LGBTQ Aggies

Instead, the group requested only meeting space on campus and the right to post notices on school bulletin boards and in the student newspaper.

At the conclusion of the litigation, GSS was recognized as an official student organization by legal decision in April 1985.

Today GLBT Aggies is an organization for queer people and straight allies alike, where anyone is welcome to join regardless of how they identify.

In April 2010, 2011, and 2012 on the National Day of Silence LGBTQA partnered with Atticus Circle to bring the Fine By Me T-shirt project to the Texas A&M campus.

"[5][6][7] LGBTQA has participated in many activities designed to engage and educate citizens of the broader Bryan-College Station area about the LGBTQ community.

[8] In a statement, the organization called the bill "a direct and blatant attack against the LGBTQ Aggie community.

Our LGBT members are not separate from the community as a whole; they are an integral part of the backbone of the student body and of campus life.

The Texas A&M family includes students with diverse backgrounds, beliefs, and needs, bound together by our commitment to our university and to each other.

[11] On April 5, 2013, the Student Body President at Texas A&M University, John Claybrook, vetoed the bill.

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Aggies strive to be inclusive of all identities, and this positive change allows for open dialogue to occur in an ill informed society.

Logo of LGBTQA while using their prior name
Flyer attached to the "gay? fine by me" T-shirt giveaway in April 2011