END SCOTSGAY MAGAZINE ================= ScotsGay is a magazine for lesbians, gay men and bisexuals. Edited, printed and published in Scotland Issue 3 - April 1995 ELECTRONIC EDITION To subscribe: Send a mail message to listserver@drink.demon.co.uk The first (not subject) line of the message should be subscribe scotsgay-list (If you are subscribing for a different address from the one you are using to send the request, you should preface your request with a line of the form set address myotheraddress@my.other.system instead) To unsubscribe: Send a mail message to listserver@drink.demon.co.uk The first (not subject) line of the message should be unsubscribe scotsgay-list (If you are unsubscribing for a different address from the one you are using to send the request, you should preface your request with a line of the form set address myotheraddress@my.other.system instead) All Material Copyright (c) Pageprint Limited 1995. Permission is hereby given to distribute this material provided that this copyright notice is included and that distribution is specifically for non-profitmaking reasons. Distribution for profit must be done only with prior written consent of the magazine any deviation from this will be seen as an infringement of copyright. Hardcopies are limited to one per person for personal use only and such hard copies are subject to the same copyright restrictions as laid out above. The printed edition of ScotsGay is available by post at the following rates: 6 issue sub (UK & EC) 6ukp 6 issue sub (Overseas) 12ukp 12 issue sub (UK & EC) 10ukp 12 issue sub (Overseas) 22ukp Make Cheques and POs payable to 'Pageprint Limited' or 'ScotsGay' and send them to: Subscriptions ScotsGay Pageprint Limited PO Box 666 Edinburgh Scotland EH7 5YW ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- In this edition: Editorial: Poor old Peter Tatchell News: Reports and investigations Serial: Grandma, We Love You Campaigning: 'Til The Law Do Us Part Interview: She Came To Edinburgh - Mary Wings Joan Burnie - the controversial columnist reveals all to Scotsgay Inside Out: The essential scene guide Venues: What and where... Scene: All the latest tittle tattle Boxes: The ScotsGay Meet Market International: The worldly round-up Music: Queercore Film: The 9th London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival Listings: Updated every issue ScotsDyke: The Evil Weed Credits: Who we are and all that stuff ------------------------------------------------------------- EDITORIAL ========= Poor old Peter Tatchell. Not a day has gone by recently that he hasn't been plastered all over the telly or the front page of the papers. He’s the Devil Incarnate as far as many people are concerned. He and Outrage have revealed that some of the famous and powerful are closet homos - that's something which should be left to the press to do - isn't it? And, how come he tried to go back into the closet when he was losing Bermondsey for the Labour Party? A touch hypocritical - eh? Well, he's long since apologised for that last piece of nonsense (and I’d like to take the opportunity to apologise publicly to him for coining the 'Peter Tatchell Eats Babies' slogan which went up on a number of pieces of street furniture in Surrey Docks as I rolled back from the pub one evening). Actually, what he and Outrage have really been doing recently is writing measured personal letters to various MPs and clerics pointing out that Coming Out is a Good Thing which cleanses the soul, etc. There's been no threat to reveal all - although some of those who have been written to have obviously got that impression and are running scared. Two Scots are believed to be amongst the 20 gay MPs (now reduced to 19 since the death of North Down MP Sir James Kilfedder) who have received letters from Outrage. Both have large majorities. Both could come out tomorrow and they’d still be re-elected. Both voted for an age of consent of 16 - unlike Kilfedder who voted to keep the age at 21. It would be unkind of anybody to out these MPs - they have a right to a private life and their votes have always been cast in favour of lesbigay issues. However, it would be nice if they'd come out of their own accord and in their own time like Chris Smith. The sooner the better. Nevertheless, Outrage has been far too kind to those gay clerics and MPs like Kilfedder who have used their power to oppress us. They should be outed forthwith - we owe these people nothing. And, next time I encounter Peter Tatchell in some outdoor spot like Hampstead Heath, I'll no doubt ruin his evening and tell him just that! John Hein --------------------------------------------------------------- NEWS ==== COMMONS OFFICIALS SAY NO TO 16 A move to reduce the male gay age of consent to 16 in Scotland has been scuppered by parliamentary officials. An SCCL/OUTRIGHT Scotland promoted amendment to the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill, which would have corrected the continuing inequality in the age of consent for gay men, introducing an equal age of consent in Scotland of 16 for all, has been ruled outwith the scope of the Bill by the Clerk to the Commons Standing Committee considering it. As is usual, the ruling has been accepted by the Standing Committee chairs, MPs Iain Mills and Norman Hogg. The amendment, drafted by OUTRIGHT Scotland, sought simply to alter the age of consent for gay sex from 18 to 16, bringing it into line with that for heterosexual and lesbian sex. Scotland’s MPs voted by a margin of 53 votes to 17 in favour of a similar amendment to equalise the age of consent at 16 throughout Britain, the last time the issue was debated in February 1994, but their vote was outweighed by the votes of MPs from other parts of Britain and Northern Ireland, and the amendment was narrowly defeated. Since then, a number of MPs who opposed equality have indicated that they have changed their minds, whilst others have been replaced at by-elections by MPs who support equality. Two seats formerly occupied by recently deceased closet gay homophobes are currently empty. The issue was raised again this year at the second reading debate of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill, on February 27th, by Mike Watson, MP for Glasgow Central, who said, 'I believe it is totally illogical to have an age of consent of 16 for heterosexuals and 18 for male homosexuals. Scots law has often been ahead of its English and Welsh counterparts. I suggest it should take the lead again.' Standing Committee Member Ian Davidson, MP for Glasgow Govan, was told by the Clerks' Office that the amendment falls outwith the 'long title' of the Bill, which defines the Bill's purposes, on the grounds that those purposes are all associated with the investigation, prosecution and sentencing of crimes, rather than what is or is not a crime. Tim Hopkins, of OUTRIGHT Scotland's Law Reform Group, expressed disappointment. 'How are Scotland's MPs supposed to propose amendments to the criminal law in Scotland if they cannot do so in a Criminal Justice (Scotland) Bill?' He indicated that OUTRIGHT Scotland's campaign for an equal age of consent would continue, 'The Government may have hoped that by reducing the age of consent from 21 to 18 last year, they could bury the issue. But the principle is equality, and Scotland's MPs have already voted overwhelmingly for it. We will take every possible opportunity to get the issue raised in Parliament again and again until we get that equality.' AULD NICK Sir Nicholas Fairbairn, MP for Perth and Kinross, died earlier this year still firmly in the closet. Although once an Honorary Vice-President of the Scottish Minorities Group (now OUTRIGHT Scotland), he resigned when the press found out and claimed that he hadn't realised what sort of perverted minority was involved. During the Age of Consent debate in the House of Commons last year, he had to be called to order by the Speaker after starting a drunken diatribe against homosexuals and the evils of buggery. Nevertheless, he was and he did - one straight man who remembers being propositioned by Fairbairn in the '60s told ScotsGay, 'It was really a shame - if he’d just accepted and been open about his bisexuality it would have taken a lot of pressure off him and he might not have taken to the drink'. CAMPAIGN'S ANNUAL GET-TOGETHER The Annual General Meeting of OUTRIGHT Scotland, held in Edinburgh on March 25th was a varied affair. It was kicked off with a talk by Saint Kate Fearnley of the Edinburgh Bisexual Group who spoke thought provokingly on 'Sleeping with the enemy?' The new Convenor of OUTRIGHT, Martin Walker, took the opportunity to come out as bisexual. He very nearly wasn't elected to the post as the Returning Officer had turned up at an earlier meeting pissed and had lost his nomination! Several Constitutional Amendments were passed - mainly to make the organisation more attractive to women members - and the size of the Executive Committee (now to be called the Co-ordinating Committee to reflect its changed role) was reduced. A comprehensive Equal Opportunities Policy was also passed. More controversial was the decision to sell the publishing company which produces Gay Scotland. Current Editor Dominic D'Angelo is to buy the company and the right to publish the magazine for five years in exchange for clearing off debts (many of which are owed to him) of ukp16,000. Amendments from James Halcrow sought to either delay for further reflection with a view to seeking open tenders for the magazine, or to prevent D'Angelo from selling on the right to publish to other people. A further amendment would have given OUTRIGHT, in the unlikely event that Gay Scotland circulation went over 2,000, a 12.5% royalty on each copy over that number. These amendments were soundly defeated (17-5) and D'Angelo walked off with a business which is worth at least ukp10,000 a year in profit. Nice work if you can get it! Finally, the group considered the position of its property in Broughton Street. It was decided that it should be retained and made fully accessible to people with disabilities. Dick Wilson CONDOMS GALORE Scottish AIDS Monitor have had a great response to their recently launched Bondage Condom Pack. The pack was produced by volunteers and features a much fancied local shy boy. The Gay Men's Project are not giving in to demands to release the name of the model, but those close to him might get a clue if we reveal that SAM volunteers had to shave his broad brown back before the shoot. Those of you who haven't got your hands on this smooth matt black pack should notice that it will be distributed by Gay Men's Project Volunteers at their SM Fetish Night II, at Club X, on Tuesday 18th April. A night not to be missed if you like men in uniforms, rubber, leather, hard hats or not very much at all. If you would like to receive the new condom pack by post, call Bruce, Colin or Peter at SAM on 0141-353 3133. SAM PUSHES ON The staff at SAM's Gay Men’s Project are currently trying to set up an HIV+ Gay Men' s Action Group in Strathclyde. This move comes after a year in which workers have noted a dearth of HIV+ gay men on decision making committees. 'There is a failure to prioritise appropriate education and care services for gay men”, said Peter McGrath, Team Leader, “and a lot of the people who have the power to make things happen are very out of touch with the opinions of HIV+ gay men.' Although the HIV epidemic is still quite 'invisible' on the gay scene in Scotland, official statistics reveal 1 in 20 gay men in Glasgow and Edinburgh to be HIV+. The Gay Men's Project believe that since gay men still make up the biggest group of new infections, and, since it is apparent that gay men’s needs are being ignored or at best de-emphasised, it is necessary for them to move their campaigning up a gear while continuing with all of their ongoing work. SAM have stated that their plans for work on the gay scene will be unaffected by the recent loss of funding. Fundraisers will be stepped up and contingency funds will be utilised to ensure that services continue. WORD POWER The new independent bookshop Word Power in West Nicolson Street, Edinburgh specialises in books on race and culture, feminism, green issues and politics, and is celebrating its launch with an evening of culture, music and fun on Saturday 22nd of April. Among the writers who will be reading from their work is Janice Galloway, winner of the McVitie's prize for Scottish writer of the year. One of the highlights of the evening will be the hilariously funny cabaret band Vive l'hysteric from Dundee. The event takes place in the Southside Community Centre in Nicolson Street and starts at 8pm. Tickets are available in advance from the bookshop (ukp3.50/ukp2) or at the door (ukp4/ukp2.50). GOC's BIGGER SPLASH The Gay Outdoor Club's Strathclyde Group are embarking on a new venture by hiring a pool for their weekly swim. The education department have agreed to let the pool at Woodside Secondary School, Berkeley Street, Glasgow between 8 and 9pm on Thursday nights during term time. A charge of ukp1.50 per head will be made which is expected to be sufficient to cover the cost of hiring the pool as well as the services of qualified lesbian and gay lifeguards. The pool is conveniently located close to the city centre and has a 16 foot deep end. Numbers of up to 30 are permitted for private group hires. Swimmers of all standards are welcome - the Group aims to have tuition for learners or those wishing to improve on their style. During school holidays (when the pool is unavailable) the group will meet informally in North Woodside Pool, about half a mile away near St Georges Cross. Initial enquiries from those interested in the group to Douglas on 0141-848 6643. The Gay Outdoor Club is celebrating its 21st birthday this year. In Scotland, a programme of nearly 40 events has been drawn up for 1995 - and that doesn't include the regular Glasgow and Edinburgh swimming nights. Amongst the highlights of the programme are Munro bashing and a long weekend on the bleak and inaccessible island of Jura. HIGHLANDS Scottish AIDS Monitor in Inverness formally handed over on 1st of April to Reach Out Highland, the first Sexual Health Charity for the Highlands of Scotland. Funded by Highland Health Board, the new charity is based in Inverness, and run by people living in the community. Its main aim is to encourage and support people throughout the Highlands - whether living there or visiting - to take responsibility for, manage, and make informed decisions about their sexual health and well-being. SCOTTISH PRIDE Pride Scotland continue with preparations for their Summer weekend in June. The march will start from Broughton Street with the consent of the Regional Council and Police. FALSE ATTACK An Edinburgh gay man who told police that his flat had been the subject of an attack by the fascist British National Party has admitted that he caused the damage himself to back up a fraudulent insurance claim he intended to make. OUTRIGHT OUTRIGHT Scotland's new Co-ordinating Committee is: Sean Cross, Michael Gracy, Hugo Greenhalgh, James Halcrow, John Hein, Tim Hopkins and Martin Walker (Convenor). Tim Hopkins was co-opted at the committee's first meeting. LOCKED UP Two men have been arrested following a TV appearance by OUTRIGHT Scotland's Police Liaison Group Spokesperson Ian Dunn. They have been charged with attacks on gay men in the Regent Road area of Edinburgh. A Glasgow police officer apparently recognised the men and tipped off his Edinburgh colleagues. BORDERS Borders Gay Switchboard closed down at 10pm on Wednesday 29th of March. David Henderson, the Switchboard's Co-ordinator blamed lack of support for the service and shortage of his time for the closure. --------------------------------------------------------------- SERIAL ====== GRANDMA, WE LOVE YOU In the previous episode of our serial on Dave and Paul's formative years by Tony Hiscox-Sloane, the two 18 year olds came out to each other. Now, here's part three, so read on ... Paul and I had decided that although we were really fond of each other, it was best not to come out to anyone in our families just yet. Our little secret, as it were. We would just try to grab the moment as best we could, after all we were two fit and horny young men in our prime. Every Easter for the last few years, since my grandfather's death, I used to go over to Edinburgh to visit my gran and the spare bedroom had more or less become my very own territory. Whilst I was on the phone to her making the arrangements, I took the bull by the horns and asked if I could bring a friend with me this time. 'Of course, Dear', Gran replied, 'but it will be a bit of a squeeze. I will have to put the Z-bed up in your room, as you know I only have one spare room.' 'That's OK, Gran', I said loudly, for Gran was a bit on the deaf side. 'I'll see you on the Friday evening, Dear', Gran said, as she rang off. As I put the phone back in the cradle, the smile on my face told all. I couldn't wait to tell Paul, I just hoped to God that he had nothing else arranged for that weekend. Three nights on our own, the very thought of it was giving me a hard on. I lay back on the bed, my hard-on busting out of my jeans, and it seemed a pity to waste it. I rolled my jeans down to my ankles, slipped my pants down, and my cock slapped against my belly. Shutting my eyes, and closing my fist round my excitement, I proceeded to wank myself, slowly at first, picking up the pace as my imagination took over. The thought of Paul giving me a good shagging really had me sore in the groin. One minute I was pumping away, the next I was shooting all over my chest, the tension and the relief were incredible. I had had some good wanks in my time but that one scored a 9 on the scale of 1-10. Roll on Easter! OOO Paul was delighted with the idea and, like me, he couldn't wait for the Friday to come round. We got the 19.00hrs train to Edinburgh, arriving at Waverley on time at 19.50hrs. When we arrived at Gran's, the clock was just striking 20.30hrs. 'Do you two want a bite of supper?' she asked. 'Yes please', we both blurted out in unison. 'I'll get it ready and you can show Paul where to take his bag, I am sure you could do with a freshen up, supper will be ready in 20 minutes.' 'How dare she call me a bag', I thought with a smile. When I opened the bedroom door, the sight that greeted us started us both off into a fit of the giggles. Gran had already made up the spare bed and had put it right alongside the other bed, just like a double. I was always close to Gran, and on reflection, I wonder if she knew more about me than I realised. She had never let on, mind you, she had never questioned me about girlfriends either. 'Supper's ready', Gran cried. 'Righty oh'. 'I hope you boys don't mind the bed like that, it's the only way you can get two beds in that room and still be able to move about', she apologised. 'No, that's fine Gran, just fine', I reassured her. I looked at Paul and winked at him. A big gentle smile came across his face, you know the kind that just melts your very inner reserve. God, I wanted him right then. However, that would have to wait a bit longer. Not too long though, I could feel my loins beginning to stir at the very thought of him. I pulled my shirt outside my trousers to cover my embarrassment, just in case Gran got sight of it. I usually went to bed at about 11 o'clock when at Gran's, and although we were as keen as hell to get there we just managed to hold out. 'See you in the morning, Gran', I said as I kissed her on the cheek. 'Goodnight Dear, Goodnight David', she said. 'Goodnight', David returned. Closing the bedroom door behind us Paul whispered to me, 'God, I want you'. 'No need to whisper', I replied. 'Remember, Gran is quite deaf, and her bedroom has both the kitchen and a cupboard between her and us.' I held him tightly in my arms and smiled as I felt his cock stiffen against me. 'You randy sod', I taunted at him. 'You can talk', he replied grabbing hold of my solid dick. We cuddled for a while, then Paul pushed me away from him, and in a few seconds he was stripped down to a pair of the sexiest white pants I had ever seen, his cock running at 45% up his leg left nothing to the imagination. I needed no instructions to join him. Once between the sheets we kissed and caressed as never before. 'David' Paul whispered in my ear. 'I want to fuck you, what do you think?' 'I thought you would never ask', I replied with a huge smile. He leaned over to his trousers and pulled out a packet of condoms. 'Come prepared did you, eh'? Quickly he rolled one down his length and positioned himself astride of me. 'Be gentle' I pleaded. I needn't have worried. Once the initial discomfort was over, Paul eased his full length inside me. 'Are you OK?' 'Oh ... yes please!' Slowly at first, Paul thrust away at me, getting faster and faster until he found a rhythm he was happy with. I was in heaven. That was what I had been waiting for. His breath was getting quicker and quicker, I could tell he was near to coming. All of a sudden he pulled out and rubbed his cock against the cheeks of my arse, gripping me tighter and tighter then his whole body shook as he came. That was only the start of the most pleasurable night I had ever experienced in my short life. Now I knew why condoms come in threes. All this and still two nights left. We both slept contented ... To be continued... ------------------------------------------------------------- CAMPAIGNING =========== 'TIL THE LAW DO US PART When planning the future with your partner whether it be the choice of this summer's holiday destination or more permanent long term plans; a new home or job, consider for a moment how you would feel if you were unable to make such plans together because your partner has no rights to stay here. Hundreds of gay and lesbian couples cannot make such plans because one partner is foreign with no rights to remain in the UK on the basis of their relationship. Foreign partners in heterosexual relationships are often allowed to remain including common - law and unmarried heterosexual couples. No such provision exists allowing partners of Lesbians and Gay men to remain, even where they meet the same criteria set out for heterosexuals. The Stonewall Immigration Group has grown from less then 10 couples to 250 couples in one year, including couples from Scotland. The aim of the group is to provide support and advice to couples, to assist in the submission of applications to the Home Office and to lobby for a change in the immigration rules. In its first year of campaigning the group has had wide spread coverage in the press, had the issue raised in the House of Commons, met with senior civil servants and organised a protest outside the Home Office with the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants includes couples form Scotland, Wales and the rest of the UK couples affected by this policy. The group exists to lobby for change, whilst offering practical and emotional support to couples who wish to solve their situation by challenging the practice of the Home Office. Mark Watson of the group commented, 'For years couples facing this problem have entered into false marriages at substantial cost, living ongoing lies to resolve their position - what other legislation forces normally law abiding people to deceive the authorities simply because they happen to love someone from another country? The group encourages couples to make honest applications to the Home Office - we are certainly having an effect, I understand that the Home Office has had to allocate staff specifically to deal with these applications.' Mark an ex-Immigration Officer himself made the news 12 months ago when he was jailed for falsely stamping his Brazilian lover's passport. Since his release he has been working as a full time volunteer at Stonewall. Ander (his boyfriend) was forced to leave the UK in January 1994 but returned to the UK after Mark's release and now awaits the decision of the Home Office on his application. As the debate on Gay and Lesbian equality moves on it is likely that the current discriminatory Immigration policy will come under greater scrutiny. A change in the law is not required to bring about change, the regulations that the Immigration service adhere to do not require debate in Parliament, simply the political will to bring about change. The Stonewall Immigration Group's commitment to bringing about a change in attitude is total. The Group will launch their document 'Compelling Circumstances: Arguments for equality in UK immigration law' at Westminster on 26 April, being the anniversary of Watson's imprisonment. We hope to show that the love between couples of the same sex is just as strong and just as durable as that between heterosexuals. Inequality is the concern of us, whether gay or straight. Although the numbers affected by this inequality are small the results are devastating. During last years Age of Consent debate the Home Secretary Michael Howard said: 'These (gay) people should be free to pursue their lives in private without discrimination of any kind.' It will be interesting to see whether such sentiments are remembered at that time. Philip Gill / Mark Watson For further information on the Group contact Stonewall on 0171-222 9007. Stonewall, 2 Greycoat Place, London SW1P 1SB. -------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERVIEWS ========== SHE CAME TO EDINBURGH Bestselling author Mary Wings recently visited Edinburgh as part of a UK tour to promote her latest Emma Victor Mystery 'She Came By The Book' and shared a few random thoughts with John Hein. Who are you writing for? Anybody who likes a good story. Not particularly lesbians or gay men? I think I do kind of do it for my friends. I feel very much as if I'm telling a story and feel like I have somebody under my arm in some way and sometimes it's an actual person and sometimes it's not. I wrote the first book for my girlfriend and I was never insulted when she fell asleep because I like to read and so the rhythm of my voice made her drift off and I considered it as a compliment. What I'm writing now, She Came to the Castro, I'm writing for my friend Derek who's just gone blind. I feel like I'm blind when I write the stories and he's blind, so we hang out together and I really write a lot for him. So, it all depends. I certainly don't write for my parents! Are the characters in She Came By The Book based on real life people? Obviously Howard Blooming is Harvey Milk and Jeb Flynne is Dan White. There are still lots of rumours about White, who was a munitions expert - many people wonder if he really didn't commit suicide and was secreted off somewhere... I found many of your characters horribly realistic - not particularly nice people. When you're writing a suspense novel, you have to have eight suspicious people. So they all have to have a secret. For me, I don't find them all negative characters - one of the most negative appearing... the fashion photographer who you think is just totally the sort of superficial, jet-setter, lesbian who just doesn't care, is in the fashion world, is taking pictures of skinny women and sleeping with them on assignments, she appear to be, you know, the worst that people can think of but it turns out that she's basically helping two people who have gone underground from the '60s. I also like Renquist Falkenberg in a way. He's based a bit on someone I know who gives me a fabulous hug - he hugs everyone. I find the characters are very mixed and, for such an action novel, very complex. But of course, people do mean things - they all have to act very suspicious. Would you be upset if someone referred to your book as a potboiler? You can call it a potboiler, whatever you want to call it. If I was hugely concerned with labels or not being considered literary enough, I wouldn’t be in this field anyway. I just love to write the stories. I’m a good story teller and if the language is interesting and good if the writing is good, that's all that matters. Are you going to continue to write about the USA or is there any chance of a novel set in Scotland? It looks like Divine Victim could be an option for a film - it could conceivably be placed in Northumbria which would be wonderful. It would be a very very appropriate place to put it especially with all the collapse of the mining industry and the way the unions were busted. But I’ve no plans to write a specifically Scottish novel. I have a very big foreign audience in Germany and Holland (and Spanish and Japanese translations). I think that part of the appeal of the books is taking people to San Francisco. One of the points which I wanted to make in the book and which I'm sure came across is that once you get that much electoral power - once you get that much of a kind of good population base and some really out gay and lesbian businesses and travel bureaus it just replicates the rest of society. So of course, there are glossy magazines now for men who want to buy gay Gucci shoes and there's every shade of activity - capitalist and otherwise - happening there. And one of the things that’s happening is that more of our arts organisations and social works organisations are being funded privately; so there’s much more emphasis on non-profit boards to locate the rich people. It’s not the direction we should be going in. Arts and social organisations should be funded by community groups, by government grants, with peer review panels, and not by rich people who decide suddenly that this project is worthy but that one isn't. Your next book? She Came to the Castro. It's about the Castro Theatre. A continuation of the last one, definitely. One thing that people ask me a lot is 'Why is there not a happy ending?'. I just don't like happy endings - I prefer very ambivalent endings. I'm also writing for the single gay person or for the gay person with a broken heart. So much as gays and lesbians we're defined that way because we're in a couple and the issues are that you come out to your parents, you come out to your job - but suddenly if you're unpartnered, if you're single and if you're dealing with dating - where does that put you in fact? In some kind of less defined area? I don't think so - but it's a nice ambivalency to work with in the book. So Emma has to date - that will be interesting for her. How do you find that gay men react to the explicit lesbian sex scenes in your books? 