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Craig Owens
Yale University and Barnard College. He wrote many essays on such diverse topics as photography, feminism, gay politics, art in the marketplace, serial art, and psychoanalysis, as well as a number of seminal essays on -
Mississippi Amendment 1 (2004)
Template:SSM Amendment 1 of 2004 is a so-called "defense of marriage amendment" that amended the Mississippi Constitution by adding a definition of marriage that has the effect of preventing same-sex marriages from -
Queer Mutiny
Queer Mutiny is an anarchist Queer organization. There are branches in Edinburgh, London, Brighton, Bristol, Cardiff and Leeds in the United Kingdom. Groups are run independently by members, who are free to take the activities -
Template:Infobox user
timezone=| location=| country=| marital status=| spouse=| girlfriend=| boyfriend=| children=| occupation=| employer=| education=| college=| university=| highschool=| hobbies=| religion=| politics=| aliases=| IQ=| personalitytype=| bloodtype=| website=| blog=| Skype=| interests=| subpages=| userboxes=}} This will become: The above text is -
San Francisco Bay Times
transgendered community in the San Francisco Bay Area. Includes book reviews, lists upcoming events in the area in addition to art, entertainment and social issues of interest to readers including news on health and politics. -
1983 in LGBT rights
February[] In the Bermondsey by-election, in the United Kingdom, Labour Party candidate Peter Tatchell loses a previously safe seat after a campaign dominated by attacks on his left-wing politics and homosexuality. External links -
Tongzhi
Template:Chinese Tongzhi (同志, tóngzhì) is a term which literally means "same will" or "same purpose" in Chinese. Idiomatically, it means "comrade". It has taken on various meanings in various contexts since the 20th -
Bill Kraus
and Sala Burton. Upon arriving in Castro Street in San Francisco, he learned the meticulous nature of politics through Harvey Milk, who was the first elected homosexual city supervisor. Bill Kraus would be the president -
Kentucky Constitutional Amendment 1 (2004)
Kentucky Constitutional Amendment 1 of 2004, is a so-called "defense of marriage amendment" that amended the Kentucky Constitution to make it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil -
LGBT rights in Burma
Homosexuality is illegal in Burma. The authoritarian nature of the government makes it difficult to obtain accurate information about the legal or social status of LGBT Burmese citizens. There are sections of the penal code -
Elaine Noble
from Massachusetts and went on to study at Boston University, Emerson College and Harvard University. Before entering politics she worked as a speech instructor and an advertising manager. She was involved in LGBT rights activism -
Libby Davies
Template:Infobox CanadianMP Libby Davies (born February 27, 1953) is a Canadian Member of Parliament for the New Democratic Party, representing the riding of Vancouver East in Vancouver, British Columbia. In 2007, she was named -
Boondock Saints
finally given a limited theatrical release of only five theaters for one week due to movie-studio politics and worries about association with the 1999 Columbine High School massacre. It was met with poor critical -
Huriyah (magazine)
and 2002 the magazine launched in English, with a focus on both LGBT and Muslim issues in politics, arts, and spirituality. It had a major interview every month, conducted by Jama, and the diverse personalities -
My Beautiful Laundrette
My Beautiful Laundrette is a 1985 British comedy-drama film directed by Stephen Frears from a screenplay by Hanif Kureishi. The film was also one of the first films released by Working Title Films. The -
XY (magazine)
glossy, color magazine, published bi-monthly, and known best for its original photography, brazenly honest commentary on politics and culture, review of film, music and literature, reader contributions, advice on surviving young and gay, and -
Robert Amsel
Robert Amsel (born August 16, 1946 in Albany, New York) is mainly known for his work in the Mattachine Society, a gay civil rights organization, prominent in New York City throughout the 1960s. While attending -
Template:Infobox user/doc
hair=| eyes=| sexuality=| birthdate=| timezone=| location=| country=| marital status=| spouse=| girlfriend=| boyfriend=| children=| occupation=| employer=| education=| college=| university=| highschool=| hobbies=| religion=| politics=| aliases=| IQ=| personalitytype=| bloodtype=| website=| blog=| Skype=| interests=| subpages=| userboxes=}} This will become: -
Humphrey Spender
Humphrey Spender, (April 19, 1910 – March 11, 2005), was a photographer, painter, architect, designer and mural painter. Humphrey Spender was the third son of Harold Spender, a Liberal journalist and writer who founded the Boys -
Gay Humanist Quarterly
The Gay Humanist Quarterly is published by the Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association (GALHA). As the name suggests, it is published four times a year and covers issues around sexuality, politics, humanism, atheism, liberalism and -
Swept Away (1974 film)
Template:Infobox Film Swept Away (full English title: Swept Away by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea of August, full Italian title: Travolti da un insolito destino nell'azzurro mare d'agosto) is a -
Aputheatre
HIV-AIDS. Though HIV remained a key subtext in many works, other themes like prostitution, pornography, sexual politics became more important. The company’s first production, Crying Celibate Tears by John Roman Baker, was performed -
An Awfully Big Adventure
quickly turns into a dark metaphor for youth as she becomes drawn into a web of sexual politics and intrigue. The title is an ironic nod to the original Peter Pan story, in which Peter -
Fulvia Celica Siguas Sandoval
in the mayoral elections in Lima, Peru. She reported to the news agency Reuters: "I have liked politics for a long time, but people like me have always been marginalized. Because I have been operated -
Bay Area Reporter
The Bay Area Reporter (B.A.R.) is a free weekly newspaper serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered (LGBT) communities in the San Francisco Bay Area. Launched on April 1, 1971 by Paul Bentley
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