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Show 199 '60s.7 However, violent confrontations remained rare, and for some officials, law- abiding gays who accepted their homosexuality posed a greater threat than lawlessness. One year after the Stonewall Riots, Dr. Charles Bemis, a psychiatrist from the University of Southern California, informed an audience of Utah law enforcement officers that "homosexuality is a disease. It can be treated, but homosexuals, like most people, don't want to change. But it is just not true, as some homosexuals claim, that some people are just different and that's the way it is.:" The following month, the Salt Lake Tribune featured an interview with Sergeant Max Yospe ofthe police department's sex crimes investigating squad and an anonymous University of Utah student, "Mary X." The discussion topic, "Should Laws Concern Homosexuality?" reflected national debate over legalizing consensual homosexuality. At first, Y ospe argued against decriminalization based on his experience arresting men for public sex. To illustrate the incongruity of homosexuality and respectability, Y ospe spoke of married men, including "staunch pillars in the community," having homosexual dalliances in public restrooms.? However, when "Mary X" replied that she only supported legalizing private, consensual behavior, Y ospe expressed a more visceral disapproval of gay domesticity: That would be just lovely, wouldn't it? To have a homosexual couple 7"Police Seize Six Persons in S.L. Bar," Salt Lake Tribune, 31 December 1972, p. B2. SRobert A. Bryson, "Police Expert Cites Danger in Lack of Sex Education," Salt Lake Tribune, 26 March 1970, p. B1. 9"Confrontation: Should Laws Concern Homosexuality? ," Salt Lake Tribune, 26 April 1970, p. B6. |