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22 Jason Morgan
23 Markus Rogan, an elite swimmer from Austria
24 Christophe Dominici
(born 20 May 1972) is a former French rugby union footballer of Italian origin. He played wing for Stade Français and France. He has been a coach with Stade Français since the start of the 2008/9 season and a board member since 2009/10 season.
25
You Decide!
The Charity calendar 2011 from the Alps
The 2011 Edition of Men In The Alps from Switzerland has already released!! Here are some sample images for you.
"Men In The Alps is a charity project of which the net proceeds are donated to charitable institutions dedicated to helping the ill, handicapped or socially underprivileged in South Tyrol and Central Europe."
This project donates to the following organizations;
: The AIDS-Help Desk PRO POSITIV
: DEBRA-South Tyrol (Toblach) cares for and supports the so-called "butterfly children" that suffer from Epidermolysis Bullosa.
Stoked?
The Charity calendar 2011 from the Alps
The 2011 Edition of Men In The Alps from Switzerland has already released!! Here are some sample images for you.
"Men In The Alps is a charity project of which the net proceeds are donated to charitable institutions dedicated to helping the ill, handicapped or socially underprivileged in South Tyrol and Central Europe."
This project donates to the following organizations;
: The AIDS-Help Desk PRO POSITIV
: DEBRA-South Tyrol (Toblach) cares for and supports the so-called "butterfly children" that suffer from Epidermolysis Bullosa.
Ugandan gay rights advocate killed
By Jeffrey Gettleman / New York Times / 01/27/2011
NAIROBI, Kenya -- David Kato knew he was a marked man.
As the most outspoken gay rights advocate in a country where homophobia is so severe that Parliament is considering a bill to execute gay people, Kato had received a stream of death threats, his friends said. A few months ago, a Ugandan newspaper ran an anti-gay diatribe with Kato's picture on the front page under a banner urging, "Hang Them."
Wednesday afternoon, Kato was beaten to death with a hammer in his rough-and-tumble neighborhood. Police officials were quick to chalk up the motive to robbery, but members of the small and increasingly besieged gay community in Uganda suspect otherwise.
"David's death is a result of the hatred planted in Uganda by U.S. evangelicals in 2009," Val Kalende, chairwoman of one of Uganda's gay rights groups, said in a statement. "The Ugandan government and the so-called U.S. evangelicals must take responsibility for David's blood."
Kalende was referring to visits in March 2009 by a group of American evangelicals, who held rallies and workshops in Uganda discussing how to turn gay people straight and how "the gay movement is an evil institution" intended to "defeat the marriage-based society."
The Americans involved said they had no intention of stoking a violent reaction. But the anti-gay bill was drafted shortly thereafter.
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