QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 306 - November 21, 2019

Page 18

18  |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  VIEWS

Qsaltlake.com  |

ISSUE 306  |  November 21, 2019

lambda lore

40 years of KRCL BY BEN WILLIAMS

December

3 will mark the 40th anniversary of “Listener Community Radio,” KRCL FM 91, broadcasting over the airwaves of Salt Lake City. All thanks to a civil-rights worker, anti-Vietnam war leader, politician, environmentalist, and gay man named Stephen Holbrook. KRCL had been on for little more than six years when sitting alone at my work cubicle, I first heard a woman’s deep, throaty melodious voice say, “If you are, or know or love someone gay or lesbian, the next half hour will be informative as well as entertaining.” I nearly peed my pants. I had just discovered this funky station calling itself “Radio Free Utah” a few days before. It touted itself as being the voice behind the Zion Curtain

but I was mostly intrigued by its mix of eclectic music and liberal news programming which I discovered while channel surfing. On that day as I was listening, unsuspecting that my world was soon to be turned upside down, this program came on calling itself “Concerning Gays and Lesbians.” I jumped out of my swivel chair and quickly turned the volume way down low, only audible enough for me to hear the salacious and audacious program. By the end of the program, I was a changed man. I realized for the first time that there were gays, other than me, in the city; enough to warrant a local program. The woman calling herself Mickey read a series of phone numbers and I quickly

scrawled out the numbers and tucked them into my pants pocket. Miraculously this little half-hour program gave me the courage, the resolve and the hope to live a more authentic life. How in the world did a weekly program dedicated to local gay and lesbian events happen in Salt Lake City of all places! It began with a vision by a gay social activist named Stephen Holbrook. Holbrook started out as your typical Bountiful young Mormon Republican; however, he came from an old, well-connected Mormon family. As expected, he served an LDS mission and was sent to Hong Kong and Chinatown in San Francisco. There, stark poverty among the Chinese profoundly affected him. It became the foundation for his belief that “Democracy cannot function if some groups have far more and other groups have far less.” Holbrook left his mission and quit the LDS Church. At home in Utah, Holbrook’s sense of social justice made him astutely aware of the racial discrimination that existed as mixed-race marriages were illegal and African Americans were not allowed to purchase certain real estate properties. However, still as a Republican, the 21-yearold went to work for Utah’s Congressman Sherman Lloyd in Washington. While there Holbrook was given permission by the congressman to attend the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. He heard Martin Luther King famously state that he had a dream. And now so did Holbrook. However, an aide to Lloyd said that Holbrook could either work for the congressman or for civil rights but he couldn’t do both. For Hol-

brook, it was an easy decision. He chose to join the Salt Lake branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and soon found himself within the year registering blacks to vote in the deep South. During the summers of 1964 and 1965, Holbrook campaigned for voter registration in the South along with other Freedom Riders, helped by his friend and progressive, Robert Freed, then owner of Lagoon amusement park. Freed actually paid Holbrook expenses to Mississippi and also was responsible for the desegregation of Lagoon. Freed abolished its former policy of prohibiting blacks to swim or dance at the park. While in Mississippi, Holbrook worked in the office of Charles Evers, the brother of the murdered civil rights leader Medgar Evers. It was an intense time, where thousands were arrested and over 50 black churches were bombed or burned to the ground. In 1964 at the age of 23, while helping two black women register to vote, Holbrook, himself was arrested. His crime; taking a picture of a water fountain with a sign stating “Whites Only.” Thrown into a cell called a “hot box”, Holbrook spent time there sweltering in the summer heat and humidity. The jailers also turned on the actual cell heater to increase his misery. Eventually, Holbrook was freed after a group of Jewish people from New York and officials from Utah raised the money for bail. Back in Utah, the headlines read “Utah Junior Arrested in Mississippi.” Upon his return to Utah, Holbrook continued to work for civil rights, including campaigning to persuade the


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Articles inside

A tale of a locomotion

3min
page 46

4 (seemingly) money-savings habits that can bleed you dry

3min
page 44

Matrons of Mayhem raise $10,500 for Camp Hobé Summer Camp for Kids with Cancer

1min
pages 42-43

Fun in the Sun awaits LGBTQ travelers in Puerto Vallarta

5min
pages 40-41

Toil & Trouble

2min
page 39

Local restaurants are the best certificate gifts

1min
page 32

‘Hedwig’s’ John Cameron Mitchell: Love me little, love me long

7min
pages 30-31

Utah Rep’s ‘American Psycho’ is bloody sexy

2min
page 29

Tony's Gay Agenda

2min
page 28

The Johns

3min
page 27

Stuff your own stocking

3min
page 26

Season's Readings

5min
pages 24-25

Holiday Markets

2min
page 23

Herbs

1min
page 22

Vegan gift guide for non-vegans

2min
page 22

Mikey Rox’s Ultimate Guide to Gay Gift Giving 2019

5min
pages 20-21

40 years of KRCL

4min
pages 18-19

Civility

3min
page 17

Give and receive

2min
page 16

Hallmark, Lifetime, the gay question

2min
page 15

Holiday savings

2min
page 13

Qmmunity

2min
page 12

Trans woman forced to remove makeup at Utah DMV against department policy

1min
page 12

World AIDS Day events in Utah

1min
page 11

Grindr/Scruff scam targets gay men in Salt Lake City

1min
page 11

Project Rainbow places 283 flags ahead of Transgender Day of Remembrance

1min
page 11

Unity Fest: 9 sports, 4 days, 1 city

3min
page 10

The top national and world news

5min
pages 7, 9
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