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Archive of newsletters issued by the American Civil Liberties Union Gay Rights Chapter documenting LGBTQ legal advocacy, political organizing, and civil liberties activism in Southern California during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The newsletters record responses to discrimination, police harassment, legislative battles, and public policy disputes through committee reports, public meeting notices, legal updates, and campaign coverage. The publications trace local LGBTQ rights organizing during the post-Stonewall period, including legal information, supporter mobilization, state policy monitoring, and responses to institutional discrimination. The archive provides primary-source evidence for LGBTQ civil rights litigation, coalition politics, California legislative activism, and the intersection of grassroots organizing with formal legal institutions. Archive consists of eight issues of the ACLU Gay Rights Newsletter and Gay Rights Guardian published between 1977 and 1980. Printed on newsprint, each issue measures approximately 8.5 x 11 inches and ranges from 4 to 14 pages. [1] ACLU Gay Rights Newsletter. Vol. 2, No. 3. May 1977. Reports on membership expansion efforts within the ACLU Gay Rights Chapter, chapter elections, and organizational committee planning, including announcements for legal committee meetings. [2] ACLU Gay Rights Newsletter. January 1978. Covers fair employment legislation, women's and lesbian rights initiatives, committee reports, and a general meeting focused on Chicano rights presented by the deputy mayor. [3] ACLU Gay Rights Newsletter. February 1978. Discusses organizing efforts supporting California Assembly Bill 1302 alongside election reports and updates concerning local legal advocacy campaigns. Includes notice of a public discussion concerning the Cincinnati riots. [4] ACLU Gay Rights Newsletter. May 1978. Features the cover story "All Hail Gay Hero" celebrating Metropolitan Community Church founder Troy Perry alongside photographs from a major LGBTQ gathering at the Palladium and reports on ACLU-sponsored civil rights events. [5] Gay Rights Guardian. Vol. 4, No. 11. November 1979. Covers the National March on Washington for Lesbian & Gay Rights with photographs of demonstrators carrying banners and includes discussion of the march's broader legal and political implications. Also features coverage of openly gay judge Stephen Lachs. [6] Gay Rights Guardian. Vol. 4, No. 12. December 1979. Reports on threatened police sweeps by the Los Angeles Police Department in Griffith Park, a historically important gathering place for LGBTQ communities, alongside coverage of police misconduct symposia and legal developments affecting lesbian mothers, women workers, and FBI employment policy. [7] Gay Rights Guardian. Vol. 5, No. 1. January 1, 1980. Documents activism surrounding California Assembly Bill 1, including marches in Sacramento and legislative lobbying efforts. Additional coverage includes gay foster homes, UCLA student publishing, visa denials by the State Department, and honors for Stonewall Democratic Club co-founder Morris Knight. [8] Gay Rights Guardian. Vol. 5, No. 4. April 1980. Reports on discrimination lawsuits, police harassment, racism and sexism within law enforcement agencies, sexual harassment in the military, draft policy, attacks on gay institutions, and the opening of the National Gay Archives. The newsletters record LGBTQ legal and political mobilization during a period marked by escalating public visibility, backlash campaigns, and expanding civil rights advocacy. Coverage repeatedly addresses policing practices, legislative reform, employment discrimination, and coalition-building with feminist and racial justice movements. The publications circulated legal developments to community members before the widespread use of digital media. Light toning and minor handling wear consistent with age; overall very good condition. A substantial documentary archive of LGBTQ legal advocacy and g.
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