'Her hands inside me like a velvet glove' - that bit seems to get everybody - gay or straight. For me, sexual excitement and tension is very similar to suspense and so it's a part of the book. It's interesting, lesbians in San Francisco are taking over a lot of gay male behaviour and anonymous sex and stuff because gay men aren't doing that as much for health reasons. There's a funny kind of crossover. I know women who really like to read or see gay male porn because it’s real. I mean, if we get lesbian porn, it's going to be Playboy and Playmate - it's very unrealistic. The thing about gay male porn is that it's very realistic - usually two guys who're really into each other. I think it has more to do with authenticity than the actual genitalia involved. I mean, how do you do it? There aren't that many huge differences that people bring to the experience - it's so much about emotion, sensuality and so much about power. I think people relate to these things much more than the genital mechanism. In our next issue, we hope to be publishing an extract from She Came By The Book. JOAN BURNIE Joan Burnie, the agony aunt and columnist from the Daily Record, we've all heard of her. Those of us who have read her column will know that she has very strong opinions on most subjects from sex to sexuality, men to prostitution - even dogs. Vicky Johnson braved the winds of Anderston Quay and went to see her for ScotsGay. Nothing is sacred to the controversial Ms Burnie. But can she justify herself? It seemed that everyone wanted to find out but no-one was brave enough to do it. Well, call me brave, call me stupid, but I had to do it. I had to separate the woman from the journalist. What do you think of International Womens Day? I think it is patronising, appalling and awful. I don't think it will achieve anything: most women journalists are against it. There are so many talented female writers out there who give it their best all year round and nobody bats an eyelid until this one day and women everywhere are supposed to be grateful. This is a male dominated world - women should be taking a stand not letting the boys patronise us yet again. A lot of men read your articles. What do you think they think of you? Men think I'm insulting. They also see me as threatening probably because I'm not afraid to speak my mind. Also, because I write from a woman's point of view, some men may misinterpret it and see it as slanderous. Your writing indicates that you are narrow minded. Would you agree? Certainly not! Life is shades of grey, but in order to be a good journalist you must only look at one side of the question. Therefore, you have to write in black and white - you cannot sit on the fence, you must go one way or the other. You come across as being homophobic. Are you? No, I am not homophobic. Again, it comes down to writing in black or white and because I'm a heterosexual woman, I cannot write from a gay point of view: so it can look as if I'm homophobic. Do you think that gay people are promiscuous? I think some gay people are promiscuous. I also think some heterosexual people are too. It depends on the person, not the sexuality. What do you think of gay weddings? I don't think any different to gay weddings than I do to heterosexual ones. If two people are so much in love that they want love blessed then so be it. There are far worse things that two people can do to each other than make love, but in this day and age I think marriage is devalued. Do you agree with Outing? No, I don't agree with it. If someone wants to come out then good, but there are so many problems involved in doing so, no-one should be forced into it. Do you think that the Press gives gay people a hard time? There aren't enough gay people working in the media. So again, it comes down to black and white. The main image heterosexual people get of gays is either the butch dyke or the very camp gay man. I don't think this gives off the right impression. I think more openly gay people should be working in the media, it would balance things out. Saying that, there are some icons, so to speak, but they won't come out. It would be a huge step forward if they did. What do you really think of AIDS Helplines? I think any helpline is useful if it gives comfort and support to anyone needing it whatever the cause or reason. Do you prefer men or dogs? I have two dogs: one male, one female. There is a degree of selfishness in having a dog. They don't complain if you arrive home late: they're so pleased to see you and just want a cuddle. Lovers don't! I'm very suspicious of people who don't like dogs - they must be afraid of touching. So, there you have it: my chat with the infamous Joan Burnie. Did she justify herself? Did I separate the woman from the journalist? You tell me ... Vicky Johnson Thanks to the Daily Record for our front cover photo of Joan Burnie. --------------------------------------------------------- INSIDE OUT ========== The most comprehensive guide to Scotland's scene bringing you all the news and gossip. You can peruse our Box adverts to see if Mr or Ms Right has finally appeared, and a quick glide through our venues list will ensure that if you find them you know where to take them or, if you don't, you know where to go... VENUES Aberdeen CLUB CABERFEIDH 9 Hadden Street. Tel: (01224) 212181. Thu-Sun 10pm-2am. The biggest and most popular Lesbian and Gay disco in the north! FLANNIES BAR 20 Stirling Street. Tel: (01224) 583881. Mon-Sat 11am-12pm, Sun 6.30pm-11pm. Run by the owners of Club Caberfeidh and just round the corner! Down to earth and friendly. Pool table. Deservedly popular with dykes. PINK FLAMINGO 47 Upper Kirkgate. Tel: (01224) 624472. Mon-Fri 5pm-2am, Sat-Sun 1pm-2am. Plush cocktail bar frequented by the trendier crowd. Dundee CLUB CRUISE 60 Brown Street (part of Oscars). Tel: (01382) 221176. Sat 11pm-3am. Noisy with soft lighting, but, despite its name, relaxed and not too cruisy. Possibility of a new monthly Wednesday Romp - watch this space. GAUGER BAR 75 Seagate. Tel: (01382) 226840. Mon-Sat 11am-midnight, Sun 6pm-11pm. Warm and friendly bar, seated lounge, pool table. Something for everyone! Edinburgh BLUE MOON 36 Broughton Street. Tel: 0131-557 0911. Mon-Thu 9.30am-midnight. Fri 9.30am-3am. Sat-Sun 5am-3am!!!! (Brasserie Noon-3pm & 6-11pm). Popular lesbigay cafe. The 'Other Side of the Moon' Brasserie is entered from Broughton Street whilst the Barony Street entrance gives access to the cafe. BUSTER BROWN'S 25-27 Market Street. Tel: 0131-226 4224. Fri-Sun late-4am. Plush new gay weekend club. At the rear entrance to Waverley Station and the foot of the Scotsman Steps. CAFE LUCIA 13-29 Nicolson Street. Tel: 0131-662 1112. Generally 10am-10pm but hours vary according to performances. Mixed bar attached to the Edinburgh Festival Theatre. Full of luvvies and their friends! C.C. BLOOM'S 23 Greenside Place. Tel: 0131-556 9331. Noon-3am. Bar/diner serving superb food in the Hole in the Wall restaurant (Noon-10pm). Karaoke on Thursday and Sunday. Kwizoki Night on Tuesday at 10pm. Male strippers Sun afternoons. Disco every night. CITY CAFE 19 Blair Street. Tel: 0131-220 0125. Mon-Sat 11am-1pm, Sun 11am-midnight. Not as outrageously mixed as it used to be, but still seriously conventional. DRONDALE LIMITED 60 Broughton Street. Tel: 0131-556 1471. Open Mon-Fri 10am-7pm, Sat 12-8. Situated at the front of the Edinburgh Lesbian Gay and Bisexual Centre. Undoubtedly the largest gay shop north of Manchester, carrying a large selection of magazines, cards, toys, underwear, swimwear, leather and rubberwear. Well worth a visit. Worldwide mail order service. EDINBURGH LESBIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL CENTRE 58a and 60 Broughton Street. Owned by OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND, it houses the Bisexual Resources Centre, Calosa Publishing Limited, Drondale Limited, The Edge Cafe, and Pride Scotland as well as providing meeting and noticeboard space for many lesbigay organisations. EDGE CAFE 60 Broughton Street. 9am-1am. Licensed cafe at the rear of the Edinburgh LG&B Centre. Recently revamped - the new vamp is called Recently. INSINUENDOS CABARET CLUB 2 Picardy Place. Tel: 0131-556 0499. Basement Cabaret Bar in QT's - cabaret plus disco. Sat - free cabaret at midnight, Mon - male stripper at midnight. Karaoke some other nights - but ask. JOY AT THE CALTON 20 Calton Road. Tel: 0131-558 3758. Sat 11pm-late. Edinburgh's Saturday One Nighter. Reduced entry before midnight. Free membership. Wheelchair accessible. LEITH OYSTER BAR 10 Burgess Street, Leith. Tel: 0131-554 6294. Noon-1am. Mixed but popular with students and Real Ale queens. Selection of real ales and good food. LORD NELSON BAR Linden Hotel, 9-13 Nelson Street. Tel: 0131-557 4344. Mon-Sat Noon-2pm, 6pm-11pm. Sun 7pm-11pm. A quiet bar attached to Edinburgh's biggest gay hotel. Superb Thai restaurant. MAGGIE RAYES 85 Rose Street Lane North. Tel: 0131-225 7651. Noon-1am. Frenetically friendly impromptu cabaret bar - formerly French Connections. Friday is karaoke night! New late licence promised until 2am at weekends. Wheelchair accessible. NEW TOWN BAR 26B Dublin Street. Tel: 0131-538 7775. Noon-1am. Especially popular with Bears, but has wide clientele. Real Ale. Intense, the sub-basement men only cruise bar is open Thu-Sat 9pm-1am - women allowed as guests. No EIGHTEEN 18 Albert Place. Tel: 0131-553 3222. Mon-Sat Noon-10pm. Scotland's only sauna club for gay gentlemen - run by a couple of straight Dykes! QT'S BAR 2 Picardy Place. Tel: 0131-556 0499. Noon-2am. Bright city centre bar with a mixed crowd of all ages. At the Centre of Edinburgh's Gay Triangle. ROUTE 66 6 Baxter's Place. Tel: 0131-556 5991. Mon-Fri 1.30am. Sat Noon-1.30am. Sun 4pm-1.30am. Food served all day. Discos Fri, Sat and Sun with DJs Christine, Claire, Craig and Patsy. Real Ale. S.L.A.G.S. AT THE CALTON STUDIOS 20 Calton Road. Tel: 0131-558 3758. Fri 11pm-late. Another one nighter with DJs Ross Keddie and Martin Valentine. Wheelchair accessible. THEATRE ROYAL BAR 24 Greenside Place. Tel: 0131-557 2142. Mon-Sat 11am-midnight. Sun 6pm-11pm. Basically straight, this Real Ale bar (formerly a Gas Board Showroom) in the middle of Edinburgh's Gay Triangle attracts an increasing number of queers having an off-scene pint before heading for the fleshpots nearby. VOGUE AT CLUB M8 12 Shandwick Place. Tel: 0131-226 2266. Fri 10.30pm-4am. New and busy one nighter at the West End of Princes Street. A free bus runs from other lesbigay venues in the city. DJs Wild Women of Wonga (Michelle and Gillian formerly of Joy). WEST & WILDE BOOKSHOP 25a Dundas Street. Tel: 0131-556 0079. Tue-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun Noon-5pm. Scotland's only lesbian and gay bookshop. Lots of books and quite a few magazines! WOMEN’S NETWORK DISCO The Calton, 20 Calton Road. Tel: 0131-558 3758. Women-only disco on the first Friday of the month - 10pm-3am. The venue is wheelchair accessible. Falkirk DROOKIT DUCK 16 Grahams Road. Tel: 01324 613644 Mon 11am-3pm and 5pm-11.30. Tue-Thu 11am-3pm and 5pm-12.30am. Fr-Sat 11am-12.30am. Sun 7pm-midnight. Straight bar used by a few local gays. Glasgow AUSTINS 183a Hope Street. Tel: 0141-332 2707. Mon-Sat Noon-midnight, Sun 12.30am-midnight. Friendly and busy basement pub. Food lunchtimes. Entertainment every evening. BENNETS DISCO 80-90, Glassford Street. Tel: 0141-552 5761. Tue-Sun 11pm-3am. Very popular busy gay disco. Tuesdays straight. CAFE DELMONICA'S 68 Virginia Street. Tel: 0141-552 4803. Mon-Sun Noon-midnight. Food Noon-7pm. Busy semi trendy pub with backroom area (but not THAT kind of backroom!). Cabaret Thurdays. Karaoke Wed and Sun. Happy hours 5-7 and 9-10 every night. CCA Centre for Contemporary Arts, 350 Sauchiehall Street. Tel: 0141-332 7521. Centre open Mon- Wed 9am-11pm Thur-Sat 9am-midnight. Bookshop 11am-7pm. Galleries 11am-6pm (admission free). Two galleries, two performance spaces, cafe bar and bookshop. Lesbigay friendly place bustling with life, the universe and everything. Wheelchair accessible apart from upstairs performance space. CLUB X-CHANGE 25 Royal Exchange Square. Tel: 0141-204 4599. Tue-Sun 11pm-3am. Large basement club, popular with young crowd. Wednesday nights are straight (though still quite mixed). COURT BAR 69 Hutcheson Street. Tel: 0141-552 2463. Mon-Sat 11am-Midnight, Sun 8.30-11pm. Small bar beside former Sheriff Court. Straight until mid-evening. DIVALLY'S 86 Maxwell Street. Tel: 0141-221 4657. 11am-3am. Increasingly popular members' club containing lounge bar and cinema showing legal erotica (gay and straight). Gayer on Mon and Tue. Glasgow's only TV staff! Membership available at the door. EAT OUT 8-10 West George Street. Tel: 0141-332 7060. 10am-10pm, 7 days. Glasgow's first lesbigay cafe. Licensed. Interesting selection of breakfasts and other food from snacks to full meals. GHQ 8-10 West George Street. Tel: 0141-332 8005. Noon-midnight. Nice and convenient for Queen Street Station. Large bar featuring Suave Gav - Glasgow's most popular DJ - when he's not working at Bennets. SQUIRES LOUNGE 106 West Campbell Street. Tel: 0141-221 9184. Mon-Fri Noon-Midnight, Sat 12.30pm-Midnight, Sun 8pm-11pm. Long narrow intimate basement bar, DJ Thu, Fri & Sat. Packed at the weekend. Nightly happy hours. VICTORIA BAR 157-159 Bridgegait. Tel: 0141-552 6040. Mon-Sat Noon-midnight, Sun 12.30pm-midnight. Basically straight, but popular with real ale queens and dykes. THE WATERLOO 306 Argyle Street. Tel: 0141-221 7359. Mon-Sun Noon-midnight. Popular, crowded, down to earth drinking shop. Cabaret every Thursday, Karaoke on Sundays. Tuesdays Music and Quiz Night. Greenock Although Greenock doesn't have a gay bar as such, some local lesbians and gays meet and socialise in the Princess Lounge. Some young gays also use the Jolly Sailor to meet and play pool. Inverness NICO'S BAR/BISTRO Glen Mhor Hotel, Ness Bank. Tel: 01463 234308. Wed and Fri 9-11pm. Smart relaxed bar popular with local gays especially on Wednesday and Friday nights (9.15pm onwards). Mixed clientele. Kilmarnock KAYPARK TAVERN 27/29 London Road. Tel: 01563 523623. Straight pub - the lounge is said to be used by some local gays on Mondays. Stirling BARNTON BISTRO 3 1/2 Barnton Street. Tel: 01786 461698. Mon-Sat 10.15am -11pm (Meals Noon-8pm), Sun 6.30pm-11pm. Mixed, busy and friendly - popular with students. Good food. Real Ale. ABERDEEN So you think you've seen it all? Trust me, you ain't seen nothing yet because on the 6th of April, Aberdeen cranks the volume aaaaaaalll the way up to 11. Yep, it's Aberdeen's very own Heat of the one and only Mr Gay UK competition. If you're not content with all those competing chickens, sorry, bodies, I hear that the club will be presenting their very own local stripper (fluffy mohair undies and all) to unsuspecting random members of the public. All good clean fun (unless you can afford otherwise, of course!) Round at the Pink Flamingo, Grippy Graham (I wonder where that name comes from) tells us that a permanent womens' disco looks on the cards, a strange place to put a disco, I first thought, but who am I to question such a handy man... ahem... more details after the hostage exchange. What do you mean, "Strippers don't ring your bell?" You're obviously not pushing the right buttons... In Aberdeen? Into Pain? Into freeform oral-jazz explorations? Then come right along to the Karaoke on a Wed-Fri-Sat! And if you've got an eye for balls, then with the Pool for Cash competition on a Saturday - you'd have to work very hard at getting bored in Aberdeen! Sigh... Tea, coffee, gravity boots and a variety of snacklets are on the platter most days from 5pm - 2am and all day Saturday and Sunday (whether you