i no jcjo-rcl o^i?i 111 111? ^uTttioojayvo :tUAI\/AAS mmm Growth changing gay rights groups By Nancy Feigenbaum Sta ff Writer year after the U.S. Su preme Court opened the doors of Texas A&M to Gay Student Services, 10 years after GSS was founded, the gav community continues to operate with a pe culiar combination of activism and secrecy. GSS helps with Gayline, runs a roommate service and invites speakers like Dr. Donna Daven port of Student Counseling to address the group. It also quietly “recommends” (rather than endorses) a candi date for student body president and plans a packed Gay Week schedule with almost no ad vance publicity. Like any minority group, GSS has two roles. One is to turn in ward and provide a safe haven for the members of its commu nity. The other is to reach out and establish its place on cam pus. GSS is having its fair share of trouble with both. “It’s been normal to lose fly ers at a higher rate than other groups do," savs Marco Roberts, president of GSS. . M he group has put up flyers at 11 p.m. only to find them gone in an hour — all of them. “It was beginning to cost us an enormous amount of mon ey," Roberts savs. Finally GSS organized a pa trol of several people armed with walkie-talkies and a cam era to walk around campus af ter posters were distributed. They have done this three times so far, Roberts says, and the problem has eased since then. The group’s posters also have been vandalized. On one poster “Womens' Rap Group" became “Women's Rape Group” and “Gay Student Services” became “Gay Stud Vices.” Mf GSS has trouble get ting its service messages through on campus, it has the opposite problem with political candidates. The group recom mends Brett Shine for student body president, but both Shine and Roberts fear the effect of publicizing the recommenda tion. Roberts is afraid that if pub licity hurts Shine’s chances in the election it will discourage remembers when Shine cam paigned at the dormitory in 1985. “He definitely was anti-gay," savs Tom Tagliabue. Shine says he “can’t condone'’ the gay lifestyle but says his at titude towards gay rights changed in the last year and he supports the right of GSS to par ticipate on campus. Other candidates for student body president say they did not seek a GSS recommendation, ei ther because of the group’s small size or simply because thev were not seeking endorse which outlaws homosexual ac tivity. .liGA’s president did not want to be interviewed but an other member agreed to speak on the condition that her pen name, Kate Weaver, be used. Weaver, who left GSS to join LGA, says the main problem was GSS’s refusal to use the word “lesbian” in its name. “Men and women are very different,” she says. “We don’t feel that we’re the same lifestyle at all.” Weaver says that GSS seemed anti-woman and anti-feminist. Women were discouraged from contributing anything that wasn’t strictly about homosex uality to the group’s newsletter, Weaver says. Roberts sees the difference in the groups as “pro-unity versus pro-representation. ” The 1985 recognition of GSS has freed the gay community to concentrate on other is sues. In the process, the dual role of GSS as a service organization and a political or ganization produced an actual split. future candidates from seeking a GSS backing. At the same time, though, he hopes publicity will encourage liberal voters on campus to fol low GSS’s lead and create a stronger voting block to attract politicians. “The fact that we endorsed a candidate last year (Mike Cook) and he managed to come in second place at least proved that we’re not that much a lia bility^,” he says. The question is, will liberal groups be willing to follow the man Roberts has picked? GSS was approached bv more than one student body presi dential candidate. At a March 26 meeting candidate Jim Cleary told the group he is proud of the student senate res olution admitting recognition of GSS. Cleary voted in favor of the resolution. Shine says he did not. A student who was a Davis Gary Hall floor representative ments of any kind. Gay rights, themselves, were not men tioned as a reason. oberts expects a block vote of 100-200, although the group has a membership of 40. At the March 26 meeting Rob erts asked members of GSS to spread the word during the Tuesday gathering at The Crossing, a gay bar. The 1985 recognition of GSS has freed the gay community to concentrate on other issues. In the process, the dual role of GSS as a service organization and a political organization produced an actual split. In the Fall 1985 semester a new group was formed. Les- bian-Gav Activists is so young it’s difficult to characterize. The group has somewhere be tween eight and 12 members and is currently involved in raising money to repeal Section 21.06, a Texas criminal statute However, members of both groups say that despite their differences thev get along and often work together. Graduate student Ramsey Sealy, a mem ber of both GSS and LGA, savs there has been no split in the gay community, but the two groups serve different purposes. LGA members characterize their group as the more politi cal of the two. ealy says the creation of LGA was a natural out growth of the recognition of GSS. “After GSS was recognized, 1 ’ Sealy says, “the next step was to have a political organization that dealt with gay issues.” The conservative atmosphere at A&=M has had two effects on gays, he savs. It can cause them to be “more closet}?’ or get them more politically involved. Most people come under the first category, he says, though some have had both reactions.