It was exactly 40 years ago that Leonard Matlovich tted the Air Force's ban on gay service members
Contents:
- HOW A CLOSETED AIR FORCE SERGEANT BEME THE FACE OF GAY RIGHTS
- PROFSOR ARTHUR S. LEONARD’S WORK GAY CY NEWS WS PRTIG PRIZE
HOW A CLOSETED AIR FORCE SERGEANT BEME THE FACE OF GAY RIGHTS
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It was early 1974 when Leonard Matlovich stumbled across a story Air Force Tim that would change his life—and alter the urse of gay rights Ameri. The piece mentned that Frank Kameny, a pneerg gay rights activist, was lookg for a se to tt the ary’s ban on gay service members. Matlovich had long known he was gay, but had lived his life firmly the closet as he followed his father’s footsteps to the Air Force and served Vietnam, earng a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.
PROFSOR ARTHUR S. LEONARD’S WORK GAY CY NEWS WS PRTIG PRIZE
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8, 1975, Matlovich, who had long been tensely guard about his personal life, was on the ver of TIME unr the banner headle, “I Am a Homosexual.
“I’m pretty old and have been volved gay rights for que a while, ” says Michael Bedwell, a close iend of Matlovich’s and the executor of his tate, “I never imaged simultaneoly how far we had to go and how long would take.
'” That letter, which is now held along wh the rt of Matlovich’s papers at the GLBT Historil Society San Francis, n be read here (roll over to zoom): Courty of Leonard Matlovich Papers, Gay, Lbian, Bisexual and Transgenr Historil Society Unlike Brown v.