Amazon Kindle, UK


Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 November 2012

November 25th in Queer History

Events in Queer History

1975 – Campaign for Homosexual Equality rally in Trafalgar Square, London, UK


1970 - The Seattle Gay Liberation Front severed ties with the Young Socialist Alliance because their exclusion of homosexuals mirrored Stalin's practices.

1997 - In South Africa, a demonstration was held at the Johannesburg High Court in support of an application to decriminalize sex between men.

1998 - Federal judge Bruce Jenkins ruled that Spanish Fork High School in Salt Lake City Utah violated the rights of teacher Wendy Weaver, who was dismissed from her position as volleyball coach and ordered not to discuss her sexual orientation, even out of school. The judge ordered the school to offer her the coaching position, lift the gag order, and pay her $1,500 in damages.

Born this day


Virgil Thomson (1896 – 1989), US.
Composer

Robert Friend (1913 –  1998) US
Poet, Translator

Rosa von Praunheim (1942 – ), Latvian.
Director, Activist

Lars Eighner (1948 – ), US.
Author

Randy Turner ( 1949 –  2005), US.
Singer

Bruno Toniolli (1955 – ), Italian / UK.
Dancer, Choreographer, Presenter

David B Feinberg (1956 –  1994), US.
 Author, Activist

Tonie Walsh (1960 –  ) Irish.
Activist, Journalist, Presenter

Craig Seymour (1968 – ), US.
Author, Photographer, Professor,Stripper, Journalist

Jason Rae (1986 – ) US.
Politician

Died this day

Yukio Mishima (1925 - 1970 ) Japanese.
Author

Laurence Harvey (1928 - 1973)  Lithuania / UK / South African.
Actor

Sir Anton Dolin (1904 - 1983 ) UK.
Ballet

Alan Bray ( 1948 - 2001) UK.
Historian, Activist

Pierre Seel (1923 - 2005) French.
Author

Sodomy laws in history, November 25

1120 — The sinking of the "White Ship" kills the sons of England’s King Henry I. A writer claims they died as punishment for sodomy.

1953 — The Montana Supreme Court upholds a sodomy conviction over protests of the prosecutor’s statements. The court reporter did not record them all, thus removing them from review.

1964 — The North Carolina Supreme Court rules that a sodomy indictment merely stating that the defendant "committed the abominable and detestable crime against nature" with a named male person was sufficient.

1968 — The Michigan Court of Appeals upholds the constitutionality of the state’s sodomy law.

1980 — The Kentucky Supreme Court rules that circumstantial evidence can be used to prove penetration in sodomy cases.

Sources:

Friday, 23 November 2012

November 23rd in Queer History

Events this day in queer history:

1973 – First Gay Academic Union conference (two day conference)


1983 - A Louisville Kentucky bank which fired a branch manager for refusing to end his association with Dignity, an organization for GLBT Catholics, was cleared of charges of discrimination and violating the employee's freedom of religion.

1998 - The Georgia Supreme Court voted 6-1 to overturn the state's sodomy law. In the majority opinion, Chief Justice Robert Benham wrote, "We cannot think of any other activity that reasonable persons would rank as more private and more deserving of protection from governmental interference than consensual, private, adult sexual activity."


Born this day

Bill Bissett (1939 –  ), Canadian. Poet

Canadian poet famous for his anti-conventional style. He often does not capitalise his name or use capital letters. In 2006, Nightwood Editions published "radiant danse uv being", a poetic tribute to bissett with contributions from more than 80 writers.

Bruce Vilanch(1948 – ), US. Scriptwriter, Comedian, Actor

American comedy writer, songwriter and actor. He is a six-time Emmy Award-winner.

Died this day



Gene Moore (1910 - 1998), US.  Window Dresser
A leading window dresser of the 20th century, who worked for almost forty years for Tiffany's on Fifth Avenue. (The example of his work above uses a watermelon made of gumdrops to display the jewellery).

Boudewijn Buch (1948 - 2002),Dutch. Author, Presenter

Dutch writer, poet and television presenter.

Sodomy laws in history, November 23


1828 — Florida repeals its common-law reception statute, thus legalizing sodomy.

1943 — The Indiana Supreme Court upholds a conviction for attempted sodomy of a man who made repeated attempts to seduce a male teenager, and the teenager had police arrest the man.

1977
 — Wisconsin enacts a new criminal code that reduces the penalty for sodomy from a felony to a misdemeanor, with a maximum penalty of 9 months in jail.

