Monday, January 27, 2014
Kids comics on Smudge Jr.
National Archives features Batman from 1966
Batman for U.S. Savings Bonds, ca. 1966
Creator(s): Department of the Treasury. (1789 - ) (Most Recent)
Series : Savings Bonds and Stamps Promotional Moving Images, compiled ca. 1950 - ca. 1977
Record Group 56: General Records of the Department of the Treasury, 1775 - 2005
Production Date: ca. 1966
Access Restriction(s): Unrestricted
Use Restriction(s): Restricted - Possibly
Note: Some or all of this material may be restricted by copyright or other intellectual property rights restrictions.
Contact(s): National Archives at College Park - Motion Pictures (RD-DC-M), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001
Phone: 301-837-3540, Fax: 301-837-3620, Email: mopix@nara.gov
National Archives Identifier: 5716995
Local Identifier: 56-BONDS-67
AV Club on Herblock documentary
HBO's Herblock doc supplies a one-man history of editorial cartooning
Jan 27, 2014http://www.avclub.com/review/hbos-herblock-doc-supplies-a-one-man-history-of-ed-200937
Ryan Holmberg on Japanese-American comics links, as seen at U of Maryland
Seduction of the Innocent, Hiroshima 1950
Flugennock's Latest'n'Greatest: "Happy Anniversary, President Drone!"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=1452
It was five years ago this week -- this past Thursday, to be exact -- that President Sparkle Pony kicked off his murderous drone warfare campaign. Not even a week in office, and already we had some change -- you've got to give him that.
So, I was reading this article over at the Bureau Of Investigative Journalism and saw a graph showing President Sparkle Pony's massive escalation of remote-control murder compared to President Chimp, and on viewing the layout of the bars showing the figures for Obama, I couldn't help noticing something...
________________________________________________________________
Mike Flugennock, flugennock at sinkers dot org
Mike's Political Cartoons: dubya dubya dubya dot sinkers dot org
The Post on tonight's Herblock documentary
HBO's 'Herblock': The finest line from Washington's surest hand
Nancy Andrews/AP - Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Herbert L. Block.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
The Atlantic on Herblock
'This Shop Gives Every New President of the Unites States a Free Shave'
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/01/this-shop-gives-every-new-president-of-the-unites-states-a-free-shave/283131/
Herblock in his office after winning his third Pulitzer Prize, in 1979. (Charles Tasnadi/Associated Press)
The Post on the Spider-Musical's tell-all book
Wishing to soar but only stumbling
By Mark Berman,
Washington Post January 26 2014, p. B7
SONG OF SPIDER-MAN: The Inside Story of the Most Controversial Musical in Broadway History
By Glen Berger
Simon & Schuster. 370 pp. $25
That darn Doonesbury continued
Letter to the Editor
Politics is at home in the comics
Washington Post January 25 2014http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/politics-is-at-home-in-the-comics/2014/01/24/3a52f77a-82d5-11e3-a273-6ffd9cf9f4ba_story.html
William Craig, Washington
Scott Kallman, Silver Spring
Allan R. Hoffman, Reston
Friday, January 24, 2014
Frozen in today's Express
No tiaras required for 'Frozen'
BY KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY
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[Washington Post's] Express January 24 2014 http://www.washingtonpost.com/express/wp/2014/01/24/reelist-frozen/
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Elsa is one of TWO female heroines in "Frozen." (Disney)
Library of Congress Releases Collection and Services Statistics
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
101 Independence Avenue SE
Washington, DC 20540
Phone: (202) 707-2905
Fax: (202) 707-9199
Email: pao@loc.gov
January 24, 2014
The Library of Congress By the Numbers in 2013
The Library of Congress today released statistics for fiscal year 2013. The daily business of being the world's largest library, home of the U.S. Copyright Office and a supportive agency to the U.S. Congress resulted in the Library adding 2.65 million physical items to its permanent collections, registering more than 496,000 copyright claims and responding to 636,000 congressional reference requests in fiscal year 2013.
