Ash (Organization : N.Z.)

ASH New Zealand, Action on Smoking and Health (Organization : N.Z.)
There are 11 related items to this topic
Image

Tremain, Garrick :37 Cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times from 16 July to 25 Aug...

Date: 2001

By: Tremain, Garrick, 1941-; Otago daily times (Newspaper)

Reference: H-655-001/037

Description: 37 cartoons on political and social subjects published in the Otago Daily Times. A panda bear sits and swings the five Olympic rings in its paws with Olympic officials commenting on China's successful bid for the Olympic games. Comment on ASH's view of underage smoking - two children walk past a cinema and a man in an alleyway furtively offers to show them pictures of people smoking. Comment on Jim Anderton's aim for a 'Peoples Bank' - Jenny Shipley is portrayed as a bank teller sitting under a signd your breath'. Public cynicism of Michael Cullen's proposed Superannuation scheme. Farmers discussing their lack of confidence in ENZA. Cartoonist's reaction to the disparity between the financial levels of sports peoples and other people when being assessed to be published on the 'rich list'. Comment on the publication that 'kiwi kids' are overweight. A male ironing clothing offers comment on Helen Clark Jenny Shipley Silvia Cartwright Sian Elias and Michelle Boag being in positions of power. Comment by a male sitting down to breakfast that deer velvet being a sex aid is 'bunkum'. Michael Cullen is shown standing next to a poker machine called 'Future Super' indication it is the helath and education monines that the poker machine needs to work on. Comment on the outcome of Max Bradford's electricity reforms. Max Bradford is in an electricial repair shop being told that if the article he brought for repair was not broken before Bradford tried to fix it it is broken now. Helen Clark Parekura Horomia and Michael Cullen presenting their individual position on the issue of Maori TV A schoolteacher chastises Max Bradford for blaming others. Michael Cullen and Helen Clark watch two overweight dogs named Super and Maori TV eating while two thin dogs named Education and Health are straining at their leads for food. A nurse opens the expectant fathers waiting room door to tell Mr Anderton to go home and he will be notified if there is any sign of labour getting serious. Early visitors arrive on the shores of New Zealand with the comment that the natives may regret not having an immigration policy. Christine Rankin wears two very large earings one labled 'winzum' the other 'lose some'. Comment on the news that the right-of-way road rule is to be revised. Jim Anderton Helen Clark and Michael Cullen cling to a life raft identified as Beneficiary Voting Block with two boaties in the background commenting that even the knowledge wave did not loosen their grip. Comment on Helen Clark's support for funding going to the arts. Comment on Laila Harre and holiday shopping Finger pointing from Pete Hodgson and Max Bradford as to who is to blame for the electricity reforms not working/ Rugby fans pay their first visit to Dunedin and pass comment on the wearing of tartan trousers. Shows a bloody battle of Gengis Khan's army. Word is being passed around to forget about the plundering and go for the 'bonus point'. Refers to the NZ cricket teams decision to stop their point scoring run glut against Australia and take the bonus point offered by a technicality. Shows two young school boys discussing public educations failure to teach reading, writing and numeracy. Shows Jim Anderton on the steps of Treasury with water flooding under the front doors and down the steps. Comment on Anderton's attempts to stop the 'leaks' coming from Treasury. Comment on the public boredom over multi-millionaire Steve Fossett's attempts to fly around the world non-stop in a hot-air balloon. Shows Marian Hobbs with a large wind instrument wrapped around her playing 'NZ Music' to a man who represents the NZ public. He has a large flat neck collar on representing the new NZ music quota. The collar prevents him from putting his fingers in his ears should not wish to listen to the music. Shows mother explaining to her crying children that their father is now going to play golf rather than take them sailing. The change is due to their father being agitated by NZ Professional Golfer Grant Waite's performance. Comment on prison staff's industrial 'go-slow' and the opportunities it creates for prisoners to escape. Shows a large area of forestry being felled for the sake of sending 'positive signals' to overseas companies. Shows an elderly couple, justifying to a squad of police officers at their front door, that they are doing all they can in the nationwide drive to save electricity. Shows Marian Hobbs introducing a rock band called 'Marian and the quotas'. Shows Sam Neill at the Jurassic Park 3 movie premiere with an old pre-historic friend. Shows a woman in an art gallery asking if a framed display is a piece of art. The gallery worker assures her it is and explains that it is Creative New Zealand's justification for their travel expenditure. Quantity: 37 photocopy/ies. Physical Description: Photocopies on sheets 297 x 210 mm.

Image

Bromhead, Peter, 1933-:This is a nuclear submarine...this is packet of cigarettes...thi...

Date: 1983

By: Bromhead, Peter, 1933-; Auckland star (Newspaper)

Reference: A-336-103

Description: Four frame cartoon outlining three different hazards to the health of New Zealanders - nuclear power, cigarettes and drink driving. This cartoon coincided with a report released by the anti-smoking group ASH estimating that New Zealand children under the age of 18 were spending $13 million on cigarettes a year. Negatives at PA Collection 5371 Bromhead Collection Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black ink on card 195 x 240 mm Provenance: Donated by the artist in 1997.