1977 — An Ohio court dismisses an importuning charge because the undercover police officer encouraged the solicitation.

1998 — Reversing a 1996 decision, the Georgia Supreme Court strikes down the state’s sodomy law on broad privacy grounds.


Sunday, 18 November 2012

November 18th in Queer History


Events this day in Queer History

1974 - The New Yorker published "Minor Heroism" by Allan Gurganis, its first gay-themed short story.

2003 - The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts rules that the state cannot bar same-sex couples from marrying and gives the legislature until June to rewrite the laws.

Born this day

Sir Edward Marsh (1872 – 1953), UK.

British polymath, translator, arts patron and civil servant. He was the sponsor of the Georgian school of poets and a friend to many poets, including Rupert Brooke and Siegfried Sassoon. In his career as a civil servant he worked as Private Secretary to a succession of Great Britain's most powerful ministers, particularly Winston Churchill. He was a discreet but influential figure within Britain's homosexual community.

Arthur Cecil Pigou (1877 – ) UK 
Economist 

Klaus Mann (1906 –  1949), German.   
German writer, the son of Thomas Mann. His most famous novel, Mephisto, was a thinly-disguised portrait of his former brother-in-law, the actor Gustaf Gründgens.
In early life, His homosexuality often made him the target of bigotry. Later, he moved to the United States, where he met his partner Thomas Quinn Curtiss.

Jackie Goldberg (1944 – ),  US.  
American politician and teacher, and a member of the Democratic Party. She is a former member of the California State Assembly. Goldberg is openly lesbian and was a founder member of the California Legislative LGBT Caucus. She married longtime partner Sharon Stricker in 2008.

Wolfgang Joop (1944 –  ), German.  
Fashion designer behind the now defunct JOOP! label of the 80s and 90s has recently made a critically acclaimed comeback with his Wunderkind line, founded together with his long-term boyfriend and former PR manager Edwin Lemberg.

Christian Siriano (1985 – ),  US.  
Fashion designer who first gained attention after winning the fourth season of American reality show Project Runway, becoming the series' youngest winner. Shortly after winning Runway, Siriano launched his fashion line, Christian Siriano, which as of 2010 has brought in revenue of over $1.2 million. Siriano is openly gay and lives in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City with longtime boyfriend, singer-songwriter Brad Walsh.

Died this day

Renee Vivien (1877 - 1909), UK.  
British poet who wrote in the French language. She took to heart all the mannerisms of Symbolism, as one of the last poets to claim allegiance to the school. She lived lavishly, as an open lesbian, and carried on a well-known affair with American heiress and writer Natalie Clifford Barney.

Marcel Proust (1871 - 1922), French.   
Novelist, critic, and essayist best known for his monumental À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time; earlier translated as Remembrance of Things Past).

Mauritz Stiller (1883 - 1928), Finnish.  
Film director Maurtiz Stiller's principal claim to fame is his discovery of an unknown actress, Greta Gustafsson, whom he renamed Greta Garbo. However, this flamboyant gay Svengali to a legendary lesbian star also deserves recognition as a key figure in forging a national cinema that was eventually to become notable for its progressive treatment of sexuality and desire

Mike Connolly (1914 - 1966),  US.  
Magazine reporter and primarily a Hollywood columnist. Connolly was also known for his 1937–38 crusade against prostitution in Champaign, Illinois, and later for his battle against communism in Hollywood. According to his biographer, Val Holley, these campaigns were attempts by Connolly, who was gay, to feel part of the mainstream. His sexual preference was not made public until thirty-seven years after his death.

Gia Carangi (1960 - 1986), US.  
Fashion model during the late 1970s and early 1980s, considered by some to be the first supermodel. Carangi and her "bi-try Bowie-mad" friends hung out in Philadelphia’s gay clubs and bars. She was beginning to settle into a lesbian identity, but did not want to take up "the accepted lesbian style".Since Carangi's death, she has been considered a lesbian supermodel and icon and is said to have epitomized "lesbian chic" more than a decade before the term was coined.

William John Christopher Vassall (1924 -1996),  UK.  
British civil servant who, under pressure of blackmail, spied for the Soviet Union. In 1952, he was posted to the staff of the Naval Attaché at the British embassy in Moscow. In 1954, he was invited to a party (arranged, unbeknown to him, by the KGB), where he was encouraged to become extremely drunk, and where he was photographed in a compromising position with several men. The KGB used these photographs to blackmail Vassall into working for them as a spy. In 1962 he was arrested and charged with spying, for which he served ten years.

