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In the final days of the spring semester of 1970, sophomore Larry Fine 鈥72 placed a few coins in an envelope, along with a note, and dropped the envelope into a slot on the office door of the 人妻少妇专区 Times.
The note, seven words long, appeared in the classifieds the following week: 鈥淭AKE HEART BROTHERS, Gay Lib is coming!鈥
It was the year after the Stonewall riots, which had begun on a night in June 1969, at a popular gay bar in New York City鈥檚 Greenwich Village, when patrons, long the target of police round-ups, decided to resist. The protest was a call to action, and within months, an organized gay rights movement was emerging nationally.
Much of the activity would take place on campuses. As Fine placed his cryptic note in the 人妻少妇专区 Times, a graduate student in physics, Bob Osborn 鈥74 (PhD), was also planning to bring the gay liberation movement to Rochester.
A southerner, Osborn had worked across the Deep South as a white ally in support of the African-American freedom struggle. He brought his experience in political organizing to Rochester where, in the fall of 1970, he laid the groundwork for a meeting in Todd Union on Saturday evening, October 3, that would officially launch the 人妻少妇专区's chapter of the Gay Liberation Front. Rochester would become the third campus in New York state, after Columbia and Cornell, to open a chapter of the national organization.
In the next several months, Osborn, Fine, and a small, committed core of students from the River 人妻少妇专区 and the Eastman School successfully petitioned Student Activities for official recognition; established an office in Todd Union; set up a small library of books and other resources related to gay issues; created a speakers bureau, in which members offered themselves as educational ambassadors, speaking before classes and local organizations; and with the help of a typewriter, a mimeograph machine, and a hand stapler, created a newsletter called the Empty Closet.
By spring 1973, the group, known by then as GLF, would spawn a series of organizations in the community鈥攖he Gay Brotherhood, Gay Revolution of Women (later the Lesbian Resource Center), and others鈥攚hich would unite under the umbrella of the Gay Alliance of the Genesee Valley.
Today鈥檚 Focus: Gender Identity
Since the Gay Liberation Front began on the River 人妻少妇专区 in 1970, the University has maintained a student group dedicated to the interests and concerns of gays and lesbians. As the movement has progressed, students have followed in casting an even broader tent, embracing those who identify themselves as bisexual or transgender as well.
Today, the LGBT student group is called the Pride Network. Clint Cantwell 鈥15, a rising junior from Palmyra, N.Y., who is the group鈥檚 vice president and social chair, says that as of the end of the 2012鈥13 academic year, the network had just over 300 members, and about 20 whom he calls 鈥渁ctive members.鈥
鈥淔or lesbians, gays, and bisexuals, a lot has happened in terms of rights and acceptance,鈥 says Cantwell. While the GLF struggled in the 1970s to encourage gays and lesbians to come out of the closet and join the organization, the Pride Network has attracted a considerably larger population of LGBT students as well as plenty of straight allies.
And while the GLF had always counted a few quiet allies among faculty and administrators, today there are people in virtually every segment of the University who are openly part of the LGBT community.
But there鈥檚 some substantial work left to do, Cantwell says. 鈥淭ransgender people are the biggest issue right now.鈥
They鈥檙e a small minority of the community. Cantwell, who identifies as gay, estimates that there are about 10 to 15 openly transgender students on campus, two or three of whom are active members of the group. But they鈥檙e the people who face the greatest difficulties and the most misunderstanding among their peers.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very difficult to get gender-neutral bathrooms,鈥 he says, underscoring how something as simple as using a public restroom can be stressful and complicated for people who are transgender. Cantwell notes that the network helped bring about a gender-neutral bathroom outside Starbucks in Wilson Commons.
This fall, the group plans a series of events to help educate the community about the fluidity of gender identity and the variety of ways in which it鈥檚 expressed.
鈥擪aren McCallyThis year, as the alliance celebrates its 40th birthday, it鈥檚 in the midst of a documentary project tracing its history and the history of the gay and lesbian community in Rochester and western New York. The project, called Shoulders to Stand On, has received funding from the New York State Archives as well as the Arts and Cultural Council of Greater Rochester.
