Sidney Brinkley, “The Bottom Line, ” Blacklight 1, no. 2 (1979): 2. ?

Sidney Brinkley, “The Bottom Line, ” Blacklight 1, no. 2 (1979): 2. ?

“Cliques, ” Blacklight, December–January 1980–81, 5. ?

The Washington Blade reported in July 1978 that six homosexual males was in fact murdered since January of the year that is same. The guys had been reported to have frequented pubs in DC’s “hustler part near 13th and ny Ave. ” Lou Romano, “D.C. Police Report escalation in Murder of Gays, ” Washington Blade, 1978, 5. ? july

Inside the essay “Without Comment, ” Essex Hemphill describes the Brass Rail as “the raunchy Black homosexual club” that “was bulging out of its jockstrap. Drag queens ruled, B-boys chased giddy federal federal government employees, fast-talking hustlers worked the ground, while sugar daddies panted for attention when you look at the shadows, providing free products and cash to virtually any friendly trade. ” Essex Hemphill, “Without Comment, ” in Ceremonies: Prose and Poetry (Berkeley, CA: Cleis Press, 2000), 75. ?

Sandra G. Boodman, “AIDS Message Misses Numerous Blacks, Hispanics, ” Washington Post, Might 31, 1987. ?

On November 21, 1978, the newly created DC Coalition of Ebony Gays sponsored a forum on racism within the community that is gay. One of several dilemmas mentioned in the forum ended up being racism within the white-dominated homosexual news. Continue reading “Sidney Brinkley, “The Bottom Line, ” Blacklight 1, no. 2 (1979): 2. ?”