Difference between revisions of "Jeff Graubart: A Conspiracy Unraveled, My 17 Day Urbana Sit-in, March, 1976"

From OutHistory
Jump to navigationJump to search
m
m
Line 15: Line 15:
 
| Reid Smith, Gay Illini Supporter || Simon Sawyer
 
| Reid Smith, Gay Illini Supporter || Simon Sawyer
 
|-  
 
|-  
| John Petersen, I-Progressive Urbana Alderman  || Joel Sandberg
+
| John Peterson, I-Progressive Urbana Alderman  || Joel Sandberg
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
| Bill Bland, Mayor of Champaign  || Bill Young
 
| Bill Bland, Mayor of Champaign  || Bill Young
Line 118: Line 118:
  
 
[[Image:BookImage.jpg|left|50px]]
 
[[Image:BookImage.jpg|left|50px]]
[[Dramatization of Meeting with John Petersen]]<ref>Graubart, Jeff. 2009. ''The Quest for Brian'', 4th Draft,9:32-35</ref>
+
[[Dramatization of Meeting with John Peterson]]<ref>Graubart, Jeff. 2009. ''The Quest for Brian'', 4th Draft,9:32-35</ref>
  
<small>The specifics of the conversation with John Petersen are fictionalized, since the information that he brought was so dramatic, I do not clearly recollect the details. The part where Mayor Paley told Alderman Petersen the details over a beer and then left for the mayor's conference are true. In the telephone conversation with Toby Schneiter afterwards, a reference is made to an asassination attempt against me in 1972 when I was living in the dormatory. This is a true story and is mentioned in several of the dramatizations throughout this exhibit, but is omitted from the exhibit, itself.</small>
+
<small>The specifics of the conversation with John Peterson are fictionalized, since the information that he brought was so dramatic, I do not clearly recollect the details. The part where Mayor Paley told Alderman Peterson the details over a beer and then left for the mayor's conference are true. In the telephone conversation with Toby Schneiter afterwards, a reference is made to an asassination attempt against me in 1972 when I was living in the dormatory. This is a true story and is mentioned in several of the dramatizations throughout this exhibit, but is omitted from the exhibit, itself.</small>
  
  
Line 149: Line 149:
 
[[Dramatization of Threats]]<ref>Graubart, Jeff. 2009. ''The Quest for Brian'', 4th Draft,9:38-42</ref>
 
[[Dramatization of Threats]]<ref>Graubart, Jeff. 2009. ''The Quest for Brian'', 4th Draft,9:38-42</ref>
  
<small>The dramatization of the threats is true to the best of my recollection. From the news accounts and GRAC press release, it appears that Alderman Petersen, among others, demanded that I receive police protection. </small>
+
<small>The dramatization of the threats is true to the best of my recollection. From the news accounts and GRAC press release, it appears that Alderman Peterson, among others, demanded that I receive police protection. </small>
  
  

Revision as of 20:47, 7 February 2010

Under Construction

Mask201.jpg The Cast - Major players identified. Actual historical figures on left.

Jeff Graubart, Member Gay Rights Action Coalition, Narrator Dave Rosen
Hiram Paley, Mayor of Urbana Manny Singer
Toby Schneiter, Member Gay Rights Action Coalition Ellen Schrader
Nancy Davis, Member Gay Rights Action Coalition Samantha Darwin
Reid Smith, Gay Illini Supporter Simon Sawyer
John Peterson, I-Progressive Urbana Alderman Joel Sandberg
Bill Bland, Mayor of Champaign Bill Young
Duane Eckerty, Urbana City Clerk Wayne Picardy


Years ago, I cried watching the movie Ragtime as Coalhouse Walker Jr. replayed the scenes from my life. To preserve his dignity when some racist firefighters wrecked his car, he ultimately gave his own life.


