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Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Caption reads: "M.B."
Bouvé, Marjorie
Bouvé, Marjorie
black-and-white prints (photographs)
black-and-white prints (photographs)
1895
1895
Haidt, Marie
Portraits
Shoreline
Portraits
Shoreline
Gloucester (Mass.)
Gloucester (Mass.)
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20158921
B000328
m89_s1p081v001b
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20158921
Portraits
Shoreline
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
marjorie bouv on rocks by water
1895/01/01
approximate
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
1895
Portraits
Shoreline
Gloucester (Mass.)
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
Bouvé, Marjorie
Bouvé, Marjorie
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Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
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Caption reads: "M.B."
Bouvé, Marjorie
Bouvé, Marjorie
black-and-white prints (photographs)
black-and-white prints (photographs)
1895
1895
Haidt, Marie
Portraits
Shoreline
Portraits
Shoreline
Gloucester (Mass.)
Gloucester (Mass.)
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20158921
B000328
m89_s1p081v001b
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20158921
Portraits
Shoreline
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
marjorie bouv on rocks by water
1895/01/01
approximate
Marjorie Bouvé on rocks by water.
1895
Portraits
Shoreline
Gloucester (Mass.)
1879-1970 Marjorie Bouvé
Bouvé, Marjorie
Bouvé, Marjorie
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Frank Palmer Speare: Educational Visionary
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Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
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Portrait of President Speare. On back: "Frank P. Speare, Boston YMCA."
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1903
1903
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.). Office of University Photography.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
College administrators
College presidents
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Presidents
College administrators
Massachusetts
Boston
College presidents
Massachusetts
Boston
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Presidents
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20163306
A000307
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20163306
College administrators
College presidents
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Presidents
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
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Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
portrait of president frank p speare
1903/01/01
approximate
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
1903
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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College presidents Massachusetts Boston
Young Men's Christian associations Massachusetts Boston
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Presidents
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
Chickering, E.
Chickering, E.
Chickering, E.
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Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
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Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
Portrait of President Speare. On back: "Frank P. Speare, Boston YMCA."
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1903
1903
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.). Office of University Photography.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
College administrators
College presidents
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Presidents
College administrators
Massachusetts
Boston
College presidents
Massachusetts
Boston
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Presidents
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20163306
A000307
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20163306
College administrators
College presidents
Young Men's Christian associations
Administration
Presidents
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Series 12: Presidents. Subseries: Speare, Frank P. > n.d., 1931-1940, 1964, 1974
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
portrait of president frank p speare
1903/01/01
approximate
Portrait of President Frank P. Speare
1903
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College administrators Massachusetts Boston
College presidents Massachusetts Boston
Young Men's Christian associations Massachusetts Boston
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Presidents
Speare Frank Palmer 1870-1954
Chickering, E.
Chickering, E.
Chickering, E.
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Senator Kennedy and Student Aid at Northeastern
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Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
photographs
2008
2008
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Kennedy Edward M. (Edward Moore) 1932-2009
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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United States
United States
Politicians
Federal aid to higher education
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http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20214852
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Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
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Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
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Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
photographs
2008
2008
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Kennedy Edward M. (Edward Moore) 1932-2009
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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United States
United States
Politicians
Federal aid to higher education
Politicians
United States
Federal aid to higher education
Kennedy Edward M. (Edward Moore) 1932-2009
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20214852
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20214852
Politicians
Federal aid to higher education
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Senator Edward M. Kennedy at a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions field hearing
senator edward m kennedy at a senate committee on health education labor and pensions field hearing
2008/01/01
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Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Linda is a sophomore in the College of Nursing and active in the Youth Concert Choir. She is the daughter of Mrs. Jean Haynes and a 1971 graduate of Dorchester High School. She is crowned at halftime of the Homecoming NU football game against AIC.
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1972-10-14
1972-10-14
Jet Commercial Photographers.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Brown Linda
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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Boston
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Boston
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Massachusetts
Boston
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Massachusetts
Boston
Women college students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Homecoming Royalty
Students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Brown Linda
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20161000
A006430
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20161000
African American students
College students
Students
Social life and customs
Student activities
Women college students
Students
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Series 7: Events. Subseries: Homecoming > Queen and Court > 1972
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
homecoming queen linda brown holds a bouquet of flowers
1972/10/14
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
1972-10-14
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
African American students Massachusetts Boston
College students Massachusetts Boston
Students Social life and customs Massachusetts Boston
Student activities Massachusetts Boston
Women college students Massachusetts Boston
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Students
Brown Linda
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
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Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
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Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Linda is a sophomore in the College of Nursing and active in the Youth Concert Choir. She is the daughter of Mrs. Jean Haynes and a 1971 graduate of Dorchester High School. She is crowned at halftime of the Homecoming NU football game against AIC.
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1972-10-14
1972-10-14
Jet Commercial Photographers.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Brown Linda
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
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Student activities
Women college students
Students
African American students
Massachusetts
Boston
College students
Massachusetts
Boston
Students
Social life and customs
Massachusetts
Boston
Student activities
Massachusetts
Boston
Women college students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Homecoming Royalty
Students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Brown Linda
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20161000
A006430
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20161000
African American students
College students
Students
Social life and customs
Student activities
Women college students
Students
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Series 7: Events. Subseries: Homecoming > Queen and Court > 1972
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
homecoming queen linda brown holds a bouquet of flowers
1972/10/14
Homecoming Queen Linda Brown holds a bouquet of flowers
1972-10-14
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
African American students Massachusetts Boston
College students Massachusetts Boston
Students Social life and customs Massachusetts Boston
Student activities Massachusetts Boston
Women college students Massachusetts Boston
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Nursing
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Homecoming Royalty
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Students
Brown Linda
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
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We Raise Our Voices:
Celebrating Activism for Equality & Pride in Boston's African American, Feminist, Gay & Lesbian, & Latino Communities
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Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Gay Community News
Gay Community News
1982-07
1982-07
Gay Community
Gay Pride
Gay Community
Gay Pride
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20241673
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20241673
Gay Community
Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
boston lesbian and gay pride
1982/07/01
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
1982-07
Gay Community
Gay Community News
Gay Community News
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VOL 9, NO. 49 ay c TH ew SOC~: BIPAD: 65498 Boston lesbian and Gay·Pride 1982 �GayCommunity Vol.9, No.49 ©GCN, 1982 - - - - - - - - - J u l y 3 , 1982· (617)426-4469' Court Ruling Condemns Anti-Gay INS Policy By Scott Brookie SAN FRANCISCO - In the most sweeping legal condemnation to date of anti-gay government immigration policy, a federal district judge in San Francisco ruled on June 17 that it is unconstitutional to exclude lesbian and gay male non-citizens from entering the U.S. simply because of their homosexuality. Ruling on a class action suit filed last June by the San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Committee (L/GFDC) against the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), Judge Robert P. Aguilar declared that, ''The INS policy of per se exclusion of homosexual aliens from entering into the United States is invalid as contrary to congressional intent and as unconstitutionally abridging Plaintiff's First Amendment rights." At the same time in a related case, Judge Aguilar ruled that Carl Hill, a gay British citizen who had been detained by the INS in 1979, must be admitted into the U.S. now and at any time in the future. Hill, a reporter for the Gay News of London, had been the subject of a lengthy legal battle after immigrations officials stopped him at San Francisco airport when they noticed his button reading "Stonewall '69, Gay Pride '79." Hill had come to the U.S. to cover San Francisco's Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day events for Gay News. Aguilar declared that the exclusion of Hill by the INS had been "an abuse of discretion." On April 23, Aguilar issued an oral ruling ordering Hill admitted to the country (see GCN, Vol. 9, No. 41). The current written decision reaffirms the oral ruling. The Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Committee had filed its suit in June of 1981, arguing that the INS policy violated the First Amendment rights of gay men and lesbians in the U.S. "who want and need to know the experiences of gay and lesbian persons of other nations ." Aguilar agreed at the time that "significant constitutional issues'' were raised by the suit and issued a temporary injunction. The government appealed the temporary injunction (see GCN, Vol. 9, No . 15), arguing that Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day activities were "contrary to the morals of significant numbers of Americans," according to Greg Day of the L/GFDC. In his ruling on June 17, Aguilar in effect agreed that lesbian/gay pride events have political significance. "Plaintiffs assert very strong First Amendment interests in this case. Plaintiffs seek to engage in discussion and exchange with homosexual aliens. They seek to share information and ideas relating to the laws regarding homosexuality in other countries to better deal with the laws and attitudes about homosexuals. Through this sharing process, Plaintiffs also seek to improve the political position of homosexual groups in the United States and to gain greater public acceptance for homosexual persons in the United States. These are well recognized and compelling First Amendment interests." According to Day, Aguilar also seemed to write his opinion in anticipation of arguments the government may make if they decide to appeal the case. ''Homosexual aliens pose no threat to national security simply because they are homosexuals .... The fact that some American c1t1zens find homosexuality morally repugnant, or the purposes of the Lesbian/ Gay Freedom Day events abhorrent or offensive cannot provide an important governmental interest upon which an impairment of First Amendment freedoms can be based," said Aguilar. Aguilar requested that lawyers for both sides submit within ten days proposed language for a permanent injunction. Mary Dunlap, attorney for the L/GFDC, told GCN that she would request an injunction covering the entire counCon tinued on page 6 State Senator Appoints Liaison to Gay Community By Larry Goldsmith BOSTON Massachusetts State Senator Bill Owens (R-Boston) has announced the appoint- Court Favors . ay Father G In Bid for Custody of Son By Jil Clark PORTLAND, ME - A gay man won a decisive victory in his prolonged battle for custody of his seven-year-old son recently when a state court judge agreed with the father and others that the boy is being abused by his legal guardians, his parental grandparents (see GCN, Vol. 9, No . 28). Ruling on the child abuse petition, District Judge Edward Rogers ordered custody of Mark Pierce, Jr. removed from Genevieve and Elwyn Pierce and recommended that the state's Department of Human Services place the boy in the home of his natural father, Mark Pierce, a 27-year-old Portland salesman. Judge Rogers made no mention of Mark Pierce's sexual orientation in his writings. Pierce's attorney, Niel Shankman of Legal Clinics of Maine, said he was relieved that the judge had "kept his personal prejudices out of his decision . . .. I knew [beforehand] that the outcome had more to do with that than all the research I •d done.'' Earlier this year, another district judge, Robert Donovan, lifted a temporary order protecting the child from his grandmother and returned him to his grandparents without considering the extensive and detailed charges· of abuse and neglect filed by Mark Pierce, Pierce's aunt and Pierce's lover, Robert Brogna. At the time of that hearing, Shankman commented that " although the judge said nothing to make us think that the fact the father is gay influenced his decision, his decision in light of the circumstances was surprisingly severe." Pierce says he feels "ecstatic" about the ruling, which he considers a significant one for lesbian and gay male parents. "But the most important thing is that he's coming home," Pierce said. "I know my mother's attorney has told her [about the decision] by now and I know she told my son and I'm excited knowing how happy he is inside about it. I just hope he can be patient a little while longer.'' It may be two or three months before Mark, Jr. is returned to his father's house, since he is residing in Massachusetts, beyond the jurisdiction of the Maine courts. The co-operation of the Massachusetts Department of Human Services is needed to take the boy from Genevieve and Elwyn Pierce and Shankman said that obtaining this may be difficult. "On the other hand, we may be saved this work; it isn't unreasonable to expect that the child will be dropped off on Mark's front door any day. She [Genevieve Pierce] has done that many times before when he becomes inconvenient for whatever reason. And this time Mark take the boy from them with a legal order behind him ." Shankman is confident that once Mark, Jr. is back in Maine, the Massachusetts Department of Human Services will place him in the care of his father , in accordance with the recommendation of the judge. However, this arrangement is still a precarious one for Mark Pierce and his son. Pierce lost his Carl Hill legal guardianship of his son in a Massachusetts law office several years ago and Maine law provides that the state has an obligation to attempt to reunite the members of the legal family, which in this case would mean sending Mark , Jr. back to his grandparents if at some future time they can prove to the court that the boy would no longer be in danger in their care. · Continued on page 6 ment of Boston actJVJst Donald Babets as his first liaison to the lesbian and gay community. Babets, a graduating student at the University of Massachusetts in Boston, was co-founder and first chairperson of the Fenway Lesbian and Gay Alliance (FLAGA), an organization formed after the murder of a gay man in the Fenway on the night following the Lesbian and Gay Pride March in 1980. Babets also served as the Worcester co-coordinator of the Massachusetts Caucus for Gay Legislation in 1978. Babets says he hopes to represent the lesbian and gay community not only to Sen. O wens' office but also throughout the State House. Owens, who has co-sponsored gay rights legislation since his election to the Senate in 1979, said the appointment of the liaison will promote "greater sensitivity on my staff and among people throughout my district to the gay community and other minority groups, all of whom make a substantial part of the constituency in the Second Suffolk District, the Commonwealth and the United States." Senate Bill 113, introduced and co-sponsored by Owens, would prohibit discrimination in public and private employment on the basis of sexual preference. The bill is currently in a Senate committee awaiting further action. Owens has also asked Boston lawyer David Lund to draw up a list of the state laws prohibiting homosexual activity in the state, in preparation for the submission of legislation aimed at removing all such prohibitions. Pride Reigns in Boston; Mayor's Executive Order Announced at Pride Rally By Larry Goldsmith BOSTON-Lesbians and gay men took to the streets on June 19 for this city's twelfth annual Lesbian and Gay Pride March and Rally. A crowd estimated by event organizers at 13,000 gathered in Copley Square at noon and marched the' traditional route through the Back Bay and Beacon Hill, ending up with a rally in the Boston Common. Police told GCN they estimated the crowd at 5,000. Rally participants braved unseasonably cold and rainy weather to hear an array of speakers and entertainers, including a short unscheduled appearance by Brian McNaught, Boston's new mayoral liaison to the lesbian and gay community (see interview in this issue). McNaught used the opportunity to announce the signing of a new executive order by Mayor · Kevin White, designed to prohibit discrimination by the city on the basis of sexual orientation. administration, and an ordinance, passed into law by the city council. The executive order also applies only to municipal employment and city services, 'whereas an ordinance could prohibit discrimination in See Pride Photos, page 5. "Today the mayor of Boston issued one of the most powerful ordinances the city has," McNaught told the crowd . "It prohibits discrimination in employment and city services ." However, activist Eric Rofes, speaking later in the rally, corrected McNaught's announcement, pointing out the differences between an executive order, issued by the mayor and effective only for the duration of that mayor's the private sector as well. Rofes emphasized the need for an ordinance in order to adequately protect the rights of lesbians and gay men. Other speakers at the rally decried the economic and military programs of the Reagan administration, saying that the president's policies contributed to the racism, sexism , anti-Semitism and heterosexism experienced by lesbians and gay men in this country. �---......,----------~----Page 2 • Gay Community News, July 3, 1 9 8 2 " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - News Notes----------~--------------~quote of the week to the windy city gomorrah the world "As a socialist (though of a libertarian-democratic variety), I do see a connection between defending gay rights and opposing Reaganism, if only because I believe it can be demonstrated that authoritarianism (of both Left and Right) and unmollified capitalism are destructive of the respect for human dignity without which I doubt our ability to live good and meaningful lives. We cannot assert the rights of one group In a vacjlJum, and if we ignore the misery around us during our quest for a place in the sun, we are demeaned. But I recognize that this position needs to be argued, not merely asserted, and that it is unrealistic to expect homosexuals to be any less prisoners of American ideology than anyone else." - Dennis Altman in "The Personal Is Political: Gay Life In 1982," published in the June 21 Issue of the New York Native. 