actually eat them from there is another matter altogether though). Gossip! Quick, over here! Yes, under the table, did you bring the hose? Good... What are the girls at Flannies up to? I hear that quite a few have been swapping girlfriends, stamps and novelty ash trays! All except for Cath who never seems to get any fun eh? Don't you bother Hon! I've got an Alabama Treble Choc Death Slab with our name on it! DUNDEE As if the Dundee scene wasn't small enough! (But it's like me - perfectly formed. Ed) The closure of the Edge has been a bit of a downer on the Dundee scene. Hooooowever you can still get a one night stand on a Saturday with Club Cruise, 10.30pm-2.30am, and if we all ask nicely, it might expand to other nights too. It would appear that Karen is about to dig the paint pot and B&D Sander out of her makeup bag (Ow! Ow! Sorry don't hit me! The cheque hasn't cleared!) Looks like the Gauger is going up for a quick nip and tuck and believe it or not, a new look loo is on the cards as well (there it is again, what a strange place to put things... You'd think it would leak or something, wouldn't you? Eeew, what a curious thought... I may be vanilla flavoured, but I'm certainly not yellow!). Sweetie luv Karen is off on a week's holiday to Magaluf, to escape all the upheaval, look out all you Spanish ladies! Dyke alert! Hot off the keyboard, we hear that Karen has been busy trying to line up a weekly cabaret spot for the Gauger. Well, you know I'd do it in an instant, hon, but Air Traffic Control just won't give me clearance to put on my wig... Life, huh? Such a quiet little month in Dundee, better watch out though... We're out there, and although we don't bite, we're lethal with pillows! Keep your eyes peeled for the wee fat thing with the camera. See y'all soon! GLASGOW By the time we come out (giggle), Bennets should have had the stage re-surfaced after their heat of the Mr Gay UK competition. Like everyone else I am looking forward to the lovely bodies parading about the stage (** Slap ** - the wife) before the one and only Sassy Stryker and her boys. Fancy something different? Of course it won't hurt and yes, it is meant to go that colour... No? Oh well, better get your butt down to Bunty's on Friday the 28th of April for Glasgow Switchboard and Bennets benefit night. The money from the door is going to Scotland's first Gay Pride. So get along and support a well worth cause. Also, Bunty's has some class PA's this month... Optimystic-Cutback-Free Spirit-Julie Zee plus an exclusive PA by The Nightcrawlers (and their support act, The Pub-crawlers (lovely people, with whom I've spent many a midnight hour explaining just exactly what "drink up and get the F*%@*$ out" means). On the pub scene, we can exclusively reveal that Tennents have at last agreed to do a job on the Waterloo in the autumn. Yep, it's getting re-furbished some time in the autumn. We're not sure just exactly when the new loo roll will be arriving, but stay tuned - we'll keep you posted! I'm just such a little socialite (S-O-C-I-A-L-I-T-E, duh, *SLAP*) read, bad cook, so the last two Saturdays, I cheated (death) and decided to have my lunch out. Dropped in to Squires and Austins and, wayhey, real value for money and quality scenery to boot (if you catch my drift). Along with Eat Out at GHQ, Glasgow seems to be well hung with eateries just now. Go on! Go on! Try it... Try it... Just a little bit... You might like it! (giggle, de-ja vu, huh?) All you lunch(box)time girls will be glad to hear that GHQ is now open at lunchtimes too! (My God, can't you just, like, file your nails, drink Pepsi and harass the new office boy like the rest of us?) Yep, they've caught up with me... I tried my best to stay on the run but they cornered me on the way to the loo in Bennets, said if I didn't come across with the goods, they'd post the envelope.... The Glasgow Bars AIDS Welfare Committee (lovely, lovely people, honest! Honest!) tell me that they are trying to line up a major Scottish television personality for next year's Gay Ball. I hear that there's a new venue in the offing too - Glasgow's Central Hotel none the less! Cheap accomm and dress hire package for anyone who requires it is on the cards as well (These cards must be pretty crowded by now, dance floor, loo and a dress-hire/accom package...). More details in the post (Nooooooooooooooo!)Up Austins (if you're into that sort of thing (any pics???)) the Monday Club saw the return of that Little Miss Dynorod herself, the very popular Oddete Clarke. Mrs Reynolds and Mrs Morris are working on parole as we speak and we'll maybe have her back again in the near future! Round at Club X, their forth cuming 5th Birthday Bash includes dates throughout April, with appearances by Sister Bliss (28th), Norma Lewis (29th), Loleata Holloway (30th), and the one and only super fab Hazel Dean (16th). At Cafe Delmonica's, the cabaret menu this month includes Lota Lasagne (6th), Angie Gold (20th), Access All Areas (27th), and the ever popular Barbara Bryceland (13th). Still no sign of the new lino though... EDINBURGH Round at Buster Brown's we hear that a name change may be in the planning, Frocx a plus at the moment (but if you can think of anything better let me know, so I can rip it off and be witty and original). Still to come at Buster's this month are Dizire Dubfire, Legs from Heaven (hairstyle from hell?), and one not to miss - Smokin Jo. Buster's is now open till 4am, but you've got to be across the door by 2am and wigs don't count. Over at CC Blooms, they have taken on the mantle of the Edinburgh Mr Gay UK competition on Saturday the 8th. Other entertainments include strippers every Sunday at 3.30pm. Karaoke on a Sunday with big K(D)arn and on a Thursday with Colin and Ali. Now something of a difference is CCs one and only KWIZOKI. This has to be seen to be believed. Down on No 18, sorry (Do I come across as frustrated? Goooood), Down at it is still getting busier. Is the place going to be big enough? That is the burning question. A young friend of mine from Glasgow was seen taking his bed in. I know he is fond of the place and I'm sure it was purely for rest purposes - BUT(T)! Round at Maggie Rayes, I hear that Raymond is about to have it cut down to size - The bar! The Bar! What else? (I wonder... bwhuahuahua) When's the big event? Supposedly the dirty deed is being done (under general anaesthetic) whilst the place is closed for refurbishment. We are still awaiting the result of the Evening News pub of the year contest, to see how Route 66 got on in the final. We'll keep you posted (Nervous look). The Workmen have been in at the old Chapps Bar, but as yet no public announcement of an opening date and NO ONE HAS SEEN THEM LEAVE!!!! Spook Huh? I wonder what the darling Ray and Andy could have done (be doing) with (to) all those feisty men (and will they let me see the video afterwards!)... Someone was asking me the other day if I had seen Bill of Drondale fame, and if he was still alive (or just remarkably well preserved). Bill and the family are, indeed, alive and well and are busy attending to other matters outside of the gay scene. Fancy tossing 'yer caber? Fling yer thing o'er here then... The success of last year's Gay Highland Fling in Edinburgh has meant it will definitely go ahead this year. The same venue, with a date of Saturday the 19th of August. Fingers and various extendable extremities crossed for a little more summer-like weather. Crank up the volume, missus! Should be on line for another howling, camp day out. So set the diaries and the personal organisers and let it rip, sugar honey! ----------------------------------------------------------- BOXES - THE SCOTSGAY MEET MARKET ================================ To reply to a Contact Ad: By e-mail: We can now accept replies by e-mail for Box Numbers. They should be sent to boxreplies@drink.demon.co.uk and will be printed out and posted on by snail mail to the box number holders. There will be no charge for this service. As box number holders are unlikely to have access to e-mail, please include your name and address so that they can get back to you! And remember to include the box number that you're replying to clearly on each reply. By snail mail: Just pop your reply in an envelope with the box number written in the TOP RIGHT corner and place the envelope with your reply inside another envelope with two loose first class stamps. If you are writing from outside the UK, an International Reply Coupon (IRC) should be enclosed for each reply instead of postage stamps. International Reply Coupons are available from most Post Offices throughout the world. We are unable to send on replies without postage stamps or IRCs. Send all replies to: ScotsGay Magazine, Pageprint Limited, PO Box 666, Edinburgh. EH7 5YW. To place a Contact Ad: Write to the above address enclosing your advertisement copy. Ads are FREE of charge to the advertiser. Or you can send them by e-mail to scotsgay@drink.demon.co.uk MEN --- Hurt too often 20 year old Hello! Me 20, 5'7" tall, dark hair, med build. You 18-23, VGSOH, looks not important. Glasgow area. Genuine replies only. No idiots. Photo please. ALA. Nights in or out. Box SG0301 Falkirk Area Mid 20's gay couple seek other gay guys or couples in Falkirk, Stirling area aged under 30 for friendship, etc. Can travel, accommodate. Photo helpful. Box SG0302 Dundee - Perth - Anywhere Young, boyish, good looking gay lad with looks and body to match, seeks masculine, athletic gay/bisexual guys for fun/friendship/relationship. Can travel or accommodate. Photo and phone please. Box SG0303 Bit on the side wanted Guy, 36, in longstanding open relationship, seeks young smooth guy 18-26 for the occasional night in. Might suit bi guy with girlfriend who needs something different from time to time. Discretion assured if required. Box SG0304 Glasgow Area - Anywhere Sexy young gay male nudist seeks special other(s) for good times. Photo/phone if possible. Detailed letter ensures reply. Box SG0305 Dundee - Tayside - Anywhere Male 39 years, slim, good looking, seeks friends 18-40. Any race, colour for good times, possible 1-1. Please send photo, telephone number. ALA. Box SG0306 Central Scotland Very straight acting/looking decent guy - quiet sporty type. GSOH. Seeks similar inexperienced and definitely non-scene guy in 20s or 30s. Box SG0307 Friendly Bear seeks Smooth Cub Small friendly and extremely hairy bear, 38, would like to get his paws on a smooth young cub. Your cave or mine! Box SG0308 Gay Convincing TV - Aberdeen 45 year old seeks TV for caring relationship. Can accommodate. Photo and phone number please. 21 to 35 years old. Box SG0309 Glasgow VWE Good looking guy, 6, vwe, looking for TVs who look like the real thing. I will pamper and spoil you in return for lots of fun and sexy times. Box SG0310 Glasgow - Scotland Are you 21-35, lonely, needing a father figure to love, care for you and understand you? I am desperately looking for a 'son' for a loving disciplined relationship. Box SG0311 Glasgow 21 year old slim, student, netsurfer geek, blue eyes, 5'11", 9 stone, seeks platonic friendship with others (pref. non-scene) for general substance abuse (drink + tabs etc), fun and geeking. e-mail git@udcf.gla.ac.uk or write to: Box SG0312 Edinburgh Tall slim 34 seeks similar or younger guy interested in CP, discipline and spanking fantasies. Send full frank letter. ALAWP. Phone number helps. Discretion assured. Box SG0313 Central Scotland Guy, 30, shy, genuine, non-smoker, would like to hear from sales rep or similar who is seeking discreet friendship. Correspondence also welcome. Box SG0314 Railway enthusiast 39 year old, typical balding, bearded, beer-bellied gricer would like to hear from younger (18+) train spotter who fancies a travelling companion. Varied interests. Non smoker. Box SG0315 Too old at 40? If you're 18 and like the company of older guys, why not drop me a line? I'm kind and understanding and discreet if need be. Box SG0316 Glasgow - Passive nephew seeks uncle I'm 35, 6'2", hairy, clean shaven, seek older active uncle any age into massage, panties, spanking. Need horny mature guy. Try anything once. Box SG0317 Glasgow area 30, student, 5'7", slim, straight acting. Just coming out, looking for friendship, possible relationship with straight acting, understanding guy, willing to take time. 25-35 non-drinker preferred. Photo appreciated. Box SG0318 Edinburgh Gay guy 25, 5'9" tall, slim, good looking, seeks similar guy in the Edinburgh area up to 25 years who is bore with the scene and the usual meet market and wants some friendship and fun! If interested, please reply with a photo if possible to Box SG0319 Prisoner seeks penpal Romantic guy, true Scorpio, 6ft tall with mousy hair and green eyes, slim build with 'tache, currently guest of Her Majesty, seeks penpal. I have many interests: music, reading, (travel - used to be), design and art. Box SG0323 Tayside/Dundee 38yo passive guy would like to meet younger active gay/bi guy for discreet no strings fun. Can travel. ALAWP. Box SG0324 Looking for friendship I'm Kevin, 23-years-old, 5'10'',good-looking, enjoys swimming, tennis, water sport, seeks new friendship and more. Box SG0325 Edinburgh Literate, unstuffy, cat-loving, beer drinking, garlic using queer (40) would like to hear from student type (non-smoker) with a few to forming an uncomplicated relationship. Box SG0326. Edinburgh 25 year old guy, unemployed, would like to meet SMers, shoe enthusiasts, boot lickers, exhibitionists, from 18-30 years old. Own place in Leith. Box SG0328 Glasgow: Shy Student I'm 18 years old, 6ft, 14st, brown hair/eyes, Love art, musicals, jazz, classical music, computing. I seek anyone who finds me interesting. Please enclose a photo with reply. Box SG0329 Perth 18 year old, going to University in Edinburgh next year, seeks friends around the same age. No older guys please. Box SG0330 Relaxed hippy 42 year old guy, would like to mellow out with equally relaxed younger guy. Your pad or mine, man! Box SG0331 Militant atheist 39 year old guy would be willing to share his prejudices with others. Students welcome. Christians will be eaten so need not apply. Box SG0332 WOMEN ----- Cumbernauld - Glasgow Lesbian mum, early 30s, quiet sensitive veggie non-smoker. Likes music, films, friendship, seeks new friends, possibly relationship. Box SG0320 BISEXUAL -------- New experiences Rather nervous guy (43), previously gay, beginning to explore other possibilities, seeks understanding woman. Box SG0321 Silver Bear Seeks Cuddles Bi gay (40s), silvery fur, seeks friendly bi woman (under 30) for bear hugs. Existing relationships (gay or straight) do not present a problem. Preferably in Glasgow/Edinburgh areas. Box SG0322 Mature man seeks friends in the West London area. Either sex. Can't put it any clearer than that! Box SG0327 COMMERCIAL ---------- Antiquity Showcase We have the following genuine artifacts for sale: No 1 - Byzantine Bronze Ring which is decorated with a four leaf flower pattern. Dark green patination. c 1000AD. ukp24. No 2 - Egyptian Eye Amulet. A blue glazed Udjat Eye Amulet with clear details. Late period. Large. Slight chip, hence inexpensive. ukp27. No 3 - Roman British Bronze Belt Decoration found in Yorkshire. Bargain at ukp15. For information, please phone Andy on 01282 862351. New Zealand Accommodation SIGMA - South Island Gay Managed Accommodation, a network of accommodation for gays and lesbians visiting the South Island of New Zealand. For a free list, write to: Ron Harris, Shag Point, RD2 Palmerston, Otago, NZ or phone 00 64 3-465-1742. Worldwide Penfriends Regular lists. Make friends, exchange holidays, improve your languages. For general and music lovers' lists send ukp3 to 'The Penpal List', c/o 221B Merton Road, Southfields, London. SW18 5EE. 