I continued from previous page like other forms of hatred, are not wel come in the U.K.” In the last weekend in February, the Westboro Baptist Church was due to picket another production of “The Laramie Project,” the widely acclaimed documentary play about the brutal murder of gay student Matthew Shepard. The production was being staged at the Per/orming Arts Center at Dominican University in River Forest, a suburb of Chicago. Students at the uni versity had vowed to stage a “silent” counter-protest. “[All the students] have been sick since they first heard about the Phelps’ plans and saw their website to check it out. They couldn’t beUeve the hateful talk on it,” a spokesperson told UK Gay News by email. The Westboro Baptist Church congre gation is made-up from the extended Phelps family — Fred Phelps has 12 chil dren who are all adults. The group is based in Topeka, Kan. In addition to their notorious pickets at productions of “The Laramie Project,” they also demonstrate at funerals of those who die from AIDS. The church’s most infamous demonstrations are at funerals of military personnel who have been killed while serving their country in Iraq and Afghanistan. . — by Andy Harley. UKGayNews.org.uk 3T1 National News by David Stout Q-Notes staff Mayor sued for anti-gay bias BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Lambda Legal has joined a First Amendment lawsuit filed by Central Alabama Pride (CAP) against Mayor Larry Langford, who interfered with the group’s right to free speech last summer when he directed city work ers to treat CAP differ ently than other groups are treated. CAP has held a gay pride parade through the streets of Birmingham every year since 1987, and its Pride banners have been displayed on city poles in accordance with municipal policy that extends this opportunity to a vari ety of organizations when they have events taking place in the city. However, in May of 2008, the mayor announced that he would nei ther sign a proclamation nor provide a permit for gay pride based on his rehgious beliefs that do not “condone that lifestyle choice.” Obama selects his AIDS Czar WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Barack Obama has tapped Jeffrey S. Crowley to head the Office of National AIDS Policy. Crowley, a Senior Research Scholar at Georgetown Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) Legal Director Shannon Price Minter University’s Health Policy Institute and an openly gay man, will coordinate the federal government’s efforts on HIV/AIDS policy and will help guide the administration’s develop ment of disability policies. Prior to his time at Georgetown, Mr. Crowley served as the Deputy Executive Director for Programs at the National Association of People with A'lDS, overseeing the organization’s public education, community development and training activities. Lawyer awarded for marriage win SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) Legal Director Shannon Price Minter and San Francisco Chief Deputy City Attorney Therese M. Stewart have been recognized as Attorneys of the Year by California Lawyer magazine. Stewart and Minter were recognized for their achievements in the fight for marriage equali ty in California. Minter has guided NCLR’s liti gation and program work for over 10 years. He has been lead counsel'in dozens of ground breaking legal victories, including the California gay marriage case. Gay immigration bill reintroduced WASHINGTON, D.C. — Gay and civil rights groups applauded the reintroduction of the Uniting American Families Act, which would grant binational same-sex couples equal treatment under immigration laws by allowing them to sponsor their partner for immigration purposes. The bill'is sponsored by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT). The Task Force Action Fund, a longtime supporter of the measure, is working closely with Immigration Equality and other ally organizations to garner con gressional and presidential support for the legislation. Dad fights court’s gay restriction, ATLANTA, Ga. — In a case currently before the Georgia Supreme Court, gay dad Eric Mongerson is disputing a child custody agreement restriction which prohibits him from “exposing his children to his homosexual partners and friends.” “The Court should do what it always does in divorce cases with cus tody issues, which is to focus on the needs of the children — placing a blanket ban on‘expo sure’ to gay people hardly helps a gay dad maintain his relationship with his children,” said Beth Littrell, Staff Attorney in Lambda Legal’s Southern Regional Office based in Atlanta. “What the ban does do is perpetuate prejudice and stigma against an entire group of people based solely on their sexual orienta tion, and that is just plain wrong.” Family court must decide custody DETROIT, Mich. — The Michigan State Court of Appeals has held that a Michigan family court cannot refuse to hear a child cus tody case simply because it involves children whose parents are lesbians and the state has a constitutional amendment barring recogni tion of same-sex relationships. The adoption was completed when then-couple Diane Giancaspro and Lisa Ann Congleton lived in Illinois. They spUt after moving to Michigan. The faniily court’s ruling left both party’s parental rights unenforceable in Michigan, calling into question whether the children were effectively orphans in the state. > N6V!/ from 2(x)ist Stylish, yet comfortable, 2(x)ist’s new Optic underwear line comes in White, Black, Turquoise, Purple and Fiji Orange. Choose from Crew Neck T-Shirt, Tank Top, No Show Brief and Trunk in sizes S to XL. Made from 96% Modal / 4% Spandex, Optic is soft and form-fitting. Optic ^a|olina’s gay & lesbian everything store! '' • ':4067 309 W. MARTIN ST. 27601 • 919.856.1429 f6RM MON-SAT: 11AM-9PM SUN: 12PM-7PM RALEIGH !a>CTiiaDie!!brdefs@whfterabbitbooks.com www.whiterabbitbooks.com MARCH 7.2009‘jltNot es 9