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Show 19 deviance" suggested the novelty of the idea and a need for consensus on matters traditionally left unspoken. The Lee committee acknowledged differences of opinion as to what constituted a sex offense, citing the recently published Kinsey study's emphasis on "wide variations in sexual attitudes between one social group and another, and in some cases of claimed sexual aberration the accusing group, rather than the accused person, may need orientation and even treatment."? Just as Alfred Kinsey's Sexual Behavior in the Human Male lifted the veil on American sexuality, a 1949 survey of male college students provided a barometer of local attitudes toward sex. John Pennock examined the sexual histories and attitudes of200 single men attending the University of Utah, 90.5 percent of whom considered homosexuality wrong. To place their disapproval in perspective, Pennock asked the students which of three behaviors they considered most "harmful" and most "wrong," homosexuality, heterosexual intercourse, or masturbation. Even though 54 percent of their heterosexual experiences involved adulterous liaisons, prostitutes, or casual "pickups," 71.5 percent of the men considered homosexuality the most wrong. II Pennock's research design and interpretations reflected a preoccupation with sexual object choice that denied homosexuality the same moral complexity as heterosexuality. Pennock asked respondents to evaluate the "wrongfulness" of nonmarital heterosexual intercourse only, while treating homosexuality monolithically. IOUtah Committee, 1,4-9. II John Albert Pennock, "A Study of the Sexual Attitudes and Behavior of Two Hundred College Men" (Master's Diss., University of Utah, 1949), 50-4, 59. Single |