1 CHICAGO - The National Coalition of Black Gays (NCBG) has announced that its national headquarters will move to Chicago effective July 1 of this year. Chris Cothran, director of NCGB/Chlcago, will be the organization's chief administrator and operations officer as well as continuing to head NCBG/Chicago. Lamda Chicago, currently published by NCBG/Chicago, will expand to become the national NCBG publication. The new mailing address for NCBG will be 1311 West Pratt Blvd., Chicago, IL 60626-7789. For more information, call Chris Cothran at (312) 764-2024 between 7 and 11 In the evening. SYDNEY, Australia- Jerry Falwell was no doubt confused to discover during a four-day tour of Australia in late May that one of the groups demonstrating against him was the Moral Majority. The Moral Majority of Australia, a network of lesbians and gay men who registered the name of their organization some time ago in preparation for Falwell's visit, was one of a number of groups countering Falwell's message. T-shirts, signs and stickers seen at the demonstrations carried such messages at "Moral Majority against the christian right", "Sodom today, Gomorrah the world", "Moral Majority loves blatant lesbians" and "If Mary had the right to choose, the world would be a better place." taking trask to task TALLAHASSEE, FL - State Senator Alan Trask, the leader in legislative attacks against lesbians and gay men in this state, has announced in the midst of a financial scandal that he will not seek reelection. The Weekly News, a gay publication in Miami, reports that Trask made the announcement in response to formal charges made on June 9 by a senate investigating committee that Trask had violated senate ethics rules. Most of the charges concern false statements Trask allegedly made on his financial disclosure statements, documents filed each year by all public officials in the state. Other charges concerning loans Trask had obtained and the manner in which he obtained them appear to involve felony violations of federal banking laws. "In this atmosphere of doubt and mistrust, it is obvious that I cannot serve and repair my troubled finances," Trask said in a prepared statement. "Trask and legislators like him must be made accountable to their constituents, which include lesbians and gay men," said Ronnie Santo of the Florida Task Force. "Such legislators will no longer be allowed to further their political careers by taking cheap shots at the lesbian and gay community, the last frontier of legal bigotry." Two bills written by Trask, both of which were passed but later declared unconstitutional, outlawed student organizations which advocated sex outside marriage. dangerously specious HAYWARD, CA- Defense attorneys .In theretrial in a widely-publicized mass murder case have claimed that it was actually the convicted man's brother who committed the murders and that his homosexuality was his motive. The New York Times reports that attorneys for Juan Corona, who was convicted in 1973 of killing 25 migrant farm workers, claimed on June 22 that Natividad Corona, Juan's older half-brother, whom they described as "an active, aggressive homosexual," killed the 25 middle-aged male farmworkers, then fled to Mexico. Natividad Corona is offi.cially listed as dead In Mexico but the defense attorneys claim he may still be alive. Juan Corona's original conviction was overturned by an appeals court on the grounds that his defense attorney did not provide adequate legal representation for him. The attorney, whose performance the judge described as "truly appalling," had presented no evidence on Corona's behalf and had not called Corona to the stand. The prosecution had relied heavily on testimony about blood stains and other physical evidence. Prosecutors at the retrial charged that the defense had failed to offer any evidence directly connecting Natividad Corona to the murders. The Times account does not elaborate on the defense attorney's claim that being homosexual Is motivation for murder. swiss rejection BERNE, Switzerland - Swiss voters have rejected a proposal to decriminalize gay sex between consenting adults and to lower the age of consent from 16 to 14. According to Campaign, a gay publication in Sydney, Australia, the negative vote followed a recommendation by a committee of experts who had heard arguments from the Justice and Police Departments, new habits WASHINGTON, DC- For the first time, an org- all the separate cantons and several political, anization institutionally linked to the Roman Catholic religious and women's organizations. The proposal to decriminalize homosexual acts Church has adopted a pro-choice position. The New York Times reported on May 28 that the was supported by several cantons, the Protestant National Coalition of American Nuns has announced Church and many political groups. The proposal to lower the age of consent would its opposition to Sen. Orrin Hatch's (R·Utah) proposed constitutional amendment limiting abortion rights. . have brought Swiss laws into line with those of Italy, "While we continue to oppose abortion in prin- West Germany, and Austria. cipal and in practice," the nuns said, "we are likewise convinced that the responsibility for decisions in this by the rules regard resides primarily with those who are directly LOS ANGELES- A city councillor here has reand personally involved." The nuns' statement, which was made in April signed as a committee chair over allocations of city but has only recently been widely circulated; also funds to a foster home for gay adolescents. The Los Angeles Times reports that Hal Bernson, points out the contradiction in the right-wing anti· abortion position. "It is paradoxical to us that the charging that his colleagues were not "playing by the same leaders who are currently demanding that rules," asked that he be removed as chair of the women bring their babies to term are simultaneously Grants, Housing and Community Development Comvoting to cut off food stamps, child nutrition pro- mittee, which had recommended against a $206,000 block grant to the Gay and Lesbian Community Serg~ams and related benefits essential for the health vices Center, which will own and operate the foster and well-being of our children." home. The full council approved the grant by a vote of ten to two. Bernson said he did not object to the nature of the foster home but to what he claimed was a violation deadly fire of council policy, giving dwindling funds to a new proSEATTLE- Officials have determined that an ar- ject. sonist is responsible for an early-morning fire at a Supporters of the grant said that since the Center local bathhouse which resulted in the death of one of had received grants in the past, the foster home c6n· the four men hospitalized for smoke inhalation. stituted part of an ongoing project. Seattle Gay News (SGN) reports that Earnest Latour died shortly after noon on May 29 as a result of in· from the heart haling smoke during the fire at The Pines baths on May 24. AMHERST, MA - Sinister Wisdom, a feminist Investigators for the fire department reportedly publication, is planning an issue by and about North told the manager of the baths that only a foreign flam· American Indian women. mable substance could have produced the amount of To be edited by Mohawk writer Beth Brant smoke seen during the fire. The three-story building (Degonwadonti), the issue will include short stories, housing the baths was built in 1978 of non-flammable graphics, essays, poetry, letters, book reviews, oral material. The facility has been cited for only minor in· histories and narrations and other forms of expresfractions of the fire code. · sion. Many of the 40 men present at the baths at the Sinister Wisdom isencouraging.aiJ Indian women time credit Marty, the attendant on duty at the time, to participate. "We are looking for words and pictures who is not further identified in the SGN account, with from the heart, from our experiences as Indian preventing disaster. "He kept his cool and he got peowomen," Brant says. ple out of there," SGN quotes one of the men as saySubmissions should be typed double-spaced and ing. sent with a stamped, self-addressed envelope by JanThe case Is being investigated by the Seattle uary 15, 1983 to Beth Brant, 18890 Reed, Melvindale, Police Department. Ml48122. Kendall Lovett Falwell was interrupted by a group of demonstrators who stormed into the National Press Club In Canberra, the federal capital. "This man wants to make a speech so that he can put points of view that deny the rights of women, of blacks, gays, of anyone who doesn't fit in with his stereotype of the nuclear family, of the Anglo-Saxon man," shouted one of the demonstrators. Also participating in demonstrations against Falwell were feminists, school teachers, humanists, the Australian Order of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and the Sydney Gay _Liberation Quire. conferences The Dallas Gay Alliance will host Celebrating the Movement: Planning for the Future, a national lesbian and gay leadership conference, August 13 through 15 at the Grenelefe Hotel in Dallas. Organizers say the purpose of the conference is to educate, inform and share experiences, goals and expectations of the gay ·rights movement. The conference, they say, does not take a position on any issue but will provide an open forum for discussion on all relevant •ssues. The $40 registration fee includes all phases of the conference, four meals and transportation to places of entertainment. For more information, contact the Dallas Gay Alliance, Box 35011, Dallas, TX 75235.... The United Church Coalition for Lesbian/Gay Concerns will present an open public forum in conjunction with its second national gathering July 15 through 17 in Columbus, Ohio. Rev. Susan Savell and Rev. William Reagn Johnson will make present~tions at the forum. More details and registration materials are available f_om Rev. Jan Griesinger, 18 N. College r St., Athens, OH 45701 or by calling (614) 593-7301 .... The First North American Gay Men's Music Fes· tival will be held in Minneapolis over Labor Day weekend, September 3 through 5. Sponsored by Voices and Visions, a collective of gay men, the festival includes performances, workshops, a community meal and other events. The fee for the festival will be $30 for registration before August 15 or $40 after that date. Payment should be sent to Voices and Visions Productions, P.O. Sox 3549, Minneapolis, MN 55403. For more information, call (612) 870.1407. News Notes compiled this week by David Morris. �- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Gay Community News, July 3, 1982 • Page 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Filmmaker Fassbinder Dies of Unknown Causes By Michael Bronski MUNICH-Rainer Werner Fassbinder, German filmmaker and open homosexual, was found dead in his Munich apartment last Thursday, June 10. The cause of . death was unknown but police have ruled out murder and doubt that it was suicide. The results of the autopsy were inconclusive, but it is generally believed that the final result will show accidental death due to an overdose of sleeping pills. Fassbinder was born May 31, 1946, the son of a doctor father and literary translator mother. (She rendered the works of Truman Capote into German and later acted in many of Fassbinder's films.) In 1967 he joined the Action-Theater group, the most avant-garde of the German theaters, where he produced and directed several plays and began writing his own original scripts. The Action-Theater was closed by the police in May of 1968 and Fassbinder and nine other mem- written or acted in many others. bers, including Hanna Schygulla, Besides being one of the most founded anti-teater in the back prolific fllmmakers working, room of a Schwa bing bar. Anti- Fassbinder also made a name for teater lasted several years during himself as a committed leftist and which Fassbinder produced, wrote openly gay man. And while either and directed many theater, radio of these may have set him apart and, finally, film productions . from other mainstream directors, under their auspices. In 1971 he he further distinguished himself founded his own independent film by refusing to toe any party lines company, Tango Films, and be- in his personal opinions or art. gan his prodigious film career. German communists were pleased More than any other post-war at his pro-socialist portrayals in German filmmaker, Fassbinder early films and then picketed the has been responsible for the theater when he released Mother resurgence of the German cinema Kusters Goes to Heaven in which from the late 1960s to the present. a working class woman is exWhile other filmmakers, like ploited by professional CP organWerner Herzog or Wim Wenders, izers. were reaching a limited "art" The same was also true of Fox audience, Fassbinder was able to and His Friends, a 1975 film in reach a large general audience which upper-class homosexuals world-wide. In 1981, the German exploit, and finally cause the premiere of his Lili Marleen death of, a working-class gay man brought in almost as much money who has won a lottery. When Fox as The Empire Strikes Back. In a was shown at the New York Film film career that lasted just less Festival in 1977, gay rights groups than a decade - he was 36 when picketed and leafleted the theater. he died - he had directed 41 full (Although it was probably true, as length films and had produced, someone once pointed out, that it FBI Refuses to .Release Flles on Gay Activist By David Hunt SANTA ANA, CA-Gay activist Andrew Ross Exler, who gained national prominence in 1980 when he was expelled from Disneyland, has discovered that the FBI is holding four pages of classified information on him in their files. Exler made the discovery last year when he applied under the Freedom of Information Act to find out if the government was gathering information on his activities. In a letter to Exler, FBI special agent Edgar Best said the information was classified "in the interest of national security and/or foreign defense." Exler called the FBI office in Santa Ana and was told by an investigator that the information probably pertained to organizations or people he associated with. "I tried to find out why there were so many pages, but he wouldn't tell me," Exler said. Although he is only 21 years of age, Exler has been active in politics in Orange County for several years. He is on the Central Committee of the county Peace and Freedom Party, belongs to the American Civil Liberties Union and is a field associate with Gay Rights National Lobby. Last year he ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the Orange County Board of Education on a gay rights platform. Exler sued Disneyland in Sep- tember 1980 in an attempt to force the park to allow same-sex dancing. He lost the first round of court battles and is in the process of appealing. Exler also made headlines locally in December of 1980 when he was fired from his job as a typist with the Orange County Human Services Agency for refusing to remove a gay rights button. He appealed the dismissal and was granted a hearing before a retired Orange County superior court judge. The judge ruled against Exler, stating, "If I was gay I would try to be as perfect as possible because gays have problems on the job." Exler said he has no idea why the FBI would keep files on his activities but said he has learned that more than one million government employees have the right to classify information. "I can't understand bow I'm a threat to national security or foreign defense," he told GCN. "It's a joke. I've never been arrested and I've never done civil disobedience. The only thing I have done is to speak out on human rights issues. I've attended several anti-nuke rallies and I've written to the president seven times since he's been in office about my stands on nuclear power and the right of women to choose abortion.'' Exler said he would like to force the FBI to declassify the infor- mation and is looking for an organization to sponsor a lawsuit against the government. was the attack on the uppermiddle class that infuriated the mostly upper-middle-class protestors, and not the alleged negative stereotypes.) What was probably most impressive, and vital, about Passbinder's career was his ability to keep on producing constantly. While most other filmmakers and other artists - fill their notebooks with ideas, Fassbinder made movies instead. If at times an idea wasn't carried through to its logical end, or if opinions changed from film to film, (or, as some claimed, within films), it was due to the urgency and force the artist felt in his desire to express them. Like Brecht, Fassbinder was a highly political artist who was intensely concerned with the culture around him and with showing his audience how this culture affected and shaped their lives. His love of Hollywood films (especially those of Douglas Sirk) and the influence of American culture on post-war Germany is evident in most of his films. He picked through popular culture and used what he wanted to express what he had to· say at the moment. That is why there is no single clearly)thought politic or political line in his body of work. Like Brecht he was also concerned that his audience think about and respond to his films on an intellectual level and not only on an emotional one. If there were contradictions there, they were meant to make us ponder: it's easy to tell people what to believe, much harder to make them think. What of Fassbinder as a gay filmmaker? He was one of the few people in the industry to be open about his sexuality. His portrayals of gay men in Fox are straightforward, non-sensational and explicit. The lesbians in Petra von Kant, given the admitted peculiarities of the film, are not the monsters of other films and plays. The transsexual Elvira of In A Year of Thirteen Moons is treated with compassion and respect. Throughout most of his films Fassbinder attempts a startling juxtaposition. His stories are thriller material, melodramas or soap operas, yet he refuses to let us get that close to the material. He serves us slices of Life with the warning not to get too involved or to care all that much. What happens is that we are able to see the larger picture, the larger view. Fassbinder's method is not dissimilar to the double edged vision of Gertrude Stein or the irony of Oscar Wilde. Stand back, watch closely, there is more here than you think, more than two sides to every question. Like many gay artists he remained the outsider: wary of easy solutions, questioning and always critical of