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Kathryn Rivers is interviewed by Kevin Indovino. Video Interview, Kathryn Rivers, June 6, 2012
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Hagberg also speaks about her own experiences coming out as a lesbian and the difficulty her mother had publicly accepting her daughter’s sexuality., Video Interview, Karen Hagberg, May 23, 2012, Rochester, New York Voices of LGBT History Project, Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester She describes appearing on The Louise Show, a local morning talk show, to promote the organization in the early 1970s and attending the second gay pride march in New York City. She talks about the significance of the Gay Liberation Front and the events and services it provided for the gay community such as dances, the annual picnic at Genesee Valley Park, and the Empty Closet. Hagberg discusses coming to Rochester as a student at the Eastman School of Music and starting the Gay Liberation Front on the River Campus and the Speakers Bureau. Video Interview, Karen Hagberg, May 23, 2012Īn interview with one of the founders of the Gay Liberation Front at the University of Rochester, Karen Hagberg, conducted by Kevin Indovino. Grace and Nelson Baldo, August 16, 2012, Rochester, New York Voices of LGBT History Project, Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester Alcala, Marshall Goldman, Patti Evans, and Whitey LeBlanc., Video Interview, John W. Members of the Gay Liberation Front that are discussed include Elizabeth "Liz" Bell, Danny Scipione, Tim Mains, Karen Hagberg, R.J. Grace goes into detail about the dance held at the restaurant Top of the Plaza and the start of the Green Thursday radio program on WCMF. Grace and Baldo share their memories of participating in events held by the Gay Liberation Front such as dances and the Speakers Bureau. They talk about the gay community in Rochester during that time, the beginnings of the Gay Liberation Front, and the organization's significance for the gay community. They discuss the challenges they faced being gay and serving in the military in the 1960s. Grace and Nelson Baldo, conducted by Kevin Indovino. Grace and Nelson Baldo, August 16, 2012Īn interview with members of the Gay Liberation Front at the University of Rochester, John W. Tim Mains is discussed and commended for bringing further visibility to the gay community in Rochester., Video Interview, John Noble, August 2, 2012, Rochester, New York Voices of LGBT History Project, Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester He also speaks about the Alliance being denied tax exemption by Mayor Tom Ryan and the legal battle that ensued. He discusses his experiences writing the first grant application on behalf of the Gay Alliance for the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), going into detail about the challenges they faced before officially receiving the grant and the support that they received from Bill Johnson at the Urban League. He shares his thoughts about the history of social activism in Rochester and his own motivations for being an activist. Noble talks about moving to Rochester in the 1970s and becoming involved in the local gay community through events at the University of Rochester held by the Gay Liberation Front and later becoming involved in the Gay Alliance of the Genesee Valley. Video Interview, John Noble, August 2, 2012Īn interview with John Noble conducted by Kevin Indovino.