Many and varied are the items and yarns which come the way of this blog. Just arrived is this original artwork cartoon of journalist Ian Mackay , on assignment in New Zealand , dressed as a Maori . It is a souvenir from his days at Melbourne's Sun News-Pictorial (said to be Australia's largest circulating newspaper for more than 50 years ) where for several years he wrote the daily column, A Place in the Sun (APITS for short). It was the newspaper's longest running column , the first written by Keith Dunstan .
"It was the lot of a columnist
to be frequently humiliated in the pursuit of a meagre contribution to his daily
measure, " Ian said . " Hence , I was depicted sinking in a bubbling, volcanic mud pool at Rotorua's Whakarewarewa by cartoonist Neil Matterson ." Compensation for the humiliation included heaps of Bluff oysters and whitebait fritters down south in Invercargill .
Matterson , also an artist and illustrator , resigned several times from the Sun Pictorial following rejection of his political cartoons after the dismissal of PM Gough Whitlam on November 11 , l975 , his resignations not accepted. One of the strips he invented was Cliff, a talking Koala , who like an archetypal Australian could not win . In 1996 he won first prize in the open theme section of the Rotary National and International Awards for a Princess Di gag .
Matterson , also an artist and illustrator , resigned several times from the Sun Pictorial following rejection of his political cartoons after the dismissal of PM Gough Whitlam on November 11 , l975 , his resignations not accepted. One of the strips he invented was Cliff, a talking Koala , who like an archetypal Australian could not win . In 1996 he won first prize in the open theme section of the Rotary National and International Awards for a Princess Di gag .
Ian now has a leafy place in the sun on Magnetic Island, complete with nesting Sunbirds fore and aft .