Word: stripping
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...perish." He has also come to the defense of conservation forces in the national controversy about the energy shortage, declaring that they should not be "the whipping boy." At the same time, though, Train has troubled many environmentalists with his active support for several Administration positions including bills on strip mining, water pollution and the siting of power plants-all of which they consider overly favorable to industry...
Faced with this problem I've always unrolled the tube, cut the metal strip off at the bottom, squeezed the tube open, and re placed the toothpaste, and then rolled the tube back to its previous position. It's simple...
Worrisome though it is, the court decision may be a less critical problem for the skin magazines than their own proliferation. Success has spawned successors at a rate now heading toward the suicidal. The great majority of imitators are blatant strip-offs of Playboy's successful format. Guccione, a painter and photographer who has succeeded largely on a genius for promotion, led the drive on Hefner's long monopoly in 1969-and already sells some 3.4 million copies of Penthouse each month (v. Playboy sales of 6.7 million). Playboy maintained a haughty indifference to Penthouse for three years...
...Comic Strip. The two have more in common than they may realize. Both wanted to be cartoonists; Guccione contributes Jules FeifTerish pieces to his magazine, Hefner once maintained a comic strip on the events of his life. Both men are divorced parents, and both have employed their own fathers as corporate treasurers. Glenn Hefner, 75, is a shy, church-going Methodist whose hobby is photographing flowers; white-haired Anthony Guccione, 68, is an accountant whose hip dress style reflects that...
...resist the bloody legalities of the Redemption; we face Judgment Day, in our hearts, much as young radicals face the mundane courts-convinced that acquittal is the one just verdict. We judge our Judge . . . incidentally reducing his 'ancient foe' to the dimensions of a bad comic strip...