Columbia University Queer Alliance

The Unofficial CQA Blog.... Not quitting you since 1967

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Freedom School to be held today at Low Plaza

From Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus:

To concerned and interested students,

A reminder that there will be a Freedom School today, April 13, on
Low Plaza. The event will go from 12-5, with a series of 30 minute
sessions open to all who are interested. We are focusing on curriculum
(the core, nine ways of knowing, etc.), on what is taught and what is
not. This is an oppertunity to engage in a discussion on what that
curriculum should look like, if and how it should be modified. The
weather should be nice, so come out, enjoy the sun, and actively
participate in shaping the dialogue of education.

Two journalists, one a Columbia Journalism School alum, gay-bashed in St. Maarten

From CBS News:



Attacked Because They're Gay-Beaten In St. Maarten
Rescue Transfered Victims To A Miami Hospital

Both Victims Work For CBS Television

Dave Malkoff
Reporting

(CBS4 News)
MIAMI Two employees from the CBS family, including a senior news producer, were transferred to Jackson Memorial Hospital this week after reportedly falling victims to a gay bashing attack in the Caribbean vacation island of St. Maarten.

Richard Jefferson, who was vacationing in St. Maarten, was rushed with his friend Ryan Smith to the St. Maarten Medical Center around 3:30am Thursday after suffering a beating at the hands of some men who called themselves “gay bashers”.

Smith, also an employee for CBS, suffered the worst injuries. He has a fractured skull and has not been able to speak properly since the incident. Jefferson is able to walk, though he sustained severe cuts on the back of his head and his lower back.

Witnesses say the group of friends were first threatened inside Bamboo Bernies - a popular restaurant and night club spot - by the group of suspects. The management was concerned enough with the threats that they offered the Americans an escort before they left in case they were carried out.

However, after the two men left, they were approached by the same group of suspects, consisting of four men and two women, in a car. That is when they were reportedly beaten with a wheel wrench or metal pipe.

Despite contacting police on the island to file a report, the men claim they didn’t even get a follow-up call from them. Management at Bamboo Bernies and the Sunset Bar both called police but did not get a response. The men were walking in front of Sunset Bar when the attack occurred.

An air ambulance has since transferred the two victims to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Intensive care unit in Miami.

Jefferson told St. Maarten’s “The Daily Herald” that he found it hard to call a place he had been visiting for 15 years “a friendly island anymore”.

“They took up a chair at one stage and tried to hit us with it," one of Jefferson's friends told the Herald, as he explained the original threat they had received inside Bamboo Bernies.

Jefferson said he had not been involved in the original threatening incident, as he had been on his way to meet with the others at the time.

Daniel Lastra, CBS4.COM


From AP:

Gay rights group condemns St. Maarten police for probe of attack on Americans
Associated Press
Wednesday Apr 12, 2006

PHILIPSBURG, St. Maarten - A U.S. gay rights group criticized what it called a slow response by St. Maarten police into an attack on two gay American tourists who were beaten with tire irons outside a bar on the Dutch side of this Caribbean island.

Human Rights Campaign urged St. Maarten authorities to launch a complete investigation into the attack, which one of the victims described as a hate crime.

"A failure to conduct a full and complete investigation to apprehend a hate crime perpetrator not only allows prejudice to fester but keeps citizens and tourists at risk,’’ Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese wrote in a letter to the Dutch ambassador in Washington D.C.

Dick Jefferson, 51, and Ryan Smith, 25, both journalists from New York, were outside a bar with several friends early Thursday when three men started hitting them with tire irons.

The men were airlifted to Miami for medical treatment. Jefferson has since been released, but Smith’s condition on Tuesday was not clear. Jefferson has said that Smith was severely beaten and his doctors believe he may have suffered brain damage.

Jefferson, a senior broadcast producer for CBS’ national evening news, said the attackers yelled anti-gay slurs at his friends earlier in the evening. He faulted St. Maarten authorities for not collecting witness testimony on the night of the crime or pursuing other leads.

"The police were and are still trying to ignore this situation,’’ he said Monday in a telephone interview from Miami.

Reports of a sluggish investigation into the attack will "most certainly give pause to members of our community who are planning any future travels to the area,’’ Solmonese said.

The island, a popular Caribbean tourist destination, is shared by France and the Netherlands.