When the Urbana cop said, "No faggot can bring charges against a real man without defaming his character," like Coalhouse Walker, I tried to get justice and failed. With each failure, those words stole a fresh piece of my soul. I continued to sink deeper into the pit of drug addiction, mental instability and desperation. Those words came to symbolize my reason for being.


Between Larry Gulian's sabotage of the march on Washington conference and my obsession with the Urbana cop, I spent two years in Chicago's gay political community, unleashing my rage. Readers of The Quest for Brian can decide whether I was more hero or villian. Ultimately, I tried to escape the demons and fled to my parent's house in California, but there was no way out, so I opted to return to Urbana and find justice or die trying.


This is the most embarassing and difficult-to-relive part of my life. My press release uses hyperbole such as "psychopathic vegetable" and "diseased ravaged mind." The sit-in in Urbana is the only part of my novel where the truth is weirder than the fiction and I toned down the mental illness, despite the reader's desire for sensationalism. It was too difficult to write. But the actual press releases and newspaper articles are included in this exhibit.



JeffAndTobyOnSteps.jpg

Arrival in Urbana


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Arrival at the Urbana City Building[1]

Newspaper accounts, days later, have City Attorney Franks allowing me to stay in the foyer and getting me bathroom priviledges in the police station, but that is incorrect. He became the fall guy for the mayor when the political firestorm erupted.


When I heard that Urbana had passed the gay rights bill a year earlier, albeit a watered down version, I almost decided to return home victorious. But there was still questions of who was the Urbana cop and why the grand jury cover-up.


Press Release Initiating the Sit-in

A good summary of the events from the Wigwam demonstration to the start of the sit-in. Currently disagrees with the novel on the role of the second cop, but the novel will be modified in the 5th draft. Poor spelling and much hyperbole, but otherwise accurate.


Demonstrator Awaits Justice

Good article by Pat Wingert, now Washington correspondent for Newsweek



AtHomeInCityHall.jpg

At Home in City Hall


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of At Home In City Hall[2]

The conversations are mostly fictional although I believe they accurately reflect what might have been said by the people mentioned. The man and woman who brought me the mattress are composites of several people. I identify them as coming from the Earthworks Collective and later news articles identify them as coming from Gemini House, a substance abuse center. One of those involved in providing assistance was Terry Cosgrove, now president and CEO of Personal PAC. He was a good friend of Reid Smith, who appears shortly and is a major character in the novel. The people who brought me food are fictional composites. There was no suspicious man with a potentially poison tuna casserole, but there were a few instances of food I felt better throwing away.




Letter to the editor of the Daily Illini, by Bill Warren played by Bobby Henderson in the novel, attacking my sit-in tactic and giving his own take on the matter

Days in City Hall


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Statute of Limitations[3]

An accurate synthesis of several conversations held at the time. According to news reports, including a later press release from the Gay Rights Action Coalition, I allowed the social worker to take me to Mercy Hospital for an evaluation, but I have no recollection of this.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Reid Smith and the Gay Illini[4]

There are some inconsistencies between this account and the Gay Rights Action Coalition press release. Apparently, I met with Reid Smith on March 6th, the day after the Gay Illini meeting with Mayor Bland, not March 10th as depicted in the novel. The press release reported a March 10th emergency meeting between GRAC and the Gay Illini calling for a grand jury investigation indicating there was less hostility from the Gay Illini over my sit-in than in the dramatization. A news story from 1977 when the Champaign gay rights bill finally passed showed Bland's public statements on gay rights were less supportive than those he gave to the Gay Illini, although he did cast the tie-breaking vote.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of GRAC Demonstration[5]

Reggie plays the role of Clarence Fletcher in earlier scenes from 1972 and 1973. In this dramatization, his role and story is purely fictional and a composite of another character. Maura, Mollie and Janet are all based on real people, all three of whom play significant roles in Chicago gay politics but are only peripheral here. Their characters are exaggerated in the novel. Nancy Davis' paranoia that Reid Smith was a police agent is not exaggerated.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Shower Break at Reid Smith's[6]

Described to the best of my recollection and only incidental to the history.




