OPINION
I
The plaintiff manufactures, sells, and distributes contraceptive products, marketing them through sales to wholesale distributors and chain warehouses for resale to retail pharmacists. It publicizes the desirability and availability of its product line by means of a sales force, and advertisements in trade publications and popular magazines of nationwide distribution. However, the plaintiff has apparently found its marketing strategy insufficient to reach many of its potential customers. Plaintiff now seeks to supplement its “mix” of marketing tools by arranging promotional activities in conjunction with its wholesalers and retailers. The proposed promotional activities relevant to this case are efforts tci mail to the public, on an unsolicited basis, three types of mailings. One type is informational pamphlets promoting the desirability and availability of prophylactics in general, and Youngs’ products in particular. The second type is flyers exclusively or substantially devoted to promoting prophylactics in general, those made by Youngs, and/or those stocked (and perhaps discounted) by a particular drugstore or chain of drugstores. The third type is multi-page, multi-item flyers mailed out by a drugstore or chain and promoting a large variety of products available and perhaps on discount there, including prophylactics. The plaintiff, its wholesalers and retailers seek to send both types of flyers not just to a drugstore’s already-known customers, but to the public.
Youngs has submitted samples of the flyers and promotional materials sought to be mailed. See Exhibit C. There is no dispute that the materials at issue in this case are tasteful expressions on a subject matter that obviously could lend itself to communications that some would find offensive. 1 However, in this case, not only are the materials not obscene, there is no suggestion that they treat the subject matter of the desirability and availability of contraceptive products in a pandering, suggestive, or graphic way. Accordingly, the Court’s opinion is limited to materials similar to those submitted by the plaintiff.
II
Youngs’ proposed promotional campaign clashes with the clear express language of 39 U.S.C. § 3001(e), which reads in full:
*825 (1) Any matter which is unsolicited by the addressee and which is designed, adapted, or intended for preventing conception (except unsolicited samples thereof,. mailed to a manufacturer thereof, a dealer therein, a licensed physician or surgeon, or a nurse, pharmacist, druggist, hospital, or clinic) is nonmailable matter, shall not be carried or delivered by mail, and shall be disposed of as the Postal Service directs.
(2) Any unsolicited advertisement of matter which is designed, adapted, or intended for preventing conception is nonmailable matter, shall not be carried or delivered by mail, and shall be disposed of as the Postal Service directs unless the advertisement—
(A) is mailed to a manufacturer of such matter, a dealer therein, a licensed physician or surgeon, or a nurse, pharmacist, druggist, hospital, or clinic; or
(B) accompanies in the same parcel any unsolicited sample excepted by paragraph (1) of this subsection.
An advertisement shall not be deemed to be unsolicited for the purposes of this paragraph if it is contained in a publication for which the addressee has paid or promised to pay a consideration or which he has otherwise indicated he desires to receive.
Youngs’ promotional campaign also conflicts with Postal Service regulations interpreting the reach of the statute. Section 123.434 of the Domestic Mail Manual reads, in pertinent part:
Unsolicited advertisements for articles or things which are designed, adapted or intended for preventing conception are nonmailable, except . . . when the mailer has no commercial interest in any such item. 2
In early 1979, the Postal Service traced an allegation of an unsolicited mailing of advertisements for contraceptive products to the Ketchum Drug Company of New York City, a wholesaler of Youngs’ product line. The Service warned Ketchum that the mailing violated the statute. Youngs and Ketchum noted in letters to the Service their view that under
Carey v. Population Services International,
III
The Court concludes that the statute in question, by its plain language, prohibits all three types of mailings in this case. 4 Hence, the Court must reach the issue of the constitutionality of the statute as applied to these mailings, in particular, whether the absolute statutory ban on all three types of mailings violates the First Amendment.
The Court notes the opinion in Associated Students, supra, which held the statute at issue unconstitutional as applied to mailers who seek to inform addressees, on an unsolicited basis, about the desirability and availability of birth control devices and practices, but have no personal economic interest in doing so. As noted above, the Service has acquiesced in that interpretation.
That case set forth various points concerning the constitutionality of the statute that bear repeating here. First, the statute constitutes a prior restraint of expression, against the constitutional validity of which there is a “heavy presumption.”
Associated Students, supra
at 21 (citing,
inter alia, Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan,
In this case all three types of proposed mailings are commercial solicitations. Accordingly, this Court must consider this case not only in the light of the considerations that formed the basis of the Associated Students opinion, but, more importantly, within the framework set forth by the Supreme Court for commercial speech cases. Moreover, the issue in this case is complicated further because, while on the one hand, this mailer, because of its commercial inter *827 est, has less freedom than the Associated Students mailers from regulation of its efforts to communicate with the public as it sees fit, on the other hand, these mailings, particularly the flyers, appear to be less explicit and less potentially offensive to sensitive addressees than was the detailed booklet on birth control and abortion practices and resources in Associated Students.
