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  • Last Call! Volunteer for the HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner & Auction!

    2011 - 08.15

    Dear HRC Cleveland Volunteers:

    It’s still not too late to volunteer for the 18th Annual HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner & Auction on Saturday, August 27 but this is your last chance! If you’re interested, read on and email us today!  The deadline is Saturday, August 20.  If you’ve already expressed an interest AND received a confirmation email, you’re all set!  If you haven’t received a confirmation, email us today!  Thanks for your interest in and support of the Human Rights Campaign!

    MARK YOUR CALENDARS AND RSVP TODAY!

    The 18th Annual HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner and Auction will be on Saturday, August 27, 2011 at the Bert L. and Iris S. Wolstein Center at Cleveland State University (http://www.csuohio.edu/wolsteincenter/), located at 2000 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland.

    This is our premier fundraising event of the year and is always a very exciting and enjoyable affair.  Many prominent public officials attend this annual event, including US Senator Sherrod Brown, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and Mayor Frank Jackson, as well as local and national celebrities.  This year’s keynote speaker is Chrissie Hynde, lead singer of The Pretenders.

    HRC Cleveland is in need of many volunteers to perform a variety of different tasks, none of which will get your hands or clothes dirty!  Past volunteers have been invaluable assets in making our previous gala dinners huge successes.  We just can’t do it without our amazing volunteers!  Best of all, each volunteer will receive FREE ADMISSION to the event (a $175.00 value!) and a full buffet dinner!

    More information on what it means to volunteer for this event follows this message. If you are interested in volunteering for this year’s dinner, please email volunteers@hrccleveland.org at your earliest convenience, including your name, mailing address, telephone number, and email address. Do NOT reply directly to this message.

    For more information on this year’s event, including a full lineup of the evening’s entertainment and speakers (as they are scheduled), go to http://cleveland.hrc.org/node/335.  Individuals who are interested in attending the Gala Dinner & Dance as guests (non-volunteers) can purchase tickets at www.boxofficetickets.com.

    Please consider forwarding this message to family, friends, colleagues, or anyone else you think might be interested in volunteering at and/or attending this year’s event.  Thank you for your interest in and support of the Human Rights Campaign.  I look forward to seeing you in August if not sooner!

    Sincerely,

    Mike Frank
    Volunteer Coordinator & Political Committee co-chair
    HRC Cleveland Steering Committee
    michaeljpfrank@hotmail.com
    216-501-1201
    www.hrc.org

    “What should I expect as a volunteer?” Many of you have emailed me wanting more information about what it means to “volunteer” at the annual HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner & Auction.  Following is an excerpt from an email I sent, which I think covers most of a volunteer’s responsibilities:

    Volunteers do many different things throughout the day and evening.  To name some, they help pickup silent auction items, setup the silent auction, monitor the silent auction, check out silent auction items at the end of the night, help guests register when they arrive, set out Federal Club pledge cards and programs, collect pledge cards, answer easy questions, hand out parting gifts, give directions, etc.

    Not every volunteer does everything I mentioned above because many areas must be covered simultaneously.  Some volunteers may be in one area while others may be in another area, or you may switch around throughout the day/evening/night.  There could be a time where you will be asked to move quickly to perform a task that is time-sensitive.

    Past volunteers have said that it was a very enjoyable and memorable experience.  A number of volunteers from previous years come back year after year because they have such a good time.

    NOTE:  Please add michaeljpfrank@hotmail.com to your contacts or safe list to ensure that our messages go to your inbox and are not discarded by an automatic spam or junk mail filter.  If you prefer to no longer receive volunteer opportunity announcements from HRC Cleveland, please send an email to the above address requesting that you be removed from our list.  Thank you.

    Jan Cline leaves LGBT Center helm: He returns to Virginia food bank

    2011 - 08.15

    by Anthony Glassman

    source: http://www.gaypeopleschronicle.com/stories11/august/0812111.htm

    Cleveland–After 16 months, Cleveland LGBT Center executive director Jan Cline is stepping down to return to the Food Bank of Southeastern Virginia.

    His last day is August 12.

    The center’s board of directors was unable to reach consensus on an interim replacement for Cline at their meeting on August 9. They will meet again on August 15, said board president Bob Sferra.

    Sferra added that, after speaking with the employees before the board meeting, “The staff seems to be in control of the scheduled hours. They feel as though they’re fine steering the ship until the middle of next week.”

    Cline was first in the organization’s development department in the 1990s, before eventually rising to the position of associate director. He took the reins on an interim basis when former director Linda Malicki left in 2002.

    He then went on to head an LGBT youth leadership development group, Outright Maine, before working in public relations and grant writing for the Food Bank in Norfolk, Va. He also spent a year and a half working for the Gordon Square Arts District after returning to Cleveland.

    Two major factors played a role in his decision to return to Virginia: First, that is where his family lives, and second, the volunteer director position there greatly appealed to him after he revamped the volunteer program at the Cleveland LGBT Center during his 16-month tenure at the helm.

    Cline also discussed his passion for dealing with hunger, a topic that often goes ignored in one of the wealthiest nations on earth.

    “It’s going to be an awesome opportunity. I have a growing interest in feeding hungry people,” he said. “It’s a growing concern, something I’m very passionate about.”

    “There is enough food in this country to feed people, it’s just a matter of getting it form where it’s being held or wasted to the people who need it,” he concluded.

    Cline assumed the mantle of executive director in late March, 2010, less than four months after Sue Doerfer ended her tenure for a stint leading Equality Ohio.

    During his time at the Center, Cline initiated changes in the structure of the staff, in part necessitated by the loss of a $30,000 grant that was not renewed after 2009. He also started a strategic planning process to examine the direction of the organization moving forward.

    Sferra expressed regret that Cline will not be there to see those efforts come to fruition.

    “The main thing that comes to my mind is, we’re disappointed that Jan won’t be able to see through any of the initiatives or the strategic planning that he has been so involved with for the last 16 months,” the board president said.

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    This material is copyrighted by the Gay People’s Chronicle. Permission is given to repost no more than the headline, byline, and one or two paragraphs, with the full name of the Gay People’s Chronicle and a link to the full article on our website. Reproduction of the entire article is prohibited without specific written permission.

    Late-afternoon Dancin’ brings crowds, donations

    2011 - 08.15

    By Anthony Glassman

    source: http://www.gaypeopleschronicle.com/stories11/august/0812112.htm

    Cleveland–The 27th annual Dancin’ in the Streets benefit for the AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland featured a later start time, a voluntary donation at the gate and surging attendance, bringing the event back to the fore as a major summer party in Cleveland.

    “I’m going to say we had an attendance of about 4,000 people throughout the course of the day,” said organizer John Katsaros.

    The start time was postponed until 3 pm this year. In previous years, it started earlier but had sparse attendance in the first few hours.

    “From one to four or five, we were really kind of dead, so we opened at three this year and as soon as we started, it was packed,” he noted. “I’ve never seen it that crowded that early.”

    “It was a nice, nice group of people, I have to say,” he enthused.

    According to AIDS Taskforce chief executive officer Tracy Jones, the July 31 festival is expected to bring in about $22,000 to help the organization provide services to people with HIV and AIDS in the Cleveland area. In her recollection, this year is the highest-earning event, which ranged from $8,000 to this year’s $22,000, according to her estimates.

    Katsaros noted a number of new faces in the crowd, which he attributed, in part, to promotion at SynergyFest, the Cleveland Synergy Foundation’s multi-sport festival that wrapped up the same day. SynergyFest materials encouraged participants to head over to Dancin’ after they were done with the athletic events.

    Katsaros was also very thankful for the dunk tank, in which he was a frequent target. “I raised $175 in there myself. It was so hot that day that I loved getting dunked,” he recalled. “It felt so good.”

    A dispute over the name

    A controversy arose earlier this summer over the ownership of the event. After the 2009 Dancin’, Vision Video Productions’ Chris Rogers and George Honaker registered the business names “Dancin in the Streets” and “Dancing in the Streets” with the Ohio secretary of state, then asserted last year that, as owners of the name, they should be allowed to organize the event.