Dr. Evelyn Hooker (  - 1996). US.
Psychologist, whose research provided some of the earliest evidence that homosexuality is not a psychological disease, notably with the 1957 paper"The Adjustment of the Male Overt Homosexual". Although not gay herself, and initially with little interest in studying homosexuality, she was challenged to do so by a student who by a student who asked her to study "people like him".

Her work became of fundamental importance. It exposed a false correlation between homosexuality and mental illness that had formed the basis of scientific classification of homosexuality as a disorder, by avoiding the use of a sample group that contained homosexual men with a history of treatment for mental illness. It is of critical importance in refuting cultural heterosexism because it shows that homosexuality is not developmentally inferior to heterosexuality. As homosexuality is not an illness, bias against it is irrational from a scientific point of view.

Paul Bowles (1910 - 1999), US.   
Expatriate composer, writer, and translator Paul Bowles liked to examine sexuality from a dispassionate perspective for its psychological suggestiveness. Bowles's literary reputation rests on his novels, but until he was thirty-five he showed more interest in musical composition and poetry.

Horst P Horst (1906 - 1999), German / US.  
Horst Paul Albert Bohrmann  who chose to be known as Horst P. Horst was a German-American fashion photographer. He and Valentine Lawford, a British diplomat, lived together as a couple from 1938 until Lawford's death in 1991. They adopted and raised a son, Richard J. Horst, together.

Ralph Pomeroy (1926 - 1999),  US. 

Poet, who at eighteen had already published poems in "Poetry", then pursued painting in Paris, and later worked as an editor, art critic, curator and exhibiting artist in New York City. Many years later, he was stabbed in the chest by a "fag basher", and also suffered a broken wrist while engaged in what a friend described as "S&M games with a trick."

Sodomy Laws in History, November 18


1910 — The South Dakota Supreme Court rules that the state’s "crime against nature" law outlaws fellatio.
1919 — A California appellate court upholds the sodomy conviction of a man and rejects his contention that his partner’s incestuous relationship with his brother should have been raised to impeach his credibility.
1925 — A California appellate court upholds the sodomy conviction of a man after photos and condoms found in his home were admitted into evidence against him.
1932 — A California appellate court rules that a trial judge need not visit the scene of the alleged act of sodomy.
1953 — The Illinois Supreme Court upholds a conviction for keeping a house of ill fame—a Gay bath house.






Friday, 16 November 2012

November 16th in Queer History


Events in LGBT history:

1989 - The Center for Homosexual Lifestyles was established in Berlin. It was the first time in Germany that a public office was established specifically to deal with the concerns of lesbians and gay men.

1995 - A directive was issued by the Canadian Government allowing workers in same-sex relationships to take time off in the event of a partner's illness or death.

2009 – David Atlanta, Southern Voice & Washington Blade all cease publication (USA)

Born this day:

Morton Beiser (1936 – ) Canadian
Professor / Psychiatrist

Paula Vogel (1951 – ), US.
Playwright

Glenn Burke (1952 –  1995), US.
Baseball

Anne Holt  (1958 –  ), Norwegian.
Author, Politician,  Lawyer

Waheed Alli (1964 – ) UK.
Politician

Gerard Duphiney (1966 – ) US.
Reality TV [Amazing Race 3]

Jamie Babbit (1970 –  ),  US. 
Director, Producer,  Screenwriter

Gus Carr (1983 – ),  US
Actor, Dancer, Singer, Songwriter

Ukea Davis (1983 – 2002),  US
Hate Crime Victim

Died this day

Russ Conway (1925 - 2000 ), UK.
Pianist


Sodomy laws in history, November 16

1880 — The Ohio Supreme Court affirms its 1876 decision that a man accused of sodomy by another can not sue for slander, but asks the legislature to change that by either outlawing sodomy or making its accusation actionable.

1889 — The Cleveland Street Scandal in England breaks. The Cleveland Street brothel provides teenage boys for many prominent and affluent London men.

1897 — The District of Columbia Court of Appeals rules that common-law crimes are recognized in the District, even without a statute receiving them. This effectively reinstates sodomy as a crime, since there is no sodomy statute under District law, and makes sodomy a crime throughout the United States.

1938 — The Montana Supreme Court overturns a sodomy conviction based on the fact that a young man and his alleged lover live near each other (and move to stay close when the other moves), hang around together, and are found by police sleeping in the same bedroom—in separate beds. The Court warns of the dangers of basing convictions on such circumstantial evidence.

