History
Our Many, Many Name Changes
Our club was first recognized by the University on December 18, 1991 under the Office of Student Activities. Filing under the name GLSA --Gay & Lesbian Student Association-- the following Spring term in April of 1992, the group took a van to Washington D.C. to be a part of the March on Washington for Lesbian Gay Bisexual Equal Rights. In the Winter quarter of 1993, the club’s name was changed to GLBA (Gay Lesbian Bisexual Alliance) to include the bisexual community. It was then changed to the ASD (Alliance for Sexual Diversity) in February 1998 after the lawsuit with the university and the State Attorney General's office took place in April of 1997. The name was further changed to GLBTA (Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Alliance) to include transgender identity in January of 2006.
In Spring 2007, we divided into two groups: GLBTA and GSA --Gay/Straight Alliance-- and in 2009, the GSA changed their name to Q & A --Queers and Allies--. In the Spring of 2011, GLBTA and Q & A merged and redesigned the purpose of the clubs, forming Spectrum and Unity. Each club would function under different fundamental ideas: the idea of activism (Spectrum) and community support (Unity).
The club historically joined Spring Hill College P.R.I.D.E. and other groups in the Mobile area in putting on an LGBT second chance prom, which was started in Spring 2011.
In March of 2011, Allies Unlimited was organized to represent an allies’ support unit for the clubs. It later dissolved due to lack of involvement
ΔΛΦ Delta Lambda Phi
In October 2000, (Beta Beta Chapter) was the first progressive gay and bisexual male fraternity at the ÃØÃÜÑо¿Ëù. The fraternity did not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. South’s chapter was started by 5 students at USA, and in 2002, the fraternity was opened to other campuses in the Mobile area as a multi-campus fraternity. It continued until Fall 2005, when a lack of interest in membership closed the fraternity.
1996 - Alabama Sodomy Law
Alabama’s sodomy law was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court on June 26, 2003, as a result of the Court’s decision in Lawrence v. Texas, No. 02-102 (U.S. June 26, 2003). Previously, Alabama’s sodomy law applied to both heterosexual and same-sex partners: ALA. CODE § 13A-6-63 (2001); § 13A-6-64 (2001). Although the sodomy law did not apply to acts by consenting adults in private, homosexual conduct was criminalized under the sexual misconduct law. In the 2002 Alabama Supreme Court case Ex parte H.H., the sodomy law was used by the court to deny a lesbian mother custody of her children, despite the holding of the intermediate court that the father verbally, emotionally, and physically abused the children. In the landmark 1996 case , an Alabama college (ÃØÃÜÑо¿Ëù) attempted to use the sodomy law to deny funding to a gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender student group (GLBA) at a state college (ÃØÃÜÑо¿Ëù). The court determined that the law violated the First Amendment. ALA. CODE § 13A-6-65(a)(3) (2001).