SGN May 22, 2015 - Section 1

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Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 21 Volume 43

FRIDAY May 22, 2015 FREE!

25¢ in bookstores & newsstands

WELCOME! Thirst Seattle Volleyball Players and Magnitude 15 Ruggers

Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Seattle Volleyball Club hosts Thirst Seattle NAGVA Championships 2015 – May 21-24 33rd Annual North American Gay VolA full week of camaraderie, competition leyball Association Championships to draw and events are planned, with 1,500+ athletes 1,500+ athletes and fans to Seattle this and fans converging on Seattle to play volweekend leyball, and to also dine, drink, shop, sightsee, and enjoy our diverse Seattle night life, Seattle Volleyball Club is hosting Thirst all while vacationing here in our beautiful Seattle, the 33rd Annual North Ameri- city. The weekend of events and competition can Gay Volleyball Association (NAGVA) officially kickoff May 21st, but many of the Championships, May 21st thru 24th at the athletes will be arriving earlier as they begin CenturyLink Field Event Center (1000 Oc- their vacations in Seattle. The Seattle Wescidental Ave. S.). 136 teams from all over tin is the official host hotel for Thirst Seattle, North America, and as far away as Puerto where we have over 1200 rooms booked Rico and Hawaii, are meeting in Seattle to with volleyball players enjoying their stay. compete for the ultimate prize, the NAGVA The fantastic CenturyLink Field Event CenChampionship Trophy and bragging rights for the next year of competition. see THIrst page 5

Ban on Gay Scout leaders must end, BSA president Robert Gates says by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) must end their ban on Gay Scout leaders, BSA President Robert Gates said in a speech May 21. Gates is a former Eagle Scout, winner of the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award, and a member of the Order of the Arrow, BSA’s honor society. He has been president of the organization since last year. He was formerly Secretary of Defense for both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, and oversaw the end of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.” Gates bluntly told BSA’s annual meeting that “The status quo in our movement’s membership standards cannot be sustained.” The group cannot continue to “ignore growing internal challenges to our current membership policy,” he said. “We must deal with the world as it is, not as we might wish it to be,” Gates added. “Any other alternative will be the end of us as a national movement.”

In 2013 more than 60% of BSA leaders voted to end the group’s discrimination against Gay Scouts, but the policy of excluding Gay adults as leaders was maintained. Since 70% of Boy Scout troops are sponsored by churches, Gates called for local sponsors to be able “to determine the standards for their Scout leaders.” “We must, at all costs, preserve the religious freedom of our church partners to do this,” Gates said. Gates said no policy changes would be made at the national meeting, but the policy might be revised soon, so that local Scout organizations could decide on their own whether to allow Gays as leaders. “It seems like the Boy Scouts will continue an internal dialogue about the subject and that a change within the next year or two is imminent,” Zach Wahls, the executive director of Scouts for Equality, said in a statement. “While our work won’t be done until we see a full end to their ban on gay adults once and for all, today’s decision moves the Boy Scouts in that direction,” Wahls added.

Amid rise in reports of bias crimes against Seattle’s LGBTQ community SPD launches May 15 GSBA Safe Place program Scholarship Dinner was by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor

– or night – inside this park located in the center of the city’s LGBTQ community and is named after the state’s first openly Gay Seattle is beautiful when the sun comes legislator. out; suddenly all the gray days of winter and CAL ANDERSON PARK fall seem worth it. It’s picturesque. It’s peaceOn Wednesday, a group of five individuful. It’s Seattle in the summer. In droves, Seattleites and Seattle-transplants alike, enjoy als were taken into custody after an early Seattle City Parks. On Capitol Hill these in- morning armed robbery reported on the clude Cal Anderson and Volunteer Parks. By eastern edge of Cal Anderson Park at 12:40 now though, everyone knows that Cal An- a.m. According to East Precinct radio disderson Park – particularly after the sun goes patches, at least two victims suffered facial down – also attracts violent criminals, drug injuries and were robbed near 11th Ave. and trafficking, and in some cases anti-LGBTQ E. Olive St. Witnesses said as many as eight or nine people could be seen fleeing the area bias crimes. As an example, in January a knife attack southbound on 11th Ave. after the holdup on three men involving a suspect who alleg- in which at least two guns were brandished. edly yelled derogatory remarks about their A witness who heard the melee called 911 sexual orientation during the assault result- bringing police quickly to the scene. Minutes later the five males were spoted in the arrest of a 37-year-old who is now ted a few blocks away walking on E. Pike facing a hate crime charge in the case. But it isn’t just bias crimes; violence has St. at Boylston. Police contacted the group been known to occur all hours of the day

the most successful ever! Celebrating 25 years Reaching two million dollars in scholarships awarded since 1990 Presenting $350,000 to 48 outstanding students Raising a record $200,000

It all made for a truly amazing evening! We heard stories from our scholarship Founders and early champions in a moving video created by InterChange Media (included below). We brought this visionary group on stage for Michael Auch to present the Richard C. Rolfs Scholarship and Bob Dlugosh & Don McKee to present the Founders’ scholarships. Mayor Ed Murray welcomed our guests and touchingly reminded us of other early scholarship chamsee Safe place page 3 pions who have passed. During the evening,

we were saddened to hear of the continuing challenges of poverty, violence, and lack of family support which so many of our scholars face. Our keynote address, given by GSBA’s first four-year scholar, Laramie Smith, was incredible. Laramie shared the story of her journey, from being disowned by her family as a teenager, leaving her with no hope of being able to attend college, to the difference that four years of scholarship support from GSBA meant to her, knowing she had the backing of an entire community. Today Laramie has a PhD and just last week was appointed Assistant Professor at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine. There was not a dry eye in the room see gsba page 6


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