GLBT Historical Society Oral History Collection GLBT-OH
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Sexual Orientation and Gender Expression
1 Carmichael, J.V. (2014). Sexual Orientation and Gender Expression. In M. Alfino & L. Koltutsky (Eds.), The Library Juice Press Handbook of Intellectual Freedom: Concepts, Cases and Theories (pp.380-404). Sacramento, CA: Library Juice Press. Made available courtesy of Litwin Books, LLC: http://libraryjuicepress.com/IF- handbook.php ***Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from Litwin Books, LLC. This version of the document is not the version of record. Figures and/or pictures may be missing from this format of the document. *** Sexual Orientation and Gender Expression Coming from the insularity and prejudices of England [. .] she [Madge Garland] also found something as elusive and enduring as this aesthetic awakening: an instinct for the possibilities of friendship and an understanding of the world as her home. She called it “freedom of thought.” Lisa Cohen, For All We Know (2012) Introduction Our ability to use words as we see fit is perhaps the primary measure of our intellectual freedom. Otherwise, we would live in a dream world, largely unexpressed. We form hierarchical classifications of value, create laws by which we function as societies, interpret law and custom, and make decisions that in turn are justified by ethical and moral understandings through words. This essay discusses words and their changing meanings over time as they have referred to sexual orientation and gender expression, and how language generally engages intellectual freedom. How humans have designated meaning by symbols and signs is one of the enduring objects of study. Words conceal as well as reveal meaning too. Minority members invent local patois understood only by initiates so that they may communicate with one another without being understood by members of the usually oppressive majority. -
Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen Collection, 1950-2009 [Bulk: 1964-1975] : Ms.Coll.3
Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen collection, 1950-2009 [Bulk: 1964-1975] : Ms.Coll.3 Finding aid prepared by Alina Josan on 2015 PDF produced on July 17, 2019 John J. Wilcox, Jr. LGBT Archives, William Way LGBT Community Center 1315 Spruce Street Philadelphia, PA 19107 [email protected] Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen collection, 1950-2009 [Bulk: 1964-1975] : Ms.Coll.3 Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 3 Biographical / Historical ................................................................................................................................ 4 Scope and Contents ........................................................................................................................................ 4 Administrative Information ............................................................................................................................ 7 Related Materials ........................................................................................................................................... 7 Controlled Access Headings .......................................................................................................................... 8 Collection Inventory ....................................................................................................................................... 8 Subject files ................................................................................................................................................ -
Taxing Polygamy
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Washington University St. Louis: Open Scholarship Washington University Law Review Volume 91 Issue 1 2013 Taxing Polygamy Samuel D. Brunson Loyola University Chicago School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_lawreview Part of the Tax Law Commons Recommended Citation Samuel D. Brunson, Taxing Polygamy, 91 WASH. U. L. REV. 113 (2013). Available at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_lawreview/vol91/iss1/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Washington University Law Review by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TAXING POLYGAMY SAMUEL D. BRUNSON ABSTRACT The tax law treats married and unmarried taxpayers differently in several respects. Married persons, for example, can file and pay their taxes as a unified taxpayer, with rates that are different than those that apply to unmarried taxpayers. This different treatment of married persons has elicited criticism over the years. Some of the more salient criticisms include that married persons do not necessarily function as an economic unit, that joint filing discourages women from working, and that the various exclusions from the joint filing regime—including gay couples—is unfair. This Article looks at joint filing through the lens of polygamy. Polygamy stretches joint filing beyond what it can handle: while the current tax rates could accommodate same-sex couples without any substantive changes, applying the current married-filing-jointly tax brackets to polygamous taxpayers would have absurd—and often unjust— results. -
