Fairness Campaign (Louisville, Ky.)

= Audio Available Online
2431
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Ms. Baker an active in Fairness Campaign in early 2000s, outspoken African American trans(woman) activist.
2432
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Mandy Carter, a North Carolina activist, long among leading southern LGBT rights leaders of color; consultant to development of Fairness; co-founder of Southerners On New Ground; spent fall 2004 in Kentucky working on No-on-the-Amendment drive.
2434
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Pat Hussain, an Atlanta-based African American lesbian, who was an early leader of SONG (Southerners on New Ground) and outspoken organizer against homophobia in 1970s-90s; consultant to what became Fairness Campaign and based in Louisville for fall 2004 no-on-the-amendment campaign.
2435
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Darnell Johnson, who is a Black gay man that first became active in the Louisville Youth Group. He “came out” while a student at UofL, later worked for Fairness Campaign staff organizer.
2438
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Carol Kraemer who is active in women’s music scene who came out as lesbian in college at WKU and got active politically back in Louisville, becoming committed antiracist and serving as Fairness first paid staffer.
2439
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with David Lott, a bisexual white man active in gay/lesbian rights causes since early 1970s. Lott was a leader in early gay-politics organization, Greater Louisville Human Rights Coalition, and March for Justice, Inc., the originator of the annual march out of which idea for Fairness was born. More recently a co-chair of Kentucky Alliance against Racist and Political Repression.
2440
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Pam McMichael, the Fairness Campaign co-founder. McMichael is a native of rural Kentucky, first active in 1970s lesbian separatism (Louisville Lesbian Feminist Union), antiracist, anti-nuclear, and international activism; later, co-founder of Southerners on New Ground (SONG), currently resides in Knoxville, TN, and is director of Highlander Center, one of co-founders of SURJ (Speaking Up for Racial Justice) network of white antiracists.
2441
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Pam McMichael, the Fairness Campaign co-founder. McMichael is a native of rural Kentucky, first active in 1970s lesbian separatism (Louisville Lesbian Feminist Union), antiracist, anti-nuclear, and international activism; later, co-founder of Southerners on New Ground (SONG), currently resides in Knoxville, TN, and is director of Highlander Center, one of co-founders of SURJ (Speaking Up for Racial Justice) network of white antiracists.
2445
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Melinda Paras a Filipino-American organizer, former executive director National Gay and Lesbian Task Force (NGLTF) and a consultant throughout founding of what became Fairness, currently resides in San Francisco.
2446
Interview regarding the history of Louisville's LGBTQ movement with Lynn Pfuhl, an out lesbian and co-founder of Louisville Gay Liberation Front in 1970. Pfuhl had also been one of two whites involved in youth sit-ins downtown Louisville protesting racial segregation in 1961 and active in anti-Vietnam movement. She was in accident and confined to wheelchair, still resides in Louisville and rescues feral cats.