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Contents List
Container
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Title
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PH 6495
Box
1
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Political cartoon prints, 1965-1969: - “It's not the danger, man--it's the haircut,” 1965
- “Well, I'll be damned! I'm with the F.B.I., myself!,” 1965
- “Man, you ain't learned the art of survival,” 1965
- The Barbs on the Wire, 1966
- “Hey, General--that's a lasso, not a whip,” 1966
- Soviet Literature (Giant pen being broken over knee of Brezhnev), 1966
- “I ain't on any team. I'm just trying to get to school alive,” 1966
- “I see they're burnin' crosses in China, too,” 1966
- “Now that you're old enough to vote, suh, ah hope you'll vote for me,” 1966
- “We mustn't push it, Dean, but if it happens to fall in, let's cover it quick,” 1967
- “I'm innocent, I tell you! Innocent!,” 1967
- “Oh, is he C.I.A.? I thought he was F.B.I.,” 1967
- “Sorry, but you'll have to start working again,” 1967
- “Now we know what the old boy thinks of us,” 1967
- “Man, that's the fanciest place I ever got throwed out of,” 1967
- “I trust you'll only be using this stuff in the interest of National Security, Mister...,” 1967
- “There ought to be some way to draft middle-aged dissenters, too,” 1967
- Crap Game (draft lottery-men in the shape of dice), 1967
- “So you're the agents who got the goods on Doctor Spock,” 1968
- “Tsk, tsk!,” 1968
- A Few Noted “Law and Order” Enthusiasts, 1968
- The Strategy of Confrontation (Russians amidst crowd of protestors), 1968
- “Welcome to the Chicago Club,” 1968
- “Attitudes displayed here are not necessarily those of the sponsors,” 1968
- Deadeye Dick (Chicago police target), 1968
- “You leave Dr. Spock alone!,” 1968
- “Privately, I agree with you. Publicly, I've got to jail you,” 1968
- “My, it looks peaceful and safe in there,” 1968
- “Personally, I was sent here for failing trigonometry,” 1968
- Building Trades--Race Barrier (African-American looking into walled up opening), 1968
- “Well, I'll be darned! It was already unlocked,” 1968
- “My, the working man has come a long way in thirty years,” 1968
- “Everything's under control, Sir, except all those pesky eyewitnesses,” 1968
- “These days, man, you can't just go around unpolarized,” 1969
- Careful-We're Tapped (two children with tin can phones), 1969
- “But you'd lower the standards of American workmanship!,” 1969
- “What manner of heretic has been brought before us today?,” 1969
- “It was designed as a flag, Buddy--not as a blindfold,” 1969
- “Me blind faith in law and order is shook,” 1969
- “It didn't work for me, either, Dick. Nobody respects the flag anymore,” 1969
- “I'm sure they did only what was necessary to preserve law and order,” 1969
- “Hang on, kids--we're decelerating,” 1969
- “Sorry, Wally. Let's say it was exploitation for exploitation's sake,” 1969
- Our New Betsy Ross (Mitchell sewing police star on flag), 1969
- “Why aren't we exposing obscenity like all the other magazines?,” 1969
- “You say your son hopes to enter the university some day? So do I, madam--so do I,” 1969
- (Giant police baton as a skyscraper in New York), 1969
- Ding-a-Lings (sympathy for the lefts, 1968/rights, 1969), 1969
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