4 COMMUNICATION 8 ANIMAL ANTICS G. L. Simons 13 ERIKA BERGMAN Eugene Finkei 20 THE LOVERS W. A. Harbinson 24 GO TO HELL Peter Clarke 27 VACATION Brian O'Hanlon 28 ANIMATION Laurence James 29 RECREATION Brian O'Hanlon 30 THE ALEXANDER WALKER INTERVIEW Mike Bygrave 35 APRIL Ed Alexander 40 ROMAN HOLIDAY Peter Stafford 43 DULCIE SCOTT Amnon Bar-Tur 52 FROM SOHO TO VIENNA J. T. Izard 57 SUPER SHEENE Wendy Gable/ Jay Myrdal
60 TO-GET-HER Alfred Mazure
62 LEONORA
Siwer Ohlsson
67 MODUS OPERANDI
Edited by David Jones
71 KEEP IT GOING Ann Summers
72 LETTERS TO Ann Summers
75 HOLLY
Amnon Bar-Tur
82 FIONA IN WARSAW Fiona Richmond
86 TRAVELLER'S REST Michael Wallace
89 CAMILLE
Eugene Finkei
95 THINGS TO COME
Teri King
99 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
EDITORIAL Iam often asked why the sales of Men Only are so phenomenal and why they con-
tinue to increase. The questions aren't easy to answer since the sales are in
fact so huge and must therefore reach an enormous diversity of people. However,
I do feel that this particular issue is a shining example of how we give everyone
enough of what they need to keep them happy.
Some people think that sex is a limited subject, but our feature, Animal Antics,
disproves that belief, and does so in an hilarious manner. G. L. Simons is the
best-selling author of such books as Sex and Superstition and Pornography Without
Prejudice, but especially for us he has departed from these straighter shores
to explore the bizarre, perverse and often rib-splitting sexual mores of the animal
and insect.worlds.
The more hUmma-porn-star">Uman aspects of sexuality are covered in Traveller's Rest, the exotic
memoirs of a journalist who has travelled the globe and found more than mere physical
satisfaction in many of its houses of ill-repute. A quick read of this and you'll
be packing your bags, bound for the Far East and its ladies.
Elsewhere, the insatiable J. T. Izard carries on up the seedy streets of Soho
and finally lands up in Vienna. For a full explanation I suggest you turn to page
fifty-two and prepare to be educated and surprised.
Two of our most popular "regulars" are Modus Operandi and the Ann Summers'
column. This month the former takes a look at group sex while the latter warns
the male about ignoring foreplay — fair warning indeed!
There is a rumour going around Fleet Street that the only reason the Thursday
edition of the Evening Standard sells at all is because of the presence of controversial
Alexander Walker. Once an extra himself, Walker has since become one of our most
knowledgeable and enthusiastic film critics, interested not only in the aesthetics
of film-making, but in the problems of finance, distribution and censorship. A
man renowned for his sharp and witty phraseology, his interview with Mike Bygrave
is quite a coup.
Meanwhile, Fiona travels on unperturbed. Lovely to look at, irresistible in print,
she was recently in battered Warsaw and has written it up in her own inimitable
style.
Pictorially, we are as usual unbeatable. Our fashion set is not only good to see,
but also features motor-cycle superstar Barry Sheene. Erika and Dulcie are just
two of our varied beauties; and there are cartoons, a game and Communication.
In short, a grand iswe./ Tony Power