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| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Arrest of Stork and Hagen (The Quincy House Two) for screening Deep Throat. | Quincy House / Cambridge Po... | View |
| N/A | N/A | Filing of civil rights action against DA Droney. | Boston Federal Court | View |
| N/A | N/A | Dismissal of charges against Stork and Hagen. | Court | View |
This document consists of the cover and several internal pages from the book 'Massage For Dummies' by Steve Capellini and Michel Van Welden, published by IDG Books Worldwide, Inc. in 1999. It includes a 'Cheat Sheet' with rules for giving massage and a massage dictionary, a section on 'Danger Zones' in massage, and multiple pages of praise and reviews from various authors, therapists, and spa professionals.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir (dated draft 4.2.12) written by an attorney (historically identifiable as Alan Dershowitz) recounting the 'Quincy House Two' case at Harvard. It details the arrest of two students, Stork and Hagen, for screening the film *Deep Throat*, the subsequent protests, and the successful legal defense against District Attorney Droney, who was accused of acting as a censor. The text discusses the irony of censorship attempts and the disparity between legal rulings and public reality regarding obscenity.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the context of 'Deep Throat', Harvard's Quincy House, and the legal defense style, though his name is not explicitly in the text) included in House Oversight files. It details a court hearing where a Judge Alberti viewed the film 'Deep Throat' to determine if it was obscene under Massachusetts law, ultimately deciding it was 'trash' but not legally obscene. The narrative concludes with the author addressing protesters and students at Quincy House regarding free speech rights.
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