This site provides online access to the text of selected items from the magazine.
| News and Views |
Comment – George Broadhead on ‘outing’. |
| Veterans Speak Out – eleven veteran lesbian and gay rights campaigners criticise the Stonewall Group for its attack on OutRage!. |
| New Humanist Book Launched – Jim Herrick’s revised edition of Margaret Knight’s Humanist Anthology. |
| Polly Toynbee Speaks to Humanists – the well-known broadcaster and journalist is main speaker at the 1995 Humanist Dinner. |
| GALHA Members in the Media – making their views known following the recent ‘outing’ controversy. |
| World Watch – news from Cyprus, Uganda, United States, Poland, and Norway. |
| Features |
Multi-Cultural Dangers – Barbara Smoker gives her views on the growth of Muslim fundamentalism in the UK and the threat it poses, particularly in the field of education. |
| Letter from America – Sukie de la Croix on Cigar Men. |
| Lesbians and Gays in Russia – Al Vol, editor of two Moscow-based gay magazines, gives an account of the past and present situation. |
| Out, Damned Spot! Out, I Say! – Antony Grey argues forcefully for lesbians and gay men to come out of the closet. |
| Opinion – Avril Hemsley on discrimination by insurance companies against lesbian and gay couples. |
| CD |
Jonathan Sanders reviews Tchaikovsky: Mazeppa (Soloists / Stockholm Royal Opera Chorus / Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra / Neeme Jarvi). |
| Video |
Jonathan Sanders reviews La Terra Trema (1947), directed by Luchino Visconti. |
| Books |
Jonathan Sanders reviews Images in the Dark: An Encyclopedia of Gay and Lesbian Film and Video, by Raymond Murray. |
| Stephen Moreton reviews The Astonishing Hypothesis, by Francis Crick. |
| George Broadhead reviews A Class Apart, by James Gardiner. |
| Postbag |
The perils of outing; and a plea for G&LH to be more widely available in Canada. |