Word: donkeys
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Handelsman cartoon, I had seen that before, so I support The Crimson’s decision to pull the cartoon,” Breeden said in an interview yesterday. Both Breeden’s Oct. 25 cartoon and Handelsman’s cartoon depict President Bush and a democratic donkey standing side by side...
Both cartoons depict President Bush standing beside a donkey, a symbol of the Democratic Party. In Handelsman's cartoon, the donkey sports a shirt that has an arrow with the word "NOT" pointing in Bush's direction...
...Breeden's cartoon, the donkey holds a sign that reads "Dem Platform" and a boldfaced "NOT" with an arrow pointing towards the president. Handelsman's heading reads "...The Democrats find a winning election strategy...." Breeden's heading is "For better or worse, it might finally be a winning strategy...
...Crimson has become aware of several editorial cartoons by cartoonist Kathleen E. Breeden ’09 that show striking similarities to previously published cartoons. On October 25, 2006, The Crimson printed a cartoon by Breeden depicting President Bush and a donkey holding a sign pointing to Bush with the word “Not” on it and a headline reading “For better or worse, it might finally be a winning strategy.” That cartoon is strikingly similar to another cartoon by Walt Handelsman, which appeared in Newsday Oct. 16 and was subsequently...
...Iranians that such radicalism carries high costs. The closure, suggests Atrianfar, may have been provoked by a recent caricature on the nuclear negotiations. He lays the cartoon on his desk, and points to the two figures it shows on a chess board. One is a horse, the other a donkey bathed in a halo of light. The donkey could be taken to represent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has in the past reported feeling surrounded by halos...