    “Dancing in the Streets,” with a “g,” was for many years an outdoor dance party in Columbus put on by Union Station and Axis during Pride weekend. Vision Video also registered “Pride in the Streets.”

    According to Katsaros and Jones, last year’s Dancin’ in the Streets, held on a Saturday night, was not successful.

    “The money at the end of the event was never accounted for,” Katsaros said. “The only money I could account for were my presale tickets. The AIDS Taskforce, when everything was said and done, they received $500 from them. We don’t know what happened to the $5,200 it raised that day. It rained, so that was all it made at the gate, or the money from the presale tickets. Two weeks later they go the Taskforce with a check for $500.”

    Katsaros made up for some of the shortfall with a $4,000 out-of-pocket donation to the Taskforce.

    An e‑mail sent to the Gay People’s Chronicle from “Gertie Gossip” and signed “Miss Rhonda Reads” included a letter from performer Stevie Reese Desmond to the Spangle online magazine, in which Desmond asks why nobody attempted to trademark the name Dancin’ in the Streets, and “Rhonda Reads” alleged a conspiracy between Synergy and Dancin’, as well making accusations of “business identity fraud.”

    Dancin’ in the Streets was started in 1985 as a benefit block party on West 9th Street in the Warehouse District. In 2004, the AIDS Taskforce decided it would no longer organize the event. Moves to larger venues like the Nautica Amphitheatre and Time Warner Pavilion meant that, despite Taskforce staff putting in hundreds of hours organizing the event, it made little money in return.

    The following year, John Katsaros of Twist, David Peifer of Club Cleveland and Gregg Witbeck of Union Station decided to organize Dancin’ themselves, returning it to its roots as a street party. Since then, it has been organized independently of the Taskforce, but still reliant on the Taskforce’s insurance and license to vend beer and liquor outdoors.

    “We still fiscally never walked away from the event because our insurance and our F2 [license] are necessary for the event,” Jones noted.

    After the 2010 event, Vision Video announced that the 2011 Dancin’ would be held at Gordon Square, the location of the Cleveland LGBT Center.

    When Katsaros and the Taskforce announced that the event was being held on Clifton Blvd., as in previous years, a fight broke out on Facebook. At one point, Honaker posted a video of photos from previous years of Dancin’ on the Taskforce’s Facebook wall, asserting the Gordon Square location. The post was deleted by Taskforce because of the location, and Vision Video rescinded an offer to “return” the name to the Taskforce.

    “My partner wrote this beautiful tribute and editorial concerning 30 years of HIV/AIDS–and placed it on the CLEVELAND AIDS TASKFORCE Facebook–and your people deleted it. Consider the olive branch removed, we will continue guardianship of the name until your representatives can prove to us you are worthy of the name ‘DANCIN IN THE STREETS’ again!” a July 15 post on Vision Video’s Facebook wall reads.

    One of the complaints about holding the event on Clifton is that Twist Social Club, located there and owned by Katsaros, benefits financially from the party. Attendees can order drinks in the bar if they do not wish to get them from the beer tent or vodka vending outside. However, Katsaros also donates thousands out-of-pocket each year. This year, he supplemented the $13,000 the event itself earned with $9,000 of his own, bringing the benefit to the Taskforce to $22,000 total.

    Gordon Square, however, has no gay bars within six blocks. The Gordon Square building itself is the site of low-income apartments, so hundreds of residents would hear the thump of dance music until well after sunset.

    “Where the event is located, all of the businesses are friendly and the community responds quite well to us being there,” Jones said. “We’ve never had a problem.”

    Vision Video also wanted the money from the event to go to other AIDS service organizations in Lorain and Akron, although those groups hold their own fundraising events.

    Next year, however, the AIDS Taskforce will return to an active role in the organizing of Dancin’ in the Streets.

    “Now with new leadership and energy, we are placed to be more intricately involved in the leadership of next year’s event, and we plan to,” Jones said.

    She also noted that the Taskforce had looked into copyrighting the name with the Federal Trade Commission, but it was already taken–not by Vision Video, but by a dance group. There are other Dancin’ in the Streets music and dance festivals scattered across the country, as well as a Motown revue. The name itself comes from Martha and the Vandellas’ 1964 song “Dancing in the Street,” which was covered by Van Halen in 1982 and Mick Jagger and David Bowie in 1985, among about a dozen other versions.

    Neither Rogers nor Honaker returned calls for comment by press time.

    This material is copyrighted by the Gay People’s Chronicle. Permission is given to repost no more than the headline, byline, and one or two paragraphs, with the full name of the Gay People’s Chronicle and a link to the full article on our website. Reproduction of the entire article is prohibited without specific written permission.

    Swimmers break two world records at SynergyFest

    2011 - 08.15

    By Anthony Glassman

    source: http://www.gaypeopleschronicle.com/stories11/august/0812113.htm

    Cleveland–SynergyFest, a multi-sport festival produced by the Cleveland Synergy Foundation, brought 500 people out for competitions as diverse as billiards and swimming. Competitors came from as far away as Washington, D.C., St. Louis, and Toronto.

    The annual festival, held July 29-31, saw two world records broken in aquatics, as the Illinois U.S. Masters Swimming team set new certified records in the 400- and 800-meter freestyle relay events.

    While Synergy made sure to post warnings on their website that staying at parties after 1 am “will prove to be hazardous to playing early the next morning,” there was also a full slate of extracurricular activities for attendees, starting with a registration mixer at the Doubletree Hotel on Lakeside. Competitors got a gift bag, wristband and SynergyFest T‑shirt, and had a chance to connect with old friends and make new ones. Also on Friday night, the Basement Beauties threw an island-themed Bunga-Bunga Party at Twist with leis, limbo and pirates.

    Sporting events began the next morning with bowling and billiards at the Corner Alley, and swimming, tennis and volleyball at Cleveland State University. That night, athletes had a banquet at Union Café featuring performances by the Marys, Veranda L’Ni and Sonshine LeRay before moving into Bounce for the Find Fred Dance Party. Simultaneously, the Women of the World Party took place at Twist.

    Competition wrapped up on Sunday, and championships were awarded. Tennis, swimming and volleyball contests were all sanctioned by the Gay and Lesbian Tennis Alliance, United States Masters Swimming and the North American Gay Volleyball Association, respectively.

    In the spirit of neighborly cooperation, SynergyFest materials encouraged attendees to stay Sunday night so they could participate in Dancin’ in the Streets, the annual dance party benefit for the AIDS Task Force of Greater Cleveland.

    Cleveland Synergy Foundation founder W. Douglas Anderson was over the moon at the turnout for the festival and the level of participation.

    “It was an incredible success,” he said. “Two USMS world records were broken in the aquatics portion of it, the first time an LGBT event has had world records broken.”

    He also noted that 90 percent of participants came from outside Cleveland, which was as much a challenge as a benefit.

    “A lot of people brought partners who played different sports,” he said, noting the challenges of accommodating them so they could compete and then watch their partners, or for those who wanted to compete in more than one sport themselves.

    He was impressed with the amount of support SynergyFest received from the community, both in volunteers and sponsors.

    “We had over 20 volunteers registering participants at the Doubletree alone,” he enthused, noting that the Corner Alley, Cleveland State, John Katsaros of Twist and Ray Lahoti of Union and Bounce had a great symbiosis with SynergyFest–they supported the festival, and it gave the out-of-towners a chance to see what Cleveland had to offer.

    “It was phenomenal,” Anderson said.

    THE DRAGON BOATS ARE COMING! (with NO COMMERCIAL RIVER TRAFFIC!)

    2011 - 08.10

    SOURCE: http://www.clevelanddragonboatfestival.com/index.php

    Mark Your Calendars: Saturday, September 17, 2011

    The Cleveland Dragon Boat Festival

    The Painting of the Eyes during the Opening Ceremony at the Cleveland Dragon Boat Festival.

