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Scott, Thomas, 1947- :[23 copies of cartoons published in the Evening Post between 1 an...
Date: 2001
By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)
Reference: H-673-024/046
Description: Cartoons on political and social issues, includes: Shows scientists' adhock research into the potential uses of genetic modification at the expense of commonsense. Comment on the intimidation tactics of Qantas Airlines toward Air New Zealand. Singapore Airlines are shown as Air New Zealands big sister ally. Christine Rankin considers taking further action following the release of the Employment Courts findings. Shows the Government (surfer) riding the knowledge wave only to be wiped out and lodged head first in the sand. Discussion between an Israeli soldier and Palestinian child. The soldier is trying to explain to the child how violence and retaliation works. The child just wants to play and go to the movies. Shows Helen Clark dealing with Steve Maharey and his use of obscene language. Shows members of the Electoral Reform Committee as angelic, working for the best interests of the country while having vested interests in the Committees outcome. Helen Clark calls on the All Blacks to crush the Australians while they've down. New Zealand reaction to the loss by the All Blacks to the Australians. Shows All Black Anton Oliver taking the blame for the loss against Australia. Comment on the Qantas involvement in running Ansett into the ground and leaving small creditors in ruins. Comment on the lack of constructive action being taken by the Pacific Forum to deal with global warming and the consequent rising of the ocean level. Shows Helen Clark encouraging all her Ministers to keep pets. Jim Anderton is shown wrapped in the arms of his pet octupus (Peoples' Bank). Shows West Coast MP, Damien O'Connor, addressing an audience about local mining and the poor decision made by Alliance MP Sandra Lee. He is reminded by a miner in the wings that his seat is still marginal. Shows Jim Anderton and Sandra Lee observing the Reefton Alliance office being pelted with food in reaction to Sandra Lee saying 'no' to mine expansion in the area. Shows a new army armoured vehicle running over an air force plane. Comment on the current situation where the armies supplies are being boosted while the air force is having its wings clipped. Shows thugs from the power company breaking into a persons house to extract money for the latest exorbitant power bill. Shows an All Black player finishing a Springbok (South African Rugby Team) and still feeling hungry. He thinks he could polish off the entire Australian Rugby Team (Wallabies) as well. Shows the relationship between government controlled power generators, empty lakes and increased revenue for power for the Reserve Bank. Shows a proposed statue for the entrance of the Sydney Harbour. Comment on Australia's policy to exclude refugees. Shows Michelle Boag's National Party purge of Parliamentary faithful. Comment on the level of ignorant public opinion over the boat people refugees trying to gain entry to Australia, by people ringing talkback radio. Quantity: 23 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: B5 size bromides.
Interview with Raymond Wong
Date: 5 April 2003 - 05 Apr 2003
From: Tung Jung oral history project
By: Wong, Raymond Ling Yui, 1911-2009
Reference: OHInt-0747-10
Description: Interview with Raymond Wong, born in Wellington in 1911. Talks about family life in New Zealand and being sent to China for further education at the age of 14. Refers to his training and employment as a radio officer on coastal ships for a British company in Hong Kong. Mentions meeting his New Zealand-born wife Betty in China, marrying her in 1935, then returning to New Zealand. Discusses his father having returned earlier and set up another fruit and vegetable shop in Cuba Street and working for the family business (Wong Tong and Sons) which he joined when he came back. Comments about working in the green grocers markets and moving to Nelson in 1954 where he joined another family firm. Talks about his father's choice to immigrate to New Zealand, family experiences as Chinese immigrants and reflects on his cultural identity as a Chinese New Zealander. Interviewer(s) - Kitty Chang Arrangement: Tape numbers - OHC-014101 Quantity: 1 C90 cassette(s). 1 printed abstract(s). 1 interview(s). 30 Minutes Duration. Finding Aids: Abstract Available - abstracting complete OHA-5057. Colour ink jet print image of Raymond Wong and his wife (no date). Search dates: 1911 - 2003
Bromhead, Peter 1933- :[Nine cartoons published in the Dominion between 16 August 1999 ...
Date: 1999 - 2000
By: Bromhead, Peter, 1933-; Dominion (Newspaper)
Reference: H-637-001/009
Description: Topics inlude the high price of whitebait, the effect of the 1999 election on business confidence, the public image of the Inland Revenue Department, shortcomings in the equipment of the New Zealand peace-keepers in East Timor, attitudes towards the millenium, the non-event of the Y2K bug, the high cost of funding the national museum, Te Papa, the cost of buying frigates, the exorbiant pay paid to television newsreaders as a news item, control of the varroa bee mite. Quantity: 9 colour photo-mechanical print(s). Physical Description: A4 size colour prints
Scott, Tom, 1947- :85 cartoon bromides published in the Evening Post between 2 February...
