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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. All writers must include their address and
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daytime phone number (for confirmation only).
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No, It
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Wasn't an Innocent Romance
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Seth Stevenson, the writer
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of "An Innocent
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Romance," should get a grip. Adultery by one's parents, even
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Ă¼ber parents like Bill and Hillary, is harmful to the child. It's not
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necessarily the public disclosure of the adultery, it is the fact of the
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adultery itself.
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Hey, Seth, adultery is
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generally a good sign that all is not well in the homestead; ergo, the fact of
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adultery tells us the family is suffering. Therefore, the child is probably
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suffering (yes, even one 3,500 miles away at Stanford).
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Your
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value-free ramblings, unconnected as they are to any sense of morality or
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healthy shame, sound a lot like the greatest hits from a sophomore philosophy
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seminar. Clever? Sure. But of any real value or connection to real people in
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the world? Definitely not.
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-- Kevin
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Dillon Houston
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Yes, It
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Was an Innocent Romance
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Well done!
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A hearty thanks to Seth Stevenson for his piece "An Innocent Romance," which is
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another blow struck for sanity in this war against Starr's sinister attempt to
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manipulate our emotions. These are potentially dangerous times. This country
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needs all the sanity it can get.
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-- Maggie Bryan Los
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Angeles
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To Bonk
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or To Boink: That Is the Question
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Recently,
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in a few articles (such as "An Innocent Romance") I have noticed the use of the
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term "bonk" to refer to the act of sexual intercourse, especially in reference
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to the president. I am impressed by
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Slate
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's attempt to use hip
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language, but I'm afraid someone has been lax in his cataloging of the latest
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terminology. As a college student familiar with all the latest urban lingo, I
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believe the proper term to be used in these contexts is "boink." Not only does
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the word itself sound more fluid, but I also think the connotation it has is
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more appropriate to the meaning
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Slate
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intends.
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--Theo
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LeCompte Philadelphia
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Government Trash, Nostalgically
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David Plotz's reviews of the
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paperback versions of the Starr report ("Flytrap's
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Trashy Books") brought back fond memories of The Report of the
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Presidential Commission on Pornography , a peculiar publication that is now
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likely to be emulated.
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Back during the Nixon
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administration, Supreme Court decisions permitted some "obscene" materials to
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be distributed only if they were combined with other matters that had
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"redeeming social value." The publication of a government document called
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The Report of the Presidential Commission on Pornography , or something
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like that, presented an opportunity to sell the smut under an appropriate
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cover. The illustrated edition included the full government report and garden
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variety beaver shots, etc. It came out around 1971, I believe, and I may not
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have the precisely correct title.
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I recall that its technical
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quality was poor, with a mimeographed text and low quality photographic
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reproductions as well, which didn't match the text very closely. With modern
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technology, so much more can be done. The video of the president's testimony
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will also lend itself to interstitial illustration.
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Sadly, my
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copy of the "illustrated edition" was lost in a college dorm long ago and far
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away. Perhaps one could be found at the Library of Congress?
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-- Arthur
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Stock Clarksboro, N.J.
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Roll
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With the Polls
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Bruce
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Gottlieb's "A
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Snowball's Chance" ignores the obvious countereffects of polling. It is a
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well-established fact that people will tend to slant their views and responses
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to questions so as to better agree with what they perceive to be the majority
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opinion. The perpetual quoting of Clinton's high job approval ratings helps
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ensure that his job approval remains high. This phenomenon could unravel in a
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similar way to that described in the article: As the polls drop a little, the
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pressure to agree with the majority decreases, and the numbers have the
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potential to drop precipitously. It would be difficult to determine which of
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these phenomena is at work without careful study (i.e., without doing more than
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just watching the polls and guessing).
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-- Mike
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Harkavy Richmond, Calif.
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Government Gaming
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I think Steve Chapman's
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article "Vice
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Is Nice" misses the point. Legal gambling is a good idea, since
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people will gamble in any case. The state should regulate gambling as it
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regulates other businesses, seeing that the odds are posted, that the games
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aren't rigged, and that the promised jackpots are paid--and then leaving those
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who want to do so free to waste their money gambling if they please. But
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"legal" gambling is not what we have.
