Another Stereotype Bites the Dust: A Candorville Collection, is hot off the press and will be on store shelves shortly.  If you can't wait for the retail store, he has a few copies that he can sell you off of his web site and they come autographed and with a sketch of one of the characters as well.  Visit his web site for details. " /> Another Stereotype Bites the Dust: A Candorville Collection, is hot off the press and will be on store shelves shortly.  If you can't wait for the retail store, he has a few copies that he can sell you off of his web site and they come autographed and with a sketch of one of the characters as well.  Visit his web site for details. " />

Posted on: October 12, 2006

Exhibit Will Focus on a ‘Peanuts’ Wall That Moved to California

by Alan Gardner

E&P reports that a wall from a Colorado Springs home where Charles Schulz lived has been removed and sent to the Charles M….  The wall had been repainted by later residents, but Stan and Polly Travnicek who bought the home in 1979, learned about the paintings underneath and successfully removed the layers of paint to reveal the original artwork below (consisting of characters from Peanuts and other storybooks).

Ed Stein to lecture at American Political Cartoonists exhibit

by Alan Gardner

Ed Stein, editorial cartoonist for the Rocky Mountain News, will be speaking at the College of William and Mary (Virginia) on October 12 as part of the American Political Cartoonists exhibit that is running at the college through January 2007. Some of Ed’s work is on display as is a selection of work from Thomas Nast, Bill Mauldin, Dr. Seuss, Herbert Block (Herblock), Pat Oliphant, Garry Trudeau, Signe Wilkinson, and Hugh Haynie. Admission to the lecture is free. Hugh Haynie’s stuff can be seen online.

Stan Lee is a super-human

by Alan Gardner

At age 82, Stan Lee is proving to be somewhat of a super-human. Among some of his activities, he attends comic conventions signing books, works on movie productions (Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer is slated to be released in 2007 and Stan is listed in the writing credits), he had a reality TV show called Who Wants to Be a Superhero?, he runs his own entertainment company called POW (Purveyors of Wonder) and he’s writing Stan Lee meets… to commemorate 65 years with Marvel Comics.

Gary Larson tries to save a mountain

by Alan Gardner

One doctor is applying a defibrillator while another is removing developers and tossing them into a waste can.Larson and his wife, Toni Carmichael, who own a place on Orcas, are members of the campaign steering committee.”Having spent time on the island off and on since I was a kid, it’s amazed me that to this day it’s been able to retain as much of its unspoiled beauty as it has,” said Larson, who grew up in Tacoma.To donateFor more information and to donate:www.saveturtleback.comThe San Juan Preservation TrustBox 327Lopez Island, WA 98261360-468-3202″My sense of why this is so is because many, if not most, of the people who live here are like-minded in their appreciation for the island’s intrinsic beauty and disconnect from the kind of blight we all see around other parts of the state, where farmlands are converted into shopping malls, rolling hills have become housing developments and sprawl goes unchecked.”Turtleback is owned by the Medina Foundation, a Seattle-based philanthropic organization started by the late Weyerhaeuser tycoon Norton Clapp….  Private gifts total about $6 million so far, and the San Juan Preservation Trust has added $1 million.If the goal isn’t reached, the groups probably would borrow the remaining money and consider selling pieces of Turtleback for development, said Tim Seifert, executive director of the San Juan Preservation Trust.No new development is planned on the mountain’s slopes or summit, beyond carving out hiking trails and possibly a small cabin for the caretaker.More than 540 individuals have donated to the campaign, some inspired by the gift of Sue Cooley, of Seattle, and her son-in-law, Bob Cooley-Gilliom, who are matching individual donations up to $1 million.

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