SGN January 3, 2014 - Section 1

Page 1

Issue 1 Volume 41

Celebrating 40 Years!

FRIDAY January 3, 2014 FREE! 25¢ in bookstores & newsstands

Sec 2 Pg. 1

Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Arsonist attacks Neighbours nightclub by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor There are two things that you don’t want anywhere near a nightclub. Fire and fuel. They equal death. We’ve all read the headlines or watched the video footage of charred bodies coming out of a smoldering club somewhere

the band that was performing, lit a firework onstage and caught the place on fire – which injured another 117 people. In December 2004, the world recoiled in horror as reports of a deadly nightclub fire emerged. In one of Argentina’s worst disasters, a flare ignited the foam ceiling at a nightclub packed with teenagers,

“This could potentially have been much worse. You have an establishment full of patrons and an intentionally set fire. That’s a very dangerous situation.” sparking a blaze that killed 175 people and injured more than 700. Some 4,000 fans at the concert by the band Los Callejeros fought to reach the exits as burning debris fell on them. But they found at least four escape routes padlocked or wired shut in an apparent effort to prevent people from entering the club without paying. see neighbours page 13

komo news

around the world. In January of last year, a blaze raced through a crowded nightclub in southern Brazil, killing more than 230 people as the air filled with deadly smoke and panicked party-goers stampeded toward the exits. It was the world’s deadliest nightclub fire in more than a decade. Nearly half of the 500 patrons that were inside perished in the fire that was started accidentally when a member of

New Year’s Eve Seattle 2013/2014 – 750 revelers exited Neighbours after fire discovered.

Sotomayor sets Jan. 3 Billie Jean King to Gay Russians: “You are not alone.” deadline for briefs on In an exclusive interview, tennis legend Billie Jean King told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour she is “thrilled” to represent the United States at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. “I’m very proud to go as an athlete, and as a Gay woman,” she said. “I’m thrilled.” Asked by Amanpour if there will be any protests, King said, “Maybe we should wave rainbow flags or something, I don’t know,” drawing an analogy to the Black Power salute – a raised fist – given by two American athletes at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. She added, “As long as we’re not being malicious, we can show our feelings.” President Obama named the former tennis champion, who is Gay, to the American delegation at the Olympics two weeks ago. The President himself will not attend the Games – the first time in more than a decade that an American president, vice president, first lady or former president has not done so.

Utah marriages

associated press

andrew coppa photography

Billie Jean King

Courtesy CNN’s Christiane Amanpour Special to the SGN

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor has set Friday, January 3, as the deadline for Utah same-sex couples to respond to a request by the state’s Governor to halt Gay and Lesbian marriages see king page 8 there.

On December 31, lawyers representing Utah Governor Gary Herbert and Attorney General Sean Reyes filed papers asking the Supreme Court to stay the ruling by Federal District Judge Robert Shelby striking the state’s ban on same-sex marriage. see utah page 5


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