BUTCH ENOUGH? Drummer Presents Some “Found” Prose ©Jack from the Red Queen, Arthur Evans by Jack Fritscher
HOW TO LEGALLY QUOTE THIS MATERIAL www.JackFritscher.com/Drummer/Research%20Note.html DRUMMER EDITORIAL ©Jack Fritscher. See Permissions, Reprints, Quotations, Footnotes GETTING OFF Bitch bites butch, and vice versa... DRAFTBUTCH ENOUGH? Drummer Presents Some “Found” Prose ©Jack from the Red Queen, Arthur Evans by Jack Fritscher This entire editoral "Butch Enough?" is also available in Acrobat pdf. Author's historical introduction Actual editorial as published Illustrations AUTHOR'S HISTORICAL CONTEXT INTRODUCTION Produced September 1978, and publishedFritscher in Drummer 25, December 1978. This piece is about Gay Civil War in the Titanic ’70s. For all its entertainment value, Drummer was a timely test-bed for purposeful versions and visions of the gay-liberation dream unfolding. Some misunderstand homomasculinity as if it were an absolute. When I coined the term in 1972, I meant not masculinity as a power tool of male privilege or male entitlement, but rather a masculinity whose identity was in traditionally masculine goodness in the Latin sense of virtue, which comes from the Latin word vir, meaning man, causing virtue to be the quality of a man, and that was quintessence I sought to define in my coinage. I published this article written by the Red Queen, Arthur Evans, for a reason of political “authenticity” just as I recommend the “authentic” political analysis of unfolding gender ambiguities made by David Van Leer in his benchmark book of the years between World War II and Stonewall, The Queening of America: Gay Culture in a Straight Society. In the gay civil wars of the ’70s, I respected Arthur Evans’ representing one kind of “authentic” queening and queering. -
Pat Adams Selected Solo Exhibitions
PAT ADAMS Born: Stockton, California, July 8, 1928 Resides: Bennington, Vermont Education: 1949 University of California, Berkeley, BA, Painting, Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Epsilon 1945 California College of Arts and Crafts, summer session (Otis Oldfield and Lewis Miljarik) 1946 College of Pacific, summer session (Chiura Obata) 1948 Art Institute of Chicago, summer session (John Fabian and Elizabeth McKinnon) 1950 Brooklyn Museum Art School, summer session (Max Beckmann, Reuben Tam, John Ferren) SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2017 Bennington Museum, Bennington, Vermont 2011 National Association of Women Artists, New York 2008 Zabriskie Gallery, New York 2005 Zabriskie Gallery, New York, 50th Anniversary Exhibition: 1954-2004 2004 Bennington Museum, Bennington, Vermont 2003 Zabriskie Gallery, New York, exhibited biennially since 1956 2001 Zabriskie Gallery, New York, Monotypes, exhibited in 1999, 1994, 1993 1999 Amy E. Tarrant Gallery, Flyn Performing Arts Center, Burlington, Vermont 1994 Jaffe/Friede/Strauss Gallery, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 1989 Anne Weber Gallery, Georgetown, Maine 1988 Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Retrospective: 1968-1988 1988 Addison/Ripley Gallery, Washington, D.C. 1988 New York Academy of Sciences, New York 1988 American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, D.C. 1986 Haggin Museum, Stockton, California 1986 University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 1983 Image Gallery, Stockbridge, Massachusetts 1982 Columbia Museum of Art, University of South Carolina, Columbia, -
Download Lot Listing
IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART POST-WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART Wednesday, May 10, 2017 NEW YORK IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART EUROPEAN & AMERICAN ART POST-WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART AUCTION Wednesday, May 10, 2017 at 11am EXHIBITION Saturday, May 6, 10am – 5pm Sunday, May 7, Noon – 5pm Monday, May 8, 10am – 6pm Tuesday, May 9, 9am – Noon LOCATION Doyle New York 175 East 87th Street New York City 212-427-2730 www.Doyle.com Catalogue: $40 INCLUDING PROPERTY CONTENTS FROM THE ESTATES OF IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART 1-118 Elsie Adler European 1-66 The Eileen & Herbert C. Bernard Collection American 67-118 Charles Austin Buck Roberta K. Cohn & Richard A. Cohn, Ltd. POST-WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART 119-235 A Connecticut Collector Post-War 119-199 Claudia Cosla, New York Contemporary 200-235 Ronnie Cutrone EUROPEAN ART Mildred and Jack Feinblatt Glossary I Dr. Paul Hershenson Conditions of Sale II Myrtle Barnes Jones Terms of Guarantee IV Mary Kettaneh Information on Sales & Use Tax V The Collection of Willa Kim and William Pène du Bois Buying at Doyle VI Carol Mercer Selling at Doyle VIII A New Jersey Estate Auction Schedule IX A New York and Connecticut Estate Company Directory X A New York Estate Absentee Bid Form XII Miriam and Howard Rand, Beverly Hills, California Dorothy Wassyng INCLUDING PROPERTY FROM A Private Beverly Hills Collector The Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz sold for the benefit of the Bard Graduate Center A New England Collection A New York Collector The Jessye Norman ‘White Gates’ Collection A Pennsylvania Collection A Private -