More than 40 years after its inaugural issue, the Empty Closet is still in print, published by the alliance since the summer of 1973. It鈥檚 the oldest continuously published gay newspaper in New York and the second oldest in the nation after the Washington Blade, which moved to an all-digital format last year.
As part of the project, the Rush Rhees Library Department of Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation worked with the alliance to digitize the paper. Since last fall, well over 400 issues have been made available on

鈥淭丑别 Empty Closet has been, and is, the primary source of LGBT history in Rochester,鈥 says Evelyn Bailey, using the acronym for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender. Bailey, a long-time member of the alliance and the executive producer of the project, says that in the past several years, volunteers from the alliance have used the paper to identify and locate almost 100 people interviewed for the next phase of the project, a documentary film titled Shoulders to Stand On. The film will premiere in Rochester this fall as part of the annual Image Out gay and lesbian film festival.
Bailey calls the students who forged the University鈥檚 GLF 鈥減ioneers.鈥
鈥淭丑别 fear that went along with being gay in those early days was extremely crippling,鈥 she says.
And not only for gays and lesbians, but also for the larger community.
Bailey says that the GLF鈥檚 pioneers forged a culture of openness toward gays and lesbians that brought benefits to the region. Before their work began, the environment 鈥渄id not allow people to be who they were and to express their talents, be able to impact their workplace or the political or economic arena to the degree that they do today.鈥 Bailey notes that by a variety of indices, the Rochester metropolitan area ranks in the top 20 鈥渕ost gay-friendly鈥 cities in the nation.
There are many reasons for Rochester鈥檚 status鈥攊ts high proportion of college graduates and major employers that have long had a financial interest in gay-friendly employment practices, for example. But no degree of friendliness would be measurable unless someone, or some group, at one point began to challenge traditional norms.
Larry Fine says he鈥檚 used to being interviewed, though not about gay issues.
鈥淚鈥檓 used to being asked about pianos,鈥 he says from his home office in Palm Springs, Calif.
For the past 35 years, Fine has been a piano technician and publisher of The Piano Book, a nearly 250-page guide to purchasing and maintaining pianos. But when asked about his work with the Gay Liberation Front, he pours forth with the story of his personal awakening in the spring of 1970.
He鈥檇 been participating that semester in a psychology experiment in which he played the part of patient as the professor, graduate student in tow, led Fine through a series of counseling sessions. The scenario, by itself, was not unusual鈥斺渋t often happened when you were a sophomore, you got recruited into experiments,鈥 he recalls鈥攂ut for Fine, the experiment would have far-reaching effects. As the sessions wore on and the semester drew to a close, the professor asked him about one subject that had yet to come up in all the 20-year-old young man鈥檚 hours of personal revelations: sex.
鈥淚 told him, 鈥業 think I鈥檓 a homosexual.鈥 He had me say it again and again to get used to it. And he said, 鈥榊ou need to meet other gay people.鈥 鈥
Days later, Fine met a gay senior named Jeff, who would change Fine鈥檚 life through a long conversation on a River 人妻少妇专区 lawn. 鈥淎ll of a sudden I realized I was part of a larger world,鈥 Fine says. Aside from a chance encounter or two in the weeks leading up to graduation, Fine never saw Jeff again after that day. But the conversation left a profound impression on Fine. 鈥淚 was fired up,鈥 he says. He placed the fortuitous note in the 人妻少妇专区 Times. And in August, he strapped a pack on his back, and hitchhiked to San Francisco in search of the gay liberation movement.
It鈥檚 not surprising that young people like Fine could go about their daily lives unaware that there was a gay community in their midst.
鈥淭丑别 community at that time was cliquish,鈥 says Bailey. 鈥淵ou would have certain known gay men or gay women who had a circle of friends. They would gather fairly often for dinner parties, and they would invite people whom they knew would not out them.鈥
During his journey to the San Francisco Bay Area, Fine encountered a similar code of discretion. Verbal tips, handwritten notes, and pay telephone calls led him eventually to an abandoned warehouse.
