Word: cartoonable
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BRITISH Cartoonist Ronald Searle, who drew this week's summit cover (his first for TIME), is recognized as one of the best of Great Britain's talented covey of cartoonists. Searle won a national reputation before he was 30 for his madcap cartoons of "St. Trinian's Girls' School," whose bloomered, black-stockinged, altogether fiendish young ladies roasted oxen in their rooms, made dissenters walk the plank, fired machine guns down the halls ("Girls! Girls! A little less noise please"). He spread his humor through weekly features for Punch and London's News Chronicle, including...
Next season the familiar Midas-touch system will be in force more firmly than ever-oaters, private eyes and twice the number of situation comedies. A new one on ABC threatened to be the ultimate development in its field: an animated-cartoon series called Flintstone, about a family living in the Stone...
...dilemma: the conflict between the lady of manners and the brittle gossip. Continued the Post: "She is secure enough to have exclaimed once: 'I'm getting a little fed up with Albert Schweitzer,' a natural caption that ever since has been in search of a cartoon." Dorothy,' wrote the Post's five-member reporting team, is so busy being a celebrity that she rarely sees her husband, Broadway Producer Dick Kollmar: "[Dick] and Dorothy go their separate ways for the most part . . . They do meet regularly for the breakfast show . . . in which the commercials sometimes...
...snubs were probably not directed at Meg and Tony personally, but were retaliatory slaps at the snobbery of Queen Elizabeth, who has failed to attend, or to send a representative to, many of the weddings and funerals of continental royalty. In Germany, the Hamburg Die Welt ran a cartoon showing a king on the phone to Britain, saying, "But in case we should need asylum again, we'd be glad to come...
...Alcohol) Smith." Widely circulated stories reported him so drunk at public functions that cronies had to support him to keep him from falling down. The Ku Klux Klan issued a "Klarion Kail for a Krusade" against him, attacked him repeatedly in the Klan publication, Fellowship Forum. A typical Forum cartoon showed what a Cabinet meeting would be like if Smith got elected: the Pope and a dozen fat priests sitting happily around the table, with Smith, in bellboy livery, serving them liquor. Out in the boondocks. Smith haters showed audiences a photograph of Governor Smith at the inauguration...