Manuscript

Sundry correspondence (A)

Date: [1977-1995]

From: Gant, Phyllis, 1922-2010: Collection

Reference: MS-Papers-6634-050

Description: Cards and letters from a variety of people; identified persons entered under Name Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Manuscript

Inward and outward correspondence mostly relating to publishing

Date: 1977-1984

From: Curnow, Thomas Allen Monro, 1911-2001 : Papers

Reference: MS-Papers-2402-65

Description: Quantity: 1 folder(s). Finding Aids: Inventory available.

Image

Clark, Laurence 1949- :Tobaccon[ist] Newsagent ; Ash to pay children to buy cigarettes ...

Date: 1993

From: Clark, Laurence (Klarc) 1949- :New Zealand Herald; Cartoons 2 - 31 March 1993

Reference: H-048-003

Description: Shows 2 children, one on the shoulders of the other, disguised as a tall man, who is leaving a tobacconist's with a packet of cigarettes. Refers to Ash's use of children to buy cigarettes from retailers who are then prosecuted for selling to under-age children Quantity: 1 cartoon bromide(s).

Manuscript

Other organisations

Date: 1980-1985

From: GirlGuiding New Zealand : Records

Reference: 88-130-12/10

Description: Quantity: 1 folder(s).

Image

Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :Giving up smoking - a four year course, Auckland Star, 1982.

Date: 1982

From: Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :One folder of original cartoons published in the Auckland Star 1970s - 1980s.

Reference: A-305-157

Description: Cartoon shows a man who, prompted by the launch of ASH, tries to give up smoking over a period of four years. The cartoon is divided into four parts, one for each year. Each year the man says, `Right! This is my last smoke!'. Until the fourth year, when his words are uttered from a crematorium. The cartoon refers to the fatal effects of cigarette smoking. Negatives at PA Collection 5371 Bromhead Collection Extended Title - Year 1. ASH - Action on Smoking and Health pressure group launched. Guilt. Right! This is my last smoke! Year 2. Right! This is my last smoke! Year 3..Right! This is my last smoke! Year 4. Crematorium - Right! This is my last smoke! Quantity: 1 photocopy/ies (negative). Physical Description: A4 size photocopy. Provenance: Donated by the artist in 1997.

Online Image

Most Kiwis want a smokefree New Zealand by 2020 - survey. "To clarify - smokefree does ...

Date: 2010

From: Hawkey, Allan Charles, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Waikato Times].

Reference: DCDL-0014955

Description: A man doing a survey on making New Zealand a smokefree country by 2020 clarifies the meaning of 'smokefree' to a cigarette-smoking man he is interviewing; he says that 'smokefree does not mean free smokes'. A new survey conducted for Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) by research company UMR shows that nearly two in three New Zealanders support ending commercial tobacco sales by 2020. This means smoked tobacco would not be widely available for sale. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"Hard to imagine a world of only drugs and alcohol to keep us going..." 4 August 2010

Date: 2010

From: Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0014948

Description: A man reads a headline in the newspaper that says 'New Zealanders back tobacco sales ban by 2020' and finds it hard to imagine a 'world of only drugs and alcohol to keep us going....' Refers to the notion that people often don't think of tobacco as being a drug. A survey, for anti-smoking group Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), asked 750 respondents if they agreed or disagreed that "New Zealand should be a completely Smokefree nation by 2020. This means smoked tobacco would not be widely available for sale." 59% of respondents "agreed" or "strongly agreed" with the statement, ASH said. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Image

[Artist unknown]: "Mind if I smoke?" "Care if I die?" People used to think second-hand ...

Date: 2000

Reference: Eph-C-SMOKING-2000-01

Description: Poster shows a photograph of a glamorous man and woman in evening dress, smiling at each other. The man has an unlit cigarette in his mouth. Text below states that around 350 New Zealanders die every year because of other people's tobacco smoke. At the lower edge is a statement that the poster is supported by ASH, Heart Foundation, Cancer Society, Health Sponsorship Council, Quit group, Te Hotu Manawa Maori, ATAK-Maori Smokefree Coalition, Smokefree Coalition. Date estimated from notes retrieved 10 March 2016, from Quantity: 1 colour photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: Photolithograph, 297 x 420 mm.

Online Image

Clark, Laurence, 1949- :'What am I going to do when there's nobody left to tell not to ...

Date: 2012

From: Clark, Laurence, 1949- :Digital cartoons

By: Northern advocate (Newspaper)

Reference: DCDL-0020399

Description: A member of the 'ASH' (Action on Smoking and Health) staff pours out her woes about potential job loss to a psychologist who recommends their cessation courses. Context: The government is about to raise the cost of cigarettes again in their determination to make New Zealand smokefree by 2025. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart