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They challenged discrimination at Georgetown: 1980

They challenged discrimination at Georgetown: 1980

Washington Area Spark posted a photo:

They challenged discrimination at Georgetown: 1980

A group of gay Georgetown University students filed suit against the university and its law department April 30, 1980 charging the school “created a chilling effect upon the speech and association rights” of gay students by denying charters to their organizations.

Some of those involved in the suit are (from left to right): James J. Ryan, student; Clint Hockenberry, student; Ronald Bogard, attorney; and Laura J. Rayburn, adjunct law professor.

Two student groups: The Gay People of Georgetown University and the Gay Rights Coalition of Georgetown University Law Center were both denied charters by the school, despite being approved by the student government in the former case and the student-faculty governing body in the latter case.

The suit relied on the city’s 1977 Human Rights law.

The suit worked its way through the courts until the full U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in November 1987 that the University did not have to officially recognize the groups, but could not deny them funds.

A settlement in the case followed where it was agreed that Georgetown would fund the groups, but not recognize them and that the groups could not hold events on campus where the majority of participants were non students.

The court decision and settlement caused a riff within the Catholic community that led to Sen. William Armstrong (R-Col.) offering an amendment to cut off city funding if D.C. didn’t change its Human Rights law.

The amendment passed, but was struck down by the courts.

Armstrong then offered another amendment—directly modifying the city’s laws that passed both houses of Congress.

The law permitted religiously-affiliated institutions to refuse to recognize gay student groups.

Gay legal rights continue to be under attack with the U.S. Supreme Court rulings that religious objections must be taken into account. A pending case will determine whether LGBTQ people fall under 1964 federal civil rights act prohibiting discrimination.

For more information and related images, see flic.kr/s/aHskcVHcxD

Photo by Brig Cabe. The image is courtesy of the D.C. Public Library Washington Star Collection © Washington Post.

They challenged discrimination at Georgetown: 1980

Jeff Goldblum on his father’s “cruel” behavior towards his gay brother

Jeff Goldblum on his father’s “cruel” behavior towards his gay brother

Jeff Goldblum
Jeff Goldblum (Photo: CBS | YouTube)

Actor Jeff Goldblum has opened up about his family and early life in an interview with The Times Magazine in the UK.

The Jurassic World star, 67, reveals that his father did not respond well to learning that Jeff’s older brother, Lee, was gay. Not only did the older man keep it a secret, but he tried to have his son’s sexuality changed by forcing him to undergo so-called conversion therapy.

He says his father, Harold, had a “traditional masculine sense of himself.”

“He didn’t tell the rest of us [about Lee’s sexuality] … Sent him to a therapist in order to ‘fix him’. It was all secret. That’s not so nourishing.”

“My dad was, without knowing why, conspicuously cruel to [Lee] at times.”

Related: WATCH: Jeff Goldblum gyrating for a crowd of gay partiers is a mood 

His brother entered medical school but dropped out to join the army. He later became a taxi driver.

Goldblum says his brother went on to experience challenges throughout his life, including, “physical ailments, [being] overweight, pharmaceuticals abuse and self-medication issues”. He ended up moving back in with his parents and living with them for the last couple of decades of his life. He has since died.

Goldblum had another brother, Rick, who died at the age of 23 from kidney failure. He also has a sister, Pamela.

Related: Thanks to Massachusetts, 32% of U.S. states now ban conversion therapy. But here come the courts… 

Some counselors and religious groups employ the controversial practice of so-called “conversion therapy” to try and convert people from being gay and bisexual towards heterosexuality. There is zero scientific evidence it works.

However, rather than helping people, studies have found such treatments can cause great mental health problems for those subjected to them.

Many respected psychiatric associations have condemned the practice and around a third of states in the US have banned it being administered to minors. The practice is banned outright in a handful of countries, including Brazil, Malta, and Uruguay.

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