This Day In Gay Utah History January 23rd
1806-William Pitt, The Younger died in London . The Prime Minister who "loved wine but not women" furthered the careers of many of his young friends, and Tom Steele was given the job of Secretary to the Treasury.
1926 Ogden The first of a series of dancing parties of the Bohemian Club will be held in the Weber Club Friday Jan 28. The committee in charge is Dr. Hugh M Rowe, George Eccles, Lawrence T Dee and William Rice Kimball Deseret News
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Paul Mantee |
1974-Two men were arrested by vice officers in Denver , Colorado and charged with lewd fondling in public because one kissed the other on the cheek as they left the dance floor. After ten minutes of deliberation the jury found the men not guilty, instead condemning the police for blatant harassment.
1976- Daily Utah Chronicle Reporter Mary Dickson wrote an article entitled “Graduate Student Studies Lesbian Lifestyle”. Only since the 1960’s has an attempt been made to study the socially sensitive area of homosexuality. While much has been written on homosexual men scientific studies on homosexual women have not. Mary Jo Olsen, a 23 year old graduate study studying in sociology recently lived with Lesbians for 5 weeks to research her master’s thesis “Lesbians: A Minority Group”. Her study is unique in that she is the first female to under take a study on Lesbians. In the past when studies on Lesbianism were made, they were made by men. Her study is also unique because it looks at Lesbians as a minority group and not as a deviant subculture. “This is the 1st study I’ve seen do this,” she said. “I don’t believe they are sick or deviant in the sense they’re bad. Deviant is only a differing from the norm-I’m deviant because I’m a graduate student. They shouldn’t be considered subculture deviants but minorities fitting minority characteristics.” Concerning Lesbianism Olsen said “It was not a choice they made but something in them.” Olsen obtained an objective view of Lesbian life style and their status as a minority group by living with Lesbians in a Mid West city, 24 hours a day and viewing all aspects of their life style. The study was funded by a University Bi-Centennial Awards Grant. (My note-Actually the first known study of Lesbianism in Utah was done by Mildred Berryman while a student at Westminster College in the late 1910’s and early 1920’s)
1976- -Friday GAY Letters to Editor Daily Utah Chronicle The Monday Chrony really takes the cake. Another fine example of uncut, uncensored, and unadulterated garbage. You had better get your act together and stop trying to prove how liberated you can be with your “freedom of the press”. Your freedom stops when it infringes on my rights as a student to read anything but junk in the University paper. Most of us students don’t appreciate the trash you print and the ”mouthy majority” is the reason we have to put up with it. About Monday’s Chrony; It is a mark of sheer perversion and depredation when society accepts homosexuality as “normal” and “natural”. It is about as normal and natural as trying to pet a rattlesnake or making friends with a pack of wolves or anything else equally “normal”. Remember when sex was for making babies? What if your father had been a fag? If you have that problem, snap out of it. You need help. Lorin Twede.
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Ed Koch |
1988- The INBETWEEN Bar in SLC UT held their 4th anniversary party even though they opened their doors in 1986. In 1984 the Bar was still the Three Aces.
