QPenn celebrates LGBT life
This week, it’s the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community’s time to shine on Penn’s campus.
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This week, it’s the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community’s time to shine on Penn’s campus.
Though National Women’s History Month commemorates years of struggle for women’s recognition, the fight for equality continues at Penn.
A small community of School of Social Policy and Practice students raised their voices Wednesday evening in support of a larger community — the underprivileged women of Philadelphia who have been affected by the recent funding cuts to women’s healthcare.
In an average year, spring break in New Orleans brings to mind community service projects and building houses. But this wasn’t an average year, and spending last week in NOLA meant one thing to Penn students — Mardi Gras.
In the minds of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender employees, two University policies stand in the way of true equal rights.
Though Penn did not participate in National Eating Disorder Awareness Week — which runs from Feb. 20-28 this year — some students have that sense of awareness every day of their lives in college.
When he was still hanging out with the football team and the Beta Theta Pi brothers at Penn, 1966 College graduate John Doman never thought he would become an actor — let alone an actor in an Oscar-nominated film.
Last weekend, members of Penn’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community traveled to Columbia University to continue the tradition that began at Penn last year — the IvyQ conference.
For the women involved, this weekend’s The Vagina Monologues is more than just a show.
The Student Labor Action Project submitted a petition on Wednesday asking Penn not reinvest in HEI Hotels and Resorts — a company under fire for alleged unjust labor practices, such as understaffing and forbidding workers from organizing protests.
Eleven freshmen who were selected to attend Penn as a “posse” from urban Miami high schools engaged their campus community at a retreat this weekend.
“By the power vested in me by Freedom to Marry, I now pronounce you husband and husband.”
Although Penn professes a “commitment to diversity” on its website, its statistics on standing minority faculty may reflect a different reality.
This week, women’s stories will be headline news.
This spring, a new stand-alone rape crisis center will be established, catering to the Penn community and Philadelphia residents.
In response to the Common Application’s decision to exclude questions on sexual orientation and gender identity last week, Penn hopes to include such questions in its supplement.
Though Penn has been hailed as a particularly welcoming place for those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, an equality gap still exists between heterosexual married employees and those in same-sex domestic partnerships.
Though the December repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” opened up the possibility of military service for those who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual, the controversy over transgender individuals in the military rages on.
Though the December repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” opened up the possibility of military service for those who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual, the controversy over transgender individuals in the military rages on.
This year’s new fraternity members will have a better understanding of what it means to be gay at Penn.