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Accountancy Services Tax problems, accounting, auditing, business plans, call Marios on 0131-555 0600 (Fax: 0131-555 6652). We are members of the Chartered Association of Certified Accountants and Registered Auditors. Personal and confidential service. International Gay Entrepreneurs Network Lambda Net: the largest global network of Gay Men & Womyn worldwide. Seeking serious folks in EU to extend business. Unlimited financial opportunity. No investments required. e-mail: salvato@ix.netcom.com or write: Dr. Gianmichael Salvato, DMSc, PhD, Cellular Dynamics Worldwide, 6131 N Sixteenth Street Suite B-206, Phoenix, AZ 85016-1720, USA. FRIENDS ABROAD -------------- 21 y.o. Portuguese boy, studying sciences, looks for friendship with other boys all over the world. I like Nature, Classic Music, History and Travelling, and, of course, Internetting. e-mail: biopp@cc.fc.ul.pt or write to: Paulo Emanuel, P.O.Box 4327, 1500 LISBON, Portugal. Macho guys! Easy-going, tall, Dutch leatherguy is looking for international contact with gays to exchange experiences and entertain each other with stories and pics. Email me on jano@euronet.nl or write to Jan van Kempen, Koningsweg 86, Netherlands. 5211 BN GWM professional, 55, 5'10, salt and pepper, stocky, good-looking: I would love to correspond via e-mail. I travel a great deal, love cooking, opera, romance, computers. Bob Rivkin, 1934 Mount Royal Terrace, Baltimore, MD 21217-4805, USA Cute Texas-Boy wants penpals Eclectic Bohemian student 22 into coffee houses, brew pubs, thrift stores, travel (if I had money), sailing, museums, jazz, grunge.. whatever. Seeks friends from around the world. Write me! Rick M. 11705 Chapel Lane Austin, Texas, USA 78748 or e-mail bosch@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu Coming to Dallas? Friendly, intelligent, hairy Texas bear enjoys meeting Europeans visiting here. 44, 170cm, 90kg, 17cm cut, long wavy brown hair (stretches past nips), bushy beard (stretches past hips). e-mail: gep2@computek.net or write to Gordon Peterson, 14500 Dallas Parkway, Apt. 160, Dallas, Texas 75240. USA. Gay penpal from Rio, Brazil Brazilian gay from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1.78 m, 80 kgs, GWM suntanned, active, would like to make contact with gays from all over the world for fun or friendship. Photos appreciated. Horny letters and photos to Caixa Postal 16.285, Largo do Machado, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, CEP 22.222-970. E-mail messages to lcsouza@vm.lncc.br or lcsouza@brlncc.bitnet Asian wants muscle GAM Hongkonger, 29yo, 5’9", 155lbs of lean muscle, 42" chest, 29" waist seeks masculine man to share workout experience or more. Intimate marriage life if possible, age not important, photo exchange. e-mail: Bear@asiaonlion.net or write to Calvin Cheung, 15C Lung Fung Count, 353-367 Des Voeux Rd West, Hong Kong. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERNATIONAL ============= International News from Rex Wockner ...our regular look at what's happening around the world... GAY MARRIAGE IN HUNGARY Hungary's Constitutional Court has legalized common-law gay marriage. Common-law and formally married couples have all the same rights in Hungary. Any couple that lives together permanently and has sex is considered married under common law. The court said a law limiting common-law marriages to 'those formed between adult men and women' was unconstitutional. 'It is arbitrary and contrary to human dignity ... that the law (on common-law marriages) withholds recognition from couples living in an economic and emotional union simply because they are same-sex,' the court wrote. The justices ordered parliament to make the changes necessary to implement common-law gay marriage by March 1, 1996. Paradoxically, the court also ruled that formal, civil marriages are for heterosexual couples only. 'Despite growing acceptance of homosexuality (and) changes in the traditional definition of a family, there is no reason to change the law on (civil) marriages,' the justices wrote. Gay leaders welcomed the ruling. Lajos Romsauer, president of Homeros Lambda, said it doesn't matter that only common-law marriage was legalized for gays because all the same rights are granted. Homeros initiated the legal action that led to the ruling. Denmark, Norway and Sweden are the other countries where gay couples have the same rights as married people, under 'registered partnership' laws that are commonly called 'gay marriage.' ZIMBABWE GAYS URGE 'PERSISTENT' PROTESTS The group Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe is requesting 'persistent letters of protest' to the government to battle legal and social repression of homosexuals. 'We are hoping letters protesting against our government's policy towards homosexuals can be sent and that with the publicity and interest being shown, they might reconsider their position,' a group spokesman said. Gay sex is criminal in Zimbabwe and recently President Robert Mugabe stated: 'Let us have no more talk ... of homosexual rights and recognize their activities for what they are - a threat to the morality and health of our growing nation. I believe our young people ... can discern what these perverted movements, coming from the so-called developed nations, really desire.' 'The government ... believes homosexuality is alien to African culture and therefore should not exist,' the GALZ spokesman wrote. 'Homosexuality is considered a 'western' practice and should not be imposed upon African people. Given the fact that a majority of the active GALZ members are white Zimbabweans, they consider their opinion to be justified. However, many gay black Zimbabweans are coming out and eventually it will be realized that homosexuality does not discriminate on the basis of race or colour.' Protest letters are urged to: (1) Zimbabwe High Commission, Zimbabwe House, 429 The Strand, London WC2 OSA, (2) Embassy of Zimbabwe, 1608 New Hampshire Ave., Washington, DC 20009, USA, (3) N.M. Shamuyarira, Minister of Foreign Affairs, P.O. Box 4240, Harare, Zimbabwe, and (4) D. Dabengwa, Minister of Home Affairs, Private Bag 505D, Harare, Zimbabwe. Carbon-copy GALZ, Private Bag A6131, Avondale, Harare, Zimbabwe. AUSTRALIA Sydney, Australia's famed gay Mardi Gras culminated with the 17th annual parade up Oxford Street and the largest all-night party in the world, in five pavilions of the Royal Showgrounds. At least half a million people watched the parade, which followed a month-long festival of theatre, film, comedy, exhibitions and sports events. The parade was broadcast the next evening by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the largest TV network. CANADA What will they think of next? Suppose one of your favourite photos has your ex-lover in it. For a mere $75, a new Canadian company will fire up its fancy computers, remove the ex, insert your current lover, and return your photos. If you’re truly interested, phone Western Pro Imaging in Vancouver, B.C., on 00 1 (604) 299-1439. ISRAEL Tel Aviv University has settled out-of-court and granted full spousal benefits to the lover of gay chemistry professor Uzi Even, reports Israel's Society for the Protection of Personal Rights. The benefits include tuition exemption, use of university facilities, air tickets for sabbaticals and a pension. More than 150 professors and 1,200 students signed petitions supporting Even's lawsuit. NETHERLANDS The city of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, has put up ukp400,000 for its part in bringing the 1998 Gay Games to the city. Twelve thousand athletes and 100,000 spectators are expected. It is the first time the games will be outside North America. 'So far we have ... 17 sports and we are working on between three and 13 more,' said Marc Janssens, secretary of the organizing committee. 'It'll be bigger than the Olympics.' The budget for the games is ukp5.5 million, the organizers said. NORWAY The homosexuality work group of the Lutheran Church in Norway issued a paper urging that the church recognize same-sex partnerships and perform gay-partnership ceremonies. Norway is one of three countries that offer an equivalent to matrimony for gays and lesbians. The work group rejected allowing gays and lesbians to adopt children or access artificial insemination because, they said, children should be raised in as 'normal' an environment as possible. Norway's gay-marriage law itself does not allow for adoption or artificial insemination. THAILAND Thirty HIV-negative heroin addicts are being injected with an experimental HIV vaccine in Thailand, reported Thai Health Minister Arthit Urairat. The GP-120 vaccine, made by U.S.-based Genentech Inc., is given at three-month intervals for a year. If it works, the addicts will become immune to HIV. Brazil also has expressed interest in the trial study. -------------------------------------------------------- MUSIC ===== rock-pig, posturing, ego maniac, loud, noisy band: rock-n-roll Or, 'Everything gay people aren't supposed to be'. Queercore (kw'ear coor): a feeling of dissatisfaction and boredom with the gay scene: a mixture of angry punk rock, experimental noise and a variety of queer politics 1988-89: Toronto - Bruce LaBruce and GB Jones (from the band Fifth Column) are doing fanzines and making films; San Francisco - Panzy Division are making records on punk label Lookout, Matt from Outpunk starts releasing singles; Boston - Screeching Weasel put out a single ‘I Wanna Be A Homosexual’ with Bruce LaBruce; Britain - Tongueman start making records. Punk and Homocore tie the knot. Early 1990s: Britain - Melody Maker picks up on the whole thing and gives it the usual music press 'this week's thing' treatment; Riot Grrl arrives on both sides of the Atlantic, playing games with sexuality. Spring 1993: London - Sister George form. Spring 1994: London - Queercore club Up To The Elbow gets up and running. My first taste of Sister George is in a tiny room above a tiny pub in a Camden side street. They're so good I come away reeling, knowing something important's happening. That's back in late September. A month later, I run into them again, this time at The Bell in Kings Cross, Up To The Elbow's new home. It's a merry drunken evening. I tell them I want an interview. They say, okay. Early 1994: Channel 4's 'Out On Tuesday' does a piece on Queercore/dykes in rock music. Sister George, still just a name to many, are shown, high on an East London rooftop, in the video 'Handlebar', a track from their album 'Drag King'. It is reminiscent of early X-Ray Spex. Young, fresh, rough and ready, giving the finger to the establishment - only this time it isn't the music biz that's on the receiving end, but the gay establishment, the Old Compton Street bores flashing their pink pounds on overpriced cappuccino. The band has more in common with the early punks, in terms of attitude, than anyone else. Musically, you can hear traces of many influences. They could sound like The Breeders if they really wanted to. The female/male vocal combination reminds me of the Au Pairs at times. Sort of. But Sister George don't sound like anyone I've ever heard, maybe because their backgrounds are pretty diverse: me and Lisa (bass) swap stories of mid 1980s anarcho punk bands. She's even heard of bands I was involved with back then. Ellyott (vocals/guitar) missed all that stuff, was still in her native Israel, grew up listening to classical music and later, REM. Lyndon (vocals/guitar) is a little younger and was a fan of Crass but hadn't heard of any of the other band names that came up, and Darryl (drums) is still in his late teens and listens to rap music. Sister George listen to a lot of stuff, but not the faceless techno of accepted 'gay music'. They see it as passive, passionless. The establishment gay scene offers them nothing. So what about straights coming to the gigs just for the music? Ellyott: 'It's the ultimate test, isn't it? We're a band, we want people to be into the music. I don't want queerbashers dancing to our songs, you know, not getting it at all....” Lyndon: 'Maybe that's what we should be aiming for.' Sister George supporting Shabba Ranks? Well, okay, maybe that's taking it too far. I've noticed a slightly more subtle edge in the newer songs, both musically and lyrically. Lisa acknowledges this, 'A year or so ago, with the Riot Grrl stuff, it was all very direct, obvious perhaps. To get a bit more subtle doesn't mean you're going back into the closet, you just maybe don't want to do some of the more obvious gay lyrics. There's a lot more emotion in our songs now.' Although perhaps some things need to be put pretty bluntly ('And does it fuck you off/when dykes strap on?') There are political and social issues here. Fun is a political issue! It's true. The gay community reflects straight society, in that it's the men who run just about everything and are expected to have all the fun. The Queercore scene (for want of a better word) is vibrant right now. There's plenty happening, and although it may look a London thing, what with Sister George, fellow activists Mouthfull and Up To The Elbow being based here, it's not; there are queerzines and people getting involved from all over. Sister George are a focal point, though, and that does create pressure - once you’re seen as leaders of a movement, some never want you to change. Lisa: 'There's so many bands, so many clubs now, you have to take your own path. We didn't start Queercore, we certainly pushed it along, and I would never step back from that. I feel the same way as I did then, but I don’t want to carry a torch for anyone.' Ellyot: 'Having gay people say 'your music really does something to me' is a great compliment, that's what I want, but I want to hear it from straight people as well. Change people's lives? Yeah, totally, that's what music does to me, that's why I do it.' Lisa: 'We were involved with the Riot Grrl thing, a bit - we got the dog end of it. It was very moral. I don't think it created anything much, for young girls and women to go out and do their own thing; it was very music biz run. Ellyott: It paved the way for us, though. But now you have all the boys' bands, 'the new wave of the new wave'. That was total backlash.' Lyndon: 'The best thing about Riot Grrl was that it did inspire people. Not so much the actual music, but the idea itself. In a way it was artificial, with some of the blokes standing at the back, guilt ridden but hating letting the girls dance down the front.' Lisa: '.... but some of the best people I met from that time were blokes.' We talk about 'the scene', the way things are. Lyndon and Lisa came to London from Manchester, where they say the 'boys v girls' thing doesn't really exist. I mentioned a dyke club I'd been to in the West End at the weekend, and how little in common I felt I had with anyone there. Lisa: 'I hate the scene! That's why we formed the band!' Sister George would rather go for a decent beer and a game