1989 Monday I went to the Crossroads Urban Center to
meet with Chuck Whyte and to try and figure out the mess inherited from former Secretary's record keeping. The Membership records, financial records, and minutes were in every state of disarray. All jumbled up. We finally managed to separate them into 3 categories-Membership, financial, and minutes. We worked for two hours and Chuck really helped a lot. I wouldn’t have been motivated to do them by myself. [1989 Journal of Ben Williams]
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Chuck Whyte |
1994 Sunday, Archuleta convicted of 1988 torture-murder in canyon near Cedar City. EXECUTION DATE SET FOR KILLER OF SUU STUDENT Associated Press Michael A. Archuleta, on death row since 1989 for the torture-murder of a Cedar City university student, has been given an execution date. Fourth District Judge George E. Balliff on Friday ordered Archuleta to die March 18, and allowed the condemned man to change his preference from lethal injection to death by firing squad. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected without comment 30-year-old Archuleta's petition for a rehearing of the case last November. He was originally scheduled to die on Feb. 12, 1990. The Utah Supreme Court upheld Archuleta's death sentence in March, ruling it was appropriate in light of what the justices called the "atrocious, cruel . . . exceptionally depraved" murder of 28-year-old Gordon R. Church on Nov. 22, 1988. Lance C. Wood, who participated in the murder, was convicted of capital homicide in a separate trial but was sentenced to life in prison because he was barely 20 at the time of the crime. Provo attorney Michael Esplin, who has been Archuleta's court-appointed lawyer since his murder trial, said the new date of execution can be appealed. Esplin said his client wants to die by firing squad because "he doesn't want to go out lying down. With lethal injection, he would be strapped to a stretcher, and he doesn't want that." Archuleta's adoptive parents, Stella and Amos Archuleta, were visibly shaken at the hearing. "(Everything is) a terrible thing, not just for us but for everyone, especially the victim's family," said Stella Archuleta, fighting back tears. Archuleta and Wood were on parole from the Utah State Prison when they abducted Church, a drama student at Southern Utah University, after meeting him at a Cedar City convenience store. They drove to nearby Cedar Canyon where they broke Church's arm, slashed his throat, bound him in chains and stuffed him in the trunk of their car. They then drove north 76 miles to a remote valley in Millard County near Cove Fort. There, they tortured Church, who died of massive blood loss as a result of injuries inflicted when the killers repeatedly jammed him with a tire iron, piercing his liver. After he died, they buried him in a shallow grave.
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Joseph Nicolosi |
1995 Monday Roger Lynn Gilson of Payson, Utah lost his battle with AIDS He was 38. He was selected to represent Tintic High in the summer of 1975 at both the American Legion's Boys State in Logan and the Utah National Guard's Freedom Academy at Camp Williams . He was graduated as class valedictorian by Tintic High School in May 1974. After attending classes in Office Administration as SUSC in Cedar City Roger served in the U.S. Army from 1976 to 1979 and earned the rank of Specialist Four and acting Sergeant as junior administrative NCO in the Office of the Division Surgeon, Fourth Infantry Division (Mechanized), Ft. Carson, Colorado. He was selected as post-wide Soldier-of-the-Year in May 1979, and was discharged with top honors in June 1979. He returned to Utah in August 1979 and found employment with the Anaconda Copper Corporation in Tooele as a laborer and underground ore train operator. He relocated to Stoneham , Mass. in October 1982, and took a position with the Center for Theoretical Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as a senior technical editor and electronic typesetter. He was also the senior partner of Prototype, Inc., and international electronic multi-media technical typesetting service, which he founded in 1984. Failing health forced his double retirements in April 1993, and he returned to Utah to spend his remaining days with his family and the loving home care provided by his mother until his death. He was an extremely fortunate man to have had the unconditional love and support of his mother and siblings and his circle of friends. He was in awe of his mother's strength, dedication and courage throughout his illness. Prior to retirement, Roger's greatest joys were frequent whale watches off the coasts of New England and international and domestic travel. He had vacationed in almost every U.S. state and territory, Northern Europe, Scandinavia , Japan , Hong Kong, and in June of 1989, he was in Beijing , China , during the student uprising and subsequent government massacre in Tianamen Square . He was arrested by the Chinese military, briefly detained and forcibly deported, unharmed, to Hong Kong . In June of 1993 he became a part-time volunteer for the Utah AIDS Foundation, serving as a telephone receptionist, computer data entry clerk and staffer of the Foundation's AIDS Hot-line. He also became a public speaker for their Educational Out-Reach Program, lecturing to the public about the dangers of AIDS and its prevention and methods of treatment. Rapid development of peripheral neuropathy in his legs/feet and arms/hands eventually made the three-times-a-week drive to Salt Lake impossible and he resigned in March 1994. Gilson was a member of the Utah County AIDS Support Group in Provo and a frequent lecturer at numerous area high schools for the American Red Cross. In May 1994, he consented to be the subject of a well-received, in-depth profile article published in the Provo Herald, about living with AIDS in "Happy Valley " (Utah County ). "My life was a most excellent adventure."
