Word: frat
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Details will relaunch in October as a men's-fashion magazine under Conde Nast's newly acquired sister company, Fairchild, which publishes W and Jane. Meanwhile, Maxim, its circulation more than 1.6 million, is the undisputed frat-house president, and it's doubtful anyone can challenge it without embracing the mammarian flat-out. "When Mark and I were at Maxim," says erstwhile Details executive editor Bill Shapiro, "our whole mission in life was to destroy Details, to eat Details for lunch." Mission accomplished, guys...
...swing, he stopped at the family compound on the Maine seacoast to celebrate Poppy's 75th birthday, a subtle reminder that he was better bred than the unworthy occupant of the White House. If some thought the young Bush had had it too easy, remained too much the carefree frat boy, they could still count on the fact that he was his father...
...Actress Hagen 32. Corduroy feature 33. World March of Women 2000 kickoff city 37. He rejected a plea of forgiveness from Vichy official Maurice Papon 40. Blow the whistle 41. Every, in prescriptions 42. The L.A.P.D. is disbanding this anti-gang unit 44. Relating to some calculations 47. Frat letters 48. Where Frankenstein's monster came to life 50. Each Dawn __ (Cagney film) 52. The FDA will begin enforcing __ therapy safety 53. Inflation-fighting agcy. of 1941 54. "Beg pardon..." 55. Added stipulations 56. Lepidopterist's need 57. Carpenter...
...bitterness? Attack ads? Everyone uses attack ads. Unfair spin? Politics always has been dirty, and no politicians can take these things personally without exploding. Sure, Bush ran a dirty campaign, but at the risk of sounding subjective, what else do you expect from a spoiled, dumb, rich, arrogant, sneering frat boy? Not that he'd be a bad president, so long as his advisors keep him from doing and/or touching anything...
...another meaning." It's not shocking that young Mark moved from suburban St. Louis to find drugs on a big campus. But it's a little surprising where he's encountered ecstasy, a drug first used in the 1970s by a small group of avant-garde psychotherapists--at frat houses. As president of the university's Interfraternity Council, Bradford has found himself in meetings with police to discuss frat boys' growing appetite for a drug today usually associated with teen ravers, gay men and what's left of America's aging hippies. "It's everywhere now," says Bradford, who doesn...