us know. Gay Central Valley is an official 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. We operate the websites w w w. g a y f r e s n o . c o m , www.gayvisalia.com, www.gayhanford.com, www.gaymerced.com and www.gaybakersfield.com . All those working for Gay Central Valley and its Divisions do so on a strictly volunteer basis. Everything raised through our nonprofit goes back into the community and toward operating expenses. www.CommunityLinkFresno.com NewsLink 2 Are Homeless “Advocates” Really Helping? By Dan Waterhouse There's been a heated debate online lately about how best to help Fresno's homeless. One side sees the City of Fresno as the villain of the piece. First of all, there seems to be a (mis)perception that one of the City of Fresno's missions is to do direct delivery of social services. It isn't. That responsibility belongs to the County of Fresno. The City's role traditionally has been to pass federal Housing and Urban Development money through to groups that provide direct services, such as emergency shelter funds. The city really didn't realize what they had gotten into when it first looked into doing something more than passing money through to other agencies. In early 2008, then Mayor Alan Autry contacted the FresnoMadera Continuum of Care. His city needed help and he thought the Continuum provided direct services. The Continuum does not, and so informed Autry. The City later combined forces with the county to put the 10-year plan to end homelessness in Fresno together two years ago. The desired outcome of the plan was re-housing. But, there was no real funding attached to the planning effort. However, the city obtained federal stimulus dollars and decided to use them to get homeless people into housing. I've heard that very few of the people who were placed in housing remain there. For re-housing to work, there have to be supportive services in place, preferably close to those who need them. In the fragmented delivery system delivering safety net social services typical in California, Fresno County is primarily responsible for providing those services. And, we all know how battered the county's delivery system is. Layoffs have decimated staff. Mental health services have been reduced to the bare minimum allowed by the state. The county's crisis intervention center was closed down over a year ago, and replaced with hospital emergency departments and a mobile crisis team that is noteworthy for the fact the hospitals will not use its services. County staff have informed providers that it might be best for them to contract through the state instead of the county, because doing that stretches service dollars further. Now, new/old governor Jerry Brown is proposing returning total responsibility for social services to the counties, with (perhaps) block grant funding to go with it-where the counties, not the state decide what services at what level will be provided.. Meanwhile, some of the advocates ignore fiscal reality, and attack the City for not doing more--regardless of what it and its lead person on homeless issues try to accomplish. They kick around the “First Steps Home” non-profit and deride most of the established homeless service groups in town as “poverty pimps.” The homeless find themselves caught between the City and “advocates” who seemingly have some other agendas. Last spring, the attacks on-line aimed at City homeless point person Greg Barfield became so virulent that Barfield finally told the attackers there was no way he would continue dealing with them. As best as I can tell, Barfield is a reasonably decent guy with a difficult job, constrained by city policy and lack of funds. Some people thought he was a “czar” who could do all things. But he isn't. Barfield is stepping down from his homeless duties and will be Councilmember Oliver Baines' council aide in a few months. It is unclear whether anyone else will assume the lead on homeless issues. FRESNO GLBT+ EVENT CALENDAR JANUARY 21 Friday 21 Friday 21 Friday 21 Friday 22 Saturday 25 Tuesday 26 Wed. 27 Thursday 27 Thursday 28 Friday 29 Saturday 30 Sunday 30 Sunday 5p “It's A Queer Thang” Radio Show - KFCF 88.1 FM www.communitylinkfresno.com and www.kfcf.org January issue of “NewsLink” comes out www.communitylinkfresno.com 6p Men's Mixer @ TBA www.sunapsis.org/lgbt/mixer 6:30p Mariposa Azul - Meeting @ call for location Gaby (559) 266-5650 (Spanish), Rachel (559) 255-4075 (English) Circle Awards @ the North Tower Circle 2777 N Maroa Ave, northtowercircle.com 5:30p Central California Alliance - Talent Show @ Roger Rocka's, 1226 N. Wishon, ccafresno.org 9a Project: MALE - HIV Think Tank @ 1584 N Van Ness Ave, (559) 268-1969 6:30p The Group In Fresno - Munch www.tgifresno.org 10p Xotica: Nicki Minaj @ the Express 708 N Blackstone, www.xotica.net 9p Imperial Dove Court - Last Friday Show @ the Red Lantern , 4618 E Belmont, idcfresno.org 8p The Group In Fresno - Social www.tgifresno.org 11a Golden State Bears - Brunch www.goldenstatebears.org 9p Mariposa Azul - Divas Night @ Los Amigos, 1752 W. Shaw Ave, losamigosmex.com FEBRUARY 2 Wed. Ellos Latinos - Meeting (559) 907-2995, myspace.com/elloslatinos 4 Friday 6p Men's Mixer @ TBA www.sunapsis.org/lgbt/mixer 4 Friday 6:30p Mariposa Azul - Meeting @ call for location Gaby (559) 266-5650 (Spanish), Rachel (559) 255-4075 (English) 5 Saturday 5p Trans-e-motion - Social Meeting (559) 255-4075, www.trans-e-motion.org 5 Saturday 6:30p Central California Alliance - Out On A Clef in concert @ North Tower Circle, 2777 N Maroa, ccafresno.org 5 Saturday Club Flesh: Goth Night @ the Express 708 N Blackstone Ave, thefresnoexpress.com 6 Sunday 1p Golden State Bears - Meeting www.goldenstatebears.org 6 Sunday 3p Superbowl Party @ the Red Lantern, 4618 E Belmont (559) 251-5898 7 Monday 7:30p Imperial Dove Court - Meeting @ the IDC Club House 4030 E. Belmont, www.idcfresno.org 8 Tuesday 7p The Group In Fresno - New Member Orientation www.tgifresno.org 9 Wed. 9a Project: MALE - HIV Think Tank @ 1584 N Van Ness Ave, (559) 268-1969 9 Wed. 7p Stonewall Democrats - Meeting @ Carrows 4280 N. Blackstone Ave, www.mangen.com/stonewall/ 11 Friday 6:30p Golden State Bears - Game & Movie Night www.goldenstatebears.org 11 Friday 10p Ellos Latinos - Show & Party @ the Red Lantern 4618 E Belmont, (559) 907-2995, myspace.com/elloslatinos 11 Friday Fresno LGBTQ Social Group www.gayfresno.com/social/ 12 Saturday 6p Gay-Straight Alliance Network - The Valentine's Mixer @ the Downtown Community Arts Collective, 754 P St. www.facebook.com/clovisnorthgsa 12 Saturday 8p Golden State Bears - Pre-V.D. Party @ The Express 708 N. Blackstone Ave, www.goldenstatebears.org 12 Saturday 9p Masquerade @ the Express 708 N. Blackstone Ave, www.thefresnoexpress.com 12 Saturday The Lady Gaga Valentine Party @ the North Tower Circle 2777 N Maroa Ave, northtowercircle.com 13 Sunday 2p PFLAG - Meeting @ Wesley United Methodist Church 1343 E. Barstow Ave, www.pflag.org, (559) 434-6540 13 Sunday 2p GayCentralValley.org Open House @ 1055 N. Van Ness Ave. suite C, www.gaycentralvalley.org 13 Sunday BIG Dance Party: Big Boys In The House @ the Red Lantern, 4618 E Belmont (559) 251-5898 14 Monday 12p Marriage Equality USA & Gay Central Valley - Marry Me @ Fresno County Clerk's Office, 2221 Kern St. RSVP to ca-fresno@marriageequality.org, (559) 862-4559 16 Wednesday 6:30p Golden State Bears - Dinner Night www.goldenstatebears.org 18 Friday 5p “It's A Queer Thang” Radio Show - KFCF 88.1 FM www.communitylinkfresno.com and www.kfcf.org 18 Friday 6p Men's Mixer @ TBA www.sunapsis.org/lgbt/mixer continued on page 3 camera/non-computerized and camera and Computerized material deadline is the 1st. All Ads must be sized to fit our format. continued from page 2 18 Friday 18 Friday Staff Editor........................................Jeff Robinson Assistant Editor ....................................Kirk C Proofreader...........................Dan Waterhouse Research Editor...................Juan Bustamante Accounts Receivable.............................Kirk C Advertising Coordinator...........Jeff Robinson Calendar Coordinator........................... Kirk C Distribution..Lorraine Wing, Kevin Caldwell Advertising Rates Once (One Month) For Each Ad Business card.......................$15. 1/8 page Ad..........................$30. 1/4 page Ad..........................$60. 1/2 page Ad........................$120. Full page Ad.......................$240. Letters to the Editor Letters to the Editor Policy: Please keep letters brief and to the point; we reserve the right to edit all letters as deemed necessary. Letters must include name and phone number of the writer. The letters must be in good taste. You may request that your letter be published anonymously. Write to: Editor, News Link, P.O. Box 4959, Fresno, CA 93744 The rate for ad work is $25 Quarterly (Three Months) For Each Ad Business card.......................$13. 1/8 page Ad..........................$25. 1/4 page Ad..........................$50. 1/2 page Ad........................$110. Full page Ad......................$215. Six Months For Each Ad Business card.......................$10. 1/8 page Ad..........................$20. 1/4 page Ad..........................$40. 1/2 page Ad..........................$80. Full page Ad......................$175. 19 Saturday 19 Saturday 19 Saturday 19 Saturday 21 Monday 21 Monday 23 Wed. 24 Thursday 25 Friday Color advertising now available at an addition $100. to the above rates 26 Saturday Advertising Dimensions 27 Sunday Business card Horizontal....................... 31/2”w x 2”h 1/8 page Ad 9 3/4”w x 1 15/16”h 2 5/16”w x 7 7/8” h 4 7/8”w x 3 7/8”h Horizontal....................... Vertical.......................... Box.............................. 1/4 page Ad Horizontal....................... 9 3/4”w x 3 7/8”h Vertical.......................... 2 5/16”w x 16”h Box.............................. 4 7/8”w x 7 7/8”h 1/2 page Ad Horizontal....................... 9 3/4”w x 7 7/8”h Vertical.......................... 4 7/8”w x 16”h Full page Ad ................................... 10 1/4”w x 16”h MEDIA SPONSORSHIPS AVAILABLE Community Link will consider media sponsorships of nonprofit events that are open and free to the community or at reduced rate for advertising for fundraising events that include a donation/addmission charge when a writen request has been submitted to Newslnk@aol.com no less then six weeks prior to the event. Community Link must be listed on all promotional materials including digital and electronic media sources as a MEDIA SPONSOR. Other terms and conditions to be negoiated on an individaul basis. For further information go to www.comunitylinkfresno.com Content and Advertising Policy The News Link reserves the right to refuse any written content and graphics that are explicitly sexual in nature. Including logos and advertisements. No portrayal of genitalia or real or simulated sexual activities are appropriate for publication in the News Link, Pink Pages, Pride Program or any other Community Link publication. We reserve the right to edit content and ads without notification. Board of Directors Jeff Robinson Male-Cochair & CEO Lorraine Wing Female-Cochair Kevin Caldwell Secretary Juan Bustamante Treasurer Vacant Gray Alliance Representatives Rachel Wilson David Bergant Youth Alliance Representatives At-Large Members of the Board of Directors: Renee Potik, Kay Taus, Jerry & Ron, Kirk, Mark McKay, Andrew Strambi, Subscribe to News Link today! Yes, I would like to become a subscriber of Get your News Link delivered directly to your address. The News Link comes in a plain envelope, respecting your privacy. We never sell or trade our subscription lists. A subscription is $25.00 per year. 12 issues per year plus any special editions News Link ___Individual - $25. Name: Address: City, State, Zip: Telephone#: E-Mail Address: Send your subscription application to: Community Link P. O. Box 4959, Fresno, CA. 93744 27 Sunday Corrections or event notices? E-mail: NEWSLNK@aol.com WEEKLY GLBT & FRIENDLY EVENTS IN FRESNO * daily: Serenity Gay AA Group, Mon 7pm, Tue 7pm, Wed 8pm, Thu 6pm & 8pm, Fri 7:30pm, Sat 8pm, Sun 7pm, 407 E Olive (location closed as of 1/31/11) * Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays 8am-11am, 1pm-4pm: Confidential HIV testing; Tuesdays 8am-11am & Thursdays 1pm-4pm: Anonymous HIV testing @ Fresno Co. Dept. of Community Health, 1221 Fulton Mall, 559-445-3434 * every Monday 6:30pm: Meditation Classes with Renee Potik, Tai Chi Center of Fresno, 1474 N. Van Ness Ave. * every other Monday starting 2/21 - 10pm: The Haus of Hit @ Pure, 18+ gay night @ Aldo's, 617 W. Belmont Ave, myspace.com/aldosnightclub, (559) 473-9362 * every Tuesday 6:30pm - Clogging Classes @ The Dance Studio of Fresno, 7491 N. Palm Bluff Ave., cagroundpounders.com, Barry (559) 259-9904 * every Tuesday evening - GLBT Support Group at a private residence, call Bill Robinson (559) 268-4015 * every Wednesday 11am: United Student Pride @ CSUFresno, meets at Women's Resource Center, see www.csufresno.edu/StudentOrgs/LGBSA/ * every Thursday 7:15pm Community Link's Rainbow Bowling League @ Cedar Lanes, 3131 N. Cedar Ave, (559) 824-1417, communitylinkfresno.com * every Friday 2p: Diversity - Fresno City College GLBT group @ SO-208 * every Friday 7p - 8:30p: LGBTQI Youth Alliance @ Big Red Church, 2131 N. Van Ness Ave, www.communitylinkfresno.com * GayCentralValley.org office open Wednesdays 12-6pm, Fridays 12-5pm, Saturdays 12-6pm, Sundays 9am-12pm @1055 N. Van Ness Ave, suite C, (559) 3254429, www.gaycentralvalley.org Corrections or event notices? E-mail: NEWSLNK@aol.com PICK “NEWS LINK” UP AT: FRESNO Brass Unicorn; Center for NonViolence; College Community Congregational Church; Echo Street Cafe; The Express; First Congregational Church; Fresno Video Exchange ; Gazebo Gardens; Holy Family Episcopal Church; KAOS Headquarters; Living Room @ West Care; The North Tower Circle; Rasputin Music; The Red Lantern; Revue Coffee House; Tacos Marquitos; Unitarian Universalist Church; Wesley United Methodist Church; Women’s Resource Center @ CSUFresno; Wildcat Enterprises; Yoshi Now! BAKERSFIELD AIDS Project; Borders; MCC of the Harvest; Casablanca; The Mint; Wildcat. GOSHEN Wild Willy’s VISALIA Borders, sometimes Visalia Pride Lions Club meetings MODESTO Borders; Brave Bull; College Avenue Congreg. Church; Haven Women’s Center; Queen Bean; Stanislaus County Assistance Project; Tiki Lounge; Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Stanislaus County. STOCKTON Borders; Club Paradise; Déjà vu Boutique; Peace & Justice Center; San Joaquin AIDS Foundation; San Joaquin County Public Health Services; University of Pacific Pride Center; Valley Ministries MCC. If you’d like to help us with distribution in Hanford, Visalia, Merced / Atwater / Turlock, or Oakhurst - e-mail NEWSLNK!aol.com NewsLink How to reach us by mail: News Link c/o Community Link, Inc. P.O. Box 4959, Fresno, Ca. 93744 By phone: (559) 486-3464 News Link's E-Mail Address: NewsLnk@aol.com Community Link's E-Mail Address:CLinkInc@aol.com 6:30p Mariposa Azul - Meeting @ call for location Gaby (559) 266-5650 (Spanish), Rachel (559) 255-4075 (English) February issue of “NewsLink” comes out www.communitylinkfresno.com 5p Trans-e-motion - Business Meeting (559) 255-4075, www.trans-e-motion.org 6p Imperial Dove Court - Mr., Miss, Ms. Gay Fresno Pageant @ the North Tower Circle, 2777 N Maroa Ave, idcfresno.org 7pm Visalia Pride Lions Club - Valentine's Dinner & Dance @ Holiday Inn, 9000 W Airport Dr, Visalia (559) 732-6732, visaliapridelionsclub.org 9p The Gaga Ball @ the Express 708 N. Blackstone Ave, www.thefresnoexpress.com 10p The Haus of Hit @ Pure, 18+ gay night @ Aldo's, 617 W. Belmont Ave www.myspace.com/aldosnightclub, (559) 473-9362 6:30p Yosemite Knights - Meeting & Dinner @ Carrows 4280 N Blackstone Ave, www.kofmfresno.com 9a Project: MALE - HIV Think Tank @ 1584 N Van Ness Ave, (559) 268-1969 6:30p The Group In Fresno - Munch www.tgifresno.org 9p Imperial Dove Court - Last Friday Show @ the Red Lantern , 4618 E Belmont, idcfresno.org The Group In Fresno - Social www.tgifresno.org 11a Golden State Bears - Brunch www.goldenstatebears.org 9p Mariposa Azul - Divas Night @ Los Amigos, 1752 W. Shaw Ave, losamigosmex.com www.CommunityLinkFresno.com FEBRUARY 3 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com GCV Office Seeks Book Donations Chris Jarvis - GayFresno.com Gay Central Valley is seeking donations of LGBT themed books. We are working to establish a small library for our start up LGBT Community Center, which is located at our office at 1055 N Van Ness Avenue, Fresno, CA 93728. Our phone number is 559-325-4GAY. We are also seeking donations of annual magazine subscriptions to LGBT publications such as the Advocate magazine. Items can be dropped off at our office, which is open Wed Noon-6PM, Fri Noon5PM, Sat Noon-6PM and Sundays 9AM-Noon. There is also a large mail slot in our front office door, through which certain items can be dropped 24 hours a day. Please attach a note to any such items. If any donations need to picked up we can do that as well. Simply call our phone number and leave a message. Gay Central Valley is an official 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. The following books have so far been donated to Gay Central Valley to help us start our LGBT Community Center Library... CITY OF NIGHT by JOHN RECHY DANCER FROM THE DANCE by ANDREW HOLLERAN GIOVANNI'S ROOM by JAMES BALDWIN RUBYFRUIT JUNGLE by RITA MAE BROWN A BOY'S OWN STORY by EDMUND WHITE THE BEAUTIFUL ROOM IS EMPTY by EDMUND WHITE QUEER AND LOATHING by DAVID B FEINBERG ANGELS IN AMERICA PART ONE by TONY KUSHNER ANGELS IN AMERICA PART TWO by TONY KUSHNER STONEWALL by MARTIN DUBERMAN BOYS LIKE US (GAY WRITERS SHARE THEIR COMING OUT STORIES) by VARIOUS AUTHORS Expression Not Suppression ENS is a FREE conference for LGBTQQIA high school, junior high school students, youth activists and their allies who are dedicated to defeating homophobia and transphobia and creating safe and supportive schools for everyone. The target audience is high school & middle school students. Beginning college students, teachers & GSA advisors are also welcome. ENS will be held on Saturday, March 26th from 12pm-9:30pm. The location of the event is 2131 N Van Ness Blvd, Fresno, 93704 (the proposed schedule may be changed as we are looking at starting earlier at 10am. To be announce later if possible) The conference will help you become more comfortable with who you are, how you want to express yourself, who you want to be, and the world around you. The day features workshops and speakers. After the workshops, there is a free dinner, and dance! If you'd like more info or would like to help with planning, please call joey@gsanetwork.org All interested youth should register at www.gsanetwork.org ENS is presented by Gay-Straight Alliance Network in partnership with Community Link’s Fresno GLBTQ Youth Alliance. Here is what you can expect: You will hear two inspirational keynote speakers from the Queer Community. Andrew McIntosh, openly Gay Collegiate Athlete, featured in “The Advocate” and “OUT” magazines. Robin McGeHee Queer Rights Activist and co-founder of GetEqual.org and of of “The Advocate” magazine’s 2010 people of the year. 12 Amazing workshops: 3 of which are mandatory for all attendees: 1. A Queer Survival Guide by the Trevor Project 2. A Safer Sex Workshop for youth by Planned Parenthood 3. Healthy Relationships by Community Link Plus you can chose 3 other workshops from this list of fantastic options: 1. How to have a kick ass GSA 2. Campaigns and Days of Actions 3. Flight for your rights 4. QueerArts 5. Qistory, Our Own Queer History 6. Coming Out - 101 7. Spiritually Queer 8. OMG I’m Gay...Fitting in 9. Getting it Together...Creating Queer Youth Happenings Community Link will be providing food and drinks for a morning pickme-up, then you’ll get a brown bag lunch, and for dinner Pizza. Capping the day off will be a dance, dejayed by DJ BINX of X/O Productions. This event is a smoke free event, meaning that there is no smoking on the church’s property or the neighboring area. All conference attendees are expected to attend both the key note speeches and attended 6 of the workshops. This year there will be two special work shops for adults only at the beginning of the conference. One for academic advisors, teachers and school administrators on how to be a supportive resource for LGBTQQIA students put on by SAFE. The second special work shop will be for parents and families who are looking at ways to be more supportive of their children and family members hosted by PFLAG. Call 486-3464 for info. NEW EVENTS FOR THE NEW YEAR AT THE RED LANTERN EVERY MONDAY IS UNDERWEAR NIGHT $1.00 DRAFT FOR PARTICIPANTS DANCE WITH DJ KUDRO EVERY TUESDAY $2.00 DRAFT KARAOKE IS NOW EVERY WEDNESDAY AND SUNDAY $1.75 DRAFT ______________________________ SUPER BOWL PARTY SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2011 3:00 PM $1.75 DRAFT LOTS OF FOOD AND FUN Sunday, February 13 NewsLink !!!!! 