- Grimbledon Down
Grimbledon Down was a
comic strip by British cartoonistBill Tidy , which ran inNew Scientist magazine fromMarch 26 1970 untilMarch 26 1994.The strip was set in an ostensibly fictitious U.K. government research lab, which was in fact a thinly veiled reference to the controversial
Porton Down bio-chemical research facility. Grimbledon Down's scientists engaged in all sorts of questionable research — such as the production of antipornography, grossly disgusting pornographicfilm s which were intended to turn off the audience's sexual drive and thus save the World's civilisation from catastrophicoverpopulation . Another frequent feature was attempts to create or distribute NU-Food, an artificial foodstuff. Often the main obstacle was human behavior - one strip featured a group of turbanned clerics complaining they couldn't decide which hand to use when eating it.Very little of Grimbledon Down's internal organisation was ever revealed, but the person in charge was evidently a recurring character named Treem (no first name given), a moustached dark-haired man in a business suit. Treem was apparently not a scientist, as the scientists tended to wear white lab coats, but he was clearly scientifically literate, and often got into detailed technical discussions with the
boffin s on his staff.External links
* [http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg14119185.200.html New Scientist's farewell to Grimbledon Down]
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