Chief Thomas J.Cahill: a Life in Review
SFGov Accessibility Police Department Chief Thomas J.Cahill: A Life In Review In the San Francisco Police Academy yearbook for August, 1942, on a page entitled Honors, J.Von Nostitz was chosen Most likely to become Chief of Traffic, G.K. Hoover was Most likely to become Chief of Detectives, and J.C. Cook was given the somewhat dubious honor of being Most likely to serve 40 years, presumably in the Department. In retrospect, the person who compiled these predictions weren't much on target, with one exception. Smack in the middle of the page filled with rather clever drawings of each of the officers, his name and prediction typed below, is a sketch of a curlyhaired, oval faced youth: T.J. Cahill, Most likely to become Chief of Police. Thomas Joseph Cahill has the distinction of having the longest tenure as Chief of Police in San Francisco's history, serving under three mayors – George Christopher, John Shelley, and Joseph Alioto through decades that saw tremendous social changes and upheavals. In the Richmond district flat that the shares with Felipa, his second wife of 28 years, there's a large 1967 portrait of him hanging on the wall. You can still see the firmness, directness, and sense of humor evident in the portrait in his face. Now 88, he's alert and strong, his hair white but still wavy. With a touch of the brogue that's never left him, he reminisced over a career that spanned 30 years. Tom was born on June 8, 1910 on Montana Street on the North Side of Chicago. -
Llyn Foulkes Between a Rock and a Hard Place
LLYN FOULKES BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE LLYN FQULKES BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE Initiated and Sponsored by Fellows ol Contemporary Art Los Angeles California Organized by Laguna Art Museum Laguna Beach California Guest Curator Marilu Knode LLYN FOULKES: BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE This book has been published in conjunction with the exhibition Llyn Foulkes: Between a Rock and a Hard Place, curated by Marilu Knode, organized by Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Beach, California, and sponsored by Fellows of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California. The exhibition and book also were supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, D.C., a federal agency. TRAVEL SCHEDULE Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Beach, California 28 October 1995 - 21 January 1996 The Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, Ohio 3 February - 31 March 1996 The Oakland Museum, Oakland, California 19 November 1996 - 29 January 1997 Neuberger Museum, State University of New York, Purchase, New York 23 February - 20 April 1997 Palm Springs Desert Museum, Palm Springs, California 16 December 1997 - 1 March 1998 Copyright©1995, Fellows of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this book may be reproduced, in whole or in part, without permission from the publisher, the Fellows of Contemporary Art. Editor: Sue Henger, Laguna Beach, California Designers: David Rose Design, Huntington Beach, California Printer: Typecraft, Inc., Pasadena, California COVER: That Old Black Magic, 1985 oil on wood 67 x 57 inches Private Collection Photo Credits (by page number): Casey Brown 55, 59; Tony Cunha 87; Sandy Darnley 17; Susan Einstein 63; William Erickson 18; M. -
Chapter Six: Activist Agendas and Visions After Stonewall (1969-1973)
Chapter Six: Activist Agendas and Visions after Stonewall (1969-1973) Documents 103-108: Gay Liberation Manifestos, 1969-1970 The documents reprinted in The Stonewall Riots are “Gay Revolution Comes Out,” Rat, 12 Aug. 1969, 7; North American Conference of Homophile Organizations Committee on Youth, “A Radical Manifesto—The Homophile Movement Must Be Radicalized!” 28 Aug. 1969, reprinted in Stephen Donaldson, “Student Homophile League News,” Gay Power (1.2), c. Sep. 1969, 16, 19-20; Preamble, Gay Activists Alliance Constitution, 21 Dec. 1969, Gay Activists Alliance Records, Box 18, Folder 2, New York Public Library; Carl Wittman, “Refugees from Amerika: A Gay Manifesto,” San Francisco Free Press, 22 Dec. 1969, 3-5; Martha Shelley, “Gay is Good,” Rat, 24 Feb. 1970, 11; Steve Kuromiya, “Come Out, Wherever You Are! Come Out,” Philadelphia Free Press, 27 July 1970, 6-7. For related early sources on gay liberation agendas and philosophies in New York, see “Come Out for Freedom,” Come Out!, 14 Nov. 1969, 1; Bob Fontanella, “Sexuality and the American Male,” Come Out!, 14 Nov. 1969, 15; Lois Hart, “Community Center,” Come Out!, 14 Nov. 1969, 15; Leo Louis Martello, “A Positive Image for the Homosexual,” Come Out!, 14 Nov. 1969, 16; “An Interview with New York City Liberationists,” San Francisco Free Press, 7 Dec. 1969, 5; Bob Martin, “Radicalism and Homosexuality,” Come Out!, 10 Jan. 1970, 4; Allan Warshawsky and Ellen Bedoz, “G.L.F. and the Movement,” Come Out!,” 10 Jan. 1970, 4-5; Red Butterfly, “Red Butterfly,” Come Out!, 10 Jan. 1970, 4-5; Bob Kohler, “Where Have All the Flowers Gone,” Come Out!, 10 Jan. -