4 BIG !!!!!!! A Dance Party With Heart "Big Boys In the House" with DJ Jimmy Mack I am Empress Diva Licious of the Imperial Dove Court and I wanted to take a minute to personally Invite you out to our Annual 3M Pageant (Mr,Ms, & Miss Gay Fresno Pageant). This Year's Festivities will be taking place on Saturday February 19th at the North Tower Circle. The Doors will be at 6pm with the pageant starting at 7pm. The Ticket price for this evening will be $10 in advance and $15 at the door tickets are available at the North Tower Circle and The Red Lantern or you may contact me @ (559) 9602716 or Regent Empress Margo Starr @ (559) 905-6674. We would love to see you at the event! Sincerely, The Jaded Dove Scorching Empress From The Flames of Hell H.M.I.M. Empress XXXV of Fresno, Ca Diva Licious of Stolengoodz www.CommunityLinkFresno.com An Invitation from the IDC Calling all Central Valley Gay Straight Alliance's! You are invited to a Valentine's Mixer brought to you by the Clovis North High School G.S.A! The Valentine's Mixer will be held at the Downtown Community Arts Collective on February 12, 2011 from 6pm-9pm. Help us bring in the new year with some G.S.A. Pride! This mixer will provide a chance for Central Valley teens to interact with one another during the season of love! The night will consist of food, drinks and music all with a splash of a Valentine's theme. G.S.A members across the California Central Valley will be asked to wear a name tag when they arrive to the event. Your name tag will display what G.S.A campus you are from, as well as if you hold a G.S.A Officer position. If you are willing to partake in even more fun, put your relationship status and your sexual orientation in hopes that when the night ends you will have someone special to spend the true Valentine's Day with! If you are Single and ready to mingle, Clovis North G.S.A has got you covered! Red roses will be available for purchase throughout the night to give to that special someone that has caught your eye! Taken but still looking for a good time? No worries! Bring your special someone to have a night out! The fun will begin right Talent Show The 10th Annual Talent Show, once again directed by Fred Bologna! Tuesday, January 25th at Roger Rocka's Dinner Theatre, 1226 N. Wishon Ave., Fresno, CA. Show & Dinner $35 (doors open 5:30pm). Show only $20 (doors open 7:15pm). Tickets available via PayPal at www.ccafresno.org Out On A Clef concert Out On A Clef is a San Francisco Bay Area lesbian vocal quartet that has been entertaining Northern California audiences since 1997 with a variety of styles including swing, barbershop, and jazz. Savvy baby boomers with attitude, they are known for a blend of polished, tight harmonies performed in a unique and whimsical way. They often "de-range" their original and standard tunes, with humorous and twisted lyrics that poke fun at convention and at themselves, as well as conveying socially progressive messages. The group has a commitment to contribute to such community efforts as raising funds for AIDS services, assisting women with cancer, and in demonstrating validation and pride for people of all sexual identities. Continued on page 8 NewsLink GSA Valentine Mixer when you walk through the door! If the party scene is not for you, slip into the lounge area where you can chat with G.S.A. members from across the Valley. Socializing and networking with other individuals that attend the event will provide a new opportunity to hear ideas to bring back to their G.S.A as well as making new friends. Snacks and drinks will be provided to everyone who attends. There will be a live DJ playing your requests for the night from XO Productions, as well as a photo booth to take some fun pictures! All proceeds that the Clovis North G.S.A raises from this event will be going towards a fund to create an LGBT community center! *** $5 minimum donation for entry! Proceeds will go towards funding a LGBT Community Center here in the Central Valley!*** Volunteers and donations are needed to help make this a great event! Four to five volunteers are needed in the following areas.: set up before the event and cleanup after the event, supervision volunteers to ensure the event is maintained at a controlled level, as well as security volunteers to ensure that students are escorted to their vehicles safely after the event is over. Please contact Justin Kamimoto via email at justinkamimoto@gmail.com for all donations inquiries and volunteer interests. The Clovis North Gay Straight Alliance hopes to see you and your G.S.A at the Valentine's Mixer in February! Details for this event are also available on our Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/clovisnorthgsa located under events.Talent Show 5 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Bear With Us! by Bill Bassett The Golden State Bears have finished another year that saw many changes. The club experienced sadness with the passing of two cherished Members, Tom H, and Allan G. Earlier in the year, The Den's fire forced the club to find another location for the monthly busts. The Golden State Bears would like to thank The Express's management for allowing us to use their facilities. Finally, during the Christmas Party, the club members also elected the new Board for 2011. Bryce retains presidency, Bill Bassett is now Secretary, Dan Waterhouse - Treasurer, Sammy Pace - Membership Chair, and Bill Robinson is Events Coordinator. With the exception of the “newcomer” Dan, all the other members were at one time the club's presidents! The Bears also voted on their favorite charities, and the Board determined the amounts of the charitable contributions. They are: $1,000 to Fresno Rainbow Pride Parade & Festival, $500 to Oral Cancer, Foundation, $366 to Community Food Bank. $200 was also given to our member Paul Moore to help with expenses resulting from the Den's fire. The club thanks Paul & The Den for all of the support over the years! With the year's earlier donations of $200 to Kampout Fresno and $102 to Community Link's Bowlathon, the Golden State Bears have donated a total of $2,368 in the year 2010! In addition, Santa Bear's canned food drive netted 565 non-perishable food items, which were donated to the Living Room's food pantry. What's next for the club? The Bears will be hosting February's Beverage Bear Party at The Express (708 N. Blackstone Ave.) with every lover's theme, “Pre-V.D”. Come on down on Saturday February 12th from 8:00pm to midnight, and get your $3 “Anti-V.D Shots”... Jell-O that is! Other activities will be a Handmade Valentine Card, to the Bears, contest. Create a handmade card with the “Pre-V.D” theme at home or during the Party, and possibly win a prize! There's a $5 cover for the bust and most drinks will be half-off. Look for us in either the Starzz Lounge or the Bourbon Street rooms! After that, many of our members will go to the International Bear Rendezvous in San Francisco (February 17 - 21). It's not too late to register at www.bearrendezvous.com www.goldenstatebears.org NewsLink Photos by Dan Waterhouse and Kirk 6 2011 IBR the Last Ever Due to the persistent economic downturn and the ever-increasing cost of producing an event the size of International Bear Rendezvous, the Board of Directors of the Bears of San Francisco has made the difficult decision that the upcoming IBR 17 "Close Encounters of the Bear Kind," will be the last International Bear Rendezvous. IBR 17 will take place over Presidents Day Weekend, February 17-21, 2011 at the Parc 55 Wyndham Hotel in San Francisco. Since this will be the final Rendezvous, we are going all out: There will be four hosted dances at the host hotel, free beer at selected events for those staying at the hotel, and free beverages in the Bear Den / Hospitality Suite for all registered attendees. Saturday's Club Day, at which clubs from around the world can promote their clubs and events, is followed by the President's Reception with Bloody Marys and Mimosas. An excellent buffet dinner and the 20th and final International Bear Competition, followed by the weekend's fourth dance party, will round out IBR on Sunday, February 20. The decision to end International Bear Rendezvous will not affect BOSF's regular schedule of monthly fundraisers and other activities. The board is committed to the same 4-F's that have been the hallmark of BOSF's entire 17-year history: Fun, Fur, Fellowship, and Fundraising. Further information is available online at www.bearrendezvous.com. ... well, almost. Congratulations to Two Chopsticks, Two Enchiladas (Sunny, Les, Daniel, Carlos) on winning the first half of the season of Community Link's 4th edition of Fall / Winter Rainbow Bowling League. Now the standings have been reset and all 8 teams have an equal shot at winning the second half of the season. The winners of the two halves will then meet in the Championship Game. Of course, if Chopsticks win that second half as well, they will be the Champions! The season will end on March 17th, 2011. But the league is not just about games, it's also about fun: just before Christmas, three frozen turkeys were awarded to the lucky players who scored a turkey (3 strikes in a row) that night. And fun happens outside the bowling alley: it's now almost a tradition to head to the Million Elephant Bar following the games for a late-night meal, or to Yosemite Falls Cafe on Shaw & Blackstone for dinner and karaoke (or “crappyoke”, as President Rich Howard puts it). Also, nearly every week there's been a Movie Night at River Park's theaters, or a social night at someone's house such as poker (thanks, Kirk P.!) or New Year's Eve party (thanks, Brian & Abel!). Even if you don't bowl, join us and 45 regulars and substitutes at Cedar Ethnic Escapades by Kevin Caldwell & Kirk, NewsLink ... this month we're going to Ethiopia, Afghanistan and Argentina! The Golden State Bears visited one of club's favorite Fresno restaurants in November - Lucy's Lair. This time, though, we stopped there for Ethiopian brunch! About a dozen of our members were treated to a scrumptious buffet (yes, all you can eat!) consisting on traditional American breakfast items as well as meat & vegetarian Ethiopian dishes. The selection included: plain Standings for the first half of the season: 1. Two Chopsticks, Two Enchiladas 8pts (28-16) 2. Bamms (Abel, Brian, Marco, Marcos) 7pts (27-17) 3. Splits or Swallows (Richard, Ramiro, Mike, Terry) 6pts (25.5-18.5) 4. The Contenders (Rob, Roy, John, Joey) 5pts (24.5-19.5) 5. Friant Pharmacy (Rich, Paul, Angel, Harold) 4pts (23-21) 6. Barry & Da Beavers (Barry, Judy, Sharon, Michelle) 3pts (19-25) 7. Pinheads (Bill, Kerry, Kirk P., Jeff) 2pts (17-27) 8. Hardwoods (Doug, Eric, Lewis, Stella) 1pt (12-32) The top performers in the first half were (team / male / female): High Game Scratch - Chopsticks 683, Marcos 256, Angel 207. High Game with Handicap Chopsticks 683, Marcos 281, Angel 261, High Series Scratch - Chopsticks 1915, Les 579, Angel 486. High Series with Handicap Chopsticks 1915, Barry 699, Angel 645. Average game - Sunny 175, Angel 145. Two games have been played already in the second half of the season, and the standings currently are: Contenders 7-1, Friant 5-3, Bamms, Barry, Splits, Pinheads 4-4, Chopsticks 3-5, Hardwoods 1-7. Any questions? Call Rich Howard at (559) 824-1417 or visit www.communitylinkfresno.com and click on Bowling! scrambled eggs; scrambled eggs with sauteed bell peppers, onions and spices; beef (Siga Tibs - chunks of meat sauteed with garlic, rosemary and onions), lamb (Yebeg Wot chunks of meat in spicy berber sauce), chicken (in a medium-hot sauce with bell peppers, made especially for brunch, this sauce is not on their regular menu). There were also several vegetarian dishes: zucchini wot (spicy sauce), Misir Kik Wot (spicy red lentils with herbs), Kik Alitcha (yellow split peas in mild sauce), Tekil Gomen (boiled cabbage and potatoes) and Fosolia (carrots and green beans). We were also offered a neverending supply of injera (Ethiopian bread) and pancakes. The verdict was unanimous: the bears were fed, happy and vowed to return. Many times over. At only $10.95 the price is lower than most Fresno-area brunch buffets and the food is definitely not run-of-themill! Sunday brunch is served 11am2pm. Lucys Lair is located at 10063 N. Maple Ave. (between Copper and Shepherd). Phone number is (559) 433-9775. Restaurant is also open for lunch Tuesday - Friday, and for dinner 7 days a week. Then, while the club bears were in hibernation, Kevin, Bryce, Kirk and Jeff (“Sparky”) took a trip to East Bay for New Year's Eve weekend. While there, they enjoyed the best Afghani dinner yet, and a pretty good Argentinian lunch. It was New Year's Day and Salang Pass restaurant in Fremont was halffull for dinner service. We wasted no time ordering our favorite appetizer: Bolani (a quesadilla-like grill-seared crepe, stuffed with potatoes and leek), which came with a side of yoghurt for dipping. Adventurously, we also tried and enjoyed Borani Badenjan, smoothly sauteed eggplant with tomatoes and garlic, topped with yoghurt sauce (yoghurt is used a LOT to cool down the spiciness of a dish). Then the salads arrived: lettuce,red onions, tomato, cucumber, cilantro and mint in oil and vinegar dressing. Their muted flavour was a nice contrast to the Afghani bread, which we dipped in medium-hot cilantro & mint as well as spicy tomato chutneys. Next was the traditional Aush soup, a broth with noodles, ground beef, split peas and yoghurt. The soup is very fresh (a slice of lemon is served on the side) and robust, but at the same time hearty and very much “comfort food”. continued on page 18 NewsLink We Are The Champions... by Kirk, NewsLink www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Lanes every Thursday at 7:15pm and make some new friends! 7 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com As Chris Sees It! Opinion Does Not Equal Bullying Chris Jarvis - GayFresno.com Why oh why do we have to hear from so many in the LGBT community who aren't even close to understanding any of the issues? Okay, let's get this straight, people. I know the general public always jumps on the current trendy terms and applies it to everything. That's common. But you'd think that the LGBT Community would be a little more politically astute. "Bullying" is the term I'm referring to. A whole parade of thin skinned and unthinking LGBT citizens are now taking this very serious term (as it applies to children and teens in school) and using it to condemn normal criticism. The latest I found was this outrageous quote from Reichen Lehmkuhl, one of the stars of the ludicrous and brain killing TV series, "The A List", a show revolving around a bunch of empty headed, self absorbed gay men who couldn't find their way out of a simple maze with a bottle of poppers on a chair at the exit. By the way, on "The A List" the stars regularly criticized and condemned other people for Out on a Clef NewsLink Continued from page 5 Performance venues have included the Hopland Women's Music Festival, Theatre Rhinoceros, Herbst Theatre in San Francisco, Josie's Cabaret in San Francisco, L/G/B/T Pride Celebrations throughout the Bay Area, The Montclair Women's Cultural Arts Club, Mama Bears, Harvey's in the Castro, Rose Street House of Music, The Bishop's Ranch Retreat Center in Healdsberg, the Northern California Women's Choral Invitational in Napa, University campuses, the San Francisco Women's Building, numerous fund raisers. Out On A Clef has produced and performed in cancer benefit concerts, and has been featured several times on "Gayble TV." They also entertain at house concerts, weddings, and celebrations throughout the Bay Area. 8 Opening act: singer / songwriter Andre dos Santos Morgan Saturday, February 5th at 7:30pm At the North Tower Circle, 2777 N Maroa Ave., Fresno, CA Price: $15 advance - $20 at the door Doors open at 6:30pm - Show at 7:30pm www.ccafresno.org being "fatties" and other such delicate terms. Lehmkuhl is responding to an editor, writing in New York's NEXT MAGAZINE, who said that Lehmkuhl and his boyfriend were "vapid queens". Lehmkuhl responded... “I don't appreciate your bullying words. You can save your 'vapid queens' comment for, well, no one. I can't even imagine speaking this way about other human beings. That you would reduce my existence to someone who is a 'vapid queen' says more about what you don't know about me, along with the kind of person you must be. Is this seriously how a 'senior editor' at a magazine talks about people?” Recently on one of my own Facebook postings someone went after me for pointing out the overwhelming evidence not that someone else was gay (well known) or mean (well known) but was an idiot (more than well known). She labeled it as "bullying". No, it was opinion, totally honest. It wasn't praise, but it wasn't bullying. I'm sick to death of thin skinned, pie in the sky idealists who want to ban the word "fag" without paying attention to any of the other million or so offensive words out there, or people who label the civil rights battle for marriage as a battle for "love". At some point in recent years, during the LGBT battle for civil rights, a whole new hybrid of activists popped up. Those who say we should "respect" all opinions and all work together in harmony. Are you serious? Why do we criticize those who get it wrong? So we can weed out the crop. Do we want to turn into a mass of passionless lumps of harmony, or do we want to get rid of those who are abusing their positions of voice to mutate a message until it's meaningless? There are things to get angry about, and there are a whole lot of things to NOT get angry about. Why can't we tell the difference anymore? Censorship leads to blindness. In Canada, the broadcast standards council has ruled that Dire Straits' 1985 hit "Money for Nothing" cannot be played on the radio unless it is played only as a censored version, leaving out the word "faggot". This decision was reached after a single caller to a radio station complained about the word. Does it matter that the word was used by Dire Straits in a sarcastic manner, not as a slur? The council said it realized Dire Straits used the word sarcastically when the best-selling "Brothers in Arms" album was released in 1985, but said it was inappropriate. This comes after the ludicrous outrage displayed by GLAAD late last year after the pro-LGBT series GLEE used the word tranny in an episode featuring a production of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. This was after a complaint from GLAAD about the word faggot being used in the world of entertainment as well a complaint about the movie THE DILEMMA using the term "that's so gay". Their articles, by the way, never printed out the actual offensive words. How do we weight the LGBT community's outrage over the censorship of art, catapulted to the public forum in the late 1980's by the controversial censoring of the Mapplethorpe exhibit, and still continuing all over the country today? Is it that we can't have our stuff censored but we're happy to censor other forms of entertainment and speech, even when it doesn't line up with the valid outrage of the day? I'm tired of those who work to censor writing and speech everywhere by capitalizing and trivializing the very real and important issue of bullying as it per- tains to children and teens. Another incident recently arose in our own community over one person's review of Club Legends, and more particularly, the Cover Girls Drag Show. The review was a harmless, critique of the club itself and went on to cover the Sunday show. It was edgy, humorous and sarcastic, criticizing the show and performers for what he felt was a lackluster performance. This person was not attacking personally. You either know the words to the song or you don't. You either know how to put an outfit together or not. You either do your best to put on a creative, entertaining show, or you just walk out on stage and move your mouth. These were his points. Others may disagree. I didn't see the show, but these are valid points for any show. Not once did I hear anyone argue anything specifically, just that it was negative. To step on a stage without a thick skin seems a tad self destructive. People are judged more harshly on television virtually every day of the week. Have you ever read a negative movie reviews? Opinion pieces in the paper? Joan Rivers commenting on fashion disasters? Any right wing radio commentator? Can anyone say SIMON COWELL? The reaction was way over the top. The performers claimed, you guessed it...bullying. Another example of how the LGBT community is now trying to silence even opinions on entertainment as bullying. You don't strengthen the campaign against the cruel bullying of children who then kill themselves by pretending that honest criticism of adults, regardless of whether it's sarcastic and biting and cynical, is the same. In fact, you weaken everything we fight for. The Senate voted 65-31 on to end Don't Ask, Don't Tell, defeating a 17year policy of banning gay and lesbian service members from serving openly in the military. Six Republicans initially crossed the aisle to vote against the policy: Susan Collins (R-Maine), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), Scott Brown (R-Mass.), Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and George Voinovich (R-Ohio). The Senate vote is a vindication of Obama's decision to push for congressional repeal as opposed to unilateral executive action, though activists note he could have done both. In the first procedural vote on Saturday morning, 63 senators voted in favor of the bill and 33 against. In the final passage, Sens. John Ensign (R-Nev.) