18 JUSt|OUt MARCH 17.2006 Portland Metro Real Estate Steve Bucheri Residential Broker 503.970.3801 Buchert@Hasson.com Mechanics that fix everything. including your conscience. Ï national NATIONAL Supreme Court: Schools Can't Bar Military Recruiters In an 8-0 ruling handed down March 6, the U.S. Supreme Court held that universities that accept federal money do not have the right to exclude U.S military recruiters from campus, even if the mili­ tary’s “don’t ask, don’t tell" policy regarding gays and lesbians conflicts with university policy. The ruling settled a suit in which a group of law schools argued that allowing the recruiters on cam­ pus violated the schools’ First Amendment rights by forcing them to participate in “a compelled endorse­ ment of messages repugnant to them.” The schools’ policies forbid on-campus recruitment by employers that discriminate based on sexual orientation. The court held that permitting the recruiters on campus did not constitute compelled speech, not­ ing that the schools were free to post disclaimers or evenly open protest rhe recruiters’ presence. Chief Justice John Roberts also suggested in arguments that the schools were free to refuse the federal funding. As a practical matter, few univer­ sities are in a position to exercise this option. "Gay Recovery ' Efforts Shifting Focus to Teens TÈgÎjt PDX Automotive is a proud member of the Ecological Business THE MASTERTECHS Association since 1998. Sleep Play Connect Dream In a report released March 2 in Miami, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force blasted the latest trend among evangelically based groups seek­ ing to “cure” gays and lesbians: targeting teens seen as “at risk” of becoming homosexual. “It is morally repugnant and downright danger­ ous the way these extremists demonize young peo­ ple and prey on rhe fears of parents through their so-called ‘ex-gay’ programs,” said Matt Foreman, executive director of NGLTF. “This report exposes the extent to which these zealots will go, including reformulating their ‘ex-gay’ snake oil at the expense of vulnerable children and young adults.” The “ex-gay” movement includes groups such as Exodus International and Focus on the Family that champion the notion that homosexuality is a dis­ ease that can be cured through therapy and prayer. But with few homosexuals clamoring to be cured of their sexual orientation, the movement has shifted its attention to parents, children and adolescents, the report found. Through teen programs and traveling confer­ ences like Focus on the Family’s “Love Won Out,” the ministries urge parents to commit their chil­ dren to treatment of “prehomosexuality,” even if it is against the child’s wishes. Heterosexual youth are also being recruited in schools and churches to spread the message that homosexuality is a treat­ able mental illness. The report calls for increased regulatory over­ sight of the treatment programs, many of which are administered by clergy with no special license to practice therapy. CALIFORNIA Students Press Assembly for Bias-Free Schools More than 500 people gathered March 5 on the California Capitol steps in Sacramento to urge passage of two bills aimed at reducing bias in California classrœms. The Safe Place to Learn Act (Assembly Bill 606) requires schixil districts to enforce the state’s existing anti-discrimination laws, laying out the procedures necessary to ensure compliance. The legislation has passed in the Assembly and awaits passage in the Senate. The Bias-Free Curriculum Act (Senate Bill 1437) would prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in course materials, school instruction and school-sponsored activities. The rally was sponsored by Equality California and the Gay-Straight Alliance Network and included queer youth, parents, teachers and sup­ porters of sexual minority rights. MARYLAND GOP Lawmaker Wants Judge Sacked for Gay Marriage A Maryland state legislator has called for the nearly unprecedented impeachment of a Circuit Court judge who ruled that Maryland’s 33-year-old definition of marriage was unconstitutional. The decision, handed down in January by M. Brooke Murdock of the Baltimore Circuit, was widely seen as a victory for proponents of same-sex marriage. Murdock has stayed her decision pending an appeals court ruling. The legislator, Delegate Donald H. Dwyer Jr., led an effort to place the question of same-sex marriage on last November’s ballot. Introducing the impeachment resolution on the state House floor, he asserted: “The public trust has been violat­ ed. It is our duty, our obligation and our responsi­ bility to hold the court accountable.” Observers believe the impeachment resolution has little chance of success. The Maryland Legislature has not impeached a sitting jurist since 1861, when Judge Henry Stump of the Baltimore City Criminal Court was removed for drinking and falling asleep at the bench. Lesbian Homecoming King Raises Eyebrows 877.800.0004- portland or ________________________________________________ —_______________________ Matt Foreman of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force blasted teen-targeted "ex-gay" ministries as "morally repugnant and downright dangerous." The election of an out lesbian as homecoming king of a small Maryland college has campus offi­ cials reaching for the rule books. Jennifer Jones, a 21-year-old senior from Newark, Del., garnered 64 of 169 votes cast in a Hix id College student election, beating out three men. “h’s cool that Hixxl allows people to be them­ selves,” Jones told The Frederick (Md.) News-Post. “If people didn’t want me to be king, they wouldn’t have nominated me and voted for me.” Campus officials say they’ll review all home- coming events. The homecoming celebration was only HcxxJ’s second—the school did not became fully coeducational until 2003. V