Sports - New Zealand - Finance
Heath, Eric Walmsley 1923-:"Spare a few bucks for a poor amateur with 122 kids to suppo...
Date: 1972
By: Heath, Eric Walmsley, 1923-
Reference: C-133-050
Description: Cartoon shows the New Zealand Olympic Association as a pavement artist begging for money to support New Zealand's Olympic team at the games in Munich. He is appealing to a peace activist who is passing by with a huge sack of money labelled "Mururoa", collected during recent "fantastic" response from the public to the peace media appeal. The beggar is sitting in front of a placard with the square NZ logo, later used for the 10th Commonwealth Games, and protected and trademarked under the Commonwealth Games Symbol Protection Act 1974. Other Titles - One hundred and twenty-two; a hundred and ten thousand two hundred dollars Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Black ink 483 x 610 mm
New Zealand Sports Foundation : Records
Date: 1977-1997
By: New Zealand Sports Foundation
Reference: 2007-268
Description: Contains Board and annual general meeting minutes 1979-1996; High Performance Sport Review Committee papers, 1995; Hillary Commission papers, 1992-1997; Marketing Committee papers, 1994-1997 and newspaper cuttings relating to sport, 1996-1999 The New Zealand Sports Foundation was established in 1978 and the Hillary Commission in 1985. They were merged to become part of Sports and Recreation New Zealand which was set up in 2002. Quantity: 8 box(es). 2.40 Linear Metres. Provenance: Donor/Lender/Vendor - Donated by New Zealand Sports Foundation, 2007
Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :Surely raising funds is only a matter of the co-operati...
Date: 1968
From: Lodge, Nevile Sidney 1918-1989 :[Archive of original cartoons for the Evening Post and Sports Post, 1941 to 1988]
Reference: B-137-335
Description: Shows three vignettes: one manager is designated to be in charge of the shooting team and one sprinter; he leads them away; they stand in wait until the T.A.B. closes and then plan for the shooting team to hold up the T.A.B. employees while the sprinter gets away with the swag. Other Titles - Renewed efforts will be made shortly to establish an Olympic Society charged with the task of raising funds to send New Zealand teams to future Olympic and Commonwealth Games meetings. Quantity: 1 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: Ink drawing 405 x 270 mm, on sheet 477 x 335 mm.
Why New Zealand gets few gold medals. "Good work Trevor! That's three... Just another 1...
Date: 2006
From: Webb, Murray, 1947- :Digital caricatures
Reference: DCDL-0001179
Description: Caricatures of Trevor Mallard, Minister of Sport and Recreation, Prime Minister Helen Clark and Deputy Prime Minister Michael Cullen. They are all dressed for sports. Trevor Mallard is skipping briskly and getting up quite a sweat, Michael Cullen is bent under the weight of a huge golden ball labelled 'Gold funds' and Helen Clark is showing off her muscles and exhorting Trevor Mallard to raise the medal count from three to 10,000 and he will get more funding for training while at the same time she advises Michael Cullen to take it easy because she thinks the government is safe for another four years. The implication is that New Zealand may have won more medals in the Commonwealth Games if there had been more funding for sports and the reason there wasn't was that Michael Cullen was hoarding funds for a rainy day. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
An ode to priorities. Guv'ment won't fund the answer, to spare you cervical cancer, so ...
Date: 2007
From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]
Reference: DCDL-0003560
Description: The cartoon is principally a rhyme about the government choosing not to subsidise the drug Herceptin which is used to treat cervical cancer but is assisting in the funding of Tean New Zealand in order to keep New Zealand's bid for the America's Cup afloat. There are also two small images, one of a woman sitting at a desk looking thoughtful and the other of a sailing boat. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).
Winter, Mark, 1958- :Not Race. 17 January 2014
Date: 2014
From: Winter, Mark, 1958- : Digital cartoons published in the Southland Times and other papers
Reference: DCDL-0027193
Description: Cartoon depicts National Party MP Steven Joyce being dragged underwater by a bag with "$100k" written on it, and he is saying, "And not a penny more". The cartoon heading says "Auckland to Bluff not race...". Refers to the $100,000 that the Government gave to the organisers of an Auckland to Bluff yacht race that was later cancelled. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).