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.) switched their vote to "aye," despite initially voting against moving forward with the bill. "The important thing today is that 63 senators were on the right side of history," Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, told HuffPost after the first vote, adding he sees the bill as a "stepping stone to further advances for the gay and lesbian community." Gay-rights activists owe a small debt to their Latino brethren, as the DREAM Act, which the House and Senate have been considering at the same time, showed the way forward for repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. Roughly a week before a crucial cloture vote failed, said one top aide, Democratic leadership staff saw that the same legislative tactic could be used to bring a standalone version of the repeal bill to the Senate floor as was currently being used to bring DREAM up. For needlessly complex reasons, a bill that comes to the Senate as a "message from the House" faces fewer obstacles to a floor vote than one that originates in the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) proposed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) that the House consider moving first. Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) had the same idea. "Senator Lieberman and Senator Collins determined that they would introduce a bill," Hoyer told HuffPost earlier this week. "I called and talked to a number of people. I then called Senator Lieberman and said 'Joe, my intent will be to talk to Congressman Murphy' -- who's the sponsor of the amendment that was adopted in the defense bill -- 'and put this in as a free standing bill, because we can probably send it over to you more quickly than you can send to us.' And he agreed and we introduced exactly the same bill that they have in the Senate." The bill passed in the House 250175 on Dec. 16. During debate before the cloture vote, Republicans ran through the usual list of arguments against repealing DADT, claiming it would hurt unit cohesion and that troops had not been given an adequate chance to voice The President Signs Repeal of "Don't Ask Don't Tell": "Out of Many, We Are One The White House Blog With his signature today, the President put in motion the end of a policy that has hurt our military as a whole, that has forced thousands of those who serve to do so under a cloud of anxiety and isolation, and that has stood as a symbol of the barriers to unity and equality in our country. As the President put it, "For we are not a nation that says, 'don't ask, don't tell.' We are a nation that says, 'Out of many, we are one.'" Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff - one of many to receive a standing ovation during the signing ceremony - has express complete confidence that those who serve in our military will easily adapt, quoting one service member who contributed to the Pentagon's exhaustive study: As one special operations warfighter said during the Pentagon's review - this was one of my favorites -- it echoes the experience of Lloyd Corwin decades earlier: “We have a gay guy in the unit. He's big, he's mean, he kills lots of bad guys.” (Laughter.) “No one cared that he was gay.” (Laughter.) And I think that sums up perfectly the situation. (Applause.) Fresno gay-rights activist at White House ceremony By Tracy Correa / The Fresno Bee Fresno gay-rights activist Robin McGehee is going back to the White House -- but this time as an invited guest. McGehee was invited to watch President Barack Obama today sign a bill repealing the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that prevents gays from serving openly in the military. She received the invitation Monday and was on a plane Tuesday morning, said GetEQUAL spokesman Brad Luna. GetEQUAL is a gay-rights organization co-founded by McGehee. In a brief telephone interview, McGehee said the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell" is on par with the integration of blacks and whites in the military in the late 1940s. And she called it a watershed moment in moving toward marriage rights for gays and lesbians. She added: "Being in that space [on Wednesday] is going to be hugely humbling." McGehee wrote on her Facebook page Tuesday that she was taking her young son Sebastian along to witness the historic signing. "I am only going to the DADT repeal signing to show Sebastian that standing up for what you believe in matters. The time I was away from him and his sister will hopefully lead to a more equal world," she wrote on Facebook. McGehee has been involved in numerous gay-rights causes and helped organize "Meet in the Middle for Equality" in Fresno. The statewide rally to protest the passage of Prop. 8 -- California's ban on same-sex marriage -- was held in May 2009 and drew thousands, including celebrities. She also helped organize the National Equality March in October 2009 in Washington, D.C. The march led her to co-found GetEQUAL with Kip Williams in March. She has been a vocal supporter of ending the 17-year-old policy that bars uncloseted gays from serving in the military. McGehee and Lt. Dan Choi were arrested after they chained themselves to the White House fence to protest the ban. Choi also is expected to attend the signing. The White House invited a number of people from the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community, including those who served in the military under the policy as well as those who advocated for its repeal, Luna said. Friends of McGehee's wrote of their pride at having her attend the signing and credited her with keeping up the pressure for repeal of the policy. "Tomorrow when you stand at the White House with President Obama, you are representing all of us," read one of the posts. www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Ryan Grim contributed reportin made the case consistently on the effect this policy has had on thousands of our troops, and the President quoted him saying “Our people sacrifice a lot for their country, including their lives. None of them should have to sacrifice their integrity as well.” The President added: I want to express my gratitude to the men and women in this room who have worn the uniform of the United States Armed Services. (Applause.) I want to thank all the patriots who are here today, all of them who were forced to hang up their uniforms as a result of “Don't Ask, Don't Tell” -- but who never stopped fighting for this country, and who rallied and who marched and fought for change. I want to thank everyone here who stood with them in that fight. The entire event was profound, and the President's remarks are well worth reading in full, but perhaps the most moving part of the President's remarks was a story he opened with: You know, I am just overwhelmed. This is a very good day. (Applause.) And I want to thank all of you, especially the people on this stage, but each and every one of you who have been working so hard on this, members of my staff who worked so hard on this. I couldn't be prouder. Sixty-six years ago, in the dense, snow-covered forests of Western Europe, Allied Forces were beating back a massive assault in what would become known as the Battle of the Bulge. And in the final days of fighting, a regiment in the 80th Division of Patton's Third Army came under fire. The men were traveling along a narrow trail. They were exposed and they were vulnerable. Hundreds of soldiers were cut down by the enemy. And during the firefight, a private named Lloyd Corwin tumbled 40 feet down the deep side of a ravine. And dazed and trapped, he was as good as dead. But one soldier, a friend, turned back. And with shells landing around him, amid smoke and chaos and the screams of wounded men, this soldier, this friend, scaled down the icy slope, risking his own life to bring Private Corwin to safer ground. For the rest of his years, Lloyd credited this soldier, this friend, named Andy Lee, with saving his life, knowing he would never have made it out alone. It was a full four decades after the war, when the two friends reunited in their golden years, that Lloyd learned that the man who saved his life, his friend Andy, was gay. He had no idea. And he didn't much care. Lloyd knew what mattered. He knew what had kept him alive; what made it possible for him to come home and start a family and live the rest of his life. It was his friend. And Lloyd's son is with us today. And he knew that valor and sacrifice are no more limited by sexual orientation than they are by race or by gender or by religion or by creed; that what made it possible for him to survive the battlefields of Europe is the reason that we are here today. (Applause.) That's the reason we are here today. (Applause.) The President stressed for the sake of those in uniform now that he, the Defense Secretary and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs still need to certify that the military has made any needed preparations for the transition before repeal goes into effect, but also gave this assurance: “I have spoken to every one of the service chiefs and they are all committed to implementing this change swiftly and efficiently. We are not going to be dragging our feet to get this done.” He went on to NewsLink Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Passes Senate 65-31 their opinions on the bill. A survey on ending DADT was sent to 400,000 service members, at least 100,000 of whom responded. Of those who responded, 70 percent said they would "work together to get the job done" if there was a gay service member in their unit -- and 69 percent said they know or suspect there is a gay service member serving with them already. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said the reason survey results were mostly positive because troops already thought the repeal was "a done deal" because politicians had said they planned to repeal it. Repealing DADT would harm recruitment and retention, he said. "I was shocked at how well this has worked for a long period of time," Inhofe said. "We have a saying in Oklahoma, 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it.' Well, this isn't broke, it's working very well." Republican senators said their opposition was not related to homophobia or lack of appreciation for those who have served or are serving in the military. "This has nothing to do with the gays and lesbians who have given valuable service to our military," said Sen. Saxby Chambliss (RGa.). "That's a given." Still, they rejected the idea that the military could adjust seamlessly to a more open policy. "Some people will say this is about civil rights and its time has come. The Marine Corps doesn't have that view," Graham said. "This is about effectiveness on the battle field, not about civil rights." In the end, though, support for a repeal won out. A number of Democrats made impassioned appeals for the bill in the debate. "I can't think of something more egregious to our fabric, to our military," said Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y). "If you care about national security, if you care about military readiness, you will vote against this corrosive policy." President Barack Obama applauded the Senate for moving toward repeal. "By ending 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell,' no longer will our nation be denied the service of thousands of patriotic Americans forced to leave the military, despite years of exemplary performance, because they happen to be gay," he said in a statement. "And no longer will many thousands more be asked to live a lie in order to serve the country they love." 9 ∏ ∏ ∏ ∏ www.CommunityLinkFresno.com ees. ENDA's Absence by Chris Geidner The employment bill started strong, but was barely breathing at the close of the 111th Congress It wasn't supposed to be like this for the Employment NonDiscrimination Act. As the members of Congress put in place the final priorities for the lameduck session of the 111th Congress, nary a word has been heard about the bill - the longest-standing piece of legislation, in one form or another, sought by LGBT advocates. Rep. Tammy Baldwin (DWisc.)''It's dead for now,'' the bill's blunt House sponsor, Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), said on Dec. 14. ∏ NewsLink And things had started so well. The bill had a hearing in the House Education and Labor Committee, with supportive testimony from the Obama administration. Then, Chairman George Miller (D-Calif.) slated ENDA for a mark-up in the House Education and Labor Committee in November 2009. But Miller canceled the mark-up and that was, more or less, the last that was heard of the bill, which would prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity for most employers with 15 or more employ- 10 Soon enough, ''Don't Ask, Don't Tell'' moved to the fore - both in Congress and in the public's consciousness. By January of this year, it appeared already that the employment measure - which had, albeit without the protection for gender-identity discrimination, been passed previously by the House and come within a vote of passing in the Senate - had taken a back seat to ending the 1993 law banning openly gay or lesbian military service. Even the spokesman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) acknowledged this week, ''The longagreed-upon order was hate crimes; ENDA; 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.''' But, speaking with Metro Weekly, Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill said, ''We then went into health care, and obviously that took much longer than anticipated.'' As Frank acknowledged, ''One of the things that delayed [ENDA] was the health bill - because it was in the same committee.'' Then, Hammill said, ''There were issues with the motion to recommit.'' Explaining the ''issues,'' he said, ''Everyone thought we had the votes on the underlying measure, but it depended on what language the GOP [brought up] on the motion to recommit. ''Many felt it would be a troublesome sign to take it to the floor and not to be able to overcome the motion to recommit.'' Frank expanded upon that, adding some specificity to the fears, saying, ''What they were worried about was a motion to recommit, like saying that an elementary school teacher can't transition in the middle of the year.'' But, as Rep. Tammy Baldwin (DWisc.) explained, ''[O]ur vote counts for two sessions in a row - we didn't reach the same conclusion [as the House Democratic leadership] about the confidence in, not so much passage, but being able to defeat a motion to recommit.'' A House Democratic leadership aide, who asked not to be named to present an open assessment of the whip process, criticized the count of members or the advocacy organizations, saying, ''You'd have the whip check it or the speaker check it, and it wasn't there. At the end of the day, there were serious problems with the motion to recommit. People who they had on the list, people who signed on as co-sponsors because they never thought it would come to the floor…. The 'yes' was not there.'' Baldwin said, however, ''I don't question the accuracy of the information I have. I also think there's a reason why there wasn't a complete match-up.'' To explain, she said, ''The conversation that individual has with the leadership whip team may not end up with his revealing how he's going to vote. He may simply say, 'I'm asking you, as leaders, don't bring this up. Don't make me take this vote. You're the ones who decide.''' But, when she or other members press them for how they would vote, she said, they get an answer, and she had a good deal of confidence in the ability to defeat a motion to recommit related to the gender-identity protections. Frank was not as sure, saying, ''I'm not confident how it would have turned out. I think people in the community underestimate the opposition.'' He added that, without the genderidentity provisions, ''We clearly have the votes for that.'' Baldwin concluded, though, ''I certainly articulated, both sessions, that I felt we should move forward. I know others shared that.'' Frank, despite his reservations, agreed. ''I wanted to go to the floor,'' he said. ''I agreed with Tammy.'' Hammill disputed that characterization as being antagonistic to the speaker's position, saying, ''Everyone wanted to go forward. I don't think I disagree with that at all.'' But, he added, ''As you well know, and she's said this a number of times, moving on two priorities at the same time would be problematic and could endanger the outcome of both.'' The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's executive director, Rea Carey, fought back against that premise. ''They are smart enough to walk and chew gum at the same time,'' she said. ''These two bills have been in play for years, and there are other examples of Congress taking up two similar bills at the same time.'' As to that, though, Hammill said, ''There was a decision made with some of the groups - some of them wanted to move forward with 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.''' National Center for Transgender Equality Executive Director Mara Keisling said that, if such a decision was made, that was unacceptable. ''The problem,'' she said, ''is that they were signaled that it was okay to pick one over the other.'' Outside of DADT-specific organizations, neither the Human Rights Campaign nor the Task Force acknowledged pushing DADT repeal in front of ENDA. HRC spokesman Fred Sainz said, ''I can tell you that HRC was not that group. Our position was always that both should proceed.'' Asked whether HRC officials had, in a lesser way, acknowledged that the LGBT community would approve of DADT repeal being prioritized over ENDA, Sainz said, ''No choice was ever made between two important priorities. There was a path forward, tied to a process, with DADT repeal.'' Rep. Barney Frank (DMass.)Carey said, ''The Task Force did not express, to any member of