ARTICLES AND FEATURES 31 INTERVIEW: DR. RICHARD HAGEN The author of The Bio-Sexual Factor believes genetics and the environment have
made men polygamous and sexually aggressive.
34 THE STERILIZATION OF THE AMERICAN MAN
Investigative report by Jerry Shields Are you becoming sterile? It's very possible,
if you've eaten produce sprayed with the pesticide DBCP.
46 THE LAST ROMANCE OF Marilyn Monroe
By Bill Stadiem
The never-before-published facts about Marilyn's clandestine affair with a Mexican
just prior to her death.
55 DOUBLES
A bonus preview of a new magazine. Learn how to be her first orgasmic lover, the
ins and outs of oral sex, why women prefer the average-looking man, and much more.
92 HOW TO HANDLE AN UNFAITHFUL WOMAN
By Joan Gill
She just told you she's been sleeping with another man. What are you going to
do? Experts tell how to stay together when infidelity hits your home.
106 THE SOCIETY
Fiction by Eric Kaldor and D.K. Krzemien
For the rich and powerful, gambling for money lacks excitement. They'll bet their
eyeteeth to see who has the greatest power over the most
beautiful women in the world.
123 PRIVATE LIVES: TEACHING THE TEACHER
He was a good teacher of English literature, but his coeds were great teachers
of biology.
128 THE DIRTIEST WORDS IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
By Norman Hoss
Stop saying "Friggin' sonofabee." The words you really want are now
considered proper English. PICTORIALS
38 FOCUS ON MARTIN SCHREIBER
Sixth in a series on top photographers, how they began, and a portfolio of their
best nude work.
49 JOIE DE VIV
Photographs by Conrad Pringle
95 THE "GIRL NEXT DOOR"
Amateur Erotic Photo Contest
104 "GIRL NEXT DOOR" OF THE MONTH CENTERFOLD
108 DIARY OF A NUDE BEAUTY CONTEST JUDGE
The trials and tribulations of a judge at a nude beauty pageant.
117 WOMAN'S EROGENOUS ZONES
A special, giant pull-out poster to show you where she most likes to be kissed,
caressed, licked, tickled, and blown.
142 GLIMPSES
A brief look at how sex is all around us—in your father's time and now. DEPARTMENTS
7 FEEDBACK
Letters from our readers.
18 GALLERY'S "HOW MANY DOES IT TAKE?" CONTEST
A new contest for Gallery readers with a sense of humor.
19 PEOPLE, PLACES AND THINGS
By Jill Toffer
23 GALLERY'S YOU SECTION
Your Career Success by Mel Shestack
Your Personal Lifestyle by J. Nebraska Gifford
Your Body and Hers: Sex Quiz by Peter Frishauf and Katharine Rice
Your Leisure Hours:
Music by Meridee Merzer
Screen by Tom Seligson
Books by Donald Newlove
150 FACE TO FACE: SABURO OKITA
Willem Oltmans in a discussion with Japan's Minister of Foreign Affairs.
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
Personal thoughts from my note pad:
• According to a recent article in The New York Times, there's no need to
give chocolates to someone you love—send them to a rejected lover instead.
Reason: two chemists at the New York Psychiatric Institute have discovered from
laboratory tests that "love lost may drain the body's store of a potent mood-altering
chemical that chocolate has in rich supply." What about jelly beans?
• Las Vegas has more than its share of beautiful women, but some men never
seem to have enough. Red Mcllvaine, director of advertising and publicity for
the Frontier Hotel, has just launched a national campaign to find the perfect
girl—an 11. "No talent is required. Just great looks." The winner
will be on magazine covers, represent the hotel in worldwide ads, appear on radio
and TV shows, and be given a Hollywood screen test. For information, write to
Red at the Frontier: 3120 Las Vegas Blvd. South, Las Vegas, NV 89114.
• The Bo Derek/Dudley Moore film that prompted the Frontier's contest has
had a whopping impact on record sales, too. Seems audiences, after seeing 10,
are rushing straight to record shops for albums that contain one of the world's
classic masterpieces, Ravel's Bolero. That's the music Bo likes to make love by
(in the movie, that is).
• If you're anywhere near Las Vegas and already have your Bolero album,
you can skip past the record shops and head straight for Battista's Hole in the
Wall. If Ravel offers music for the ears, Italy-born Battista Locatelli can provide
music for your taste buds. A once-upon-a-time opera singer, this charming gent
opened a tiny restaurant exactly ten years ago that has grown five times its original
size without losing any of the coziness and quality that's made it a favorite
of every celebrity who appears on the Vegas Strip. One measure of his success:
Battista and his wife, Rio, own his-and-her private airplanes. Oh, by the way—you
can buy a record here, too. Not Bolero, but Battista's own powerful voice in a
selection of his favorites. At $1, it's almost as good a deal as his eggplant
parmesan.
• Larry Gatlin, country-western star who is now making it big in pop music,
recently told me about the biggest disappointment of his entire career. The former
Odessa, Texas choirboy released a new song that he was convinced would make the
charts. "Midnight Choir" describes the plight of a group of winos who
sing their hearts out for one last swig from the bottle:
Will they have Mogen David in Heaven, Dear Lord
We'd all like to know,
Will they have Mogen David in Heaven, sweet Jesus
If they don't, who the hell wants to go .. .
No sooner did the song hit radio, than a flood of complaining telephone calls
had cautious station managers withdrawing the song. A narrow-minded but vocal
minority, who obviously don't understand the song at all, has—for the time
being, at least—censored Gatlin's song and made it impossible for the rest
of us to enjoy it. If you'd like to hear it, pick up the telephone and call your
local station. Larry deserves it.
• One of the nice things about my line of work is the people I have an opportunity
to meet. I'm not talking about Muhammad Ali, Charles Aznavour, Dick Williams,
Dave Parker, Larry Gatlin, or anyone I've interviewed for Gallery. I'm referring
to names you've never heard before, but who make my days more enjoyable—men
like the ones at Clarion and Glenmore Distillers, two advertisers whose staffs
have become real friends. Whenever you see Clarion ads in these pages or anywhere
else, know that Jim LeVitus, Don Coleman, Marty Mazner, Bob Kresser, and Lou Jacobs
are quality men who turn out a quality product. And if you're down Louisville,
Kentucky way, good old Southern hospitality emanates from the offices of Bob Farrell,
Don Rayle, Jack Milici, and Rick Bland. They'll be happy to get you a tour of
the Glenmore distillery ... including a free taste.