what is usually called "the real world.'' -filed from Boston Police in Schenectady Crack Down on Cruising By Mark A. Perigord SCHENECTADY, NY-A gay law group is monitoring the actions of the police department here after the city announced a crackdown on gay men cruising in a downtown business district. The Lamda Law Guild accused the police of harassment after they began photographing and taking down the license numbers of people in the area and using uniformed and undercover police to patrol the area. The Schenectady police have accused one man of approaching an undercover patrolman and offering to perform a sexual act and, on May 19, arrested RobertS. Surico, 30, and charged him with loitering for the purpose of deviate sexual activity. One sergeant said he patrolled the district the night Surico was arrested and estimated that between 30 and 40 homosexual men were there. Mayor Frank Duci and Police Chief Richard Nelson said the intense surveillance effort was in response to numerous complaints from merchants and citizens of being accosted by men in the vicinity of the Schenectady City Hall, the library and the post office. Duci told local reporters the situation required "some drastic action" and assured them the men involved were not ''low-grade criminal types," "just people with · a different sexual preference than most people." He compared the surveillance effort to the city's attempts to curb prostitution, and pledged to seek maximum penalties for those convicted of solicitation. Lisa Ottati of the Schenectady Gay Coalition said, "I cannot outwardly say the police are making trouble, but it does appear that way. Homosexual prostitution is not an issue here. I see nothing wrong with the guys just hanging out. The police do not have a good feeling for the community.'' Richard Redlo, a spokesperson for the :Lambda Law Guild, expressed doubt there would be more incidents in the business district because the media attention given to the crackdown scared everyone away from the area. "People in Schenectady are either going to the clubs in Albany or staying in the closet," Redlo said. The Guild held a public meeting to gather ev.idence to the extent of the police department surveillance, but, according to Redlo, no one from Schenectady attended. He said the group has decided to take a "wait and see" attitude toward the police and may offer legal assistance to anyone else arrested because of the surveillance. The Guild offered to represent Surico, Redlo said, but he refused and said he is a heterosexual who has been falsely charged. -filed from Boston No Trial for Woman In Self-Defense Case By Jil Clark BOSTON, MA - A Suffolk County Grand Jury has recently decided not to press manslaughter charges against a Dorchester woman who killed a man in selfdefense last January. "The last couple of days I've been smiling so hard my cheeks are hurting," said Donna Finn, feminist, community activist and co-founder of Families and Friends of Prisoners, who received a "no bill" from the jury on June 22. "But in the back of that smiJe is a lot of pain," Finn continued. "I'm dealing with the fact that someone I cared about is dead because we [in the community] haven't come up with a more creative way of responding to rage and violence that is so typical among working-class people. And that violence is going to increase as the government takes more and more control over our lives away from us.'' Finn shot Paul McGrath, an uncle of the man she has lived with for years, when he showed up at her house in a rage on the evening of January 26. He was threatening her and her 15-year-old daughter as he punched out the glass of the outer and inner doors to her house. McGrath was angry because Finn had refused to give him the telephone number of the battered women's shelter where his ex-lover and their children had gone, seeking shelter from him. Finn spotted what appeared to be a gun in his hand. "I was never so scared in my life," Finn told a reporter for Do- ing Time. "I was crying, pleading, 'Please, Paul, don't do this. Think!' "If he hadn't been talking about blowing my brains out I never would have shot him. If I hadn't been aware of Paul's potential for violence in a rage, I might not have taken it so seriously." Finn says that McGrath, like many working-class men, dealt with his lack of power over his own life by controlling women. "Paul had no sense of himself except bravado and repression of women." "I don't know that much about middle-class men, but I know that among working-class men there is rage ... and I don't feel comfortable just shooting them. That's not a solution. "What upsets me is that women keep being left to defend ourselves. But women are busy just covering our asses, sheltering other women. This violence is men's problem and men need to organize around it. "A few middle- class men's groups are dealing with women batterers who are seeking help. But no group of men in this whole country is dealing with the rage among working-class men that are not seeking help. So they keep dumping on us .... I'm worried about the woman next door that gets punched in.'' Finn added that McGrath's racism and homophobia "fueled his fury" about the women's shelter, where many of the women are black and lesbian. Finn's acquittal is not a victory for all women, according to Rose Viviano, Director of Families and Friends of Prisoners, who was amon-g those subpoenaed by the grand jury. "1 ustice was done in Donna's case," said Viviano, "but only because Donna is so well known. The D.A.'s office received more than 200 letters from priests, nuns, middle-class suburbanites, doctors, lawyers objecting to the fact that Donna was being charged with a crime." Any other woman, without that support, would not have been freed, said Viviano. Nancy Gertner, Finn's attorney, commented, "I've had lots of women's self-defense cases. Those that fail are those with criminal records or those who the grand jury doesn't apContinued on page 12 , II �~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Page4•GayCommunHyNew~Ju~~1~2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; l • I . Botton, MA02108,(117)4~ Com mun·ty 'vOIces ~- - - - - - - - - - 1 Gay Community News 22BromfleldSt., a happy sustainer gays and nazis To the editor: The Hitler-loving, goose-stepping, swastikawaving punks who call themselves the American Nazi Party are planning to march in Chicago on June 27 at the site of the city's annual Gay Pride rally . And in a particularly ominous move, they are appealing to the Ku Klux Klan and mainstream "respectable ' ' bigots of the Moral Majority to swell the ranks of their mob. They plan to counterdemonstrate at a gay festival because here and now homosexuals are the most vulnerable group on their hit list. They don't want to start with the labor movement, Latinos, Jehovah's Witnesses, modern art, or Slavs. And going after blacks gets real deadly fast. They're going after the group they see as the weakest, as a beginning. And they must be stopped! These Nazis are deadly serious. Only a few weeks ago they demolished the home of a middleaged couple in Evanston, a Chicago suburg, and then phoned to ~Y they plan to drive all the Jews out of Evanston and Skokie. If they are allowed to recruit and grow, they will implement their program of concentration camps and genocide for blacks, Jews, Latinos, unionists, gays and all the minorities that they hate. There a re those who say that the Nazis are irrelevant - that if we just ignore them, they will go away. This is the strategy of the Gay Pride Committee and the gay establishment in Chicago, who argue that merely by "coming out' the Nazi provocation will be defused. But it is suicidal to dismiss the American Nazi Party as a bunch of lunatics who can safely be ignored. Try telling the survivors of Auschwitz and Dachau, the thousands of homosexuals tortured and incinerated in Hitler's camps, the 20 million Russians who died resisting the mad Nazi drive for world conquest that the Nazis should be ignored! The Nazis and the Klan do have wide support here and there among the desperate and backward. They are terrorists vigilantes growing in the fertile soil of Reagan's anti-Soviet war drive and the economic and social miseries inflicted on workers and minorities at home. The Nazis are a deadly serious threat right now - they cannot be ignored! Equally suicidal is a strategy for a narrowly gay-centered mobilization against the Nazis, as put forward by the "StonewaJJ Committee," a hodge-podge of feminists, reformists, and liberals stage-managed by the Revolutionary Soc- ialist League (RSL) which wants to throw tomatoes and day-old bagels at the Nazis. Thousands of angry gays alongside every other minority in Chicago must be mobilized behind the social power of the labor movement to stop the Nazis on June 27 . The RSL has a history of adventurist confrontations with the Nazis - and with the cops who protect the fascists. Mayor Jane Byrne's trigger-happy "boys in blue" will be out in force on June 27, protecting the "rights"ofthe Nazi race terrorists. The Chicago cops are no different than their brothers in Boston who busy themselves closing down gay after-hours clubs and locking up "sex offenders" as an adjunct to brutalizing blacks in Roxbury and Dorchester. Whenever the fascists march, they are generously and energetically guarded by their cop friends. And whenever the fascists terrorize blacks, Jews, gays or trade unionists, the police are conveniently and conspicuously absent. It is absolutely criminal to rely on the police for protection against Nazi attacks. The RSL throws up its hands in despair at the possibility of labor/minority mobilizations to stop the fascists, and instead retreats into its pitiful rotten blocs, where it is red-baited and violence-baited by its erstwhile partners. But it is the labor movement which has the social power to stop the Nazis. Chicago is a union town! Chicago is a black city! In fact, Chicago is in its vast majority a city of decent people, heavily minority, whom the Nazis would love to annihilate. What's needed is the will to forge a labor/minorities mobilization to bring out thousands of militant protesters to stop the Nazis. The Spartacist League (SL) knows the fascists can be stopped. Two years ago we participated in a largely Jewish demonstration that drove them out of Lovelace Park in Evanston. On March 20, 1982, an SL-initiated mobilization of over 2,000 students, trade unionists, blacks, gays and Jews stopped a Nazi recruiting rally in Ann Arbor Michigan and ran them out of town. The Nazis ~Y they will show up in Chicago's Lincoln Park at 2:30p.m. on Sunday, June 27. We say these terrorists have no right to push their kill-crazy tactics anywhere. Stop them now! Tom Dowling former member of the Red Flag Union for the Spartacist League Boston , MA from 1974 to 1982 nyc mattachine Dear GCN This letter to GCN is long overdue, but recent events and personal experiences finally moved me to write it. Every publication has flaws and weaknesses, but I am deeply grateful that GCN exists. I'm tempted to praise a dozen pieces I've read in GCN, but for the sake of brevity,.I'll.just mention the June 5 issue. The articles on legalized homosexuality vs. gay liberation in Poland and East Germany were moving and informative. They should be reprinted in leftist papers like In These Times and The Guardian, and won't be. Likewise, a magazine like The Nation will, in 1982, publish someone like Gore Vidal, but is just not ready to print the GCN"Speaking Out" piece on Erotic Liberation. When I want to read the latest about the gangsters in government, I read The New York Times- "All the News That's Fit to Print." But if I want news about what life is like behind bars for some gay brothers, then it helps to read Jil Clark's GCN news piece: "Vermont Prisons May Use Aversion Therapy.'' Excellent articles appear in other U.S. gay magazines and papers, but GCN is more likely to print the "quirky" perspective, and to give voice to folks who are not necessarily professional writers and yet deserve to be heard. If I want third-hand pontification about gay liberation, I can read it elsewhere; but if I want the live pulse of liberation, I turn to GCN. I happen to read the letters from readers first whenever I read GCN; it is often there that the first signs of a storm appear, or that old debates take new turns. And if I sometimes find the turnips in the stew to be indigestible, then I'll eat the tomatoes instead. I detest the anti-intellectualism which sometimes crops up \n GCN, but it will crop up everywhere when our school system and government encourages us not to use our heads. (Our heads are part of our bodies and there will be no erotic liberation without gonads and brains). I wish GCN were sexier: how about running a series on Favorite Fantasies? Each fantasy would probably elicit a political pro and con in the letters. I also wish GCN could afford at least token payment to regular writers. (A recent survey states that most writers in the U.S. make less than $5,000 a year from their writings.) I wish more GCN readers would make the effort to let GCN know when they like something, as well as when something makes them mad. Since being a writer is as important to my identity as being gay, socialist, and horny for basketball sneakers, I would feel a bit crazy without GCN. I have been able to write and say things in GCN which do not quite fit any other publication. Leftist mags rarely print my kind of socialism, and the slicker gay mags rarely print my kind of gay liberation. GCN gives me a voice, and GCN gives me readers who tell me they love me and hate me. Except for money, what more could a writer ask for? Maybe someday this summer I'll finally visit Boston and thank some of the staff in person. Good luck with the GCN Sustainer Program. I hope this letter helps. Best wishes, Scott Tucker Philadelphia, PA Dear GCN: Dear Folks, With John Kyper's memoir, William Loeb has Regarding Bob Nelson's write-up in the June 5 finaJJy been laid to rest. I know he died last fall GCN on the benefit for the "Before Stonewall" but this is the obituary I' ve been waiting for. film group, he referred to me as ''a founder of the To add a footnote: The Philadelphia Weekly New York Chapter of the Mattachine SocGayzette, in its issue of April26, 1974, published iety ... .'' excerpts of Mr. Loeb 's response to a letter from I am not a founder of the New York Chapter of Dan Sherbo, then editor of Philadelpha's Gay Mattachine. That distinction, I believe, goes to AI A lternative. Dan had written to protest Loeb's DeDion, Curtis Dewees, and Art Maule. stance against the attempt of gay students to orgPlease publish this correction at your earliest anize at the Uni versity of New Hampshire. convenience. Thank you. On April 18, 1974, Dan' s letter and Loeb 's Gay Love, Craig Rodwell (Sparrow) reply were published in the Manchester Union Leader under the headline, "Pervert Defends Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop P erversion .'.' Mr. Loeb wrote , " diversity makes New York, NY li~ pka~n t. But . . . according to your theor~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ we should be happy that there are arsonists, mur- Gay Community News welcomes letters to Community Voices. If at all derers, rapists ... I am well aware that sodomists possible, your letters should be TYPED AND DOUBLE SPACED and kept in the year 1974 are doing their best to delude themselves that they are respectable . . . If 100fo to three pages (or less!) in length. GCN publishes all the letters it receives, of the population is homosexual, and I doubt that unedited, on a space-available baSiS, unleSS they contain personal attaCkS. figure is accurate, then I sincerely hope the nation Anonymous letters will not be published, but names will be withheld upon find s a way to get rid of that IO%. " A few days later Dan received an anonymous request. Address letters to: Community Voices, Gay Community News, Jetter from "a citizen of Manchester" which The GayzettepublishedinfullinitsissueofMay3.He 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108. or she wrote, "your letter was very beautiful and ' meaningful. I was appalled and embarrassed at his response to you .... Please rest assured that there are many New Hampshirites that fully agree with and respect your feelings about living 100 honest, open, proud, and full lives." 50 We sent a copy to Mr. Loeb so he would know 25 that one of his readers didn' t swallow his brand of 0 bigotry. The Gayzette and the Gay Alternative are gone but I hope that citizen of Manchester is Welcome to our first Gay Pride sustainer from Davis, California! reading GCN in 1982 so that he or she will know how good that letter made us feel in 1974. We ~rge more of you to celebrate Pride by becoming GCN Yours, sustamers. Tom Wilson Minneapolis, MN Join the GCN ~00 ------~-----------------------~ THE GCN SUSTAINER PROGRAM a common language Editors, Gay Community News: The letter of Urvashi Vaid (15 May), expressing thoughts provoked by the Eric Rofes interview of John Preston, speaks of the division among "natural " allies, homosexual women and men . She uses terms, however, evocative of the very divisiveness which has been created and fostered by homosexual women who violently refuse to acknowledge any common unity with homosexual men unless their divisiveness is stridently recognized by differentiating between gay women and gay men. In our struggle for freedom from oppression, no greater need exists than a common term which indicates that we are " one," neither greater than the other. Sincerely yours, Fred R. Methered Honolulu, HA D YES, 1/We would like to become a GCN sustainer and help to build a Financially Stronger GCN. 1/We pledge to contribute 0 $120 D $180 D $240 D $360 0 $420 D $480 D $300 D $540 D _ The number of installments to be made to fullfil! this pledge is ... D one D two 0 four name address • Please enclose first installment with this mailing. • All individual sustainers names will be kept strictly confidential. • If the sustainer is a group or organization, may we publish your name in our sustainer newsletter? D yes D no. • Your comments are welcome; please enclose with this coupon. Mail to: GCN sustainers, 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108 ~-------------------------------~ Cover photo by Sue F~eischmann MANAGING EDITOR Cindy Patton NEWS EDITOR David Morris FEATURES EDITOR Jeremy Grainger DESIGN DIRECTOR Paul Volpe OFFICE MANAGER Mike Riegle ADVERTISING MGR. Sherry Edwards PROMOTIONS MGR. Maida Tilchen CIRCJSTAFF WRITER Jil Clark LOCAL REPORTER Larry Goldsmith STAFF WRITER Scott Brookie CLASSIFIEDS Nancy Walker COPY EDITOR Gordon Gottlieb DISTRIBUTION Barbara Cischke BOARD OF DIRECTORS President: Richard Burns, Treasurer: Beth Kelly, Clark: Cindy Rizzo; Bob Andrews, Kevin Cattr cart, lan Johnson, Urvashi Vaid, Eric Rofes, Katherine Triantafillou, Nancy Wechsler NEWS STAFF Joanne Brown, Richard Burchardt, Bob Nelson, Philip Shehadi, Christine Guilfoy, Fran Koski, John Kyper, lisa Nussbaum, Mark Perigard, John Zeh, Nancy Wechsler David France FEATURES STAFF Lee Swislow, Duncan Mitchel, Michael Bronski, Steve Forgione, Rudy Kikel, Martin Krieger, Wade Nichols, Eric Rofes, Joe Interrante, Judy Stern, Mitzel, Andrea Loewenstein; Warren Blumenfeld, Marsha Maurer Lisa Orlando ART STAFF Design Assistant: Ann Heron; Neely O'Hara, Jennifer Camper, Abe Rybeck, :rimothy Blackburn, Pip, Tom Huth, Rob Schmieder, Paul Brouillette, Read Weaver, Diane Ayott, Jeff Kopseng ,Kate Gawf, IDavid Storm PRISONER PROJECT Virgil Chenoweth, Debra Davenport, Will Doherty, Lisa Orlando PHOTOGRAPHERS Ellen Shub, Michael Thompson, Susan Fleischmann, Neal Trousdale, John Tobin, Joyce Harper, Bettye Lane PROMOTIONS Barry Forbes, John Feeney, Dave Peterson; Microfilm Promoter: Dee Michel CIRCULATION STAFF Jeb Bates, Richards Edwards, Henry Gingras, Diane Harris, Katie Kenner, Catherine OLohr, Allen Blaich, Jim Fox, linda Gwizdak, Paul Howard, Jodie Neally, Kendall Watts AD REP Bruce Gordon Bill Brennan TYPESETTER: Xanadu Graphics, Inc. INDEXER Charles Ash BULK DIST. Ray Hopkins NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE Rivendell Marketing, 666 6th Ave., New York, N.Y. 10010 (212) 242-6863 NEW YORK DISTRIBUTION Majority News Distributors, Inc., 306 W. 13th St., New York, N.Y. 10014, (212) 243-7770 Postmaster: Send address changes to: Gay Community News, 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108. Gay Community News (GCN) is dedicated to provid ing coverage of events and news of Interest to the gay community. GCN Is published eNery week (except the first week of January and the last week of August) 0 ~ 100~ b~~~:i~n~f
tx>sp,tdhzed rlre ildrn111ed tu lh~ Belll l'>rf
(207) 646-9056
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CiaSSifiedS-------------:----------PERSONALS
MOUSIE MOUSIE WILDFLOWER
Wish you could have been with me
for everyone we know to see.