of pool than be seen dead in your average gay bar. At their gigs, dykes and fags dance together. It's sort of natural. Ellyot points out glumly that their audience is in the main white, perhaps feeling that however many barriers you push over, another will always appear. Sister George gig pretty regularly, and live they're one of the best bands I've ever seen: loud, intense, sassy - a bloody good rock and roll band. Which is why an old cynic like me has seen them four times in two months. I'd been out for only a couple of weeks when I first saw them, and it was during their set that I knew that everything was going to be okay, and also that it was going to be fun. I'd spent the summer reading articles by heterosexuals on how cool it was to be a lesbian and if anything, it stopped me coming out for a while. I didn't want to be anyone's pet dyke. The 'lesbian chic' thing seems to be fading now. It's been replaced by the AIDS red-ribbon-as-fashion-accessory, something I'd noticed recently, and even more so since singer Diamanda Galas announced that everyone who wore the ribbon should be forcibly injected with the disease. Sister George like her. Ellyott: I liked her before, when she had 'We are all HIV Positive' tattooed across her knuckles and everyone said, 'Oh, how can you say that!' It bothers me, though, that Diamanda Galas could be seen to monopolise suffering. She has suffered: her brother died, but he's not the only one. Ellyott: 'Most of her friends have died, her whole community's been shattered by AIDS. She's been living with this for the last ten years, she's been raising a hell of a lot of money, been getting arrested left, right and centre.... but that's not to say she’s beyond criticism.' Lyndon: 'The red ribbon is now the ultimate liberal statement. Lisa: You can wear all the ribbons you want, but there's still no real, strong AIDS movement. It's passive. If there was a movement, some action, to back that up, that would be fine, but it's so do-gooding it just makes me angry. It's liberal, bourgeois, money making bollocks. It makes me cringe.' Ellyott: 'It was never meant that way. It used to be very rare to see anyone wear it: if you were HIV Positive, and you saw someone wearing a red ribbon, you'd know that that wouldn't be the sort of person who'd try and put you in a concentration camp. If you had the virus, and were scared to come out, you'd think, maybe, maybe you could tell them. Now it's a naff, horrible gay sign. I know where it started, and why, but they should've known it would end up like this. And now it's in Hollywood. Three years ago at the Oscars, everyone was wearing them, because of Liz Taylor.' And then in Tom Hanks' acceptance speech for the Oscar he got for Philadelphia, he said how ever AIDS sufferer who died was another angel in heaven. Ellyott: 'Oh, please! There were some horrible people who've died of AIDS. He was just.... Being a luvvy? Ellyott: 'Yeah, acting out a fucking part.' Talk moves onto Go Fish, a film that got a lot of coverage because of the 'lesbian chic' thing, although its success was well deserved. Lisa hadn't seen it, Ellyott had and thought it was well made, a funny movie. 'It went well with the 'lipstick lesbian summer'. It coincided with that. We got a lot of our exposure because of that. But I still don't wear lipstick!' Coverage of the band has died a little recently, a few gig reviews, not much more. The band concede that that's the way it works, that until there's a tour, or another record, the music press won't see fit to cover them, or anyone else connected with Queercore, for their own sake, even though there's more happening now than there was earlier in the year when the music press picked up on it. Ellyott: 'We have to play that game, we are part of it. But we want to play it and win!' There's not much chance of another record for the moment - Catcall Records, (run by Liz Naylor - it's her quote that titles this piece), which released 'Drag King', is no more. The atmosphere has changed, though. It just doesn't seem to be such a big deal to a lot of people anymore if you come out to them. Once people have said it's okay to be queer, they can't ever take that back. So surely lesbian chic changed things, a little anyway? Ellyott agrees, sort of. 'But how long's it gonna last?' Late November 1994: London, Winter Pride - Up To The Elbow have a stage here for a couple of hours. I'm standing in a corridor, making notes, feeling hungover and very suspicious. I'm getting a real feeling that Queercore is being sidelined here. Ellyott hangs around for a while, pissed off with the clones, the country and western dykes, the nerdy security guards. The whole situation. Later, Sister George play to an audience of, oh, two dozen maybe, before three o'clock on a Sunday afternoon, in the acoustic hell of a sports hall. The sound is so dreadful the band give up and walk off after a few songs. I couldn't blame them. I walk around for a while, feeling like a consumer, a shopper, not a participant, squeezing past stall after stall of silly T-shirts. The Lesbian Avengers are here, though, and that raises my spirits a bit. They have press cuttings and stuff to read. I get a copy of their handbook. And then I leave. The whole event sums up why Queercore exists; all I have in common with most of the people there is my sexuality. And that just isn't enough. Julie Travis ----------------------------------------------------------------- FILM ==== This year's Ninth Lesbian and Gay Film Festival has been dedicated to the memory of Mark Finch whose untimely death shocked the lesbian and gay film community. The festival is an annual film bash where lesbian and gay filmmakers mix with the general public for two weeks - some of the films then go on tour throughout the UK. The London part of the festival includes some twenty five features and about fifty short features. The Scottish part of the tour is from 9th to the 21st June at the Glasgow Film Theatre and the Edinburgh Filmhouse and will include ten features and a small programme of shorts. Some of the films which will not be on tour will be released on video later in the year. BRAITHWAITE caught them in London. I love film festivals - the opportunity to completely overdose on films, go to a few parties, meet filmmakers. Amazing fun - especially because l don't have to pay and everyone else is at work, hard work, but some one has to do it. I've rated each film out of ten. Only The Brave (Ana Kokkinos, 1993, 61 min) This is an uncompromising feature which captures the sickly angst of adolescence with a gruelling honesty. It has Alex and her best friend Vicki (both Greek Australians). They party hard with a gang of girls and have a passion for setting things on fire. Alex lives with her father (her mother abandoned her years earlier). She is angry at everything in society: high school, child abuse, family... everything really. Alex realises that she has growing attractions to Vicki and a teacher and there are some suggestive erotic moments with the teacher and Vicki. The cast has some great young actors - one in particular you will recognise as Cody from Neighbours who gets beaten up in one of the fight scenes. The film comes to a head rather quickly and tragically: Alex is disappointed by her friends and the teacher when one of the girls sets fire to herself. The film is one of the better lesbian films at the festival but is, ultimately, unsatisfying. 6/10 Fresh Kill (Shu Lea Cheang, 1994) The press pack for this film describes it as a 'multi-media, multi-racial, eco-techno-thriller' and this kind of description would make most folk run a mile but please don't! This, the directorial debut for Shu Lea Cheang, is an audacious comedy. The film is set some time in the future in New York when society has broken down to a degree - there are giant multinational companies, people living in squatter camps - you are either very rich or very poor. There is a ship which has been travelling the world trying to unload but because it has nuclear waste no one will accept it. All information in the society is censored and must be paid for so only the rich or computer hackers have it... yes they surf the 'Net in the future. This set the scene for two lesbians, Shareen (last seen in Mississippi Masala with Densil Washington) and Claire who are bringing up a daughter. Claire works in a trendy restaurant which sells fish lips to rich yuppies and Shareen sells the junk of society. Their lives go on well until the child is kidnapped by what could be a corrupt multinational or some strange government department - it’s all rather odd. The audacity of the film may be striking, but it doesn’t quite pull it off. l think it would be ideal as a ten part series which would give you the opportunity to understand the characters a little more. Nevertheless, l liked it. 6/10 100 Days Before The Command (Hussein Rekenov, 1990, 70 min) This film came highly recommended but I found it really disappointing - in fact, l fell asleep: twice! Anyway, it tells the story of barracks life for five young men and how they survive service in the Red Army. There is abundant nudity where the men bathe each other - quite why, I don’t know - nevertheless, they do have excellent bodies! This not a gay movie but apparently it went down well at the San Francisco and Berlin film festivals but why, oh why? The solders are brutalised by their senior ranks and have the odd silly dream - a real waste. Why was it in the film festival at all? 0/10 Midnight Dancers (Mel Chionglo, 1994, 100 min) English subtitles This is a film for all those who loved the documentary Ladyboys about Manila gay life. There are three brothers who enter the world of the Manila gay scene as 'Macho Dancers'. Joel has plied his trade for seven years and is now 23 and is a little old for the game. He has a wife and a gay lover and succeeds in balancing the relationships. Denis lives on the street preferring life on the edge. The youngest, Sonny, has a transvestite lover and dances for a living hence the title. The film is shot in a semi-documentary style with no professional actors. It gives an insight into gay life in Manila and it shows a little of sex tourism. 2/10 Highway of Heartache (Gregory Wild, 1994, 86 min) This is for all fans of Priscilla Queen of the Desert: it's a mix of John Walters with Pee Wee Herman and is an hysterical musical. Wynona Sue Turnpike is a God-fearing Southern redneck with gravity-defying hair. Shooting her no-good wife-beating husband, she takes to the road of mayhem and murder. She becomes a beautician and a porn star, and manages to escape the electric chair before becoming a Country and Western superstar - the pinnacle of her fame being songs like 'Bullets Don't Mend Broken Hearts' and 'Ring on my Finger and a Stiff on my Hand'. This is a cartoon camp romp with amazing wit which makes it well worth watching. 5/10 Complaints of a Dutiful Daughter (Deborah Hoffman, 1994, 42 min) This is probably one of the best documentaries currently on the LGF tour. It tells the story of a daughter's response to her mother's Alzheimer's Disease. As the autobiographical story of a filmmaker's relationship with her mother it is tragic and at the same time witty. Please watch it. 8/10 Skin Deep (Midi Onodera, 1994, 85 min) This is one of those films that deals with that 'transgender' thing. I am not sure about it, really. Part of me says 'Why make life more difficult?' (why would anyone want to shave every morning). Another says “It's OK really, whatever!!!'. The last part thinks they are taking the piss out of men (which is fine). But, back to the film: Film director Alex finally has the money for her first film about love, tattoos and obsession and starts work with her lover Montana as her assistant. They begin research by placing an advertisement in a tattoo magazine and get a reply from Chris. Alex develops a fascination for Chris which begins to damage the relationship with Montana and they all begin to pursue a dangerous power game. This is a very powerful first feature about gender prejudice. 5/10 Fun (Rafal Zielinski, 1994, 105 min) This was shown at last year's Edinburgh Film Festival - it's one of those 'female buddies who kill' movies. It starts with two giggly girls sitting on a bed discussing makeup - they only really want to have fun. They tell each other stories. They eventually progress to killing an old lady, are caught and sent to jail where the main action of the movie takes place. The prison scenes are shot in moody black and white. The girls are interviewed by a journalist and the prison psychiatrist who, for different reasons, attempt to discover their motivation. The acting and direction in this movie is well up to telemovie standard. There is a slight lesbian subtext to the movie but it's not up to much. 6/10 Postcards from America (Steve McLean, 1994) I have not seen this film because it was being shown on the last day of the film festival which would have been too late for publication. So this is taken from the press release: 'This film is seen through the eyes of David, a gay man who reflects on his life - a violent abusive childhood; his teens spent as a hustler in New York and his disaffection with life in the era of AIDS as he takes to the road. An excellent study of growing up gay in America.' Eclipse (Jeremy Podeswa, 1994, 95 min) This is a small budget film about what happens to a city when it's about to experience an Eclipse. A man picks up a rent boy, goes home and has sex with his au pair, who seduces a stranger... a husband takes a boy to an hotel room, the boy fucks an artist who fucks an old friend, who goes to the backroom of a bar... the focus becomes increasingly gay. Each scene is well paced and well shot. The sex scenes between the heterosexuals are shown as boring while the gay scenes are not really shown. It is a whimsical film - a gentle feel good movie. 5/10 Fast Trip Long Drop (Greg Bordowitz, 1994) This an attempt to portray living with AIDS in a somewhat satirical manner by activist Bordowitz. It’s largely autobiographical and tells of how he tested positive, quit booze and drugs and came out to his parents. There are bits of satire which don't really work or maybe they don't translate to our culture. There have been many AIDS documentaries in the last fifteen years and l must admit to be rather bored by them. There are three things l don't like about HIV and AIDS: first, the fact that it is killing my friends and lovers, secondly the politic which has created AIDS Professionals who waste our money and time and lastly, the culture of which films like this are a major part - they largely preach to the converted and with the possible exception of Zero Patience should never have been made. 3/10 Not Angels But Angels (Wiltor Godecki, 1994, 80 min) This documentary has caused much debate. It is striking portrait of young rent boys who ply their trade in Prague. The boys are young - from 15 to 19 - and they talk about their tricks, rates, dreams, and how they became prostitutes. The most offensive person in the film is a pimp who talks straight to camera in an honest unconcerned manner about the boys who work for him and how he finds clients. The boys tell you that most of their clients are German and that they prefer older rich men, and discuss their bad experiences with S/M perverts (as they call them). Not surprisingly, most of the boys claim to be straight and are largely homophobic. All dream of making lots of money but are really rather sad. I don't really like this film because the filmmaker makes no comment - he merely presents the pretty young boys with inserts of pornography and Bach's St Matthew Passion. I think this is really sex tourism on video - 'Come to Prague and this is what you can fuck'! 