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...been quick to appreciate Mauldin's veracity. First the 45th Division News, then the Army Times, the Stars & Stripes and the Yank printed his cartoons. He became a G.I. favorite overnight. When Ernie Pyle called Mauldin the finest cartoonist produced by the war, United Feature's George Carlin promptly signed him to a long-term contract. His saturnine "Up Front with Mauldin" is now syndicated to over 100 U.S. civilian newspapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Genuine G.I. | 11/6/1944 | See Source »

Ernie Pyle, top G.I. war correspondent, called Sergeant Bill Mauldin the best cartoonist of the war. His drawings, thought Pyle, often went beyond comedy, were "terribly grim and real . . . about the men who are ... doing the dying." That was enough for smart George A. Carlin, boss of United Feature Syndicate. In a fortnight 22-year-old Sergeant Mauldin's unshaven, unsmiling infantryman "G.I. Joe" and his hard-faced pals will become syndicated newspaper characters. This week Carlin reported that 42 papers had signed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Up from the Ranks | 4/3/1944 | See Source »

...Lwow, Poland, LL.M. and Master of Diplomatic Science, '35, University of John Casimir, Lwow, Poland, candidate for LL.M. '40, Harvard; Marcus Manoff, of Philadelphia, Pa., candidate for LL.B. '40, Harvard; George H. Schuller, New Haven, Conn., J. D., '32, University of Vienna, candidate for LL.B. '40, Yale; Benjamin Carlin, Grove Hall, Mass., candidate for LL.B. '40, Wake Forest Law School; Henry H. Foster Jr., Lincoln, Nebr., LL.B. '36, University of Nebraska; Robert G Murray, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, candidate for LL.B. '40, Dalhousie; William T. Muse, Richmond, Va., LL.B., '30, University of Richmond, S.J.D., '34, Harvard; and James A. Washington...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NINETEEN LAW SCHOOL AWARDS MADE PUBLIC | 4/18/1940 | See Source »

...Franklin Roosevelt's reception at Carlin, Nev. which Senator Pat McCarran turned into a rally for himself. To Senator McCarran, too, another anti-Court plan man, the President gave the silent treatment. But the crowd saw smiling Pat McCarran beside the President and cheered him loudly, shouted for him to speak. "It's nice to see you," grinned happy Pat McCarran. Later the President publicly thanked him for several Nevada trout...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Wahoos for McAdoos | 7/25/1938 | See Source »

...days, Patient Carlin had spent 31? (all the money he had) for newspapers, had taken to playing checkers with fellow inmates, had dropped his depressed air. "But the more natural I acted," he said, "the wackier they thought I was." At the end of ten days, Patient Carlin was losing sleep, losing his appetite for the drab, saltless food, and began to realize that his surroundings were having no good effect on him. As a voluntary patient he petitioned for release, saying he felt much better. Rockland's officials told him that he was an incipient dementia praecox victim...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Crazy Carlin | 2/14/1938 | See Source »

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