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/ #32647 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:

25.03.2014 21:39

#32637: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:

On sinulla hyvä muisti kun 1925 asioita muistat!!! Mistä lähteestä nuo tiedot ovat?

"Weininger paid a $10 fine ($133 in 2013 dollars) for "disorderly conduct" eikä siis "lusinut"

Gerber taasen ei livahtanut mihinkään vaan syytteet raukesivat! "He left Chicago for New York City, where he re-enlisted in the Army, serving for 17 years before being honorably discharged."

Ja tässä myöhemmät vaiheet:

Gerber travelled to New York City, where a friend from his Army days introduced him to a colonel. The officer encouraged Gerber to re-enlist and he did. Gerber served until 1945, when he received an honorable discharge. During his second enlistment, Gerber ran a pen pal service called "Connections" beginning in 1930. The service typically had between 150 and 200 members, the majority of whom were heterosexual. He continued writing articles for a variety of magazines, including one called Chanticleer, in which he sometimes made the case for homosexual rights. It was the norm for gay writers to use pseudonyms when writing on gay matters; Gerber sometimes wrote under his own name but sometimes used the name "Parisex". Gerber continued to write for the next 30 years. In the 1950s, Gerber began exploring the New York gay scene more extensively and maintained a voluminous correspondence with other gay men, discussing gay organizing and strategies for answering societal prejudice. Gerber lived in New York until near the end of his life, when he moved into the Soldiers' and Airmens' home in Washington, D. C.. There he worked on his memoirs (the manuscripts are thought to be lost) and translations of German novels. Gerber died in the home on December 31, 1972, aged 80.

Eli kaukaa saa natsiyhteyksiä hakea! Livelyn pääkopasta varmaankin.