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Fwd: Fwd: Highlights from the September 1996 Penthouse

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Aug 1, 1996, 3:00:00 AM8/1/96
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NEW YORK--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--July 29, 1996--Three
photographs taken by the U.S. military of the autopsy of an alien
from outer space are being published nationally for the first time
in the September issue of Penthouse magazine, which has challenged
the government to acknowledge their authenticity.
The images, which were obtained clandestinely by Penthouse for

its 27th anniversary issue from unidentified sources, show the head
and upper torso, hands and mid-section of a being of indeterminate
sex that looks remarkably human-like. In an accompanying story, the
magazine's editor-in-chief and publisher Bob Guccione said the
images are "incontrovertible evidence, from a film that has been
suppressed for decades, that mankind is not alone in the universe."
Guccione said he has sent a copy of the September Penthouse to

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Ronald Fogleman so that the published
photos can be matched against the complete film record he says was
made of the autopsy.
"I am convinced that these are 100 percent genuine photos of
an
alien but the government will never admit it because to do so would
acknowledge a coverup of the existence of life beyond our solar
system," Guccione said. He said he has posted extra guards at the
magazine's printing plant and warehouse to make sure that
distribution of the magazine is not disrupted. The magazine goes on
sale July 30 and copies will be sealed in plastic envelopes.
"A photograph of Jesus Christ might be a comparable story to
the
first real photo of an extraterrestrial," Guccione said.
"Otherwise, there's nothing that compares to this," according to
Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione, who was interviewed for an
accompanying story by former Omni magazine editor Keith Ferrell.
In recent weeks, Time and Newsweek and other media have
published extensive stories on investigations into the possibility
that the Earth has been visited by life-forms from outer space.
Surveys indicate that up to 48 percent of Americans believe that
aliens have actually visited Earth. The motion picture
"Independence Day," with an alien-invasion theme, broke box office
records in its opening weeks.
Guccione said the photos were obtained from the daughter of a
German scientist who escaped to America at the outset of World War
II and worked with Einstein and Oppenheimer on high-level research
projects. Separately, he was involved in the investigation of the
crash of a mysterious spacecraft in Roswell, New Mexico, in the late
1940s. Neither the scientist nor his daughter were identified by
the magazine.
The photos published by Penthouse were secretly copied from a
filmed record of the autopsy of the remains of one of the victims of
the Roswell crash. Although the crash was investigated by U.S.
military personnel, which is reported to have conducted the autopsy,
no official government reports of the post mortem have ever been
released of the event that has been widely chronicled in UFO
literature. The Penthouse photos are not related to a dramatized
reenactment of the Roswell alien autopsy incident that was carried
recently by Fox-TV.
"The pictures from the autopsy have never been seen in the
national press until now. Other copies, originally shared with a
close colleague, have appeared in the Japanese media and a few
esoteric UFO magazines with extremely limited circulation," Guccione
maintains.
"With the publication of these pictures I challenge the
government to acknowledge the existence of the complete
motion-picture documentation of alien presence on Earth," Guccione
said. (Page 150; Interview available with Bob Guccione and Keith
Ferrell)

-0-
Sexy in America: survey says we're sexier than we thought
A new study of the sex lives of Americans conducted by
Penthouse
magazine concludes we are much sexier than we thought. The new
findings show that 85 percent of American women think about sex at
least once a day, and this compares with a 19 percent figure
reported by the University of Chicago when it released its 1994 "Sex
in America" report. About 2,000 people took part in the "Sexy in
America" study by completing a survey that ran in Penthouse. The
results are published in the 27th anniversary September issue of the
magazine (on sale July 30). About 82 percent of the respondents
were men and 18 percent women.

Among the conclusions:

- When asked to choose between sex, love, power and wealth, men
and women both rank love as the "most important." However, sex is
much more important to men than women (15 percent of men ranked it
"most important", compared with 6 percent of women).
- About 69 percent of men and 45 percent of women think about

sex more than four times a day.
- Top picks for sexual turn-ons are: Adult movies (88
percent);
seeing a sexy woman (87 percent); adult magazines (84 percent);
seeing their lover turned on (79 percent) and sexy lingerie (77
percent).
- Two-thirds of the women surveyed fantasize about being with

two men and 65 percent fantasized about having sex in a public or
dangerous place, while just 47 percent dreamed of having sex in the
office.
The respondents were generally from urban or suburban areas
and
about equally arrayed on both sides of age 40, well educated,
affluent and healthy. Three quarters have never had a sexually
transmitted disease and 60 percent have been tested for H.I.V. (Page
22; interview available with survey experts Dr. Patti O. Britton and
Dr. Peter Sandor Gardos)

-0-

The Dark Side of Steven Seagal
How much can celebrities get away with? In Steven Seagal's
case, according to the September Penthouse, the limit may soon be
tested. The magazine reports that "high-powered litigators cannot
stop the stories of Seagal's thuggish behavior," and goes on to add
a new layer of stories his "retinue of lawyers, public relations
people and studio executives" have tried to keep out of the press.
According to reporter John Connolly, four women on the set of
his
Warner Bros. movie "Out for Justice" resigned en masse to protest
what they said was his harassing behavior and a sexual attack on one
of them. A former housekeeper alleges Seagal forced sex on her. She
later was fired and soon after was arrested for stealing personal
effects from his home. She pleaded guilty, but now says she did so
only to avoid a jail term. Four actresses told Connolly about
late-night casting sessions in which Seagal acted like "a slime ball"
and fondled them or made other sexual advances. Says Penthouse:
"Seagal's behavior is apparently so flagrant that the (Hollywood)
code of silence is starting to crack."
CONTACT:
Robin Gold or Shari Bryan, 212/702-6000 ext.1901
email: reg...@aol.com


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