    The Fifth Annual Cleveland Dragon Boat Festival, proudly presented by the Cleveland Dragon Boat Association, will take place on Saturday, September 17, 2011. This will be a banner year for the Festival and paddling season with the Grand Opening of Rivergate Park in the Spring of 2011. Rivergate Park will be the new home for our dragon boats! Competitive and recreational paddling opportunities will be available at Rivergate from May through October. The Cleveland Dragon Boat Association will partner with Dynamic Dragon Boat Racing, LLC to provide six BUK dragon boats for the races. There will also be NO COMMERCIAL RIVER TRAFFIC during the Festival!

    Cleveland Dragon Boat Festival photos on flickr >>

    The Festival takes place on the West Bank of the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland’s historic Flats. Opening Ceremonies will take place on the patio deck of the Historic Powerhouse, 2000 Sycamore Street. Races will be held immediately following the opening ceremonies and continue throughout the day. There is no admission fee for spectators and ample parking is available.

    The Festival acknowledges dragon boat history and its connection with Asian culture and will promote the people and unique cultures of Cleveland’s Asian community. Dragon Boat racing incorporates high energy, fitness, team building and recreational exercise in a fun and competitive atmosphere! It is an excellent recreational sport for men and women of all ages and fitness levels. Individual strength is less important than teamwork, coordination and cooperation.

    Proceeds from the Cleveland Dragon Boat Festival will benefit The Gathering Place. The Gathering Place is a caring community that supports, educates and empowers individuals and families touched by cancer through programs and services provided free of charge. Join us for thrilling races, team spirit and fun on the banks of the majestic Cuyahoga River in Cleveland’s Historic Flats. The races will be an exciting and exhilarating event!

    East Ceveland City Council members pass monumental inclusive HUMAN RIGHTS ORDINANCE # 558 & create a Human Rights Commission!

    2011 - 07.28
    Leslye Huff

    Leslye Huff

    SOURCE: http://www.facebook.com/notes/leslye-m-huff/east-ceveland-city-council-members-pass-monumental-inclusive-human-rights-ordina/251593694850681

    UNANIMOUS!! East Cleveland City Council votes “YES!” Sponsored by Council President Dr. Joy Jordan and co-sponsored by Council vice-President Chantelle Lewis, this legislation provides needed protection for lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, and transgender folks against discrimination, in addition to offering protection to folks who experience discrimination based on race, gender, age, disability, or religious choice. Each Councilor expressed, exuberantly, his or her commitment to protecting the rights of every East Cleveland citizen and anyone doing business with East Cleveland, regardless of that person’s gender, race, sexual orientation, disability, age, gender identity, or religious choice! Today, I am so very proud of these statespersons that were elected by the people of East Cleveland who rose up a did what’s right.

    For nearly 2 years, Attorney Leslye M. Huff & fellow Cleveland Stonewall Democrat Board members, developed a cooperative and supportive relationship with the elected officials City of East Cleveland, Ohio. Last year, at East Cleveland City Council’s request, Attorney Huff drafted this history comprehensive legislation – the first of its kind in OHIO – that protects from discrimination in housing, employment, & public accommodations, the rights of all residents or those doing business with the City, including lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, and transgender individuals! The legislation provides for legal redress in the court if mediation or post investigative conciliation fail. – EAST CLEVELAND, OHIO is a hard-working class/poor city, an inner-ring suburb of Cleveland, OHio, & comprised of over 90% minority population.

    SynergyFest This Weekend

    2011 - 07.28

    SynergyFest This Weekend

    Happy SynergyFest Weekend. Please come out this weekend and enjoy the SynergyFest Activities and have a great time with all our visitors to Cleveland this weekend.

    Volunteers are still needed to help with the competitions and events. Please email Mike Readinger to volunteer!!

    Friday, July 29th

    From 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Registration at the Host Hotel – DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Downtown Cleveland-Lakeside. After you check in, head down to the Ballroom, grab a refreshment, sign your forms, receive your gift bag, a souvenir wristband and a official SYNERGYFEST T-Shirt as our welcoming gift. Say hello to your old friends and meet a few new ones!

    At 8:00 PM the Basement Beauties “Bunga-Bunga” Party starts at TWIST Social Club. This special event is hosted by John Katsaros (owner of TWIST) with the help of Cleveland’s premier volunteer society, the Basement Beauties. They are going all out to welcome you to Cleveland. They have closed off the parking lot; put up a big tent; added bars, lights, and music; and have created some libations that will kick your feet right onto the dance floor. The Retro Rider bus will be running from the DoubleTree to TWIST Social Club all night for all the participants staying in the hotel.

    Saturday July 30 –

    Competition begins at 8 AM

    At 6:00 PM the Marys, Divas of Volleyball, welcome you to “Rejuvenate” at Union Cafe. Join the Marys and all of your fellow participants for an evening of specialty cocktails, a hosted buffet, and live entertainment, and of course the results and seedings from Saturday’s games and Sunday’s scheduled playing times.

    At 8:00 PM, “WOW” the premier of Women of the World Party begins. Celebrate this free event until 1:00 AM at TWIST Social Club.

    10:00 PM Kicks off the “Find Fred” Dance Party where Cleveland’s top DJ’s will be spinning at Bounce.

    Sunday – July 31st

    Championship play begins at 8:00 AM.

    All games, matches and rounds of play should end by 6:00 PM. Whether you or your team is eliminated from competition early or you make it into the finals, make plans to stay Sunday night and make your way to “Dancin’ In The Streets”, Cleveland oldest outdoor dance party, right outside the front door of TWIST Social Club

    The 1st Annual Ohio Burlesque Festival will be held in Cleveland, OH August 4th & 5th 2011.

    2011 - 07.28
    1st Annual Burlesque

    1st Annual Burlesque

    SOURCE: http://ohioburlesque.weebly.com/information.html

    The 1st Annual Ohio Burlesque Festival will be held in Cleveland, OH August 4th & 5th 2011.

    This festival will showcase the best burlesque, variety and vaudeville in the country!. Paying respect to Cleveland Burlesque roots of the Roxy Burlesque house that once stood on E 9th and Euclid.

    Our event will be held in 2 different locations:

    Twist Social Club
    Thursday, August 4th
    Kick-Off Party w/ DJ Saint
    Show at 8pm
    Dance Party at 11pm

    FESTIVAL DATE !!! BANDS AND PERFORMERS 8/5
    The Beachland Ballroom
    Friday, August 5th
    Opener Party- 6pm to 8pm
    Bands: Matt Reed and TGP
    Burlesque Show 9pm
    Featuring:

    Dixie D’Vamp OH
    The Bad Girl of Poetry, Kristie LeVangie OH
    N – The ONLY Letter In Burlesque NYC
    Bella Sin OH
    Steele Starling St. Louis, MO
    Bossy Girl Columbus, OH
    Dolly Longlegs Baltimore MD
    Constantinople Cleveland OH
    Elizabeth Couteau Pittsburgh PA
    Naughty Natanya Chicago, IL
    CoCo Chevelle Cleveland, OH
    Alexandria Absinthe, Kansas City Missouri
    Horchata Dentana St. Louis, MO
    Viva Valezz OH
    Goldie Glitteratti, Fort Wayne IN
    Miss Anna Sassin Detroit, MI
    Rubi~nesque! Cleveland, OH
    Lola Van Ella St Louis,MO

    Aug 6th Burlesque Univercity at Be Studios
    Classes by Lola Van Ella!

    Sponsors:

    The Mission Boutique
    Exquisite Corpse Boutique
    Cypherlox.com
    The Cleveland Double Tree
    Twist
    The Beachland Ballroom
    Eric Paul Owens
    Be Studios

    We welcome one an all from far and wide!!

