Showing posts with label Cooper Point Journal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cooper Point Journal. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

A Short Walk Through Evergroove-- a Comix-eye View


The main "Red Square" and Library Building for The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. It was somewhere on these bricks Lynda Barry dropped a human skeleton and looked in horror as it shattered into tiny pieces.

Behind these doors in the CAB Building (Campus Activities Building), before the place went through a major facelift, sat the office of the student newspaper, The Cooper Point Journal when Matt Groening was editor. Today the area houses student activities offices.


I was amazed and pleased to see the Stairwell Dragons are still with us! Our fellow cartoonist David George was fascinated by this spiral mural. Cruz Esquivel and I shared an adventure with local law enforcement.











The area where the Library Ghost was originally spotted in 1988. According to the eyewitness who returned to area and demonstrated where the ghost had been seen, the being would've been walking away from the camera in the center of the photo.

The huge stairs are now absent, but this is the spot where Evergroove's amazing dedication ceremony took place in 1972.

This squat little cube is actually an air vent and one of many entrances to the fabled steam tunnels. If you are inside this thing you can see people through the grate.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Groening on Evergreen


Recently reread this part of Matt Groening's Comics Journal interview in April 1991 where he talks about his time at The Evergreen State College. He's pretty dead on when describing then place back in the 1970s.

I actually recall copies of Arcade sitting around the office of The Cooper Point Journal, the student newspaper Matt edited. Now that I think about it, they probably belonged to Matt!

Matt is being modest here. I was acquainted with Matt and Lynda before they knew each other, and although Matt's chief ambition was to be a writer, he was already into cartooning. Lynda was multi-talented in drawing and writing with a desire to be an art teacher, and Matt, I believe, encouraged and promoted her entry into cartooning. But they did provide each other with a lot of creative spark and energy.

I was some local rural hayseed with barbed wire holes still in my jeans, dazzled by their banter. But they were nice to me anyway.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Crapper Point Journal




The Crapper Point Journal was a response to the official student newspaper for The Evergreen State College, The Cooper Point Journal.

Here's how I got roped into this. During my very last quarter at Evergroove a faculty member who shall remain anonymous but is named Margaret Gribskov contacted me and asked if I would be willing to participate in a spoof of the CPJ. Of course I would. So she introduced me to a fellow named Ken Silverstein.

Ken was a new arrival to TESC and was struck by how pompous and lockstep the place had become as contrasted to the earlier reputation the school had enjoyed as a more libertarian institution. His idea was to create a newspaper for the college set in the future. That's why even though the paper was really released on June 6, 1979, it carries a date of December 12, 1985.

So I drew the masthead and a couple cartoons. Ken, I think, did all the writing. Margaret bankrolled the project. For most of the humor in this publication all I can say is you really had to be there at the time to get it. The jokes were extremely local and topical.

In the brief time I worked with Ken I was impressed by his sharp observations and energy. Today he is a well known journalist and writer, mostly known his work in the Los Angeles Times and Harpers. Today he appears to be in freelance transition. Definitely an engaging journalist to follow.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Daily Zero, April 21, 1977


During his tenure as editor of the Cooper Point Journal, campus newspaper for The Evergreen State College, Matt Groening organized a pretty dead-on parody of The Daily Olympian (now called the Olympian), the mainstream paper for Olympia, Washington. Charles Burns is included among the contributors.

During the previous quarter I recall hearing Matt talk about this project, but by April I had moved to Seattle.

To see the entire paper, hop on over to OlyBlog. You don't have to be a fellow Mossback to enjoy the trip.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Matt Groening at The Evergreen State College, 1977



From The Sunday Olympian, Feb. 6, 1977.

I seem to recall Matt saying something about the Daily Olympian reporter holding up a copy of The Cooper Point Journal and declaring no one could get away with this kind of writing in real life after college.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Retreads 9














1st edition, November 2005, 25 copies, white cover, regular digest size.

Trivia:

Pages 1-3: Yes, I really did interview J.P. Patches.

Pages 7-11: It is safe to say I did not enjoy the graduate school experience. But then again, I wasn't supposed to. The first panel portrays Lee Norton (who, for reasons I don't want to even begin to guess at, wore a duck decoy on her cranium once) interviewing Morty for an article entitled "Morty Dog, Come Home." This was originally in the Cooper Point Journal and reprinted in Retreads 4.

Pages 23-24: This particular teacher died last Fall at the age of 101. She was a sweetie. I hated algebra and used to draw cartoons on the margins. She would return my papers with the grade: "Math - D, Art -A." As you can see, I attended a pretty wild junior high during the Vietnam War era.

This is the only issue of Retreads still available at Poopsheet.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Retreads




































1st edition, 1983, Olympia, Washington, 46 copies, salmon cover, enlarged digest size.

1st Danger Room Reprint edition, July 2005, 5 copies, blue cover, enlarged digest size.

Retreads was a way for me to collect a lot of my work that had been published hither and yon and round it up in one series.

Some of the drawings appear out of context, but I'm sure as this blog continues we'll revisit them in their native state.

Most of the work in this issue dates back to college and much of it makes me cringe today. Really cringe. A lot.

Trivia:

Channel 14 was the name I chose for a comic strip. Obviously this was before cable TV really took hold. In broadcast television days Channel 14 didn't exist, at least around here it didn't. That's Dixy Lee Ray, our pro-nuclear, pro-supertankers in Puget Sound Governor at the time on page 4. Cartoonists loved her the way we loved Nixon-- easy to draw and such an inviting target. She wasn't our worst governor in my lifetime (Gary Locke gets that distinction) or the most arrogant (Locke wins that one too), but she was the most entertaining and loony.

I drew posters for the weekly film series at The Evergreen State College for awhile. Page 10 has drawings I made for a John Ford movie, and another for a Hitchcock triple feature.

Page 16, lower panel: That's Joan Armatrading, I think.

The bottom of page 21 has the very first appearance in print of "Mortie" the Dog, as far as I know. It was probably drawn in 1978, but wasn't printed until 1980-- after I had graduated TESC. The school newspaper, The Cooper Point Journal, published more of my work after I left Evergreen than when I was a student, taking illustrations from a big pile of artwork I left them.
"Art Laboe" was among the many fake names I used when I signed my work. I was part of a band in college called "Art Laboe and the Happy Martyrs." Although we had one guy who could really play the piano, we never performed or even practiced. But we did have a band because that was expected of all Evergreen students and at parties you could say, "Yes, I'm with a band," which was supposed to make the mystique meter go up a notch.

Page 25: I had given a pile of original art to Lynda Barry as a gift when we were fellow students at TESC. Apparently she had several of my comix from this present I made printed in the University of Washington Daily after she left TESC, and my name was forged on the panels. Although this was flattering, I didn't find out these had seen print until a couple years later. I have no idea how many were published, but a friend did supply me with the issue of the Daily that had the lower panel here on p. 25.

Page 31: Originally compiled and titled by the CPJ editors, Starhead's Michael Dowers took Life With Skippy and reprinted it into a bonafide minicomic. I always liked this one. "Life With Skippy" was later used as the title for a non-existent television show as part of an elaborate marketing hoax.