The UCLA LGBT campus Resource Center
was borne of a long history of queer activism at UCLA, from
Evelyn Hooker’s research in the 1950s to the formation
of the Gay Liberation Front in 1969.
In 1974 the first Gay Awareness Week was
held hosted with such speakers as Rita Mae Brown, Harry
Hay, and Charlotte Bunch. In 1976 UCLA Chancellor Charles
E. Young directed departments and programs not to discriminate
on the basis of sexual orientation, one of the first such
administrative orders by the head of an American university,
and in the same year, the first course in lesbian, gay,
and bisexual studies was offered at UCLA and taught by Peter
Thorslev.
In 1979 UCLA students published the first
edition of Ten Percent, which predated Frontiers as a Los
Angeles gay newspaper. Also in 1979 a gay film festival
was held at UCLA, organized by John Ramirez and Stuart Timmons,
and grew to become OutFest..
In 1989 both the UCLA Lesbian and Gay Faculty/Staff
Network and the Lambda Alumni Association were founded.,
and in 1990 the Chancellor's Advisory Committee on Lesbian
and Gay Issues was established. In 1991 Curt Shepard developed
the proposal to establish an LGB student resource center
which opened its doors in 1995 under the direction of doctoral
student Charles Outcalt.
In 1997, after the center moved from a
small closet in Haines Hall to 440 square feet in Kinsey
Hall, Dr. Ronni Sanlo, founder of Lavender Graduation, was
recruited from the University of Michigan to grow the UCLA
LGBT Center. In 1998, the first UCLA Lavender Graduation
was celebrated. In September of 2003 the UCLA LGBT Campus
Resource Center moved into a 1600 square foot space in the
Student Activities Center, formerly the Men’s Gym.
Though we started in a closet - didn't
we all - in Haines Hall in 1995, then moved to 400 square
feet in Kinsey Hall, you can find the Center nowadays in
the 1600 square foot suite B36 in the Student Activities
Center. Thanks to the support of the university, generous
donors, and grants, the new UCLA LGBT Campus Resource Center
now includes the David Bohnett Cyber Center and an extensive
library collection. Feel free to come check out our center
whether you just want to hang out, check your e-mail, or
watch one of our noon-time movie showings.
The UCLA LGBT Center is a department
in Student Affairs. |