    18th Annual HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner & Auction on Saturday, August 27th, 2011 5PM

    2011 - 07.25

    SOURCE: http://cleveland.hrc.org/node/335

    18th Annual HRC Cleveland Gala Dinner & Auction

    Date:
    Saturday, August 27, 2011 – 5:00pm
    Location:
    The Wolstein Center, 2000 Prospect Ave, Cleveland 44115

    save

    Saturday, August 27, 2011
    The Wolstein Center
    2000 Prospect Ave, Cleveland 44115

    Co-Chairs Michael Smithson and Alana Jochum

    -AGENDA-
    5:00pm – VIP Reception
    6:00pm – Grand Reception
    7:30pm – Dinner & Entertainment
    Purchase Your Tickets Today!

    For more information contact us at: communityevents.cleveland@hrc.org

    Platinum Sponsors:

    Gold Sponsors:

    Silver Sponsors:

    Bronze Sponsors:

    HRC Friends:

    Crystal Sponsor:



    Community Partner:

    In Kind Sponsors:

    If you would like to be a sponsor, volunteer, orto donate to the auction, please e-mail us!

    Volunteer Opportunities:
    Yes
    Ticketed Event:
    Yes

    LGBT/GLBT Cleveland/Akron Meeting Group (Launches on Facebook)

    2011 - 07.25

    source: http://www.meetup.com/LGBT-GLBT-Cleveland-Akron/

    We are a new group and we are growing at a rapid pace. We are warm, kind, open, non-judgmental and we do a lot of fun things. We will have a variety of fun things to do, and I soon to be co-leaders will try to cater to everyone’s needs the best way we can. Some of the things we will doing are coffee nights, Movies, Yoga, Dinners, Walks/Hikes, parties, bowling, sports, health/fitness, cookouts, bon fires, one tank trips, wine tasting, Guys night out, Gals night out, Theater, book club, Cleveland sports outings, pioneer water land, Home Days, Cedar point, County fairs etc etc.

    I really want people just to be happy. Anyone who is gay has a difficult time at one time or another(I know I certainly have) I hope through this group people with be able to form friendships, socialize with other people in the LGBT community,form relationships & maybe meet that someone special?? I know I don’t speak for all people, but I feel most comfortable around other gay people.

    I have tried the bar scene, I have tried dating sites, and a few other venues and it just doesn’t work(way too many stuck up people) And in many ways it has made me fed up.

    When you a form a group like this, I think for the most part people will be down to earth, like minded, friendly and just good all around people. You don’t have to be the most friendly person, just don’t be an asshole either. Say hi to people, introduce yourself. Ask people what there interests are, make small talk, be real. If you can not do these things group is probably not fo you.

    I recently started a frontrunners group(I love to run) if intereted click on the link. www.Frontrunner.org. Click on the United States, then Ohio. Then Cleveland. Scroll down to Facebook to check schedule & you are all set.

    So far the people in the group have been between people in there 20′s to-60′s

    I am slightly worried as this group takes off, that might be some jealousy. Just remember everyone has a back story.

    I sincerely write this from the heart, and with that being said

    LET’S ROCK!!! :-)

    Best

    Justin

    “Labels are for clothes, not for people.”

    .

    After Long Wait, Same-Sex Couples Marry in New York

    2011 - 07.25

    SOURCE: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/nyregion/after-long-wait-same-sex-couples-marry-in-new-york.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all&src=ISMR_HP_LO_MST_FB

    After Long Wait, Same-Sex Couples Marry in New York
    By MICHAEL BARBARO

    Hundreds of gay and lesbian couples, from retirees in Woodstock to college students in Manhattan, rushed to tiny town halls and big city clerks’ offices across New York to wed in the first hours of legal same-sex marriage on Sunday, turning a slumbering summer day into an emotional celebration.

    They arrived by subway cars and stretch limousines, with children and with grandparents, in matching sequined ties and pinstriped suits, to utter words that once seemed unimaginable: I do.

    Even those who had been together for decades, watching same-sex marriage become legal in surrounding states but suffer rejection in New York, said there was something unexpectedly moving and affirming about having their unions recognized by the state in which they live.

    “We feel a little more human today,” Ray Durand, 68, said moments after marrying his partner, Dale Shields, 79, whom he met 42 years ago by a jukebox in a West Village bar.

    The start of same-sex marriage in New York instantly doubled the number of Americans who live in states where gay and lesbian couples can wed. Gay-rights advocates, energized by their victory in New York — the sixth and largest state where it is allowed — are turning their attention next to Maryland, but they face long odds in much of the country, where there are tougher legal and political obstacles.

    Several thousand people rallied in Midtown Manhattan to protest the new law, waving signs that said “God cannot be mocked” and calling for a public referendum on same-sex marriage. Their cries were echoed by smaller crowds in a few cities upstate.

    “Today, we start the war,” State Senator Ruben Díaz Sr., a Bronx Democrat, declared.

    Despite the demonstrations, long lines and bureaucratic glitches, a spirit of patience and good humor pervaded. In Lower Manhattan, brides and grooms defiantly opened dozens of rainbow-colored umbrellas to block the protesters from view.

    There were scenes, too, of striking public embrace. Outside marriage bureaus, police officers offered unsolicited congratulations, passers-by honked their horns and strangers tossed hand-made confetti at the newlyweds.

    After a bruising multiyear legislative battle that ended when the State Senate approved same-sex marriage last month by a narrow margin, some of the state’s top elected officials seemed determined on Sunday to demonstrate public support for the new law.

    Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo hosted a party for same-sex marriage advocates in Manhattan, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg presided at a wedding in the backyard of Gracie Mansion, and the City Council speaker, Christine C. Quinn, visited marriage bureaus in several boroughs.

    The bulk of the day’s marriages took place in New York City, where 659 couples picked up licenses and 484 wed at city marriage bureaus: 293 in Manhattan, 66 in Queens, 66 in Brooklyn, 32 on Staten Island and 27 in the Bronx. Most were New York residents, but 107 of those who married in the city had arrived from other states, mostly those, like California and Alabama, where same-sex marriage is not legal.

    But even far from Manhattan, city and town offices opened their doors on a day when they would ordinarily have been closed, sometimes just for a handful of weddings. Binghamton had five; Buffalo and Syracuse, eight.

    In Shandaken, a town of 3,100 in the Catskills, the town clerk issued just one marriage license, to a New Jersey couple: Katie Morgan, 37, a freelance television producer, and Brooke Barnett, 30, a wine consultant, who have a weekend home in Shandaken.

    Three communities — Niagara Falls, Albany and Hudson — were so eager to marry gays and lesbians that began to do so shortly before midnight.

    At 12:01 a.m., with the roaring waters of Niagara Falls behind him, a tuxedo-clad Mayor Paul A. Dyster officiated at the wedding of Kitty Lambert, 54, and Cheryle Rudd, 53, who have been together since they met while working at a paper goods company in Arizona 12 years ago. They have spent 11 of those years engaged, waiting for New York to rewrite its marriage laws.

    On Saturday night, Ms. Rudd nonetheless experienced last-minute jitters — and the unique burdens of an outdoor marriage just a few feet from a giant cascade. Moments before the ceremony was to begin, a mishap involving a sink in a public bathroom left Ms. Rudd’s tuxedo jacket drenched with water. Ms. Lambert quickly improvised, placing it under a hand dryer.

    “The best part of my life with Cheryle,” Ms. Lambert said, “is that everything has been an adventure.”

    Many of the newly married had already sought every legal protection and held any symbolic ceremony available to same-sex couples. But it was never sufficient, they said. They wanted to marry, just like their parents and friends had.

    Jim Consolantis, 62, and Joseph Oroza, 58, had conducted their own wedding ceremony three decades ago in the back of a church, exchanging vows and Cartier rings. At the Manhattan marriage bureau on Sunday, they did it again, this time in the eyes of the state.

    “This is the legal affirmation of what we vowed 31 years ago,” Mr. Oroza said.

    Across the state, judges, families, friends and even the couples themselves grappled with the uncertain etiquette and evolving lexicon of same-sex marriage. In Manhattan, Alisa Fuentes, a clerk, paused as she reached the end of a wedding service and declared, “I pronounce you married.”

