ly back police raids on newsstands, arbitrary post office decisions on what citizens will be allowed to read, committees of aged police widows (as in Chicago) deciding which motion pictures will be shown on American screens.
On a lighter side of censorship, pointing up by satire the absurdity of censorship, is the following review by Field and Stream of the book Lady Chatterley's Lover.
"Although written many years ago, "Lady Chatterley's Lover" has just been reissued by Grove Press, and this fictional account of the
day-by-day life of an English gamekeeper is still of considerable interest to outdoor-minded readers, as it contains many passages on pheasant raising, the apprehending of poachers, ways to control vermin, and other chores and duties of the professional gamekeeper. Unfortunately, one is obliged to wade through many pages of extraneous material in order to discover and savor these sidelights on the management of a Midlands shooting estate, and in this review's opinion this book cannot take the place of J. R. Miller's 'Practical Gamekeeping.'
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THAT'S WHAT YOU GET FOR TRYING TO PLEASE EVERYONE
Two women became pregnant as a result of a homosexual act. One partner had sex with a male friend, and then had sex with her female friend and unknowingly passed semen from herself to the female friend and they BOTH became pregnant by the semen from the male. (Journal of the National Medical Association, Vol. 55, No. 4).
During his late February visit to L.A., Father James Jones-known to ONE Friends for his appearances at ONE Institute, 1963, and on Norman Ross' Chicago TV show "Off the Cuff" with W. Dorr Legg
one
-reported his repeat performance on the same TV show February 14th. However, among the other speakers this time discussing homosexuality was a representative of the DOB Chicago Chapter, Dr. Franklin Kameny, Wash., D. C. federal employee currently contesting his dismissal from government employment, and the public relations director of the Homosexual League of N. Y.
Sexology, in its March, 1964, number reports the death of famed sexologist Dr. Rene Guyon in Thailand where he had spent the latter part of his life as legislative advisor to the government there.
Truly a patriarch in the field of sexual ethics, there is hardly a man anywhere with the qualifications that Guyon possessed, for he not only had vast personal experience but he was also a philosopher, a world traveler, a judge and student of jurisprudence, a student of human behavior, and he was fully familiar with the main roads and byways of passion. His most conspicuous work on civilization and sex begun in the early 1930's, Studies in Sexual Ethics, ran into many volumes. Only the first two volumes were ever published in English. In volume number X, The Abolition of Sex Offenses From the Penal Code, he got the jump on Wolfenden, The American Law Institute, and all such bodies by de-' manding and blueprinting new laws conforming to an enlightened pro-sexual society.
Guyon believed in complete sexual freedom and the abolition of all sexual restrictions where minors and violence were not an issue. BOOKS
Probably the most important recent book on the subject of birth control is Too Many Americans by Lincoln and Alice Day, Houghton Mifflin Co. It is must reading.
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