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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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, may 23, 1960 | 5/23/1960 | See Source »

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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Season | 5/9/1960 | See Source »

...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: What's Whose Line? | 5/2/1960 | See Source »

...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Hardly Regal | 4/25/1960 | See Source »

...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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: THE DEFEAT OF THE HAPPY WARRIOR | 4/18/1960 | See Source »

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