1944 — The Washington Supreme Court overturns a sodomy conviction because the state was able to prove only an attempt.

1955 — A Pennsylvania appellate court upholds the sodomy conviction of a man after prejudicial remarks were made by the prosecutor to the jury.

1967 — A Michigan appellate court rejects the contention of a man and woman that the "crime against nature" can be committed only by people of the same sex.

1977 — The Texas Court of Appeals overturns the public lewdness conviction of a Gay man, because his acts never were specified.

1999 — The Rhode Island Supreme Court rules that all pending consensual sodomy prosecutions at the time of the 1998 legislative repeal must be abandoned.

Thursday, 15 November 2012

November 15th in Queer History

Events this Day in Queer History

1980 - Michael Harcourt, an alderman consistently supportive of the gay community, is elected mayor of Vancouver.

1989 - Massachusetts passed a statewide gay rights law

1992 - Thirty-five members of The Cathedral Project, a gay Roman Catholic group, demonstrated at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York City  to protest a Vatican directive urging bishops to oppose laws banning anti-gay bias.

Born this day


Sara Josephine Baker (1873 –  1945),  US.
Author

Georgia O'Keefe (1887 - 1986),  US.
Bisexual artist

Paul Moore (1919 –  2003) US.
Marine, Bishop

Bishop of the Episcopal Church and served as the 13th Bishop of New York. During his lifetime, he was perhaps the best known Episcopal clergyman in the United States, and among the best known Christian clergy in any denomination.

Although twice married and the father of nine children, he was bisexual. This was firmly revealed after his death. Honor Moore, the oldest of his revealed that her father was bisexual with a history of gay affairs in a story she wrote about him in The New Yorker and in the book The Bishop's Daughter: A Memoir.

Fred Richmond  ( 1923 – ),  US.
Navy,  Politician, Pianist

Patricia Marion Fogarty(1940 - )
Illustrator and photographer, lover of filmmaker Jayne Parker.

Dawn Airey  (1960 –  ) UK
Television Executive [Five]

Judy Gold (1962 –  ), US
Comedian / Actress ,  Author,  Producer

Jeroen Willems (1962 –  ),  Dutch.
Actor, Singer,  Director

Evan Adams (1966 –  ), Canadian.
Actor, Playwright,  Doctor

Francois Ozon (1967 –  ),  French.
Director,  Screenwriter

Todd Klinck (1974 –  ), Canadian.  Author / Director / Producer

Stephanie Thomas (1982 –  ), US .  2002  Hate Crime Victim

Died this day

Annemarie Schwarzenbach (1908 -  1942) Swiss.
Author, Journalist –

Margaret Mead (1901 - 1978 ),  US.
Anthropologist

Robert McCall (1958 - 1991),  Canadian.
Figure Skater

Jacques Morali (1947  -1991),  French.
Music Producer

Mary Meigs (1917 - 2002 ),  US.
Painter , Author

Hanne Haller (1950 - 2005),  German.
Singer,  Composer,  Author, Producer, Sound Engineer

Donathyn J Rodgers (? - 2005),  US.
Murder Victim


Fred Goldhaber (1947– ) US
Teacher 


Griffith Vaughan Williams ( 1940– 2010 ) UK 
Activist

Sodomy laws in history, November 15

1636 Plymouth colony outlaws consensual sodomy with a penalty of death.

1912 Portland newspapers report what becomes known as the "Vice Clique Scandal." Some 68 men are involved in prosecutions for private, consensual sexual relations.

1935 Oregon adopts a new sterilization law and requires names of all known "sexual perverts" in the state to be turned over to the Board of Eugenics.

1941- Heinrich Himmler announced a decree that any member of the Nazi SS or the police who had sex with another man would be put to death.

1950 The Puerto Rico Supreme Court rules that emission is not necessary for a conviction of sodomy.

Sources:


Wednesday, 24 October 2012

October 24th in LGBT History


Events in LGBT History: 


Born this day

Caroline Spurgeon ( 1869 -1942) UK

Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author


Moss Hart (1904 – 1961) American
Playwright and theatre director, best known for his interpretations of musical theater on Broadway. Married and a father, but known by his friends to have been gay.