    “I was going to say ‘husband and husband,’ ” she explained. “But we decided to just say ‘married.’ ”

    There were flashes of showmanship and swagger. In Albany, Dale Getto and Barbara Laven, both 53, rented a white Cadillac Escalade limousine to ferry them to their wedding at City Hall. “Don’t hold that against us,” Ms. Laven said.

    This being New York, entrepreneurs flooded the marriage bureaus. In Manhattan, the clerk’s office prominently displayed a range of same-sex marriage paraphernalia: rainbow-colored bouquets, mugs featuring two men or two women and pairs of male and female rubber ducks with matching tuxedos and gowns. A few feet away, a young videographer offered to film weddings, advertising a same-sex marriage discount: $50 for heterosexuals, $30 for gays. “It’s reverse discrimination,” she acknowledged.

    By 5 p.m., the metal barricades had been cleared from outside the marriage bureau on Worth Street, and a slow-moving sanitation truck began to scoop up the confetti.

    The last wedding of the day, a security guard informed a small group of lingering spectators, was over.

    Almost.

    At 5:40 p.m., Andy Berg, 41, and Dominic Pisciotta, 39, walked out of the building, their son standing between them. They had a reason for being last.

    Mr. Pisciotta, an employee at the city’s Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications, had been at the clerk’s office since 7 a.m., ensuring that those who had registered to marry online made it down the aisle. “It was a nice way to finish my work,” he said.

    The men had not planned on marrying on Day 1, Mr. Pisciotta said, but their young children had been insistent.

    “We’ve been waiting for this,” said their 8-year-old son, Spencer Berg-Pisciotta, “since we were, like, 4 or 5.”

    Reporting was contributed by Sam Dolnick, Matt Flegenheimer, Danny Hakim, Javier Hernandez and Thomas Kaplan.

    The 1st Annual Ohio Burlesque Festival will be held in Cleveland, OH August 4th & 5th 2011.

    2011 - 07.17

    The 1st Annual Ohio Burlesque Festival will be held in Cleveland, OH August 4th & 5th 2011.

    This festival will showcase the best burlesque, variety and vaudeville in the country!. Paying respect to Cleveland Burlesque roots of the Roxy Burlesque house that once stood on E 9th and Euclid.

    Our event will be held in 2 different locations:

    Twist Social Club
    Thursday, August 4th
    Kick-Off Party w/ DJ Saint
    Show at 8pm
    Dance Party at 11pm

    The Beachland Ballroom
    Friday, August 5th
    Opener Party- 6pm to 8pm
    Bands: Matt Reed and TGP
    Burlesque Show 9pm
    Featuring:

    Dixie D’Vamp OH
    The Bad Girl of Poetry, Kristie LeVangie OH
    N – The ONLY Letter In Burlesque NYC
    Bella Sin OH
    Steele Starling St. Louis, MO
    Dolly Longlegs Baltimore MD
    Constantinople Cleveland OH
    Elizabeth Couteau Pittsburgh PA
    Naughty Natanya Chicago, IL
    CoCo Chevelle Cleveland, OH
    Alexandria Absinthe, Kansas City Missouri
    Horchata Dentana St. Louis, MO
    Viva Valezz OH
    Goldie Glitteratti, Fort Wayne IN
    Miss Anna Sassin Detroit, MI
    Lola Van Ella St Louis,MO

    Aug 6th Burlesque University at Be Studios
    Classes by Lola Van Ella!

    Sponsors:

    The Mission Boutique
    Exquisite Corpse Boutique
    Cypherlox.com
    The Cleveland Double Tree
    Twist
    The Beachland Ballroom
    Eric Paul Owens
    Be Studios

    We welcome one an all from far and wide!!

    SynergyFest 2011

    2011 - 07.15

    SYNERGYFEST

    July 28-31, 2011
    Cleveland, OH USA

    Cleveland Synergy Foundation, Cleveland State University, DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Downtown Cleveland-Lakeside, The Corner Alley, Union Cafe, Vedda & Sons Printing, and TWIST Social Club invite you to celebrate the 2nd annual GLBTS multiple sports and cultural event SYNERGYFEST.

    Participants from all across the USA and Canada will converge on Cleveland for a weekend filled with sporting competitions, sponsored parties and community building. More than 800 participants will compete in:

    Aquatics – Swimming
    Basketball

    Billiards
    Bowling

    Cards

    Flag Football

    Women’s Softball
    Tennis

    Volleyball
    Wii

    Friday, July 29th from 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Registration at the Host Hotel – DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Downtown Cleveland-Lakeside. After you check in, head down to the Ballroom, grab a refreshment, sign your forms, receive your gift bag, a souvenir wristband and a offical SYNERGYFEST T-Shirt as our welcoming gift. Say hello to your old friends and meet a few new ones!

    At 8:00 PM the Basement Beauties “Bunga-Bunga” Party starts at TWIST Social Club. This special event is hosted by John Katsaros (owner of TWIST) with the help of Cleveland’s premier volunteer society, the Basement Beauties. They are going all out to welcome you to Cleveland. They have closed off the parking lot; put up a big tent; added bars, lights, and music; and have created some libations that will kick your feet right onto the dance floor. The Retro Rider bus will be running from the DoubleTree to TWIST Social Club all night for all the participants staying in the hotel.

    WARNING: Staying out later than 1:00 AM will prove to be hazardous to playing early the next morning.

    Starting at 8:00 am on Saturday, July 30th, the competition continues throughout the day. At 6:00 PM the Marys, Divas of Volleyball, welcome you to “Rejuvenate” at Union Cafe. Join the Marys and all of your fellow participants for an evening of specialty cocktails, a hosted buffet, and live entertainment, and of course the results and seedings from Saturday’s games and Sunday’s scheduled playing times.

    At 8:00 PM, “WOW” the premier of Women of the World Party begins. Celebrate this free event until 1:00 AM at TWIST Social Club.

    10:00 PM Kicks off the “Find Fred” Dance Party where Cleveland’s top DJ’s will be spinning at Bounce.

    On July 31st, Sunday morning Championship play begins at 8:00 AM. All games, matches and rounds of play should end by 6:00 PM. Whether you or your team is eliminated from competition early or you make it into the finals, make plans to stay Sunday night and make your way to “Dancin’ In The Streets”, Cleveland oldest outdoor dance party, right outside the front door of TWIST Social Club.

    As you can see, from the moment the weekend kicks off with the Registration events, after the last medals and trophies are awarded to the winners, until the last party ends, the entire weekend will be packed full of activities for participants, spectators, volunteers and corporate sponsors.

    Contact:

    Mary Motley at ml@csfmail.net or

    Mike Readinger at mr@csfmail.net

    Drag Softball 2011 on July 23rd 2011 at 5PM at Gordan Park…

    2011 - 07.15

    In 2006, North Coast Softball started an annual tradition, called “Drag Ball,” a league fundraising drag softbal game.  Players and friends from the North Coast Softball league dress up as the opposite gender to play softball.  Admission is a requested donation of $5 and the proceeds go to league costs. This always entertaining, adult themed, campy event lasts under two hours and will keep you laughing the entire time!  A live-DJ playing the latest hits is at your disposal. Last, but not least, are the cheerleaders. These raunchy “girls” keep the crowd in the game with their brilliant and inspiring cheers.

    Themes have included: “70′s vs. 80′s”, “Good Girls vs. Bad Girls”, “Heroes vs. Villains”, and “Cleveland Trash v. Pittsburgh Trash.”

    Characters we’ve seen on the field include: The Golden Girls, Starsky and Hutch, Sunny and Cher, Carrie, Wicked Witch of the West, Dorothy, Tina Turner, Paris Hilton, Lara Croft, Superwoman, The Riddler, Xena, Octo-mom, and many more!

    Mark your calendars for July 23, 2011 at 5PM at Gordon Park!

