Dallas Voice (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 2007 Page: 16 of 56
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NATIONAL BRIEFS
From staff and wire reports
Judge rules against Christian protestors
at Philadelphia's 2004 Outfest
PHILADELPHIA — A federal judge dis-
missed a freedom-of-speech lawsuit by members
of a conservative Christian group who were
arrested while picketing a street festival for gays
and lesbians.
"There is no constitutional right to drown out
the speech of another person,'' U.S. District
Judge Lawrence Stengel wrote.
Organizers of the 2004 Outfest event tried to
block the bullhorn-wielding, anti-gay protesters
from entering the festival. Police allowed them to
enter, but at each location they were surrounded
by gay activists blowing whistles.
Eleven demonstrators affiliated with a group
called Repent America were arrested after they
refused a directive to move to another spot. The
gay Pride event's organizers said the protesters
were attempting to incite the crowd.
Stengel said the Outfest event had received
proper city permits, and the evangelists failed to
take appropriate measures to communicate their
message, including applying for a permit to hold
a counterprotest.
"This is an important decision that supports the
First Amendment rights of organizers of all per-
mitted events," said Jeremy Frey, attorney for
Philly Pride Presents.
Ted Hoppe, an attorney for the Christian
activists, said the Jan. 18 decision allows the gov-
ernment to deny free speech in public areas.
Robinson, gay bishop, says reports of
schism in Episcopal Church exaggerated
HARTFORD, Conn. — The openly gay bish-
op whose election spurred a schism in the
Episcopal church that has played out in
Connecticut and elsewhere said the scope of the
rift has been exaggerated in the media.
Gene Robinson, bishop of New Hampshire,
said there are a small minority of parishes at odds
with the national church's liberal stance on
homosexuality. The parishes are "seeking to get
themselves recognized as the true expression of
Anglicanism in this country and not inconse-
quentially get the. Episcopal Church — I don't
know what the word is — unrecognized as that
legitimate expression. And I think they are using
more conservative churches around the globe to
support that claim," he said.
Robinson, leader of a 15,000-member diocese,
was in Hartford Monday, Jan. 22 to speak at a
Gene Robinson
luncheon attended by
local church leaders.
"In a world facing
40 million people
dying of AIDS and an
increasing gap
between rich and poor,
this seems like a waste
of our time and energy,
debating the rightness
and wrongness of gay
and lesbian people and
their relationships," he
said. The current division over homosexuality in
the church is not much different from an earlier
split over ordaining women priests, he said.
"I think it breaks God's heart that we would be
focusing on such an internal issue, instead of
focusing upon the world which, as I understand
it, Jesus called us to," Robinson said.
Robinson said after his stop in Hartford he was
headed to the Sundance Film Festival, where a
documentary, featuring his story and those of
four other gay families, titled "For the Bible Tells
Me So," has been nominated for a grand jury
prize.
Former assistant professor files federal
discrimination suit against Penn State
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. —A former assistant
professor has filed a federal lawsuit claiming she
was denied a promotion and tenure at Penn State
University because of her gender, open homosex-
uality, or advocacy on equity issues.
All three factors may have played a part,
Constance R. Matthews, 51, said in the civil law-
suit filed Monday, Jan. 22, seeking back pay,
compensatory damages, attorney fees and rein-
statement.
Bill Mahon, a university spokesman, said Penn
State generally does not comment on pending lit-
igation.
M atthews, of State College, joined Penn State
in 1998, applied for tenure in 2004, and was
denied tenure in February 2005 by David Monk,
dean of the education college, according to the
lawsuit. The lawsuit claims the college hosted an
offensive, hostile or intimidating environment for
women and sexual minorities.
The college hired three tenured men to be fac-
ulty members in its counselor-education program
from 1998 to 2004, but hired no tenured women
to teach in the program, the lawsuit claims, say-
ing Matthews opposed such an environment.
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Nash, Tammye. Dallas Voice (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 2007, newspaper, January 26, 2007; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth238945/m1/16/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.