Tuesday, July 17, 1973 Penthouse to defend retailers NEW YORK (UPI) - Pent- house magzine announced Sun- day it will defend vendors of the periodical who may be accused of selling pornography under the recent Supreme Court ruling per- mitting local communities to set obscenity standards. "Any news agent in the U. S. or on any street corner in the country or otherwise who is tried for selling Penthouse will have our full support," said Penthouse publisher Bob Guc- cione. "WE WILL BE there in full strength with all usr resources to defend him and ourselves" Guccione, 42, said he "will not allow anybody to give up the magazine, if it is at all pos- sible." Guccione said in m'iking the announcement that his attor- neys had been in contact with Plyboy magazine, its chief com- petitor in the field of sophisti- cated girlie magazines, to see if it would do the same but Playboy was "not interested" PENTHOUSE HAS repared a leg-il team which will contact the local vendor when the maga- zine receives a report of a seiz- ure, Guccione said. "If there is something we can do," he said, "we will do it." Guccione said that so far his magazine has received reports of seizures in Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Virginia. HOWEVER, HE SAID that no legal defense was necessary be- cause the cases were thrown out at the initial stages of litigation. Playboy announced last week it will re-evaluate the future con- tent of the photography of its magazines, but Guccione said Penthouse will not make any revisions in its format. He said both magazines divide about 20 per cent of the magazine ven- dor's market. Guccione said it would be al- most impossible to edit the mag- azine on a regional basis to com- ply with the 5-4 Supreme Court decision. Talks at MSU to continue EAST LANSING (UPI).- Contract negotiations between Michigan State University and two striking locals of the Ameri- can Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFS- CME) stalled Sunday after 26 hours of bargaining which began Friday. Members of the two locals walked off their jobs early last week, with the skilled trades- men of Local 999 going on strike Monday and the maintenance workers of Local 1585 going out Tuesday. KEITH GROTY, assistant to the vice president at MSU for personnel and employe relations, said talks with Local 1585 would resitme in the presence of Ed- nards Connors, a mediator from tine Michigan Employment Rela- tions Conmmission beroty si fese isses hiad dsiritsg tI weukend, but sexeral najor issues, including svages, rztmained in dispute Given tim closeness of plisi- tions," Groty said, "the assis- tnnce of the state mediator is likely to speed up final agree- ment." THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five The big stretch United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock, left, reaches across the eight-foot-wide negotiations table in the General Motors Building in Detroit yesterday to shake hands with General Motors Vice-President George Morris. The talks between the union and the auto company affect some 700,000 workers across the nation. II It{ ji ' ' + ' 'iI o , a o , If women thought this way about men they tists, political candidates professors itndcorn- would be awfully silly, pony presidents, any other viewpoitit is ridic- When men think this way about womanUU they're silly, too. Think of it this way. When we need all I Women should be judged for a job by whether or not they con do it., In a world where womnn are doctors, lawyers, judges, brokers, economists, scien- the he p we can get, why waste haf he brs around? Womanpawer. t's much too goad to waste. 5avccc ihuue a Lv tII-MI Is A