Police, who have appealed to the public for help, held a press conference on Monday to dispel allegations that they have done little to advance the case. Officials would not reveal details of the investigation.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Pictures from Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus' (SHOCC) Low Plaza Rally



















If you want your photo taken down for privacy reasons please e-mail ariesofthecross@yahoo.com

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus - Rally at Low Plaza

Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus

WHAT: Rally to protest hate crimes and lack of administrative response

WHEN: Wednesday April 5 at 2:00pm

WHERE: Low Plaza, enter 116 th and Broadway

Columbia students will rally on Wednesday April 5, 2006 against institutional racism, sexism, homophobia, and transphobia. Six hate crimes on Columbia University's campus within the 2005-2006 academic year have spurred many students to say "enough is enough." Recent incidents have included racist, homophobic, and anti-Semitic graffiti in public spaces and student dorms. Students who are part of a wealthy literary society threw a bottle and yelled homophobic slurs at a student passing by on his way to his dorm.

Diversity on Columbia's campus is not a new issue. In 2004, there were three incidents that took place on campus including a cartoon in the Federalist paper, an anti-affirmative action bake sale, While students protested and won the creation of an Office of Multicultural Affairs for undergraduates, President Lee C. Bollinger made no substantive commitments to systematically address bias and inequality university-wide. This year, when students organized under the banner of Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus (SHOCC), it took more than three months for President Bollinger to meet with them.

SHOCC and allied student organizations held town halls and speak outs that led to the formulation of eight demands addressing issues of hate and institutional oppression. The demands include policies to report, document and publicize hate incidents; increased diversity training for students, staff and faculty; a central administration office dedicated to student diversity issues; changes in the Core Curriculum to address Eurocentric bias; and creation of more safe spaces on campus for students of color and other marginalized groups.

When students met with President Bollinger, he provided only empty rhetoric and referred students to lower level administrators. Yet students have been meeting with various administrators throughout the university since 2004 and see a lack of action. Students are asking for the president as well as other administrators to be proactive in their commitment and vision of a university that truly values diversity as a "core value."

Columbia College junior Daphne Rubin-Vega of SHOCC said, "Hundreds of students have mobilized to show their outrage that hate crimes can happen on our campus and the administration can't get its act together to respond."

This week, SHOCC is spreading the word by encouraging all of its members and its supporters to wear black as a show of solidarity with the movement, to pass out flyers, leaflets, and pamphlets to educate those who are disconnected from the campus happenings. There will be other publicity campaign efforts like "dorm-storms," where students will go door to door inside university dormitories passing out literature and asking people if they would be interested in both learning more and being apart of the effort. Students will also form a "Safe Space Circle" on Tuesday, April 4 to educate the campus about the history of SHOCC's demands. These activities will lead to a mass rally on Wednesday, the day that President Bollinger is expected to return from Asia.

What is a Hate Crime?

Hate crimes include any and all forms of speech, writing, literature, or expression that stereotypes, marginalizes, denigrates, and isolates an individual or group based on an aspect of his or her identity. Hate crimes challenge an individual or group's sense of self, safety, and belonging within their community. Hate crimes on campus deny the safe space to which all members of a university are entitled. Hate crimes on campus make Columbia a dangerous place to be.

Background on 2004 Racist Incidents

In 2004, a cartoon in the Federalist paper (Columbia funded/supported publication) named "Blackey Fun Whitey" that parodied Black History/Heritage Month and stereotyped blacks as "cheap labor." The affirmative action bake sale, which was part of a wave of such displays across the country sold the price of goods based on sex, gender, and perceived level of "oppression." The Columbia Marching Band flyers such as those saying "Said: 0, Yahweh: 1" to commemorate the death of a Palestinian professor in the Middle East Asian Languages and Culture department Edward Said, put into direct opposition several communities with long histories of cultural, societal, and lifestyle misunderstanding. Black students led a mobilization to decry these acts by holding a week-long silent protest on the steps of Low Library in which hundreds of students dressed in black in a show of solidarity. In 2006, as in 2004, students will not tolerate acts of hatred and are mobilizing for lasting change.

"Allies Redefined: How To Take a Stand"

"Allies Redefined: How to Take a Stand": 8pm Tonight!

You overhear a group of students making racist jokes...You learn that Columbia buys its produce from a farm that exploits migrant farm workers...You see an event on Low steps advocating financial aid reform...

What does it mean to take a stand against social injustice? Which issues will you take a stand on? How are your actions related to the way you identify yourself? What is any ally anyway?

