The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, September 3, 2008 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, Septemher 3, 2008 - 7A TOY From Page 1A but it kickstarted a lifetime of ac- tivism and advocacy. "At the meeting, we found a doz- en other women and men just as energized, frightened and hopeful as I was," Toy said. It was with that group that Toy co-founded the Detroit Gay Liber- ation Movement. He later opened a local Ann Arbor Gay Liberation Front in 1970. Toy said the decision to start the group didn't require much deep thinking. "Someone said to me, 'There's an office on campus for women stu- dents and for black students; Don't you guys want an office?"' Six months after Toy applied for one, he co-founded the Univer- sity's Lesbian, Gay Male Bisexual Programs Office, now called The Spectrum Center. He went on to lead the center for 24 years and worked with the office of Institu- tional Equity for an additional 14 years. Scott Dennis, with whom Toy founded the first gay youth group in Ann Arbor in 1978, attributes much of the University's gay rights KROLL From Page 1A related questions. But apart from Bishop's com- ment that the RNC "was defi- nitely back to normal" - despite the much-anticipated Gustav hitting land earlier the same day - the two men were noncom- @ mittal and their only displays of emotion amounted to longing looks back toward the chattering din and clinking of glasses inside strides to Toy's work. "We have such a big and well- developed office at Michigan be- cause of the many years that he put in," he said. "There is no question that people tried to eliminate that office and Jim was one of those people who was able to be diplo- matic in the face of hostility and hatred." Among the things Toy says have made him proud: seeing two male friends walking down the side- walk holding hands and a pair of additions to the University's non- discrimination clause. Toy said seeing his friends hold hands was gratifying because it wouldn't have occurred without gay rights advocacy. The nondis- crimination clause additions - put in place in 1993 and 2007 by Uni- versity regents - added gender identity and gender expression in the school bylaws. Toy and others had pushed for the changes for 21 years. Although he is no longer an offi- cial faculty member at the Univer- sity, Toy said he'll stay as involved as he was before his "retreading." Dennis called Toy's retirement "a mere formality." "He will never retire," said Den- nis. "He is tireless. His dedication to his causes is going to continue the club. As soon as it started,I thanked Bishop and Bouchard for their time and headed in the direction of some other nightclubs. Yet after walking around downtown Minneapolis, and being denied entrance to simi- lar RNC-themed parties, I have to agree with the bloggers over at PoliticalPartyTime.org, who reported: "Sen. John McCain had made a pitch that events be turned into hurricane fundrais- ers. However, these appeared to forever." Toy's career will be recognized on Nov. 12 during the Spectrum's Center "Celebration of Liberation." But that honor isn't what motivates him. "One memory that is so gratify- ing and so humbling is that some- times years after a student has been in therapy with me, he would come back to campus and come by the office and say, 'I want you to know if it had not been for you and the office, I would have killed myself,' " Toy said. Toy himself said he has much more work to do, noting thathe and others will continue to fight to add sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression to the state's nondiscrimination policy. Jackie Simpson, director of The Spectrum Center, said Toy's retire- ment wouldn't silence his advo- cacy. "Without his inspiration, sup- port, passion, and resilience, our movement on campus and beyond would be significantly different," said Spectrum Center Director Jackie Simpson. "Jim's influence will continue and even though he has decided to be a retired staff member, we know his voice as an advocate for LGBTQ and Ally peo- ple will remain as loud as ever." be the same parties that would have occurred, hurricane or not - opportunities for corporate sponsors to schmooze with mem- bers of Congress and convention goers." With Gustav looming, McCain said on Sunday that Republicans should "take off our Republican hats and put on our American hats." This may have temporarily been the case. The Republicans's partying hats weren't far from hand. 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