    DRAG BALL V PICS – 2010

    DRAG BALL IV PICS – 2009

    MORE 2009 VIDEOS AND PICS BELOW

    MEET CLEVELAND’S UNDISCOVERED NATURAL TALENT SQUAD AS THEY INTRODUCE THEMSELVES BEFORE THE GAME:

    BrettDrag2
    Pitts

    RobPitts2

    Shop

    PICS FROM DRAG BALL II-III (Above)

    LGBT Center of Greater Cleveland Party

    2011 - 07.15

    TICKETS ON SALE NOW! FOR GARDEN PARTY DETAILS

    CLICK HERE

    CENTER SPOTLIGHT

    This week we would like to Spotlight

    our 2011 Garden Party Host Committee.

    There is still time for you to be a part of our

    2011 Garden Party Host Committee.

    You can join the host committee here.

    Henry Hawley & George Vassos, Honorary Co-Chairs

    Ron Bailey & Bill Edwards, Homeowners & Hosts

    Steve Adams

    Christopher Amato & Jorge Castillo

    James Anderson & David Wittkowsky

    State Representative Nickie J. Antonio & Jean Kosmac

    Dan & Susan Brennan

    Carrie Carpenter

    Matthew Coates

    Mark & Bill Corcoran

    John Corlett

    Meg Doerr & Dan Bode

    Tim Downing & Ken Press

    John Farina & Adam Tully

    Thomas Ganley & Tony Stillings

    Thom Geist & Christopher Leo

    James Graham & David Dusek

    Deba Gray & Serena Harragin

    Gary Gumz & Bill Miller

    Eric Hammer & Richard Skerl

    Joe Hazen & Tim Howard

    KC Koester & Sharon Hammer

    John Koncar & Claudio Caviglia

    Valda Lewis & Dorothy Miller

    Valarie J. McCall, City of Cleveland

    Diane Millett & Susan Dean

    Scott Morgan & Joe Lamm

    Tom Nobbe & David Ward

    Stephan Pepper & Jack Dusek

    Thom Rankin & Ray Zander

    Bob Sferra & Matt Walsh

    Bill Tregoning & Steven Musgrave

    Russell Trusso M.D.

    Ted Wammes & TC Whysall

    Michael Wojtanowski, M.D. & Matt Arnold

    Raymond Wolf & Robert Benyo, M.D.

    Michael Zinicola & David Bailey

    SPRING/SUMMER CAMPAIGN
    Thank you to the 131* individuals and community groups that have contributed to the LGBT Community Center’s challenge campaign.

    If you haven’t given your tax-deductible gift yet,

    won’t you please contribute something today?

    Click Here

    to help your

    LGBT Community Center

    meet the challenge.

    *Over 17,000 people attend Pride for one day; but only 131 have also contributed to the Center that works on your behalf all year long. Please help the Center provide vital programming for our community.

    Contribute today.

    2011 Dancin’ in the Streets

    2011 - 07.14
    July 31, 2011
    3:00 pm to 11:00 pm
    3:00 pm to 11:00 pm

    One of Cleveland’s biggest LGBT events raising money and awareness for the AIDS Taskforce and the HIV/AIDS community – Dancin’ in the Streets – returns this year on July 31, 2011. This year’s event is, as it has been since 2005, a collaboration between the AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland and John Katsaros – one of the most philanthropic business owners in the Cleveland’s LGBT community.

    AIDS has been with us for the last 30 years and Dancin’ in the Streets has been around for 27 of them. To commemorate 30 years of loss, love and life, the AIDS Taskforce and John Katsaros are proud to announce that this year’s Dancin’ in the Streets will be FREE!

    If you are unable to attend, please consider making a contribution by clicking here.

    The AIDS Taskforce and the many volunteers planning Dancin take very seriously the commitment to maintaining an event that is accessible to people in our community while raising much needed funds to support people with HIV/AIDS.

    That is why the agency is asking the community to show their support on July 31 by donating as generously as they can at the event gates. A minimum donation of $10 is requested – but individuals are encouraged to donate more if they can, or something less if they can’t. Every donation, no matter how great or small, is tremendously welcomed and appreciated.

    The generosity of everyone at the gates to Dancin’ in the form of donations, as well as all outdoor beer and vodka sales, goes directly to AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland and provides crucial support to this important community organization.

    In addition, with a minimum donation of $10, attendees will also be able to enjoy discounts on beverages purchased outdoors at Dancin’ all day long. No tickets are needed and no one will be turned away. (For those who have purchased tickets in advance, 100% of your donation will go directly to the AIDS Taskforce and the drink discount will be honored.)

    “Dancin’ in the Streets is a part of our LGBT and HIV/AIDS community. No individual or entity owns Dancin’; it belongs to the community, “ said Tracy Jones, CEO of the AIDS Taskforce. “It belongs to the thousands of people who have come together over the years to make a difference in the lives of people impacted by HIV/AIDS. It belongs to the thousands of clients of the AIDS Taskforce who have benefitted over the years from the generosity of people just like you. Dancin’ belongs to all of us.”

    In some years Dancin’ was a make-or-break event: if the event didn’t succeed, the Taskforce didn’t pay its bills. Things are a little different today, but the volunteers, passion, and money to keep providing services and working to prevent new infections is still necessary. While Dancin’ may no longer be directly managed by the Taskforce, it still plays a critical role in the agency’s success.

    The event kicks off at 3 pm on Clifton Boulevard between West 116 and West 117 Streets and runs until 11 pm. All donations made at the gate and through outdoor beer and vodka sales are 100% directly contributed to the AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland. So, on July 31, please join us at one of Cleveland’s favorite events for another day of fun, laughter, love, music and most of all, dancing!

    New York couples to wed next weekend

    2011 - 07.13

    source: http://www.gaypeopleschronicle.com/stories11/july/0715114.htm

    by Anthony Glassman

    New York City–Couples in a number of cities across the state of New York will find clerks’ offices open on Sunday, July 24, as municipal governments try to issue marriage licenses on the day the state’s same-sex marriage law takes effect.

    Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the bill into law on June 24 to go into effect 30 days later, so it will be in force on Sunday, July 24. City clerk offices are not usually open on Sundays, but many municipalities, including Binghamton, Syracuse and New York City, are eager to allow people to avail themselves of the law as soon as legally possible.

    In New York City, for instance, some state judges have volunteered to be present to both waive the 24-hour waiting period between getting a license and being married, as well as to perform the weddings themselves.

    Officials in Ithaca, Woodstock and some other towns have said that they will decide whether to open on Sunday based on public demand.

    However, Islip and Brookhaven, the two Long Island municipalities that encompass most of the Fire Island gay vacation spot, will not open on Sunday. They will, however, have extra staff on hand on Monday to handle marriage license applications.

    Couples do not need to be New York residents to marry there. Clerk’s offices in Mayville, Jamestown, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and other towns nearest to Ohio will be open on Monday, July 25. Ohio, however, will not presently recognize a same-sex marriage under current law and its 2004 ban amendment.

    Mayor Michael Bloomberg will officiate at the marriage of his chief policy advisor, John Feinblatt, and his commissioner for consumer affairs, Jonathan Mintz. The couple, who have been together 14 years, will be married on July 24. They have two daughters.

    However, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani seems to be avoiding his pledge to marry the gay couple who sheltered him during his messy 2001 divorce.

    Howard Koeppel and Mark Hsiao let Giuliani use their Midtown apartment when he was trying to avoid Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s residence. Koeppel says that Giuliani told the men that were New York to ever legalize same-sex marriage, they would be “one of the first ones I would marry,” he told the New York Post. Now, however, Giuliani won’t return his phone calls.

    “It seems like a lot of people he was close to become persona non grata,” he noted.

    Giuliani would be able to perform the wedding, since mayors of the city retain the power to perform weddings even after they leave office.

    New York will become the sixth state with full same-sex marriage, plus the District of Columbia. The others are Iowa, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont and New Hampshire. A seventh state, California, had full marriage for five months in 2008, before voters passed a ban amendment.

