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...comic publishers have begun catering heavily to this market with such complete reprint series as Fantagraphics' Krazy and Ignatz, reprinting George Herriman's "Krazy Cat," and their best-selling Complete Peanuts line of hardcovers. Now, Montreal's Drawn & Quarterly has joined in with perhaps the most nostalgic reprint yet, Walt and Skeezix (400 pages; $30), the first volume of the complete daily strips of Frank King's "Gasoline Alley." Wonderfully warm and humane, the book should come with a warning not to mix it with alcohol or old-timey music lest you lapse into irreversible reverie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bright, Well-lit 'Alley' | 7/9/2005 | See Source »

...designed by the meticulous cartoonist Chris Ware, who is also behind the George Herriman series, this is the first volume of a projected 20-years-long series that will reprint the strip in its entirety up through the early 1950s when King started turning over duties to assistants. Walt and Skeezix volume one begins with the full 1921 and 1922 run, excluding color Sunday strips, the period when "Gasoline Alley" had just started to appear as a four panel strip after beginning in 1919 as a series of single gag panels. Gorgeously designed and printed on heavy, off-white paper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bright, Well-lit 'Alley' | 7/9/2005 | See Source »

...policy, Disney doesn’t give credit to studio executives on the movie. There are so many people working for Disney who are instrumental in making a great film that it’s impossible to list everyone. The “Walt Disney Pictures” or “Touchstone Pictures” logo at the start of the movie represents...

Author: By Scoop A. Wasserstein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Josh H. Simon ’00 Fields Questions About Job as Studio Exec, Lohan Film | 7/1/2005 | See Source »

...Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus Vance, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and I went to Austin to meet with the President and Walt Rostow, special assistant to the President for national security affairs. Our purpose was to review with the President the defense budget for the fiscal year 1968, which was to be presented to the Congress in February 1967. Among the items to be considered was the recommendation of the Chiefs that the budget request include funds for production of an antiballistic-missile system. I explained to the President that the Chiefs had recommended the action, but that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: By Robert S. McNamara (Long Road to Reykjavik) | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...President called on each of the five Chiefs in turn, and each one of them urged approval of the ABM program. Walt Rostow sided with the Chiefs. This was an extraordinarily difficult moment for President Johnson. I never hesitated to disagree with a unanimous recommendation of the Joint Chiefs if I felt it was the wrong decision. In this case, however, Congress had already passed a law authorizing production of the ABM system. To continue to refuse to proceed in the direction that had been supported by the Congress, and to do so in the face of a unanimous recommendation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: By Robert S. McNamara (Long Road to Reykjavik) | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

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