Celebrating 40 years out of the closet 
http://www.campustimes.org/2011/09/22/celebrating-40-years-out-of-the-closet/ 

By Leah Buletti 
September 22, 2011 



In the middle of a summer night in 1969, a group of policemen violently 
descended on the Stonewall Inn, a gay nightclub in the heart of New York City’s 
Greenwich Village that had become an enclave of the up-and-coming gay rights 
movement. 

Bottles, rocks and gunshots rained down upon the crowd of about 200 homosexual 
bar-goers in a melee that lasted most of the night and decimated the Stonewall 
Inn — already a burgeoning icon for the city’s gay community. Battling on the 
streets lasted for days as police and homosexuals swarmed into the street, 
including beloved Beat poet Allen Ginsberg, who may have given the moment its 
most apt christening: “Gay power! Isn’t that great! It’s about time we did 
something to assert ourselves.” 

The gay rights movement had begun. 

A little more than a year later, on Oct. 3, 1970, two gay UR students, Bob 
Osborn and Larry Fine, stood on the steps of Todd Union, anxiously waiting to 
see if anyone would attend a talk by guest speakers from two regional gay 
rights groups. The event was the first of its kind in the University’s history, 
at a time when society around UR was pervasively homophobic. But no fewer than 
100 people came out for the event. 

The fledgling group became the Rochester Gay Liberation Front and was granted 
formal recognition by UR, given an on-campus office and an operating budget. 
Part of their start-up included The Empty Closet, a four-page chronicle of the 
emerging gay rights fight, first published in January 1971. 

The Empty Closet, which is the oldest monthly gay newspaper in New York state 
and one of the oldest continuously published LGBT papers in the country, 
transferred hands from the Rochester Gay Liberation Front to the Gay Alliance 
of the Genesee Valley (GAGV) — the name officially given to the original group 
of UR students in 1973. The GAGV still publishes The Empty Closet in its 
current form — a 40-page monthly tabloid newspaper that covers local, state, 
national and international news, as well as issues pertaining to the LGBT 
community. 

Forty years after Osborn and Fine stepped out from the crowd to lead a movement 
in its infancy, The Empty Closet has transformed into a dynamic newspaper, 
celebrating its 40th anniversary this fall with a completely digitized archive, 
thanks in large part to UR’s inculcation of the movement and financial support. 

As of this fall, every issue of The Empty Closet from April 1971 to April 2010 
has been digitized. The complete collection will be available on UR’s online 
database for research purposes this semester, while the microfilm will be kept 
in the Rare Books and Special Collections secure storage area. 

“We needed to have it digitized to make it a complete record of gay liberation 
in upstate New York,” Evelyn Bailey, chair of a local LGBT history committee 
called Shoulders to Stand On, said. 

To fund the project, Bailey’s committee applied to numerous grants — to no 
avail — before turning to Richard Peek, Director of the Department of Rare 
Books and Special Collections at Rush Rhees Library, who helped secure 
preservation grant money from UR. The CD digitization process was paid for by 
an anonymous donor. 

Besides creating a commemorative collection of the archived issues that is for 
sale in celebration of the 40th anniversary, one of the main motivations for 
archiving The Empty Closet is a documentary project. 

“If we hadn’t digitized it, we would have to go through literally 40 years 
worth of newspapers and extract news. It would be an incredible task,” Bailey 
said. 

Bailey’s committee is still working to finalize funding for the documentary, 
which she aims to complete by 2012 or 2013. They need to raise about $120,000. 

“A community doesn’t exist until history has been documented and written,” she 
said of the importance of the project. “It’s too easy to dismiss a group of 
people who may be involved in politics but don’t have a documented history of 
participation. The gay community has been extremely active in Rochester, and we 
want it to be on record so that the LGBT community cannot be dismissed as here 
one day and gone the next.” 

Even after the passage of legislation that legalized gay marriage in New York 
state this July and the excitement surrounding The Empty Closet’s anniversary, 
students have varied opinions on the LGBT community at UR. 

“UR is big on supporting diversity, and I think the UR community, at least as 
far as I’ve experienced, is really accepting, tolerant and open,” junior Casey 
Aten, publicity chair for UR’s Pride Network, said. “But I also find that LGBT 
support is kind of background support here — people think [sexual orientation] 
doesn’t really matter, so they think you don’t really need [the support].” 

Pride president and senior Melanie Davidoff said that while she doesn’t feel 
like students are generally aware of The Empty Closet, she thinks the LGBT 
community at UR is strong. 

“We have a decent core of LGBT students who are interested in activism, along 
with many others who help to create a sense of community via social events,” 
she said. “I do think more could be done to create a larger sense of LGBT 
community in Rochester as a whole, rather than a bunch of smaller communities 
at the different colleges and in the city itself.” 

Davidoff also said she thinks the administration at UR has been supportive of 
the LGBT community in recent years, which she said is especially important 
given the group’s push to make UR a more “transgender friendly zone.” 

“I’ve had pretty good experiences — I have good friends and feel comfortable 
talking about my sexuality with everyone I meet on campus, including 
professors,” senior Charles Genese, who has been involved with Pride for four 
years and served on the Shoulders to Stand On Committee, said. 

Genese concurred that few students, even in the LGBT community, are aware of 
The Empty Closet, but said that UR Pride still has a strong relationship with 
GAGV. Pride’s fall general interest meeting saw the largest turnout in recent 
years, he added. 

“My one complaint is that many of my gay friends find it hard to form 
relationships on campus because LGBT students are, of course, in the minority 
and many open people don’t make it public knowledge,” he said. 

Junior Alanna Scheinerman, who is not formally involved in Pride, said she 
thinks prejudice still exists at UR and that more could be done to educate 
students. 

“I think UR is a very open and welcoming community for LGBT people, but 
organizations like Pride aren’t particularly active on campus,” she said. “Gay 
rights issues aren’t really advertised … there aren’t many awareness events 
that would educate the average student. For example, [‘don’t ask, don’t tell’] 
was finally repealed for good this week and there wasn’t a celebratory rally or 
anything.” 

In 40 years, the gay rights movement has covered an immense amount of ground, 
starting from that night in Greenwich Village. From there, two brave souls on a 
cold October night went on to revolutionize LGBT acceptance in Rochester. Even 
recently, we see improvements in gay rights with this past Tuesday’s official 
end to the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. 

Despite society’s strides, bullying and suicides at the hands of the uneducated 
leave us wondering, as Bob Dylan asked, how much longer we will go on, 
pretending we just don’t see. 

Buletti is a member of the class of 2013. 



You can contact Leah at leah.bule...@rochester.edu . 

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