1996-The state senate of Vermont voted 22-7 to reject a measure that would have banned adoption by same-sex couples.
1998 Author: PATTY HENETZ THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Salt Lake Tribune Page: C2 Corradini Restricts Meeting A day after confirming she would meet with a broad coalition of human-rights activists on whether she would consider vetoing a City Council action, Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini laid down some ground rules: Only eight people would be allowed in the meeting. And none of them would be reporters. Representatives of the Utah Progressive Network on Thursday said Corradini's chief of staff, Kay Christensen, relayed the mayor's conditions late Wednesday.
1999 Same-sex couples, unmarried straight couples and polygamists will be prohibited from adopting children in state custody. The Board of Child and Family Services voted 7-2 Friday to require that caseworkers verify that adults in prospective adoptive homes are related to prospective parents by blood, legal marriage or adoption. The policy does not prevent single-parent adoptions. The revision, which also calls for criminal background and child abuse screenings of each adult present in the adoptive home, goes into effect
immediately, said board chairman Scott H. Clark, who proposed the change. Clark, a Salt Lake attorney and adoptive father of 18 children, said his proposal was grounded in law, social science research and his own belief that traditional two-parent families can provide the greatest degree of stability to children in the state's foster care system. Most private adoption agencies in Utah follow a similar rule, he said. "I believe the state has the ultimate responsibility to make the best placement choices for its children. We have the most vulnerable, most needy children in our custody," he said. Regnal Garff, a board member and retired juvenile court judge, said he resists any policy that makes adoption placements more difficult. "I don't think married couples have a monopoly on the ability to love, understand or create a stable, loving environment," Garff said. He and board member Paula Johnson cast dissenting votes. Each of the councils that advise the board -- among them the Child Abuse and Neglect Council and the Adoption Advisory Council -- opposed the policy. Bradley Weischedel, a social worker who with his gay partner adopted a son through a private agency, urged the board to reject the policy. "As a gay couple who recently completed the 28-hour foster parent/adoption preparation course offered by the DCFS (Division of Child and Family Services), we are completely dumbfounded that anyone on the board of DCFS would even consider reducing the number of potential parents for at-risk children in the state's custody. "That training helped us become even more clearly aware of the great need for loving, safe homes for these children," Weischedel said. Gayle Ruzicka of the Utah Eagle Forum urged adoption of the policy. She questioned whether a child adopted by a same-sex household would one day wonder "Why me? Why wasn't she placed in a home where she had a mommy and daddy? Would she ever wonder why a state would let that happen?" Salt Lake attorney Joanna Kobak-Hudson testified that she was raised by a lesbian couple. "The only difference I had growing up was trying to understand the hatred people had toward my family. This policy is based on quite outdated assumptions," she said. Carmen Thompson, spokeswoman for Tapestry of Polygamy, testified in support of the portion of the policy that would prohibit couples practicing polygamy from adopting children. Children in polygamous households often receive inadequate education, health care and parenting, she said. "Some are even forced into arranged marriages at a premature age," Thompson said. "I recently returned from southern Utah , where I was told of two 8-year-old girls who were married to men in their late 40s. Utah cannot allow this to continue, but to voluntarily place a child in this situation is inhumane and an atrocity." The American Civil Liberties Union of Utah lobbied against the policy, calling it illegal and unwise. "Obviously, I'm disappointed. I think the hearing clearly demonstrates this is a non-solution to a non-problem in this state. Children in the custody of DCFS are overwhelmingly placed with heterosexual, married couples, and in limited circumstances, DCFS exercised judgment (about) what was in the best interest of children to make other placements," said Stephen Clark, legal director for the ACLU, following the vote. DCFS director Ken Patterson told the board that in fiscal year 1998, 328 children in state custody were adopted. Of those, 305 were placed with married couples and 23 were adopted by single parents. "This data tells me we're able to attract married couples and allow single people to adopt if this is in the best interest of the child," Patterson said. Doug Wortham, executive director of the Gay and Lesbian Community Center of Utah, decried the decision and predicted it will face a legal challenge. "When you move to eliminate very worthy and caring parents, children suffer first and families suffer second," he said.