But In my heart I carried you
as always In everything I do.
Mother, of course, made quite a splash
though Ideologically we still clash.
I love you more than wet and cool.
All my love, Porcupine.
GWM 30 into motorcycles sks friends
for wkend trips. Write: DM, South Ad,
Apt 42, Londonderry, NH 03063.
(49)
Southern NH area.
Will share small farm wfyng M who
likes animals. Pref dis VIetnam Vet or
ex con, can't make it In concrete jungle.
No heavy drugs. (617) 347·3866 PM,
leave mess. L Rivers cfo RR N1, Box 84,
Fiskdale, MA.
(49)
SW MONTANA- NW WYOMING
GWM, 31, 5'8", 160 well-placed lbs,
gdlkng, masculine & sensual. Lkng for
husky, heavy-weight, well-built, masculine GM or Bi' s to 45 yrs. For good times
& hot sexual endeavors. Photo, phone,
address, or general info appreciated.
Discretion assured. No fems or fats
please. Let's get it on. GCN Box 570. (50)
SERIOUS
Prof LF mid 40's sks potential mate "to
love & cherish 'til death do us part." No
drugs, no bars. Commitment & sharing
amust(NH). GCNBox5.71.
(1)
·Maine LF's: I have a summer job In N
Windham, lkng for other dykes to visit,
hike, play and talk with during July &
Aug. Planning to travel around a bit late
July. GCN Box 566.
(48)
Publisher of gay/lesbian bks needs vol·
unteers to read & help select manuscripts for publication. Must live in Boston area Sasha Alyson, 542·5679. (48)
Handsome smart Masculine Black male
born US raised Europe well-traveled sks
transvest super fern willing & able permanent relationship desired. GCN Box
567.
(49)
YOUNG HOUSEBOY WANTED
By kind, masculine guy 45. Need a
place to live? Join me & live on a
beautiful Caribbean Island. Clean
house, cook & swim every day. Pref
young newcomer under 19. Letter,
photo, phone to GCN Box 568. All races
OK (no smokers, no drugs, no ferns) . (49)
GGN
You've been so long away
I've missed you a lot
Come on back & let's play
(49)
What you want I've got.
MID-COASTAL MAINE GWM
Other young gay men who are happy,
healthy, loving, looking for fun and gay
friends: Please write: Boxholder, PO
Box 1064, Rockland, ME04841.
(50)
LESBIAN COUPLES RESEARCH
Lesbian researcher sks women who live
w/their lovers, have no children & are
out to both parents. For study on cou·
pie relations. If willing to fill out questionaire pis call Bianca Cody Murphy
(617) 969-2500, lv name & number. (45)
GCN Staff member is looking for a nev.
job. Has anybody got any leads in the
area of magazine or business promo·
tions, or curriculum design? Boston on·
ly. Call me at (617) 426·4469 or write to
Maida Tilchen, GCN, 22 Bromfield St.,
Boston, MA 02108.
(c)
EVERYTHING PASSES
EVERYTHING CHANGES
and I'm leaving the GCN staff after two
wonderful years. I'd love to hear from
anyone who can help me find another
job in the Boston area. I would like to do
promotions, circulation or fundraising ,
for another magazine or business; or I'd
like to go back to my other professional
field: instructional developmenUcurriculum design. Other writing or business jobs would also be of interest.
Please call me, Maida Tilchen, at (617)
426-4469 or write to me at GCN, 22
Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108.
(c)
NURSERY· DAY CARE
We have a lot of "scrap" paper, mostly
colored, much in odd sizes, which we'd
like to give to a day care or nursery
group. Some printed one side. Phone
ahead. Xanadu Graphics, 661-6975.
We say we're into social change. We
say we want to create a community
where we take care of each other. But
how many of us really help each other
out? Are we "too busy" with meetings
where we talk about social change to
actually do little things for each other?
If you have a short span of time (2·3 hrs)
to spend hanging out with a child or
teenager of a lesbian mother approx
once every 2 wks (consistently & dependably), you can change the world. For
more info call Julie after 6 pm week·
days, 491·5020.
(?)
GAY AIRWAVES
Updated list of gay radio and cable TV
shows in US, Canada, and abroad $1
and SASE, John Zeh, GCGC, Box 19158,
~incinnati~H 4521~-·_ _ _ _ __)
(c
DEAR ADVERTISER
If r.ce Ia not • crucl•t luue for you,
why put It In your •d? It Ia not • required
formula: OWM, OWF .,. not neceaury;
OM, OF would do u well, unleu you
lly went It otherwiH.
If you wl h to respond to a box number
In any of our ads, send to GCN Classl·
22 Bromfield St,
lleds, Box
Boston. MA 02108.
ROOMMATES
3 women skng 4th for beautiful JP
home. Pref lesbian. Open July 1. Please
no more dogs. $180/mo plus. Cindy or
(49)
Karen 547-9158.
Seml-veg coop house (gay & straight)
sks friendly 5th rmte Cam-Som. Lge
rms, 110/mo plus util. 776-4821 after
5:30pm, avail now.
(49)
Mature GM student sks friendly veg
coop place to live from Aug or Sept In
Camb or Som'l, bikefwalk to Harvard.
Ken 628-8292 betw July 5 & 15. Lv message. Thanks!
(49)
3 LF lkg for 1 more to share our spacious Dorch hse. Garden, porch, no
cigs, seml-veg. Sharing & sep space.
Politically aware, sense of humor, pref
late 20's plus. 282·9388, $100 pis util.
(50)
GM 36 sks compat indpt reliable person
to share semi-turn 6 rm twn hse dlshw
wash/dry. Garden, quiet side st, Boston
South End start Sept 250fmo pis Y2 util
(617) 267-4128 eve.
(50)
Prof, independent woman 27 pis wtd for
lg 2 bdrm apt in Back Bay. Pref nonsmkr. No pets. Responsible and neat.
$230fmo inc heat. 536-0147.
(47)
SUBLEl-JULY
'1f.! lg sunny apt, porch, piano, cat. Union
Sq Somerville. Rent negotiable.
628-4741.
(48)
2 prof GM sk 3rd, resp & neat to share 6
rm twn hse on Beacon Hill. $217/mo pis
'1f.! uti I. No pets. 367-3298 aft 6 pm. (49)
MELVILLE PK, DORCHESTER
Lg 12 rm comfortable, well equipt prof
photog's hse on red line to share with
washer, dryer, dw. Sk prof man. $200 pis
(49)
sec dep. 436-1538 Paul.
2 Lfs sk 1 F to share 3 bdrm house in
residential area of Allston; 5 min from
Harvard Sq, 191 pis. Avail 711. 783-3439
or492·0692.
(49)
GWF sks prof GF or GM rmte 190/mo
btfl apt in Brkln nr T; for more info call
after 5 pm 277-2940.
(49)
Country lvg, 35 min from Bos. Feel
safer, lg yard for garden, discreet L, nos mo. To shr 5 rm ranch near So Shore
Hosp. $250, sec dep (617) 878-3940. (49)
3 GM sk responsible 4th fo share lge
Newbury St apt 237/mo pis gas & elec.
Call between 6 & 10 pm Mon·Thurs only.
536-7289. Avall711 .
(49)
2 LF sk LF quiet responsible for Bel·
mont house, bus to Harvard, sunny por·
ches fireplace prkng no smoke no more
(49)
pets 150 plus util. 484-2085.
GM wants rmte to share 10 rm hse 35 mi
N of Boston. Ocean views, garden,
beach. $375fmo, $375 sec dep, & Y2 util.
David 1-525-3745, mornings.
(49)
LF to share 2nd fl triple decker Union
Sq Som late 20s politically Involved,
easy going & lover of all kinds of music
(49)
pref. $125 Monica 666-0513.
1 woman sks 2nd for JP, 2 br, 2nd fl.
$125 pis util. Oil ht, small yard, winterized. Lesb (non-smok pref). Tita
524-6592.
(1)
GM sks rmte Davis Sq Somerville.
157.50 plus '1f.! utils, sec dep. 628-8048,
AM best. Dresch, July 1.
(1)
DORCHESTER, MELVILLE-PARK
2 GM to set up 3 br-6rm in supportive all
G house. Porch, yard, laundry. Gd area 2
blks to Shawmut T. Avail 8130 $200 pis
uti I. 536-9420,7-8 AM, 6-10 PM.
(2)
FASHIONABLE SOMERVILLE
2 rms avail (1 Jul-1 Aug) indep house
sks 2 LF pref day-workg 25 pis share
wfwom & dog. Sense of humor moderate in all things helpful. $100 pis sec
(1)
dep 776-55681v message.
FABULOUS W SOMERVILLE
2 independent GM sk respons 3rd rmte
for spacious sunny semi-coop apt nr
Davis/Porter Sqs. $133 pis utils. Nonsmkrs only. 776-6377 eves/wknds.
LF sks· same 25 pis for sunny apt in
racially mixed nghbd of JP. Woman of
color espec welcome. Hse is dykeowned, 1 blk fr Orange Line. 1 50fmo
pis utll.
No smoke. Jil
426·4469.
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS
If you are renting rooms or space in
your own home, you are collecting money from renters and therefore your ad
must be paid at the business rates (see
ad form). Roommate (non-business) ads
are for seeking others to share the rent
!ou a to a third party, the land person.
AMMATE NEEDED FOR 7/1/82
200/mo, pis util. 2 bdrm, lge eat-In kit,
lge lvg rm, shared bth. In-house laundry
fac, near T. Excel Nghbrhd. Call eves 7
(49)
pm. Roger 436-1538, Dorch.
Woman wntd to share lge hse in Dorch
w/LFs. WID, garage wfdrwy nr Red T.
Yrd, pet OK, avail 7/1. Call Cheryl at wrk
(9·5) 735-6629.
(44)
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
If you wd enjoy bldng a business of y r ·
own out of making people aware of the
need for gayflesbian love, I Invite you to
consider becoming a Sales Promoter &
Distributor in your area of my soon to
be published paperback book on homer
sexuality's positive value to society &
the straight individual. You can start
wfas little as $500 capital. PO Box 2736,
San Francisco, CA 94126-2736.
(48)
CAMDEN, MAINE
Gay professional man sks GM or LF for
about 4 hrs weekly. Routine light
house-cleaning. Write: Boxholder, PO
Box 1064, ~ockland, ME 04841.
(50)
FRENCH SPANISH TRANSLATORS
Part time experienced French &
Spanish translators. Call Mr. Manuel
661·4681 or leave message.
(49)
MANAGEMENT
Good opportunity to join a growing co.
Leading publisher of law books & professional references has opening for
manager of our phone sales unit.
Responsible for 15·25 part time
employees & for developing new sales
programs in conjunction w/overall mar·
keting effort. Sales or direct marketing
experience helpful. Good communications ability & feminist attitude also
helpful. Interesting & challenging work,
busy but casual atmosphere. Salary
20K pis, depending on experience.
Good benefits. Send resume to L Walz,
cfo 6th fl, 210 South St, Boston 02115. A
very equal opportunity employer.
(49)
APARTMENTS
JOGGERS & BICYCLISTS:
I am renting my quiet and bright 2
bedroom condominium that is on the
Emerald Necklace with lots of Goodies:
• Parking
• Resident Super
• Secure 3rd story, top floor location
• Hardwood floors
• Windows on 3 sides
• Heat & hot water included
All for $525 a month with a one year
(49)
lease(negotiable). 522-7411.
Back Bay Realty-We have a wide
selection of July, Aug & Sept apts avail
in Back Bay, South End, & Fenway
(49)
areas. 245 Newbury St, 262-1650.
Boston quaint Bay Vii 1 bdrm apt mod
kiUbth crpt w/smali balcony. Gay owned bldg. 375fmo pis. Owner, aft 5 pm,
(617)227-6151.
(50)
South End-Chandler St penthouse 2
bdrm wfmod kit, did, ale, laundry.
619/mo, no fee. Back Bay Realty 245
Newbury St, 262-1650.
(49)
Downtown businessman's retreat new
rooms w/private bth furnished or unfurnished also studio apt gay ownedfoccupied 295. (617) 357-4097.
(50)
Park Drive-huge 1 bdrm with eat-in
kitch, hardwood firs, gd closets.
345fmo. Back Bay Realty, 245 Newbury
St. 262·1650.
(49)
For Rent: Comfortable 1 bdrm duplex
condo in Provincetown East End on
Bradford. Parking. $200/wk June.
$275fwk Aug. $200/wk Sept, Oct. Fully
furnished & equipped except for linens
& towels. 2 people maximum. Sec dep
req. Eves 236-1292 or before 9 am. (48)
Dorchester 6 rms now under complete
renovation new kitchlbath safe clean
home. No utilities 282·1196 eves, only
$350.
(49)
JULY-AUG SUBLET IN N END
LF sks resp F for wonderfl 3 rm apt. Lg
kltch, gd-slzed front rm, bdrm. Shared
toilet, semi-fumishd. 200 pis. Sorry, no
dogs. Judy 523·7638; wk 265-0900. (49)
WORCESTER SO SOUTH END
Great bargain 2 rm apt freshly painted.
Sanded firs, nice kltch, share bth w/one.
$225/mo all util inc. Avail now.
262·8842.
(50)
So End 8 rm apt (1670 sq ft) 3rd fir of
owner occ bldg. Washington St nr Bos
City Hosp. Fireplce. Avail now $395 inc
heat. 262·0225 eves 5:30-10.
