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...setting is a dress rehearsal, days before the premiere of “Ruddigore,” the new production by the Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Dick Dauntless (Pedro K. Kaawaloa ’06) strides across the stage and looks incredulously at the wretched, love-lorn face of his half-brother, Robin Oakapple (Benjamin T. Morris ’09) “Why, you’re a fine, strapping, muscular young fellow—tall and strong as a to’-gall’n’-m’st—taut...

Author: By April B. Wang, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Night at the Operetta | 12/2/2005 | See Source »

...honest: I am probably not the intended audience of Dick Morris’s latest political issue “Condi vs. Hillary: The Next Great Presidential Race.” I like Hillary Clinton.But I love political trash, and Dick Morris embodies the genre. He has worked as a political strategist and pollster for a variety of colorful characters, including Bill Clinton, Trent Lott and, currently, FOX News—along the way showing he has no philosophical core. And even though tabloids alleged in 1996 that Morris sucked a high-priced call girl’s toes...

Author: By Natalie I. Sherman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 'Condi vs. Hillary': Morris Meows | 12/1/2005 | See Source »

Several of the chosen 15 created enduring characters, styles and narratives from the golden age of the daily strip. Peanuts' Charles Schulz is represented, as are the creator-artists of Popeye (E.C. Segar), Dick Tracy (Chester Gould) and Terry and the Pirates (Milton Caniff). From the '50s, the emphasis segues to comic books and graphic novels. With Mad, Harvey Kurtzman virtually invented what would become the era's dominant tone of irreverent self-reference. He inspired several of the artists, including R. Crumb, whose exemplarily twisted panels first appeared in Kurtzman's post-Mad magazine Help!, and Art Spiegelman, whose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Peanuts in the Gallery | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

While most australians are sleeping, Dick Estens is plotting. Between 3 a.m. and 6 a.m., when truck drivers, factory hands and bakers are in a skirmish with their circadian rhythms, the 56-year-old cotton farmer from Moree, in northern New South Wales, is in bed whirling his mind through a problem. Estens might be crafting a game plan to outwit a Canberra bureaucrat or thinking of a way to motivate a juvenile criminal offender; he might be trying to understand the power structure in a small town or finessing a schmooze assault on a CEO target. This social entrepreneur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jobs For Our Mob | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

...innovator started to work the system. As supportive elders held off the "radical and ratbag elements," Estens turned the AES into a crusade. Perhaps a non-indigenous person is the only one who can prevail in places that have competing Aboriginal tribes and a redneck underbelly. "I advised Dick not to go into it," says friend and legal counsel Roger Butler about the personal financial liabilities Estens has had to endure ever since. "It's fortunate that this mission was undertaken when his farms could stand on their own feet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jobs For Our Mob | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

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