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Scott Clark |
2000-Sunday, Guest speaker Kurt Howard, pastor of the Community Congregational Church in Provo (who happens to be gay), will speak at Provo Affirmation on being gay and Christian. Held at the home of Gary and Millie Watts, in Provo.
2004 The fight isn’t over! Yesterday the Utah State Senate Judic0iary Committee voted to “hold” the so-called “Marriage Defined” bill in committee. However, even the Chairman of the committee admitted that that was only a temporary hold-up of the bill, and it would eventually receive a vote in the Utah State Senate. Bills are only officially open for public comment while in committee. We need your voice on this now, while it’s still in committee! Today progressive voices rang loud. Today voices for equality and freedom won in the Utah Senate Judiciary Committee. Today the Constitution won the day. Tomorrow is a different day. The committee will vote on this bill again, and the members of the committee were clear: they plan to vote for this bill when it comes up again. That could be any day now. What can you do for equality and freedom and the Constitution? You can call all eight members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. You can thank them for voting to hold Senate Bill 24, Marriage Defined, in committee today. You can then ask them to vote against this bill when it comes to committee next. Call them even if you called them about this bill already. The members of the committee’s phone numbers and fax numbers are listed below. Please contact them, leave messages, etc. The other side of this debate is strong, and they will definitely try to limit our access as GLBT and non-traditional families to equal rights. We must act as strongly as them and do the same activist activities – to protect our basic civil liberties. Please be polite, but be firm. The senators have a lot of pressure on this bill, and we must make sure that they know we respect the difficult position they are in, but demand that there is only one reasonable way to vote:
AGAINST Senate Bill 24, Marriage Defined. Feel free to share your personal stories liberally with the Senators. They need to see that this bill does matter real families in Utah . Any Senator, his or her intern, or voicemail can be reached during business hours Monday through Friday at 801-538-1035. Please feel free to contact Adam Bass with any questions. Please feel free to distribute this email as liberally as you choose.
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Adam Bass |
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Rocky Anderson |
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Blythe Nobleman |
2004 I would like to respectfully disagree with Chad Keller also. I emailed Madstone Theaters corporate offices after learning of the cancellation of Latter Days also. Not surprisingly I did not get a reply. My main objection is similar to Tim Keller's that as an adult I should be allowed make decisions regarding what I choose to see and hear. As a film buff I have seen hundred's of B grade movies or worse yet it was my choice to view them. Why did Madstone not let the market place decide whether the film had merit rather than them deciding for us? Thank you but I decline the offer to have a baby sitter. As the new LDS "genre" of film making is being regularly touted here in Utah (and some of it very dismal from what I hear), I can only assume that Latter Days was not reviewed and promoted because it deals with two subjects that the powers in Utah find too controversial; sexuality and homosexuality. And this is in a state where highway billboards promote "Pride and Prejudice" a Latter Day Comedy and promote the study of polygamy as a matter of faith. As a historian I am also dismayed over the fact that the "first" film dealing with homosexuality and LDS missionaries can be so easily swept under the beehive patterned rugs. Sometimes horrible films find a niche despite critics and go on to become cult classics. "Plan 10 from Outer Space", "Orgazmo", "Trapped by the Mormons", "Carnival of Souls", and "The Attack of the Giant Brine Shrimp" come to mind. Ben Williams
2004 Don't Miss the Sweetest Show to date....WONKA VISION At the Trapp Door (a private club)Saturday January 24, 20049:00 pm Hosted by Imperial Crown Prince Chad Keller and the R C G S E Proceeds for the Peoples Concern Fund Experience the Spike www.RCGSE.org