Congress in any way, that 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' should move forward at the expense of ENDA.'' She added that it is the ''responsibility'' of LGBT organizational leaders is to ''push … to make sure that the needs of LGBT people are tended to'' - in multiple areas at the same time. Further, said Carey, regarding the political strategies employed, ''Neither has been enacted. That's the real problem.'' As to the specter of a lame-duck vote on ENDA, which had been floated as a possibility throughout the summer and fall, Baldwin said, ''If I were to give you my best opinion on this, [chances of a lame-duck ENDA vote] disappeared when it became clear that if we had any chance of repealing 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell,' that that would happen in the lame duck.'' Carey added, however, ''We all appear to be hindered by the reticence of the speaker's office to move forward on an inclusive ENDA.'' Keisling was more specific. ''It had to do with there being staff members in leadership who were afraid of the trans part,'' she said. ''And leadership stalled on it. They stalled and they stalled.'' Other LGBT advocates concurred, with different advocates pointing to varying members of the Democratic leadership team as the individuals most responsible for holding back the bill from a vote. All, though, acknowledged that the motion to recommit was the main concern and that, because of that, Pelosi was unwilling to bring the bill to a vote. Hammill, however, also noted another major concern for the speaker's office, saying, ''Possibly we could get it out of the House, but I don't think anyone sees a path in the Senate.'' HRC's Sainz and others acknowledged that the lack of a path for ENDA's passage in the Senate was a major obstacle to getting movement in the House. New Hospital Visitation Regulations for LGBT Families Go into Effect Tragedy Leads to New Protections for LGBT Families On Tuesday, January 18, 2011 federal regulations regarding patients' hospital visitation rights will go into effect. These new regulations require all hospitals participating in Medicaid and Medicare programs - virtually every hospital in the country - to permit patients to designate visitors of their choosing and prohibit discrimination in visitation based on a number of factors, including sexual orientation and gender identity. Moved by the tragic story of an LGBT family - Janice Langbehn, Lisa Pond and their children - who were kept apart as Lisa lay dying in a Miami hospital, President Obama issued a presidential memorandum in April 2010 directing the Department of Health and Human Services to develop regulations protecting hospital visitation rights. HRC has prepared a Hospital Visitation Guide. “LGBT people experience discrimination in many aspects of their lives, but it is perhaps at its worst during times of crisis,” said HRC President Joe Solmonese. “We thank President Obama and HHS Secretary Sebelius for recognizing the hardships LGBT people face and taking this important step toward ensuring that no one will be turned away from a partner's hospital bedside again.” In addition to working with the Obama administration on the hospital visitation issue, HRC administers the Healthcare Equality Index, an annual survey of healthcare policies and practices related to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender patients and their families. For more information about the HEI, as well as resources for hospitals and LGBT patients, go to www.hrc.org/hei. Gay intern credited with saving Giffords' life Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Issues. “She's been a great ally to the LGBT community,” Hernandez said of Giffords during the brief interview across a bad connection. According to the Arizona Republic, Hernandez was standing about 30 feet from Giffords during the “Congress on Your Corner” event outside a Safeway store near Tucson. When the gunshots began, Hernandez ran toward them and began checking the pulses of people who'd been hit. When Hernandez got to Giffords, he used his hand to apply pressure to the entry wound on her forehead. He pulled her into his lap and held her upright so she wouldn't choke on her blood. Daniel Hernandez is shown with Giffords in this image from his Facebook page.Hernandez used his hand to apply pressure to the wound until someone brought clean smocks from the meat department of the grocery store. He stayed with Giffords until paramedics arrived, then climbed into an ambulance with her. On the way to the hospital, he squeezed her hand and she squeezed back. From the Republic: When they arrived at the hospital, Hernandez was soaked in blood. His family brought him clean clothes because the FBI took his for evidence. He waited at the hospital while she went into surgery. He needed to tell police what had happened. He overheard people walking by talking about how Giffords had died. He also heard this on NPR. Later, he learned she had lived. “I was ecstatic,” he said. “She was one of the people I've looked up to. Knowing she was alive and still fighting was good news. She's definitely a fighter, whether for her own life, or standing up for people in southern Arizona.” The fact that Hernandez was nearby and able to react quickly probably saved Giffords' life, said state Rep. Matt Heinz, D-Tucson, and a hospital physician. He talked to Hernandez at the hospital after the shooting. Eight hours after the shooting, Hernandez stood with Giffords' friends and staff and told them what had happened. The tall, strong 20year-old said, “Of course you're afraid, you just kind of have to do what you can.” They hugged and thanked him. Later, he sat with his mom and sisters and told them about his friends and the staffers who had died that day. “You just have to be calm and collected,” he said. “You do no good to anyone if you have a breakdown. … It was probably not the best idea to run toward the gunshots, but people needed help.” by John Wright Daniel Hernandez Jr. is shown accompanying his boss, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, to an ambulance after she was shot on Saturday. (Associated Press)Daniel Hernandez Jr., a 20-year-old University of Arizona student who'd been working as an intern for Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords for only five days, is being credited with saving her life after she was shot on Saturday. Hernandez, who confirmed that he is gay in an interview with Instant Tea on Sunday morning, is a member of the City of Tucson Commission on Gay-friendly jurist leaving CA's highest court Justice Carlos Moreno tells governor he's stepping down at end of February California Supreme Court Justice Carlos R. Moreno - the lone dissenter in a 6-1 decision upholding Proposition 8 - has announced he is retiring from the bench. Moreno, regarded by many legal experts as the high court's most liberal member, was appointed by Gov. Gray Davis in 2001. Moreno, 62, said in a brief resignation letter to the governor that he would be stepping down “effective with the close of business on February 28, 2011.” On May 26, 2009, the California Supreme Court upheld Proposition 8, the state constitutional initiative prohibiting same-sex marriages. But in his lone dissent, Moreno wrote, “In my view, the aim of Proposition 8 and all similar initiative measures that seek to alter the California Constitution to deny a fundamental right to a group that has historically been subject to discrimination on the basis of a suspect classification, violates the essence of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution and fundamentally alters its scope and meaning. Such a change cannot be accomplished through the initiative process by a simple amendment to our Constitution enacted by a bare majority of the voters; it must be accomplished, if at all, by a constitutional revision to modify the equal protection clause to protect some, rather than all, similarly situated persons. I would therefore hold that Proposition 8 is not a lawful amendment of the California Constitution.” Moreno wrote two majority opinions for the court in 2005 that bolstered 'homosexual rights' in California. In one case, Moreno wrote, "We perceive no reason why both parents of a child cannot be women." In the other case, Moreno concluded that state laws barring discrimination by businesses included registered domestic partners, ruling that such partners could not legally be treated differently from married couples. The San Jose Mercury News reported that, with Moreno's resignation, “Gov. Jerry Brown has a quick opportunity to dust off his once controversial judge-picking skills and name a justice to one of the most influential state Supreme Courts in the country.” Almost as if they had seen Moreno's resignation coming, the national homosexual rights group Lambda Legal sent a letter to Brown on Dec. 30 - less than a week before Moreno's Jan. 5 resignation letter -urging Brown “to appoint only judges who will rule fairly and impartially, particularly in cases involving LGBT and HIV-positive individuals,” according to a statement issued by Lambda Legal. “It explains why judges must not only abide by landmark legal precedents recognizing the rights of LGBT individuals, but must also follow the principles of equal protection and fairness underlying those decisions,” said the Lambda Legal statement. “These precedents include the constitutional requirement that anti-gay laws be tested against the most rigorous level of judicial scrutiny, the right to privacy that applies to both same-sex and different-sex relationships, and the right to be treated equally across a wide variety of settings regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity or HIV status.” www.CommunityLinkFresno.com R. Clarke Cooper, executive director of Log Cabin Republicans, took issue with Hammill's remarks, saying, ''Having it not been calendared or advanced … it's kind of hard to do a 'coulda, woulda, shoulda.' But … I didn't get any negative response to ENDA.'' ''It's a cop-out to say there weren't votes. There were,'' he said. ''There are members out there who are more comfortable with ENDA than with 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.''' Asked what those supportive of ENDA should do in the 112th Congress, Frank concurred, in a sense, with Hammill's comments, saying, ''It's dead until the Democrats retake the House.'' Carey responded similarly: ''It looks like we don't have votes to move forward on any LGBT-specific legislation in the coming year, which makes it particularly disappointing that Congress didn't take care of LGBT people's business in the past year.'' Cooper, unsurprisingly, was more optimistic, noting that LCR - for the first time - had been invited to participate in a meeting on Dec. 15 of Republican organization heads with the House Republican Study Committee, headed by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio). ''There is opportunity there. To say there is no support or will, I would say, is not accurate,'' Cooper said. ''We have 17 folks we endorsed, 12 of them are going to be in Congress in January, and they all support ENDA.'' Jordan, however, is not one of them. Despite Obama's ''continue[d] support'' of the legislation, White House spokesman Shin Inouye did not sound hopeful about passage of the bill in the near future, telling Metro Weekly of the president's view, ''As the public continues to learn about the need for this legislation, he hopes that Congress will take on this issue to help bring fairness and equality to our nation's laws.'' As to that education, Frank had a message for LGBT advocates, saying, ''In the interim what the community needs to do is educate on the transgender issue.'' The point was echoed by the Democratic leadership aide, who said ''there has not been the work done by the community in the Senate'' to ensure the passage of an inclusive ENDA. As Frank said, ''I would point out to you that they still have not been able to get transgender protections in liberal places. If you can't do it in Massachusetts, New York and Maryland, it doesn't get easier when you add in South Dakota, Oklahoma and Utah.'' http://metroweekly.com/news/?ak= 5852 NewsLink As Hammill put it, ''Obviously, it's a disappointment, but you have Republicans blocking over 420 bills that the House has passed.'' Hammill went down the list of Democratic complaints about Republican intransigence in the Senate, concluding, ''They extend the time that every piece of legislation takes to pass. And, they're not interested in equality.'' 11 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com SAGE www.sageusa.org Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE) is the country's largest and oldest organization dedicated to improving the lives of LGBT older adults. SAGE has pioneered programs and services for the aging LGBT community, provided technical assistance and training to expand opportunities for LGBT older people across the country, and provided a national voice on LGBT aging issues. In 2005, SAGE became the first official LGBT delegate at the White House Conference on Aging. In 2010, SAGE was awarded a three-year $900,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Administration on Aging to create the nation's only national resource center on LGBT aging. Why LGBT Older People Turn to SAGE for Help Despite advances in LGBT civil rights, many older adult care providers never stop to consider that their older clients may be lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) - and even those who do may not know how to provide services in culturally-sensitive ways. As a result, LGBT older adults often avoid seeking needed services out of fear of discrimination. The tendency for LGBT older adults to go "back in the closet" is particular- ly pronounced in situations where they are most vulnerable - such as when accessing home health care or residing in assisted living or residential care facilities. One study indicated that LGBT older adults may be as much as five times less likely to access needed health and social services because of their fear of discrimination from the very people who should be helping them. This type of social isolation has an enormous impact in the health and well-being of LGBT older adults. With LGBT older adults twice as likely to live alone than heterosexual older adults, more than four times as likely to have no children, the informal caregiving support we assume is in place for older adults may not be there for LGBT elders. Resources on Aging SAGE has a wonderful online resource guide to services available for LGBT older people and those interested in LGBT aging issues. In February 2010, SAGE, in partnership with 10 leading organizations from around the country, received a landmark, three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to establish a National Resource Center on LGBT Aging. SAGE's Ad Campaign SAGE's launched an ad campaign which took New York City by storm with the message that there's no expiration date on a full and active life. SAGE ads appeared in print media and in the public transportation system all over NYC. These ads depict SAGE clients, social workers, donors and volunteers in a vibrant light. SAGE's Ad Campaign Takes New York City by Storm! And the press has taken notice, including the Daily News, NY1 and 1010 WINS among others Photographer Janette Beckman, world-famous photographer who has shot rock stars and hip-hop artists for Rolling Stone magazine for the past two decades, has turned her lens on SAGE members, donors, staff and volunteers. After a month-long casting process and more than 20 interviews, Janette and Double Platinum, the award-winning gay and lesbian focused marketing agency owned by Arthur Korant and Stephanie Blackwood, have put a positive and hopeful face on LGBT aging. History and Background Programs like SAGE become an important "safety net" for LGBT elders. Incorporated by lesbian and gay activists and aging service professionals in 1978 as Senior Action in a Gay Environment, SAGE (now Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders) is the world's oldest and largest non-profit agency addressing the needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender elders. SAGE works with LGBT elders to address and overcome the challenges of discrimination in older adult service settings, while also being an essential component in the creation of informal caregiving support, and development of new "family" networks. SAGE's programs include: The nation's first Friendly Visiting program for frail and homebound LGBT older adults The country's first support group for LGBT older adults with HIV The nation's first program dedicated to caregiving services for LGBT older adults. The nation's first LGBT Senior Drop-In Center, The creation of the first national conferences devoted to LGBT aging concerns The only Robert Wood Johnson Foundation "Faith in Action" grantee (of more than 2,000 nationwide) specifically targeting LGBT older people for supportive services, The recipient of a three-year, $900,000 grant from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Administration on Aging to create the nation's only national resource center on LGBT aging. Today, there are a growing number of retirement communities, senior housing and other high-end housing options targeting LGBT older adults. But for hundreds of thousands of LGBT older adults who will be aging in place in their own communities, SAGE programs and services provide the link they need to a safe and welcoming community. SAGE Affliates Network In order to end the invisibility of aging and older adults in the LGBT community, SAGE supports local LGBT leadership and older adult advocates as powerful engines for positive change within communities. SAGE affiliates strengthen local work, increase visibility, and provide a national network of programs and services for LGBT older adults around the country. The closest SAGE Affiliate to the Central Valley is: The Golden Rainbow Center - SAGE 700 E Tahquitz Canyon Way, Suite F Palm Springs, CA 92262 (760) 416-7790 www.goldenrainbowseniorcenter.org Community Link’s Gray Alliance A group that knows it may get a little harder, but that It is always Gets Better With Age. The Gray Alliance doesn’t just live life WE CELEBRATE IT! NewsLink Gray Alliance welcomes all women & men within the graying Lesbian and Gay Community. 12 We are a friendly group of graying folks who enjoy each other’s company and unique personalities. Tower Health & Diet Foods 1130 N. Fulton at Olive We are social, like activities and eating . In the Tower District We have a monthly night out at Denny’s at Shields & Blackstone on the SECOND 237-8479 WEDNESDAY of the month. We also have a monthly pot luck dinner at one of our members’ homes on LAST SUNDAYS. For more information call Liz Brown at 559-287-2428 or email her at xmas1225@attnet Check out the Gray Alliance section at Same location for your vitamin & food www.communitylinkfresno.com supplement needs since 1955 Hours: Mon-Fri 9-5:30 Sat 9-5 Sun 11-4 Closed Major Hoildays Golden Globes Shameless Gay Teen the Anti-Kurt by Advocate.com Editors Chris Colfer Attached To His Golden Globe…In Bed ∏ PerezHilton.com We couldn't be more prouder to report that last night, Chris Colfer won for Best Supporting Actor in a TV series. As such an amazing young man in the industry today, we can't help but feel like the award went to the most deserving actor. After receiving his accolade, Chris was bombarded by the press, asked hundreds of questions about how he was feeling and what the award meant to him. But one of our favorite questions is always where do the celebs intend on putting the award now that it's all theirs. Chris had the perfect answer to that: “I think I am going to sleep with it. It is not going to leave my bedside. Usually when I get this is usually A F T Glee was a winner at the 2010 Golden Globes. It won Best Television Series - Comedy or Musical. Creator and Executive Producer Ryan Murphy accepted the Golden Globe for Glee. Ryan Murphy says, "this is for anybody and everybody who got a wedgie in high school." 