(47)
BOAT BOY
Wanted lmmed to maintain sailboat;
must be handy, have some boating exper; full or part time; sal, rm & board
negot. Ken Harris 720-0992.
(49)
Versatile pianist w/feminist viewpoint
to help create origlnalftopicallhumorous cabaret-style duo. I'm experienced
singer w/contacts. Broke but talented &
resourceful. Susan Abod 522·9830 after
5:30.
(50)
RESORTS
Provincetown-1 bdrm condo for rent
sleeps 4; 1 or 2 wks avail. Pkg. $250/wk;
call eves 487-2420. .
(50)
VERMONT GUESTHOUSE
Spend a weekend at our 1824 village
house - guest rms for lesbians & gay
men. lakes, mt trails, Newfane Flea
Mkt, Bromley Slide. Bed & lg bkfst
$20/nite. Dave & Mike (802) 348-7840.(49)
SERVICES
GABRIEL'S
Apartments & guest rooms for women.
Hot tub, sun deck, coffee, in the center
of town. 104 Bradford St, Provincetown,
(17)
MA 02657. {617) 487·3232.
DIFFICULT DECISIONS?
Worried abOut the future? Tarot often
clarifies the issues & tTelps with decision making. . Readings for women.
Susan, 354-7316.
(49)
THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE
Blending of Swedish, Esalen, Shiatsu &
Reflexology. Special rates for dancers
& students. Joe 262·1000 ext 298.
Hours: Tues-Sat 12·7.
(8)
Clean, Comfortable, Inexpensive
Convenient To All, Friendly
CARL'S GUEST HOUSE
68 Bradford
Provincetown, MA 02657
(617) 487-1650
April thru November
MASS. BAY
COUNSELING ASSOCIATES
Reasonably Priced
Guest Rooms, Cottages & Apartments
At the NORMANDY HOUSE
184 Bradford, Provincetown MA 02657
(617) 487-1197
INDIVIDUALS, COUPLES
AND GROUP COUNSELING
ALCOHOL COUNSELING
HYPNOTHERAPY
SEX THERAPY
INSURANCE ACCEPTED
(817)965-1311 for appt.
REAL ESTATE
GAY MALE THERAPIST
Individual and couples counseling
Socialization Skills
Insurance Accepted Sliding Fee
Charles Hannagan, MA. 262-4194. (50)
JAMAICA PLAIN REAL ESTATE
JP: Great starters-2 fam duplex, 291<; 1
fam Victorian, 30K; 3 fam nr T, 22K.
Roxbury: Nr Fort Hill 6 fam, owner will
finance, 40K.
Dorchester: Newly renovated 3 tam,
29K. Call Sue 524·5464.
GRANDMOTHERS HELPERS
Cellars attics & garages cleaned. Rubbish removal. Deliveries. Appliance and
piano pick-ups. Bands. Gay owned &
operated. Commercial, personal or in·
dustrial. No job too big or too small.
641·1234.
(10/5)
MOVERS
THE JIM CLARK MOVING CO.
Serving the Gay Community
with professionalism and respect.
Very careful furniture movers.
Plano and hoisting specialist.
Any time of day - any day of year.
No overtime charges 354·2184
MDPU Number 23733
complete printing Mrvlce
Mrvlng the gay •lesbian
community
Copy Cellar
Copy Cellar
Copy Cellar
Copy Cellar
LOST AND FOUND
LOST AT GAY PRIDE MARCH:
Silver bracelet with female figure in
prone position & chain. Sentimental
value. Reward. Call (617)428·8151. (49)
No Job too big or small
orden by phone • mall
accepted locally •
natlonaly
ACCOMMODATIONS
World's Fair Guest House, Knoxville's
Eleanor House, one mile from fair, near
bars. Clean, ale rooms from $28.50.
(615) 523-5831.
(1),
BOSTON OASIS GUEST HOUSE
Totally renovated, private or share bath,
decks, continental breakfast. Center of
Boston: Oasis 22 Edgerly Ad, Boston,
(13)
MA 02115 (617) 267-2262.
(617) 542-8280,
(617) 825-6700
56 Broad St., Boston MA 02109
BELLVILLE ASSOCIATES
COPLEY SQUARE
Individual, Group and
Couples Counseling
Career Assessment
Assertiveness Training
Call (617) 739-7803
For initial Appt.
THE PARKVIEW
Private guestrooms in heart of Boston.
(33)
85 Westland Ave. (617) 536-3608.
JUNE OPENING! RESERVE NOW
Sea Gnomes' Home, Womyn's Guest
House, coastal Maine. Lovely private
rms, views, commonbath. Reasonable
rates. Wk ex June & Sept. Write Box 33,
Stonington, ME 04681 .
(43)
CHILDCARE
Quality childcare in my home on
Beacon Hill. Days & some eves avail.
Barb 523-3772.
(c)
WANTED
Lesbian relationships - monogamy,
non-monogamy, serial monogamy, celi·
bacy, etc. Short stories, essays,
political analysis, poetry, etc., wanted
for anthology. Send to Pam Moniz, 2087
S. Clayton St, Denver, CO 80210.
(49)
Classified deadline, Tues. noon. All ads must be
prepaid . No ads accepted by phone. GCN is a
national paper, include area code with phone
numbers. All apartment ads, even if you rent space in
your own home, are business. Make check or M .O .
payable to Gay Community News, 22 Bromfield St.,
Boston, MA 02108.
Business: $6.00 per week for 4 lines (35 units per
line), 50¢ tor each additional line. Headlines are $1.00
for 25 units.
Non-Business: $4.50 per week for 4 lines (35 units per
line); each additional line 25¢. Headlines 50¢ for 25
units.
Box numbers are $1 .00 for 6 weeks, you may pick up
mail at the GCN office Mon.-Fri., 10-6. It you wish
your mail forwarded, the rate is $4.00 for 6 weeks,
$6.00 for 3 months. Mail is forwarded at the end ot
the 3rd and 6th weeks.
Name ___________ City
Address
'
Want a clean house made easy? Of
course you do, so let me do it for you. A
neat home for sure! Professional cleaning at a reasonable rate. 73Hl537 late
pm.
(c)
Display Classifieds (boxed ads): $12 per column inch.
Please circle category ad is to run under.
ACCOMMODATIONS
INSTRUCTION
APARTMENTS
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LOST I FOUND
JUST FRIENDS
MOVERS
FOR SALE
JOBS WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
ORGANIZATIONS
PERSONALS
PRISON.ERS
PEN PALS
PUBLICATIONS
REAL ESTATE
RESORTS
RIDES
ROOMMATES
SERVICES
WANTED
Headlines ....... at$, _ _ _ per wk. $ _ _ _ __
First 4 lines ...... at$
per wk . $ _ _ _ __
Each additionailine at$
per wk. $ _ _ _ __
Pick-Up Box No. at $1.0016 weeks
Forward Box No. at $4.0016 weeks
$ _ _ _ __
$. _ _ _ __
3 months forwarding at $6.00
$ _ _ _ __
Number of weeks ad is to run
TOTAL ENCLOSED
$ _ _ _ __
Zip
Please print neatly, use shaded area for headlines and additional lines.
�Classifieds------------------MATH AND CHEMISTRY
Experienced tutor, reasonable rates .
Larry 497-6323.
(c)
FOR SALE
Gay Button Business
For Sale. 4,000 white
on silver ,..,. inch buttons.
Tres chic. Retail value $2,400. Selling
now for $500. Box No. 569.
--FRTOA,.
Come to GCN office, 22 Bromfield St.
(near Park St. subway stop), 2nd floor,
anytime after 5 for as long or as short as
~u like (until about 11pm) to help send
the paper out to subscribers. (There are
LOTS of them and we do need help!) Re·
freshments and good times. Men and
women welcome. 426-4469.
SHERRY NEEDS AD REPS
Our ad manager Is putting together a
national team of energetic, hardwork·
lng, highly motivated people who want
to see GCN grow. If you have advertis·
ing sales experience, or want to learn,
call Sherry at GCN, (617) 426-4469.
THURSDAY
GCN proofreading and correcting. Ncr
experience necessary. We'll teach you
all you need to know! Proofreading
begins 5-lsh and layout 6--lsh. 22 Bromfield St. (near Park St. and Washington
St. subway stops), 2nd floor. 426-4469.
HELP!
We got the bad news from The Good
News Garage. The GCN truck is sick
unto death. The rust has taken over and
the dyke who does local distribution is
no longer willing to risk her life by driving the Infamous green machine. Anyone got an extra truck they don't
need??? If so, please call Mike or Amy
at 426-4469.
GCN SPECIALS
EX-GAYS
& former lesbians wanted: people who
have changed (or have tried to change)
their orientation from homo- to heterosexuality. Your experiences are needed
for a GCN article on the subject. Please
send first name and way to contact to
GCN Box 655. All replies will be held in
strictest confidence.
Volunteer touch typists needed to do
data entry for change In GCN subscription system. July 15-Aug 15. Info: Mike
426-4469.
69 cents can buy a lot of Information
and enjoyment. That's what it costs to
send 1 lb. of bks to a lesbian or gay
friend in prison. lots of people have
given us bks, now we need some money
for postage. Think about it, you spend
as much to buy a cup of coffee. Lesbian
& Gay Prisoners Project, c/o GCN, 2~
Bromfield St., Boston 02108 or
426--4469.
MICROFILM READER WANTED
The GCN staff would love to be able to
read Its back Issues on microfilm, but
cannot afford to buy a film reader. If
anyone has access to a used one or
would like to donate one to the office,
please call Mike at 426-4469.
ORGANIZATIONS
SAM
The Social Alternative for Gay Men is
meeting regularly in the NHIVT Upper
Valley area. Info: SAM, PO Box 479, Norwich, VT 05055.
(2)
Are you Interested in forming a Gay
Communal Retirement Center? Join
others in the Ganymeade Society who
are forming now. Write: Ganymeade
Society, c/o Karl Volk, 43 Whittier Blvd.,
Poughkeepsie, NY ~2603.
D.O.B.
Support organization for lesbians, 1151
Mass. Ave., Camb. Old Camb Bap. Raps
every Tues & Thurs 8pm, 35 pis raps 2nd
Weds & last Fri, 8pm, Parents & Coparents rap 3rd Mon, 8pm. Softball
every Sun 3pm Apr-Sept, weather permitting, Magazine Field. Bimonthly
magazine FOCUS $8. Mnthly social &
fundraislng event. Info & office hrs
661-3633. All women invited to participate.
(c)
IDENTITY HOUSE
Lesbian, gay, bl, peer counseling and
groups. Rap groups: 2:30-5 pm Sat. for
women, and Sun. for men . Free walk-in
counseling. Sun.-Tues. 6--10pm. 'Donations accepted. 544 Ave. of Americas,
NYC. (212)243-8181 .
DO YOU SECRETLY LUS 1
After wlmmin In black habits? Do you
picture your soul liberally sprinkled
with black specks reminding you of
your venial sins? Do you feel guilty
whenever you're enjoying yrsf? Contess! Join ex-Catholic dykes group. Call
Jll 426·4469.
WOMEN PRINTERS
Typesetters, press operators, strippers,
bindery-workers, are invited to join us in
regular pot·luck meetings. Compare
notes about your job - hear informal
talks on occupational safety, union
organizing, etc. - help work on a news··
letter and other projects. For meeting
times and locations call 266-6644
Socialist-Feminism Discussion Bulle·
tin; articles on: Trends In the women's
mvt, reproductive rhts, lesbian/gay
liberation, community org, wklng
women, soc-fem theory. Available from:
Solidarity,
a
Socialist-Feminist
Network, 4360 23rd St, SF, CA 94114.
$3.95 (Inc. postage).
(c)
'dAY SWITCHBOARD OF NYC'
When you 're In New York, give us a call
for the latest information in gay and les
bian events, which bars to go to, when;
to stay, what group to contact, and
which businesses to patronize. Call us
to rap or just to say hello. (212) 777-1800
from noon till midnight.
NGTF NEEDS YOU
Join with the largest, fastest growing
gay civil rights group in the country!
The National Gay Task Force works
with a professional staff on media rep·
resentation, national legislation, Information clearinghouse, religious reforms, corporate non-discrimination
statements, more! Help support our
work - join now. $20 membership ($5
limited income) Includes Newsletter.
NGTF, 80 Fifth Ave. Rm. 1601 , New
York, N,Y 10011.
New women's media gp commmed to
lesb. education outreach thru media
sks mems. Need assistance w/market·
ing, graphic design, fundraislng, media
work. Letter of interest &lor resume to
Women's Educational Media, Inc., 36
Colwell Ave,, Brighton, MA 02135.
367-2086
(8)
GAY/LESBIAN AND JEWISH?
Am Tlkva welcomes you. Activities
Include religious observances, discus·
slons, potluck dinners, folk dancing,
etc. For events, check GCN calendar,
call 626--3986 or 524·1617 or write PO
Box 11, Camb MA02138.
(36)
BOSTON LESBIAN /GAY CATHOLICS
Dignity/Boston sponsors a liturgy for
Lesbian/Gay and concerned Catholics
every Sunday at Arlington Street
Church (Boston), right side entrance on
Arlington St., at 5:30 pm. For info call
Dignity/Boston MF 7·10 pm, Sun 2-5
pm, 536--6518. DIGNITY/BOSTON , 355
Boylston St., Boston, MA 02114
(c)
NH LAMBDA
A LESBIAN Organization. Box 1043,
Concord, N H 03301 . Concord: 224-3875,
746--3339; Dover/Portsmouth: 431 -1541.
.:;RISIS LINE: 483-2592, Sun, Mon, Wed
6·9 pm. A statewide organization,
meeting the third Saturday of every
month. Support, education, and poll·
tical action, since 1976.
(45)
PUBLICATIONS
FOCUS: A Journal for lesbians, is now
soliciting never-before-published
essays, stories or personal histories
(NO poetry) for its 7th annual prose contest. Entries should be no longer than
3,000 words and must be postmarked
by August 1 to be eligible. FOCUS has
first publication rights on all entries
submitted. Include SASE if. you wish
your MS returned. Mall to: Focus, 1151
Massachusetts Ave ., Cambridge, MA
02138.
The Transsexual Voice, a newsletter
written by and about transsexuals (contains ads) $2 per copy; $12/yr. Phoebe
Smith 764 North Ave, Hapeville, GA
30354.
(49)
Free lesbian catalog of books, send two
15c stamps, Womankind Books, Dept
GCN, 1899 New York Ave., Huntington
Station, NY 11746(516) 427·1289.
(12)
GRAB.ITI
Read In These Times, the Independent
national socialist newspaper. Each
week brings fresh and responsible
socialist analyses of critical issues &
unique features. Congressperson John
Conyers says we' re " invaluable." SF
Supervisor Harry Britt supports us. Why
don' t you read us? 6 mo sub/10.95. In
These Times, 1509 N. Milwaukee, Dept
A, Chlcago,ll60622. (29) (30x)_
Subscribe to BIG MAMA RAG , a
monthly feminist newsjournal. $6 per
year, $10 outside the U.S., FREE to
prisoners. Contact BMR, 1724 Gaylord ,
Denver, CO 80206.
Prisoners
Seeking
Friends
I am Interested m receiving your n~:~v.
letter. 1am a gay female and also would
like to correspond with same. I have no
relatives except a grandmother and
so I am in great need of someone
to. I enjoy reading, writing,
good life. Thank you. Jeanhington, Box C N17290,
60420.