鈥淵ou had to knock a certain way, or say a certain thing when they answered the door so they knew you were OK,鈥 Fine recalls. 鈥淚nside were young gay people who were involved in the GLF, and I found out from them other places to go.鈥
He spent a week in Berkeley, staying at a GLF crash pad for gay visitors and attending gay coffeehouses and other events. 鈥淚 met a guy named Michael, who became my boyfriend for the next few months and who came back to Rochester with me鈥攂elieve it or not.鈥
The Rochester GLF began with a simple announcement in a late September issue of the 人妻少妇专区 Times: 鈥淯R Gay Liberation Front will hold an interest meeting. . . Open to all people who believe that realization of basic civil rights for all minority groups must come from organized effort.鈥
鈥淚t was Bob Osborn who started the group, not me,鈥 says Fine. Osborn, who died in 2004, was the author of that announcement and organized and moderated the first several meetings of the group, which featured guest speakers and discussions on topics such as Military Service and the Homosexual, Homosexuals and the Law, Women鈥檚 Liberation, and Dialogue with the Church.
In those meetings and through the Empty Closet, Osborn, inspired by his activism in the South, would work to cast gay liberation as a natural outgrowth of the African-American civil rights movement.
He鈥檇 sat in the U.S. Senate gallery during the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Friends recall that he had marched from Selma, Ala., to Montgomery in the 1965 demonstration led by Martin Luther King Jr. to secure voting rights for African Americans who鈥檇 long been harassed and intimidated at the polls.
鈥淔or him, this was a continuation of the civil rights movement, and he spoke in those terms,鈥 says Fine, who became fast friends with Osborn after the first GLF meeting.
In his mid-20s, Osborn was older and more overtly political than most of the group鈥檚 student members. Several students in the group, especially those coming to campus as freshmen undergraduates, were not even sure of their sexual identity, let alone how they believed it should be expressed in social and civic life.
Gary Clinton 鈥73 still remembers, word for word, the note that he read in the 人妻少妇专区 Times at the end of his freshman year.
鈥淚t said, 鈥楾ake heart, brothers. Gay lib is coming.鈥 I remember thinking, 鈥楾his might be interesting.鈥 鈥

That summer, at home on Long Island, Clinton continued to mull over that message. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 sure what my sexuality was,鈥 he says of himself as an 18-year-old freshman. 鈥淚 knew I liked men. But I wasn鈥檛 sure what that meant in those days.鈥
When the GLF started in the fall, he was slow to take part. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 much of a joiner then,鈥 says Clinton, now the dean of students at the University of Pennsylvania鈥檚 law school.
Karen Hagberg 鈥76E (PhD), then a graduate student in musicology at the Eastman School, says, 鈥淚 knew I was gay, somehow. But I鈥檇 never heard of anybody else who was. I mean, we really used to all think that we were the only ones in the world, no joke.鈥
Hagberg had come out to a few friends, such as Robert (R. J.) Alcala 鈥71E, an undergraduate studying oboe at the Eastman School, who was also gay. But she鈥檇 never publicly identified herself as gay. 鈥淚t was exciting and scary to actually go into a room that was designated for a group of gay people,鈥 she recalls of her first GLF meeting.
Like Hagberg, Patti Evans 鈥73 came out first to a couple of friends and had little familiarity with gay life in Rochester. When she approached a Todd music room on October 3, 1970, it was her second attempt to walk into an on-campus meeting of gay students.
鈥淭丑别re was a planning meeting before that one,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was up on the Hill, which was my dormitory. I hadn鈥檛 come out on campus. I was kind of nervous.鈥 Intent on going, she approached the lounge where the meeting was to be held. She saw just three people. 鈥淭丑别re was a very flamboyant man,鈥 she recalls, and two women seated close together. She kept on walking.
