Word: cartoonable
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...rules. The next step, of course, is for Andromeda and the machine to start taking over the world. Directed by the machine, Andromeda produces miracles: new wonder enzymes and an anti-missile missile system that confounds the Communists. British politicians begin dreaming of regaining big-power status, and villainous cartoon-capitalists from a giant international cartel get into the act. By now, the irascible Dr. Fleming is screaming that the machine is engaged in the "slow subjugation of the planet." When no one listens, Fleming attacks the machine itself with an ax. And the parthenogenetic blonde dies because...
...edit our Canadian coverage right on the scene. This week they are doing something unique in TIME'S history: putting out a cover story of their own. Their issue, of course, contains the complete Nelson Rockefeller cover story. But the cover is a specially drawn Canadian political cartoon (see cut) straight out of A Midsummer Night's Dream. Canada's leading cartoonist, Duncan MacPherson, aware that the summer Shakespearean season at Stratford, Ontario, coincided with the June 18 national election, put his Prime Minister John Diefenbaker (center) and Liberal Opponent Lester Pearson (holding the lion...
...Trib let Kennedy have it on a variety of other scores. After Salinger's return from a tour of Russia, the paper front-paged a caustic cartoon that showed the secretary reporting to his boss: "Mr. Khrushchev said he liked your style in the steel crisis" (see cut). The Trib also carried a Page One editorial arraigning the President as the cause of the market decline. Back in the business section, Financial Editor Donald Rogers not only blamed the slump on Kennedy, but called him an "antibusiness" schemer...
From Meters to Car Boosts. Inevitably, the manufactured crime wave engulfed the police department. Both the News-Call Bulletin and the Chronicle blasted departmental indifference ("These citizens want action," shrilled the Chronicle, "not explanations"). The Examiner printed a singularly unjust cartoon of a mugger escaping under the very nose of a motorcycle cop-who was too busy writing a parking ticket to notice. And all three papers printed statistics to prove that since Jan. 1 crime in San Francisco was up 13% over last year...
...Thomas Storke of the Santa Barbara (Calif.) News-Press; local reporting under deadline: Robert Mullins of the Salt Lake City Deseret News-Telegram; local reporting not under deadline: George Bliss of the Chicago Tribune; national reporting: Nathan Caldwell and Gene Graham of the Nashville Tennessean; international reporting: Walter Lippmann; cartoon: Edmund S. Valtman of the Hartford (Conn.) Times; news photography: Paul Vathis...