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Magazine Surveys Sex at Modern American College

Compact, "The Pocket Magazine for Young Moderns" becomes the latest in a lengthy list of magazines to survey immorality on the American campus with an article, "What About College Morals?," in its March issue.

In the article, students representing a "highly selective cross-section" of colleges present their opinions on everything from the good-night kiss, to heavy necking, to pre-marital relations. Wellesley, Radcliffe, M.I.T., and Harvard are among the schools represented.

On the subject of the good-night kiss, a Wellesley girl calls it "Standard procedure for the first date. I had a date every Saturday night my first semester and only two of the boys didn't try to kiss me the first time I went out with them. One was a blind date--I didn't like him and he didn't like me--and the other was a young intern, definitely above average, who really knew how to treat a woman."

A Radcliffe junior offers a method for avoiding the good-night kiss: "Don't let yourself get 'fenced in' Sometimes it works if you try the line, 'It's been so wonderful this way,' accompanied by a gentle pressure of the fingers."

According to a Harvard freshman, "There's too much talk about necking and petting already. It's more important for a girl to dance a good rumba and to know some of the fine points of football than to spend her time worrying about whether she should pet or not."

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An M.I.T. student applies the theory of Eve seducing Adam to the problem of petting, which he calls "one of the girl's own making. You can't blame a boy for taking advantage of whatever opportunity presents itself. Some girls invite familiarities."

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