•1Nould like to hear from gay females in
area. Female penpais from at .
nd are welcome. Have many inter·
Would like to hear from some
into leather. Write to Teresa
-1n/>\,nu1N, 1034 Bragg St., Raleigh, NC
am an Aquarius and would like some1 can relate to. I get no mail, am 4
pregnant and going through this
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Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Gay Community News
Gay Community News
1982-07
1982-07
Gay Community
Gay Pride
Gay Community
Gay Pride
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20241673
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20241673
Gay Community
Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
boston lesbian and gay pride
1982/07/01
Boston Lesbian and Gay Pride
1982-07
Gay Community
Gay Community News
Gay Community News
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VOL 9, NO. 49 ay c TH ew SOC~: BIPAD: 65498 Boston lesbian and Gay·Pride 1982 �GayCommunity Vol.9, No.49 ©GCN, 1982 - - - - - - - - - J u l y 3 , 1982· (617)426-4469' Court Ruling Condemns Anti-Gay INS Policy By Scott Brookie SAN FRANCISCO - In the most sweeping legal condemnation to date of anti-gay government immigration policy, a federal district judge in San Francisco ruled on June 17 that it is unconstitutional to exclude lesbian and gay male non-citizens from entering the U.S. simply because of their homosexuality. Ruling on a class action suit filed last June by the San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Committee (L/GFDC) against the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), Judge Robert P. Aguilar declared that, ''The INS policy of per se exclusion of homosexual aliens from entering into the United States is invalid as contrary to congressional intent and as unconstitutionally abridging Plaintiff's First Amendment rights." At the same time in a related case, Judge Aguilar ruled that Carl Hill, a gay British citizen who had been detained by the INS in 1979, must be admitted into the U.S. now and at any time in the future. Hill, a reporter for the Gay News of London, had been the subject of a lengthy legal battle after immigrations officials stopped him at San Francisco airport when they noticed his button reading "Stonewall '69, Gay Pride '79." Hill had come to the U.S. to cover San Francisco's Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day events for Gay News. Aguilar declared that the exclusion of Hill by the INS had been "an abuse of discretion." On April 23, Aguilar issued an oral ruling ordering Hill admitted to the country (see GCN, Vol. 9, No. 41). The current written decision reaffirms the oral ruling. The Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Committee had filed its suit in June of 1981, arguing that the INS policy violated the First Amendment rights of gay men and lesbians in the U.S. "who want and need to know the experiences of gay and lesbian persons of other nations ." Aguilar agreed at the time that "significant constitutional issues'' were raised by the suit and issued a temporary injunction. The government appealed the temporary injunction (see GCN, Vol. 9, No . 15), arguing that Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day activities were "contrary to the morals of significant numbers of Americans," according to Greg Day of the L/GFDC. In his ruling on June 17, Aguilar in effect agreed that lesbian/gay pride events have political significance. "Plaintiffs assert very strong First Amendment interests in this case. Plaintiffs seek to engage in discussion and exchange with homosexual aliens. They seek to share information and ideas relating to the laws regarding homosexuality in other countries to better deal with the laws and attitudes about homosexuals. Through this sharing process, Plaintiffs also seek to improve the political position of homosexual groups in the United States and to gain greater public acceptance for homosexual persons in the United States. These are well recognized and compelling First Amendment interests." According to Day, Aguilar also seemed to write his opinion in anticipation of arguments the government may make if they decide to appeal the case. ''Homosexual aliens pose no threat to national security simply because they are homosexuals .... The fact that some American c1t1zens find homosexuality morally repugnant, or the purposes of the Lesbian/ Gay Freedom Day events abhorrent or offensive cannot provide an important governmental interest upon which an impairment of First Amendment freedoms can be based," said Aguilar. Aguilar requested that lawyers for both sides submit within ten days proposed language for a permanent injunction. Mary Dunlap, attorney for the L/GFDC, told GCN that she would request an injunction covering the entire counCon tinued on page 6 State Senator Appoints Liaison to Gay Community By Larry Goldsmith BOSTON Massachusetts State Senator Bill Owens (R-Boston) has announced the appoint- Court Favors . ay Father G In Bid for Custody of Son By Jil Clark PORTLAND, ME - A gay man won a decisive victory in his prolonged battle for custody of his seven-year-old son recently when a state court judge agreed with the father and others that the boy is being abused by his legal guardians, his parental grandparents (see GCN, Vol. 9, No . 28). Ruling on the child abuse petition, District Judge Edward Rogers ordered custody of Mark Pierce, Jr. removed from Genevieve and Elwyn Pierce and recommended that the state's Department of Human Services place the boy in the home of his natural father, Mark Pierce, a 27-year-old Portland salesman. Judge Rogers made no mention of Mark Pierce's sexual orientation in his writings. Pierce's attorney, Niel Shankman of Legal Clinics of Maine, said he was relieved that the judge had "kept his personal prejudices out of his decision . . .. I knew [beforehand] that the outcome had more to do with that than all the research I •d done.'' Earlier this year, another district judge, Robert Donovan, lifted a temporary order protecting the child from his grandmother and returned him to his grandparents without considering the extensive and detailed charges· of abuse and neglect filed by Mark Pierce, Pierce's aunt and Pierce's lover, Robert Brogna. At the time of that hearing, Shankman commented that " although the judge said nothing to make us think that the fact the father is gay influenced his decision, his decision in light of the circumstances was surprisingly severe." Pierce says he feels "ecstatic" about the ruling, which he considers a significant one for lesbian and gay male parents. "But the most important thing is that he's coming home," Pierce said. "I know my mother's attorney has told her [about the decision] by now and I know she told my son and I'm excited knowing how happy he is inside about it. I just hope he can be patient a little while longer.'' It may be two or three months before Mark, Jr. is returned to his father's house, since he is residing in Massachusetts, beyond the jurisdiction of the Maine courts. The co-operation of the Massachusetts Department of Human Services is needed to take the boy from Genevieve and Elwyn Pierce and Shankman said that obtaining this may be difficult. "On the other hand, we may be saved this work; it isn't unreasonable to expect that the child will be dropped off on Mark's front door any day. She [Genevieve Pierce] has done that many times before when he becomes inconvenient for whatever reason. And this time Mark take the boy from them with a legal order behind him ." Shankman is confident that once Mark, Jr. is back in Maine, the Massachusetts Department of Human Services will place him in the care of his father , in accordance with the recommendation of the judge. However, this arrangement is still a precarious one for Mark Pierce and his son. Pierce lost his Carl Hill legal guardianship of his son in a Massachusetts law office several years ago and Maine law provides that the state has an obligation to attempt to reunite the members of the legal family, which in this case would mean sending Mark , Jr. back to his grandparents if at some future time they can prove to the court that the boy would no longer be in danger in their care. · Continued on page 6 ment of Boston actJVJst Donald Babets as his first liaison to the lesbian and gay community. Babets, a graduating student at the University of Massachusetts in Boston, was co-founder and first chairperson of the Fenway Lesbian and Gay Alliance (FLAGA), an organization formed after the murder of a gay man in the Fenway on the night following the Lesbian and Gay Pride March in 1980. Babets also served as the Worcester co-coordinator of the Massachusetts Caucus for Gay Legislation in 1978. Babets says he hopes to represent the lesbian and gay community not only to Sen. O wens' office but also throughout the State House. Owens, who has co-sponsored gay rights legislation since his election to the Senate in 1979, said the appointment of the liaison will promote "greater sensitivity on my staff and among people throughout my district to the gay community and other minority groups, all of whom make a substantial part of the constituency in the Second Suffolk District, the Commonwealth and the United States." Senate Bill 113, introduced and co-sponsored by Owens, would prohibit discrimination in public and private employment on the basis of sexual preference. The bill is currently in a Senate committee awaiting further action. Owens has also asked Boston lawyer David Lund to draw up a list of the state laws prohibiting homosexual activity in the state, in preparation for the submission of legislation aimed at removing all such prohibitions. Pride Reigns in Boston; Mayor's Executive Order Announced at Pride Rally By Larry Goldsmith BOSTON-Lesbians and gay men took to the streets on June 19 for this city's twelfth annual Lesbian and Gay Pride March and Rally. A crowd estimated by event organizers at 13,000 gathered in Copley Square at noon and marched the' traditional route through the Back Bay and Beacon Hill, ending up with a rally in the Boston Common. Police told GCN they estimated the crowd at 5,000. Rally participants braved unseasonably cold and rainy weather to hear an array of speakers and entertainers, including a short unscheduled appearance by Brian McNaught, Boston's new mayoral liaison to the lesbian and gay community (see interview in this issue). McNaught used the opportunity to announce the signing of a new executive order by Mayor · Kevin White, designed to prohibit discrimination by the city on the basis of sexual orientation. administration, and an ordinance, passed into law by the city council. The executive order also applies only to municipal employment and city services, 'whereas an ordinance could prohibit discrimination in See Pride Photos, page 5. "Today the mayor of Boston issued one of the most powerful ordinances the city has," McNaught told the crowd . "It prohibits discrimination in employment and city services ." However, activist Eric Rofes, speaking later in the rally, corrected McNaught's announcement, pointing out the differences between an executive order, issued by the mayor and effective only for the duration of that mayor's the private sector as well. Rofes emphasized the need for an ordinance in order to adequately protect the rights of lesbians and gay men. Other speakers at the rally decried the economic and military programs of the Reagan administration, saying that the president's policies contributed to the racism, sexism , anti-Semitism and heterosexism experienced by lesbians and gay men in this country. �---......,----------~----Page 2 • Gay Community News, July 3, 1 9 8 2 " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - News Notes----------~--------------~quote of the week to the windy city gomorrah the world "As a socialist (though of a libertarian-democratic variety), I do see a connection between defending gay rights and opposing Reaganism, if only because I believe it can be demonstrated that authoritarianism (of both Left and Right) and unmollified capitalism are destructive of the respect for human dignity without which I doubt our ability to live good and meaningful lives. We cannot assert the rights of one group In a vacjlJum, and if we ignore the misery around us during our quest for a place in the sun, we are demeaned. But I recognize that this position needs to be argued, not merely asserted, and that it is unrealistic to expect homosexuals to be any less prisoners of American ideology than anyone else." - Dennis Altman in "The Personal Is Political: Gay Life In 1982," published in the June 21 Issue of the New York Native. 1 CHICAGO - The National Coalition of Black Gays (NCBG) has announced that its national headquarters will move to Chicago effective July 1 of this year. Chris Cothran, director of NCGB/Chlcago, will be the organization's chief administrator and operations officer as well as continuing to head NCBG/Chicago. Lamda Chicago, currently published by NCBG/Chicago, will expand to become the national NCBG publication. The new mailing address for NCBG will be 1311 West Pratt Blvd., Chicago, IL 60626-7789. For more information, call Chris Cothran at (312) 764-2024 between 7 and 11 In the evening. SYDNEY, Australia- Jerry Falwell was no doubt confused to discover during a four-day tour of Australia in late May that one of the groups demonstrating against him was the Moral Majority. The Moral Majority of Australia, a network of lesbians and gay men who registered the name of their organization some time ago in preparation for Falwell's visit, was one of a number of groups countering Falwell's message. T-shirts, signs and stickers seen at the demonstrations carried such messages at "Moral Majority against the christian right", "Sodom today, Gomorrah the world", "Moral Majority loves blatant lesbians" and "If Mary had the right to choose, the world would be a better place." taking trask to task TALLAHASSEE, FL - State Senator Alan Trask, the leader in legislative attacks against lesbians and gay men in this state, has announced in the midst of a financial scandal that he will not seek reelection. The Weekly News, a gay publication in Miami, reports that Trask made the announcement in response to formal charges made on June 9 by a senate investigating committee that Trask had violated senate ethics rules. Most of the charges concern false statements Trask allegedly made on his financial disclosure statements, documents filed each year by all public officials in the state. Other charges concerning loans Trask had obtained and the manner in which he obtained them appear to involve felony violations of federal banking laws. "In this atmosphere of doubt and mistrust, it is obvious that I cannot serve and repair my troubled finances," Trask said in a prepared statement. "Trask and legislators like him must be made accountable to their constituents, which include lesbians and gay men," said Ronnie Santo of the Florida Task Force. "Such legislators will no longer be allowed to further their political careers by taking cheap shots at the lesbian and gay community, the last frontier of legal bigotry." Two bills written by Trask, both of which were passed but later declared unconstitutional, outlawed student organizations which advocated sex outside marriage. dangerously specious HAYWARD, CA- Defense attorneys .In theretrial in a widely-publicized mass murder case have claimed that it was actually the convicted man's brother who committed the murders and that his homosexuality was his motive. The New York Times reports that attorneys for Juan Corona, who was convicted in 1973 of killing 25 migrant farm workers, claimed on June 22 that Natividad Corona, Juan's older half-brother, whom they described as "an active, aggressive homosexual," killed the 25 middle-aged male farmworkers, then fled to Mexico. Natividad Corona is offi.cially listed as dead In Mexico but the defense attorneys claim he may still be alive. Juan Corona's original conviction was overturned by an appeals court on the grounds that his defense attorney did not provide adequate legal representation for him. The attorney, whose performance the judge described as "truly appalling," had presented no evidence on Corona's behalf and had not called Corona to the stand. The prosecution had relied heavily on testimony about blood stains and other physical evidence. Prosecutors at the retrial charged that the defense had failed to offer any evidence directly connecting Natividad Corona to the murders. The Times account does not elaborate on the defense attorney's claim that being homosexual Is motivation for murder. swiss rejection BERNE, Switzerland - Swiss voters have rejected a proposal to decriminalize gay sex between consenting adults and to lower the age of consent from 16 to 14. According to Campaign, a gay publication in Sydney, Australia, the negative vote followed a recommendation by a committee of experts who had heard arguments from the Justice and Police Departments, new habits WASHINGTON, DC- For the first time, an org- all the separate cantons and several political, anization institutionally linked to the Roman Catholic religious and women's organizations. The proposal to decriminalize homosexual acts Church has adopted a pro-choice position. The New York Times reported on May 28 that the was supported by several cantons, the Protestant National Coalition of American Nuns has announced Church and many political groups. The proposal to lower the age of consent would its opposition to Sen. Orrin Hatch's (R·Utah) proposed constitutional amendment limiting abortion rights. . have brought Swiss laws into line with those of Italy, "While we continue to oppose abortion in prin- West Germany, and Austria. cipal and in practice," the nuns said, "we are likewise convinced that the responsibility for decisions in this by the rules regard resides primarily with those who are directly LOS ANGELES- A city councillor here has reand personally involved." The nuns' statement, which was made in April signed as a committee chair over allocations of city but has only recently been widely circulated; also funds to a foster home for gay adolescents. The Los Angeles Times reports that Hal Bernson, points out the contradiction in the right-wing anti· abortion position. "It is paradoxical to us that the charging that his colleagues were not "playing by the same leaders who are currently demanding that rules," asked that he be removed as chair of the women bring their babies to term are simultaneously Grants, Housing and Community Development Comvoting to cut off food stamps, child nutrition pro- mittee, which had recommended against a $206,000 block grant to the Gay and Lesbian Community Serg~ams and related benefits essential for the health vices Center, which will own and operate the foster and well-being of our children." home. The full council approved the grant by a vote of ten to two. Bernson said he did not object to the nature of the foster home but to what he claimed was a violation deadly fire of council policy, giving dwindling funds to a new proSEATTLE- Officials have determined that an ar- ject. sonist is responsible for an early-morning fire at a Supporters of the grant said that since the Center local bathhouse which resulted in the death of one of had received grants in the past, the foster home c6n· the four men hospitalized for smoke inhalation. stituted part of an ongoing project. Seattle Gay News (SGN) reports that Earnest Latour died shortly after noon on May 29 as a result of in· from the heart