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The First Phase: 1971-1986

In the fall of 1971, three separate efforts came together to create what was then called the Kent Gay Liberation Front.  Bill Hoover, an openly gay graduate student in the Department of Sociology and Criminology, began giving talks on gayness. He also taught a course at this time or shortly thereafter on the Sociology of Deviance.

That same fall, Dr. Dolores Noll, a then-assistant professor of English, signed up to speak on the gay liberation in the Experimental College, an addition to the Honors College formed as one response to the events surrounding May 4, 1970.  Noll had come out as a lesbian in the gay community of Washington D.C., in the summer of 1971 and while there became acquainted with the gay rights movement.  After acknowledging  her lesbianism in the first Experimental College class that she spoke in, she talked with both the University Faculty Ombudsman and with the Department of English chair about what she had done.  Both expressed support for her.

Some gay students met with Noll at her home.  This small group then joined with Hoover and his friends with the intention of forming an organization, perhaps off campus at first.  They were then presently surprised to see flyers announcing a meeting of a “Gay Lib” group at a given date and place.  This was a group organized by a student, Gail Pertz, who with one other student had already gained recognition for their group.  The Hoover-Noll group then joined with the Pertz group to sponsor the first meeting.

Seventy people attended the meeting! Pertz and Hoover were elected co-chairs of the Kent Gay Liberation Front, Noll was chosen as faculty advisor.  This occurred during finals week of the fall quarter of 1971.  At the beginning of the winter quarter, there was some question as to whether or not the Board of Trustees would give formal approval to the Kent Gay Liberation Front, but the Trustees acceded when the Kent Gay Liberation Front threatened to hold a protest demonstration.

Most of the major activities and organizational structures of the Kent Gay Liberation Front were put into place in 1972. The first social activity was a series of dances held in a downtown bar on Monday nights.  Participants came from Kent and surrounding areas.  The focus moved soon to the campus.  The group was assigned an office in the Student Activities Center and, a year later, in the present Kent Student Center, after it was constructed.  The Kent Gay Liberation Front (and its descendants) has always had an office in the years up to the present.  At one time the largest available office was assigned to the group, but persons threw rocks and broke the window on two occasions. In the early years, the office was a lively place most school days and evenings, with a student office manager present much of the time.

A constitution established the organization’s structure.  There were two equal co-chairs, one female and the other male.  There were required to make their full names known whenever dealing with the university, the press and public.  The same was true for the advisor.  Others were not under this requirement, but the basic tenet of the group was to encourage members to come out as much as possible, particularly to their parents—often an especially difficult task.  The third major student office was the Steering Committee coordinator, the governing/business part of the organization. Any Student could be a member of the Steering Committee by simply attending three consecutive meetings and continuing to attend regularly.  The treasurer also was an important position, necessitating working with the appropriate university official and the Student Government.  Obviously the Steering Committee coordinator and the treasurer needed to use their full names, at least when working with the university.

Three weekly meetings were held during the school year.  On Tuesday nights, there was a general meeting, open to the public.  In the first few years, this meeting was held in a large lounge on the second floor, where the Enrollment Management and Student Affairs office is today. Many people attended, from surrounding communities, as well as the СƬƵ student body.  Sometimes there were speakers; sometimes documentaries were shown; at other times there was simply discussion.  On Friday nights a Women’s Rap and a Men’s Rap, led usually by the co-chairs, were held in the smaller meeting rooms of the third floor.  Attendance at these meetings was restricted to the appropriate sex.  (At one time, a group of counseling graduate students who wanted the observe were told that the men would have to leave; the women could stay but only as participants, not as observers.)

Another major activity was the Speakers Bureau.  In the fall of 1972 Channel 3 in Cleveland sent a producer and cameras down for a story it was doing on the “Lavender Scene” (or some such name). (The Kent Gay Liberation Front later awarded the producer a certificate of “Honorary Lesbian,” for her work!). Other invitations poured in from radio and TV stations; classes at СƬƵ and other colleges in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana (and a few high schools, though these were invariably one-time invitations); civic groups; counseling organizations; and GLBT conferences at other colleges and universities.  At first any Kent Gay Liberation Front member who wanted to speak could do so, but soon it seemed desirable for speakers to be trained.  Experienced speakers became the primary speakers, preferably a woman and a man; secondary speakers were generally the newer, younger students, who were encouraged to tell their personal stories – often the more appealing part of the presentation.  Probably several hundred talks were presented in the first 10 years.

