This site provides online access to the text of selected items from the magazine.
| News and Views |
Oh, Lord! The tale of the Humanist who wasn’t. |
| EU directive “a milestone – but the battle is not over yet”. |
| GALHA members make a splash in West Wales age-of-consent row. |
| Committed – the Pink Triangle Trust launches its new ceremonies brochure. |
| Sanderson on Sunday – GALHA press officer in the hot seat. |
| Gays recognised as Holocaust victims. |
| Briefly ... – a miscellany of short news items. |
| World Watch edited by George Broadhead – news from Finland, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Norway, the United States and the Vatican. |
| Web Watch |
Queer Resources – Brett Humphreys looks at some lesbian and gay directories and search engines. |
| Features |
William’s “Compassionate Conservatism” – Texas-style – Andy Armitage reports on Conservative party leader William Hague’s recent alignment with the religious right. |
| Consent and Dissent: It’s the law now – Andy Armitage reviews reactions to the recent age-of-consent legislation. |
| Gossip from Across the Pond – Warren Allen Smith remembers Quentin Crisp and Paul Bowles. |
| Striking at the Roots of Justice and Tolerance – Colin de la Motte-Sherman argues that discrimination, whether it be on grounds of gender, ethnic origin, belief or sexual orientation, attacks the very roots of human rights. |
| Video/Film |
Dean Braithwaite reviews Like It Is by Paul Oremland, Paris Was a Woman by Greta Schiller, and Drôle de Félix by Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau. |
| Airings |
Three little wishes ... with Steven Dean. |
| CD |
Terry Sanderson reviews The Agnostic, by David Chesky; and A Mass of Life and Requiem, by Frederick Delius. |
| Books |
Jim Herrick reviews The Gay Times Book of Short Stories: New Century, New Writing, edited by P-P Hartnett. |
| Andy Armitage reviews The Thinkers’ Guide to Life, edited by Marilyn Mason, and Seasons of Life, compiled by Nigel Collins and edited by Jim Herrick and John Pearce. |
| Postbag |
The colour of language; and Bye George. |