Word: screwing
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...rejected. It is true that The Crimson occasionally holds meetings, which all staff members may attend, to discuss running certain ads which our advertising manager determines may present problems. It is also true that some staff members at the meeting where a majority of those present rejected the Screw magazine ad voted against it for reasons set forth in the majority position. Crimson readers should not be led to think, however, that the reasons for rejection stated in the majority position constitute The Crimson's advertising policy. In fact, the Crimson has no ad policy other than to reject...
PRESTO, CHANGEO, close your eyes and it's gone, so fast that you might think an ad for Screw magazine had never been there in the first place. But it was, almost...
...reading ads for Screw in The Crimson today, tomorrow, or anytime in the near future. With a slight-of-hand worthy of Houdini himself, a majority of The Crimson has managed to begin to dismantle the First Amendment--all in the name of a greater good...
What this good is or who it will benefit is not clear, but we do know for sure that it includes refraining from exploiting women. Screw magazine is an easy target for charges of exploitation, not nearly as obvious as Time magazine, or other publications currently pandering Al Haig and the new Reaganism that promises to exploit the urban poor and the aged...
...majority does not explain whether it plans to extend its decision censoring Screw to other publications, but the potential exists for such a ban because The Crimson has no policy stating the guidelines for the acceptance of an ad. Most other ads are probably safe, though, because, as the majority notes, The Crimson needs money to stay in business. The opinion implies, however, that if it were freed from financial constraints, the majority would reject many other...