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Gay couples mark 1-year anniversary of legal marriage recognition in Mass.

BOSTON -Alexander Westerhoff and Thomas Lang celebrated their first wedding anniversary yesterday by holding a sign on the Statehouse steps reading: Thank you Massachusetts for one year of equality.

A year after Massachusetts became the first U.S. state to recognize same-sex marriages, Westerhoff said fears have subsided that lawmakers will nullify their marriage.

I'm very hopeful

he said. The more time passes the more people understand that we just want to be equal.

Last May 17, couples lined up in city and town halls across the state to apply for marriage licenses. Since then, some 6,200 of them have been handed out to same-sex couples.

The anniversary also brought protests from gay-marriage opponents. Some seek to oust the judges who legalized gay marriage in November 2003, while others protested the fact the state's high court rewrote state law.

The effect of this perceived law has been the forced normalization of homosexuality on the people of Massachusetts and harsh intimidation against those who don't go along activist Brian Camenker said.

Lawmakers compromised last year with a constitutional amendment that would outlaw gay marriage but permit civil unions. The measure needs a round of approval by the legislature this year to make it onto a ballot in 2006. But its future is uncertain, as new pro-gay marriage lawmakers have been elected and some past supporters of the amendment are reconsidering.

Supporters of traditional marriage are considering gathering voter signatures for a ballot initiative that would ban gay marriage and civil unions, said Ron Crews, head of the Massachusetts Family Institute.

They would need to gather more than 68,000 signatures but would face a lower threshold of legislative support to get it on the ballot. The earliest it could go before voters is 2008.

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Hundreds of gay couples and supporters, including Mark Brown, left, and his husband, Kraig Kissenger, of Boston, pose for a group photo in front of the statehouse in Boston yesterday, one year after Massachusetts became the first U.S. state to recognize s

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