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            February 7, 2001: 
              From 
              the Editor 
            In a story about writing 
              in our December 20 issue, we quoted Richard Preston *83, who said 
              that at Princeton, throw a rock and you bring down a writer. 
              It also seems true that off campus, you can throw a rock and bring 
              down a Princeton writer.  
            That phenomenon probably 
              seems more pronounced to those of us who did time on one of the 
              many campus publications; from my four short years at the Prince 
              I recognize bylines at the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, 
              Fortune, and Fox Sports. But even those who werent involved 
              in writing on campus may know that Tigers are in charge at the New 
              Yorker, the Nation, Sports Illustrated, Entertainment Weekly, and 
              Harpers Bazaar, among others. 
             Many 
              of these editors served their campus apprenticeships in organizations 
              such as the Prince, the Nassau Weekly, or the Press Club. The Tiger 
              magazine, on the other hand, despite a checkered but illustrious 
              100-year-plus history that includes student contributions by Booth 
              Tarkington 1893, F. Scott Fitzgerald 17, New Yorker cartoonists 
              Whitney Darrow, Jr. 31 and Henry Martin 48, and an editorship 
              by John McPhee 53, has not in recent decades been thought 
              of as a proving ground for writers-to-be. After all, where does 
              one go after four years of beer and flatulence jokes?  
            Fortunately, theres 
              now an answer: Maxim. The U.S. version of this U.K.-born mens 
              magazine offers up cover lines including Get fit NOW! Right 
              after this moon pie, Score at will: Pillow-bursting 
              sex in one date or less, and World-class losers: Stupidest 
              sports screw-ups of all time. Stories like these  which, 
              incidentally, rocketed Maxim ahead of established magazines like 
              GQ and Esquire in its first year of publication, 1997  seem 
              to make Maxim the ideal follow-up to the Tiger, whose most recent 
              issue promised alcohol, politics, and imbeciles.  
            So its only natural 
              that Maxim would be led by Keith Blanchard 88, who helped 
              lead something of a revival of the Tigers fortunes in the 
              late 1980s with issues like a spoof of Brooke Shields 87s 
              1985 guide to campus life. He brings Tigers unique brand of 
              sophomoric humor to Maxim, a complement to the magazines self-proclaimed 
              emphasis on sex, sports, beer, gadgets, clothes, and fitness. Blanchard 
              has also brought a number of other former Tiger staffers to the 
              Maxim masthead. It may just turn out that not only is Maxim the 
              best thing to happen to men since women, as its cover claims, but 
              its also the best thing to happen to former Tiger editors 
               ever.   
                                                             
            
             
              
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