Helping Hands

Should you feel inclined to donate to relief efforts for victims of Gustav — or any other recent tragedies — I would like to remind you about my charity of choice, Operation USA. I looked around at many organizations that ask for money and promise to good with it…and many do. Many, it should also be pointed out, spend way too much on their own bureaucracy and salaries so only a small part of each dollar you give actually helps out folks in need.

After a fair amount of research and asking folks who know this kind of thing, I decided that whatever money I can afford to donate could not be put to better use than it is when I give to Operation USA. They have a small staff (small, considering how much they accomplish) and they don't spend a lot on themselves or on frills. Give them a buck and something like 95 cents of it is spent feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, helping control disease, etc. Not only that but they do it all with a minimum of delay, often before any other organization can get its act together.

As for why you might not want to donate to the Red Cross, read this article by Richard Walden, who's one of the guys behind Operation USA. He's not shilling for the interests of his own charity. He's telling you the kind of bureaucratic hinderances that plague the big charities and prevent them from doing as much good as the small ones.

Letterman

swampthinglogo01

Folks often hail the Swamp Thing comic done in the seventies by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson…and in so doing, they leave out a key credit. The evocative logo above and the lettering in most issues were the handiwork of one of comics' great unsung talent, a gentleman named Gaspar Saladino. If you read comics in the so-called "Silver Age" (especially those edited by Julius Schwartz) and for years after, you read word balloons lettered by Gaspar and you probably saw his sharp, commanding lettering on covers and in ads.

I'm not going to write a lot about him here because I want you to go check out two other places. "Robby Reed," the creator of the Dial B for Blog website, is offering up an extraordinary tribute to Mr. Saladino that will tell you a lot more than I can possibly relate here, plus its loaded with examples. It all starts here.

And then over the next few days, drop by the weblog of Todd Klein. Todd's the guy who wins the Eisner Award for Best Letterer so often that it has been suggested that they just hand him one every year when he arrives at the con, and then at the ceremony, they'll have a category called "Best Letterer Other Than Todd Klein." As Todd explained on a panel when I interviewed him at the last Comic-Con, Saladino is a special hero of his and he's also posting examples of the man's craft. That starts here.

Not much I can add to those two celebrations of the man, other than to say I think he's every bit as important an artist as anyone who drew on the pages he lettered. It's about time he got more recognition.

Today's Video Link

From a 1972 episode of The David Frost Show: Four performers from the Broadway show, Follies — Harvey Evans, Kurt Peterson, Virginia Sandifur and Marti Rolph — do a number from the original production.

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