Citations:pansexual

attracted to others regardless of gender

 * 1970–1972 (originally issued; printed in compiled form in 1973), Ramparts, page 25:
 * Karen and Carlos are definitely pansexual people who have paired off to have this child, and this seems real and good to them now. When I had been with Karen, she had floated through several gay relationships, and the father of the baby, [...] all my friends had been what I would call pansexual, avoiding the older term bisexual, which is meaningless when you can count more than two sexes.
 * 1974 April 1, Judy Klemesrud, "The Bisexuals", in New York Magazine (link 1, link 2), volume 7, number 13, page 37:
 * A bisexual was also a central character on a recent CBS prime-time episode of Hawkins, starring James Stewart. [...] Whether you call a person who is able to have sex with a male or female[:] bisexual, AC-DC, a switch-hitter, ambisexual, pansexual, omnisexual, or, in Freud's words, a 'polymorphous perverse,' his or her sexual persuasion is certainly nothing new.

attracted to anyone (or anything)

 * 1971, Mental Health Program Reports, issues 5-6, page 166:
 * A goodly number became homosexual or pansexual, making indiscriminate advances to males, juveniles, or females that were not in estrus.
 * 1974, Erich Goode, Richard R. Troiden, Sexual Deviance and Sexual Deviants, page 158:
 * The least restrictive sexual pattern would be displayed by the bisexual — or better yet, the "polymorphous pansexual," the man or woman who is willing to entertain the notion of sex with anyone, or even anything.

unsorted citations

 * 1976-77, Maria, a pansexual quoted in : Janet Bode, View from Another Closet: Exploring Bisexuality in Women,
 * [page 84:] they refused to be shoved by society into a gay or straight category. Maria said, “If I must have a label call me pansexual, ambisexual, antisexual, androgynous, neutral, undecided…just don’t make me into something I’m not!”
 * [page 136:] They felt that men and women must become integrated beings—uni- or pansexual.