Matching Items (597)
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- All Subjects: Gay activists
- All Subjects: Gays--Employment
- All Subjects: Gays--Social life and customs, Gay bars
Created2000
DescriptionSelected article titles: "Softball Craze!"; Two Opportunities for Gay People to Count"; "Tempe Elects Giuliano to Fourth Term"; "Pentagon Finishes Report on 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell'"; "Life After Knight: A Call for Direct Action and Civil Disobedience"
Created2000
DescriptionSelected article titles: "Legislator, Latina, Lesbian: Will Tucson's Colette Barajas Make It Happen in Arizona?"; "The Right to Protest"; "Legislator's Personal Plea Makes Hate Crimes Legislation Fly"; "Blacks, Gays Feel Most Discriminated Against - And Other Americans Agree"; "Methodist Traditionalists Have Won the Gay War, But at What Cost?"
Created2000
DescriptionSelected article titles: "Inclusiveness in L.A. - Gay Delegates and Gay Issues Welcomed at Democratic Convention"; "The Boys (and Girls) of Summer"; "Gore Hits Ball Out of the Park with Lieberman Choice"; "Manufacturing Fake Controversies the Gay Activist Way"; "Democrats Embrace Gays and Lesbians at Convention"
Created1982
DescriptionSelected article titles: "Getting to Know You … An Interview with Rusty Warren"; "Alert!!! Phoenix Police Crackdown"; "Speaking Out: What's it Worth?"; "Tony's Locker Room"; "ARC Plans for the Future"
Created1861
DescriptionSeveral records identifying mistreatment of Chinese settlers aboard the Bremen “Fides”. It contains the testimony of three Chinese settlers.
Created1867
Description
Permission to enter Cuba with a shipment of Chinese settlers in on the Bremen ship “Confucius”. The Captain General hired hired a German ship to bring Chinese settlers; some official communications on the subject; superior civil government documents on the authorization of the shipment; list of the 218 boarding Chinese settlers in Macao; document the Spanish consulate in Macao on cargo; list of the 218 boarding Chinese settlers in Macao, received in Havana landing-released Chinese settlers.
Created1867-05-12
Description
This is a ship manifest of 218 Chinese settlers who arrived in the port of Havana on May 12, 1867, aboard the Bremen ship "Confucius." The list included the original Chinese name, new Christian name, and age of each settler. The settlers who died during the journey were marked within the list; only 5 settlers died. 1867.