2 The Fresno Youth Alliance A Group for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual,Transgender & Questioning Teens & Young adults A Safe and Sane Substance Free Place to BELONG! Young Adults/Teens Meet every Friday Night from 7 pm to 8:30 pm at The Big Red Church, 2131 N. Van Ness Blvd For more information call Jeff: 486-3464 Or if you just need someone to talk to right now, are having a hard time, or are in crisis call LYRIC Youth Talkline 1-800-246-PRIDE NewsLink As gay teen Ian Gallagher on the new Showtime series Shameless, 17year-old Cameron Monaghan says his character is the anti-Kurt Hummel. His character smokes pot, is obsessed with porn, and occasionally screws his married, Muslim boss. “He's the anti-stereotype,” Gallagher says. “He never does anything that's stereotypically perceived as 'gay.' He's tough, he's street smart, and he's pretty much unlike any gay teenager on television right now.” The show, about a lower-income family including William H. Macy as the alcoholic father and Emmy Rossum as the smart, slutty sister, is raising eyebrows before premiering for its provocative content. But Monaghan says as an actor - even one who's not yet legal - he had no qualms about taking on such an in-your-face role. “I'm always happy to support the gay community. Ian's a really fantastic part. A non-stereotypical part. And I think a lot of teens - and a lot of gay teens, especially - will really relate to the role.” Shameless premieres January 9 on Showtime. Continued from the front page A stunned Chris could hardly believe his ears when his name was called out as winner in the aforementioned category. From the images shown on the big screens, his “Glee” co-stars were just as surprised, but also incredibly happy for him, barely able to contain their tears as he went up on stage. The star thanked everyone involved in the making of the hit show, from creator Ryan Murphy to his castmates whom, he said, deserved to be up there with him just as much as he deserved to be there. He then turned his attention to a topic that's been getting a lot of media since early 2010, the issue of bullying among teens, specifically on grounds like orientation. Colfer dedicated his award to all the teen boys and girls who are always told they would never fit in and who are constantly picked on because they're different. “Most importantly, to all the amazing kids that watch our show and the kids that our show celebrates that are constantly told no by bullies in their school and they can't be who they are,” Colfer said. “Well, screw that, kids,” the visibly nervous actor added, holding up his award, before bowing out. Colfer had some serious competition for the Golden Globe award that he proudly took home last night. The other nominees included Chris Noth for “The Good Wife,” Scott Caan for “Hawaii- 5-0,” David Strathairn for “Temple Grandin” and Eric Stonestreet for “Modern Family,” for his role as Cameron Tucker. www.CommunityLinkFresno.com when I wake up. So I am going to keep it very close." Aw! So charming! So genuine! But go ahead and pinch yourself, baby, because this is all real. You're a big time actor with the big time award to prove it. Enjoy the moment! 13 ∏ “When I dream I dream in color!” The color of our world.............. .....................the color of our community, the color of our events! ∏ IDC’s Closet Ball 2011 The New Closet Ball Queen Unique Baptist Essence Photos by Wendee Cruz ∏ www.CommunityLinkFresno.com ∏ BAKERSFIELD No H8 Pictures from Bakersfield Pride If you had pics taken at Bako Pride for the No H8 Campaign, they are now available online: http://www.noh8campaign.com then click PHOTOS. Most of Bako is in the file called CREATIVE GROUPS 9, but many singles are in other files as well, so check several files to find yours! Small Town Pride by the NoH8 Campaign The movement for LGBT rights took a huge step forward last week when both the US House and Senate took steps to end the discriminatory policy that prevented gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. While we celebrate the huge advances toward equal rights for all, it's equally important to recognize large steps on a much smaller scale. There are many battles to be fought in the fight for equality, and sometimes it's easy to overlook smaller pockets of hope. Bakersfield, California is a small, conservative town. Compared to giant city-wide events like Los Angeles Pride, Bakersfield Pride [2010] was far more intimate. The festival was held at a small park grounds with a stage and some picnic tables. The lines weren't blocks long; the celebration was laid back and casual, with some informal emceeing and performances by some local LGBT groups. Bakersfield Pride was a true opportunity for people in the area to show their solidarity for one another and enjoy their community together for just one day; to exist together in one place. There's no West Hollywood in Bakersfield, and in such a conservative area, it can sometimes be hard to feel like you can be unapologetically yourself. Being different in any small town can be hard. We felt so fortunate to have a chance to spend so much time meeting and talking with many of our Bakersfield participants. It was a welcome change of pace from our normally hectic shoots, and hearing the stories we did reminded us just how important visibility is in small towns like Bakersfield. Those people in Bakersfield will now sport their NOH8 photos with Pride, and their photo will bring the issue of equality to the forefront of those they know; and we couldn't ask for more. Soon, everyone in Bakersfield will know what NOH8 stands for; and we were just glad to be a small part of it. Thank you to everyone at Bakersfield Pride for making us feel welcome! Bakersfield AIDS Project's Ongoing Needs… Bakersfield AIDS Project has some ongoing needs. There are items that are used up fairly quickly, and they could use a good supply. Here are the items: Chap stick Baby Wipes Lotion Washable changing pads lovingly sewn;) Hospital gowns (colorful prints, lovingly sewn) Shirts for Men/Women that are button up, comfortable, easy to remove Small, Med, Large Drawstring or elastic waist pants Sheets/Pillow cases Body Pillows Body Wash Small Face Towels If you have any of these things, please contact BAP to drop off - call Audrey 661-742-3611. The address is 910 Grace St. PO Box 78056 Bakersfield, CA 93383 To make a gift by PayPal: go to www.paypal.com and send your donation to bakersfieldpride@aol.com We appreciate all the support we receive from the community throughout the year, especially in these tough times. Thank you for attending our events and making your donations. We're changing the world one day at a time! Bakersfield LGBTQ Appeal MERCED Bakersfield LGBTQ is dedicated to making a difference in the Kern County LGBTQ community. The farreaching impact of donations to our organization is remarkable. We are truly inspired by the range of activities, services, and advocacy initiatives made possible by our generous donors. Please join our community of supporters by making a tax-deductible year-end gift to Bakersfield LGBTQ. Your gift will help ensure the continued success of the organization and help us take one more step toward our vision of a Center in Bakersfield dedicated to serving LGBTQ individuals and their families. To make a gift by mail: Bakersfield LGBTQ “Out In The Silence” “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” Truth and lies, love and contempt, life and death - the American classic by Tennessee Williams. Admission by donation. Suggested donation $15 for adults, $10 for students and seniors. February 18 - March 5 at 8 PM At the Empty Space, 706 Oak St. (661) 327-7529 www.esonline.org UC Merced's 5th Annual Human Rights Film Series presents “Out in the Silence”. The film dramatically illustrates the challenges of negotiating the morally charged issue of sexual orientation and the potential for building bridges when people with differing opinions approach each other with openness and respect. Directors: Joe Wilson and Dean Hamer. Friday, February 11th at 7 p.m. Free and open to the public. Event Contact: 209-228-4032. At UC Merced, 5200 North Lake Rd, COB 105. events.ucmerced.edu/?event_ID=5 IF Y O U H A V E A BUSINESS I N T H E VALLEY THIS SPACE C O U L D B E Y O U R S F O R ONLY $25 a month ∏ NewsLink (for 3 months minimum) 16 WE PRINT 1,500 COPIES AND RECEIVE 500-1,500 VISITORS TO THE WEBSITE EACH MONTH Is it important to you to be included in News Link? We think it is! Send us your submissions of events & articles. See page 3. CALL 559-486-3464 O R E-MAIL: CommunityLinkFresno@Yahoo.com Y O U R C L U B O R ORGANIZATION CAN A D V E R T I S E H E R E TOO! Texas police officer and church organist Steven Russell (Jim Carrey) is happily married to Debbie (Leslie Mann), and spends his off hours searching for the biological mother who gave him up as a child. When a car accident forces a dramatic reassessment of his life, and after he finds his mother, who handily rejects him, he leaves his life and family behind and decides to live life instead in Miami as his true, flamboyantly gay self. After finding a boyfriend (Rodrigo Santoro) and living the high life, Steven becomes a conman to fund his life of luxury. When his con work finally catches up with him, he's sent to prison where he meets and falls in love with Phillip Morris (Ewan McGregor). His devotion to freeing Phillip from jail and building the perfect life together prompts Steven to attempt and often succeed at one impossible con after another. Written and directed by John Requa and Glen Ficara of Bad Santa fame, I Love You Phillip Morris is all over the place, but it's also outrageously funny. Best not to make too much sense out of the series of escapes, disguises and reunions that defy belief. Stop fighting it. I Love You Phillip Morris is based on fact. Career criminal Stephen is currently serving a 144-year sentence. It's one crazy love story, but Carrey and McGregor make it work by making us buy the romance as the real thing. There's something about these Marys that pulls you in. Rated R. 1 Hr. 38 Min. Tickets are $10 or $8 for matinees. January 29th - February 3rd, Sat & Mon - Thurs 7pm, Sun 1pm. At the State Theatre, 1307 J St. www.thestate.org/calendar/event/282/view New OESCI Board We would like to take this time to thank the 36th reign Board Of Directors of The Owl Empire of Stanislaus County, Inc. of Modesto on a job well done. You have succeeded to make Modesto shine this past year. At this time we would like to introduce to you all, Modesto's new Board Of Directors for the 37th reign. President...Jack Balmer aka Shanda; Vice President ...Marti Cantrell aka Momma Cantrell; Treasurer ... Matt Cantrell; Secretary ...Corey Morris aka Missy Bradford; Emperor 37...Anthony Rosales-Fleming; Empress 37...Shaun McDaniel aka Kiki Peru Braxton St. James; Member at Large...Ryan Hernandez Lewis-St. James; Member at Large...James Hastins aka April Powers; Member Why isn’t your business card here? It could be for just $10.00/month! Call 559-486-3464 Tuesday - Friday: MoFest!7 Brainstorming Meeting Make MoFest!7 LGBT Film Festival a reality, and help PFLAG Modesto make it happen! Committed people, lots of ideas, a brainstorming session! Saturday, February 5, 7:00pm - 8:30pm at Starbucks, 820 Kansas Ave www.pflagmodesto.org Sync & Drag Informational Meeting Interested in performing a lip-sync number during this year's Sync&Drag at College Avenue Congregational Church on March 18? Come to our mandatory informational meeting on Sunday, February 20 at 5:30pm in the Youth Room! This year's theme is “Love, Love, Love!” Any and all ages are welcome to participate! Contact Rob at studentministries.collegeavenue@gmail.com for more information! 1341 College Ave. www.cacc-ucc.org STOCKTON 2nd Annual Superbowl Party Imperial San Joaquin Delta Empire, the Court of Vulgarity, Fun & Laughter presents Superbowl 2011! We had so much fun last year that the owner of Club Paradise, Chris Davis, asked if we could do it again...so we are! We are offering our $8 pulled pork sandwiches that are to DIE for complete with all the fixins, a chili bar, trivia games for the "commercial lovers", raffle, prizes for best in theme and much more. Come for the food and fun, stay for the tight ends and cheerleaders! Sunday, February 6th at 3pm at Club Paradise, 10100 Lower Sacramento Rd. More information: Emperor 21 & 31 Brenda Evans-Harris (209) 430-6297 groups.yahoo.com/group/StocktonImperialCourt San Joaquin AIDS Foundation Crab Feed PORTERVILLE The San Joaquin AIDS Foundation will hold its annual Crab and Shrimp Feed on Saturday, February 19th, at the Lodi Grape Festival Grounds, 413 East Chardonnay Hall. Tickets are $40 each and they go fast. There are only 650 tickets available. There is a silent auction and raffle tickets. There will be a D.J and no-host bar. You can also purchase tables of 8 so groups can sit together. Tickets are available at the San Joaquin AIDS Foundation, and at Serventi's with Flair in Lincoln Center. For more information, call (209) 476-8533. www.sanjoaquinaidsfoundation.org “Bullied” TRACY Please join us at 10 am on Sunday, February 19th for Coffee and Conversation. At 10:30 we will view the 40 min movie: “Bullied: A Student, a School and a Case That Made History” followed by discussion on the movie. Refreshments Provided. "Bullied" chronicles the powerful story of a student who stood up to his anti-gay tormentors and filed a federal lawsuit against his school district. The suit led to a landmark federal court decision holding that school officials could be held accountable for not stopping the harassment and abuse of gay students. At Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship Of Porterville, 135 E. Harrison uufellowship.homestead.com/UUFellowship.ht ml Psychotherapy Adult, Adolescent, Couples Melissa A. Cuneo, L.C.S.W. #LCS13570 (559) 901-5461 7:00 to 11:30 a.m. 1:30 to 6:00 p.m. Lunch: 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 1416 W Center St Visalia, CA 93291 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com “I Love You Phillip Morris” at Large ...Ron Coonce. We want to thank the Board Of Directors for taking this time out of their lives to volunteer to help support the 37th reign of The O.E.S.C.I. of Modesto. We are looking forward to working with you all this year! In service to our community, Emperor 37 Anthony Rosales-Fleming Empress 37 Kiki Peru Braxton St. James www.oesci.org ∏ Northern California Courts Bingo by Saybeline, San Francisco Imperials Honorable Member of Her Majesty's Parliament Just wanted to follow up with everyone to let you know how proud I am of everyone of you. Last night's [December 19th, 2010] Holiday Bingo Event [held in Tracy] put on by our Northern California Parliament Members was a success on so many levels... Since we came together in early October we have set the bar for other regions within the International Court System. Tonight we proved beyond any shadow of a doubt, that the Courts of Northern California can come together for a common cause, united in our efforts and be successful. Last night, we came together, enjoyed each other's company, had a wonderful time and we raised $1,000 after expenses for the Harvey Milk Foundation. To all the naysayers, we can all stand tall and be proud that we did something tonight that many didn't think could happen. I personally have to say that when the honorable members of Parliament: Christopher St. James - Alameda Imperial, David Dulan - Fresno Imperial and myself talked about bringing our courts together within the region and working together in May, last night's event and many more like it, was what we envisioned. My hat is off to all of you for the work you did to make tonight's event a success. continued on page 18 NewsLink MODESTO 17 ∏ ∏ www.CommunityLinkFresno.com NewsLink ∏ 18 continued from page 17 Tonight, all 10 courts of the Northern CA had representation at our Holiday Bingo event, and I thank all of you for working to make sure that happened. To our event steering committee and our event co-chairs, I thank you all for stepping up and making last night the success that it was. To each and every court, I wish to extend my deepest gratitude for your commitment to our vision of a greater and even better Northern CA region within the International Court System... Each and every one of you have helped to make this event a success... Thank you! And here are some reactions from the event's participants: “I would like to say a huge congratulations to the Northern California Parliament Members and Court Members on a very successful Holiday Bingo event! For all ten courts of Northern California to come together for this and help out, was amazing! My hat is off to all of you! (…) The courts that were in attendance were Chico, Sacramento, Alameda Imperial, Alameda Ducal, San Francisco Imperial, San Francisco Ducal, San Jose, Stockton, Modesto, and Fresno! (…) Miss Saybeline you did a great job and Grand Duke Michael Kennedy, great job being the bingo caller.” - Emperor 36 of Modesto, Mr. Ryan Hernandez LewisSt. James “I am truly proud to be a member of one of the several courts in Northern Cali and this past Sunday proved that there is NO "I" in team. From setting up the facility to sweeping up the very last pile of dust... EVERYONE did their part in making this bingo a powerhouse event. It was wonderful being amongst friends and meeting new ones and... well... just having FUN. It was so refreshing just being ourselves and enjoying EVERYONE'S company... WOW, WHEN'S THE NEXT ONE???” - H.I.M. Emperor XXI & XXXI of Stockton, Brenda Harris “Way to go everyone! My personal thanks go out to everyone who supported the event on Sunday. A very special thank you to Saybeline (Steve), who took the ball and ran, like the wild drag queen she is, with this idea of a stronger unification initiative. I am so proud of you Steve. You did whatever was needed to make it happen. You had key players involved and you stayed on top of things. WAY TO LEAD, MY FRIEND! San Francisco should be very proud to have a power player in their midst. As was stated before, this is the first of what we hope are many endevours of this kind and to think of what we could do with it when we do not have a time crunch like we did with this one event. There were roughly 30 days to plan, advertise, and make it happen.” Christopher Michael, Alameda Imperial VISALIA Visalia welcomes new LGBT Lions Club The Visalia Pride Lions Club has the great distinction of being Number 2 and they are very proud of that! The club is the second LGBTQ Lions Club in California. The Castro Lions Club in San Francisco has the honor of being the original club and is celebrating their 25 year anniversary this year. The club members started Visalia Pride Lions to assist their LGBT community and the larger Tulare/King County communities through projects, scholarships and volunteerism. The new club is currently 44 members strong and meets on the first and third Monday of the month, at Mimi's Cafe in Visalia, CA. This is the 6th Lions International club in Visalia. The Visalia Pride Lions originated with 24 members who were determined to create an influential LGBT club. Their official Charter dinner party was held last April at the Visalia Convention Center. Among the 150 people who attended the gala event were the Mayor and Vice-Mayor of Visalia, several officers of the Lions Clubs International district staff and many members of other community clubs. The Lions International organization has been very welcoming and supportive of the new club and hopes that there will be more LGBT Lions clubs starting in the Central Valley and across the state. There is already interest in Bakersfield and Sacramento to form new clubs. In their first year of charter, the Visalia Pride Lions hosted a "Meet and Greet" for The Trevor Project, an organization which supports LBGTQ youth through its crisis intervention and suicide prevention programs. Club members staffed booths at the Tulare County Suicide Prevention event and the Family Festival in Visalia, supported the Youth Prom in Fresno, collected 50 gifts for the Tulare Co. Foster Care program and volunteered services to the Visalia Lions Band Review. The last 2010 club project