Join ROOTEd for Week 5 of The Allies Series at 8 pm in Broadway Sky Lounge.
Dinner provided by ROOTEd

The Allies Series is a six-part discussion about the role of power and privilege in student organizing on campus. The dialogue will bring together activist and identity/cultural groups as well as individuals independent of any formal organizations, to explore how our identities effect our interactions.

ROOTEd is a peer diversity facilitation program dedicated to facilitating respectful informed discussions about diversity with regard to power and privilege issues.

Co-sponsoring groups also include:
Black Students Organization, Chicano Caucus, Columbia Queer Alliance, Students for Choice, Proud Colors, Native American Council, Students for Native American Growth, Amnesty International, V-Day, Student Coalition on Expansion and Gentrification, United Students of Color Council, Students for Environmental and Economic Justice, Productive Outreach for Women, Asian American Alliance, Japan Society

The Office of Multicultural Affairs Proudly Sponsors the Allies Series

Monday, April 03, 2006

EEO & Affirmative Action administrator sends out e-mail to CU students

Perhaps in the wake of recent developments of hate crimes, the University Senate passing a revised sexual harassment policy after a year since the issue came up, and Barnard SGA's attempt to mandate sexual assault awareness and diversity training for student leaders in Barnard and Columbia, you might be surprised to hear that that Columbia does not "tolerate unlawful discrimination or harassment in any form". For those who may have conveniently forgotten this obscure part of University policy, Associate Provost Susan Rieger sent out the following e-mail to the entire Columbia student body. This e-mail unfortunately marks the most public position the University has taken on these issues in recent memory.


From: sr534@columbia.edu
Subject: Discrimination and Sexual Harassment Resources for Columbia Students
Date: April 3, 2006 1:29:37 PM EDT
To: ALL-STUDENTS@CUVMC.AIS.COLUMBIA.EDU
Reply-To: sr534@columbia.edu

To All Columbia University Students:

Columbia has a variety of resources available to students who believe they may have been the victims of unlawful discrimination, discriminatory harassment or sexual harassment. It is the policy of the University not to tolerate unlawful discrimination or harassment in any form and
to provide students who feel that they are victims of discrimination or harassment with mechanisms for seeking redress.

The Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action can provide information, assistance and counsel on rules, procedures and resources to any member of the community.

Our contact information is:

Susan Rieger, Associate Provost, sr534@columbia.edu
Vielka Holness, Associate Director, vh2105@columbia.edu
Laila Maher, Associate Director, lm2214@columbia.edu
103 Low Library
212-854-5511

Students who believe they have been discriminated against or harassed by a student should consult Columbia's Equal Educational Opportunity and Student Nondiscrimination Policies and Procedures on Discrimination and Harassment at:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vpaa/eoaa/docs/student_discrim.html

Students who believe they have been discriminated against or harassed by a member of the staff, administration or faculty should consult Columbia's Equal Employment Opportunity and
Nondiscrimination Policies and Procedures on Discrimination, Discriminatory Harassment and Sexual Harassment at:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vpaa/eoaa/docs/nondispol.html

For confidential inquiries, students may contact Columbia University's Panel on Discrimination and Sexual Harassment at
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vpaa/eoaa/docs/shpanel.html

or The Ombuds Office at:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/ombuds/

Susan Rieger
Associate Provost
Equal Opportunity & Affirmative Action
Columbia University
sr534@columbia.edu
212.854.5511

NY Post article on police leads in Brazell murder inaccurate


From Gay City News:

Rashawn Brazell Murder Progress Discounted

Police challenge Post account; victim’s mother expresses anger, doubt

BY PAUL SCHINDLER

A March 20 published report that police investigating the gruesome February 2005 murder and dismemberment of Rashawn Brazell—a 19-year-old African-American gay man from Bushwick—are trying to find a former neighbor in his 30s who was the victim’s lover, has drawn a firm denial from the NYPD and created confusion and anger for the young man’s family.


“They didn’t get that from us,” a spokesman for the NYPD’s deputy commissioner for public information said of a story Monday in the New York Post. “We are not saying that we are looking for somebody with whom the victim was acquainted.”

The DCPI spokesman added, however, “For us to say we are looking for somebody makes it that much harder to find them.”

That statement suggested that there could be police interest in a person not yet located.

