Word: comically
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...undergraduate in a letter to the CRIMSON suggested. "... It seems the least the CRIMSON can do is to carry the daily Pogo comic strip if for no other reason that to offer consolation to those undergraduates arrested." And in the first statement of opinion by a resident of the Annex. "A concerned "Cliffedweller" noted. "There's a quest for coed's panties. From Tufts to M.I.T. But only at fair Harvard. Could two thousand men agree WE GO POGO...
Orwell's Thoreau like fidelity to the details of life make his war vignettes unforgettable. The soldiers "wretched children" of this "comic opera with an occasional death" were much more concerned with finding firewood killing lice and playing practical jokes than they were with killing Fascists. Orwell's objectivity extended even to his own wound. "The whole experience of being hit by a bullet is very interesting," he wrote, "worth describing in detail...
...arrests followed a rally held for Walt Kelly, creator of the comic strip character, Pogo. Most of the students were arrested before Kelly arrived in the Square. Police issued a riot call when the crowd, which had swelled to 1500, began to slow traffic...
...rotund and genial creator of the comic strip possum had a little difficulty with traffic conditions in the Square and arrived a few minutes late for his scheduled lecture. Kelly, in fact, spent the first part of his informal talk explaining to students his impression of "the way a person in a uniform must feel when surrounded by so many people without uniforms...
...CRIMSON which, with a certain "commercial establishment," now sponsors Pogo, has been noted as a liberal paper. Is it then possible that the liberals, finding themselves without a candidate whom they can wholeheartedly support, have in disillusion turned to Pogoism as a form of institutionalized escape? The comic strip, Pogo, is one of the best in circulation and contains both amusing and valuables satire. Anthony Winner '53 Robert M. Goldwyn...