Notice how Mayor Paley neither confirms nor denies that the officer involved was the son of Urbana City Clerk Duane Eckerty.

The Truth That Set Me Free


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Meeting with John Peterson[7]

The specifics of the conversation with John Peterson are fictionalized, since the information that he brought was so dramatic, I do not clearly recollect the details. The part where Mayor Paley told Alderman Peterson the details over a beer and then left for the mayor's conference are true. In the telephone conversation with Toby Schneiter afterwards, a reference is made to an asassination attempt against me in 1972 when I was living in the dormatory. This is a true story and is mentioned in several of the dramatizations throughout this exhibit, but is omitted from the exhibit, itself.


Learning that the cop who falsely arrested Bill Stanley and I, on the charge that no faggots can bring charges against a real man without defaming his character, was Floyd "Butch" Eckerty, son of Urbana City Clerk Duane Eckerty, went a long way in resolving the mystery that had haunted me for years. It provided a pre-condition for a coverup by the States Attorney, although not the actual reason, especially since States Attorney Lawrence Johnson was a Democrat and Duane Eckerty, a Republican.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of City Council Meeting[8]

It is true that I remained in the foyer during the council meeting because Reid Smith failed to bring me fresh clothes and deoderant. I believe the BO fetish part is fictionalized, although Reid was very big on gays being rugged.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Failed Hearts[9]

The newspaper articles mentioned in the dramatization are not in my archives. The Daily Illini article to the left mentions Floyd Picardy being released from the hospital. The accuracy of this dramatization needs to be backed up by those articles before it should be accepted as history.


It would take me several days to understand the life-lesson in the heart attacks of Duane Eckerty and his son. But I knew early on that if fate had brought me to Urbana for a reason, it had been realized and the sit-in would soon be coming to an end.



The Vigilantes of Urbana


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Threats[10]

The dramatization of the threats is true to the best of my recollection. From the news accounts and GRAC press release, it appears that Alderman Peterson, among others, demanded that I receive police protection.


Phone Call Threatens Man In Lobby

This article has a number of inaccuracies, including that I was beaten by the assailant, rather than William Stanley, that two counselors from Mercy Hospital took me for a checkup when other accounts point to the single social worker mentioned previously and that City Administrator Franks authorized bathroom priviledges at the police station when it was the mayor.



GraubartMayParticipateInDiversionProgram.jpg

Arrest


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Mayor Paley Returns Early[11]

Although I speculated to Mayor Paley that there was some kind of deal to effect the Picardy cover-up, which he neither confirmed nor denied, the theory about the mayoral race did not occur to me until I returned to Chicago. The exchange about the second cop is also fictionalized, but the rest of the dramatization is true to the best of my recollection.


It was clear that the entire City of Urbana, save a few radicals, wanted me out of City Hall one way or another. And they also wanted the head of Mayor Paley.


There isn't a shread of non-circumstantial evidence that the candidates for the 1973 Urbana mayoral election were selected as part of an Eckerty cover-up deal. But fiction demands that, what would perhaps be the most ironic mayoral election in U.S. history, be mentioned as a possibility. My apologies to Hiram Paley and the late Ruth Brookens.


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Arrest[12]


BookImage.jpg

Dramatization of Jail[13]




Graubart Vigil Ends

Graubart Arrested For Trespassing

Gay Rights Action Coalition Press Release March 25th



A Wanted Man


To learn that what had torn at my soul for the previous four years had likewise torn at the soul of the City of Urbana,




References

  1. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:13-17
  2. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:18-22
  3. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:22-23
  4. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:23-26
  5. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:26-29
  6. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:29-31
  7. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:32-35
  8. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:35-37
  9. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:37-38
  10. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:38-42
  11. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:43-45
  12. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:45-47
  13. Graubart, Jeff. 2009. The Quest for Brian, 4th Draft,9:47-51

Contact Person

Jeff Graubart jeffgrau@rcn.com

Categories