Another police source told Gay City News that the thrust of the published report was “total BS,” but that “there is someone who needs to be spoken to.” That source emphasized that the man in question is not a suspect, and that while he is “an acquaintance [of Brazell’s], I wouldn’t even say he is a boyfriend. That is unknown.”

Brazell, an aspiring Web designer, was last seen on Valentine’s Day 2005 as he prepared to visit an accountant about his taxes. Early on, police sources indicated that he might also have been planning to meet someone, perhaps a man he had met on a telephone chat line.

Early in the morning of February 17 of last year, a transit worker found portions of two legs and an arm stuffed in a bloody plastic bag jammed against the tunnel wall on the A line very close to the Nostrand Avenue stop at Fulton Street. Fingerprint and DNA tests confirmed that the victim was Brazell. Nearly a week later, torso parts, bagged in similar fashion, were found at a Greenpoint recycling plant where refuse from the subway station is transported. No other body parts have been found.

The Post said a police source told the newspaper that a man who lived around the corner from Brazell’s Gates Avenue home, in his 30s, on welfare, and romantically linked to the victim is being sought and is believed to now be somewhere in the South.

“We want to try and find this guy, identify him, and talk to him,” the Post quoted its source as saying.

For Desire Brazell-Jones, the victim’s mother with whom he lived and who has pressed insistently for answers for the past 13 months, the latest turn in the case came as a shock, and also made her angry. She first learned of the speculation when reading the Post Monday and saw a television report recounting the same information later that day. To her, the story makes no sense and also seems like a diversion created by police under pressure to come up with answers.

Brazell-Jones noted that the family and its supporters have announced plans for an April 15 march from the Nostrand Avenue subway stop to the 79th Precinct at 263 Tomkins Avenue and recounted that she called the precinct in the wake of the Post story.

“They are denying that they ever said that. I think they threw this out there because of the march,” Brazell-Jones said. “The detective on the case asked me if I talked to anyone.”

The victim’s mother also voiced a feeling of disproportionate justice that has come up a number of times as her family, friends, and members of the gay community have demanded action on the killing. Brazell-Jones made specific mention of the enormous police effort undertaken to solve the February 25 murder of Imette St. Guillen, which resulted in Tuesday’s indictment of Darryl Littlejohn, the bouncer at the SoHo bar, The Falls, where that victim was last seen.

“I am very unhappy when this young lady’s case came about to see what amazing energy the police showed on that compared to this case,” Brazell-Jones told Gay City News in a telephone interview Tuesday.

She also said that the man identified in the Post story was not a boyfriend of her late son, but rather “an acquaintance… He knew our family very well.”

Asked if she had seen the man lately, Brazell-Jones said, “No I haven’t,” adding that she does not know his current whereabouts. But, she said, police had never identified him to the family as person of interest in the case.

Despite her obvious frustration with and suspicion of the police handling of her son’s murder, Brazell-Jones singled out the 79th Precinct’s community affairs office for its help in working out details for the April 15 march and rally.

The victim’s mother is not the only person to express frustration with the pace of the Brazell murder investigation. At a March 2005 vigil for Brazell outside the Nostrand Avenue subway station, an April town hall meeting at Brooklyn Borough Hall, and a June City Hall press conference, leaders in the LGBT people of color community, advocates from the New York City Gay and Lesbian Anti-Violence Project, and elected officials pressed for a more aggressive effort to solve the crime.

The June beating of 27-year-old Dwan Prince, a gay man and a building porter, by his neighbors in Brownsville, Brooklyn, heightened concerns that gay men of color face an unacceptable risk of violence in the city.

At Brooklyn Borough Hall last April, Marvin Paige, of the gay advocacy group Black Men’s Exchange, said, “Had Rashawn Brazell been a young white man, this murder would have been news for days.”

But police are insisting that the murder remains a priority.

“It hits the detectives, it bothers the supervisors involved, for the simple fact that it’s a 19-year-old kid who was somebody’s son,” a source told Gay City News.

And not all the frustration has been aimed at the police. At the City Hall press conference last June, Councilwoman Leticia James, an African American who represents Fort Greene and Crown Heights, a district adjacent to the one where Brazell lived, said, “Unfortunately, in central Brooklyn there is a conspiracy of silence,” terming the response from some elected officials “appalling.”

“Homophobia does exist in the black community,” she said. “It is our dirty little secret.”