2004 It has been awhile since there's been in-your-face stuff going on in Salt Lake . The Utah Lesbian Avengers are hoping to change that and in fact DID have an "action" during the last LDS conference; Two avengers were dressed as brides and one gay man acting as a "minister" to marry them. We stood on the corner of N. Temple and W. Temple and repeated a save-sex marriage ceremony several times, so the people walking back and forth from the Conference Center could see it. The ceremony ended with a "you may now kiss your brides", and they did. We then walked thru the crowded sidewalk in front of the Center (it was in-between sessions and there were 100's of people) with the brides holding hands, others holding "just married" signs and chanting "Queer Marriage Now!". We actually stole the attention of the "bible thumpers" away from their focus on the Mormons and we had it on us... which actually was mildly disturbing... but never-the-less, we were noticed. So... maybe activism isn't dead in Salt Lake ... just resting a bit.... The Lesbian Avengers hope to carry out more radical actions in the future, but we're running into the good ole apathy thing and could sure use some support and bodies. Queerly, Toni Palmer
2004I think we would all benefit from living in a world where gay films could receive the same level of critical analysis as other films without provoking conspiracy theories. Some gay movies that have been made really are terrible--they can be as emotionally manipulative and devoid of artistic value as any other flick at the Multimegaplex, and Chad 's right that a theater is under no obligation to show bad movies.” Latter Days" may well be in this category--I'll withhold judgment until I see it. Still, from what I understand, Madstone is still planning on screening this movie in some of its other locations. If their reason for cancelling it here is, as their spokesman said, that it lacks artistic merit, then it's hard to see why they would do this. Do audiences in Salt Lake have such exceptional artistic sensibilities that a film that's good enough for, say, Atlanta is beyond the pale here? Regardless of the quality of the film, I think it's clear that Madstone caved to the threat of an anti-gay boycott. This kind of cowardice does not encourage me to spend my entertainment dollars at Trolley Square . Still, Madstone's relatively new to Utah --they're from New York ; they don’t know how things work here. Ruzicka and her minions are always boycotting something. Give Madstone a couple years and they'll learn to ignore her like everybody else does. Brandon Burt
2004 OUR LAWMAKERS ARE TRYING TO LEGISLATE OUR LGBT FAMILIES OUT OF EXISTENCE Tell them NO! Monday, January 26, 6:00 PM Capitol Rotunda From SB 24 (Marriage Defined) to the Federal Marriage Amendment, LGBT families are under attack. Bring your families, friends, allies, neighbors and coworkers to find out what you can do advocate for our families. Community leaders will be speaking(Rallies are not allowed in the Capitol Rotunda. Please do not bring signs on sticks. No chanting.)Sponsored by the EQUAL families Coalition: ACLU Utah Equality Utah GLBT Community Center of Utah HRC Utah Steering Committee Log Cabin Republicans PFLAG Stonewall Democrats swerve UPNet
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2004 OUR LAWMAKERS ARE TRYING TO LEGISLATE OUR LGBT FAMILIES OUT OF EXISTENCE Tell them NO! Monday, January 26, 6:00 PM Capitol Rotunda From SB 24 (Marriage Defined) to the Federal Marriage Amendment, LGBT families are under attack. Bring your families, friends, allies, neighbors and coworkers to find out what you can do advocate for our families. Community leaders will be speaking(Rallies are not allowed in the Capitol Rotunda. Please do not bring signs on sticks. No chanting.)Sponsored by the EQUAL families Coalition: ACLU Utah Equality Utah GLBT Community Center of Utah HRC Utah Steering Committee Log Cabin Republicans PFLAG Stonewall Democrats swerve UPNet
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2004 The Paper Moon’s 10th Anniversary Celebrated
2004 The Salt Lake City mayor recently accepted a post as a "key spokesman" for a new pro-gay-marriage group called Freedom to Marry. Anderson was one of the first people asked to be on what amounts to the organization's honorary board, along with the civil rights leader U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Georgia.