haling smoke during the fire at The Pines baths on May 24. AMHERST, MA - Sinister Wisdom, a feminist Investigators for the fire department reportedly publication, is planning an issue by and about North told the manager of the baths that only a foreign flam· American Indian women. mable substance could have produced the amount of To be edited by Mohawk writer Beth Brant smoke seen during the fire. The three-story building (Degonwadonti), the issue will include short stories, housing the baths was built in 1978 of non-flammable graphics, essays, poetry, letters, book reviews, oral material. The facility has been cited for only minor in· histories and narrations and other forms of expresfractions of the fire code. · sion. Many of the 40 men present at the baths at the Sinister Wisdom isencouraging.aiJ Indian women time credit Marty, the attendant on duty at the time, to participate. "We are looking for words and pictures who is not further identified in the SGN account, with from the heart, from our experiences as Indian preventing disaster. "He kept his cool and he got peowomen," Brant says. ple out of there," SGN quotes one of the men as saySubmissions should be typed double-spaced and ing. sent with a stamped, self-addressed envelope by JanThe case Is being investigated by the Seattle uary 15, 1983 to Beth Brant, 18890 Reed, Melvindale, Police Department. Ml48122. Kendall Lovett Falwell was interrupted by a group of demonstrators who stormed into the National Press Club In Canberra, the federal capital. "This man wants to make a speech so that he can put points of view that deny the rights of women, of blacks, gays, of anyone who doesn't fit in with his stereotype of the nuclear family, of the Anglo-Saxon man," shouted one of the demonstrators. Also participating in demonstrations against Falwell were feminists, school teachers, humanists, the Australian Order of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and the Sydney Gay _Liberation Quire. conferences The Dallas Gay Alliance will host Celebrating the Movement: Planning for the Future, a national lesbian and gay leadership conference, August 13 through 15 at the Grenelefe Hotel in Dallas. Organizers say the purpose of the conference is to educate, inform and share experiences, goals and expectations of the gay ·rights movement. The conference, they say, does not take a position on any issue but will provide an open forum for discussion on all relevant •ssues. The $40 registration fee includes all phases of the conference, four meals and transportation to places of entertainment. For more information, contact the Dallas Gay Alliance, Box 35011, Dallas, TX 75235.... The United Church Coalition for Lesbian/Gay Concerns will present an open public forum in conjunction with its second national gathering July 15 through 17 in Columbus, Ohio. Rev. Susan Savell and Rev. William Reagn Johnson will make present~tions at the forum. More details and registration materials are available f_om Rev. Jan Griesinger, 18 N. College r St., Athens, OH 45701 or by calling (614) 593-7301 .... The First North American Gay Men's Music Fes· tival will be held in Minneapolis over Labor Day weekend, September 3 through 5. Sponsored by Voices and Visions, a collective of gay men, the festival includes performances, workshops, a community meal and other events. The fee for the festival will be $30 for registration before August 15 or $40 after that date. Payment should be sent to Voices and Visions Productions, P.O. Sox 3549, Minneapolis, MN 55403. For more information, call (612) 870.1407. News Notes compiled this week by David Morris. �- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Gay Community News, July 3, 1982 • Page 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Filmmaker Fassbinder Dies of Unknown Causes By Michael Bronski MUNICH-Rainer Werner Fassbinder, German filmmaker and open homosexual, was found dead in his Munich apartment last Thursday, June 10. The cause of . death was unknown but police have ruled out murder and doubt that it was suicide. The results of the autopsy were inconclusive, but it is generally believed that the final result will show accidental death due to an overdose of sleeping pills. Fassbinder was born May 31, 1946, the son of a doctor father and literary translator mother. (She rendered the works of Truman Capote into German and later acted in many of Fassbinder's films.) In 1967 he joined the Action-Theater group, the most avant-garde of the German theaters, where he produced and directed several plays and began writing his own original scripts. The Action-Theater was closed by the police in May of 1968 and Fassbinder and nine other mem- written or acted in many others. bers, including Hanna Schygulla, Besides being one of the most founded anti-teater in the back prolific fllmmakers working, room of a Schwa bing bar. Anti- Fassbinder also made a name for teater lasted several years during himself as a committed leftist and which Fassbinder produced, wrote openly gay man. And while either and directed many theater, radio of these may have set him apart and, finally, film productions . from other mainstream directors, under their auspices. In 1971 he he further distinguished himself founded his own independent film by refusing to toe any party lines company, Tango Films, and be- in his personal opinions or art. gan his prodigious film career. German communists were pleased More than any other post-war at his pro-socialist portrayals in German filmmaker, Fassbinder early films and then picketed the has been responsible for the theater when he released Mother resurgence of the German cinema Kusters Goes to Heaven in which from the late 1960s to the present. a working class woman is exWhile other filmmakers, like ploited by professional CP organWerner Herzog or Wim Wenders, izers. were reaching a limited "art" The same was also true of Fox audience, Fassbinder was able to and His Friends, a 1975 film in reach a large general audience which upper-class homosexuals world-wide. In 1981, the German exploit, and finally cause the premiere of his Lili Marleen death of, a working-class gay man brought in almost as much money who has won a lottery. When Fox as The Empire Strikes Back. In a was shown at the New York Film film career that lasted just less Festival in 1977, gay rights groups than a decade - he was 36 when picketed and leafleted the theater. he died - he had directed 41 full (Although it was probably true, as length films and had produced, someone once pointed out, that it FBI Refuses to .Release Flles on Gay Activist By David Hunt SANTA ANA, CA-Gay activist Andrew Ross Exler, who gained national prominence in 1980 when he was expelled from Disneyland, has discovered that the FBI is holding four pages of classified information on him in their files. Exler made the discovery last year when he applied under the Freedom of Information Act to find out if the government was gathering information on his activities. In a letter to Exler, FBI special agent Edgar Best said the information was classified "in the interest of national security and/or foreign defense." Exler called the FBI office in Santa Ana and was told by an investigator that the information probably pertained to organizations or people he associated with. "I tried to find out why there were so many pages, but he wouldn't tell me," Exler said. Although he is only 21 years of age, Exler has been active in politics in Orange County for several years. He is on the Central Committee of the county Peace and Freedom Party, belongs to the American Civil Liberties Union and is a field associate with Gay Rights National Lobby. Last year he ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the Orange County Board of Education on a gay rights platform. Exler sued Disneyland in Sep- tember 1980 in an attempt to force the park to allow same-sex dancing. He lost the first round of court battles and is in the process of appealing. Exler also made headlines locally in December of 1980 when he was fired from his job as a typist with the Orange County Human Services Agency for refusing to remove a gay rights button. He appealed the dismissal and was granted a hearing before a retired Orange County superior court judge. The judge ruled against Exler, stating, "If I was gay I would try to be as perfect as possible because gays have problems on the job." Exler said he has no idea why the FBI would keep files on his activities but said he has learned that more than one million government employees have the right to classify information. "I can't understand bow I'm a threat to national security or foreign defense," he told GCN. "It's a joke. I've never been arrested and I've never done civil disobedience. The only thing I have done is to speak out on human rights issues. I've attended several anti-nuke rallies and I've written to the president seven times since he's been in office about my stands on nuclear power and the right of women to choose abortion.'' Exler said he would like to force the FBI to declassify the infor- mation and is looking for an organization to sponsor a lawsuit against the government. was the attack on the uppermiddle class that infuriated the mostly upper-middle-class protestors, and not the alleged negative stereotypes.) What was probably most impressive, and vital, about Passbinder's career was his ability to keep on producing constantly. While most other filmmakers and other artists - fill their notebooks with ideas, Fassbinder made movies instead. If at times an idea wasn't carried through to its logical end, or if opinions changed from film to film, (or, as some claimed, within films), it was due to the urgency and force the artist felt in his desire to express them. Like Brecht, Fassbinder was a highly political artist who was intensely concerned with the culture around him and with showing his audience how this culture affected and shaped their lives. His love of Hollywood films (especially those of Douglas Sirk) and the influence of American culture on post-war Germany is evident in most of his films. He picked through popular culture and used what he wanted to express what he had to· say at the moment. That is why there is no single clearly)thought politic or political line in his body of work. Like Brecht he was also concerned that his audience think about and respond to his films on an intellectual level and not only on an emotional one. If there were contradictions there, they were meant to make us ponder: it's easy to tell people what to believe, much harder to make them think. What of Fassbinder as a gay filmmaker? He was one of the few people in the industry to be open about his sexuality. His portrayals of gay men in Fox are straightforward, non-sensational and explicit. The lesbians in Petra von Kant, given the admitted peculiarities of the film, are not the monsters of other films and plays. The transsexual Elvira of In A Year of Thirteen Moons is treated with compassion and respect. Throughout most of his films Fassbinder attempts a startling juxtaposition. His stories are thriller material, melodramas or soap operas, yet he refuses to let us get that close to the material. He serves us slices of Life with the warning not to get too involved or to care all that much. What happens is that we are able to see the larger picture, the larger view. Fassbinder's method is not dissimilar to the double edged vision of Gertrude Stein or the irony of Oscar Wilde. Stand back, watch closely, there is more here than you think, more than two sides to every question. Like many gay artists he remained the outsider: wary of easy solutions, questioning and always critical of what is usually called "the real world.'' -filed from Boston Police in Schenectady Crack Down on Cruising By Mark A. Perigord SCHENECTADY, NY-A gay law group is monitoring the actions of the police department here after the city announced a crackdown on gay men cruising in a downtown business district. The Lamda Law Guild accused the police of harassment after they began photographing and taking down the license numbers of people in the area and using uniformed and undercover police to patrol the area. The Schenectady police have accused one man of approaching an undercover patrolman and offering to perform a sexual act and, on May 19, arrested RobertS. Surico, 30, and charged him with loitering for the purpose of deviate sexual activity. One sergeant said he patrolled the district the night Surico was arrested and estimated that between 30 and 40 homosexual men were there. Mayor Frank Duci and Police Chief Richard Nelson said the intense surveillance effort was in response to numerous complaints from merchants and citizens of being accosted by men in the vicinity of the Schenectady City Hall, the library and the post office. Duci told local reporters the situation required "some drastic action" and assured them the men involved were not ''low-grade criminal types," "just people with · a different sexual preference than most people." He compared the surveillance effort to the city's attempts to curb prostitution, and pledged to seek maximum penalties for those convicted of solicitation. Lisa Ottati of the Schenectady Gay Coalition said, "I cannot outwardly say the police are making trouble, but it does appear that way. Homosexual prostitution is not an issue here. I see nothing wrong with the guys just hanging out. The police do not have a good feeling for the community.'' Richard Redlo, a spokesperson for the :Lambda Law Guild, expressed doubt there would be more incidents in the business district because the media attention given to the crackdown scared everyone away from the area. "People in Schenectady are either going to the clubs in Albany or staying in the closet," Redlo said. The Guild held a public meeting to gather ev.idence to the extent of the police department surveillance, but, according to Redlo, no one from Schenectady attended. He said the group has decided to take a "wait and see" attitude toward the police and may offer legal assistance to anyone else arrested because of the surveillance. The Guild offered to represent Surico, Redlo said, but he refused and said he is a heterosexual who has been falsely charged. -filed from Boston No Trial for Woman In Self-Defense Case By Jil Clark BOSTON, MA - A Suffolk County Grand Jury has recently decided not to press manslaughter charges against a Dorchester woman who killed a man in selfdefense last January. "The last couple of days I've been smiling so hard my cheeks are hurting," said Donna Finn, feminist, community activist and co-founder of Families and Friends of Prisoners, who received a "no bill" from the jury on June 22. "But in the back of that smiJe is a lot of pain," Finn continued. "I'm dealing with the fact that someone I cared about is dead because we [in the community] haven't come up with a more creative way of responding to rage and violence that is so typical among working-class people. And that violence is going to increase as the government takes more and more control over our lives away from us.'' Finn shot Paul McGrath, an uncle of the man she has lived with for years, when he showed up at her house in a rage on the evening of January 26. He was threatening her and her 15-year-old daughter as he punched out the glass of the outer and inner doors to her house. McGrath was angry because Finn had refused to give him the telephone number of the battered women's shelter where his ex-lover and their children had gone, seeking shelter from him. Finn spotted what appeared to be a gun in his hand. "I was never so scared in my life," Finn told a reporter for Do- ing Time. "I was crying, pleading, 'Please, Paul, don't do this. Think!' "If he hadn't been talking about blowing my brains out I never would have shot him. If I hadn't been aware of Paul's potential for violence in a rage, I might not have taken it so seriously." Finn says that McGrath, like many working-class men, dealt with his lack of power over his own life by controlling women. "Paul had no sense of himself except bravado and repression of women." "I don't know that much about middle-class men, but I know that among working-class men there is rage ... and I don't feel comfortable just shooting them. That's not a solution. "What upsets me is that women keep being left to defend ourselves. But women are busy just covering our asses, sheltering other women. This violence is men's problem and men need to organize around it. "A few middle- class men's groups are dealing with women batterers who are seeking help. But no group of men in this whole country is dealing with the rage among working-class men that are not seeking help. So they keep dumping on us .... I'm worried about the woman next door that gets punched in.'' Finn added that McGrath's racism and homophobia "fueled his fury" about the women's shelter, where many of the women are black and lesbian. Finn's acquittal is not a victory for all women, according to Rose Viviano, Director of Families and Friends of Prisoners, who was amon-g those subpoenaed by the grand jury. "1 ustice was done in Donna's case," said Viviano, "but only because Donna is so well known. The D.A.'s office received more than 200 letters from priests, nuns, middle-class suburbanites, doctors, lawyers objecting to the fact that Donna was being charged with a crime." Any other woman, without that support, would not have been freed, said Viviano. Nancy Gertner, Finn's attorney, commented, "I've had lots of women's self-defense cases. Those that fail are those with criminal records or those who the grand jury doesn't apContinued on page 12 , II �~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Page4•GayCommunHyNew~Ju~~1~2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; l • I . Botton, MA02108,(117)4~ Com mun·ty 'vOIces ~- - - - - - - - - - 1 Gay Community News 22BromfleldSt., a happy sustainer gays and nazis To the editor: The Hitler-loving, goose-stepping, swastikawaving punks who call themselves the American Nazi Party are planning to march in Chicago on June 27 at the site of the city's annual Gay Pride rally . And in a particularly ominous move, they are appealing to the Ku Klux Klan and mainstream "respectable ' ' bigots of the Moral Majority to swell the ranks of their mob. They plan to counterdemonstrate at a gay festival because here and now homosexuals are the most vulnerable group on their hit list. They don't want to start with the labor movement, Latinos, Jehovah's Witnesses, modern art, or Slavs. And going after blacks gets real deadly fast. They're going after the group they see as the weakest, as a beginning. And they must be stopped! These Nazis are deadly serious. Only a few weeks ago they demolished the home of a middleaged couple in Evanston, a Chicago suburg, and then phoned to ~Y they plan to drive all the Jews out of Evanston and Skokie. If they are allowed to recruit and grow, they will implement their program of concentration camps and genocide for blacks, Jews, Latinos, unionists, gays and all the minorities that they hate. There a re those who say that the Nazis are irrelevant - that if we just ignore them, they will go away. This is the strategy of the Gay Pride Committee and the gay establishment in Chicago, who argue that merely by "coming out' the Nazi provocation will be defused. But it is suicidal to dismiss the American Nazi Party as a bunch of lunatics who can safely be ignored. Try telling the survivors of Auschwitz and Dachau, the thousands of homosexuals tortured and incinerated in Hitler's camps, the 20 million Russians