IV
The Commercial Speech Tests 5
In a series of cases from the last few years, the Supreme Court has made clear that commercial speech enjoys First Amendment protection.
Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc.,
Whether the First Amendment protects commercial speech “turns on the nature both of the expression and the governmental interest served by its regulation,”
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission,
The Supreme Court applied the following analysis in those two cases. Since the First Amendment extends to commercial speech because of the informational function of advertising,
First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,
First, the restriction must directly advance the state interest involved; the regulation may not be sustained if it provides only ineffective or remote support for the government’s purpose. Second, if the governmental interest could be served as well by a more limited restriction on commercial speech, the excessive restrictions cannot survive.
Id.
V
Application of the Commercial Speech Test to this Case
а. The substantiality of the governmental interest
This Court finds that the Government does have a substantial interest to be achieved by this statute.
6
The Government states that interest as “protecting the privacy of individuals in their homes.” Since there is a statute, upheld by the Supreme Court in
Rowan v. Post Office Department,
b. The “Directness" Prong
The Supreme Court ruled in
Central Hudson
that the New York Public Service Commission’s complete prohibition of electric utility advertising promoting the use of electricity
did
directly advance the state interest in energy conservation since “there is an immediate connection between advertising and demand for electricity.”
Central Hudson, supra
c. The Least Restrictive Means Prong
Reaching the last part of the test, this Court finds, as did the Supreme Court in
Central Hudson,
that this regulation of commercial speech is constitutionally impermissible because it is “more extensive than is necessary to serve the [governmental] interest.”
Central Hudson, supra,
Here the effect of the statute and the regulations is that under no conditions may a commercially-interested mailer mail to the public on an unsolicited basis, any material promoting or mentioning the desirability or availability of contraceptives. The Court concludes that under the line of Supreme Court commercial speech cases cited supra, the application of the statute and the regulations to the three types of mailings involved in this case cannot withstand less-restrictive-alternative scrutiny.
Therefore, this Court will order, first, that multi-item drugstore flyers containing tasteful promotion of contraceptives, may be mailed to the same extent that such flyers could be mailed if they did not contain such promotion.
8
The Court relies on
Consolidated Edison, supra,
in particular, where the Supreme Court reviewed New York’s highest court’s determination that bill inserts promoting nuclear power plants intruded upon individual privacy because the public “ha[s] no choice whether to receive the insert and the views expressed in the insert may inflame their sensibilities.” The Court ruled that the fatal flaw in that determination was an “err[oneous] assessment of the seriousness of the intrusion.”
Id.
Second, with respect to flyers and pamphlets devoted exclusively or substantially to promoting the desirability or availability of contraceptives, this Court will order that such materials are mailable only under the following conditions. First, they must be mailed in an envelope that completely obscures from the sight of the addressee the contents. Second, the envelope must contain a prominent notice stating in capital letters that the enclosed material has not been solicited in any way by the recipient. Third, the envelope must contain a prominent warning that the contents are “promotional material for contraceptive products.” Fourth, the envelope must contain a notice, in less prominent lettering than the warning and the other notice, but not in “fine print,” that federal law permits the recipient to have his name removed from the mailing list of the mailer of that envelope, and citing to 39 U.S.C. § 3008(a).
The Court concludes that, with respect to materials devoted exclusively or substantially to promoting contraceptives, nothing less than the envelope, notice and warning requirement set out above would be a reasonable less restrictive alternative for advancing the governmental interest in protecting the privacy of individuals in their homes from mailings they find offensive. The combination of the envelope’s complete obscuring of the contents, the notice that the material is unsolicited, and the warning indicating the predominant subject matter of those contents, substantially enhances the “wastebasket” remedy. Taken together, they make it likely that persons who would find the contents offensive will resort to that remedy without opening the envelope and being offended. The fourth requirement substantially enhances the Section 3008(a) remedy by alerting addressees to the existence of the statute as a protection against any future mailings from that mailer.
Finally, the format ordered by this Court goes far in achieving a companion governmental interest of particular concern to the Court. Due to the sexual nature of the subject matter at issue in this case, there is an interest in ensuring, to the extent constitutionally permissible, that it not fall into the hands of children whose parents do not wish them to be exposed to subject matter of a sexual nature, regardless of the style of its presentation. The multi-item flyer does not present a serious threat to that interest, since the ad for contraceptives in such flyers will likely be — as it is in the exhibit submitted to the Court in this case,
see
Exhibit C — buried in the middle pages of the flyer.