Neal Blewett (1933 – ) Australian
Politician

Ronnie Kray ( 1933 – 1995), Reggie Kray ( 1933 – 200) UK
Crime Bosses

Paula Gunn Allen (1934 – 2008) US
Poet / Literary Critic / Lesbian activist / Author

Mathilde Santing ( 1958 – ) Dutch
Singer

BD Wong (1960 –) US
Singer / Dancer / Actor

Emma Donoghue (1969 –) Irish  Playwright / Author / Historian

Bryan Michael Egnew ( 1970 – 2011) US
Mormon, who served an LDS mission, studied at BYU, married and had children in accordance with Mormon teaching. But after coming out to his wife, she left him, taking the children with her, and outed him to the church authorities, resulting in excommunication. He then committed suicide at his home on September 10, 2011.

Raul Esparza (1970 –  )
US Actor

Zac Posen (1980 – )
US Fashion Designer

Tila Tequila (1981 – )
US Model / Singer


Erica Wheeler ???? –  ) US 
Singer / Songwriter 

Died this day

Jerome Duquesnoy II  (1612 - 1664 ) Flemish 
Sculptor executed for sodomy

Caroline Spurgeon ( 1869 -1942) UK
Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author

John Sex (1956 - 1990)US
Entertainer / Performance Artist

Harry Hay (1912 - 2002 ) UK / US
Activist


Sodomy in history, 
October 24th

1901 — The Illinois Supreme Court refuses to overrule its 1897 decision that fellatio violates the state’s sodomy law.
1912 — The Arizona Supreme Court rules that fellatio is not outlawed by the term "crime against nature."
1921 — The Arkansas Supreme Court upholds the state’s sodomy against a vagueness challenge.
1945 — The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rules that the sodomy law is not so broad as to cover kissing or shaking hands.
1956 — The Florida Supreme Court overturns a sodomy conviction because the defendant was found guilty by a judge before he had rested his case.


Sources:

Calendar of Sodomy, October




1869 – Caroline Spurgeon ( – ) UK Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author – Died 24th October 1942 



And Those Who Died: 
1664 – Jerome Duquesnoy II – Belgian [brother of Sculptor Francois Duquesnoy] – Born 1612 
1942 – Caroline Spurgeon – UK Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author – Died 24th October 1869 
1971 – George Dyer – UK Burglar / Lover of Francis Bacon – Born 1934 
1990 – John Sex – US Entertainer / Performance Artist – Born 8th April 1956 
2002 – Harry Hay – UK / US Activist – Born 7th April 

1912 Events in LGBT History: 1998 – Washington Renegades RFC founded in Washington D.C., USA . Posted by Alex at 00:01 No comments: Labels: 

Monday, 22 October 2012

October 22nd in LGBT History


Events in LGBT History: 


Born this day


Lord Alfred Douglas (1870 - 1945) UK
British writer and poet, and the lover of Oscar Wilde. Bosie, as he was known to his friends, married Olive Cunstance in 1902 and they had a son, Raymond, that same year. The 1997 film 'Wilde' tells the story about his relationship with Oscar Wilde.

Robert Rauschenberg (1925 - 2008) US 
American artist, who came to prominence in the 1950s transition from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art. Rauschenberg is well-known for his "Combines" of the 1950s, in which non-traditional materials and objects were employed in innovative combinations. Rauschenberg was both a painter and a sculptor and the "Combines" are a combination of both. Rauschenberg's approach was sometimes called 'Neo-Dada', a label he shared with the painter Jasper Johns, with whom he had a long artistic and personal relationship.


Delmas Howe ( 1935 –  ) US 
Artist 

Sir Derek Jacobi  ( 1938 –  ) UK 
Actor / Director


Robert Long ( 1943 – 2006  ) Dutch 
Singer, writer, playwright, Radio- and TV-host and songwriter


Claude Charron  ( 1946 –  ) Canadian 
Teacher / Politician / Presenter / Author 

Bill Condon  ( 1955 –  ) US 
Actor / Director / Producer / Screenwriter


Mark Shaiman ( 1959 – ) American 
Composer, lyricist, arranger, musical director and music producer


Saffron Burrows  1972 –  ) UK 
Actress / Activist 

Jesse Tyler Ferguson  ( 1975 –   ) US 
Actor 


Sodomy in history, October 22nd

1840 — Maine makes its sodomy law gender-neutral.
1968 — The Michigan Court of Appeals upholds a "crime against nature" conviction even though prior acts with others were admitted into evidence.
1971 — The Nebraska Supreme Court upholds a sodomy conviction based entirely on circumstantial evidence.


