This site provides online access to the text of selected items from the magazine.
| News and Views |
Gay man elected – Dan O’Hara becomes President of the National Secular Society. |
| Productive chain letter – an unusual letter from Finland produces unexpected results. |
| Wymondham weekend – a report on GALHA’s 1996 weekend gathering in Wymondham, Norfolk. |
| GALHA on the Web – GALHA establishes its own Web site. |
| Gay sex book publicised – Terry Sanderson’s A to Z of Gay Sex hits the national press. |
| Gay and lesbian Humanist workshop in Mexico – Jim Herrick reports. |
| World Watch – news from Zimbabwe, Australia, Denmark, Slovakia, Saudi Arabia, and Russia. |
| Obituary |
Obituary for Brian Parry. |
| Features |
Two Cheers for the "Anti-Gay Gay Movement" – Diesel Balaam assesses the merits of the latest queer phenomenon. |
| War on Prejudice – Conor Foley explains why War on Want is supporting the work of a number of lesbian and gay groups in the developing world. |
| A Lost Cause? – Terry Sanderson assesses the Christian stance on homosexuality, following the recent furore over the Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement’s 20th anniversary celebration, and concludes that LGCM will not succeed in persuading the Church of England to do a volte-face on the issue. |
| Scene from New York – Allen Windsor reports from the Big Apple. |
| Arresting Developments – Neal Cavalier-Smith, founder and Managing Director of Prowler Press, looks back at a remarkable decade in the life of Britain’s leading supplier of gay erotica. |
| CD |
Jonathan Sanders reviews Why Ever Did They?: Hollywood Stars at the Microphone and Ruth Etting: Love Me or Leave Me. |
| Video |
Terry Sanderson reviews Boyfriends, written and directed by Neil Hunter and Tom Hunsinger. |
| Books |
Stephen Moreton reviews The Prehistory of Sex: Four Million Years of Human Sexual Culture, by Timothy Taylor. |
| Jonathan Sanders reviews Brief Encounters: Lesbians and Gays in British Cinema 1930-1971, by Stephen Bourne. |
| Leni Miller reviews The Remarkable Journey of Miss Tranby Quirke, by Elizabeth Ridley. |
| Postbag |
In defence of President Clinton. |