    Also in North America, Canada has had full marriage since 2005, and same-sex marriages done in Mexico City are recognized throughout that country.

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    This material is copyrighted by the Gay People’s Chronicle. Permission is given to repost no more than the headline, byline, and one or two paragraphs, with the full name of the Gay People’s Chronicle and a link to the full article on our website. Reproduction of the entire article is prohibited without specific written permission.

    AIDS The 30 Years War

    2011 - 07.12
    source: http://www.advocate.com/AIDSThe30YearsWar/

    As AIDS enters its fourth decade, we look back at the events that changed the course of history

    It’s not a birthday to celebrate, but the 30th year of AIDS does remind us to appreciate how far we’ve come. From the early days of panic and paranoia to today’s promise, the world has seen monumental advances in not only prevention and treatment but also acceptance and tolerance. A diverse group, including scientists, politicians, and reality stars, helped contribute to these sweeping changes and increased the odds of AIDS not living to 40. Here are some of the people and moments that brought us to now…

    1981
    June: Due to reports of unusual outbreaks of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) and the rare cancer Kaposi’s sarcoma among gay men in New York City and Los Angeles, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention establishes a task force on Kaposi’s Sarcoma and opportunistic infections. more
    September: From his Manhattan apartment, activist Larry Kramer begins to mobilize gay New Yorkers with Kaposi’s sarcoma.
    1982
    Michael Callen June: The CDC reports that there have been several cases of a syndrome involving PCP, Kaposi’s, and other opportunistic infections among gay men in California’s Los Angeles and Orange counties. This suggests the infectious agent may be sexually transmitted. more
    July: By the beginning of the month, 452 cases of the syndrome, from 23 states, have been reported to the CDC. more
    1983
    more
    January: The Red Cross and other blood banks propose banning blood donations from gay males.
    May: San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein (below) declares the first week of the month AIDS Awareness Week
    August: Activist Michael Callen (below left) and others testify during the first congressional hearing on AIDS.
    September: The ACLU brings attention to an “AIDS Alert,” a list of people with AIDS circulated among Seattle police. more
    1984 more
    October: In an effort to stop the spread of AIDS, the city of San Francisco shuts down gay bathhouses. In three years, 817 cases of AIDS had been reported in San Francisco.
    December: Ryan White, a 13-year-old hemophiliac in Kokomo, Ind., is diagnosed with AIDS, having contracted HIV through tainted blood. more
    Liz Taylor
    1985
    March: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration licenses the first blood test for HIV antibodies.
    April: The Normal Heart, Larry Kramer’s semiautobiographical play about the AIDS epidemic, premieres at New York City’s off-Broadway Public Theater.
    July: Ann-Margret and Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley participate in the city’s first AIDS Walk.
    September: The American Foundation for AIDS research is formed with Elizabeth Taylor (left) as founding chairman. more
    October: Rock Hudson, 59, dies of AIDS complications at his Beverly Hills home.
    1986
    February: The Reagan administration proposes rejecting immigrants who test positive for HIV.
    February: A witty look at gay life in 1980s New York, the low-budget but much-loved Parting GlancesParting Glances features Steve Buscemi as an unrepentant rock star losing his battle with AIDS.
    June: The federal government commits $100 million over five years to evaluate promising AIDS medications.
    1987
    March:
    Act Up
    The FDA approves the first AIDS drug, AZT, marketed as Retrovir.
    October: Congress overwhelmingly passes the Helms Amendment more.
    October: During the largest gay rights march in the nation’s history, activist Cleve Jones’s NAMES Project Memorial Quilt is unveiled to commemorate those lost to AIDS.
    1988
    May: The Centers for Disease Control and Surgeon General Koop distribute the pamphlet “Understanding AIDS” to each of the 107 million homes in America.
    August: Presidential candidate George H.W. Bush endorses protections against discrimination for people with HIV/AIDS.
    October: Congress passes an $800 million AIDS research package, with a provision from Sen. Jesse Helms requiring that testing confidentiality be dropped.
    1989
    March: Three thousand AIDS demonstrators storm New York’s City Hall to draw attention to the problems within the city’s hospital system.
    April: President George H.W. Bush is heckled for his inaction on AIDS at a nationally televised speech on the bicentennial of George Washington’s inauguration.
    September: The AIDS charity album Red Hot + Blue (above) is released, featuring reworked Cole Porter classics sung by artists including Annie Lennox, Tom Waits, and Debbie Harry. more
    1990
    February: Artist Keith Haring dies of AIDS-related complications at age 31.
    May: Longtime Companion becomes one of the first American films to focus almost solely on AIDS.

    August: Congress passes the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act, funding a variety of AIDS-related services.