Plans for the April 15 march, the day when Rashawn would have turned 21, call for participants to gather between noon and 1 p.m. at Nostrand Avenue and Fulton Street near the A train station. At 1 p.m., marchers will proceed the roughly 15 blocks to the 79th Precinct for a rally.

For more information on the march and rally and on the scholarship fund established to help support college-bound African-American New York youth, visit rashawnbrazell.com or call the Anti-Violence Project at 212-714-1184.


[ Rashawn Brazell Memorial Fund: NYPD Admits Mistake. Still No Answers. | Rashawn Brazell Memorial March ]

SHOCC Steps Up

The student group is planning a "safe space circle" on Low Plaza from 12-2PM on Tuesday, April 3, as well as a rally the following day at Low Plaza at 2PM. Come support Stop Hate on Columbia's Campus (SHOCC) by wearing black on Tuesday and Wednesday as a statement of solidarity. They are also asking people to put the following sign on their dorm windows.

From today's Spec:

SHOCC Kicks Off Campaign

By Laura Brunts

After another planning meeting Sunday night, the student coalition Stop Hate on Columbia’s Campus announced that it had finalized plans for a sweeping three-day awareness campaign beginning today and culminating in a large rally on the Low Steps on Wednesday, the day Lee Bollinger returns from a trip to Asia.

Frustrated by its discussions with Bollinger and other administrators, last week the group held two planning meetings designed to draw as many concerned students as possible. Large portions of both meetings were closed.

Daphne Rubin-Vega, CC ’07, and Anthony Walker, CC ’07, both designated to speak to the press on behalf of SHOCC, announced the group’s action plan Sunday night. On Monday group members will put up fliers on the Columbia and Barnard campuses: signs at campus gates will read, “You are now entering an unsafe space.” On Tuesday, students will hand out literature and speak from a chalk circle on the Low Steps about the history of their demands.

The efforts are designed to build support for a Wednesday rally, where SHOCC members will encourage other students to call and e-mail Bollinger about the group’s proposal.

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Academic Events This Week

Monday April 3, 2006

The Center for Comparative Literature and Society and the Institute for
Research on Women and Gender Presents: "PICTURES FROM HERE"

Speaker, Sunil Gupta, artist, photographer, theorist, AIDS activist and cultural critic will show images from his recent show, 'Pictures from Here,'and will discuss questions of representation posed by his current exhibit, hosted by SEPIA Gallery and CUNY, entitled "Imagining Childhood: Living with HIV in Delhi." A world-renowned artist and critic, Mr. Gupta achieved his reputation working in Britain, where he became a signal contributor to emerging debates about the relationship between gender and sexuality in postcolonial nations. Admissions is free and open to the public.

Location: 569 Lerner Hall, Broadway at 115th Street

Time: 4:00 - 6:00pm

Sponsored by: The Center for Comparative Literature and Society and the Institute for Research on Women and Gender at Columbia University.




Program for the Study of Sexuality, Gender, Health, and Human Rights
Presents:

"Making Sense of the UN's 'Zero Tolerance of Sex' in Peacekeeping Economies"

Talk given by Dianne Otto, Director, International Human Rights Law Program,
Institute for International Law and the Humanities (IILAH), Faculty of Law, The University of
Melbourne, Australia. This talk examines the effects of the policy of zero-tolerance of sex between peacekeepers and local people, promulgated by the Secretary-General's Bulletin on October 9, 2003. In the name of protecting women and children, the UN Secretary-General has chosen rigid simplicity over nuanced recognition of the myriad ways that peacekeepers influence the economies of survival with which they interact. The talk focuses on one particular set of practices, described as 'survival' sex, that are included in the Bulletin's prohibitions.

Location: Faculty House, 116th Street between Amsterdam Avenue and
Morningside Drive.

Time: 7:15 - 9:00 pm

For Information: Alicia Peters, awp33@columbia.edu or 212 305 6361

Sponsored by: Program for the Study of Sexuality, Gender, Health, and Human Rights





Wednesday April 5, 2006

Institute of Latin American Studies Presents:

"Prevalence of Dating and Sexual Violence among Chilean University Students"

Talk with Vivian Lehrer, JD '06 and 2005 ILAS Summer Field Research Grant Recipient, who will describe the methods used to obtain the data for this quantitative study and the collateral community-building activities conducted while in Chile around the issues of sexual and dating violence within university communities in Santiago. Ms. Lehrer will provide and overview of the preliminary results of the study.

