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Bill Mauldin, 81, the editorial cartoonist whose muddy, sarcastic dogface characters Willie and Joe were icons for the GIs of World War II, died Jan. 22 at a nursing home in Newport Beach, Calif ...
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 ...
Comic Culture host Terence Dollard discusses Bill Mauldin's career, life and impact as an editorial cartoonist with biographer Todd DePastino.
After the war, some critics expressed surprise, even dismay, at Mauldin’s anti-racist, anti-Red Scare cartoons for the newspapers that had competed to hire the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner.
For millions of American G.I.s. the most vivid symbols of their lot in World War II were Sergeant Bill Mauldin’s cartoon dogfaces, Willie and Joe. Appearing up front in Stars & Stripes and ...
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 ...
opinion Letters to the Editor Letters to the Editor - Remembering the pain, Vietnam veterans, guns, cartoons Readers agree with columnist about preserving good and bad history; share their ...
Like other G.I.s, famed Soldier Cartoonist Bill Mauldin has found the transition to civilian life hard. So have his once begrimed subjects, Willie and Joe. In uniform, their moods and deeds had ...
Editorial cartoonist Bill Mauldin reflected life for both the dogface soldier during World War II and the people of the United States afterward. His experiences with the 45th Infantry Division in ...
Bill Mauldin, who dished out snippets of World War II reality laced with humor through cartoon soldiers Willie and Joe and became one of the 20th century's pre-eminent editorial cartoonists, died ...