    1991
    June: Jeremy Irons is the first celebrity to wear the red AIDS awareness ribbon publicly, at the 1991 Tony Awards. The Red Ribbon Project was conceived by New York’s Visual AIDS Artists Caucus.
    August: A major research study indicates that AZT can slow progression to AIDS in asymptomatic HIV-positive people. more
    October: A second anti-HIV drug receives FDA approval—didanosine, sold under the brand name Videx.
    November: Freddie Mercury (right), the flamboyant lead singer of Queen, is the latest celebrity to die of AIDS-related causes. He was 45.
    1992
    January: To prevent the spread of HIV, the Los Angeles Unified School District approves the distribution of condoms in high schools. August: Mary Fisher, an HIV-positive woman, addresses the Republican National Convention.
    December: The Bush White House allows the Food and Drug Administration to fast-track experimental anti-HIV drugs.
    1993
    May: Tony Kushner’s Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, the first part of his AIDS epic, opens on Broadway. It wins a Tony award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. more
    September: HBO’s dramatization of Randy Shilts’s groundbreaking book And the Band Played On premieres.
    December: The film Philadelphia tells the story of a gay lawyer (Tom Hanks, right, in an Oscar-winning role) who sues his former firm after he’s fired for having AIDS.
    1994
    November: A study indicates that AZT can cut mother-to-child transmission of HIV by two thirds.
    November: The Real World: San Francisco follows the trials of HIV-positive AIDS activist Pedro Zamora. more
    1995
    June: President Clinton establishes the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS by executive order.
    December: The FDA approves saquinavir (brand name Invirase), the first in a new class of drugs called protease inhibitors, whose use with other drugs becomes known colloquially as a “cocktail.”
    1996
    July: Hopeful news emerges from the international AIDS conference in Vancouver. Scientists report that new drug combinations have dramatically improved the health of many people with AIDS. more
    September: On ER, heterosexual physician assistant Jeanie Boulet (played by Gloria Reuben, below) learns she has HIV.
    1997
    January: New York City health officials report the first documented drop in AIDS deaths—the number of city residents dying of the disease declined 30% from 1995 to 1996.
    February: CDC officials say there were 13% fewer deaths in the first half of 1996 than in the same period in 1995. The trend is attributed to the new drug therapies.
    June: The New York Times reports post-exposure prophylaxis, or PEP, medication is being offered to those who may have been exposed to the virus but have not tested positive for infection.
    1998
    February: Scientists announce that they detected HIV in an African man’s blood sample preserved from 1959, making it the oldest documented case of HIV infection.
    June: The FDA approves the first human trial of an AIDS vaccine, to involve 5,000 volunteers throughout the United States.
    November: The Joint United Nations AIDS Programme announces that HIV infections worldwide rose 10% over the past year, with great increases among women and youths.
    1999
    February: New York City health officials announce that a study of young gay men in the city shows 12% of them are infected with HIV. more
    May: The World Health Organization’s annual report says AIDS has become the fourth leading cause of death worldwide.
    August: The CDC reports that deaths from AIDS continue to drop, but at a lower rate than they did immediately after the introduction of drug cocktails. U.S. AIDS deaths declined 42% from 1996 to 1997, but only 20% from 1997 to 1998. more
    2000
    January: The CDC announces that 1998 marked the first time there were more AIDS diagnoses among black and Latino gay men than among white gay men.
    February: New research indicates AIDS may have originated as far back as 1930.
    November: The World Health Organization reports that new HIV infections rose during the year, but the infection rate stabilized in sub-Saharan Africa for the first time.
    2001
    February: Results from a study involving six large U.S. cities indicate that 30% of young black gay men are HIV-positive.
    June: On the 20th anniversary of the epidemic, the United Nations devotes a special session to HIV and AIDS, the first for a public health issue. All 189 member countries sign a Declaration of Commitment on HIV and AIDS, which includes pledges to reduce HIV prevalence among young people by 25% in the hardest-hit nations by 2005, and to reduce it by 25% globally by 2010.
    2002
    February: The American version of the British drama Queer as Folk introduces Robert Gant’s Ben Bruckner as an HIV-positive love interest to Hal Sparks’s HIV-negative Michael Novotny.
    April: The World Health Organization outlines steps to make antiretroviral drugs more accessible to people in poor nations.
    November The FDA approves an HIV test than can provide results within 20 minutes.
    2003
    January: President George W. Bush outlines what will become PEPFAR—the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, aimed at fighting AIDS in developing countries.
    November: Results from a trial of the AidsVax vaccine show it failed to prevent HIV transmission. The trial was conducted among injection-drug users in Thailand.
    December On World AIDS Day, the WHO announces its “3 by 5″ plan, to have 3 million people in resource-poor countries on antiretroviral drugs by 2005.
    2004
    February: The first PEPFAR funds are distributed—$350 million to 14 countries, a month after congressional approval.
    July: The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announces a $50 million donation to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
    December Designers Against AIDS launches with the mission of using pop culture components to raise media awareness of HIV/AIDS.
    2005
    September: GlaxoSmithKline’s patent on Retrovir (AZT) expires, meaning any company can produce generic versions without paying royalties, and the FDA approves four generics.
    November: The WHO announces that the 3 by 5 plan is far short of its goal, but it estimates that expanded access to treatment saved between 250,000 and 350,000 lives during the year.
    2006
    July:The FDA approves Atripla, the first once-daily single-tablet regimen. From Bristol-Myers Squibb and Gilead Sciences, it combines efavirenz, emtricitabine, and tenofovir.
    December: Results are in from two African studies that indicate male circumcision can help prevent HIV transmission, although there are fears that some populations may not accept the procedure and that it could lead to a lax approach to prevention.
    2007
    January: A large-scale trial of a vaginal microbicide is stopped because the product is not preventing HIV and may even be enabling it.
    March: Due to the studies released the preceding December, WHO endorses male circumcision as part of a comprehensive AIDS prevention strategy.
    April: WHO reports that 2,000,000 people in low- and middle-income countries are receiving HIV drugs—only 28% of those who need such treatment.
    2008
    August: The annual report from UNAIDS notes AIDS deaths worldwide dropped more
    November: German doctors announce that they have essentially cured an American patient of HIV more
    2009
    January: Barack Obama is inaugurated as U.S. president. He immediately lifts an executive order that had denied U.S. aid to international family planning organizations more
    March: Pope Benedict XVI reiterates the Roman Catholic Church’s opposition to condom use, saying it may actually contribute to the spread of HIV.
    2010
    August: State and federal budget crises threaten AIDS Drug Assistance Programs in several states. more
    September: Project Runway contestant Mondo Guerra reveals that a design he created, featuring oversize plus signs, was inspired by his HIV-positive status.
    November: The secretary of the Smithsonian, G. Wayne Clough, withdraws an edited version of A Fire in My Belly a silent film by artist David Wojnarowicz (who died of AIDS complications in 1992) from the exhibit ‘Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture’ after complaints from the Catholic League.

    2011
    March: U.N. secretary-general Ban Ki-moon releases a report urging world leaders to take bold action against the AIDS epidemic, warning that recent progress is fragile.
    more
    March: Elizabeth Taylor dies of congestive heart failure at age 79.
    April: Larry Kramer’s Larry Kramerlandmark 1985 AIDS play The Normal Heart gets its first Broadway production

    GARDEN PARTY 2011 SUNDAY JULY 24, 2011 TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

    2011 - 07.11

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    We are very pleased to announce our 2011 Garden Party Honorary Chairs
    Henry H. Hawley
    Cleveland Museum of Art 1960-2002 Curator, Decorative Arts and Sculpture

    and his partner George S. Vassos Cleveland Institute of Music 1956-2006 Chairman, Department of Voice
    Henry and George have been long time supporters of the Center, and Henry has served on our Board of Directors for multiple terms. Being well respected in our community and throughout their careers locally, we recognize their contributions to helping make Cleveland a significantly more fabulous place to live, work and enjoy the arts!

    Please join us on Sunday, July 24 at 2:00pm
    for the Garden Party in Hunting Valley.
    “An Elegant Summer Picnic — Celebrate Summer’s Bounty”!

    Tickets go on sale June 10.
    You can join the Host Committee Now by calling:
    Samara McCullough at the Center, 216-651-5428, ext.15
    or Jan Cline at ext. 12

    Official Dancin’ Press Release – Dancin’ in the Streets to be FREE this year!

    2011 - 07.11

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

    June 11, 2011

    Direct questions to:

    John Farina at 216-357-2221

    jfarina@atfgc.org

    Dancin’ in the Streets returns for 27th year.

    In commemoration of 30 years of AIDS and community support, attendance this year to be free of charge.

    Cleveland, Ohio – One of Cleveland’s biggest LGBT events raising money and awareness for the AIDS Taskforce and the HIV/AIDS community – Dancin’ in the Streets – returns this year on July 31, 2011. This year’s event is, as it has been since 2005, a collaboration between the AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland and John Katsaros – one of the most philanthropic business owners in the Cleveland’s LGBT community.

    AIDS has been with us for the last 30 years and Dancin’ in the Streets has been around for 27 of them. To commemorate 30 years of loss, love and life, the AIDS Taskforce and John Katsaros are proud to announce that this year’s Dancin’ in the Streets will be FREE!

    The AIDS Taskforce and the many volunteers planning Dancin take very seriously the commitment to maintaining an event that is accessible to people in our community while raising much needed funds to support people with HIV/AIDS.

    That is why the agency is asking the community to show their support on July 31 by donating as generously as they can at the event gates. A minimum donation of $10 is requested – but individuals are encouraged to donate more if they can, or something less if they can’t. Every donation, no matter how great or small, is tremendously welcomed and appreciated.

    The generosity of everyone at the gates to Dancin’ in the form of donations, as well as all outdoor beer and vodka sales, goes directly to AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland and provides crucial support to this important community organization.

    In addition, with a minimum donation of $10, attendees will also be able to enjoy discounts on beverages purchased outdoors at Dancin’ all day long. No tickets are needed and no one will be turned away. (For those who have purchased tickets in advance, 100% of your donation will go directly to the AIDS Taskforce and the drink discount will be honored).

    “Dancin’ in the Streets is a part of our LGBT and HIV/AIDS community. No individual or entity owns Dancin’; it belongs to the community, “ said Tracy Jones, CEO of the AIDS Taskforce. “It belongs to the thousands of people who have come together over the years to make a difference in the lives of people impacted by HIV/AIDS. It belongs to the thousands of clients of the AIDS Taskforce who have benefitted over the years from the generosity of people just like you. Dancin’ belongs to all of us.”

    In some years Dancin’ was a make-or-break event: if the event didn’t succeed, the Taskforce didn’t pay its bills. Things are a little different today, but the volunteers, passion, and money to keep providing services and working to prevent new infections is still necessary. While Dancin’ may no longer be directly managed by the Taskforce, it still plays a critical role in the agency’s success.

    The event kicks off at 3 pm on Clifton Boulevard between West 116 and West 117 Streets and runs until 11 pm. All donations made at the gate and through outdoor beer and vodka sales are 100% directly contributed to the AIDS Taskforce of Greater Cleveland. So, on July 31, please join us at one of Cleveland’s favorite events for another day of fun, laughter, love, music and most of all, dancing!

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