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Terence Smith remembers the life and work of Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Bill Mauldin, who died Jan. 22 at the age of 81. Bill Mauldin, who died yesterday at age 81, was probably best known ...
They were cartoon characters, a pair of GIs from World War II, who were splashed across the pages of a book by Bill Mauldin, a friend of my parents and, for a time, as famous as famous can be.
Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Bill Mauldin, whose portrayal of World War II gave soldiers something to smile about – to the chagrin of the officers he poked fun at – died yesterday at age 81.
Bill Mauldin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist whose characters -- two downtrodden GIs, Willie and Joe -- spoke to a generation of soldiers who fought in World War II, died early Wednesday.
Bill Mauldin's cartoon of a grieving Lincoln, published after the assassination of John F. Kennedy Credit: Copyright 1963 by Bill Mauldin. Courtesy of Bill Mauldin ...
Victors and vanquished are equally hungry, ragged, and battle-weary. Bill Mauldin’s World War II cartoons showed the American infantryman’s war: muck, flying bullets, exhaustion, pompous fools ...
Donation Options Search Search Search Bill Mauldin became famous while an editorial cartoonist on the military newspaper Stars & Stripes assigned to American forces fighting in Italy during World ...
Thanks for the memories, specifically the biographical sketch of Bill Mauldin, the great but never assuming cartoonist for Stars and Stripes during the World War, Act II. I worked in a cubicle ...
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. -- Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Bill Mauldin, who as a young Army rifleman during World War II gave newspaper readers back home a sardonic, foxhole-level view of the ...
When they leave his room at a Newport Beach nursing home, some of them cry. Bill Mauldin is one of the most famous veterans of World War II, although he never led troops, never took a hill and ...
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