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Word: cartoonist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Carmichael lives in New York, and neglected to request an absentee ballot. But bar a catastrophe, she'll add her vote to Ralph Nader's presidential tally. Carmichael, who is also a Crimson cartoonist, planned to scurry to Logan, hop on a Delta Shuttle and vote with her mother in their Upper West Side precinct...

Author: By Marc J., CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Election Night Odds and Ends | 11/8/2000 | See Source »

...writer-director, son of political cartoonist Ranan Lurie, lets his large, attractive cast display varieties of charisma and chicanery for an hour or so. Then he has everyone make speeches; it's as though a TV remote control had switched from The West Wing to the Lieberman-Cheney debate. All drama, not to mention insider dish, gets lost in the wind tunnel. By the end, The Contender is as edifying and stultifying as--what would the real-life equivalent be?--a Ralph Nader presidency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Filibluster | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

...final panelist was political cartoonist Peter Kuper, who said he now exists in a self-proclaimed "netherworld between politics and Garfield...

Author: By Judd B. Kessler, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Journalists Debate the Role of Media in Elections | 10/3/2000 | See Source »

Around the turn of the last century, Friedrich Nietzsche killed God and replaced him with the Ubermensch, or superman. In the graphic novel Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth (Pantheon; 380 pages; $27.50), Chicago cartoonist Chris Ware goes Nietzsche one better. He replaces God with Superman, the caped hero, who becomes a God/father metaphor to the emotionally crippled title character. Then Ware kills Superman too--or at least a man in a Superman suit, who, in a single bound, leaps to his death from a tall building in a scene, witnessed by Jimmy, that sets the tale's poignant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comics: Comics: Right Way, Corrigan | 9/11/2000 | See Source »

...crane over it, literally trying to enter the book. Many of the spreads, including the fold-open dust jacket, are crazy quilts, stitched with dotted lines and arrows, as if the very seams were straining to contain the story. "You have to keep turning the book," says New Yorker cartoonist Art Spiegelman, who first nationally published Ware in Raw magazine. "It's a dizzy-making, Oz-like tornado that takes you out of Kansas and into his world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comics: Comics: Right Way, Corrigan | 9/11/2000 | See Source »

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