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Virginia
Related: About this forumVirginia Tech's annual Pride Week celebrates LGBTQ+ community
TOP STORY
Virginia Tech's annual Pride Week celebrates LGBTQ+ community
Ally Hessenius, news writer Apr 5, 2022 0
Virginia Techs Pride Week, an annual celebration of the LGBTQ+ community, began on Friday, April 1, and concludes on Sunday, April 10.
Pride Week, simply put, is a weeklong series of events on the Virginia Tech campus meant to celebrate, educate and provide space and resources to the Virginia Tech community, said Ashleigh Bing Bingham, the director of the LGBTQ+ Resource Center.
Pride Week takes place in April so that the Virginia Tech community can celebrate Pride within the academic calendar, since Pride Month takes place nationally in June.
The history of Pride Week at Virginia Tech stems from a point in time when the campus did not allow a place for LGBTQ+ students to gather. According to a piece in the Newman Library collective on LGBTQ+ history on campus, the first Gay Alliance group was approved in 1971 by the student constitutional affairs board, making it an official campus organization.
{snip}
Virginia Tech's annual Pride Week celebrates LGBTQ+ community
Ally Hessenius, news writer Apr 5, 2022 0
Virginia Techs Pride Week, an annual celebration of the LGBTQ+ community, began on Friday, April 1, and concludes on Sunday, April 10.
Pride Week, simply put, is a weeklong series of events on the Virginia Tech campus meant to celebrate, educate and provide space and resources to the Virginia Tech community, said Ashleigh Bing Bingham, the director of the LGBTQ+ Resource Center.
Pride Week takes place in April so that the Virginia Tech community can celebrate Pride within the academic calendar, since Pride Month takes place nationally in June.
The history of Pride Week at Virginia Tech stems from a point in time when the campus did not allow a place for LGBTQ+ students to gather. According to a piece in the Newman Library collective on LGBTQ+ history on campus, the first Gay Alliance group was approved in 1971 by the student constitutional affairs board, making it an official campus organization.
{snip}
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Virginia Tech's annual Pride Week celebrates LGBTQ+ community (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Apr 2022
OP
mahatmakanejeeves
(61,437 posts)1. UVa Queer Student Union celebrates 50 years of activism and history
The group at Virginia Tech was established about a year before the group at UVa.
Life
Queer Student Union celebrates 50 years of activism and history
Students and faculty express their sentiments and experiences in LGBTQ+ life at the University
By Mario Rosales and Cecy Juárez
March 31, 2022
The Queer Student Union has overcome fear, prejudice and discrimination to advocate for LGBTQ+ rights and recognition for the past half century. Colorful and lively celebrations have taken place around Grounds to commemorate this historic milestone. In light of this anniversary, members of the University community have reflected on the early and difficult past of the organization, what they have achieved and what they still strive to accomplish.
First established as the Gay Student Union in 1972, the organization quickly faced its first obstacle after requesting $45 from the Student Council for general needs. This simple request for funds was met with bureaucratic opposition, eventually reaching the Student Affairs and Athletics Committee of the Board of Visitors. The issue concluded with the Board suggesting to deny the request for funds on the basis of preserving the heteronornative notion that sexual behavior should only occur between males and females.
This was just the beginning of the many challenges the GSU would face throughout its existence at the University. In the 1970s, the organization struggled to find a safe place on Grounds to exist. ... Andy Humm, College alumnus and president of GSU in 1975, recounted how the group used to meet in the Wesleyan Church. He described the difficulties of being openly gay at the University and the harrasment he endured.
After I came out in my fourth year publicly [my first-year roommate] wouldn't speak to me anymore, Humm said. [Someone] painted my car and painted a big penis on my driveway I also taught Sunday school in those days of the Catholic parish, there were people who wanted to have me fired. [But] the priest stood up for me.
{snip}
Queer Student Union celebrates 50 years of activism and history
Students and faculty express their sentiments and experiences in LGBTQ+ life at the University
By Mario Rosales and Cecy Juárez
March 31, 2022
The Queer Student Union has overcome fear, prejudice and discrimination to advocate for LGBTQ+ rights and recognition for the past half century. Colorful and lively celebrations have taken place around Grounds to commemorate this historic milestone. In light of this anniversary, members of the University community have reflected on the early and difficult past of the organization, what they have achieved and what they still strive to accomplish.
First established as the Gay Student Union in 1972, the organization quickly faced its first obstacle after requesting $45 from the Student Council for general needs. This simple request for funds was met with bureaucratic opposition, eventually reaching the Student Affairs and Athletics Committee of the Board of Visitors. The issue concluded with the Board suggesting to deny the request for funds on the basis of preserving the heteronornative notion that sexual behavior should only occur between males and females.
This was just the beginning of the many challenges the GSU would face throughout its existence at the University. In the 1970s, the organization struggled to find a safe place on Grounds to exist. ... Andy Humm, College alumnus and president of GSU in 1975, recounted how the group used to meet in the Wesleyan Church. He described the difficulties of being openly gay at the University and the harrasment he endured.
After I came out in my fourth year publicly [my first-year roommate] wouldn't speak to me anymore, Humm said. [Someone] painted my car and painted a big penis on my driveway I also taught Sunday school in those days of the Catholic parish, there were people who wanted to have me fired. [But] the priest stood up for me.
{snip}