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Pub Magazine Back Issue, March 1977

Pub March 1977 magazine back issue Pub magizine back copy 70s porn magazine pub back issues hot horny classic women xxx pix pussy shots erotic pictorials sexx
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Pub March 1977 Magazine

TABLE OF CONTENTS

3 PUB•LICLY SPEAKING
Letters
5 SEX IN YOUR TOWN
Letters
7 PUB OF THE MONTH
Feature: Jay Coleman
8 PARADISE REVISITED
Memoir: Ron Butler
11 METER MAID
Pictorial
16 MASSEUSE
Pictorial
22 CARNIVAL IN RIO
Article: Paul Brock
26 YE OLDE COCK & BULL STORY
Fantasy: D F. Matthews
27 PUB POURRI
Miscellany: Colette Cachet
35 WAITRESS Vikki Donovan
Pictorial
42 NURSE
Pictorial
51 ACTRESS
Pictorial
STEWARDESS 58
Pictorial
67 THE CONGRESSMEN'S LADY
Article: Jeanne Becker
78 THE TEACHER AND HER PETS
Fiction: Roy Battle
82 TEACHER
Pictorial
88 DINKUM DRINKING DOWN UNDER
Article: Joel Hopkins
92 COME FLY WITH ME
Fiction: John Martin Wrenn

Editorial Note - On The House
According to the shrill and strident cries from those women who emasculate men in the name of N.O.W. or theMs philosophy of "liberation," all females who work should be provided equal treatment (and pay) with men who perform the same task.
Tsk. Tsk. Frankly, every one of them we know only think this is what they want. To a man—er, woman—each wants the privileges of her sex PLUS all those enjoyed by us males. Not so, however, with PUB'S "working girls" featured in this issue. From our "meter maid" to the "teacher" and elsewhere in between, happiness is just being themselves. Each devoutly follows the logic inherent in the refrain, "I enjoy being a girl!" All are liberated in the truest sense of the word, but none would ever presume to take over the man's traditional role.
So we trust you will enjoy our interpretation of girls who work, and their unselfconscious exhibitions of total womanhood. They really do want more than your job!
Most people in the matrimonial state will agree that keeping it all together is a piece of work in itself. But when a guy drops out of marriage after several years, he may find that fitting back into the dating game is pure hell. In "Paradise Revisited," (page 8) Contributing Editor Ron Butler recalls how much more fun things used to be—or at least, seemed to be—before marriage in contrast to the aftermath. His memoir is a kind of "The Way It Was" or, perhaps, "The Summer of '42."
Frequent contributor Paul Brock, on the other hand, tells it the way it is during "Carnival In Rio" on page 22. Like the Mardi Gras, anything goes during this final fling before Lent, into drink, debauchery, and occasional skullduggery.
A celebration of another sort is chronicled by Joel Hopkins in "Dinkum Drinking Down Under" (page 88). Two visits to the Down Under continent of Australia have convinced Joel that beer reigns supreme there, and that nobody but nobody does the "Pub Crawl" with more enthusiasm than the Aussies. It sounds like fun.
Fun is what the teacher has in the classroom in the first of our two fiction pieces this issue. Roy Battle is back to provide the lowdown on higher education in "The Teacher and Her Pets" (page 78). We must assume that the action occurred in a progressive school, of course.
The course that Contributing Editor John Wrenn takes this time is faintly familiar a la Arthur Haley's "Airport." Another working girl, a stewardess, comes up with some unique sexual antics in "Come Fly With Me" (page 92). She is obviously a girl who doesn't really take to the notion that "what goes up must come down."
When a man has the notion that he can restrain an attractive, over-sexed wife from indulging in more than fantasy, he is either a fool or an egomaniac. Such is the stuff of "The Nuptial Scroll, or the Tale of a Wife and Her Bath" by D.F. Matthews in this month's "Ye Olde Cock & Bull Story" (page 26). Clever . . . and not really dirty either!
Clever is always a word we bestow without reservation upon our favorite fact-finder of the off-beat and significantly erotic: Colette Cachet. Once again, "Pub Pourri" is crammed with the latest from her meanderings here and there (pages 27-34).
Here, too, between pages 67 and 74, are reminiscences of "The Congressmen's Lady" by Jeanne Becker. As the lady herself explains of her life as a playmate to powerful politicians, "I made close to a hundred thousand (per year) and never had to show up at an office or be a concubine for one man. And I didn't cheat the taxpayer out of one dime!" So much for ElizaBeth Ray et al.
So much, too, is going on around our land in almost every city and village if the mail we receive for "Sex In Your Town" is any indication. Take a look, starting page 5.
More than a look is in order for our next issue and succeeding installments of PUB, as we continue to add more exciting features for your continuing pleasure. See the inside back cover for details, then greet and meet with us next month. At PUB, the welcome mat is always out, the company is friendly, and the entertainment is superb. •

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