was funding LGBTQ libraries for 4 local high school GSA (gay-straight alliance) clubs and the COS Pride Club. Starting out 2011 with a bang, the club is proud to announce a glamorous Valentine's Dinner and Dance which will be held at the Visalia Holiday Inn (9000 W. Airport Dr.) on Saturday, February 19th. This event welcomes the LGBTQ community and its friends and allies to a evening of dinner, dancing and surprises. Celebrate Valentine's Day in a comfortable, accepting venue. Tickets for the dinner and dance are on sale now through February 1st. You can also purchase dance only tickets that will include dessert. Visit the club's website at visaliapridelionsclub.org or see the ad in this paper. The hotel is offering a special low rate to those around the valley who wish to stay the night after the event. Use the code "VPL" when making your reservation for February 19, 2011. The club also has a facebook page at ttp://www.facebook.com/event.php?ei d=113156818756092 The Visalia Pride Lions Club is proud to be Number 2 and looks forward to continuing their service with the Trevor Project, local LGBTQ youth clubs, and the many projects we plan for the community in the coming years. The club is always welcoming new members and invites anyone interested to contact the club at sbeipridelions2009@sbcglobal.net. Tuesday Evening Dining Group The upcoming tentative restaurants for this LGBT+ & straight-friendly weekly dining-out group are: January 25th - Asian Delite Café, 409 N Willis St. February 1st - El Tarasco, 2636 S Mooney Blvd. February 8th - The Vintage Press, 216 N. Willis St. February 15th - Mimi's Café, 4004 S. Mooney Blvd. February 22nd - Main Street Café, 233 W. Main St. All dinners start at 6pm. For last minute changes, visit the website: www.tedg.info Do you SHARE? by Brooke, gayvisalia.com Do you wish that you could donate and support Gay Visalia but you just don't have the cash? Well now you can at NO COST to you! Gay Central Valley is part of the S.H.A.R.E.S. program offered through Savemart. All you have to do is swipe your card each time you shop at one of their 4 stores (Savemart, Smartfoods, FoodMaxx & Lucky). It's just that easy! Our organization will receive 3% of everything you spend. So, if you spend $100, you would be earning $3 for us. Every little bit adds up and is completely appreciated! If you shop at these stores and would like to help our organization and raise funds with little effort and no out of pocket expense, please contact us. You can pick one up at our new office in Fresno or I have a bunch here to distribute. I will even mail one to you. Thank you all for your support and please know, we will always support you right back! Ethinc Escapades continued from page 7 For our mains, we all got different entrees so we could share and compare. Bryce ordered Sabzi Challow - a leg of lamb, cooked with spinach, herbs and spices, and served with Basmati rice. The meat was falling off the bone and the spinach was sauteed just right. Kevin had Qbidah Kabob, two charbroiled ground sirloin kabobs, grilled with onions and sweet spices, served with grilled tomato and Basmati rice. Their meat and spice mixture has a hint of nutty sweetness. Finally, Kirk enjoyed a plateful of Mantoo, Afghani ravioli stuffed with ground beef, onions and seasonings, topped with a sauce of (again) yogurt, split peas and more ground beef! Each bite was “a mouthful of heaven”... Salang Pass is located at 37462 Fremont Blvd. in Fremont, a block from the Amtrak station. (510) 7959200. www.salangpassrestaurant.com On our way back to Fresno, we stopped at Big E Cafe in San Jose for some Argentinian baked empanadas. Empanadas are similar to Indian somosas or turnovers stuffed with a variety of fillings; sometimes they're deep-fried. sometimes baked. The ones at Big E Cafe are baked and healthier than ones you might get at Empanada Place in Los Angeles, for example. We tried the entire delectable selection they had available that day ($2.95 each): chicken mushroom; spinach; mediterranean (spinach, cheeses, olives); very spicy Thai chicken with peas, carrots and potatoes; beef - kind of like Philly cheesesteak. For dessert, we had Apple & Cranberry (this one was not baked all the way, they redid it for us) and Peach & Blueberry (filled with fruit and jam-like glaze), neither were overly sweet. They also offer a full range of coffees and similar beverages, stop there for a snack and try the empanadas for yourself! Big E Cafe is at 1683 Branham Ln. in San Jose. (408) 978-9040. www.mybige.com 21 “The Half Life of Sgt. Jen Hunter” by Tracy Baim; published by CreateSpace, December 2010, 164 pages. The Half Life of Sgt. Jen Hunter, by lesbian journalist Tracy Baim, takes paces during the first Gulf War, in the early 1990s, prior to the compromise DADT law. The military banned all gays and lesbians from service, but tens of thousands bravely served their country. During the Gulf War, many of those soldiers were kept in service under a "stop loss" order, only to be discharged upon their return home. Now that DADT has been struck down, this novel is perfectly timed to give a closer look at the lives of people impacted by any policies or laws that ask them to compromise who they are. Author Baim, who is publisher and executive editor of Windy City Times newspaper, offers a romance and mystery novel about this era in our nation's history, when gays and lesbians served proudly, but quietly, risking their lives for a country that disrespected and attacked who they were. What would happen if an out lesbian journalist met and became attracted to a closeted military spokeswoman? Would sparks fly? Would the sergeant risk her career for love? Would the journalist compromise her ideals for a chance at happiness? What about the servicemembers on the ground in Iraq? They faced bullets and dangerous chemicals, and some came back wounded and faced the loss of their career. See what happens in this fast-paced tale of war, pride, sacrifice, and love. Baim has covered military gay and lesbian issues since 1984. She is the author of the non-fiction book Obama and the Gays: A Political Marriage and Out and Proud in Chicago: An Overview of the City's Gay Movement. Queer Pollen discusses three notable black queer twentieth century artists--painter and writer Richard Bruce Nugent, author James Baldwin, and filmmaker Marlon Riggs--and the unique ways they turned to various media to work through their experiences living as queer black men. David A. Gerstner elucidates the complexities in expressing queer black desire through traditional art forms such as painting, poetry, and literary prose, or in the industrial medium of cinema. This challenge is made particularly sharp when the terms "black" and "homosexuality" come freighted with white ideological conceptualizations. Gerstner adroitly demonstrates how Nugent, Baldwin, and Riggs interrogated the seductive power and saturation of white queer cultures, grasping the deceit of an entrenched cultural logic that defined their identity and their desire in terms of whiteness. Their work confounds the notion of foundational origins that prescribe the limits of homosexual and racial desire, perversely refusing the cordoned-off classifications assigned to the "homosexual" and the "raced" body. Queer Pollen articulates a cinematic aesthetic that unfolds through painting, poetry, dance, novels, film, and video that marks the queer black body in relation to matters of race, gender, sexuality, nation, and death. “Aging with HIV: A Gay Man's Guide” by James Masten Ph.D. LCSW; published by Oxford University Press USA, January 2011; 248 pages. With improvements in the treatment of HIV disease, gay men in great numbers are surviving--and thriving--into middle and older age. While increased longevity brings new hope, it also raises unanticipated chal- “Shakesqueer: A Queer Companion to the Complete Works of Shakespeare” edited by Madhavi Menon; published by Duke University Press Books, January 2011; 512 pages. Shakesqueer puts the most exciting queer theorists in conversation with the complete works of William Shakespeare. Exploring what is odd, eccentric, and unexpected in the Bard's plays and poems, these theorists highlight not only the many ways that Shakespeare can be queered but also the many ways that Shakespeare can enrich queer theory. This innovative anthology reveals an early modern playwright insistently returning to questions of language, identity, and temporality, themes central to contemporary queer theory. Since many of the contributors do not study early modern literature, Shakesqueer takes queer theory back and brings Shakespeare forward, www.CommunityLinkFresno.com “Queer Pollen: White Seduction, Black Male Homosexuality, and the Cinematic” by David A. Gerstner; published by University of Illinois Press, January 2011; 312 pages. challenging the chronological confinement of queer theory to the last two hundred years. The book also challenges conceptual certainties that have narrowly equated queerness with homosexuality. Chasing all manner of stray desires through every one of Shakespeare's plays and poems, the contributors cross temporal, animal, theoretical, and sexual boundaries with abandon. Claiming adherence to no one school of thought, the essays consider The Winter's Tale alongside network TV, Hamlet in relation to the death drive, King John as a history of queer theory, and Much Ado About Nothing in tune with a Sondheim musical. Together they expand the reach of queerness and queer critique across chronologies, methodologies, and bodies. ∏ “Double Play: The Hidden Passions Behind the Double Assassination of George Moscone and Harvey Milk” by Mike Weiss; published by Vince Emery Productions (2nd Edition), December 2010; 496 pages, San Francisco Supervisor Dan White assassinated Mayor George Moscone and fellow Supervisor Harvey Milk but received only a slapon-the-wrist sentence for manslaughter-a verdict that provoked thousands of outraged San Franciscans to riot. What hidden passions drove White to kill Moscone and Milk? How did he literally get away with murder? An exciting true crime thriller, Double Play provides often-shocking answers based on years of research and hundreds of interviews. The book earned the Edgar Award as Best True Crime Book of the Year. This expanded and updated edition reveals for the first time White's life after his release from prison, the first detailed accounting of White's suicide and the reasons for it, his secret plan to kill two more politicians, how his defense attorneys feared losing the trial over an unnoticed piece of evidence, what happened to the major characters in the 30 years after the assassinations, and how the killings catapulted a discouraged politician named Dianne Feinstein into national prominence and changed San Francisco irrevocably. This edition also provides more information about and photos of Harvey Milk, much unavailable anywhere else. 80 photographs and 10 illustrations are included, most never before published. Edgar Award winner as Best True Crime Book of the Year! NewsLink Following are some of the many new, interesting GLBT-themed books. They are not reviews they’re book descriptions provided by the publishers. lenges, particularly for gay men who never thought they would live this long: How do I deal with all the physical changes? Who can I rely on as I get older? Is a relationship still in the cards for me? What about sex? How should I prepare for old age? A one-of-a-kind guide for gay men aging with HIV, Aging with HIV offers an upbeat, down-to-earth approach for adapting to change, whether driven by age, AIDS, or both. Psychotherapist James Masten and physician James Schmidtberger shed light on the many common assumptions and fears of aging with HIV. Aging with HIV provides concrete solutions for facing midlife with a positive outlook, offering a wealth of advice for breaking unhealthy habits and coping mechanisms. The book describes the nine changes common to gay men as they age with HIV, discusses the four challenges of aging, and offers a unique ten-step path to optimal aging with HIV, helping the reader to tailor the book's suggestions to the realities of their lives. Woven throughout the book are first-person narratives from men who recount what worked--and did not work--for them. In addition, Rapid Research, Fast Fact, and Self-Reflection boxes highlight the latest research and challenge readers to take stock of the present--and plan for the future. An invaluable tool to keep handy and to refer to often, Aging with HIV is an inviting, confident companion to navigating midlife and beyond with HIV. 19 ∏ ∏ www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Sebastopol. $15-25 per person, sliding scale. www.lindyjames.com Rivalry: Where Worlds Collide 1 Year Anniversary 1/21 in San Diego Sara Felder's Out of Sight till 2/13 in San Francisco Solo theater artist and trickster, Sara Felder, invites you into the story of a nearly-blind mother and her lesbian daughter who try to “see” each other as they navigate their different perspectives on Israel. With her mix of circus tricks, shadow puppets and a Jewish queer sensibility, Felder sets out to balance family loyalty, social justice and juicy lemons. Written and Performed by Sara Felder. 80 minutes, no intermission. All seating for this performance is first-come, first-served. This show is recommended for ages 12+. Please do not bring infants to the show. Thursdays at 8pm, Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 3pm at the Marsh Studio Theater, 1074 Valencia St. www.themarsh.org The Feminine Face of Sexuality 1/21 & 2/25 in Sebastopol The Feminine Face of Sexuality with Lindy James, Sacred Intimate, Sex, Love & Intimacy coach. For women of all ages and sexual preference, all are welcome! Experience your body as a sacred and erotic gift! You are warmly invited to come and explore the feminine aspect of Sex, Love and Divine with Lindy. Join in a circle of women as we slow down, listen to each other, hear our own body's wisdom, and trust what we already know on deeper levels. In a cozy and safe environment we are invited to speak the unspeakable, to talk openly about such topics as: * Exploring ways to be more open to intimacy * Embracing who we are as women * Inviting the Divine into sexual relationships * Bringing more heart-connection into our sexuality * Relaxing into our own sensuality and desires * Finding more freedom and joy as sexual beings. This group is for women with some Tantric or sacred sexuality experience. We meet every 4-6 weeks in Come celebrate Rivalry's one year with us! All of you are what helped to keep this event going. This event will start at 8pm for some really cheap drinks to begin your night! This month we will have our always fun and exciting obstacle course. If you participate you will have the chance to win some great prizes for first place. DJ Kiki will be there to make us dance! Great drink specials all night long! Amber will be your hot little dancer for the evening. Birthday toast at midnight so contact us if you are a January birthday so we can set you up in the VIP room and get the number in your group to prepare your toast! $5 cover. $1 well drinks 8pm 9pm. 8pm at the Brass Rail, 3796 5th Ave. www.thebrassrailsd.com Butch / Femme 10th Annual Winter Ball 1/ 22 in Oakland Butch / Femme folks & their friends... put your sexy on! Suits, Tuxes, Slacks, Leather, Cocktail Dresses, Skirts, etc. But don't let clothes be the reason that you don't celebrate with us. Wear whatever makes you feel comfortable & join us! Easy street parking. BYOB (there will be some liquor available as part of your ticket purchase). Our charity at this event for donations is Meals for Reals, which feeds needy people in the Butch/Femme community. Bring a food gift card of any denomination from Trader Joe's, Whole Foods, Berkeley Bowl, Lucky's, Safeway OR your personal check (NO cash please). 6pm - 11pm at Humanist Hall, 411 28th St. Event tickets ($10) available at: www.brownpapertickets.com/event/1 41606 www.butchfemmesocials.com Chamber Music Soiree Benefit 1/23 in Oakland You are invited to a very special benefit event for the Women's Community Orchestra! Chamber Music Soiree with Dr. Kathleen McGuire, Conductor & the Community Women's Orchestra; Special guests Yuchi Chou, Adrienne Krug, and Stephanie Lynne Smith. Silent & Live Auction with nationally known auctioneer Kathy Kingston, CAI, BAS, Kingston Auction Company. A fun and elegant afternoon of chamber music, Nine Vines wine, hors d'oeuvres, complimentary CD Baby download cards, and more! Live Auction items: South African Photo Safari for Two - 6 days/6 nights, 3 meals per day and 2 game drives per day. Valid for two years. Airfare not included. Value: $3,950. Tuscan Resort - 7 night stay for four adults in one of the five properties in Manciano, Italy (90 min. north of Rome). No expiration date. Airfare not included. Value: $4,950. Wall of Wine - Supplement or start your wine cellar! A unique collection of local and international red and white wines. Conductor for a Day - CWO is providing a rare opportunity for the highest bidder (male or female) to conduct the Community Women's Orchestra in concert, including a private conducting lesson with Dr. Kathleen McGuire, a souvenir baton, a photo with the orchestra, and a video recording of your performance as a memento. 2:30pm - 5:30pm at The Bellevue Club, 525 Bellevue Ave. Tickets: $25 Advance / $30 Door. Children under 12 admitted free. www.communitywomensorchestra.org Marga Gomez's Funny Mondays starting 1/24 in Berkeley Marga's Funny Mondays starts January 24th! Marga Gomez will host a hells-a-poppin comedy/variety showcase every Monday in the Cabaret at The Marsh. Joining her will be some of the hottest comedy acts in the Bay Area; Natasha Muse (aka The Funniest transexual you will ever know,) Steven Pearl (wrote for Rodney Dangerfield,) DJ Real, Dee Dee Russel (Yes the Princess of Public Access) Candy Churrilla (last Comic Standing) and many more in Marga's ever changing lineup of comics, storytellers, troubadors and sock puppets. Marga Gomez is a native New Yorker who makes San Francisco her home and identifies as a bicoastal Gemini. As the daughter of a Cuban comedian and Puerto Rican dancer Marga made her stage debut in New York at age 7 and was hooked ever since. Her long and colorful career includes achievements in comedy, theater, film and television and was profiled in the 2005 documentary “Laughing Matters.” Marga's talents have brought her to audiences all over the planet. She has had the fortune to work with some of her heroes including Rita Moreno, Dustin Hoffman, Lily Tomlin and Whoopi Goldberg. Robin Williams was so impressed with Marga's response to a heckler at a benefit that he booked her on HBO's Comic Relief VI on the spot. 90minutes, no intermission. All seating for this performance is firstcome, first-served. This show is 18+. 