Published by Society for Individual Rights, San Francisco, 1970
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 32p. including covers, 8.5x11 inches, ads, illustrated with photos and a calendar of events, very good magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Study in Figure and Light by W. Rinder, Experiment in Land's End, Alioto Silent? S.I.R. was an extremely important homophile organization in the 1960s-70s and "Vector" was the main gay magazine for the Bay Area during those years. The magazine began life as a newsletter in 1964, merely several folded and or stapled sheets with news and calendars. The late Sixties found the magazine concentrating more on local and national news of interest to gay men. The final years saw the magazine turn more to a standard gay men's magazine with photos of young men from around the Bay Area.
Published by Society for Individual Rights, San Francisco, 1970
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 40p. including covers, 8.5x11 inches, ads, illustrated with photos and a calendar of events, very good magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Human Rights Victory. Women Win over WACS. Freakin' Fag Revolution. S.I.R. was an extremely important homophile organization in the 1960s-70s and "Vector" was the main gay magazine for the Bay Area during those years. The magazine began life as a newsletter in 1964, merely several folded and or stapled sheets with news and calendars. The late Sixties found the magazine concentrating more on local and national news of interest to gay men. The final years saw the magazine turn more to a standard gay men's magazine with photos of young men from around the Bay Area.
Published by Society for Individual Rights, San Francisco, 1969
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. 40p. including covers, 8.5x11 inches, illustrated with photos of nude young men, artwork and ads, Gold Sheet newsletter for September laid-in, very good magazine in lightly-worn stapled pictorial wraps. Dorr Jones interview. Glide gay show. S.I.R. was an extremely important homophile organization in the 1960s-70s and "Vector" was the main gay magazine for the Bay Area during those years. The magazine began life as a newsletter in 1964, merely several folded and or stapled sheets with news and calendars. The late Sixties found the magazine concentrating more on local and national news of interest to gay men. The final years saw the magazine turn more to a standard gay men's magazine with photos of young men from around the Bay Area.