Word: bindrim
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...enough when California courts ordered Novelist Gwen Davis and her publisher, Doubleday, to pay $75,000 last April to Hollywood Psychologist Paul Bindrim. He said he was defamed by Touching, Davis' 1971 novel involving an encounter group whose gig is communal nudity in warm pools. Now Davis, 45, feels doubly wronged: Doubleday has sued her for some $138,000, which includes legal costs, the money Bindrim won and interest. Several authors' groups and a number of writers, among them Irving Wallace, Gore Vidal and Joan Didion, have criticized the publisher for turning on one of its authors...
Davis contracted with Doubleday in 1969 to write a novel about two women who, in search of something missing in their lives, attend a "nude encounter workshop." As part of her research, Davis spent 20 hours at the Los Angeles center where Bindrim pioneered the "nude marathon," a therapy in which participants strip naked to gather in a pool, where they spend long periods talking and touching. Bindrim, 59, describes this as a way to teach people "how to be more open toward one another and to relate in a more authentic and satisfying manner." When Davis' book appeared...
When he arrived for the trial, the once clean-shaven Bindrim was sporting a full white beard and a recently acquired Ph.D. He produced tape recordings of the sessions that Davis attended; many of Bindrim's remarks appeared nearly verbatim in Touching. Bindrim was awarded $75,000-$50,000 to be paid jointly by Davis and Doubleday-plus $25,000 in penalties to be footed by the publisher alone. Last December, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the California decision, thus letting it stand...
...issue of privacy has replaced the '60s issues of equality and self-determination." "This is nonsense," said Southern California Psychologist Paul Bindrim. "Why not just put up a sign...
...PAUL BINDRIM...