Letter From Howard McCrum Snyder to Eli Ginzberg
Images (4)
Document
| id |
id
12004814
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 4SUPREME HEADQUARTERS
ALLIED POWERS EUROPE
APO 55 c/o P. M.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
21 December 1951
Dear Eli,
I am embarrassed to comment upon problems of homosexuality to a
staff which incorporates the knowledge that Sol alone among you repre-
sents on this subject. I will not enter upon a long-winded discussion
of the subject but will confine my remarks almost exclusively to a re-
ply to your questions.
I have always taken the position, which I feel you share with me,
that none but overt homosexuals should be rejected for the military ser
vice, It is questionable whether some of these would not make "good"
in the Service, We are acquainted with the anecdotes that are presented
occasionally in the press, more often in novels, of volence and death as
a result of activities of these individuals, but we also know that these
instances are exceedingly rare. As a matter of fact, we can read in the
press and novels about violence and death resulting from "pure love".
Yet, me must accept the fact that many consider homosexuality a morale
destroyer in any and all circumstances,
I think that many homosexuals were prematurely separated from the
Service "hho had not even a "nuisance value" because of this characteris-
tic. I do not consider an individual a homosexual based upon the atti-
tudes represented by many of those included under that heading in Kinsey's
work. I am sure that many adolescent instances of occasional homosexual
contact represent no material deviation from normal conduct, though these
individuals may be statistically classified as homosexuals because they
have at some time indulged in homosexual "experimentation,
I cannot believe that there were many "active" seducers among the
homosezuals in the military service, at least in the Army, during the
last war. I was close enough to the "soil" to have had any glaring ex-
amples of such conduct brought to my attention. It was only rarely that
I learned of a situation in which homosexuality created an administrative
problem of any seriousness, To all intents and purposes, I think we can
form the conclusion that those who were interested in this form of sex
expression used discretion in their practices. Some few cases were made
the subject of investigation by the Inspector General's Office,
9 and
is
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to