LGBT major approved at SDSU
MONDAY October 3, 2011 Volume 97, Issue 21 W W W.T H E D A I LYA Z T E C . C O M
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No longer just a minor, proponents praise the progress Arturo Garcia staff writer Last week, the California State University chancellor approved San Diego State’s latest addition to its current list of 84 bachelor’s degrees: the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered studies major. As the major’s future adviser acclaims SDSU’s preparedness for the LGBT program, another alumnus who served as co-chair for the Pride Action Committee student group on campus questions the addition. “We look at history, queer literature – much will depend on the research focus of the staff that will be teaching,” Associate Vice President for Faculty Affairs Edith Benkov said. “It will include interdisciplinary visions that are less typical of other programs.” As part of a growing academic specialization within many disciplines across the U.S., including literature, history, social sciences, media studies, political science, law and many others, the LGBT major will provide students the opportunity to form an interdisciplinary degree starting spring 2012, according to current adviser of the LGBT minor and professor of women’s studies at SDSU, Dr. Esther Rothblum. She will also be the adviser of the major in the spring.
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The background of LGBT studies According to Benkov, the major will be the first of its kind in the CSU system. LGBT studies have been carving their way through academia since the early 1970s, SDSU’s LGBT bibliographer Will Weston said. “Higher education research related to LGBT people has evolved in tandem with activist movements,” associate professor at Michigan State University, Kristen A. Renn, wrote in her research paper “LGBT and Queer Research in Higher Education: The State and Status of the Field.” According to Renn, in 1965 the first known gay student organization, the Student Homophile League at Columbia University, was founded immediately after the riots in the city. Weston said LGBT studies are comprised of classes in many different disciplines. “In 1970, SDSU founded the first women’s studies department in the U.S., and the world, realizing at the time that the women’s movement had reached a critical momentum in scholarship, media, activism and pedagogy,” Rothblum said. The first university program in gay and lesbian studies was established at the City University of New York in 1986, according to an article by Jacques Steinberg in The New York Times. SDSU introduced its LGBT minor in 2009, after incorporating two LGBT studies courses within the 2002 academic year, according to Rothblum.
San Diego State’s Aztec Recreation Center is promoting a program focused on arms, meant for men and women looking to either build muscle mass or trim down. “Whether you are a guy or girl, you can follow a basic recipe that will tighten, tone and shape your arms,” Matt Dawson, a personal trainer at the ARC, said. According to Dawson, following the formula will give these results faster than most regimes. The formula he suggests is to drink water constantly, complete a cardiovas-
Program assets and university pre paredness For two years in a row, SDSU was voted one of the top 20 colleges by campuspride.org, receiving a perfect five-star rating for LGBT policy inclusion, support and institutional commitment, academic life, student life, housing, campus safety, counseling and health, recruitment and retention efforts, according to SDSU alumnus Allan Acevedo.
“Higher education research related to LGBT people has evolved in tandem with activist movements.” Kristen A. Renn Associate professor at Michigan State University
“The fact that SDSU has an LGBT studies minor, in addition to the national visibility of Safe Zones and SDSU, which trains students, staff, and faculty to improve campus climate for LGBT people, contributed to this superior ranking,” Rothblum said. However, Acevedo called the rating premature and noted a particular dissatisfaction, writing “The biggest thing I see lacking right now is a LGBT resource center on campus with staff, program funding and support from the university.” Director of Diversity at SDSU
cular exercise routine six days each week and reduce overall calorie intake by 200 to 400. This, says Dawson, will decrease the overall size of your arms. To build arms up, the same steps with a 200 to 400 calorie increase is suggested. “People ask me what exercises will shape their arms and help them get that ‘V’ shape or how to lose that second wave,” Dawson said. “You know, when a person waves with their hand and the triceps feel compelled to join in. Fortunately there are some simple
Aaron Bruce said there are plans to include a LGBTQIA space in the school’s new student union, scheduled to open fall 2013. According to Benkov, the minor has been well received by students. “In terms of overall impact of the minor, we started doing a lavender graduation,” she said. “The minor facilitated something that might not have happened without it.” According to Rothblum, SDSU has three LGBT student groups: the Pride Action Committee, the LGBTQ Student Union and the Gamma Rho Lambda queer-based sorority. The curriculum SDSU hired four new faculty members this fall who are focused on LGBT issues, said Rothblum. Among them are Pablo Ben in the history department, focusing on gay men’s communities in South America and Douglas Bigham in linguistics, focusing on “gay and straight speech” and queer linguistics. Rothblum mentioned 10 existing courses with LGBT emphases, ranging from history, “homosexuality in the Middle Ages and history of sexuality” to women’s studies, “same-sex marriage and lesbian mental health.” “SDSU faculty scholars are at the forefront of scholarship on LGBT issues,” Rothblum said. The major’s curriculum is fairly broad according to Benkov, who currently teaches a course titled “Lesbian Identity in Medieval Europe.” “A lot of coursework will maybe focus 50 percent on LGBT issues, the rest on broader issues of sexuality,” Benkov said.
steps anyone can take for better looking arms.” The most important thing to be done though, according to Dawson, is to stay consistent because results are probably not going to show otherwise. For more information, visit the ARC. There is also a video on arcsdsu.wordpress.com titled “Strong Sexy Arms” which thoroughly details the complete workout. — Information compiled by the Aztec Recreation Center
Read about how SDSU used the bye week to work on its game.
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