'1 told UPlta n g feelinjia nwasaseii® M’s recniKa rewasconca ball teaml* TimageMiB atire 5 had relavjj » Ellenberte enbergen would be ig. emphasis because die >llege transfe! ild beatais Douglas Finbar Graham is becoming what he feared most — an old Ag. Doug has been an editor, writer, and cartoonist with the Battalion for the last two years. He graduated this semester, ending a 5-year career at Texas A&M. Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper a ““J)ouglas Finbar Graham: man, myth or cartoonist? J that ptiitea •ope posed | 1 peace, ined dis 1 City, r that Ci e that the /ill substant itributions ent” ofH as the Omil porting N to decide began in Cji Doug Graham, The Batt s cartoon- 1, has graduated. He’s now the perty of the U.S. Army, and the lehistoric characters of his Thotz ip will depend on the Post Office jbring them to The Batt from Fort Okla. Ifirontosauri will no longer inhabit le Battalion office, though they will till grace the paper’s editorial page. A'ith the exceptions of Jim Earle’s uch and dp’s cartoons on the sports pages, Doug has done most of the artwork in The Batt for two years. Doug’s duties were confined chiefly to illustrating stories for a time. His career in comic strips got off to what he admits was a feeble start in Feem. The roaches and rats who were Feem s main figures in fested The Batt during the summer of 1978. Thofz began as an occasional occu pant of the editorial page in the presidntob nt, made e prelimi® p of 77, tU tirdU.N.G* Develop®: in New spring of 1979, moved next to a three-time-a-week strip and finally, against almost all the editors’ better judgment, to a daily. Those who campaigned against increasing the frequency of the strip’s appearance now cheerfully admit they were wrong. The main character ot lliotz, Cheeseworth, had many things in common with his creator — up to and including fingerprints, it’s ru mored. Both struggled their ways through “Sadistics” and battled the temptations of keg parties and other diversions in their valiant attempts to triumph in the evil world of classes and grades. Batt staffers will miss Doug’s ta- '-Heirtt'and vSvsktflity, bF one else could do so many things**— design ads, draw an illustration (and make it funny) on a minute’s notice, and write capably for any depart ment of the paper. But what will leave the biggest void is the loss of Doug’s personality. Doug’s wit has decimated entire newsrooms full of writers and editors with a single punch line. He can in sult a victim’s virtue, heredity, potency and sexual preference with one glib remark. Doug’s funniest cartoons aren’t the ones he draws, they’re the ones he lives. Tales of his eccentricities are almost endless. Doug’s background — his father was in the army — made him a natu ral for the Corps. This same back ground also gave him his peculiar taste in food. For example, his idea of a culinary taste treat was govern ment issue C-rations. Eating fruit cockatail out of a can is by no means the most legendary of * Doug’s gastronomical trangressions. He has things in common with the trash can inhabitant, Ernie the Weremaggot, who is disgusting “ev ery time there is a full sun. Undergoing Army training one summer, Doug found himself in an exercise aimed to teach soldiers how to live off the land. The trainees were being shown the correct method for killing and eating chickens in the wil derness. There were various military units there, all claiming to be the “best damn outfits’’ from their various campuses or regions. Doug was lis tening to them, holding an armload of field supplies. Suddenly, he asked a trainee nearby to hold the supplies for a second. When she asked why, he smiled and grabbed a chicken. He looked into the chicken’s eyes; the chicken looked into his. A moment of empathy passed between the two — then Doug hit through the bird’s feathery neck. On another occasion, an editor eased into the Doug’s bedroom early one morning, hoping to return a book without waking him. He found Doug asleep on the floor under two week’s worth of dirty laundry. “Well, it was cold,” Doug said as he woke up. As jthose of us close to him have 1— Doug is,to ? la^ : . chaos. He has been known to lose the keys to his house, a trait that has forced him to make the Batt office a true home away from home. Doug’s absent-mindedness is noticeable in his relationships with other people, too. For example, Doug’s perception of time is called “Graham-time“. It works like this: five minutes = one hour; ten minutes = three hours; fifteen minutes = infinity. Yet, de spite his personal problems, he was always on time with stories and artwork for the Batt. His schoolwork is another story ... Despite his tardiness and ques tionable “eating” habits, we will miss Doug and we hope the Army will find a use for his unconventional ta lents. To Doug, if you should read this: Love, peace, and be sure to write us from Iran. — Battalion Staff H0U/3& qrKo«>&5 {tre-e- deh'se-r^) S. Cheeseworth is the hero of Doug’s semi-autobiographical comic strip ‘Thotz.’ The strip concerns a pair of dinosaurs — Cheeseworth and his roommate Tork — going to a university similar to Texas A&M. Despite Doug’s departure, the strip will continue on a daily basis since he’ll be mailing it to the Batt from wherever he ends up. SHOP EARLY MAIL EARLY BUY ONE PIZZA-GET THE NEXT SMALLER I With this coupon buy any giant, large or medium pizza at regular menu price and get second pizza of the next smaller size with equal ingredients up to 3 FREE. One coupon per visit Coupon not valid with gourmet pizzas 1803 Greenfield Plaza (Next to Bryan High) 846-1784 Valid 413 S. 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