6/10 Under Heat (Peter Reed, 1994, 92 min) In this steamy melodrama, Dean comes home to tell his dysfunctional family that he has AIDS, but his news is overshadowed by the needs of his demanding mother who believes she is dying and his older drug-addicted brother. He is constantly distracted by a babe of a gardener. This is really funny Tennessee Williams Southern-style comedy. One of the best movies in the festival, it has the best looking men with some of the best camp twists. 9/10 World and Time Enough (Eric Mueller, 1994) Mark is an artist who specializes in setting up fast disposable outdoor sculptures. He is an activist and is HIV positive. Joey is a trash collector who is HIV negative. They have both fallen out with their families and Joey is looking for his biological parents. This is a tangled and off-beat story. It's said to be the companion piece to last year's hit Go Fish but it is much better than that. 8/10 ----------------------------------------------------------------- LISTINGS ======== If your group isn't listed, - or if your entry needs updating - please write to ScotsGay with full details. If we don’t know about it, it just won't go in! We'd also like to know about your forthcoming events and meetings. Although many of the listings are for specific towns, they often cover a much wider area. If in doubt, you can always phone one of the Switchboards for more information. To include your group, write to:- ScotsGay Listings, Pageprint Limited, PO Box 666, Edinburgh EH7 5YW, Fax them to: 0131-558 1262 or e-mail them to scotsgay@drink.demon.co.uk NATIONAL ORGANISATIONS OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND is Scotland's premier lesbian, gay and bisexual rights organisation. It was founded in 1969 as the Scottish Minorities Group, later became the Scottish Homosexual Rights Group and changed its name to OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND in December 1992. OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND owns the Edinburgh Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Centre. For their new leaflet and membership application form, send an sae to: The Secretary, OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND, 58a Broughton Street, Edinburgh. EH1 3SA or send e-mail to outright@drink.demon.co.uk EDINBURGH: The Lantern is a drop-in discussion group which meets every Monday 7.30–9pm in the Edinburgh Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Centre at 58a Broughton Street. Varied programme - please drop down any Monday, no formalities, new members welcomed. Contact: Jim Liddle 0131-669 3205. DUNDEE: OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND Dundee Focus Group for lesbians, gay men and bisexuals meets 4th Thursday of each month at 7pm in the YMCA Special Projects Office, 76 Bell Street. Write to: PO Box 104, Dundee. DD1 3DU. OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND has other Focus Groups. The contacts are: LBG Disability Forum - Jim Liddle 0131-332 1949 (day) 0131-669 3205 (eve/weekend) or Jim Halcrow 0131-661 5398. Diversity (Anti racism group) - Andy Gentle 0131-557 1662. Outright Women - Alison Rowan. International - John Hein 0131-558 1279. Law Reform - Tim Hopkins 0131-553 1459 or Hugo Greenhalgh. Police Liaison - Ian Dunn 0131-557 1662. If no telephone number is given, you can write to the person listed c/o 58a Broughton Street, Edinburgh. EH1 3SA. Why not join OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND? Membership is ukp10 waged and ukp5 unwaged. Please make out your cheque/Postal Order to OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND and send to The Membership Secretary, OUTRIGHT SCOTLAND, 58a Broughton Street, EDINBURGH. EH1 3SA. PRIDE SCOTLAND: Pride Scotland has been established to organise the lesbian, gay male and bisexual Pride event in Scotland. Although the main celebrations will be held over the weekend of the 17th and 18th of June 1995, other events will be held throughout the year. Phone: 0131-556 8822. Or write: 58a Broughton Street, Edinburgh. EH1 3SA. All kinds of help are urgently required! LOCAL ORGANISATIONS ABERDEEN: Aberdeen Gay Group caters for all ages and meets 3rd Sunday of every month. Phone John on Aberdeen (01224) 317552 for information or write to: AGG, PO Box 129, Aberdeen. AB9 6EY. Swim or Social most Wednesdays: Phone David on Aberdeen (01224) 317552. Icebreakers is a social group which meets on Friday evenings. Contact Aberdeen Switchboard for details. AYRSHIRE: Gay and Lesbian Switchboard operates Mon/Wed/Fri 7-10pm (answerphone outwith these periods). Phone: Ayr (01292) 619000. Or write to: PO Box 1043, Ayr. KA6 5JQ CAITHNESS GAY AND LESBIAN CONNECTION: A friendly informal group which meets regularly. Write to: Box 689, Journal Office, 42 Union Street, Wick, Caithness. KW1 5ED. CENTRAL REGION: Forth Friend has a social group which meets every second Wednesday. The Forth Friend phoneline operates each Monday from 7.30pm to 10pm on Stirling (01786) 471285. Or write to: PO Box 28, Stirling. FK9 5YW. DUMFRIES AND GALLOWAY: Regular social meetings - usually every second Thursday. For details of all events: phone Dumfries (01387) 269161 Thursdays 7.30–9.30pm or write to Dumfries and Galloway Lesbian and Gay Group, PO Box 1299, Dumfries. DG1 2PD. DUNDEE: Tay Friend, holds regular meetings. Write to: Tayfriend, PO Box 182, Dundee. DD1 9UP. EDINBURGH: Edinburgh Gay Social Club is an off-scene social group for gay men. Write to: EGSC, PO Box 12207, Edinburgh. EH4 3YX. Icebreakers is an alternative to the scene and takes place between 7pm and 8pm on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each calendar month in the ELGBC, 58a Broughton Street, Edinburgh. Phone 0131-556 4049 for details. The Lantern is an informal discussion group held every Monday 7.30-9pm downstairs in the ELGBC, 58a Broughton Street. Phone Jim Liddle 0131-332 1949 (days) 0131-669 3205 (eve/weekends). FIFE FRIEND: Small voluntary phoneline offering support, advice and information to lesbians and gay men within Fife. Friday: 7.30pm-10.30pm. Telephone: Kirkcaldy (01592) 266688. Write to PO Box 19, Kirkcaldy, Fife. KY1 3JF. GLASGOW: GALLUS (Gay and Lesbian Liberation & Unity in Strathclyde) - A campaigning organisation. Contact c/o SGLS, PO Box 38, Glasgow G2 2QF or via Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8372. Glasgow Gay and Lesbian Centre Project meets on the 1st Saturday of each month at 2pm in Strathclyde House. Write to: GLC Project, PO Box 463, GLASGOW G12 8NJ or contact Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8372. For childcare, phone Jennifer (at least 1 week in advance) on 0141-552 3320. BSL Interpreter is usually available (check 2 weeks in advance). Glasgow Gay Group is an informal social group for gay men. Has a regular weekly pub night as well as running other social events like theatre, cinema, bowling, etc. Phone: Steve on 0141-339 7395 - preferably on Mon or Tues evenings. Icebreakers Cafe - An alternative to the gay scene - First Sunday in each month. 12.30-3.30pm in Austin's Bar, 183a Hope Street, Glasgow. Details from Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8372. INVERNESS: Gay Group meets on the 4th Wednesday of each month at 28 Huntly Street. Phone Andrew on Inverness (01463) 711585 (Mon-Fri 9am-5pm) or write to: PO Box 67, Inverness. PAISLEY: Paisley Forum is a social group for lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and our allies. Meets Paisley Arts Centre, New Street on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of each month. Details: Phone Allan Johnstone on 0141-842 7200 (9-5 only) or Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8372. WOMEN'S GROUPS ABERDEEN LESBIAN GROUP: Meets every Wednesday in the Women's Centre, Shoe Lane. Phone Aberdeen (01224) 625010 for details. ALLOA: Lesbian Social/Discussion Group. Phone: Alloa (01259) 219891. EDINBURGH: AD Group: For lesbians 45+ and older (younger lesbians who support the concerns of lesbians 45+ and older also welcome). Meetings for discussion and support, first Saturday (1-5pm) of month in The Women's Centre, 61a Broughton Street. For more details, phone Lesbian Line. Bisexual Women 30+ meet monthly. Details from Bisexual Phoneline or Angi on 0131-661 9907. Dykes Nytes Out: social events for couples and singles in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Write to: PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3LU. Lesbian Line 0131-557 0751, Mondays and Thursdays 7.30-10pm. For information, advice and counselling in confidence. Write to: PO Box PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3UU. Lesbian Mothers Group: Contact Lesbian Line for details. Edinburgh Bisexual Group meets every Thursday at 8pm in the ELGBC, 58a Broughton Street. All welcome. Women's Network: PO Box 159, Edinburgh. EH7 5EL. GLASGOW: Dykes Nytes Out: social events for couples and singles in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Write to: PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3LU. Glasgow Bisexual Group meets 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month from 7.30 - 9.30pm in the City Centre. Phone: 0141-221 8372 for details and venue. Glasgow Women's Library, 4th/5th Floors, 109 Trongate, G1 5HD. Tel: 0141-552 8345. Open Tue-Fri 1-6pm. Sat 2-5pm. Closed Mon. Lending and reference library - books, magazines, journals, videos, leaflets and information. UK and overseas feminist and lesbian publications. Lesbian Line 0141-552 3355 Wednesdays 7-10pm. Write to: PO Box 686, Glasgow. G3 7TL enclosing an sae for monthly 'Lavender Listing'. Lesbian Mothers Group: Meets every second Monday at 7pm. Support group, pub nights, informal chat. Créche and fares help available. Phone Lynne on 0141-221 7150. Lesbian Networking Meeting: Contact Lesbian Line on 0141-552 3355 for meeting details and Lynne on 0141-221 7150 for childcare information. Lesbian Sports Group: Squash, badminton, tennis. Meets weekly. Phone Lesbian Line on 0141-552 3355 for details. Lesbian Youth Action: Contact Lindsay Jane Morgan c/o Lesbian Line on 0141-552 3355. Olderwomen's Group: Contact Lesbian Line on 0141-552 3355 for details. Team Caledonia West Women's Cycling Group: Phone Women in Sport on 0141-227 5933 for details. Women's Softball Group: Meets weekly. Contact Lesbian Line on 0141-552 3355 for details. INVERNESS: Out and About is a friendly lesbian social group that gets together once a month. Write to: PO Box 91, Inverness. IV1 2GJ. LESBIAN INFORMATION SERVICE: PO Box 8, Todmorden, Lancashire. Telephone: 01706 817235. BISEXUALS BIFROST: A national newsletter for bisexuals, their partners and allies. Send sae for sample copy and subscription details to BIFROST, PO Box 117, Norwich. NR1 2SU. BISEXUAL RESOURCE CENTRE: Downstairs in the Edinburgh Lesbian Gay and Bisexual Centre, 58a Broughton Street. Lending library, archive, etc. Open Tue, Wed, Thur Noon-5pm. EDINBURGH BISEXUAL GROUP: Meets every Thursday at 8pm in the ELGBC, 58a Broughton Street. There’s an excellent programme of talks and speakers. Phone Bisexual Line on 0131-557 3620. GLASGOW BISEXUAL GROUP: Meets 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month from 7.30 - 9.30pm in the City Centre. Phone Bisexual Line on 0131-557 3620 or Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8372 for further details. ATHEISTS/HUMANISTS EDINBURGH FREETHINKERS: An informal network of militant atheists (with one militant humanist agnostic atheist). Write to: PO Box 666, Edinburgh. EH7 5YW or e-mail god@dorothy.demon.co.uk GAY AND LESBIAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION (GALHA): A group for non religious lesbians gays and bisexuals which promotes an enlightened, rational Humanist approach to homosexuality. Details from GALHA National Office, 34 Spring Lane, Kenilworth, Warwickshire. CV8 2HB. Telephone/Fax: 01926 58450. BEARS BEARS' CLUB UK: For hairy men and admirers. Has a monthly meeting in the New Town Bar, Edinburgh. Write to: BCUK, 56 Albert Street, Beswick, Manchester. M11 3SU. BEREAVEMENT GAY BEREAVEMENT PROJECT: Lesbians and gay men needing advice and support can ring 0181-455 8894 at any time. Or write to: Lesbian & Gay Bereavement Project, Vaughan M Williams Centre, Colindale Hospital, London. NW9 5HG. BIKERS GAY BIKERS MOTORCYCLE CLUB: A UK-wide club for women and men. Active Scottish section. Write for details to GBMCC, PO Box 33, Nottingham. NG10 2BF. BODYBUILDERS/ WEIGHTRAINERS GAY BODYBUILDERS/WEIGHTRAINERS CLUB: contact Frank Wallace on 0181-675 5858 for contact with Scottish members and nationally. Club produces 'Fizzical' magazine as part of ukp12 membership. CHRISTIANS L&GCM: Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement. Glasgow Group - Helpline 0141-334 2286 Thurs 7-10pm or write to PO Box 1436, Glasgow. G31 2NY. Edinburgh Contact - Phone John Thomson on 0131-556 1309. QUAKERS: Quaker Lesbian and Gay Fellowship (formerly Friends' Homosexual Fellowship) is a welcoming and supportive national group for people of all sexual orientations and their friends. Write to: Ruth, 3 Hallsfield, Cricklade, Swindon, Wilts. SN6 6LR. QUEST: Organisation for Roman Catholic men and women who are gay. Regular monthly meetings, socials, befriending, help at times of calm or crisis. Groups meet in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Telephone Linkline Glasgow 0141-333 9340 Tuesday and Sunday 7–10pm. Or you can write to Quest, PO Box 280, Glasgow. G12 0AW. COMPUTER BUFFS BORDERS BULLETIN BOARD: Computer based info every evening 6pm-8am. 01450 377877. To get at the Gay areas, leave a message for the SYSOP asking for access. LAMBDA BOARD - EDINBURGH: A free computer based bulletin board system. Private mailboxing, areas for Women, Gay Men, Bisexuals, Leather Enthusiasts, TV/TSs, etc. 0131-556 6316. Scrolling (8N1) and Viewdata (Prestel) formats at speeds up to V22bis (2400/2400). CULTURAL GAY CALEDONIAN ASSOCIATION: Social group for kilt wearers and friends. Meets in GHQ on the 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of each month. Phone Bill on 0141-646 1513. INTERNATIONAL KILT APPRECIATION SOCIETY (IKAS): Contact and social group for guys interested in viewing/wearing kilts. Regular newsletter: SAE Mervyn Tacy, 'Ziveli', 20 Ordsall Park Road, RETFORD, Notts, DN22 7PA. LONG YANG CLUB : An international organisation for gay orientals and interested people of other nationalities. Promotes social events, education and mutual help services and publishes a magazine. Phone Robert: 0141-334 7144. DRINK PROBLEMS If you are a lesbian or gay man with a drink problem and want help and advice, ring Tom on 0141-770 6599, 7 days a week anytime. Tom refers to Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), but does preparatory work. FOOTBALL GAY FOOTBALL SUPPORTERS NETWORK: Glasgow group holds monthly meetings in Squires Bar. For further details, please send an sae to GFSN, c/o Gay Times, 116 Bayham Street, London. NW1 0BA. FORCES AT EASE: An advice service to armed forces personnel and their families on any subject. Free, independent, confidential, impartial. Write: 28 Commercial Street, London E7 8LY or phone (Sundays 5-7pm only) 0171-247 5164. RANK OUTSIDERS: Support group of Lesbian and Gay Ex Armed Forces Personnel. No rank distinctions. Write to Rank Outsiders, c/o The Stonewall Group, 2 Greycoat Place, Westminster, London. SW1P 1SB. HEALTH MATTERS AYRSHIRE AIDS AWARENESS PROJECT SUPPORT GROUP: Meets Wednesdays 7-10pm for discussion and social events. Phone: Ayr (01292) 619000. Or write to: PO Box 1043, Ayr. KA6 5JQ. BODY POSITIVE (GLASGOW): Providing support for those HIV+ and with AIDS in the West of Scotland. Phone: 0141-332 5010. Or write: 3 Park Quadrant, Glasgow. G3 6BS. BODY POSITIVE (GRAMPIAN): Support and assistance for gay men with HIV/AIDS. Phone: Aberdeen (01224) 404408. Or write to: PO Box 83, Aberdeen. BODY POSITIVE (LOTHIAN): HIV+ gay men's social group meets every Sunday 2-6pm. Or phone to speak to a gay positive person 1:1. Phone 0131-652 0754 Mon-Fri. GALUP: Gay and Lesbian United Programme. Promotes health issues among lesbians gays and bisexuals in the Dundee area. Phone: Dundee (01382) 200352. Or write: c/o YMCA Special Projects Office, 76 Bell Street, Dundee. GLASGOW HIV CARERS SUPPORT GROUP: Phone: 0141-353 2979. Or write to: Church House, 340 Cathedral Street, Glasgow. G1 2BQ. GRAMPIAN AIDS LINE: Aberdeen (01224) 574000 Tuesdays and Fridays 7-9pm or write to GAL, PO Box 250, Aberdeen. PAISLEY SUPPORT GROUP: For people with HIV, partners, friends and family. Meets Tues 1.30-3.30 at The Wynd, School Wynd (off Moss Street). Phone Joe: 0141-889 6252. PHACE WEST: A new, locally based and managed agency for people affected by HIV/AIDS serving Glasgow and the West of Scotland. 