Date: 2000
By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-
Reference: H-648-001/085
Description: 85 cartoons on political and social issues. The topics include cricketers, PM's avoidance of Waitangi Day protests, Treaty of Waitangi signing 1840, Maori sovereignty, Israel's hard line on Palestine, perils of being a child in NZ, Rugby sevens, Fiji's lack of moral fibre, genetic relationship between humans and slugs, corporate savaging of small shareholders, dairy farmers play down record returns, farmer reaction to vet strike, People's Bank documents leaked, Anderton looks for way to get rid of Phillida Bunkle, cricket rules questioned, possible beaurocracy of Kiwi Bank, NZ Post attempts to gag Richard Prebble, Bunkle and Hobbs on political scrap-heap, NZ rich list, possum damage Australian tax payer responsibility, cricket match-fixing, Bunkle unlikely to get back into Cabinet, extended rugby season not cricket, Kiwi Bank customers may bring their debt with them, Super-12 referees, census forms, British border control officials under fire, NZ scenery blocked by pine trees, ACT conservation policy - eat Kiwis, Germans announce NZ sheep have scrapies, Winstone Peters argues against opinion polls, RCD farmers support border control of foot-and-mouth, TVNZ presenters fight amongst themselves, Helen Clark and her husband communicate via e-mail, Clark defends and attacks her husband, CNN broadcasts incorrect information about NZ cases of foot-and-mouth disease, skyhawks put out to pasture, Clark and Shipley fight it out, MIR space station breaks up, Hobbs on the rack, Air Force apologise to Clark, Clark wins 'scariest skirt' award, George W Bush's stance on carbon dioxide emissions, Jonathon Hunt fails to name drunken MP's, Milosovich faces punishment, Clark and Anderton negotiate deal to get rid of Bunkle, Bush's foreign policy stance escalates world tensions, women in leadership roles - men ponder their choices, Bush questions the colour of 'red China', Tiger Woods - king of the golf world, Clark hot and cold on America, Shipley faces political crisis, schizophrenic flatmates, Ansett NZ maintenance, Anderton farmers' favourite, schizophrenic flatmates, cervical screening and justice, Rankin missed by bomb on WINZ building, message from Qantas NZ, airline collapses while owner plays golf, dawn parade 2030, Saturn TV, Bush armwrestles Chinese dragon, King and budget decisions, air ticket competition, US impose tariffs on NZ farmers, white house and star wars, Hurricanes fans pray for victory, Clark axes skyhawks, Hitler and Hirohito and Clark, female, sex and animals, arms race history, TVNZ internal affairs, Clark and Blair campaigns, McVeigh dies in Oklahoma, Clark out of touch, Peters makes a come-back, burning effigies, global warming, Dairy Board merger, Maori Party, taxing home ownership, soya sauce scare, Bob Dylan on Radio NZ, importance of appearance in the public service. 85 H-648-033 misrecorded as a Tom Scott cartoon when it is in fact a Garrick Tremain. Refiled H-645 series. Quantity: 85 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: A4 bromides
Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :'I have just signed the Kyoto Emissions Protocol -' 'Co...
Date: 2002
From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons
Reference: DX-003-087
Description: New Zealand Prime Minister, Helen Clark feels virtuous after signing the Kyoto Emissions Protocol. However New Zealands trade competitors also feel good about it as they see New Zealand bound by the requirements of the Protocol. Other Titles - NZ Trade Competitors. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Nisbet, Al 1958- : Qantas NZ. Christchurch Press.
Date: 2001
From: Nisbet, Alastair, 1958- :Digital cartoons
By: Press (Christchurch, N.Z.)
Reference: DX-006-029
Description: A plane tail with the Qantas logo of the Kangaroo dead on its back and the words "Qantas NZ" written across the body of the plane. Quantity: 1 digital image(s).
Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Fat cats. 23 April 2013
Date: 2013
From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons
By: National Business Review Ltd
Reference: DCDL-0024624
Description: Shows a group of three 'fat cats' labelled 'Mighty River', 'Meridian' and 'Genesis' who are seated at a table greedily hoarding their funds and 'burning' cash. Below the table two 'Bolshevik Bombers', Labour leader David Shearer and Green Party co-leader Russel Norman are shown sneaking in with lit bombs. Refers to the strongly emotive media debate around the Government's decision to sell shares in Mighty River Power and other power companies. The Bolshevik bombers refer to claims in the media that the Labour and Green Party joint plan, released very close to the floating of the Mighty River shares, was a deliberate act of sabotage. There have been claims that the proposed state ownership of power companies and price caps reflect a collectivist approach akin to Communist models. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :"Floats like a butterfly!" "Stings like a bee!" 19 January 2013
Date: 2013
From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]
Reference: DCDL-0025385
Description: Shows two men in suits labelled 'Importer' and 'Exporter'. Both watch the New Zealand dollar, which hovers over them. The Importer says "Floats like a butterfly!" but the Exporter says "Stings like a bee!". Refers to the different experiences of the import and the export sector depending on the strength of the New Zealand dollar. Also references the famous quote by boxer Muhammad Ali, who said he would 'float like a butterfly, sting like a bee'. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Doyle, Martin, 1956- :Christchurch predators. 9 July 2013
Date: 2013
From: Doyle, Martin Maurice Michael Thomas, 1956- :Digital cartoons
By: Scoop (Firm)
Reference: DCDL-0025525
Description: Mock warning notice featuring feral dogs and the wording 'Warning to all visitors and worker in the Christchurch Accommodation Wilderness: If you wish to survive, give an arm and a leg to any wild dog [Canis Landlordius] which calls at your tent or caravan'. Accompanying note from cartoonist states 'Christchurch desperately needs workers in the rebuild. Rack-rent landlords are a pox on this effort'. With the need for labour in the Christchurch rebuild, incoming workers were discouraged by the high rents charged by local landlords exploiting the shortage of accommodation. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Bromhead, Peter, 1933-:'So why do you think business confidence is slipping?'. 12 June ...
