Get Inspired with 12 Muses

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GET INSPIRED!

12 Muses was founded to provide intimate educational cruises and tours for open-minded women. Explore the sights, sounds, flavors and aromas of the world, accompanied by distinguished lecturers.

Travel on land, and sea, confident that the only time orientation is an issue is when it concerns the ship’s compass heading. 12 Muses emphasizes meaningful exploration, good food, and good conversation, to help the adventurous woman return home revitalized and refocused, ready to take a fresh look at familiar places and old habits, inspired to change things or love them more, just the way they are.

The September 2006 trip to Central Europe will feature muse Lillian Faderman, author of Surpassing the Love of Men: Romantic Friendship and Love between Women from the Renaissance to the Present and Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth Century America. Lillian Faderman and her partner, Dr. Phyllis Irwin, founded one of the first women’s studies programs in the U.S. at Cal State Fresno in 1971. For more information, see www.12muses.com.

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herland annual financial report

Herland Sister Resources, Inc.
Annual Financial Statement (1/1/05 to 12/31/05)

INCOME















































Events

$1,043

Fundraisers

$1,916

General Donations

$4,088

Grants

$1,000

Newsletter Donations

$674

Newsletter Sponsors

$555

Retreats

$4,775

Sales

$1,195

Sales Tax Collected

$40

Miscellaneous

$233

Total Income

$15,519

EXPENSE































































Bank Charges

$127

Building Maintenance

$1,619

Community Support

$90

Event Expenses

$535

Fundraising

$850

Insurance

$1,737

Merchandise for Resale

$733

Newsletter Postage & Print

$4,303

Other Postage & Printing

$150

Retreat Expenses

$2,339

Sales Tax

$57

Telephone

$618

Utilities

$1,288

Miscellaneous

$121

Total Expenses

$14,567

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lapd sponsors gay games vii

When the competition commences at the Seventh Gay Games in Chicago this July, officers of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) in uniform will be marching with the assembled athletes opening the GAY GAMES VII SPORTS AND CULTURAL FESTIVAL. The games run July 15-22, 2006, and sponsorship by the LAPD marks a first for any major metropolitan police force.

While in Chicago for the games, the LAPD Recruitment Unit will be talking to interested persons about joining the force. With efforts such as this, the LAPD hopes to continue and increase its commitment to diversity within its ranks. For more information about the LAPD, visit joinlapd.com or call the recruitment section at 866-444-LAPD.

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meeting of minds in atlanta

Leslie Fulbright, San Francisco Chronicle

A landmark meeting of African American clergy and members of the gay and lesbian community that began January 19, 2005 in Atlanta is the keystone of an effort to promote the acceptance of gays in black churches. The Rev. Al Sharpton from New York and Bishop Yvette Flunder of San Francisco’s City of Refuge United Church of Christ in the South of Market area are headlining the Black Church Summit organized by the National Black Justice Coalition.

The gathering, at the First Iconium Baptist Church near downtown Atlanta, will feature films, discussions on acceptance and a look at how homophobia in churches is promoting the “down-low” phenomenon — men having sex with other men while maintaining a heterosexual identity.

“The summit will let us have an open, honest and mobilized way to say to black ministers that we have to start talking about gay people in their churches,” said Mandy Carter, a lesbian activist in North Carolina who plans to attend. “This is the first time we have high-profile people having this conversation.”

The involvement of well-known black politicians and church leaders has given new inspiration to the National Black Justice Coalition, the country’s largest black gay civil rights group. The Washington coalition, which has been trying to promote just this kind of dialogue for years, says the summit is especially important because of the large number of black clergy across the country who support bans on same-sex marriage.

The church plays more than a religious role in most black communities, serving as a social gathering place and often dictating the politics of its parishioners. Activists say anti-gay sentiment grew in 2004 because white conservative Christian groups rallied black ministers against gay marriage. Many believe this bond between white evangelicals and black pastors helped President Bush get 11 percent of the African American vote that year.

“The Karl Roves of the world wrote an agenda on how to mobilize the African American vote, and part of that was to suggest the vote against same-gender marriage,” Flunder said, referring to Bush’s top political adviser. Flunder is one of a handful of Bay Area black clergy who support same-sex marriage.

Though the NAACP has vocally supported gay rights, the group has not taken a stand on same-sex marriage. Executive Chairman Julian Bond has, however, compared opposition to same-sex marriage to bans on interracial marriage.

Sharpton, who has been politically active in New York for decades, became involved in the debate over the acceptance of gays and lesbians in black churches during his most recent run for president. He openly supported same-sex marriage, and then in August, he announced plans for an educational initiative to challenge homophobia in churches. In addition to participating in discussions like this one, Sharpton plans to make public-service announcements and talk in schools.

For details on the summit, visit www.nbjcoalition.org.

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