Homosexuality.
Found in 32 Collections and/or Records:
Douglas C. Kimmel papers
Fund for Human Dignity records
Correspondence, minutes, memoranda, financial records and reports, and publications; correspondence with the National Gay Task Force (NGTF).
Gay Media Task Force records
Correspondence, press releases and other information of Newton Deiter, coordinator of the Task Force; film and television scripts on which the Task Force worked; 3/4" video tapes of network television programs and source material.
Gay Publishing Company records
Business records, incorporation and funding papers, correspondence, advertising samples, and submissions pertaining to the Gay Publishing Company of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Also, like records pertaining to that company's affiliated enterprises, including Gay International Press, Lord and Shields, Ltd, and Scene Publishing Company; correspondence of editors, publishers, and owners James C. Ward, Robert M. Marsden, and Robert Maynard.
Harry Langhorne papers
The collection consists of the papers of Harry Langhorne, a Philadelphia area gay activist and executive officer of the Gay Activists Alliance of Philadelphia. Includes subject files relating to all aspects of the gay movement and of other liberal and radical social causes.
Human Rights Campaign records
J. Ari Kane-Demaios male erotic films
Films collected by J. Ari Kane with primarily male homosexual erotic pornography.
James M. Foster papers
Foster's personal files, including correspondence, sexual audiocassettes, and records pertaining to Foster's business enterprise and various gay rights organizations. Other records concern public health issues, most notably AIDS.
Jean O'Leary papers
Correspondence, notes, minutes, and press releases pertaining to the International Women's Year and its national conference in 1977; also, questionnaires, lists of delegates, and supplementary publications relating to the International Women's Year, its conference, and to women's and lesbian issues.
John R. TeWinkel papers
Papers of John R. TeWinkel, a Cornell graduate who lived in China, Morocco, Greece, Nigeria, and the United States.