Two other major activities were the Halloween Ball and, in the spring, the Annual Conference.  For at least 10 years the ball was held in the Kent Student Center ballroom, often with a band.  It was an event popular with more than the СƬƵ lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.  The physically challenged students particularly enjoyed attending; one student from that community volunteered that “KGLF really throws a good party!” In 1980 or ’81 the ball was tear-gassed.  Thanks to the quick thinking of the female co-chair, Wendy Gaylord, who had worked at the Kent Student Center and remembered that all the doors along one side opened to the outside, most of the dancer escaped unscathed.  However, some were severely affected: there were several lying on the floor in the hall, being worked on by EMT personnel, who were transported by ambulance to hospitals; at least one had gone into cardiac arrest.  Fortunately, all survived. As a result of the university investigation, several of the culprits who had thrown the tear gas were found to be Marine reservists who consequently were discharged from the Marines.  Others were university students who were disciplined, though perhaps not as stringently as they should have been.

In the spring of 1972 gay rights pioneer Frank Kennedy appeared unexpectedly on the campus and spent several days with the group.  There was not time then to organize a speaking engagement for Dr. Kameny, but in the following years the Kent Gay Liberation Front sponsored a conference every spring.  The group applied for and received monies from the Student Government for these events.  Speakers including many persons active in the national gay rights movement.  Some of these were Barbara Gittings, Karla Jay, Bill Johnson, Rita Mae Brown, Jean O’Leary and Howard Brown.

Dr. Brown’s visit was especially meaningful.  He had grown up in Ravenna, Ohio and had gone to medical school in Cleveland. At the time he spoke, he was the chief medical officer of New York City.  When he came out as a gay man, the news made the front page of the New York Times.  At СƬƵ he said that he never had dreamed that he would talk in Portage County about being gay! He also stated that while a medical student, he had gone through four years of standard psychoanalytic analysis and had come out of it with a greater problem than he had come in with.  He said that if a drug had such poor results, it would be banned. Dr. Brown met with the СƬƵ counseling services and was very helpful in explaining and supporting the psychological benefits of the gay rights approach. Later in his book, Public Faces, Private Places, he spoke of his visit to СƬƵ.

Print coverage of the Kent Gay Liberation Front was plentiful.  In addition to letters and items in the Daily СƬƵr and the Akron Beacon Journal over the years, the Stater published a major story in 1974, and in the same year (Sept.15) the Akron Beacon Journal Sunday magazine did the same, covering both the Kent Gay Liberation Front and Akron groups.  In 1973 at the Modern Language Association conference, Women’s Caucus, Noll presented a paper titled “A gay Feminist in Academia,” describing her experiences as faculty advisor of the gay organization at СƬƵ (published in1974 in College English). As a result, she joined with others present at the conference to organize the Gay Caucus for the Modern Languages.  In 1980 she and a colleague, Louis Crompton of the University of Nebraska, were honored by the Gay Caucus with the establishment of an annual award, the Crompton-Noll Award, for the best article or book on gays/lesbians in literature.

In 1972 the Honors and Experimental College accepted a proposal by Noll that she teach an Experimental course called Gay Womanhood.  Ten people signed up for this class, and another 18 sat in.  Two years later she taught another course, the Politics of Gay Liberation.  After teaching this course twice, she offered an Experimental course called Sexual Minorities. She continued teaching this class yearly (eventually as part of her regular teaching load) until 1981.  At this time she turned the course over to Art Kaltenborn, Professor Emeritus of Speech Pathology, who had joined her as co-advisor of the Kent Gay Liberation Front for about three years.  Kaltenborn continued teaching the course, including at the Medical School, for several years until the dean of the Honors and Experimental College deemed it no longer necessary.

Noll, having retired, ended her tenure as faculty advisor around 1986.  She did return briefly in 2003-4 in an internship as part of the requirement for a Master of Divinity degree, involving serving as a minister to the LGBTQ students at СƬƵ.

In general, the СƬƵ Administration, including in the early years President Olds and Vice-president Faye Biles, were quietly supportive of the Kent Gay Liberation Front and its faculty advisor.  They are to be commended for that.  Dr. John Binder, associate dean of students, was always present and generous with help and advice whenever problems arose.  Carolyn Arnold and Molly DeLong were members of the community who could always be counted on for support.

Noll’s work with LGBTQ students of СƬƵ has been the most fulfilling experience of her life.  The success of the Kent gay Liberation Front KGLF (and its succeeding manifestations) resulted from the courage, initiative, enthusiasm and dedication.  Some have become lifelong friends. Her debt to all is immeasurable.