Word: lampooning
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Mademoiselle, the Great American Fashion Magazine, may turn its entire staff over to the editors of the Lampoon, the Great American Humor Magazine, for an upcoming issue. "It's just going to be incredible," Ibis Michael Frith '63 chirped last night, "we can't afford not to do a good...
...first time anything like this has ever happened to any college humor magazine," added ex-Ibis John L. Berendt '61. With a circulation of almost 600,000 for the Mademoiselle issue, the Lampoon in she's clothing will be read by more people than any college magazine in history, and double the total number of people who have ever read the 'Poon, he predicted...
...going to provide the literature, art, and makeup," Frith continued, "and they the models, clothes, and photographers--all facilities." The only restraining stipulation Mademoiselle has thus far imposed is that the Lampoon must use "real models and clothes that fit, in ads that are paid for." "But we can really mess around with the fake ads," Berendt said...
...Each Lampoon subscriber will receive the fashion magazine as the last issue of this term. "We'll be having stories poems, and cartoons, like always," Frith promised...
...Inward Eye. Politically, Schirmbeck is an annoying cafe neutralist; he indulges himself in an overcrude lampoon of U.S. Physicist Edward Teller, and solemnly puts forth the preposterous view that Atom Spies "Arthur and Edith Rosenbluth" were martyrs in the cause of freedom of information. But the author's principal concern is examined exhaustively and well: If the eye of science offends, should it be plucked out? The heroic Prince de Bary refuses to build war brains for the OSI, and retires to a life of contemplation. Subtly enough that the truth does not cloy, Schirmbeck answers his own question...