Location: 802 IAB, 420 West 118th Street at Amsterdam Avenue

Time: 12:00 - 1:30 pm

Sponsored by: ILAS





Thursday April 6, 2006 & Friday April 7, 2006

The Institute for Research on Women and Gender Presents

"A Workshop on Intimacy, Postcolonialism, Postsecularism"

Keynote speaker James Schamus of Columbia University and Focus Features, for this workshop, which will explore the relations between forms of love and forms of governance at the intersection of post secular and postcolonial discourses, without reducing this intersection or these discourses to a singular kind or scale of power, to analogue, description, or rumor. The event is free and open to the public. No registration is required.

Location: Thursday: Jerome Greene Hall, First Fl. Auditorium, Friday: 710 Jerome Green Hall

Time: Thursday: 7:30 pm, Friday: 9:30 am

For Information: irwag@columbia.edu

Co-Sponsored by: Center for the Study of Law and Culture, The Department of Anthropology, The Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP) and the Middle East Institute.

News

Jury Finds Brooklyn Gay-Basher Guilty


Steven Pomie

A jury this week found Stephen Pomie guilty of assaulting Dwan Prince last summer. 247Gay.com writes "Pomie beat, kicked, stomped on and called 28-year-old Dwan Prince a “faggot” last June, as two neighbors testified. Prosecutors argued that as the neighbors were tending to Prince after the first attack, Pomie returned and landed one final kick. Two other men prosecutors say were involved in the beating have not been caught."

[Advocate: New York gay basher found guilty | Gay City News: Guilty Verdict in Dwan Prince Hate Assault | 365Gay.com: Guilty In Hate Crime That Left NYC Man With Permanent Brain Damage | Daily News 6/11/05: Gay-bash victim in coma ]







John McCain Assures Falwell of His Support for Anti-Gay Marriage Amendment


Sen. John McCain

ABC News: "According to Falwell, McCain is not pushing for a federal marriage amendment at this time. But McCain "reconfirmed" to Falwell that he would support a federal constitutional amendment defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman if a federal court were to strike down state constitutional bans on gay marriage."

Senator McCain, considered a contender for the Republican Presidential nomination for 2008, is scheduled to speak at both Rev. Jerry Falwell's conservative Liberty University and Columbia University this summer as part of commencement exercises.





Busta Rhymes Hates "Fucking Faggots" Man


Busta Rhymes

NY Post writes:
Busta Rhymes went ballistic on a young gay fan who dared to tap the rapper on the shoulder after a night of clubbing in Miami. Rhymes, who was in South Beach for the Winter Music Conference, has been on edge ever since one of his security guards, Israel Ramirez, was shot dead last month in Brooklyn while guarding Rhymes' jewelry. But it seems nothing makes the rapper's temper flare faster than the unwanted touch of an effeminate man. The drama unfolded at the 11th Street Diner, which is next door to gay club Twist, early Sunday morning. "The restaurant was packed with transvestites, gay men and drag queens, which obviously made Busta a little edgy," eyewitness Thomas Barker e-mails. "This became evident when a young gay guy came up behind Busta and tapped him on the shoulder to congratulate the rapper on his recent comeback. Before the guy could even mutter a word, Busta turned around and repeatedly screamed, 'Why the [bleep] you touchin' me, man? Get the [bleep] away from me' . . . his two huge bodyguards then caused an even larger scene by pushing the kid away . . . Busta quietly whispered to his bodyguards, 'I hate [bleeping] faggots, man.' " A spokeswoman for Rhymes did not return calls."

[LondonNet:
Busta Rhymes Lashes Out at Gay Fan Outside Miami Restaurant | Starpulse: Busta Rhymes Lashes Out at a Gay Fan]

CQA Elections/Dessert and Discussion

CQA Elections

When: Sunday, April 9th, 2pm
Where: Stephen Donaldson Lounge, basement of Furnald


Requirements to run for office: You must have attended 3 meetings (that includes Sunday OR Thursday CQA meetings and also includes EAAH meetings). If you are running for office, please prepare to say a few sentences about what you'd bring to the club, why you'd like to run for office, and what leadership experience you've had.