It was easier for Evans to approach the October meeting with confidence. 鈥淭丑别re were, like, 40 people at that meeting,鈥 she says (The 人妻少妇专区 Times would report an attendance of 鈥渁pproximately 100,鈥 in its Dec. 13, 1970, issue). From that day forward, she became part of the small group of activists who shepherded the GLF through its early years.
She helped plan the group鈥檚 first dance, and more than 40 years later, she remembers vividly 鈥渢he feeling I had at that dance.鈥
It inspired her to write a letter about it in the 人妻少妇专区 Times as well as in the Empty Closet. In both places, she signed her name 鈥淧atricia Evers.鈥
Today she laughs about that decision. 鈥淚t was kind of naive of me to think I could get away with that. It wasn鈥檛 that big of a campus.鈥
Though she concedes now that the robust attendance at the dance may well have been due to other factors than a chance to experience freedom from proscribed social norms鈥斺渨e had a live band and free beer鈥濃攖he experience was indicative of the reaction she says she continued to feel around campus. She feared disapproval. She didn鈥檛 get it. 鈥淚 guess I was surprised. I guess I didn鈥檛 fit a stereotype.鈥
Hagberg, too, remained active in the GLF from that first meeting forward. She established the speakers bureau, in which members of the group would volunteer to appear before classes at the University, and at schools and other local organizations to talk about homosexuality, what it meant to be gay or lesbian, and the nature of the discrimination they faced and sought to eradicate.
鈥淪ome of us thought that if everybody would just come out, we wouldn鈥檛 have a problem,鈥 says Hagberg. 鈥淎nd that was the impetus for forming the speakers bureau.鈥
GLF speakers appeared in several psychology classes. Hagberg recalls appearing before psychology professor Vincent Knowlis鈥檚 Sex and Gender Roles class toward the end of the fall 1970 semester. Knowlis held the class in his home. 鈥淚'm not sure why,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure if he didn鈥檛 feel comfortable having it in his classroom.鈥 Regardless, Hagberg says the experience was 鈥渞eally amazing, because people never had the opportunity to talk to gay people before.鈥
鈥淭丑别re was certainly no backlash,鈥 Fine recalls of the early days of the group. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what people were talking about among themselves, but there wasn鈥檛 a lot of reaction. I think for the most part, people weren鈥檛 paying attention.鈥
The 人妻少妇专区 Times, however, was giving prominent coverage to the GLF by the fall of 1971. A news article in October reported on the group鈥檚 upcoming one-year anniversary celebration, a series of events including a concert, dance, coffeehouse, and teach-in. Noting that 鈥渆veryone is welcome,鈥 the 人妻少妇专区 Times reported, 鈥淪ince last October, when Gay Liberation was still an uptight topic on campus, GLF has held four public dances at the university. Nobody knew, at first, exactly who would attend these supposedly far-out functions, but when the first dance was over, it was clear that people here are less hung-up than they might seem, or at least less hung-up than GLF members feared they would be.鈥
In December, the 人妻少妇专区 Times ran a front-page feature on the group in which reporter Marc Rosenwasser 鈥74 cited GLF鈥檚 claims about deeply ingrained societal homophobia and its members鈥 political activities in response. The Rochester police had recently raided two popular gay bars, arresting three patrons as well as the owners of the bars鈥攖he patrons for loitering and the owners for 鈥渇ailing to display a license for dancing.鈥 鈥淥sborn charges that the raids were illegal and stated that countersuits were being filed along the grounds of false arrest,鈥 Rosenwasser reported.
Meanwhile, the Empty Closet was fast becoming an effective tool for community building, both within and outside the University.
鈥淲hen it first began at the 人妻少妇专区, it was the means of communicating among university students and the greater Rochester community,鈥 says Bailey. 鈥淎s far as news about what was going on, it was the conduit.鈥
Osborn, Fine, Evans, a freshman named Marshall Goldman 鈥74, and others distributed the paper at Rochester鈥檚 gay and lesbian bars.
Its readership was鈥攁nd is, Bailey stresses鈥攎uch larger than the openly gay community.
