Gay billiards

Pool

Athletic Alliance of Chicago (“AAC”) is a non-profit corporation that operates a sports league in Chicago devoted to the LGBT group and our straight friends. At AAC we are dedicated to building society through camaraderie and rivalry.

Our mission is simple, through a spacious range of athletic challenge, AAC strives to provide it’s members and the community the following:

A social outlet to build camaraderie within a diverse LGBTQ+ community.

A supportive environment that nurtures participants beyond the playing field.

A dynamic, all-volunteer organization that is self-sustaining and dedicated to excellence on a local, regional and national level.

Currently AAC is comprised of eight different leagues Badminton, Beach Volleyball, Darts, Indoor Volleyball, Pickleball, Pool, Table Tennis, and Tennis. We welcome all kinds of players, whether you are a seasoned or picking up the sport for the first time.



let mapElement = document.getElementById('map'); // Build the Google Route using out element and options defined above map = new google.maps.Map(mapElement, mapOptions); addFieldMarkers(); // road venue map uses gtag('event', 'venue_map_load', { 'event_label': 'gmap', }); } /** Adds venue markers. **/ function addFieldMarkers() { let bounds = new google.maps.LatLngBounds(); $('.venue').each(function () { enable $venue = $(this); let venue = $venue.attr('data-name'); let speak to = $venue.attr('data-address'); allow surface = $venue.attr('data-surface'); let lights = $venue.attr('data-light'); if (lights) { surface += '   |   ' + lights } let info = $venue.attr('data-info'); permit location = $venue.attr('data-location'); let nextEvent = $venue.attr('data-next-event'); let homeTeams = $venue.attr('data-home-teams');

Gay couple playing billiards together in a bar

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(PT) is for Pool Table

Posted by Eric Gonzaba

Whether you’re brand-new to using Mapping the Gay Guides or not, you’ll know that one of the most helpful ways to explore our dataset is using what we call “amenity features.” These amenity features can be found in the original Damron Speak to Books and were a letter coding system that helped the reader recognize a little bit more about a listed establishment. For example, a famous site (say, a busy bar) would often have a star next to the bar’s designate (in place of a star, our team at Mapping the Gay Guides uses an asterisk *). If the listing was a place where one could find, speak, a burger to chow down on, Damron would often include the letter “R,” denoting that the site was a restaurant. The amenity features often denote the compassionate of patrons to a site (whether African Americans frequented that site, or if the place is mostly for a younger or older clientele, for example). Sometimes the letters noted practical information—whether a site served coffee or was a place suitable for dancing.

While working with the first 15 years of data on the site, one amenity initially surprised our team—the designation “PT,” which Damron noted stood for