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The Other Coast is a Canadian comic strip, drawn by Adrian Raeside. It has been syndicated by the Creator's Syndicate since 2001. It is syndicated to more than 150 newspapers worldwide. The strip blends environmental, political, and animal rights issues with comedy.
In 1990 he created The Other Coast, a satirical comic strip which features two dogs and looks at life from a dog's perspective. The Other Coast appears in hundreds of publications, worldwide. Raeside is the author of sixteen books, including There Goes the Neighbourhood, an irreverent history of Canada; The Demented Decade; and 5 Twisted Years.
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The Katzenjammer Kids (1897–2006) originally by Rudolph Dirks, longest running American comic strip (US) Kee's World (It's a Durian Life) (2005– ) by C. W. Kee (Malaysia) Keen Teens (1950–1960) by Stookie Allen; Keeping Up (1925–1949) by Bill Hamilton; Keeping Up with the Joneses (1913–1938) by Pop Momand (US)
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She was a school dropout who frequented local bars. She had no known connection to strip clubs, and unlike most of the other victims, she was African American. [7] Five days later, another African American woman named Patricia Jones was found alive, fully clothed, at the foot of the Weedon Island Bridge in St. Petersburg.
William J. Rechin (August 20, 1930 – May 21, 2011), better known as Bill Rechin, was an American cartoonist who created the comic strips Out of Bounds and Crock. [1]Born in Buffalo, New York, Rechin studied art at Buffalo's Albright Academy of Art, where he met his wife, Trish.
Because the term "gentlemen's club" is commonly used in the United States to refer euphemistically to strip clubs, traditional gentlemen's clubs often are referred to as "men's clubs" or "city clubs" (as opposed to country clubs) or simply as "private social clubs" or just "private clubs". For other meanings and nuances of the word "club", see ...