who died resisting the mad Nazi drive for world conquest that the Nazis should be ignored! The Nazis and the Klan do have wide support here and there among the desperate and backward. They are terrorists vigilantes growing in the fertile soil of Reagan's anti-Soviet war drive and the economic and social miseries inflicted on workers and minorities at home. The Nazis are a deadly serious threat right now - they cannot be ignored! Equally suicidal is a strategy for a narrowly gay-centered mobilization against the Nazis, as put forward by the "StonewaJJ Committee," a hodge-podge of feminists, reformists, and liberals stage-managed by the Revolutionary Soc- ialist League (RSL) which wants to throw tomatoes and day-old bagels at the Nazis. Thousands of angry gays alongside every other minority in Chicago must be mobilized behind the social power of the labor movement to stop the Nazis on June 27 . The RSL has a history of adventurist confrontations with the Nazis - and with the cops who protect the fascists. Mayor Jane Byrne's trigger-happy "boys in blue" will be out in force on June 27, protecting the "rights"ofthe Nazi race terrorists. The Chicago cops are no different than their brothers in Boston who busy themselves closing down gay after-hours clubs and locking up "sex offenders" as an adjunct to brutalizing blacks in Roxbury and Dorchester. Whenever the fascists march, they are generously and energetically guarded by their cop friends. And whenever the fascists terrorize blacks, Jews, gays or trade unionists, the police are conveniently and conspicuously absent. It is absolutely criminal to rely on the police for protection against Nazi attacks. The RSL throws up its hands in despair at the possibility of labor/minority mobilizations to stop the fascists, and instead retreats into its pitiful rotten blocs, where it is red-baited and violence-baited by its erstwhile partners. But it is the labor movement which has the social power to stop the Nazis. Chicago is a union town! Chicago is a black city! In fact, Chicago is in its vast majority a city of decent people, heavily minority, whom the Nazis would love to annihilate. What's needed is the will to forge a labor/minorities mobilization to bring out thousands of militant protesters to stop the Nazis. The Spartacist League (SL) knows the fascists can be stopped. Two years ago we participated in a largely Jewish demonstration that drove them out of Lovelace Park in Evanston. On March 20, 1982, an SL-initiated mobilization of over 2,000 students, trade unionists, blacks, gays and Jews stopped a Nazi recruiting rally in Ann Arbor Michigan and ran them out of town. The Nazis ~Y they will show up in Chicago's Lincoln Park at 2:30p.m. on Sunday, June 27. We say these terrorists have no right to push their kill-crazy tactics anywhere. Stop them now! Tom Dowling former member of the Red Flag Union for the Spartacist League Boston , MA from 1974 to 1982 nyc mattachine Dear GCN This letter to GCN is long overdue, but recent events and personal experiences finally moved me to write it. Every publication has flaws and weaknesses, but I am deeply grateful that GCN exists. I'm tempted to praise a dozen pieces I've read in GCN, but for the sake of brevity,.I'll.just mention the June 5 issue. The articles on legalized homosexuality vs. gay liberation in Poland and East Germany were moving and informative. They should be reprinted in leftist papers like In These Times and The Guardian, and won't be. Likewise, a magazine like The Nation will, in 1982, publish someone like Gore Vidal, but is just not ready to print the GCN"Speaking Out" piece on Erotic Liberation. When I want to read the latest about the gangsters in government, I read The New York Times- "All the News That's Fit to Print." But if I want news about what life is like behind bars for some gay brothers, then it helps to read Jil Clark's GCN news piece: "Vermont Prisons May Use Aversion Therapy.'' Excellent articles appear in other U.S. gay magazines and papers, but GCN is more likely to print the "quirky" perspective, and to give voice to folks who are not necessarily professional writers and yet deserve to be heard. If I want third-hand pontification about gay liberation, I can read it elsewhere; but if I want the live pulse of liberation, I turn to GCN. I happen to read the letters from readers first whenever I read GCN; it is often there that the first signs of a storm appear, or that old debates take new turns. And if I sometimes find the turnips in the stew to be indigestible, then I'll eat the tomatoes instead. I detest the anti-intellectualism which sometimes crops up \n GCN, but it will crop up everywhere when our school system and government encourages us not to use our heads. (Our heads are part of our bodies and there will be no erotic liberation without gonads and brains). I wish GCN were sexier: how about running a series on Favorite Fantasies? Each fantasy would probably elicit a political pro and con in the letters. I also wish GCN could afford at least token payment to regular writers. (A recent survey states that most writers in the U.S. make less than $5,000 a year from their writings.) I wish more GCN readers would make the effort to let GCN know when they like something, as well as when something makes them mad. Since being a writer is as important to my identity as being gay, socialist, and horny for basketball sneakers, I would feel a bit crazy without GCN. I have been able to write and say things in GCN which do not quite fit any other publication. Leftist mags rarely print my kind of socialism, and the slicker gay mags rarely print my kind of gay liberation. GCN gives me a voice, and GCN gives me readers who tell me they love me and hate me. Except for money, what more could a writer ask for? Maybe someday this summer I'll finally visit Boston and thank some of the staff in person. Good luck with the GCN Sustainer Program. I hope this letter helps. Best wishes, Scott Tucker Philadelphia, PA Dear GCN: Dear Folks, With John Kyper's memoir, William Loeb has Regarding Bob Nelson's write-up in the June 5 finaJJy been laid to rest. I know he died last fall GCN on the benefit for the "Before Stonewall" but this is the obituary I' ve been waiting for. film group, he referred to me as ''a founder of the To add a footnote: The Philadelphia Weekly New York Chapter of the Mattachine SocGayzette, in its issue of April26, 1974, published iety ... .'' excerpts of Mr. Loeb 's response to a letter from I am not a founder of the New York Chapter of Dan Sherbo, then editor of Philadelpha's Gay Mattachine. That distinction, I believe, goes to AI A lternative. Dan had written to protest Loeb's DeDion, Curtis Dewees, and Art Maule. stance against the attempt of gay students to orgPlease publish this correction at your earliest anize at the Uni versity of New Hampshire. convenience. Thank you. On April 18, 1974, Dan' s letter and Loeb 's Gay Love, Craig Rodwell (Sparrow) reply were published in the Manchester Union Leader under the headline, "Pervert Defends Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop P erversion .'.' Mr. Loeb wrote , " diversity makes New York, NY li~ pka~n t. But . . . according to your theor~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ we should be happy that there are arsonists, mur- Gay Community News welcomes letters to Community Voices. If at all derers, rapists ... I am well aware that sodomists possible, your letters should be TYPED AND DOUBLE SPACED and kept in the year 1974 are doing their best to delude themselves that they are respectable . . . If 100fo to three pages (or less!) in length. GCN publishes all the letters it receives, of the population is homosexual, and I doubt that unedited, on a space-available baSiS, unleSS they contain personal attaCkS. figure is accurate, then I sincerely hope the nation Anonymous letters will not be published, but names will be withheld upon find s a way to get rid of that IO%. " A few days later Dan received an anonymous request. Address letters to: Community Voices, Gay Community News, Jetter from "a citizen of Manchester" which The GayzettepublishedinfullinitsissueofMay3.He 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108. or she wrote, "your letter was very beautiful and ' meaningful. I was appalled and embarrassed at his response to you .... Please rest assured that there are many New Hampshirites that fully agree with and respect your feelings about living 100 honest, open, proud, and full lives." 50 We sent a copy to Mr. Loeb so he would know 25 that one of his readers didn' t swallow his brand of 0 bigotry. The Gayzette and the Gay Alternative are gone but I hope that citizen of Manchester is Welcome to our first Gay Pride sustainer from Davis, California! reading GCN in 1982 so that he or she will know how good that letter made us feel in 1974. We ~rge more of you to celebrate Pride by becoming GCN Yours, sustamers. Tom Wilson Minneapolis, MN Join the GCN ~00 ------~-----------------------~ THE GCN SUSTAINER PROGRAM a common language Editors, Gay Community News: The letter of Urvashi Vaid (15 May), expressing thoughts provoked by the Eric Rofes interview of John Preston, speaks of the division among "natural " allies, homosexual women and men . She uses terms, however, evocative of the very divisiveness which has been created and fostered by homosexual women who violently refuse to acknowledge any common unity with homosexual men unless their divisiveness is stridently recognized by differentiating between gay women and gay men. In our struggle for freedom from oppression, no greater need exists than a common term which indicates that we are " one," neither greater than the other. Sincerely yours, Fred R. Methered Honolulu, HA D YES, 1/We would like to become a GCN sustainer and help to build a Financially Stronger GCN. 1/We pledge to contribute 0 $120 D $180 D $240 D $360 0 $420 D $480 D $300 D $540 D _ The number of installments to be made to fullfil! this pledge is ... D one D two 0 four name address • Please enclose first installment with this mailing. • All individual sustainers names will be kept strictly confidential. • If the sustainer is a group or organization, may we publish your name in our sustainer newsletter? D yes D no. • Your comments are welcome; please enclose with this coupon. Mail to: GCN sustainers, 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108 ~-------------------------------~ Cover photo by Sue F~eischmann MANAGING EDITOR Cindy Patton NEWS EDITOR David Morris FEATURES EDITOR Jeremy Grainger DESIGN DIRECTOR Paul Volpe OFFICE MANAGER Mike Riegle ADVERTISING MGR. Sherry Edwards PROMOTIONS MGR. Maida Tilchen CIRCJSTAFF WRITER Jil Clark LOCAL REPORTER Larry Goldsmith STAFF WRITER Scott Brookie CLASSIFIEDS Nancy Walker COPY EDITOR Gordon Gottlieb DISTRIBUTION Barbara Cischke BOARD OF DIRECTORS President: Richard Burns, Treasurer: Beth Kelly, Clark: Cindy Rizzo; Bob Andrews, Kevin Cattr cart, lan Johnson, Urvashi Vaid, Eric Rofes, Katherine Triantafillou, Nancy Wechsler NEWS STAFF Joanne Brown, Richard Burchardt, Bob Nelson, Philip Shehadi, Christine Guilfoy, Fran Koski, John Kyper, lisa Nussbaum, Mark Perigard, John Zeh, Nancy Wechsler David France FEATURES STAFF Lee Swislow, Duncan Mitchel, Michael Bronski, Steve Forgione, Rudy Kikel, Martin Krieger, Wade Nichols, Eric Rofes, Joe Interrante, Judy Stern, Mitzel, Andrea Loewenstein; Warren Blumenfeld, Marsha Maurer Lisa Orlando ART STAFF Design Assistant: Ann Heron; Neely O'Hara, Jennifer Camper, Abe Rybeck, :rimothy Blackburn, Pip, Tom Huth, Rob Schmieder, Paul Brouillette, Read Weaver, Diane Ayott, Jeff Kopseng ,Kate Gawf, IDavid Storm PRISONER PROJECT Virgil Chenoweth, Debra Davenport, Will Doherty, Lisa Orlando PHOTOGRAPHERS Ellen Shub, Michael Thompson, Susan Fleischmann, Neal Trousdale, John Tobin, Joyce Harper, Bettye Lane PROMOTIONS Barry Forbes, John Feeney, Dave Peterson; Microfilm Promoter: Dee Michel CIRCULATION STAFF Jeb Bates, Richards Edwards, Henry Gingras, Diane Harris, Katie Kenner, Catherine OLohr, Allen Blaich, Jim Fox, linda Gwizdak, Paul Howard, Jodie Neally, Kendall Watts AD REP Bruce Gordon Bill Brennan TYPESETTER: Xanadu Graphics, Inc. INDEXER Charles Ash BULK DIST. Ray Hopkins NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE Rivendell Marketing, 666 6th Ave., New York, N.Y. 10010 (212) 242-6863 NEW YORK DISTRIBUTION Majority News Distributors, Inc., 306 W. 13th St., New York, N.Y. 10014, (212) 243-7770 Postmaster: Send address changes to: Gay Community News, 22 Bromfield St., Boston, MA 02108. Gay Community News (GCN) is dedicated to provid ing coverage of events and news of Interest to the gay community. GCN Is published eNery week (except the first week of January and the last week of August) 0 ~ 100~ b~~~:i~n~f
Northeastern at War:
A History of NU Student Involvement in the U.S. Military
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Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
Jet Commercial Photographers (Boston, Mass.)
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1973-11-09
1973-11-09
Jet Commercial Photographers.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Reserve Officers' Training Corps
United States Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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United States Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps
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photographs
1973-11-09
1973-11-09
Jet Commercial Photographers.
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Reserve Officers' Training Corps
United States Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Reserve Officers' Training Corps
United States
Army
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Jet Commercial Photographers negatives (A60)
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1973-11-09
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Student Activism and the Vietnam War:
An overview of Northeastern’s relationship with the anti-War movement, with a focus on student activism both on and off campus.
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Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
On back: "A3." Students in the photo hold signs reading "End N. U. War Complicity. Strike. Shut It Down." and "U. S. out of S. E. Asia - ROTC Must Go."
photographs
1970-05
1970-05
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20181230
A007985
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20181230
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Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
Students on steps protesting Vietnam War
On back: "A3." Students in the photo hold signs reading "End N. U. War Complicity. Strike. Shut It Down." and "U. S. out of S. E. Asia - ROTC Must Go."
photographs
1970-05
1970-05
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts
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Vietnam War, 1961-1975
Protest movements
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College students
Massachusetts
Boston
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Massachusetts
Boston
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Vietnam War, 1961-1975
Protest movements
Students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20181230
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http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20181230
College students
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A history of entrepreneurship and innovation at Northeastern University.
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Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
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Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Caption: "Business Administration major checking policies at John Hancock Ins Co. (Donald Budge 52B)."
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1950
1950
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Budge Donald
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Boston
Business education
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Education, Cooperative
Students
Business education
Massachusetts
Boston
College students
Massachusetts
Education, Cooperative
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Business Administration
Students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Budge Donald
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20165134
A005851
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20165134
Business education
College students
Education, Cooperative
Students
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Series 5: Division of Cooperative Education. Subseries: Jobs > General > n.d., 1964-1970, 1996
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
donald budge a business administration coop student works in a room with several women at john hancock insurance company
1950/01/01
approximate
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
1950
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Education, Cooperative Massachusetts
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Students
Budge Donald
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
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Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Caption: "Business Administration major checking policies at John Hancock Ins Co. (Donald Budge 52B)."
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Photographer
Photographer
photographs
1950
1950
Selected resources in this collection were acquired through transferals from Northeastern's Office of University Photography, Jet Commercial Photographers, Northeastern University publications, unprocessed archival collections and other contract photographers.
Collection finding aid: https://archivesspace.library.northeastern.edu/repositories/2/resources/761
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Budge Donald
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Boston
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Boston
Business education
College students
Education, Cooperative
Students
Business education
Massachusetts
Boston
College students
Massachusetts
Education, Cooperative
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
College of Business Administration
Students
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Budge Donald
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20165134
A005851
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20165134
Business education
College students
Education, Cooperative
Students
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
Northeastern University Photograph collection (A103)
Series 5: Division of Cooperative Education. Subseries: Jobs > General > n.d., 1964-1970, 1996
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
donald budge a business administration coop student works in a room with several women at john hancock insurance company
1950/01/01
approximate
Donald Budge, a Business Administration co-op student, works in a room with several women at John Hancock Insurance Company
1950
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.)
Business education Massachusetts Boston
College students Massachusetts Boston
Education, Cooperative Massachusetts
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) College of Business Administration
Northeastern University (Boston, Mass.) Students
Budge Donald
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
Fay Foto Service (Boston, Mass.)
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