8pm at The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret, 2120 Allston Way. No show on February 21st. www.themarsh.org Smart Women Business Network 1/27 in Petaluma For 2011, Smart Women events will be held for the first time in North Bay locations. The first of these will be on Thursday, January 27th, 5:30 PM 7:30 PM, with optional dinner to follow, at the Pelican Art Gallery & Custom Framing Studio, 143 Petaluma Blvd. North, hosted by Linda Postenrieder and Donna Hinshaw. Featured speaker will be Zoe Dunning, Retired Navy Commander and co-chair of the Service Members Legal Defence Network. www.bettyslist.com/blpage.php?id =3887 Eclipse! Women's Only Play Party 1/28 in San Francisco ECLIPSE PRESENTS: Ms. Cat's Spanking Party. It's her birthday and she's in the mood for a lil' OTK spanking. Come get your spankings from her or give out your own spankings....I'm sure they'll be takers. We'll also be serving cake on someone in celebration. Come and ring in the new year with Eclipse (8pm - 2am)! ECLIPSE is the SF Citadel's party for women and trans perverts! We have become known for our intense, sexy atmosphere, great music and Counseling Associates Cynthia Callaghan LICENSED CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKER NewsLink 3134 Willow, Suite # 103 Clovis, CA 93612 20 Cell: 559/930-9327 E-mail: cclcsw@sbcglobal.net ALL BREED PET SITTING Quality Pet Care in Your Home Caring For Your Pets Since 1988 Pet Care • Feeding • Exercising • Medication Gail Gaston Bus. 275-5092 Res. 325-0540 Home Care • Plant Care • Mail Pick-up • Light Changes Bonded Insured 3204 N. Van Ness Blvd 559-222-ROSE Fax 559-222-7693 Salacious Magazine Launch Party 1/28 in San Francisco Celebrate the launch of SALACIOUS Magazine with Madison Young and Reid Mihalko as they go head to head, revealing their BEST bedroom moves! Entertaining, informational, guaranteed-to-be-funny and friendly “competitive” throwdown (indie porn pioneer Madison Young vs. Sexpert Reid Mihalko)? Queer feminist sex, illustrated and photographed for your reading pleasure (that you get to take home with you)? All in one evening?! FeminaPotens.org and ReidAboutSex.com proudly present... Tonight's Iron Slut Sex Educators: Queer Feminist Porn Star and Sex Educator... Madison Young vs. Reid Mihalko, to celebrate... SALACIOUS Magazine's 1st issue! Launch profits to support the magazine. We know - you can barely control yourselves just reading about it, so get your ticket to the Launch Party of SALACIOUS Magazine, succinctly for persons of all genders. Madison Young is an “Indie Porn Pioneer” and has been called the “Picasso of Porn” by porn legend Annie Sprinkle. Madison travels the world giving presentations on sexuality, presenting rope bondage performance pieces, and teaching classes on sexual and kinky techniques at venues that vary from International bdsm conferences to Yale University. Madison's work in the adult industry, as well as the art world, has been featured on HBO's Real Sex and she has been featured as a sexpert in multiple episodes of Spike TV's “1000 Ways to Die”. Madison Young has been featured in over 100 adult dvd titles and web sites for the past 9 years and has directed 26 films. Ms Young is the founder and executive director of the nonprofit community art gallery, Femina Potens, which is a sex positive art gallery showcasing cutting edge women and transgendered artists and performers that are pushing boundaries with their visual and performative artistic expressions. 7 - 11pm at Femina Potens, 2199 Market St. www.Feminapotens.org Women Inspiring Women Conference 1/28 - 1/29 in Palm Desert Consider yourself invited to the First Annual Women Inspiring Women Conference with author Tammy L. Coia. Be inspired by other empowering writers and speakers - including Nickie Nicolas, Fitness Trainer & Reiki Master. Panel Discussion includes: - Alzheimer's: Making it Work. - Cancer: Survivor's Stories - Widows: Finding your way Alone - Hollywood: Past & Present - FitbyNic Women's Fitness & more!! The cost is $100.00 for the weekend conference (Friday 5:30pm - 9:30pm, Saturday 8:30am - 5pm). www.womenswritingworkshop.com Girls' Night Out Play Party 1/29 in San Diego Club X and Ms San Diego Leather 2010 Presents: Girls' Night Out at Dungeon Servitus on Saturday, January 29th, 7pm till midnight. No tickets sold on the day of the party. Prices are $10 for Club X Members, and $15 for non-Club X members. Limit is 30, so get your tickets before Your Ad could be seen here for $10 a month. Call 559-486-3464 for details we're sold out! This event is limited to women only. Contact tiger at tigerboisd@yahoo.com for more information. Directions will be given with ticket confirmation. Club X, Inc. is San Diego's largest pansexual leather/ BDSM fetish group. Our primary goal is that of education with secondary goals of activism and social activities. We hold monthly meetings to this end. Among those are regular workshops that cover various aspects of safe, sane, consensual, and fun leather BDSM and SM fetish play. We also hold regular social gatherings, special events, play parties, fundraisers, special interest group meetings, and our monthly Board meetings. www.clubxsd.org Lesbo Bingo 1/29 in West Hollywood www.CommunityLinkFresno.com and succulently fused with IRON SLUT Sex Educator Showdown now before they sell out! What is SALACIOUS Magazine? SALACIOUS is a brand new magazine dedicated to erotic art and literature curated with a queer, feminist, anti-racist lens. A perfect fusion of pornography with high art, comics with erotica, titillation with stunning visuals, SALACIOUS is the radical queer answer to the proliferation of such limited stereotypes as “girl-ongirl” and gay “muscle” porn. With a broad definition of the word queer, SALACIOUS offers a smorgasbord of lascivious delights! Boasting an editorial board comprised of kinksters, authors, performers and activists from across the United States and helmed by Portland, Maine activist-artist Katie Diamond, SALACIOUS features sex art that ranges from pinup photos of a voluptuous Black “Femme Shark” to pastel drawings of White transmen in bondage. Bear orgies share a leaf with an earnest poem about the sweet sensuality of first love. SALACIOUS runs the gamut from vanilla to hardcore, each piece selected for its unique perspective on queer sex as well as for its artistic excellence. What is Iron Slut Sex Educator Showdown? Iron Slut Sex Educator Showdown is a 90-minute, friendly and funny (sometimes competitive) "throwdown" where real sex educators talk about -then demonstrate- the tips and tricks and things they like to do in the bedroom. Think Jon Stewart's The Daily Show meets Bravo's Inside The Actors Studio where the audience gets to take notes, ask questions and watch explicit, frank, honest sex education like you've never seen it before! Show up to this fun-filled, 90minute workshop and learn: what sex educators do under the covers and how; their best tips and tricks (and probably not the kind you read about in Cosmo); their favorite, black belt sexy-sexy time moves, and much, much more... Because of Sex Educator Showdown's sometimes explicit and frank nature and live demonstrations, no one under 18 admitted. Please try to arrive on time. And, as with all of Reid's workshops, you can always leave early. Madison Young of MadisonBound.com is an award winning adult performer and director dedicated to creating sex positive and empowering erotica and pornography ∏ Join Women On A Roll for a wild and wacky night of fun, games, exciting prizes and lots of women! 7:00 pm Dinner and best seats, 7:30 pm Doors open for Bingo, 8 pm Bingo begins. Dinner: Guests have the option to arrive at 6:00 pm for dinner. Call the restaurant at (323) 654-3800 for dinner reservations. Best bingo seating for dinner guests. (You must mention Women On A Roll or Lesbo Bingo, or they will not take your reservation). Bingo: $20 Suggested Donation (Includes 10 games of Bingo hosted by the fabulous Belle Aire -- nine regular games and one grand prize game. Does not include food and beverage.) Grand Prize: Dinner party for 10 people at Cantalini's Salerno Beach! Note: Advance reservations are not available for this event. Walk-up admission begins at 7:30 pm. No credit cards, please. At Hamburger Mary's, 8288 Santa Monica Blvd. www.womenonaroll.com Lesbians & Breast Cancer 1/29 in San Diego World-renowned breast cancer expert, author and activist, Dr. Susan Love is the keynote speaker and will host “Lesbians & Breast Cancer: A Town Hall Forum”. continued on page 22 NewsLink fresh themes that help inspire your fantasies! We work toward building bridges within the community, by hosting fundraisers, spotlighting artists, presenting demos and supporting other endeavors of the kinky people in our community. If you're looking for a hot scene, Eclipse is the place to be! ABOUT THE SPACE - The SF Citadel provides a safe space for Women & Transpeople to play on state-of-the-art dungeon equipment. Known as the Bay Area's Premiere Community Dungeon, with dual levels and 5,400 square feet of play space, the SF Citadel is a sex-positive and volunteer-ran centerpiece of the BDSM Community. We provide the sexy music, water, delicious snacks, and safer sex supplies…you provide yourselves and whatever toys make you tingle. Come alone, come partnered, or bring a group of friends ADMISSION POLICY - You must be a Citadel member to attend, and have your membership card with you. Memberships can be obtained at the door on the night of the party, (2 guests per 1 member allowed). Annual membership cost is $10. Sorry, those who are bio-male AND identify as such in their daily life will not be admitted. Must be 18+ to attend with valid ID required. www.sfcitadel.org 21 ∏ www.CommunityLinkFresno.com ∏ Hotties 4 Homo Health Care Fundraiser 1/30 in San Francisco continued from page 21 The forum is open to the public and free to attend, courtesy of a grant by the BCAUSE FUND housed at the San Diego Human Dignity Foundation. The schedule includes a free breakfast, followed by a presentation and Q&A session with Dr. Love. In addition, she will be available for a meet and greet, photo opportunities and to sign copies of her breast cancer book following the event. Find out more about Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation at www.dslrf.org Advance registration is strongly encouraged. RSVP: dslrf.kintera.org/BCAUSE 9am - 1pm at the San Diego LGBT Community Center, 3909 Centre St. www.thecentersd.org FlawLes Rooftop BBQ 1/29 in San Diego ∏ Her HRC Music Festival 1/30 in Huntington Beach Join Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Orange County Committee for our “Her HRC” Music Festival, celebrating women, the music they create, and the music they Love. 21 and over event. Featuring 6 female-centric musical acts and a comedienne emcee to keep the party moving. Featuring Jennifer Corday and the Classic Rock Cougars, Shitting Glitter, Peachy Keene, Michelle Mangione on the Main Stage, and eminent.ruth and He Is/She Is in the Salon Lounge. Comedienne Emcee to be announced. Drink and food specials all night. Be there and bring your girlfriends! Full Bar and Latin/Asian Fusion Gourmet Food Truck available. NewsLink We would like to THANK YOU for supporting FlawLes over the past 4 years. As a way of showing our appreciation, we would like to invite you to attend this event on us! ALL Cover Charges are FREE* when you RSVP! (*$1 service charge applies online). $10 at the Door without advanced RSVP. You MUST RSVP online on our website, See what FlawLes has planned for you in 2011 as we unveil our 2011 Events Calendar, along with some special discounts and offers from our sponsors. Also, increased visibility = increased equality! Please be our guest and help us kick off our 2011 Calendar Year with a rooftop BBQ and community celebration! Save the date for live DJs, beautiful weather and another great year in Southern California...with the beautiful ladies, bois and swirls of San Diego! Featuring a premiere screening of the 2010 Flawles Media & Events Year in Review Video. 12pm- 8pm at W Hotel, 421 West B St. www.flawles.com Join us for "Hotties 4 Homo Health Care," a fundraiser for Lyon-Martin Health Services. The evening will include fabulous performances by Kentucky Fried Woman, Brock Cocker, Drew Montana and Jake Danger. DJ Booty Klap from Party Hole! Ships in the Night and DJs HLAWS & Jxn James from Transfat will be providing awesome music to get down to! Raffle prizes include hundreds of dollars worth of amazing items and certificates from Good Vibrations, Vixen Creations, CrashPadSeries.com, HeavenlySpire.com, and Kink.com. Admission is a suggested $5-20 sliding scale donation. Lyon-Martin Health Services is a non-profit community health clinic with over thirty years experience in providing competent, non-judgmental healthcare to women and transgender people. Lyon-Martin Health Services is the only free-standing community clinic in California with a specific emphasis on lesbian/bisexual women and transgender health care. Services are provided regardless of the patient's ability to pay. For more information about Lyon-Martin Health Services, visit www.lyon-martin.org. 7 - 10pm at El Rio's back room, 3158 Mission St. www.facebook.com/event.php?eid =113967692005240 22 2/15/2011 General admission: $10 donation. VIP admission: $50, and includes: VIP seating and 2 drink tickets. Includes an annual HRC membership! 4pm at Avec Nightclub, 18582 Beach Blvd. www.hrc.org Holly Hughes' The Dog and Pony Show 2/3 - 2/26 in San Francisco A new solo show written and performed by 2010 Guggenheim recipient Holly Hughes and directed by Dan Hurlin. A blend of autobiography, animal behavior and bald faced lies, "Dog and Pony" is a poetic/comic meditation on the midlife crisis in the key of canine by the woman who drove Jesse Helms nuts. Or nuttier. After several years as a professional lesbian, Hughes gives up preaching to the perverted and takes a real job at a prestigious university, acquiring a small pack of dogs in the process. She discovers that as we age, the thin membrane between the animal and the human dissolves entirely. Time doesn't heal or heel, it brings new questions: "What is the sound of one lesbian clapping?" Written and Performed by Holly Hughes. Directed by Dan Hurlin. 55 minutes, no intermission. All seating for this performance is first-come, first-served. This show is no age limit though it is not designed for children. Please do not bring infants to the show. Thursdays at 8pm, Saturdays at 8:30pm, Sundays at 7pm at the Marsh Mainstage Theater, 1062 Valencia St. www.themarsh.org Whale and Dolphin Trip 2/6 in Santa Cruz Hello Whalesters! Mark your calendars for this special trip! Peninsula Women's Group has reserved the whole boat again for lesbians and their women friends (adults only) on the beautiful boat Velocity. It has a full service snack bar and is wheel chair accessible (not motorized). Our trip may include sightings of Grey Whales, Humpback, Killer and Blue Whales as well as Dolphins...How cool is this! The cost is $45 and will be on a first come basis for the first 40 women. Please RSVP to Donna pwgpenwomen@aol.com. She will send you further instructions as to where to send your checks. The trips out of Santa Cruz are stunningly beautiful. The chances of sightings are pretty much 100% whether it be whales, dolphins, or both!! After the trip there are a couple of restaurants nearby where we can all get together and eat! Hope to see you all soon!! Questions? Email me at whalequest@pacbell.net www.peninsulawomensgroup.org Valentine Dance 2/12 in Santa Cruz Women's Dance benefiting the Diversity Center, jointly produced by LezCruz and the Diversity Center. -DJ Rebel spinning -Santa Cruz Derby Girls back by popular demand. -Special guests to be announced soon. -Door Prizes and Raffle -Special Dinner Menu (not included with admission ticket) Tickets $15 in advance at Streetlight Records and BrownPaperTickets, $18 at the door. 7pm at Center Street Grill, 1001 Center St. www.diversitycenter.org Hot Flash - Speak Easy Valentine's Celebration 2/13 in San Francisco Get ready to do the Charleston! It's going to be a hot Valentine's Day as Hot Flash slips into the swanky 20's at an old-fashioned Speak Easy. So pull out your favorite flapper dress or zoot suit, sport that flask, and get your dancing shoes on to kick up your heels to DJ Page Hodel. 4 - 9pm at Slide, 430 Mason St. www.hotflashdances.com/san-francisco.html Victory Fund Champagne Brunch 2/13 in San Diego Join the Victory Fund and special guest, the honorable Mayor Annise Parker of Houston, Texas, for our annual Champagne Brunch in San Diego. Annise and her life partner, Kathy Hubbard, have been together since 1990. They have two children. Annise was inaugurated to be Houston's Mayor on January 4th, 2010. Join Lyon-Martin Health Services (visit www.lyon-martin.org or read above under “Hotties 4 Homo Health Care”) and Queer Food for Love for an evening of food, music, art and raffle prizes benefiting Lyon-Martin. This Lyon-Martin fundraising reception will be held at a Mission artist's cooperative and will highlight the local businesses and organizations that sustain our communities. The evening will include delicious appetizers catered by Queer Food for Love, a volunteer non-profit that creates organic, vegan meals for the queer community. “Mildred's Bridge Group,” a queer women quartet, will provide music for the evening, and art by the cooperative's artists-in-residence will decorate the space. Raffle prizes include a $225 tattoo gift certificate by Micah Riot of Black and Blue Tattoo, $50 to local leather artisans Project TransAction, a piece of original art by local artist Danyol, a private yoga lesson from Alice DeYoung and much more! General Admission tickets are $25, tickets for low-income attendees are $15, and VIP tickets are $50 and include 5 free raffle tickets and a Lyon-Martin t-shirt. Tickets at: www.brownpapertickets.com/event/14 0886 6 - 9pm at 2509 Bryant St. www.facebook.com/event.php?eid =154574244592144 Lily Tomlin 2/19 in San Luis Obispo Lily Tomlin, one of America's foremost comediennes, continues to venture across an ever-widening range of media, starring in television, theater, motion pictures, animation, and video. Throughout her extraordinary entertainment career, Tomlin has received numerous awards, including: six Emmys; a Tony for her one woman Broadway show, Appearing Nitely; a second Tony as Best Actress, Drama Desk Award and Outer Critics' Circle Award for her one woman performance in Jane Wagner's The Search Curiously Strong Comedy 2/19 in Long Beach StandOut Productions brings the 2011 launch of the "Curiously Strong Comedy" National Tour to Long Beach! Featuring rising stars Gloria Bigelow and Jackie Monahan, and the legendary Vickie Shaw headlining! Three hilarious comedians, in mint condition... performing outside the box! Subtle, disarming, and witty-Gloria Bigelow is a refreshing new comic who doses out humor in bite sized chunks-easy for the listener to swallow but realness nonetheless. Coming to comedy from a background of acting she is an excellent observer of life and a natural improviser. An openly gay black woman, “she's got a bone to pick with everybody!” She does so by wittingly tackling issues from Low Lesbian Esteem to the Iconization of Snoop Dog, all done with a smile. With issues of sexuality, race, and gender at the forefront of her work she has become a favorite and a “one to watch” on the national comedy scene. Jackie is taking the NYC comedy scene by storm. Quickly becoming a local favorite at Gotham and Caroline's on Broadway, Jackie took her show on the road headlining at Clubs and Colleges all over the country. When she is not on the road with the LOL tour, she is busy around Manhattan doing spots on Maxim's Sirius radio and VH1 shows. With this trained actress and Uprights Citizen Brigade improviser it seems that Miss Monahan is unstoppable. Vickie Shaw looks like the woman next door ... All-American with blond hair, lipstick and polished nails. Once she opens her mouth, you'll know she was born and raised in Texas and you'll never stop laughing. After eighteen years of marriage and three kids, something was missing in Vickie's life... “People were always coming up to me and saying, 'You should do stand-up comedy.'” Vickie did become a stand-up comic and came out as a lesbian at the same time. “I would've come out as a stand-up, but it would've killed my parents.” Now, she performs in both straight and gay venues opening audience's minds with laughter. “I don't look the part. I blow away all their stereotypes. I'm the woman next door - except I just happen to be gay.” Tickets: $45 - VIP Preferred Seating (Orchestra section 3 and first two rows of sections 2 and 4) & admittance to after-party with cast; $32.50 Orchestra (sections 1, 2, 4, 5) and Center Loge (sections 4 and 5); $22.50 - Loge (Sections 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8). Seats assigned on a first come, first-served basis. All sales final. 