Word: editoral
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...News Editor for This Issue: Colin F. Boyle '90 Night Editors: Ross G. Forman '90 Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Tara A. Nayak '92 Editorial Editor: Joshua M. Sharfstein '91 Features Editor Joseph R. Palmore '91 Sports Editors: Michael D. Stankiewicz '90-'91 Julio R. Varela '90 Photo Editors: Michael F. Koehler '92 Ali F. Zaidi '92 Business Editor: Michael S. Harwayne '91 Copy Editor: Michael P. Mann '91 Graphics Editor: Edward G. Owen
This Bronx-reared Barnum has magazines in his blood. In the 1960s and '70s, working as a cover designer with the late editor Harold Hayes, Lois turned Esquire's cover into a gallery that registered every shock of those seismic years. As an adman, he taught America's children the insistent demand "I want my Maypo." In the early 1980s he recycled the line to meet their grownup tastes: "I want my MTV." And he's the man who told people, "When you got it, flaunt it" (for Braniff airlines, remember?), a pretty good description of his advertising ethos...
...News Editor for This Issue: Ross G. Forman '90 Night Editors: Jonathan S. Cohn '91 Ross G. Forman '90 Susan B. Glasser '90 Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Spencer S. Hsu '90 Salil Kumar '91 Features Editor Spencer S. Hsu '90 Editorial Editor: Joshua M. Sharfstein '91 Sports Editor: Jennifer M. Frey '90 Photo Editor: Rebekah C. Seaton '91 Gavin R. Villareal '90 Business Editor: Michael S. Harwayne '91 Copy Editor: Julian E. Barnes...
...actually the ghost of Beaumont's fetal twin, who was incompletely absorbed in utero (the medical horror here is the book's only high-voltage shocker), comes to life as a cunning psychopath who, somewhat ludicrously, is determined to keep on writing. He slices up Beaumont's agent and editor and several other innocents with a straight razor, in scenes so lovingly detailed they would be called pornographic if the author had given the same attention...
...preserve their dignity amid the shambles of harsh circumstances. In The Literary Life of Laban Goldman, an elderly Jew attends night school to improve his English and get away from his nagging wife; he experiences a brief moment of triumph when the Brooklyn Eagle publishes his letter to the editor urging a relaxation of New York State divorce laws. The Grocery Store evokes the atmosphere in which the author, the son of a grocer, grew up in Brooklyn...