NEW YORK (AP) — Exuberant crowds rryg rabow lors filled New York Cy streets Sunday for one of the largt pri paras the history of the gay-rights movement, a dazzlg celebratn of the 50th anniversary of the famo police raid on the Stonewall Inn.
Contents:
- THE MAYORS AND THE GAY PRI PARA
- PRI SAID GAY COPS AREN’T WELE. THEN CAME THE BACKLASH.
- A GLOBAL GAY PRI WEEKEND, PHOTOS
THE MAYORS AND THE GAY PRI PARA
ETThe other Swift for The New York Tim“I love beg gay, ” Larry Kramer, the playwright, screenwrer and gay rights activist, told the thoands who had gathered on the Great Lawn Central Park to hear him and others speak. Kramer, 84, spoke on Sunday at the ncln of the Queer Liberatn March and shared his pri the gay muny and his ncerns over s well-beg.
PRI SAID GAY COPS AREN’T WELE. THEN CAME THE BACKLASH.
“I thk we’re smarter and talented and aware of each other, ” he said, addg, “I’m approachg my end, but I still have a few years of fight left me to scream out the fact that almost everyone gay I’ve known has been affected by this plague of AIDS. And one of the first stand-up edians to be openly gay. Many hours to Norman/The New York TimAbout four hours to the march, members of the Oslo Fagottkor, a Norwegian gay choir, were still wag for their turn to march the above the start of the route, Paal Christian Gjoeen, 37, and his three iends rted their arms over the fence, their s men, each whe and pk sailor uniforms, had been wag for more than two hours.
A GLOBAL GAY PRI WEEKEND, PHOTOS
ETGay Street was renamed Acceptance Heisler/The New York TimIt seems pecially ftg that, a brick’s throw om the Stonewall Inn, there is a short quat block named Gay Street the heart of the Wt Village, long an L.