鈥淚 think the paper represented the touchstone between the LGBT community that was closeted, and not closeted.鈥 She tells about a man she met recently who reads the Empty Closet 鈥渆very single month, cover to cover, front page, back page,鈥 but won鈥檛 pick it up at a newsstand. 鈥淗e鈥檚 gay. He鈥檚 not out. He won鈥檛 pick it up outside because he doesn鈥檛 want to be seen, identified with it. That鈥檚 his major source of information and connection to the community and to the people in the community. That has always been part of the real value of the Empty Closet.鈥
The first issues of the paper combined national and local news about the gay rights movement with listings of upcoming GLF events, poetry, short prose, opinion pieces, the 鈥淕LF Bookshelf,鈥 and an advice column called 鈥淒ear Gale Gay.鈥
The paper also compiled a written record of harassment and discrimination in the city as well as on campus.
鈥淚 have made my activities in GLF and the fact that I am gay known to the denizens of my dorm, and got generally good to indifferent reactions,鈥 wrote Goldman in the spring of 1971. But one day, he alleged, some residents trapped him and a male friend in Goldman鈥檚 dorm room by stuffing pennies in the lock, which the head resident came and removed. Later, freed from his room, Goldman lost his eyeglasses. He found them later in a Hoeing lounge, with an obscene rhyme attached that made reference to his homosexuality.
The 鈥渃omment,鈥 as Goldman called it, and those like it 鈥渨on鈥檛 stop us from being ourselves and won鈥檛 push us back in our closets.鈥
In June of the same year, the paper reported allegations that the Eastman School dean of students was using her office to intimidate and penalize gay students. 鈥淭his has resulted in a virtual reign of terror at the Eastman School, where gay students are extremely fearful of being open about themselves,鈥 the report noted.
Inevitably, though, gay students would form relationships, and in some cases, live openly as couples. In his suite in Anderson Hall, for example, Fine shared his room with Michael. The room was a double, and Michael had moved in when Fine鈥檚 roommate didn鈥檛 return for the fall semester.
鈥淎t some point, I had to tell my suitemates who this guy was,鈥 Fine says. 鈥淭丑别y were very, very good about it. One of the guys was actually on the sex education committee for the student government. The others were curious. And who knew? I took a chance. It was scary when I first broached the subject.鈥
By his senior year, Clinton would meet a freshman, Don Millinger 鈥76, who would become his life鈥檚 partner. The couple married in October 2011 in New York City, 39 years, virtually to the day, after they met.
They lived openly as a couple on the River 人妻少妇专区 during the 1972鈥73 academic year. 鈥淏y the end of my first semester, I basically moved myself into Gary鈥檚 dorm room in Helen Wood Hall from the Hill,鈥 Millinger says.
While Clinton had been initially reticent about taking part in GLF activities, Millinger jumped right in. In his second semester at Rochester, he began participating in the speakers bureau, standing before his classmates in psychology classes, serving as 鈥渁 real-live, honest-to-God, three-dimensional homosexual,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hings got around. People knew I was gay.鈥

鈥淎nd then he was elected treasurer of the student government,鈥 says Clinton.
As a national organization with chapters throughout the country, GLF was always intended to be a community-based group. University students, however, were prominent among the leaders in many communities, not least Rochester.
In December 1971, Osborn told the 人妻少妇专区 Times that the group had a 鈥渇loating membership鈥 of about 200 people, out of whom 12 were 人妻少妇专区 students.
According to the recollections of Evans, Fine, and others whom alliance volunteers interviewed for the Shoulders to Stand On project, Student Activities grew concerned about whether the group could genuinely be considered a student organization.
Today, members disagree about whether the students in the GLF were singled out unfairly by Student Activities.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a hostile thing,鈥 says Evans. 鈥淚t was a legitimate concern that they had. It was using activities funds and serving only a handful of students.鈥
Fine disagrees, calling the concern expressed by Student Activities 鈥渁 red herring.鈥 He recalls appearing before a student appropriations committee to argue the group鈥檚 case.