Some notable items newly cataloged into the Library's collection include the papers of astronomer Carl Sagan; eight rare U.S. city plans; Pope Clement V's Constitutiones, printed in 1476; the Bob Wolff sports broadcasting collection; the collection of Sharon Farmer, the first woman and the first African American to serve as chief White House photographer; and a list of books that Thomas Jefferson asked newspaper publisher William Duane to buy in Paris for the recently established Library of Congress.
The U.S. Copyright Office registered work in fiscal year 2013 from authors in all 50 states. Grammy Award-nominated songs such as "Locked Out of Heaven," registered in November 2012, by Bruno Mars, and such box-office toppers as "Iron Man 3," registered in April and "Despicable Me 2," registered in June, were among the nearly half-million novels, poems, films, software, video games, music, photographs and other works submitted.
Reference librarians and Congressional Research Service staff responded to more than 1 million reference requests from patrons both on-site and via phone and email – an average of 4,600 every business day. Researchers sought information this year about World War I, trade data, early exploration of the Americas, household management in the ancient world, the timing of the federal fiscal year, family history and how many languages Thomas Jefferson could speak.
In fiscal year 2013, the Library of Congress …
■ Responded to more than 636,000 congressional reference requests and delivered to Congress approximately 23,000 volumes from the Library's collections;
■ Registered 496,599 claims to copyright;
■ Provided reference services to 513,946 individuals in person, by telephone and through written and electronic correspondence;
■ Circulated more than 25 million copies of Braille and recorded books and magazines to more than 800,000 blind and physically handicapped reader accounts;
■ Circulated more than 1 million items for use within the Library;
■ Preserved more than 5.6 million items from the Library's collections;
■ Recorded a total of 158,007,115 physical items in the collections:
23,592,066 cataloged books in the Library of Congress classification system
13,344,477 books in large type and raised characters, incunabula (books printed before 1501), monographs and serials, music, bound newspapers, pamphlets, technical reports and other print material
121,070,572 items in the nonclassified (special) collections, including:
3,530,036 audio materials (discs, tapes, talking books and other recorded formats)
68,971,722 manuscripts
5,507,706 maps
16,816,894 microforms
1,697,513 moving images (film, television broadcasts, DVDs)
6,751,212 items of sheet music
14,472,273 visual materials, as follows:
13,728,116 photographs
104,879 posters
639,278 prints and drawings
3,323,216 other (including machine-readable collections)
■ Welcomed more than 1.6 million onsite visitors and recorded 84 million visits and more than 519 million page-views on the Library's web properties. At year's end, the Library's online primary-source files totaled 45.2 million.
Founded in 1800, the Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural institution. The Library seeks to spark imagination and creativity and to further human understanding and wisdom by providing access to knowledge through its magnificent collections, programs, publications and exhibitions. Many of the Library's rich resources can be accessed through its award-winning website at www.loc.gov.
PR 14-009
01/24/14
ISSN 0731-3527
Sun-Gazette on former Arlingtonian animator
O'Connell Alum Finds Success in Field of Animation
Arlington Sun-Gazette January 22, 2014
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Fantom Comics Book Club: Saga
Herblock documentary profiled
'HERBLOCK' DOCUMENTARY HIGHLIGHTS AMERICA'S MOST FEARED EDITORIAL CARTOONIST
SAN ANTONIO CURRENT JANUARY 22, 2014
"In opposing corruption, the political cartoon has always served as a special prod, a reminder to public servants that they are, after all… public servants." —Herblock
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
A Long and Winding Road, or, Ike Liked Cartoons
"This historic photograph of four National Cartoonists Society presidents meeting with President Dwight D. Eisenhower more than 30 years ago was sent to CBG by Stuart McIntire. Stuart asked us to identify the participants; we did, getting confirmation from Mort Walker, Milton Caniff, and Ron Goulart. Eisenhower was presented with a collection of original cartoons, caricatures, and drawings of himself by members of the NCS (many of these were collected into a book called President Eisenhower's Cartoon Book), and made an honorary member of the NCS. (Stuart mentions that, using extreme magnification on the original photo, he was able to make out the name "Carl Grubert" on the page to which the book is open; Grubert drew a humorous family strip called The Berrys.) From left to right are: Milton Caniff (Terry and the Pirates; Steve Canyon), an unidentified man (Caniff said he thinks he was a Treasury Department official); Goulart says it could be Charles Biro), Alex Raymond (Flash Gordon; Rip Kirby), another unidentified man (another Treasury Department official, Caniff guessed), Eisenhower ("probably Eisenhower," said Goulart, living up to his reputation as a wit), Walt Kelly (Pogo), Rube Goldberg (Boob McNutt), and Treasury Secretary George Humphrey. Walt Kelly was then President of the NCS; Caniff, Raymond, and Goldberg were past Presidents. Caniff added that Humphrey arranged the meeting "as a sort of reward for drawings the cartoonists had made in support of the E-Bond sales after the war."
