OCR Text |
Show THE BORN LOSER rr Sunday, March 14, 1971 Art Sansom By I By BUT X) MAMA TAKES BIUV AND ME TO THE PARK EVERY All WERE At I e m VOU A I uf,TF,Z M Saunders Heinrich Heine, poet and was born in Dusseldorf, Gern.ny, on December 13, 1797, of Jewish parents. Heine first tried his hand at business in his uncle's bank, but then he changed to law. At the universities he went to, he met outstanding poets and scholars. He discovered he was more interested in literature than law and began to write poems. His TTZr. .ahiw i Am r -- . OKI !- WHERE EARTH- I Ml . fx 60 ON! SAV IT, MRS. worth!- -i shouldn't - V SHE'S A r. I Ernst & BECKA- MAMA WAS READING A NEWSPAPER. AND CRYING AND I WANTED TO 60 OUT I v BE A M0THERJ first collection peared in 1821. W VMV-AC- of poems ap- Heine received his law degree in 1825 after being baptized a Christian. But he couldn't find a job and emigrated to France. He published a "Book of Songs" and "Travel Pictures", and became world famous. As a newspaper correspondent, he hoped to bring about a better understanding between France and Germany. About BUT Uf U4H A NARROW ESCAPE! AR J K 4 if i Heine began suffering 1845, greatly from a spinal disease and was confined to bed. Even so, his finest poems were written during his last years. Some of them indicate his return to Judaism. Heine died on February 17,1856. Many of his poems were set to music by Schubert, Schumann, Brahm3, and other composers. This gave him the reputation of being a romantic poet, but he was also a great writer of prose. In 1941, Adolf Hitler ordered Heine's grave in Paris to be destroyed. Heine's books were burned. The reason Hitler and the Nazis were so much against Heine was that he had written, many years before, that the Germans would one day "fill the world with horror". FUN TIME The Chuckle Box Carol : I know a Texan who can fly an airplane. REDEYE LI'L ABNER 'mm LrW V--r-- OUTSIDE I BY APPLYING OUR THE fbL6 WH$ HT IT ATS AS A LfcVER. '3W$IN6 "HE WULOER TO CRASHING COWN ON THE R3E! r - MAN, WHAT OU N SUPE MISSED GUVS PlDTOME I "YA IN THE V .I PONT KNOW WIONIA WHATDONCU HOOT? BIG -PBCTCE NOTHING LIKE MOVING FAST, ) JAN V SESSION AT FIVE? TB3WTE BCOUGHT f d ' 3 THE BERRYS PETER. LET'S SEE HOW By Karl ' t NIMBLE VOUR MIND AND CIWT.PDC ADC TUIC OKAY MORNING QUICK.' BUTTON UP tOJR COAT Grubert nr!5b n BUGS BUNNY By BEAUTY CREAM I'M SELLINJ' IS SUPER, PETUNIA! IT'LL DO WONDERS J & Stoffel PUT IT THIS WAY: USIN' THIS IS SORTA LIKE PRESSIN'TH' WRINKLES OUT OF ) LEMME Heimdahl f:- A a npccci AiMc!tt STEVE ROPER NEGATIVES 7 By GIMME ACE... I FORGOT MY I LINES. ) DICK. SPEAK O VOG NOW tt u w, tm w ii 3-1-3 Coker And Penn By XZT THE- -J 'I Hey, wilt! if voi 6LANC leil HIM DINNER P ? lTVn A V . A I'M HOLDING ACID GOING? ii I'M PICKING , CHOOL ARE f THOSE DROPOUTS j AT OBEDIENCE UP MY DOG J THE TANK OF IFONc PINCH iici i TurfiiiufN By KERRY DRAKE OF " a.teeeM f --i I'M GIAD OU TOLP CRICKET SHE COUID USE THE GUEST ROOM UNTIL SHE FINDS A f KNOW SHE'S THE"' DAUGHTER OF AN OLP T T I 50 WISH 1 FRIEND.. BUT HADN'T BEEN QUICK WITH THE OFFER.' r- L - )iJSkH ' j CHL i7;iy 'I THE SSr J I IT OVER FIXIWG-ESAT- it Ar" 7 HI, ROLLO WHERE ARE YOU K I ir4i VI By Ernie Bushmiller . Saunders And Overgard jHTHE STUFF USED TO M EXECUTE MUCDERFR ' NANCY I - KIB'iTCOnTAIWS CYANIDeIoTT I JU5T I IoBEDIENCeI Alfred Andriola I DON'T KNOW WHAT FRANKLY TO MAKE OF HER, KERRYSOME i OF THE THINGS SHE 5AY5 ARE J 1! L MfKT CPIfiHTFNINlV I uun ihrc nci iuu otKnjuLf, I IL MINDY.. ITS THE "IN" THING THESE LY5 FOR KUS TO SPOUr RAWCALX BUT THEIR BARK PHILOSOPHY' Vf rjL 50DR0P YOUR GUN5V. 1H By Al PRISCILLA'S POP X If THERE V( KINDS f Lst' W OP INSECTS I ALLEY W ( By V.T.Hamlin OOP 60 THIS tARL" TOOK OVER YEAH, BUT AND RAN ttXI RIGHT OUTA I SAY... . LEMIAN jlTH' PAl.EH ..WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR CROWN? OH,eUZ LEFT BACK IN MOO... IT'S FIRST PRIZE IT V IN OUR BIG DINOSAUR- BSa HUNT; YOU'RE KIPPING.' - . ) y i ...WHOEVER UH-U- FINDS TH' BIGGEST P(M FTC TWFA.B ....... I VHNWw... O 1 . "s v'DnwIT v Vermeer IMASIN1E!! ARE- - A K I , FRECKLES By NO, 1HANKS, I PON'T DRINK. J Frank O'Neal it pulls vs. senses AMP MAXES ONE UNAWARE OF WKAT5 HAPPNNS. 1 KNOW, ARE SOU WONT HAVE" 00 ;!!.v, isnyii I IBttf SHORT RIBS does tV-M- SUffS day somebody ase t1" 1 L MONEY A h NIA, !, TM In. M K Henry Formhals (wd5tit,n MRuwwsir. ONE? VTTrani By AND HIS FRIENDS B Wl , d' : OhiE MILLION! EZ$f I I I ALL DIE IW5TANTLy ' i "V-- V 1 OKAy; LETS SEE HCW SMART "CU LANCELOT ' YEAH I Cava V - Mm OKAY, GENTLEMEN.' VOU WANT THOSE tXPLAINS TH F' SOT IN PHYSICS Qf JML. NQTUPy &- - I'LL CAN'T YOU BE Motee specific? vrf (J v YOU ( 1? FB P0E5 FOR SECONDS. C&'U IL THIS THAT'S WWAT AN EDUCATION vVyOL BUTTONED IT DOWNY L,, YOU DID IT IN FIVE - "And, as is the case with many other minority groups, the more we know about the Indian, the more w can understand his basic needs which must be met to bring him into the mainstream of contemporary life," Melis said. Gordon Bess BUTVDUt. THERE ITS BUTTONIEDJ" Wis, When a group cf people get together to agree on a course of action, we say they are having a "caucus". This word probably came from a word ine Algonquin Indians used, "cauau-as-u"- . It By Dick 9 mi y NSW YORK (UPI)-O- nce ignored, the American Indian Is now a proper subject of study, according to Dr. Lloyd Meli, professor of special education at Carthage College in Kenosha, i V06CQKIE5T : 8 I SMARTEST OkAY, LET'S PRACTICE Indian Studied W&LL...THIS By Dick Brooks SAV. Answer to yesterday's How Many? Ear, face, arm, toe, foot, nail, lip, nose, hair, rib, chest, bone, chin. 60 i JACKSON TWINS Jim: What do you think of the two candidates for mayor? Bill: I'm glad only one of them can win. WHY WE SAY IT -- Wi WINTHROP THE meant "one who advises". So a caucus is a way for people to advise each other! HOW'D X3U EVER FIGURE THIS OUT ? tj -- Ted: So what? Lots of people fly airplanes. Carol: In their houe? By ByAICapp fwASTEDrM-- f SI aga Heinrkh Heine Noted Poet TriESe IF ITS THE LAST IHiKifi VO... MARY WORTH V I'tah-P- Tell Me Why journalist, Ira. THE HERALD. Prove, t! A i |