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Pride St Louis
Fri, 15 Jan 2010 00:26:03 +0000

http://pridestl.blogspot.com/

noreply@blogger.com (Pride St Louis) on Jan 05, 2010 07:34PM

Welcome

Pride St Louis News Feed

Gay St Louis

LGBT Community Center
Mon, 19 Jul 2010 02:04:14 +0000

http://findmycenter.blogspot.com/

noreply@blogger.com (St Louis LGBT Center) on Jul 18, 2010 07:00PM

CLOSED on July 20 & 21, 2010 (Tuesday and Wednesday)

Hello all,

We're going to close up The LGBT Center on both Tuesday and Wednesday this week (July 20th & 21, 2010).

All events and meetings on those days are canceled.

We will reopen again on Thursday, July 22, 2010 at 12noon.

For now, click the link below to enjoy this short film preview for The Art of Michael and Amy Brinkley Closing Show on Friday, July 30, 2010 @ 6:30P!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8r76z0TQD4

------------
The Lesbian Gay Bi Transgender
Community Center of
Metropolitan St. Louis
625 North Euclid Avenue
Suite 420
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.findmycenter.com
info@findmycenter.com
314-367-1166

noreply@blogger.com (lmlewis517) on Jun 29, 2010 01:38PM

CLOSED for Zen: Thursday, July 1, 2010

Hello all,

We're going to close up The LGBT Center for the day (Thursday, July 1st) to do some much-needed breathing and relaxation.

Both the Simply Seasoned Social and The Pink Cinema will be canceled for that day, as well as any other scheduled meetings. Please make sure to contact The Center by phone at (314) 367-1166 to reschedule, if needed.

We'll reopen again on Tuesday, July 6, 2010 at 12noon.

See you then and enjoy the 4th :-)

For now, click the link below to enjoy this photo album that we made during PrideFest St. Louis 2010 in Tower Grove Park!

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=185078&id=550374865&l=02cb2563b6


------------
The Lesbian Gay Bi Transgender
Community Center of
Metropolitan St. Louis
625 North Euclid Avenue
Suite 420
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.findmycenter.com
info@findmycenter.com
314-367-1166

MCCGSL The Hope and Health Center
Fri, 30 Jul 2010 23:20:54 +0000

http://hopeandhelpcenter.blogspot.com/

Colby.Kluthe@gmail.com ("D's Cheeze") on Jul 30, 2010 03:25PM

MEP Honors Savion Simpson Black (1979-2010)


July 29, 2010
on Behalf of Metro East Pride
Savion Simpson Black (1979-2010)
Join Metro East Pride & community leaders from accross our region on Sunday August 8 as we celebrate the life of an individual truly missed, Mr. Savion Simpson Black.

Mr. Savion Simpson Black was honored as Entertainer of the Year in 2008 (Missouri E.O.Y.),Mr. Pride 2010, as well as a former Mr. Missouri Continental. Savion represented the St. Louis Region on a National Stage and leaves a legacy of entertainment excellence.

Savion Simpson Black will be honored on August 8th, at ATTITUDES located on Manchester Ave in St. Louis City.
All proceeds to benefit the Antonio Curry family.
Savion was a blessing to the community. We all love and admire Savion so much, lets help his mother, Mrs. Curry, to thank her for bringing Savion to the world.

If you would like to perform in the show please contact Victoria R...ose to be booked.

*Remember all proceeds will go to the Curry family. Let's get together and show Savion how much he is still loved-celebrate the amazing life that he led!


August 8 at 9:00pm - August 9 at 2:30am

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Location:
Attitudes Nightclub
4100 Manchester Ave
Saint Louis, MO 63110

metroeastpride@gmail.com (Metro East Pride) on Jul 28, 2010 01:08PM

Metro East Veteran Discharged under DADT


On behalf of Metro East Pride, http://www.metroeastpride.com/


Lesbian Officer in DADT Case Discharged
July 26, 2010
Belleville News-Democrat, Ill.
SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE -- A lesbian Air Force officer who earlier this year became a national symbol of loopholes in the military's controversial "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy is set to be honorably discharged today.

First Lt. Robin Chaurasiya, 25, said she plans to spend a few weeks in the St. Louis metro area before heading off to Mumbai, India -- where her immigrant parents were born -- to work full time on a charitable foundation for impoverished girls that she started.



"It's definitely going to be a bittersweet day on Monday," Chaurasiya said. "You can't just deny the fact this has been such a huge part of my life for how many years, ever since I started ROTC."

Air Force Secretary Michael Donley ordered the discharge of the 375th Air Wing communications officer Wednesday under the federal law that bans openly gay servicemembers.

Chaurasiya, whose hometown is Seattle, joined the Air Force by way of a Reserve Officers Training Corps scholarship to the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago.

But because Chaurasiya is exiting the Air Force early, she has been ordered to pay back some of money that financed her ROTC scholarship -- or about $16,000.

"It's huge," she said of the debt. "It's going to impede anything I do as far as education or getting a loan, things like that."

The flap that surrounded Chaurasiya's decision to disclose her sexual orientation has led her to change her views on whether the military is ready to allow open gay men and women to serve, she said.

"You know, honestly, this whole process has really shown me that change is going to take a long, long time," she said. "I don't have the faith anymore that it's going to happen. In that regard, I'm not sorry to be leaving an incredibly prejudiced and discriminatory institution."

Chaurasiya's return to civilian life is taking place slightly more than a year after she arrived at Scott. Which is also when her problems with the Air Force began.

It all started with an e-mail to her friends updating them about her new situation. In it, she mentioned she had started dating a St. Louis woman.

The list of e-mail recipients included a man she had once dated; he forwarded it to Chaurasiya's commanding officer at Scott. That led to a chat with the officer, who told her, "'If I were you, I would make sure that nobody else makes such claims on my character,'" she said. "And that was what kind of put me over the edge."

She followed up with a memo to her commander declaring she would not deal with him treating her sexual orientation as a problem.

The memo led to preliminary separation proceedings. Feeling certain she would be discharged, Chaurasiya and her then-girlfriend, a St. Louis educator, got married in New Hampshire.

When she returned to Scott, however, Chaurasiya was surprised to learn the Air Force had decided to keep her. A three-star general had determined she was acknowledging her sexual orientation as a way of "avoiding and terminating military service."

But there was one big string attached.

"I was encouraged to keep my mouth shut, basically," she said. "And that's what really irked me about this ruling was that not only are we going to keep you in, but you have to shut up about it."

Chaurasiya made sure the opposite happened. By the end of March, she had contacted reporters around the country who had been writing about "Don't Ask, Don't Tell."

The resulting media attention proved embarrassing for the Air Force, resulting in renewed discharge proceedings against her.



Chaurasiya's case hit the national spotlight soon after President Obama announced he wanted the military's 17-year-old "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy repealed, as well as the ban on openly gay people serving in the U.S. military.

In April, however, Defense Secretary Robert Gates urged Congress to delay repealing the ban on gays in the military until after troops are surveyed on how the repeal should be carried out. That report is not due until Dec. 1.

Original post: BND.com
http://www.military.com/news/article/lesbian-officer-in-dadt-case-discharged.html