Word: mauldin
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...something called the Wardroom Panel, where such guests as Navy critic Rear Admiral (ret.) Ellis M. Zacharias, Columnist Frank Kent, Lieut. General Albert C. Wedemeyer and Lord Inverchapel could damn the torpedoes or anything else they pleased. Some did and some didn't. Last week Cartoonist-Author Bill Mauldin, who used to be an Army enlisted man himself, stood up front. As usual, no officers were invited, but a record 1,200 midshipmen turned...
Pulitzer Prizewinner Bill Mauldin, whose cartoons of grimy, unsmiling G.I.s were the war's best, chalked off two milestones in his postwar career last week. He got married, for the second time.* He also turned out a cartoon (see cut) that was in effect an announcement of a drastic change in his own political thinking...
...year ago Mauldin was playing a hard game of footie with the far left. He made leftists happy with some speeches, turned out bitter cartoons about those who questioned Russia's motives. But now, says William Henry Mauldin...
Babyfaced, serious-eyed Bill Mauldin also takes quite a few slaps at the Mauldin who, he says, "was a very embittered little squirt" when he got out of the Army two years ago. He knocks down his war-born reputation as "overinflated, overpublicized-and I wasn't that good." When he started doing civilian strips (TIME, Sept. 24, 1945), he had 180 papers using his cartoons; now he is down to 79 (circ. about 5,000,000). He is not bitter over the cancellations: "The quality of my drawings was lousy, and I got mad when I heard everybody...
...dark-haired, 23-year-old Natalie Evans of Manhattan, who, says Mauldin, "wishes to write...