2006 Monday COMMUNITY CALL TO ACTION! AUTHOR CAROL LYNN PEARSON IS LOOKING FOR STORIES FROM OR ABOUT GAY MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS FAMILIES WHO I AM. I am Carol Lynn Pearson (www.clpearson.com), a well published author. My widely publicized book Goodbye, I Love You (1986, Random House) told the story of my life with my husband Gerald, a homosexual man, our twelve year Mormon temple marriage, our four children, our mutual anguish over Gerald’s inability to change his orientation, our divorce and continuing friendship, and his death from AIDS in my home, where I was caring for him. WHAT I NEED. I am currently (early 2006) gathering true stories to assist me in writing a new book that will appear late this year. The title is No More Goodbyes—Embracing our Gay Family and Friends in spite of and because of Our Religions. My one goal is to assist in healing relationships. I will deal with the tragic and unnecessary goodbyes that arise from— Family alienation Ill-fated marriages based on unrealistic expectations of change Suicide I am looking for true experiences from gay people, parents, siblings, wives/former wives, friends, that involve religion either as a part of the problem or a part of the solution (or both) in terms of the above subjects. To establish the pain of the unnecessary goodbyes, I require stories that show our failures, but I especially want stories that show our successes—families and friends refusing to allow anything, including religion, to come between them and their gay loved ones. It is important to me that the accounts come from many different religious cultures— Christian—Evangelical, Catholic, Baptist, Mormon, etc.Jewish, Muslim, all other faiths WHAT YOU CAN DO: Email your story to clp@.... Each email will be acknowledged. Neither your name nor your family’s name will be used without your permission. Please keep your story concise, but tell all that is important. If used, your story may be told in its full version, condensed version, or perhaps in brief reference. Due to my deadlines, these accounts need to be received soon, by July 15, 2006 at the latest (although I will still read and appreciate every story sent). THANK YOU! Your response may further the ongoing healing that is one of the challenges of our day. Sincerely, Carol Lynn Pearson
2007 The Film and Discussion Series presents: Chasing Amy Holden and Banky are comic book artists. Everything's going good for them until they meet Alyssa, also a comic book artist. Holden falls for her, but his hopes are crushed when he finds out she's a lesbian. Or is she? One of the first movies to really talk about what it’s like to dare to seek love outside of the labels.
2009 Gay students at BYU still struggle for acceptance BY BRIAN MAFFLY THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Provo » Dan Embree came to Brigham Young University four years ago, in part, to iron out his sexual orientation. Hailing from a Chicago-area Mormon family, Embree grew up believing his same-sex attraction was deviant and unclean. But he is healing in a way he did not anticipate when he matriculated at the church-owned school. "I was not in a healthy frame of mind, doing self-destructive things," says Embree, a senior who is studying painting. "I did therapy and it didn't work. After my mission, I realized it wasn't going to go away. When I accepted that, it really improved my life." Last fall, Embree was one of several gay BYU students who posed for portraits shot by photography student Michael Wiltbank. The portraits were hung as part of a class show, but after a week college administrators ordered the portraits taken down. The move disturbed some BYU arts faculty, as well as critics who lit up the blogosphere with renewed allegations that BYU does not tolerate a free exchange of ideas. Within days, officials declared the portraits acceptable for public display and invited Wiltbank to rehang them. The incident illustrates how sensitive the subject of homosexuality is on the BYU campus, particularly at a time when its owner, the Mormon Church, was playing a pivotal role in the divisive fight over California's Proposition 8, defining marriage as between one man and one woman. Gay students say they sat through religion classes last fall, listening to professors liken the California ballot initiative to God's war against Satan. "I have never been comfortable at BYU," Embree says. "During the Prop 8 campaign I had to listen to peers talk about homosexuality being the same as a pedophile and an alcoholic." Looking for support » That BYU allowed the gay-portrait exhibit shows how far the school has come since the student days of its most famous gay alumnus, Bruce Bastian, who happens to be Embree's granduncle. Bastian, the Utah County software developer behind WordPerfect, attended BYU in the late 1960s when gay colleagues did not venture from the closet and many hid their struggle with same-sex attractions. "It wasn't an issue because you wouldn't dare talk about it," says Bastian, who