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What we have is
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state-sponsored gambling. The government either runs the games, as in
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lotteries, or sponsors them and takes a large cut of the take, as in casino
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gambling. By running the games, the state endorses the dubious value of
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"something for nothing." Worse still, it deceives the people: Instead of
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emphasizing the truth of the business--the long, long odds--it emphasizes the
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unrealistic chance of winning big. (The ads for every state lottery prove that
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point.) The state treats people not as citizens it serves and protects but as
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suckers it will swindle.
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If the states were not the
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partners of the gambling interests, they would apply the same consumer
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protection standards to legal gambling that they do to other businesses. As it
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is, they connive in the deception of the public, because they share the
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take.
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I would
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like to know if Chapman would favor privatizing gambling, so that anyone
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who put up proof of the ability to pay off the pot could run a lottery, casino,
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or whatever. That would take the government out of the gambling business
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both ways. And I am sure that in that case, the government would make
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sure not only that the games are honest but also that the people knew how long
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the odds are.
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-- Brian Abel
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Ragen St. Louis
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Steve
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Chapman replies:
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I don't
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disagree with Mr. Ragen on the wisdom of getting the government out of the
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lottery business, repealing special gambling taxes, and leaving the whole
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business to the free market. But I would not let the best be the enemy of the
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good. I think "state-sponsored" gambling is preferable to none at all--just as
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state-owned liquor stores are a lot better than Prohibition.
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The
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Traveler's New Clothes
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Anne Hollander--who wrote
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"Travel
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Without Clothes!"--might be interested to know that traditional Japanese
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inns today provide clothes to travelers. All patrons are offered light cotton
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robes, which can be worn around the hotel and in the surrounding neighborhood.
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Heavier robes are provided in winter. Traditionally, the wearer would wear his
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own traveling clothes to the inn. The clothes would be given over to be
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cleaned, and the traveler would use the inn's clothes during his stay. When the
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traveler left, he would again wear his own traveling clothes, which have been
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cleaned. In this way, people could make weekslong journeys on muddy footpaths
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with just one set of clothes, which would be washed regularly.
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I doubt
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that hotels are interested in having customers walk off with their clothes, as
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Hollander suggests. However, it's conceivable that hotels could provide the
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customer with a set of clothes while he's staying at the hotel. For example, a
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business traveler could arrive at the hotel wearing a suit. The hotel would
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provide casual clothes, and also underwear, socks, dress shirts, undershirts,
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ties, etc. The business traveler would wear his own suit to business events,
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perhaps paired with the hotel's shirts, socks, and ties. At the end of the
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trip, the traveler would receive his own clothes back, now laundered, for the
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trip home or to the next destination. Admittedly, providing women's clothes,
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which are more complex, presents a slightly greater challenge. But this method
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would make it possible to travel indefinitely carrying nothing more than a
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paperback and a credit card. The hotel, which is assured of getting its own
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clothes back, can offer more than just jeans and T-shirts from the Gap.
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Wouldn't it be nice to have a closet full of Armani to go with your
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$400-a-night hotel room?
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-- Nathan
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Lewis Tokyo
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A Pubic
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Mistake
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Despite
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Slate
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's status as an online zine and all that that implies,
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(erratic spelling, shaky grammar, much exposure of genitalia), I feel strongly
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that you should probably aspire to at least adequate copy editing. I'm
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referring to Scott Shuger's assertion in the Sept. 17 "Today's
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Papers" that "pubic radio stations have tripled." Perhaps Shuger is simply
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obsessed, like the rest of you media types, with pubic matters, or perhaps we
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as a nation have finally entered adolescence, with a concomitant increase in
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all things pubic. But please consult the Chicago Manual of Style : Any
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sentence that contains the word "pubic" must also contain either the word
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"Clinton," the word "Lewinsky," or the word "Thomas." I'm shocked to see such a
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lapse in a zine of
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Slate
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's quality, and was considering canceling
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my subscription until I realized that to do so would mean that I would not have
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access to the upcoming "Explainer" on "What Is Oral Sex?"--and that I simply
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could not swallow.
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-- Floyd
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Elliot Chicago
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Address
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your e-mail to the editors to [email protected]. All writers must include their address and
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daytime phone number (for confirmation only).
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