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1967: ONE Magazine ceases publication. 1975: Jim Kepner's personal archive is named the Western Gay Archives. 1979: The Western Gay Archives is renamed the National Gay Archives: Natalie Barney/Edward Carpenter Library and moves to 1654 North Hudson Avenue in Hollywood.
QQ Magazine, national bimonthly lifestyle magazine, 1969 – ca. 1982, from Queen's Quarterly Pub. Co in New York City. Co in New York City. [ 19 ] [ 20 ] Started as Queens Quarterly and used the motto: For gay guys who have no hangups [ 19 ] [ 20 ]
1967 1968 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Philadelphia chapter of Daughters of Bilitis [1] [3] No More Fun and Games [b] 1968 1973 Somerville and Cambridge Massachusetts: Cell 16 and Female Liberation Irregular Considered by some scholars to be the first lesbian magazine to espouse separatist feminism. Untitled (1968) and titled The Female Slate ...
1966 – The first lesbian to appear on the cover of the lesbian magazine The Ladder with her face showing was Lilli Vincenz in January 1966. [12] 1967 – The Advocate was first published in September as "The Los Angeles Advocate", a local newsletter alerting gay men to police raids in Los Angeles gay bars.
LGBT-related (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) magazines in the United States Subcategories This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
The magazine, established in 1967, [3] is the oldest and largest LGBTQ publication in the United States and the only surviving one of its kind that was founded before the 1969 Stonewall riots in Manhattan, an uprising that was a major milestone in the LGBTQ rights movement. On June 9, 2022, Pride Media was acquired by Equal Entertainment LLC.
The magazine was created using paste-up boards, and hand drawn graphics. [7] His mother, Phyllis Shafer, was a LGBT activist herself, and wrote under the pseudonym 'Estelle Graham' for the magazine. [8] In the July 1966 issue, she penned an essay titled "A Mother's Viewpoint On Homosexuality". [1] [2]
The magazine maintained a clipping service to identify news coverage of gay issues from across the country which were often reprinted in Drum. [6] Polak wanted to "put the 'sex' back in homosexuality", and the magazine was the first in the country to publish full frontal male nudity in 1965.
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