鈥淚 said, 鈥楲ook. There鈥檚 a foreign film festival and most of the people coming to it are from the city. You鈥檙e giving money to this festival, so you really have no basis for complaint here.鈥 鈥
Fine says the GLF prevailed. But by the spring of 1973, GLF members voted to form two autonomous organizations: an all-student 人妻少妇专区 GLF, led by undergraduate officers, located on the River 人妻少妇专区, and retaining recognition and funding from Student Activities; and an organization for people in the greater Rochester community.
鈥淭hrough the assistance of the University and student body,鈥 the Empty Closet reported, the group has grown 鈥渢o the point that [non-students] are now able to leave the campus, and move into town. It is anticipated that both students and townspeople will find expanded participation because of more convenient locations and a more comfortable peer relationship.鈥
The group鈥檚 membership and financial resources would shrink drastically. But Clinton and Millinger, both of whom were among the individual signers of a letter from the GLF to the 人妻少妇专区 Times announcing the April 1973 鈥渆mergency meeting鈥 to discuss the future of the group, say that in retrospect, the reorganization may have been a good deal for students, particularly undergraduates like themselves.
鈥淚 went to a few meetings at the beginning, and I remember thinking, 鈥榃ho are these people?鈥,鈥 Clinton says. 鈥淭丑别y were older鈥攚hich meant they might have been anything between 25 and 40鈥攁nd I was used to student groups.鈥
鈥淭丑别re were two separate kinds of priorities,鈥 says Millinger. 鈥淏ob and the folks from town were looking at the social change aspect. On campus, students were figuring out, 鈥業鈥檓 19, 20 years old, I think I鈥檓 gay, I am gay, I may be gay, but what does that mean to me, and what does that mean on campus, and how secure can I be, and who can I talk to鈥攁ll those kinds of things.鈥 The reorganization of GLF into an all-student group, Millinger says, was 鈥渁 good motivator to actually have a more significant student presence on campus.鈥
For the next several years, that goal proved elusive in practice. The GLF would never count more than a dozen members. Jay Stratton 鈥74 (MA), a graduate student in linguistics, kept a diary in which he chronicled the activities of the GLF through his eyes as a participant-observer. He donated a typed version of the diary to Rush Rhees Library last year.
From 1974 to 1980, he recorded car rides from the River 人妻少妇专区 to the Gay Alliance meetings, a 鈥済ay table鈥 in the dining hall, petition drives that proved disappointing, and dances that were sparsely attended.
The dances attracted spectators, according to Stratton, who eventually overwhelmed the dance floor. 鈥淚t was rather funny in that most of the gay people had already left and they were gawking at others of their own kind,鈥 he wrote.
But the group sustained itself as one among many student organizations. And the groups they spawned in the greater Rochester community sustained themselves too, with the help of tools and leaders shaped and developed in the GLF鈥檚 first years as a student organization.
Evans remained active in the alliance, advocating legal equality, and eventually becoming elected chairperson of the New York State Lesbian and Gay Lobby.
Hagberg participated increasingly in lesbian feminist activism, raising awareness of violence against women and of the ways in which sexism had infused the gay movement.
Evans, Hagberg, and Alcala went frequently on the local airwaves as part of the speakers bureau. And the bureau, Hagberg says, remains a key part of the work of the alliance today.
鈥淲e were making it up as we went along,鈥 Fine says.
Occasionally, he鈥檒l look back and find some of his writings 鈥渃hildish.鈥
鈥淚 can be quite critical. I was 21 years old. I鈥檓 62 now.鈥 But he鈥檚 also astonished at what they accomplished, and the meaning it had for people who looked at the pioneers with silent admiration.
鈥淎 lot of the effect of what we did was not measurable at the time,鈥 says Fine.
He tells about a gathering he attended years after he鈥檇 left Rochester. 鈥淚 encountered friends from my college days who, unbeknownst to me, had been struggling with their sexual orientation at the time, but who were not ready to come out. I was a hero to them. I was greeted as a hero.
And I was astounded. I had no idea.鈥