contributed $1 million to defeat Proposition 8. "If people let gay people be gay, there would be a lot less pain surrounding it all. Gay men shouldn't marry straight women and try to become straight." Recent studies show that gays rejected by their families have a far higher incidence of suicide, while mainstream psychology flatly rejects therapies intended to "cure" same-sex attraction. Wiltbank, a 28-year-old senior from the tiny Arizona town of Eager, solicited his portrait subjects through Facebook and his social networks. Embree and a friend went together to Wiltbank's Orem studio and sat in front of a camera as the photographer shot dozens of digital images of their faces. "I participated to show other students who might be struggling that it is OK to accept the fact that you are gay and know that there are people at BYU who do support you," Embree says. The faces in the finished portraits have neutral expressions with only the eyes in sharp focus. "It's visual communication. When you want to get into someone's face you look in their eyes," Wiltbank says. His untitled series was one of 16 student shows in a class exhibit hung in the Harris Fine Arts Center's Gallery 303 for a two-week run starting in late November. Four portraits each depicted a gay student along with a supportive person in his life. "I have not included labels with these portraits as I feel that labels only create separation and division and further ungrounded stereotypes," Wiltbank wrote in an artist's statement. "We never know who may identify themselves as homosexual and I felt that not labeling these images would force us as a society to question what it is to be homosexual." No Honor Code violation » On Dec. 5, the exhibit came down on orders from the dean of the College of Fine Arts and Communications to the dismay of gay students who sat for Wiltbank. "The project wasn't promoting homosexuality," says English major Tommy Johnson. "It was promoting understanding of a group that doesn't have a lot of understanding in the Mormon power structure." University officials declined to discuss the incident, attributing the take-down order to a "miscommunication" between arts dean Stephen Jones and faculty. Arts faculty contacted by the Tribune declined to speak on the record; while Wiltbank's professor, Paul Adams, also declined comment. Administrators say the exhibit did not violate the university's Honor Code, which obligates students to abide by strict moral standards. Last year, BYU sharpened its position on homosexuality to make it clear that same-sex attraction does not run afoul of the code, although acting on it does. Homosexual behavior and advocacy therefore constitute violations, according to university spokeswoman Carri Jenkins. "However, the Honor Code requires all members of the university community to manifest a strict commitment to the law of chastity," Jenkins wrote in response to e-mail queries. "Homosexual behavior includes not only sexual relations between members of the same sex, but all forms of physical intimacy that give expression to homosexual feelings. Advocacy includes seeking to influence others to engage in homosexual behavior or promoting homosexual relations as being morally acceptable." Bastian takes issue with the idea that gays should deny themselves one of the great comforts of life to remain in the good graces of the church. "It's really unfair and ridiculous to say gay people are supposed to remain celibate," he said. "You get to live half a life? They are so determined to punish people who don't fit in their box." Before his show, Wiltbank says he showed the portraits to arts faculty to ensure their support. He did exclude one portrait pairing that could be seen as an Honor Code violation because it depicted a friend's father who lives in a gay relationship. In the ensuing hubbub, Wiltbank was unnerved that his exhibit upstaged the good work of his classmates, such as portraits of Mexican immigrants who held professional jobs in their homeland. Another series paired photos of natural objects, such as mushrooms and poppies, with the contraband they produce. Still, Wiltbank sees the outcome as a "win-win" in that his ideas were aired, and BYU showed it isn't the fortress of bigotry and homophobia painted by critics. "I can't tell you how may people have seen [the portraits]," says Wiltbank, who intends to move to New York City after graduation. "I thank BYU for that. I got the message out much farther than I could have on my own. I like that they are being used to open dialogue."
2009 Hanks apologizes for Mormon 'un-American' diss Tom Hanks says he's sorry he told FOXNews.com that Mormons who supported California's gay marriage ban, Proposition 8, were "un-American." "Last week, I labeled members of the Mormon church who supported California 's Proposition 8 as 'un-American,' " the actor said in a statement released Friday. "I believe Proposition 8 is counter to the promise of our Constitution;
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