61. Gruson was a perennially debonair and ebullient figure with a love of life, particularly the good life. 62. He currently is in fashion again, a kind of cult figure with a regular show of his old cartoons on the Cartoon Network. 63. He drew figures with big hair and willowy bodies, dots for eyes, and words slipping from their lips into cartoon bubbles. 64. He is gobbling up a Lilliputian figure with a piggish snout and a dollar sign emblazoned on its head, a figure familiar to Otterness fans. 65. He is also the only Palestinian figure with a strong enough police force to bring greater security to Israel, again provided he chooses that path. 66. He is described by people who know him as an imposing figure with graying hair, tobacco-stained teeth and a gruff voice. 67. He played an old man on death row, a mysterious figure with a hazy past. 68. He stood a foot taller than his adversary, Pape Faye, a squat figure with a potbelly. 69. He was such an unlikely impresario, that hunched Nixonian figure with the charisma of an undertaker and no discernible showbiz talent of his own. 70. He remains a popular figure with a steady following, and Bradley does not. |