Sources:

Saturday, 13 October 2012

October 13th in Queer History,

Events this day in LGBT History: 

2009 – Uganda introduce Anti-Homosexuality Bill

Born this day

John Herbert (1926 –  2001)  ) Canadian 
Playwright 

Richard Howard ((1929 –   ) US 
Poet / Literary Critic / Author / Teacher / Translator

Alan Bray ( 1948 - 2001), UK. Historian, Activist.
Historian and gay rights activist. He was a Roman Catholic and had a particular interest in Christianity's relationship tohomosexualityTwo books of importance to gay non - specialists are Homosexuality in Renaissance England, and "The Friend"

Jane Lynch ( 1960 - ) US
Award-winning theater, film and television actress. In 2010, she shared a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Comedy Ensemble for the hit television series “Glee.” She also received a Golden Globe nomination and won an Emmy for her role on the show.

Kele Okereke (1980 - ) UK
Singer, Bloc Party

Died this day

Clifton Webb1889–  1966 ) US 
Actor / Dancer / Singer 

Michael Sandy ( 1977– 2006 ) US 
Hate Crime Victim 

Sodomy in History, October 13

1964 — At oral argument in the U.S. Supreme Court, Chief Justice Earl Warren demands that Mississippi strike from its brief an allegation that civil rights defendant Aaron Henry had been arrested for sex with another man. Warren claims that Mississippi is "poisoning the mind of the Court and the nation."
1982 — The Maryland Court of Appeals overturns the disorderly conduct conviction of a man who said "Fuck You" to a police officer. The Court noted that the arrest was illegal unless the police officer would testify that he was sexually aroused at the thought of being fucked by another man.
2000 — The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals reverses a trial court and upholds an Alabama law banning sex toys.

Friday, 12 October 2012

October 12th in LGBT History

Born this day


Aleister Crowley ( 1875 –  1947) UK
Author / Mountaineer / Poet

Josephine Hutchinson  ( 1903 –  1998 ) US
Actress

Stathis Orphanos  ( 1940 – )  US
Publisher

Arthur Evans  (1942 –   ) US
Author / Activist

Kristen Bjorn  ( 957 –  )  UK
Porn / Director / Producer

Beate Peters  (1959 –  )  German
Javelin

Brian Kennedy  (1966 –  )  UK
Singer / Author

Michael Sandy  (1977 –  2006) US
Hate Crime Victim



Died this day


Nikolai Zverev   (1832 –  1893 )  Russian
Pianist / Teacher

Ricky Wilson  (1953  –  1985) US
Musician / Singer 

Gary Bond   ( 1940  – 1995 )  UK
Actor Born

Matthew Shepard   ( 1976 –  1998)  US
Hate Crime Victim

Christina Smith   ( ???? – 2005)  US
Murder Victim


Sodomy in history, 
October 12th 

1984 — Congress enacts a law repealing the District of Columbia sexual assault reform law of 1981, that had included a repeal of the District’s sodomy law.
1988 — The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals clarifies that only "consensual, heterosexual" activity is constitutionally protected, preventing a more liberal decision of two weeks earlier from becoming precedent. 





Sources:

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

October 10th in LGBT History


Events in LGBT History: 

2008 –  Connecticut court overturns state ban on same-sex marriage becoming the third US state to legalise it .

Born this day


Bernard Mayes ( 1929 –  ) UK / US
Teacher / Presenter / Author / Lecturer

Gary Beach ( 1947 –   )  US
Actor

Mike Penner [Christine Daniels] ( 1957 – )  US
Journalist

Stefano Tonchi ( 1959 –  )  US
Editor

Jennifer Veiga ( 1962 –  ) US
Politician / Lawyer

Bai Ling ( 1966 –  )  US
Actress

Q Boy (Marcos Jose Brito) ( 1978 –  )  UK
Rapper / Journalist / Editor / Presenter



Died this day


Jacob Dahlin ( 1952 –  1991) Swedish
Presenter

Jackie Forster ( 1926 –  1998)  UK
Presenter / Reporter / Actress / Activist

George Forrest ( 1915 –  1999) US
Musical Writer

Ian Scott ( 1934 –  2006) Canadian
Politician / Lawyer

Francis Garcia ( 1958 – 2007)  Mexican
Actor



Sodomy in history, 
October 10th

1960 — The Virginia Supreme Court reverses the sodomy conviction of two men that was based on the confession of only one.
1960 — The U.S. Supreme Court refuses to review the case of a Gay alien being deported after conviction of a minor misdemeanor solicitation.
1960 — The U.S. Supreme Court refuses to hear a consensual sodomy case from Ohio.
1972 — The U.S. Supreme Court refuses to hear a challenge to the Maryland sodomy law. 


Sources: