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(10/09/15 4:00pm)
This is Maggie. She's a 12-year-old Minature Schnauzer. I met her on Ball State's campus and she had an entire following with her. She would sit and jump up when her human asked her to do so. She shied away from the Camera to keep an eye on her human.
(10/08/15 4:00pm)
This is Winston. He was 6 months old when the photo was taken. He's a Minature Schnauzer. He is a very friendly pup and will walk up to every human he sees. He might even jump in your lap and try to lick you when you pet him.
(10/07/15 4:00pm)
This is Manni. He's a 1-year-old Great Dane. I watched him greet some humans sitting on a bench before he walked up to me. He sat when his human told him to and laid down when I tried to get on his level.
(10/06/15 4:00pm)
This is Theo, just 4 months old when this photo was taken. He is a Black Labrador Pointer mix. He will look any direction when his human is holding a treat. He's also friendly when other dogs come up to visit.
(10/05/15 4:00pm)
This is Holli, a 3-year-old Miniature Poodle. She was walking without a leash next to her human on Ball State's campus. She was a bit shy, but didn't seem to mind having her photo taken.
(10/02/15 4:00pm)
This is Jet. He recently turned 1-year-old in March. He's a toy Australian Shepherd with his face on a longboard designed by his human. She hopes he will run alongside her when they start longboarding.
(10/01/15 4:00pm)
This is Maizey. She's a 3-year-old Yorkshire Terrier. Her human brought her to the Unified Media Lab where she greeted every student she could. She loved meeting the students and giving them kisses.
(09/30/15 4:00pm)
This is 12-year-old Pooh. His human was a volunteer at the Animal Rescue Fund in Muncie when she met Pooh. She decided she had to have him and adopted him in November 2014. Pooh had been abused and is just now starting to get comfortable with seeing and meeting new humans.
(09/29/15 4:00pm)
This is Minnie. Yes, her human named her after Minnie Mouse. Minnie was just over 1-year-old when the photo was taken. She tends to watch over her adopted brother Zeeke, a French Bulldog. Minnie is a bit of a flirt when she meets humans; as her human describes her. She will come up to you then back away, then do it again.
(09/28/15 4:00pm)
This is Zeeke. He was a 4 month old French Bulldog when the photo was taken. He loves humans and will walk up to every human he sees. He also likes to chase leaves when the wind blows. Zeeke is always fashionably dressed with a collar that has a bow tie on it. Zeeke lives with his human and an adopted brother, Pooh, and an adopted sister, Minnie.
(09/25/15 3:17pm)
About two weeks after the broadcast of a network program U CAN U BIBI season two episode six, the Chinese State Administration of Radio Film and Television, a national institution that controls the censorship of all the audiovisual products including movies and TV or web programs, replaced this episode silently with no exact reason. This was the normal official response, however, it is said the reason was that the views about coming out of the closet in the program challenged the traditional social values. I tried to verify this information with one of the producers of this program who is a friend of mine, but he refused to acknowledge it.
(09/25/15 3:11pm)
You can read Fun Home in a single afternoon. That is not as difficult as you might think; Fun Home contains more pictures than words. If you sprint through the book, however, it will be a mistake. Alison Bechdel’s graphic memoir packs so much into few pages that the reader could (and should) spend days or even weeks unpacking all the layers of meaning in her text.
(09/25/15 3:07pm)
On August 11, 2015, the Indy Star reported that Jim Brainard, mayor of Carmel, Indiana, constructed a new anti-discrimination law for his city. It was reported that this “ordinance would protect residents from discrimination based on gender identity or expression and sexual orientation as well as race, color, religion, national origin, gender, disability, family or marital status, ancestry, age and veteran status.” The law would apply to all people involved in the fields of business, housing, education, employment, contracts, programs, public accommodations and services and amenities in the Carmel city limits. Furthermore, this ordinance is inapplicable to religious worship or clergy engaged in religious activities, private residences and nonprofit private clubs exclusively for fraternal or religious purposes. The fine for breaking this ordinance would be $500, daily. This means that in the best circumstances, LBGT+ people will not be discriminated against and strictly religious organizations will not be forced to act outside of their beliefs.
(09/25/15 3:05pm)
Two men walk into a café in Budapest. Start of a really bad and cheesy joke, right? Wrong, this is a start of a story about the meaning of love, the different types of love, and what said love entails. The two men are called Oswald and Imre von N and each are from different countries with very different backgrounds. The story is told from Oswald’s point of view, and readers get to learn and discover with him the complications of finding out whether or not his male friend has strong and passionate feelings for him.
(09/18/15 4:14pm)
The Kim Davis controversy is, by this point in time, already well known to anyone with even a slight grasp on current events. The way people choose to analyze this fiasco, however, and by extension any similar ones that take place in the future, remains hugely relevant and important. Because this issue is centered on a lot of discussion about peoples’ rights, the Civil Rights Movement is inevitably brought up to draw comparisons. Many on the side of Kim Davis, including presidential candidate Rick Santorum, see fit to compare her with Martin Luther King Jr., a famous leader of the civil rights movement, portraying her as a champion of religious freedom.
(09/18/15 4:09pm)
Most of children are fearful of evil characters in stories, and most students are fearful of rigorous teachers and homework. However, this kind of fear is just coming from the desire to escape, not the fear coming from the depth of one’s soul, the fear that controls people’s conduct unconsciously. What I want to talk about is the latter one, growing in everyone’s heart even though some of us will deny its existence: the fear of loneliness and the unknown.
(09/18/15 4:10pm)
On June 28, 1969, Stonewall Inn, a speakeasy in Greenwich Village popular with gay, lesbian, and transgender citizens, was raided by New York police. This wasn’t the first time the bar had been searched, after all, Stonewall Inn was serving alcohol without a license and was a well-known gay hangout at a time when homosexuality was still considered a mental disorder and homosexual sex could land you in prison. The June raid began to go off script when the patrons of the bar, particularly the transgender men and women present, began resisting arrest. Details get a little murky here, but it is accepted much of the crowd consisted of gay, lesbian and transgender people of color. It is also generally known that among the first to begin throwing stones were 25 year old African-American transwoman Marsha P. Johnson and 17 year old Puerto Rican transwoman Sylvia Rivera
(09/18/15 4:05pm)
Dear Young Queer Boys
(09/11/15 3:26pm)
On September 8, 2015, Kim Davis, the infamous Rowan County, Kentucky clerk who has refused same-sex couples marriage licenses, was released from jail following her arrest this past Thursday. According to CNN, Davis “broke down in tears” at a press rally following her release.
(09/11/15 3:25pm)
A recent article published by Forbes discovered that in 2014, there were 4,610 speaking characters in the top 100 grossing films of that year. Of those 4,610, only 19 belonged to characters that were lesbian, gay, or bisexual. Not a single transgender character was portrayed. Despite the fact that nearly two million Americans identify as transgender, Hollywood has chosen to ignore these demographics and instead opt to reflect a reality in which only 0.4% of their characters are somewhere on that spectrum.