SNAPSHOT - Murray, Kentucky · Dr. Peggy Pittman-Munke >$500 LGBT Programming Advisory Committee...
Transcript of SNAPSHOT - Murray, Kentucky · Dr. Peggy Pittman-Munke >$500 LGBT Programming Advisory Committee...
HIGH IMPACT THEMED PROGRAMMING
1,450Students
375Faculty and Staff
2013-14 IMPACT
Faced with theirown mortality an improbable group of young people, many of them HIV-positive young men, broke the mold as radical warriors taking on Washington and the medical establishment.
HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE is the story of two coalitions—ACT UP and TAG (Treatment Action Group)—whose activism and innovation turned AIDS from a death sentence into a manageable condition. Despite having no scientific training, these self-made activists infiltrated the pharmaceutical industry and helped identify promising new drugs, moving them from experimental trials to patients in record time. With unfettered access to a treasure trove of never-before-seen archival footage from the 1980s and ‘90s, filmmaker David France puts the viewer smack in the middle of the controversial actions, the heated meetings, the heartbreaking failures, and the exultant breakthroughs of heroes in the making.
December 2 7 p.m. • Curris Center TheaterThe showing is sponsored by: • Gender and Diversity Studies• LGBT Programming • MSU Alliance • President’s Commission on Diversity and Inclusion
FREE ADMISSION
FOR MORE INFOJody Cofer Randall, 809-5040Dr. Josh Adair, 809-4540Equal education and employment opportunities M/F/D, AA employer
RacerRed EvEnts
AIDS Walk DECEMBER 2 6:15 P.M.• Begins at Lovett Auditorium • Ends at the Curris Center • Dress Warmly • Hot chocolate available at the end
Wednesday, April 9, 20148 p.m. – Barkley Room, Curris Center
– Free admission – Q&A to follow presentation – Light refreshments will be served
T his program will focus on homophobia and other forms of discrimination in the media. It will examine how books, movies, TV shows, and other forms of media reinforce
and perpetuate negative stereotypes and attitudes about LGBT people and other underrepresented communities. The media can engage in discrimination intentionally or unintentionally. Examples will be given of how the media can discriminate. There will be a panel discussion featuring local representatives from the fields of journalism and public relations led by Joe Hedges, lecturer in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications, following the presentation. ContaCtsRobert Scott, Out Racer participant [email protected] Cofer Randall, LGBT program coordinator [email protected]
Equal education and employment opportunities M/F/D, AA employer
LGBT Programming presents
2nd Annual Conversation and Dessert featured
Jeff Graham on Domestic HIV/AIDS
RacerRed • HIV/AIDS Awareness Walk • “How to Survive a Plague” film showing in partnership
with Gender and Diversity Studies • Red Tie Affair Out Racer Project by D. Andrew Porter
Graphic Side of Gender Out Racer Project
by Tyler Davis
Media Matters for Fairness Out Racer Project
by Robert Scott
EMPOWERING LGBT-SPECIFIC STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Homocon: A Conservative Gay’s View from the Trenches of the Culture Wars with Jimmy LaSalvia Out Racer Project by Alec Brock
MSU Alliance • Homecoming Parade and Tent City • Glamour and Fame Drag Shows • Partnership with MSU Health Service
for “Man Up Monday!” Campaign • Presentation of the Jane Etheridge Ally of the Year Award
to Dr. Leon Bodevin • Dozens of other
educational and social programs throughout 2013-14
SNAPSHOT
Creating Safe Spaces Training at Hopkinsville Community College
Out Racer Project by Pat Hinton Theatre Delta Production on Depression and Suicidal
Ideation, co-sponsored with the Women’s Center
ALLY DEVELOPMENT Safe Zone Project
• 297 Participants • 44 New Participants • 58 Training Attendees
EXTERNAL RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
Panelist for two LGBT College Fair Housing Forums by Kentucky Commission on Human Rights
POLICY AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION
Preferred First Name Policy for Students Education Tuition Waiver Policy
RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT & ALUMNI ENGAGEMENTCelebrate and Support a Fair KY >$5,000Alumnus Kristie Helms and State Street Corporation $2,400Artisan Kitchen of Paducah >$1,300 In-KindAlumnus Will Hansen >$1,000JustFundKY Grant for Out Racers $1,000Dr. Peggy Pittman-Munke >$500
LGBT Programming Advisory CommitteeJosh Adair, Ph.D.Charley Allen Jo Bennett Kathy Callahan, Ph.D. Renae Duncan, Ph.D. Jana Hackathorn, Ph.D. Will Hansen Joe Hedges Judy Lyle Peggy Pittman-Munke, Ph.D. Morgan Randall Steven Shupe Angie Trzepacz, Ph.D. Jody Cofer Randall LGBT Program Coordinator 270.809.5040 www.murraystate.edu/lgbt MSU Alliance OfficersJo Bennett Beverly Jewell (Fall) Emily Oliver D. Andrew Porter (Spring) Morgan Randall Steven Shupe
Items over $500 in Value
LGBT AND ALLY STUDENT LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT
Out Racers • Leadership Retreat with Petey Peterson
Professional Development • Campus Pride’s Annual Camp Pride
• National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Creating Change • Vanderbilt University’s Out in Front • Come Together Kentucky (Jody Cofer Randall, keynote)
LGBT organized talk-back and reception with Gender and Diversity Studies
and the Women’s Center for the Department of Theatre Production
“Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead”
HIGH IMPACT THEMED PROGRAMMING continued
HOMECOMING PARADE
Equal education and employment opportunities M/F/D, AA employer