[The Editors of CBG publicly express their deep personal gratitude to Mort, Milt, and Ron - three of the busiest people we know - for taking time to help us on identification.]
with dustjacket |
without dustjacket |
8. I bought this one on eBay in April 2017. Next to Ike is Rube Goldberg. Next to Rube, behind Ike is Walt Kelly. On the left hand page to which the album is opened is a drawing by Jay (Modest Maidens) Alan. The drawing on the right is by Jerry Robinson. The caption under Robinson's drawing says "Thank you Mr. President --- for the wonderful laughter! Especially if the joke is BY us --- but even if it's ON us! J.R. N.C.S."
The caption reads: (WX4) WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 -- CARTOONS OF, AND FOR, IKE -- President Eisenhower is pleased by this gift from White House callers today, a bound volume of cartoons of himself drawn by members of the National Cartoonists Society. Standing at right are Rube Goldberg, honorary chairman of the Society, and Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey, right. The drawings on the opened pages are not identified. (AP Wire photo) (EE31038 stf-hlg) 1954
Herblock on HBO
WATCH HERBLOCK: THE BLACK & THE WHITE ON HBO
Herblock prize expands eligibility
HERBLOCK PRIZE & LECTURE
Eligibility
January 17, 2014 - The Board of Directors voted to include monthly newspaper or magazine publications!
The Herblock Prize contest is open to any newspaper, magazine, wire service or syndicate cartoonist for editorial or political cartoons published in a daily, weekly, or monthly newspaper or magazine published in the U.S. or its territories in 2013. Cartoons appearing in U.S. editions of foreign publications are also eligible. In keeping with the changes in the editorial cartooning landscape, the Foundation will accept animated cartoons for consideration for the Herblock Prize.
The winner will attend the annual Herblock Prize & Lecture to receive a $15,000 tax-free cash award and a trophy from Tiffany & Co. designed for the Herblock Prize.
A finalist will be announced and receive a $5,000 tax-free cash award.
Note: The $50 entry fee has been waived for the Herblock Prize contest. Given the difficulties facing editorial cartoonists, the Foundation believes the fee money can be better used to support other efforts to promote the craft.
Rules
- All entries must be submitted or postmarked no later than Feb. 3, 2014 for calendar year 2013.
- Entrants can either enter their own work or be sponsored by their publication. If the entry is sponsored, the entry must be accompanied by a cover letter from the sponsor.
- There can be no more than 15 entries nor fewer than 10 entries per individual.
- Each cartoon entered must be an 8 x 10 inch print of the original submitted in a three-ring binder (or similar size and form).
- Animated entries should be provided on a CD (preferably in Quicktime format).
- Each entrant must provide a biography and a photo with the submission.
- Material submitted with the entry becomes the property of The Herb Block Foundation and may be used to publicize the awards program or collected in educational and/or research archives for educational purposes.
- Contestants or their sponsor must certify that the submitted entries were published as presented in the year of contest eligibility.
- The winner must agree to appear at the Herblock Prize awards ceremony in Washington, D.C. (typically btw March and May)