49 Bath Street, Glasgow. G2 2DL. Phone: 0141-332 3838 (Fax: 0141-332 3755). POSITIVE HELP: Practical help for people who are HIV+ or who have AIDS and their families, children, friends and carers. 64a Broughton Street, Edinburgh. EH1 3SA. Phone: 0131-558 1122. REACH OUT HIGHLAND: encourages and supports people throughout the Highlands - whether living there or visiting - to take rsponsibility for, manage, and make informed choices about their sexual health and well-being. 28 Huntly Street, Inverness. Phone: Inverness (01463) 711585. Helpline: Inverness (01463) 241000. Mon & Fri 7-9.30pm. SCOTTISH AIDS MONITOR: provides information and support on all matters relating to HIV/AIDS, including welfare rights and legal advice, charitable relief fund, Buddy support and counselling for friends and family. Phone: 01382 461167 (Dundee), 0131-555 4850 (Edinburgh), or 0141-353 3133 (Glasgow). Or write to c/o SWT Dept, Northern College, Gardyne Road, Broughty Ferry, Dundee, 26 Anderson Place, Leith, Edinburgh. EH6 5NP or 22 Woodside Terrace, Glasgow. G3 7XH. SOLAS NATIONAL HIV INFORMATION CENTRE: 2/4 Abbeymount, Edinburgh. EH8 8EJ. Information, advice and cafe. Information centre: Mon, Tue, Thurs, Fri - 11-4pm. Wed, 5-8pm. Phone: 0131-659 5116. STEVE RETSON PROJECT: Weekly sexual health service for gay men. Tuesday 5.30-9pm. GUM, Royal Infirmary, Castle Street, Glasgow. NATIONAL AIDS HELPLINE: 0800 567123. A Freephone, 24 hour service for confidential advice and information. LEATHER MSC SCOTLAND: MSC Scotland, PO Box 28, Head Post Office, Edinburgh. EH3 5JL. MSC Scotland is a member of the European Federation of Motorcycle Clubs. LEGAL GAY AND LESBIAN LEGAL ADVICE: GLAD is a London based advice line run by lesbian and gay lawyers. Phone: 0171-976 0840 (Tue-Fri 7-9.30pm). State clearly that you seek Scottish legal advice as our law is very different from that of England and Wales. MALE RAPE/ SEXUAL ABUSE MASA: Men Against Sexual Abuse. Phone: 0141-550 2048, Tuesday evening or Friday evening 7pm–9pm. OUTDOOR CLUBS GAY OUTDOOR CLUB: Holds regular events including walking, cycling, swimming, hillwalking, windsurfing, cross-country skiing, camping and youth hostelling etc. Also holds regular swimming/social meetings in Edinburgh and Glasgow. For more details about GOC, write (enclosing an A5 sae) to: GOC, PO Box 24, Minehead, Somerset, TA24 8YZ or ring one of the Scottish Contacts:- East: Grant on 0131-556 8705 (Hill-walking), John on 0131-226 2341 (Swimming), Iain on 0131-539 0715 (Cycling). West: Douglas on 0141-848 6643. North: Michael on Inverness (01463) 230651. GAY RAMBLING GROUP: Walks on the 2nd Saturday of each month. Phone Robert on 0141-427 1511. OVER FORTIES PHOENIX: The only national group for the over forties and friends of any age. Write (enclosing an sae) to: Phoenix, PO Box 103, Wallington, Surrey. SM6 9SJ. PARENTS PARENTS' FRIEND: Phone: Leeds (0113) 2674627 7-11pm. Or write to: Voluntary Action Leeds, Stringer House, 34 Lupton Street, Hunslett, Leeds. LS10 2QW. SCOTTISH PARENTS ENQUIRY SERVICE: Support for parents of lesbians and gay men. Contact via Edinburgh Lesbian and Gay Switchboard (Nightly 7.30-10pm - 0131-556 4049) or write to SPE, PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3UU POLITICAL CONSERVATIVE: Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality - write: BM TORCHE, London WC1N 3XX. LABOUR CAMPAIGN FOR LESBIAN AND GAY RIGHTS: Works within the Labour and Trades Union movement to secure equality for lesbians and gay men. Contact PO Box 306, LONDON N5 2SY. There are also Local Groups throughout the country. LESBIAN AND GAY FREEDOM MOVEMENT: LGFM is a movement to bring Anarchist ideas and ideals to lesbians, gays and bisexuals, and to make sexuality a major campaigning issue for all anarchists. Details (3 postage stamps please) from LGFM, BM Box 207, LONDON. WC1N 3XX LIBERAL PARTY LESBIAN AND GAY CAMPAIGN: Phone: Southport (01704) 500115 (day), 0151-259 5935 (ansaphone), write to: Liberal Party Lesbian & Gay Campaign, 41 Sutton Street, Liverpool. L13 7EG or e-mail: liberal@drink.demon.co.uk RUNNERS EDINBURGH GAY ME'’S RUNNING CLUB: Meets for 3-4 mile casual local run. Call Alistair: 0131-661 0008. SCIENCE FICTION GLASGOW GAY SCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY: Meets every 3rd Sunday of the month. Contact Paul on 0141-339 9176. S/M SM GAYS: Write to SM Gays, BM SM Gays, London. WC1N 3XX SPORTS BRITISH GAY AND LESBIAN SPORTS FEDERATION: Encourages participation in sport. Write (with sae) to BGLSF, Central Station, 37 Wharfdale Road, London. N1 9SE. STUDENTS Many Universities and Colleges have Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Societies. Contact these via your Student Union or Student Association. Many are open to non-students living in the area. There are also groups covering wider areas run in conjunction with the National Union of Students - East of Scotland: Write to Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Officer, East of Scotland Area NUS, 11 Broughton Market, Edinburgh. EH3 6NU or phone on 0131-558 1541. North of Scotland: Write to Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Officer, North of Scotland Area NUS, University of Abertay, 158 Marketgait, Dundee. DD1 1NJ. West of Scotland: Write to Lesbian, Gay & Bisexual Officer, West of Scotland Area NUS, Cathcart House, Langside College, 50 Prospecthill Road, Glasgow. G42 9LB or phone Gary McNeil on 0141-636 6477. You can contact the NUS Scottish Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Officer on 0131-556 6598 or write to NUS Scotland, 11 Broughton Market, Edinburgh. EH3 6NU. TEACHERS LESBIANS AND GAYS WORKING IN EDUCATION: Write to BM LAGWIE, London. WC1N 3XX. TV/TS ABERDEEN: Crossdressing Group. Contact Aberdeen Switchboard for details. EDINBURGH: Scottish TV/TS Group meets in private rooms every last Saturday each month except December. Ring Edinburgh Lesbian and Gay Switchboard 0131-556 4049 for further information. GLASGOW: Crosslynx meets on the second Wednesday of each month from 7pm-10pm. Phone Strathclyde Switchboard 0141-221 8372 for more details. VISUAL IMPAIRMENT VISUAL IMPAIRED GAY GROUP SCOTLAND (VIGG): Offers a listening ear and support to women and men in close co-operation with the Lesbigay Disability Forum. Phone Colin and Jim: Dumfries (01387) 261679. WORKPLACE MSF: Lesbians and Gays in MSF. Phone: 0171-738 5469 or write c/o 39b Pentonville Road, London. N1 9LP. UNISON NATIONAL L&G CO-ORDINATING COMMITTEE: Phone: 0131-469 3880. Or write: c/o 18 St Giles Street, Edinburgh. EH1 1PT. WRESTLING ALTERNATIVE WRESTLERS EUROPE: A European-wide gay/bisexual wrestling organisation organised from Glasgow. Contact c/o Alternative Sports, PO Box 437, Glasgow. G42 8HU, phone 0973 310416 or e-mail 100022.2554 @compuserve.com YOUTH GROUPS LOTHIAN LESBIAN AND GAY YOUTH MOVEMENT: For those under 26. Phone Edinburgh Switchboard or write to: LLGYM, PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3UU. STONEWALL YOUTH GROUP: For lesbian and gay teenagers. Meets Sats. Phone: 0131-556 4040 Tues 8-9pm. Or write: PO Box 169, Edinburgh. EH1 3UU. STRATHCLYDE LESBIAN AND GAY YOUTH MOVEMENT: Friendship and support for under 28s. Meets Tuesday 7.30pm and Sat afternoons. Details from Strathclyde Switchboard on 0141-221 8373 nightly from 7–10pm. SWITCHBOARDS AND HELPLINES ABERDEEN GAY SWITCHBOARD: Wed & Fri 7-10pm Phone: Aberdeen (01224) 586869 Minicom: Aberdeen (01224) 213355 Fax: Aberdeen (01224) 212333 BISEXUAL PHONELINE: Thurs 7.30-9.30pm Phone: 0131-557 3620 DUMFRIES AND GALLOWAY L&G PHONELINE: Thurs 7.30-9.30pm Phone: Dumfries (01387) 269161 DUNDEE LGB SWITCHBOARD: Mon 7-10pm Phone: Dundee (01382) 202620 EDINBURGH GAY SWITCHBOARD: Nightly 7.30-10pm Phone: 0131-556 4049 EDINBURGH LESBIAN LINE: Mon, Thurs 7.30-10pm Phone: 0131-557 0751 FIFE FRIEND: Fri 7.30-10.30pm Phone: Kirkcaldy (01592) 266688 FORTH FRIEND: Mon 7.30-10pm Phone: Stirling (01786) 471285 GLASGOW LESBIAN LINE: Wed 7-10pm Phone: 0141-552 3355 STRATHCLYDE GAY AND LESBIAN SWITCHBOARD: Nightly 7-10pm Phone: 0141-221 8372 LONDON LESBIAN AND GAY SWITCHBOARD: 24 hours Phone: 0171-837 7324 -------------------------------------------------------- SCOTSDYKE ========= PEACE, HEALTH AND HAPPINESS I saw the Queen was out in South Africa and she looked as if she was really enjoying the trip, (I know I would). I couldn't help wondering though whether she did buy some bush. And I don’t mean the jungle or the hedgerow, but Marijuana. Queen Victoria of course used Tincture of Cannabis every day and I harbour my own thoughts on the reasons why she never went out for years after her Albert's death. Perhaps she was not only in mourning, but was simply too stoned to go anywhere, she probably wore black all the time because it wouldn’t hurt her eyes as bright clothes would. It’s a funny old world, isn’t it? Because of course what was perfectly accepted in her days has now been vilified and declared a dangerous drug. Since 1971 even doctors cannot prescribe Cannabis any longer. Mind you, they are still free to give their patients Heroin, Morphine, Cocaine, Valium, Ativan, etc... All these are of course addictive, yet Cannabis, which has no proven addictive side-effects, has been stricken from the medical repertoire, after thousands of years of therapeutic usage. Yes, that's right, even the Egyptians recognised Cannabis as a healing herb when we had hardly a civilisation to speak of. And to bring you up to date, there still is a place for it in modern medicine. Many specialists these days are convinced that it is a very useful drug for treating illnesses as diverse as Multiple Sclerosis, ME, Depression, Bulimia, Glaucoma, Anxiety, Hyperactivity, Anorexia and even some AIDS patients have reported a marked pain-killing effect. It can be used successfully to control muscle spasms and all sorts of pains, from period pains to arthritic joints (no pun intended). But since 1971 anybody using Cannabis therapeutically has been made into a criminal. For someone who is already experiencing the trauma of illness the act of purchasing what is in fact an illegal drug to relieve the symptoms of their affliction is a disgraceful state of affairs. It is especially disheartening when a drug that is available through the NHS and is in fact a chemically produced substitute, which mimics the cannabinoid THC, is not prescribed for reasons of cost. How inhumane can you get when you tell a person to suffer their pains, because there isn't enough money in the kitty and sorry, but the plant which you could grow so easily on your window sill has been made into an abomination of everything this society stands for. You see of course what is behind all of this. People are being brainwashed into thinking that if you smoke or digest Cannabis you are on the slippery slope to eventually becoming a heroin addict. What a load of rubbish! It's like saying that if you smoke tobacco you'll eventually end up at Alcoholics Anonymous. I have my suspicions that the reason for all the misinformation might lie in the financial rewards creamed off by the chemical industries, who get the medical professions to prescribe their drugs and make vast profits every year. These drugs are copyrighted and of course nobody can hold a copyright on a plant (well not unless your name is God). Large amounts of tax are being paid by these companies to the governments of the day, which makes them honour-bound to bombard us with the lies conceived by the chemical industries in glossy pamphlets and TV ads preaching the evils of Cannabis. And with large profits available for anybody investing money in these companies I doubt whether there is many an MP who can afford campaigning for medicinal use of Cannabis, as it might affect the return on his or her portfolio. Next time you have someone at your door wanting you to vote for them ask them where they stand on this issue. If they are against the therapeutic use of Cannabis chances are that their portfolio contains a large share in chemical companies! There are people all over Britain fighting to legalise Cannabis, but I would be quite happy if the medicinal use of it would be authorised. I would like to be able to grow a couple of these plants to help my partner, who suffers from ME, without being made a criminal for it. Peace, Health and Happiness always, Martina ------------------------------------------------------------------- CREDITS ======= ScotsGay is a magazine for lesbians, gays and bisexuals which is edited, printed and published in Scotland. ISSN: 1357-0595. © Pageprint Limited 1995. Non profit use by the lesbigay community of material in the magazine will normally be permitted free of charge - but contact us first for permission. We haven’t had sex with most of the people who appear in the magazine so we don’t actually know what their sexuality is. Editor: John Hein. Advertising Manager: Gordon Gosnell. Contributors in this issue: Martin Powell, Richard Wilson (News), Philip Gill, Mark Watson, Vicky Johnson, Julie Travis (Features), Adam and Gordon (Scene), Rex Wockner (International), Tony Hiscox-Sloan (Smut), Braithwaite (Films & Media), Martina (ScotsDyke). Editorial Enquiries: Write to: ScotsGay, Pageprint Limited, PO Box 666, Edinburgh. EH7 5YW. Telephone: 0131-557 0412. Fax: 0131-558 1262. E-mail: scotsgay@drink.demon.co.uk We welcome news, articles, photos, cartoons, etc. - especially lesbian and bisexual material. Advertising Enquiries: Telephone: 0374 966402. Fax: 01505 335021 Subscribing by Internet: Scotsgay is available on the Internet. Send a 'subscribe scotsgay-list' message to listserver@drink.demon.co.uk and the text files of future editions will be delivered to you by e-mail.