Date: 2012
From: Bromhead, Peter, 1933- :Digital cartoons
By: Marlborough Express (Newspaper)
Reference: DCDL-0021754
Description: Shows a man reading a newspaper headline 'BNZ Survey' asking Mr New Zealand why 'business confidence is slipping' as a barrel of 'International never-ending doom and gloom' drips on to Mr New Zealand's head. Context: The June BNZ Confidence Survey showed a return of pessimism regarding prospects for the New Zealand economy in 2012 (BNZ website 11 June 2012) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Smith, Ashley W, 1948- :'No comment' 5 December 2012
Date: 2012
From: Smith, Ashley W, 1948- :[Digital cartoons published in the Shipping Gazette, MG Business, or Presto]
By: New Zealand shipping gazette (Periodical)
Reference: DCDL-0023632
Description: A large egg labelled, 'Primary Industries Ministry', and referencing the nursery rhyme character, Humpty Dumpty, sits on a stone wall, and says 'No comment' to a group of reporters. One of the reporters says, 'He's stonewalling in case their investigation comes to nothing' Another responds, 'Doesn't want egg on his face.' Possibly refers to new regulations regarding battery hen cages put forth by the Primary Industries Ministry. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Crichton, Anna, 1957- :[Floating orange squeezers] 8 July 2011
Date: 2011
From: Crichton, Anna, 1957- :Digital cartoons
By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper)
Reference: DCDL-0018283
Description: The scene shows dozens of orange squeezers that look like little boats floating on a Japanese lake beneath blossom. Context - The cartoon was drawn to accompany an article by Deborah Hill Cone which suggests that New Zealand needs an evil plan for world domination. She goes on to say 'Charlie's had one. They sold their cordial company to Japanese brewer Asahi for lots of clams. Mwaah-ha-ha. But instead of hailing the company's founders as evil geniuses, the sale seems to have prompted the usual rending of garments and unrelenting self-bollocking.' (Source - www.nzherald.co.nz - July 19 2011) The sale refers to the news that 'Asahi Beverages looks almost certain to become the new owner of Charlie's Group after the major shareholders said yesterday they had agreed to sell their combined 52.17 per cent stake to the Japanese brewing giant'. (Source - nzherald.co.nz July 5 2011) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Scott, Tom, 1947- :74 cartoon bromides published in the Evening Post between 1 May 2000...
Date: 2000
By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-
Reference: H-618-001/074
Description: 74 cartoons on political and social issues. The topics include National Party style ('radical conservatism'), political aspects of the ban on native forest logging on the West Coast, bribery and corruption in international cricket, softening of the macho image of Super 12 Players, the fatal shooting Steven Wallace by police in Waitara, email viruses, underage drinking, tax on cigarettes, greenhouse gas emission control, the entrenched position of Christine Rankin, Head of WINZ, television presenter Paul Holmes, the sale of the cell phone spectrum to Maori, Americas' Cup yachtsmen, the rebel coup in Fiji, prisoners' rights, All Black rugby, Maori activisim and cultural sensitivites, the falling New Zealand dollar, falling business confidence, the Employments Contracts Act, the legal staus of cannabis, the Coalition between the Labour Party and Alliance, the flight of underpaid and overworked young doctors from New Zealand, unseasonable weather, the meeting between the Presidents of North and South Korea, the Budget, the Government's 'Closing the Gaps' policy, underfunding of the army, muck-raking by ACT politician Richard Prebble, drugs in sport, the takeover by Qantas of Ansett New Zealand, political scandal and the sacking of Dover Samuels as Minister of Maori Affairs, child abuse, dangerous driving by truck drivers, the conflict over Israel, the dangers of excusing away mental illness, Helen Clark's leadership style, alcohol and sportsmen, railway accidents, republicism and Tandor Nancos of the Green Party, the Bledisloe Cup, cannabis use, forest fires in the United States, extended sittings in Parliament, the Employment Relations Bill, speed limits, the loss of Kursk, the Russian submarine, defence expenditure, controversy over Maori domestic violence, rising petrol prices. Quantity: 74 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: A4 horizontal bromides