7 pm Doors open, 8 pm Showtime. At Long Beach Center Theater, 300 E. Ocean Blvd. www.womenonaroll.com Speed Dating for Queer Women 2/19 in San Francisco Hosted by The Queer Love Connection: bringing you meaningful connections in a fun, safe space. It's time we took our dating lives into our own hands! Let's change the world, one speed date at a time. Why Come? Dating's hard, right? The bar scene is stale. Online dating is a drag. The laundromats are empty. And you've met all your friends' friends. It'll be your cheapest date ever - 10 dates for 20 bucks. You'll be able to meet loads of awesome folks during the speed dating as well as The Mingles. Prior to and after the event, we'll have a DJ - and food & drinks are available. So, you'll have tons of time to meet others -- on and off the speed date floor. And we hope for representation from the entire rainbow! There will also be a fun presentation on the Neuroscience of Love - with helpful tips for relationships and speed dating! (After all, we want to set you up for success!) Tickets $20 - all profits go directly to your local queer safety-makers, CUAV (Community United Against Violence). Registration and Mingling: 8:009:00pm, Speed Dating: 9:00pm10:30pm, DJ + Drinks: 10:30-12am. If you want to * just* come for The After-Mingles, feel free to arrive at 10:30pm for only $10! 8pm at Il Pirata, 2007 16th St. RSVP to Sarah at ms.noyes@gmail.com or visit www.facebook.com/home.php#!/even t.php?eid=183980451629829 Readings in Lesbian & Bisexual Women's Fiction Thursdays Broadcasts live on Thursday nights, 10:30 pm ET. Hosted by bisexual author Lara Zielinsky. You can listen live, chat during the show, or catch the replay on iTunes, or mp3. There is a switchboard phone number that's oper- ational during the show so you can call in! "Readings" radio (for short) has been bringing the voices of your favorite authors of lesbian and bisexual women's experience (fiction and non-fiction) since 2009. And we hope to bring you many more! www.blogtalkradio.com/lara-zielinsky Women on Wednesdays in Long Beach This new women's group encourages companionship, relationships, opportunities, laughter, recreation, news, networking, interesting varying events and socializing. Weekly meetings at 6pm on Wednesdays at a private residence in Long Beach. Special events: Sunday, 2/6 - We are going to have a super bowl potluck party. The party starts at 1 pm and the game starts at 3 pm. Saturday, 2/12 - Touch of Class. Sit down Valentine dinner $25. Everything included. Dressy, casual, to tux and gown. Bring a friend. 5 pm. Singles wanted along with couples. Sunday, 2/20 - Potluck party for all February Birthdays. 1 pm. For locations and to RSVP, please visit www.womynzbrunchbunch.org. www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Heart: A Loving Community Fundraiser 2/13 in San Francisco for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe; a CableAce Award for Executive Producing the film adaptation of The Search; a Grammy for her comedy album, This is a Recording as well as nominations for her subsequent albums Modern Scream, And That's the Truth, and On Stage; and two Peabody Awards--the first for the ABC television special, Edith Ann's Christmas: Just Say Noël and the second for narrating and executive producing the HBO film, The Celluloid Closet. A GALA (Gay & Lesbian Alliance of Central Coast) sponsored event. 8pm at Cal Poly Performing Arts Center, 1 Grand Ave. Tickets: (805) 756-2787 www.pacslo.org ∏ Betty's Out Events in Las Vegas Coffee Social Meet George on January 30th at 11:00am, for some freshly brewed coffee, stimulating conversation and the opportunity to make new friends. At Borders, 6521 Las Vegas Blvd. S. Karen Jones Concert & Dinner Join Cindy and Betty's Out on January 31st for “All That Jazz with Karen Jones”. There's a $10 door cover and the show is from 8pm to 11pm. We'll be meeting up at 7pm to have dinner before the show they have great burgers and pizza! At E-String, 2031 West Sunset Rd., Henderson. www.Karenjoneslive.com www.bettysout.com San Francisco girl of Leather Events January 22nd will bring our very first SFgoL slumber party! We are looking forward to lots of pink, pajamas, pillow fights and other oh-sogirly things. If you identify as a girl of Leather, please come! Please come to Debauchery at the White Horse Inn, 6551 Telegraph Ave., Oakland on Sunday, February 20th for our first club fundraiser! We are so lucky to have the MC and performance talents of SFgoL member Ms. Alotta Boutté, as well as many fabulous raffle prizes! www.whitehorsebar.com www.sfgol.org NewsLink In 2010, more openly LGBT candidates won election to public office than in any year in America's history. Please join us and help continue to expand the LGBT community's voice at all levels of government in 2011. Reception: 11:00am - 11:45am, Brunch Program: 11:45am - 2:00pm. Individual Tickets - $100. There is a special room rate available at the Catamaran Hotel and the Lodge Torrey Pines by visiting www.catamaranresort.com/victoryFun d/ At Catamaran Resort Hotel & Spa, 3999 Mission Blvd. www.victoryfund.org 23 ∏ ∏ ∏ ∏ Your Ad could be seen here for $10 a month. Call 559-486-3464 for details Your Intellectual Whore “An effervescently gay advice columnist” Disclaimer: Although the author of this syndicated column holds a doctorate in clinical psychology, the tongue-in-cheek advice given is for entertainment only and is not a substitute for therapy. Barbie responds to all emails…whether you deserve it or not. Send your questions to Uncle Barbie at: askunclebarbie@aol.com ON WITH THE SHOW-VINIST Dear Uncle Barbie, Hey Barbie, a hypnotist came to my school and did some pretty cool stuff. They made my friends do some really crazy stuff. I just wanted to ask you a one question. Could I use hypnosis to make a girl make out with me? I am just wondering if it would work. Signed, Joe Smooth Hello Mr. Smoothie, I do not know if your generation uses the phrase “male chauvinist,” but your attitude reflects a very sexist view of girls and womyn. Let me get right to the point. No, you cannot seduce a girl against her will--not even with hypnosis. Come on, now. I am sure you can get a girl your own age to go out with you without having to trick her by trying to reprogram her unconscious. How pathetic is that? Have a little self-respect. You seem to have a great misunderstanding of hypnosis, so let me clarify a few things for you. When most people think of the word hypnosis, images of a stage hypnotist (such as the one who came to your school) come to mind. With selected volunteers from the audience, the stage hypnotist will use peer pressure from the audience to manipulate the volunteers into performing ridiculous acts on stage for the amusement of the viewers. What the audience does not realize is that the people on stage, who have freely volunteered to be subjects, have also freely chosen to cooperate and follow the hypnotist's suggestions. www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Santa has finished his shopping list and now it's your turn to make your list. What do you want to do in the coming year to improve your life? A pad of paper, a Ticonderoga #2, and some brainstorming should get you on the way to those New Year's resolutions. Make it realistic, Roger! Resolutions are goals that you aim to achieve. It's buckets of fun to imagine losing 300 pounds over the next six months and snagging that hot young guy for a date to your class reunion. There's never anything wrong with having an escapist moment and dreaming in Dolby surround sound! Just have a back-up plan; one that includes a realistic goal that will fit nicely on your shelf of resolutions. Keep it simple, Simon! It's quite possible to have twenty resolutions for the New Year. It's also quite possible to get overwhelmed with that many goals to focus upon. If you spread yourself too thin you will probably not complete anything. Think it through and choose three to five main resolutions that will garner your attention in 2011. Put it on paper, Paula! It isn't good enough to announce your resolution list to the frothy mob from atop the banquet table at four minutes past midnight. There isn't a soul that will remember your blustery bravado and hold you to those good intentions. If you want to do it right then print out They are never under the control of the hypnotist. The subjects have strong performance expectations placed on them by the hypnotist. I have actually seen it happen where a subject was abrasively told to get off the stage simply because she did not meet the performance criteria of the stage hypnotist. If the subjects do not perform well, they end up looking badly in front of their friends. This type of scenario is just a hypnotic show for entertainment purposes and is not the true design of hypnosis. Originally, the true purpose was to find a way to tap into a person's subconscious in order to reduce or cure illnesses of neurosis by releasing repressed thoughts and emotions. To put it simply, hypnosis, like any trance, is merely a focused state of concentration during which time seems to slow down. The trance state is very natural. In fact, you go in and out of various trances every day. It is as easy as turning your attention from one thing to another. When you concentrate intensely on something, your mind tends to interpret the other things going on around you as distractions and blocks them out. It is similar to when you are driving down the freeway while your mind is singing along to your favorite song on the radio, and, then without even realizing it, you have missed your exit because your mind was somewhere else. That is an example of a natural trance that is commonly experienced by most adults. So, I hope that you now realize that clinical hypnosis is most effective when you use it to control yourself-not someone else. Now, when I snap my fingers, you will snap out of it and be more respectful to womyn. Snap, Uncle Barbie The latest in psycho-analytic amusement J. STANLEY TEIXEIRA ATTORNEY AT LAW 1233 W. SHAW AVENUE, SUITE 100 FRESNO, CALIFORNIA 93711 TELEPHONE (559) 225-2510 FACSIMILE (559) 225-2389 MFC37347 H E A D QU A R T E R S NOW FEATURING 1451 W Shaw Ave. Fresno, CA 93711 Ph: (559) 243-1809 Fax: (559) 243-1807 Gina Keller PsyD, LMFT Licensed Marriage Family Therapist Alternative hair coloring, Cosmetics, Wigs Cynthia Stevens - proprietor/stylist 1236 N. Wishon Fresno, CA 93728 559-498-8430 Psychotherapy for all ages NewsLink ∏ your resolution list and hand them out to your friends and family at a sober hour. Your odds of achieving your goals significantly increase when paper meets pen! Create some challenges, Charlie! There isn't much excitement in attaining something easily! Going to the gym once a month is better than not going at all. Going to the gym at least once a week seems to be a bit more challenging and might even spur you to go more frequently than that. Resolutions should get you out of your comfort zone. If it was too easy, you were too comfortable! Try again! Allow it to continue, Carla! There's no shame in not achieving your resolutions from 2010. Keep 'em going again over the next year. If it was important to you last year, then I will place good odds that it is important to you this year too! Continue moving toward those goals and make the necessary adjustments. Rome wasn't built in a day! Sign up your friends and family, Frank! There is always strength in numbers. You are more likely to realize success when working with others in your quest to achieve your resolutions. Social networking makes it much easier to find others with similar resolutions. Find a companion or two and support each other on the journey. That famous lanky statesman with the stove-pipe hat and the full beard once stated, “Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any other.” Those are honest words from an honest man and you'd be wise to heed them! Happy New Year to you all! This health and fitness article is brought to you by that knight in shining armor. That noble Blake and he can be reached at rblake5551@hotmail.com. 25 www.CommunityLinkFresno.com ∏ "IN THE LIFE Presents: Gen Silent" This month's episode has already aired. Watch it online at www.inthelifetv.org The LGBT family "of choice" is a uniquely important lifeline and community support system. It is among the most profound legacies of LGBT life, illustrated by the men and women who came together to care for people with AIDS at the height of the epidemic. Today, a new health crisis is unfolding across America as LGBT seniors face homophobia, transphobia and insensitivity in the health care system. With traditional support systems failing to address the needs of aging LGBT people, a new generation is called to organize care and community around its elders. This month, IN THE LIFE presents an excerpt of the film Gen Silent, a moving documentary about the very seniors whose generation organized the LGBT community into a movement, but now face so much fear and discrimination that they're driven back into isolation; featuring the story of KrysAnne Hembrough, a transwoman struggling to find acceptance and community in the midst of battling a terminal illness. And we speak with the film's director, Stu Maddux, about the power of change. HOROSCOPES by Eric Biglione Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 19) Beneficial time begins now. You are more upbeat and others are willing to help you. Love and work are on the up swing. Opportunities are looming. Taurus (Apr 20 - May 20) Trying time with others. Be patient and try to understand it isn't all about you. Physical activity will release the stress here. Love sparks your interest in Feb. Gemini (May 21 - June 20) It’s all about career and status now. Opportunity is here but make sure you are up to all the tasks . Friendships are important now so listen to them. Scorpio (Oct 23 - Nov 21) The is a time where people either peak your interest or get on your nerves. Keep busy or spend time meditating. The home life can be a little unsettling now. Sagittarius (Nov 22 - Dec 21) Love interests are the norm for now as others listen to you and find you attractive. This is a good time to get others on board with your ideas. Capricorn (Dec 22 - Jan 19) (July 23 - Aug 22) Others will ask you for your support this month which seems to interfere with your plans. Be flexible here. This is a period to help others. Make time for your friends. Virgo (Aug 23 - Sep 22) Stick with idealistic friends for your sanity. No naysayers please. Look at your health now-eating habits, exercise, etc.. and make adjustments. Creativity is high NewsLink The craziness of the past month goes away and you move around more with a sense of direction and ease. You may want to make some practical purchases now to simply your life. Try not to expect too much from your friends at this time. (June 21 - July 22) Leo 26 (Sep 23 - Oct 22) Cancer You are in a transition period for awhile. Out with the old and in with the new. It;s harder then it sounds. Have a hobby to keep you grounded. ∏ Libra You have a lovely way about you here as you increase your friends and find more love in your life. Go slow here for long lasting relationships Aquarius (Jan 20 - Feb 18) Mars in your sign make you not afraid to take chances and go for the gold. It is decision time and you are going to make them. Pisces (Feb 19 - Mar 20) What you want is not what you get here and you will be happy about this. Work with friends to get a new direction going in your life. There may be a new love interest coming. Family Pride Coalition PO Box 65327 Washington, DC 20035-5327 202-331-5015 familypride.org Human Rights Campaign 1640 Rhode Island Avenue NW Washington DC 20036-3278 800-777-4723 TTY: 202-216-1572 hrc.org Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network 90 Broad St, 2nd Floor New York, NY 10004 212-727-0135 glsen.org Immigration Equality 350 West 31st Street, Suite 505 New York, NY 10001 212-714-2904 immigrationequality.org Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation 5455 Wilshire Blvd, #1500 Los Angeles, CA 90036 323-933-2240 glaad.org Int'l Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission 80 Maiden Lane, Suite 1505 New York, NY 10038 212-268-8040 iglhrc.org Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund & Leadership Institute PO Box 96308 Washington, DC 20077-7529 202-VICTORY victoryfund.org Lambda Legal 120 Wall Street, Suite 1500 New York, NY 10005-3904 212-809-8585 lambdalegal.org STRAIGHT ADVOCATES FOR EQUALITY Outreach Education Support www.safefresno.com CALIFORNIA RUAL LEGAL ASSISTANCE Proyecto Poderoso 1-800-242-2752 2115 Kern St., Suite 370, Fresno, CA 93721 611 E. Belmont Fresno, CA 93701 559-237-3420 Log Cabin Republicans 1901 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, #902 Washington, DC 20006 202-347-5306 logcabin.org National Center For Transgender Equality 1325 Massachusetts Av NW # 700 Washington, DC 20005 202-903-0112 nctequality.org National Coalition For Lesbian Rights 870 Market St San Francisco, CA 94102 415-392-6257 nclrights.org National Stonewall Democrats 1325 Massachusetts Av NW # 700 Washington, DC 20005 202-625-1382 stonewalldemocrats.org ~ Changing the world, one closed mind at a time ~ Trans-e-motion meetings: third Saturdays 5pm Call Rachel (559) 255-4075 (evenings please) www.trans-e-motion.org DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Community United Against Violence (San Francisco) 24 Hr. Hotline: (415) 333-HELP The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center STOP Domestic Violence: 1-800-373-2227 National Gay & Lesbian Task Force 8704 Santa Monica Blvd #200 Los Angeles, CA 90069 310-855-7380 thetaskforce.org www.GayVisalia.com (559) 300-0224 Servicemembers Legal Defense Network PO Box 65301 Washington DC 20035-5301 202-328-3244 sldn.org The Network / La Red (Boston) Ending abuse in lesbian, bisexual women's and TG communities 617-742-4911; TTY 617-227-4911 National Domestic Violence Hotline (not GLBT-specific) 800-799-7233; TTY 800-787-3224 Trevor Helpline (GLBT youth sui cide prevention) 1-800-850-8078 IT'S A QUEER THANG Where we just don’t tolerate diversity... We celebrate it! KFCF 88.1FM 3rd Friday of the month at 5-6pm P.O. Box 4959, Fresno, CA 93744 (559) 266-LINK CLinkInc@aol.com www.communitylinkfresno.com Your Gay Hosts: Jeffery Robinson & Kirk P.O. Box 27382, Fresno, CA 93729-7382 (559) 434-6540 You are Welcome! 2:00 P.M. 2nd Sun Wesley United Methodist Church, 1343 E. Barstow, Fresno Imperial Dove Court w w w .G ay Paris: 559-355-6163 Central Valley Alliance of Atheists and Skeptics WE DON’T BURN HERETICS WE WELCOME THEM! www.cvaas.org Social group for bears, cubs & fans P.O. Box 4642, Fresno, Ca. 93744 905-6674 www.idcfresno.org om Diversity Club at F.C.C. Meetings: Fridays 2-4pm SO-208 1993 - 2010 Celebrating 18 Years of Pride & Service [559] 265-7117 www.ccafresno.org call 891-7725 United Student Pride @ C S U Fresno Meetings: Wednesdays 12-2pm @ Women’s Resource Center http://www.campingwomen.org The Fresno GLBTQ Youth Alliance 19 years of Outrageous Fun Every Friday Teenagers @ 6:30 Teens & Young adults @ 7:30 @ 1584 N. Van Ness 477-3773 or 486-3464 PROJECT: MALE ARTEMIS Recovery Club artemisrecoveryclub.com FIGHTING AIDS IN FRESNO COUNTY KIDS LIKE US 1584 N. Van Ness Ave. Fresno,CA 93728 Gay parenting group Community Link’s RAINBOW BOWLING Thursdays 7:15pm @ Cedar Lanes 3131 N Cedar communitylinkfresno.com Fresno Reel Pride Annual GLBT Film Festival Robin (559) 287-9670 (559) 268-1969 kidslikeus@yahoo.com diversity_club2006@yahoo.com ∏ love the outdoors… P.O. Box 5561 Fresno CA 93755 csufresno.edu/StudentOrgs/LGBSA/ .c For women who GoldenStateBears.org Join the Listserv at no w w w.StrideWithPrideForKids.com (559) 285-2333 I Camping Women Fr es June 19th 2010 Fraternal order raising funds for groups who need help NOW “You’ll just never know what they’ll say next!” You’ll have to tune in to find out! Community Link ∏ Rape, Abuse, Incest, National Network 1-800-656-HOPE www.ReelPride.com http://groups.yahoo.com/group/project-male Serenity Fellowship (Gay AA) 407 E. Olive Ave. Fresno QVB The Central Valley Queer Volleyball Frinedly Outdoor fun Games are open to all Meet new people! No formalities! Weekly Thurs. Games. Season: March-Oct. Info at 486-3464 559-268-2780 NewsLink ∏ Freedom To Marry Coalition 116 West 23rd St, Suite 500 New York, NY 10011 212-851-8418 freedomtomarry.org Gender Public Advocacy Coalition 1743 Connecticut Ave NW, 4th Fl. Washington, DC 20009-1108 202-462-6610 gpac.org www.CommunityLinkFresno.com Gay, Lesbian Bisexual & Transgender Resource - National, Sate, & Local 27 ∏