<P> ONE, Inc. had a tremendous impact on vision and mission of socially active gay people in early phases of movement . It was started by William Dale Jennings joined with likeminded colleagues Don Slater, Dorr Legg, Tony Reyes, and Mattachine Society founder Harry Hay . It formed the public part of the early homophile movement, with a public office, administrative infrastructure, logistics, a telephone, and the first publication that reached the general public, ONE Magazine, a huge leap of gay movement . The Los Angeles Postmaster seized and refused to mail copies of ONE Magazine in 1954 on grounds that it was "obscene, lewd, lascivious and filthy ." This action led to prolonged court battles which had significant influence on gay and lesbian movements . In 1958, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled unanimously in One, Inc. v. Olesen that the mere discussion of homosexuality was not obscene, and the magazine continued to be published and distributed until 1972 . </P> <P> Along with its continuing growth a part of ONE became the Homosexual Information Center, formed by Don Slater, Billy Glover, Joe and Jane Hansen, Tony Reyes, Jim Schneider, et al. Part of ONE's archives are at USC and part at CSUN . The funding part of ONE still exists as the Institute for the Study of Human Resources, which controls the name ONE, Inc . </P> <P> Websites for parts of ONE and HIC are: </P> <P> HIC One Archives </P>

When did the movements begin and laws take shape that led to workplace diversity in the us