Positions up for election:
  • 2 Co-Presidents
  • Secretary
  • Treasurer (also in charge of booking space for events)
  • Social Chair (also in charge of planning 1st Friday Dances)
  • Publicity Manager (make flyers, put up flyers, be in contact with other groups)
  • 2 or 3 Representatives for SAHLS
  • 3 or 4 Representatives for QuAM (Queer Awareness Month) Committee
Being a QuAM rep means attending weekly meetings throughout the summer and dedicating a certain amount of your own time to helping contact speakers, plan events, etc. It's work, but it's very rewarding. Come help out!!



Dessert and Discussion


Dessert & Discussion with Professor Mignon Moore. Dr. Moore is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and African American Studies at Columbia and will be speaking about her new book which highlights the intersections of race, class, and gender in the lives of Black and Latina Lesbians. This Dessert & Discussion will occur next Wednesday, April 5th from 7pm-9pm in the Intercultural Resource Center.

Friday, March 31, 2006

Proud Colors in Today's Spec



Proud Colors Supports LGBTQ Students

Columbia Daily Spectator
By Cristina Garces

Amidst a crowd varied in race and sexual orientation, members of Proud Colors, an organization for queer students of color, and the Sexual Health House came together Wednesday night in Wien lounge to discuss misconceptions about the queer community.

Getting Proud Colors to the point where it is finally an up-and-running organization gives president Norman Washington, CC ’08, a sense of pride. In October, Washington worked with Bali White GS ’06, Tiffany Dockery CC ’09, and Sharilyn Phillips CC ’09 to restore the once floundering Queers of Color group. The group, renamed Proud Colors, seeks to promote awareness of the gray area that exists at the intersection of race and sexual orientation. The group represents “some of the most marginalized people of this campus and city,” said vice president Bali White.

Washington said that he wanted to start the group because he did not feel completely comfortable in other groups that catered solely to sexual orientation or race. “I felt that the experience of a queer person of color is much different than any other situation,” he said.

The group is run by the four original members, each of whom represents a different area of the LGBTQ community.

As the alleged victim of the homophobic messages and drawings scrawled on a white board of an East Campus suite earlier this month, Washington said he feels it is important for the LGBTQ community to have outlets in which they can feel comfortable speaking about issues that queers of color deal with, and to spread awareness to those who may not have working knowledge of the queers of color community.

“We really want to educate people at Columbia about these issues because these issues are real and they’re daily, and most people on campus aren’t aware of that,” White said.

Since meetings began in January, the group has had a meet-and-greet and a movie and discussion night, and hopes to host a guest speaker in the near future. “I don’t want this to become more of a social club than an awareness and activism organization. We have to find a balance,” Washington said.

The group does not only cater to the queers of color community, but also their supporters. Students of all races and sexual orientations are welcome to attend meetings and become integral parts of the organization.

According to White, the Columbia community has been very accepting of and helpful with Proud Colors’ interests, especially the Office of Multicultural Affairs. The goals of the Columbia queer students of color communities have also intersected this year through the creation of the President’s Student Advisory Committee on Diversity which includes Columbia Queer Alliance President Alex Jung, CC ’06. The group Stop Hate on Columbia’s Campus, created after the Ruggles vandalism incident in December, has also incorporated the interests of the queer community and other marginalized groups into its conversations with administrators. They have been pushing for a separate advisor for LGBTQ students, among other specific demands.

For future endeavors, Proud Colors expects to plan teach-ins, facilitate workshops, and collaborate with other groups for events. Proud Colors is cosponsoring an event April 5 at 8 p.m. in honor of Sexual Awareness Month in the Steven Donaldson room of Furnald. The event will be co-hosted by Maura Bairley, director of the Sexual Violence Prevention and Response Program.

Upcoming Events


Queer Community Service

Show your support!

Each year, Columbia Community Outreach sponsors a service day (this year, April 8th, 2006) in which a variety of students and campus groups spend the day doing volunteer work in various parts of the city. Attempts are being made at trying to get CCO to add a queer
related project, so Steven Mui, CC '06 is leading a non-exclusive group called Columbia Queer Alliance (CQA) with the intention of allying all the queer groups under one banner, and showing enough interest to add a queer service project. (There need to be at least 15 people signed up in order for CCO to be able to offer a queer related project). As an added bonus, One lucky volunteer will receive an iPod Nano!