Calling San Francisco's Silent Majority
c Official Publication Of The C SAN FRANCISCO POLICE OFFICERS ASSOCIATION This Publication was Produced and Printed in California, USA ✯ Buy American ✯ Support Local Business VOLUME 48, NUMBER 6 SAN FRANCISCO, JUNE 2016 www.sfpoa.org Calling San Francisco’s Silent Majority; Isn’t It Time to Send Some Inept Politicians Packing? have had their due day in court, which 19th and offered him the full support of their disdain for the San Francisco Police is where these criminal matters need to the POA. Department. David Campos and John be resolved in front of a Judge, not on Unfortunately, due to politics, poor Avalos, who are both termed out of of- the streets of the city. Also unknown to Toney has been thrown into the deep fice with no other political office to hold, the officers, at the time, was the mental end of the pool with very little notice. publicly came out against Chief Suhr. status and/or the level of narcotics that The question I have of those who ap- They were joined by Eric Mar and Jane these individuals had ingested prior to pointed him is this: Will you throw him Kim who is desperately trying to garnish these encounters. a lifeline when the next OIS happens, or any momentum in her failing campaign The actions of our elected officials will you be throwing him a bag of rocks for the State Senate. These members was to choose the politically expedient and watch him sink? I ask this because of the Board of Supervisors have no route by picking the closest scapegoat there will be another OIS in this city, standing when it comes to the hiring or and throwing him under the proverbial sooner or later, much like every major firing of the Chief of Police. -
Oral History Interview: John V. Moore
Oral History Interview: John V. Moore Interviewee: John V. Moore Interviewer: Chris Waldrep Date: January 7, 2010 Chris W. Okay, so this is January 7, 2010 and I’m Chris Waldrep with John Moore. And I’m interviewing you for publication, so if you say something that you would rather I didn’t quote, just say so and I won’t quote that. John M. Okay, fine. Chris W. And you’ve shared so much with me. [Laughs.] John M. Well, it helped me recall a lot of those experiences, and I just felt better doing it for my own self, and I thought it would be helpful for you. Chris W. It sure is, definitely. Let me ask you a very broad question. I don’t know if you can answer it. But our annual conference, and maybe all the annual conferences on the West Coast, [are] very liberal, very progressive. How do you account for that? John M. I think frontier religion has something to do with it. People come to California and to the West, in part, because they’re looking at opportunities, but church membership in the West, all along the West Coast, is lower than any other part of the country. San Francisco, you can understand why that [is]— its whole history of frontier days and all of that, and the radical movement of the ‘60s. 1 lgbtran.org Our children, two daughters, were in Peoples Temple and died in Jonestown, and they— I think the University at Berkeley. Stanford’s not particularly radical, but in the ‘60s they were— the students acted up there as they did over in Berkeley. -
Tavern Guild of San Francisco Records, 1961-1993
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt509nb9d7 No online items Guide to the Tavern Guild of San Francisco Records, 1961-1993 Processed by Martin Meeker and Heather Arnold. © 2003 The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society. All rights reserved. Guide to the Tavern Guild of San 1995-02 1 Francisco Records, 1961-1993 Guide to the Tavern Guild of San Francisco Records, 1961-1993 Accession number: 1995-02 Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society San Francisco, California Processed by: Martin Meeker and Heather Arnold Date Completed: July, 2003 © 2003 The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Tavern Guild of San Francisco Records, Date (inclusive): 1961-1993 Accession number: 1995-02 Creator: Tavern Guild of San Francisco Extent: 21 boxes, 2 folders Repository: The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society. San Francisco, California. Abstract: Minutes, correspondence, financial papers, membership materials, ephemera, photographs, and banners, 1962-1993 (11.25 linear feet), document the work of the Tavern Guild of San Francisco in promoting the interests of gay bars in San Francisco as well as the growth of the Tavern Guild into a well-known service and fundraising organization. Language: English. Access Collection is open for research. Publication Rights Copyright to unpublished manuscript materials has been transferred to the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Tavern Guild of San Francisco Records, 1995-02, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society. Acquisition Information Donated to the GLBT Historical Society by Stanley Boyd in 1995. Organizational History The Tavern Guild of San Francisco (TGSF) was founded in 1962.