10
However, it is a central concern in the case of the “exclusive or substantial” flyer and the pamphlet, whether sent by a local retailer or Youngs into the home. Yet in
Consolidated Edison,
even though the unsolicited, possibly offensive material
was being mailed to the home,
the Supreme Court nevertheless cited with approval the rule of
Cohen v. California,
The Court believes that it has devised a less restrictive alternative that does not limit the commercial speech rights of mailers any more than necessary in order to significantly advance the Government’s substantial interests in protecting personal privacy and keeping subject matter of a sexual nature from falling into the hands of children inadvertently. On the other hand, the Court concludes that this alternative, unlike some of the others that it has considered such as a pre-mailing followed by a mailing only to those who have returned a card soliciting further promotional materials, does not impose a serious financial burden on the exercise of those rights.
As in any balance, of course, the requirements ordered by the Court do not achieve, to the fullest extent imaginable, all the aims of the competing interests. In particular, these requirements do not provide absolute protection against having material concerning contraception occasionally fall into the hands of inquisitive children. However, the requirement of an opaque envelope and the fairly technical language of the warning, that is, “contraceptive products” as opposed to, say, “materials having to do with sex,” will reduce, though not to zero, the above problem. Especially where free speech rights are on the other side of the balance, no reduction to zero on the governmental interest side can be realistically expected. In sum, this Court is satisfied that it has struck the balance that the Constitution mandates. 12
Notes
. The Court notes that the plaintiff has submitted a number of more explicit, more potentially offensive advertisements for sexually-oriented products which, Youngs alleges, the Postal Service permits others to mail. See Exhibit E. However, all those advertisements are mailed
on a solicited basis,
being either specifically ordered by the addressee or contained in a specifically-ordered publication. Obviously, different interests are brought into play when materials are furnished on request, than when they are sent unsolicited to a member of the public.
Rowan v. Post Office Dept.,
. The exemption from coverage that the regulations provide to mailers without a commercial interest is a result of the Postal Service’s acceptance of, and its interpretation regarding, the decision in
Associated Students v. Attorney General,
. The Court was particularly concerned that the defendants might suffer irreparable harm, while it did not appear that the plaintiff ran a substantial risk of such harm. In particular, were the Court ultimately to rule on the merits in favor of the Government’s position, the Court feared that the Government’s interest in assuring the nonoccurrence of the statutorily-prohibited mailings would be defeated. Indeed, had Youngs taken advantage of a preliminary injunction to launch a huge mass mailing of advertisements and promotional materials to the public, it might have achieved the bulk of the relief it sought on the merits, no matter how the Court ultimately ruled on them.
. Indeed, the Service argues not that the statute can be read expansively to reach, but rather that it especially covers, multi-item drugstore flyers containing advertising for contraceptives. See Defendants’ Supplemental Memorandum, at 7 (§ 3001(e)(2) “proscribes the mailing of unsolicited commercial advertisements concerning contraceptives, essentially in the form of drugstore flyers, which are precisely the materials with which the private home owner is likely to be overwhelmed”).
. The Court notes that the plaintiff argues in the alternative that this is not a commercial speech case at all, but rather one of pure speech, albeit in the form of an ad.
Cf. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
. The Court notes its surprise to learn that in Associated Students, supra at 22, the Government “did not present any interest which might form the justification for this restraint on free speech.”
. The Court recognizes, though, that the emergence of well-organized direct mail efforts by mailers with an ideological interest has lessened to some extent the “commonsense differences between commercial speech and other varieties.”
. The Court reiterates that it has no occasion on the facts of this case to consider the mailability of such flyers if the promotion they contain for contraceptive materials is done in a tasteless or palpably offensive style. For reasons stated in the text, however, this Court doubts that drugstore flyers present a serious risk of frequently containing tasteless or palpably offensive promotion of any product.
. The Court notes that many of the items listed may be offensive to some one. For instance, in the drugstore flyer from the Park Plaza Pharmacy of the Bronx, New York, submitted to this Court as an exhibit in this case, there are *830 ads for a number of feminine products, mention of which may well be offensive to sensitive addressees.
. The Court notes that if the promotion of contraceptives appears on the front page of the flyer, or by some other manner of graphic design dominates the rest of the flyer, then a court might decide to treat the flyer as one “devoted in substantial part to the promotion of contraceptives.” In that event, the flyer would come under the envelope, notice, and warning requirement.
. That “remedy” will be an especially effective check on tasteless promotion of contraceptives in multi-item drugstore flyers in many communities, where, as in this area, the major drugstores deal in everything from prescription drugs and general health care products, to groceries, magazines and counter meals.
. This Court has also considered the defendants’ argument that the statute is a reasonable restriction on the manner of Youngs’ exercise of its free speech rights. The Court concludes that the statute and the regulations go to the content of the communication — information about contraceptives — and not to the manner of that communication — unsolicited mailing of commercial information. Indeed, were the Postal Service really in the business of restricting this manner of communication, few of us would recognize our mailboxes.