Registration link:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/outreach/register.html - Choose the "Columbia Queer Alliance (CQA)" Group

Project assignment: TBA but will be related to the queer community
Registration deadline: Friday April 7th, 2006
Event Date: Saturday, April 8th, 2006 @ 9 am

General Information
The day begins on Low Plaza at 9:00 am where volunteers check in, get a volunteer t-shirt and eat breakfast. At 10:00 am there is an opening ceremony with public speakers and school officials. Last year, former New York City Mayor Ed Koch was our keynote speaker. Once the ceremony has ended volunteers are sent out to various service projects throughout New York arranged by the CCO members.

All volunteers are given bagged lunches, Metrocards for traveling, and any supplies they will need for the project site. The day is spent working at volunteer sites, and at the end of the day, when they return to campus, CCO provides pizza, drinks and ice cream for all the volunteers who participated.

Let's all give back together!
Register TODAY.


Know any Queer Faculty?

If so, invite them to the LGBT Student/Faculty/Administrator Commonmeal!! Some of your may have attended the commonmeal with students and administrators earlier in the semester. If you didn't, you missed out! We want faculty this time, so help us out to find some!

Below is a sample note you might consider using to ask a faculty member if he or she would like to attend. The information regarding the date/time of the meal and the instructions for RSVP are in the note. It is written in such a way that it neither assumes nor implies that the professor is queer, but rather it requests that s/he spread the word in case s/he knows any one interested. (You can send this note even to professors whom you know are straight cause they might know queer faculty that you don't). Keep in mind that no one likes to be the object of assumptions, so unless a professor has explicitly "come out" to YOU PERSONALLY (not your
friend, or your friend's friend), you probably shouldn't say anything that assumes their sexual orientation.

Sample note:

Dear Professor ________,

On April 12th from 7-9 pm, the Columbia Queer Alliance is helping sponsor a common meal for LGBT students, administrators, and faculty. I was wondering if you could spread the word about this event and forward this information to any faculty members you know (in any department) who might be interested in attending.

The purpose of the common meal is to introduce students to faculty and administrators on campus who might in the future serve as mentors or friends, providing support or advice, and also to pave the way for future collaboration on projects of interest to all LGBT individuals. Interested faculty should RSVP by emailing lgbtqcommonmeal@gmail.com

Thanks so much for helping spread the word!

Best,
___________

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

The First Ever Queer Cross Graduate School Alliance Educational Event

The Closet in the Classroom: Law, Sexuality and Education

This panel brought to you by Columbia Law School (The Outlaws) and Teachers College (Queer TC), will address these questions: What skills do we give teachers - LGBT and straight - to help them
address LBGT issues in the classroom? What legal advice to we offer LGBT's - students and teachers alike - to empower them? What are some of the current legal endeavors in this area? (This event is open to the entire Columbia community)

Columbia University School of Law
Jerome Greene Hall 104, 116th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Friday, March 24th, 2 - 4 p.m.

Panelists to include:

Ross D. Levi, Esq., Director of Public Policy and Governmental
Affairs, Empire State Pride Agenda

Rita Kissen, author of The Last Closet: The Real Lives of Lesbian
and Gay Teachers

Bridget Hughes, Director of Youth Services, LGBT Center's Youth
Enrichment Services Program

Thomas Krever, Deputy Executive Director, Hetrick-Martin
Institute,Home of Harvey Milk High School

Moderator Ariela R. Dubler, Associate Professor, Columbia University
School of Law

Presented by Teachers College, Queer TC and Columbia Outlaws
In memory of Harold Challenor, CLS '83. Sponsored by The Office of
the University Chaplain, Columbia University School of Law Student
Senate and Office of the President, Diversity and Community,
Teachers College.

Visit LGBT Grads

Queer Grad School Social

WHERE: Eastern Block, 6th between Ave A and B

WHEN: Thursday, March 23rd. Happy hour goes from 7 - 10 pm

WHAT: Happy Hour Specials Include: 2 for 1 drinks: Beer
(bottle/draft) AND Wine AND the Columbia group special of Stoli
Razz Cosmos. Gabe, the owner has offered us a GREAT selection of
specials specifically for our party.

WHAT ELSE: Look in next week's Time Out for a group shout out for
our party in the Gay/Lesbian section. We will be published!!

MORE? Yes! DJ arrives at 10 pm. Go go dancer arrives at 11 pm. If
anyone has a DVD they would like to run that night or a music mix,
please contact your hostess, Alysa Turkowitz and it can be arranged.. Anything from G to X.