In the late seventies,
Oui published some interesting articles, including "Is this the man who ate
Michael Rockefeller?" (April 1977) by Lorne Blair (lately famous for the
Ring of Fire documentaries), beginning with a photograph of a grinning
New Guinea native, told by the intrepid anthropologist/reporter who journeyed to New Guinea, interviewed people who had known Michael Rockefeller, then ventured into the jungle and talked to members of the tribe from whom Rockefeller had bought native art artifacts, including
totem poles. In the end, he found a man who claimed he had eaten the unfortunate collector.
Oui also hosted several reportages about
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) activity, like the article "CIA vs. USA – The Agency's Plot to Take Over America" by
Philip Agee, about an alleged Operation
PBPrime, whose leaders were the top four men in the CIA and whose target was the control of the U.S. government. In a more humorous vein,
Oui also published the essay "The 3 Most Important Things in Life" by
Harlan Ellison in its November 1978 issue. The three things in question were
sex,
violence, and
labor relations, each illustrated by anecdotes from Ellison's life. The sex anecdote involved a less-than-successful assignation with a young woman, the violence anecdote was about witnessing a murder in a movie theater during a screening of
Save the Tiger, and the labor relations anecdote was Ellison's version of the story of his being fired after only one morning at
The Walt Disney Company for jokingly suggesting the making of a pornographic cartoon using the primary Disney characters. The piece has since been republished in Ellison's
Stalking the Nightmare and
Edgeworks 1.
Oui also published short fiction. A 1977 interview by
Peter Manso of the then 29-year-old emerging actor
Arnold Schwarzenegger on issues like sex, drugs, bodybuilding, and homosexuality produced some embarrassment 25 years later to candidate Schwarzenegger in the
2003 California gubernatorial campaign. During the 1970s,
Oui printed a copy of
Shere Hite's questionnaire about female sexuality that was used as the basis of
The Hite Report. Replies were received from 253 of the magazine's women readers. == Post-
Playboy years ==