Manifold alive! Meet KIT KARTER, the star of this week’s ODDBALL COMIC, one that’s dedicated to that long-vanished vehicle favored by American teenagers of the early 1960s, the “go kart”! Plus, meet Kit’s best buddy, Axil Greez, his ginchy girlfriend, Claire DaLoon and his rotten rival, Kris Kross! Oddest of all, the whole motorized magilla was written and drawn by none other than MAD magazine’s “Roger Kaputnik” himself, Dave “The Lighter Side Of…” Berg!
[fieldinserts][issuetitle]Title: [subissuetitle]Kit Karter[subissuetitle]
[issuetitle][issue]Issue: [subissue]No. 1[subissue]
[issue][publicationdate]Date: [subpublicationdate]May-July, 1962[subpublicationdate]
[publicationdate][publisher]Publisher: [subpublisher]Dell Publishing Co., Inc.[subpublisher]
[publisher][coverartists]Cover Artist(s): [subcoverartists]Dave Berg[subcoverartists]
[coverartists][introtext]Manifold alive! Meet KIT KARTER, the star of this week’s ODDBALL COMIC, one that’s dedicated to that long-vanished vehicle favored by American teenagers of the early 1960s, the “go kart”!
Plus, meet Kit’s best buddy, Axil Greez, his ginchy girlfriend, Claire
DaLoon and his rotten rival, Kris Kross! Oddest of all, the whole
motorized magilla was written and drawn by none other than MAD magazine’s “Roger Kaputnik” himself, Dave “The Lighter Side Of…” Berg![introtext]
[fieldinserts] According to go kart authority Dr. Larry A. Johnson, “Go karts were first created in the United States in the 1950s with the majority of historians crediting Art Ingels as the inventor. He built his first go kart in California in 1956 and it was during this post-war period where airmen raced these go karts as a way to pass the time. They are referred to as go karts, go carts, go-karts, shifter karts, go karts and many other differently spelled variations. Go karts are related to open-wheel racing such as Formula One and Indy Car. In fact, many top professional race car drivers, including Michael Schumacher, Sarah Fisher, Darrell Waltrip, Tony Stewart and Kyle Petty, got their start on the go kart racing circuit. Go kart enthusiasts can easily become addicted to the thrill of racing. Once you’ve experienced the excitement it’s hard to let it go. There are ATV all terrain vehicles, dirt bikes, scooters, mopeds, mini bikes and motorcycles, but none give a driver any more of an adrenaline-rush than the popular go kart. They are simple 4-wheeled vehicles with no suspension (relying on chassis flex). They are basically just a smaller version of the professional open wheel cars and race on similar, but smaller, racing tracks. Go karting can be a stepping stone for drivers desiring to work their way up to professional Formula One or Indy Car racing. It’s a cheaper way to get involved with racing. If a driver shows talent on the go kart circuit he can then move up to the more expensive divisions of motor racing including Formula One and Indy Car. But go karting is not just for the professionally-minded. Most of the time go karts are raced by non-professionals, people just out for a little fun. Go karts have become popular all over the world and are found in most larger cities. For the faint of heart there are extremely tame tracks located in many family fun centers and amusement parks. So what is a go kart? Go karts are made up of a chassis, motor, transmission, seat and 4 tires. Since go karts have no suspension the chassis must provide flexibility and yet retain enough stiffness to allow the kart good grip around the track and through the turns. The chassis can be either open or closed. Simply put, the closed, or caged chassis, allows protection for the driver in the event of a rollover. The open chassis does not. Engines used in karting are typically either 2-stroke or 4-stroke. The 2-stroke engine is generally more of a specialized engine that is made by companies such as Honda or Briggs and Stratton (who also make lawnmower engines). In fact, 4-stroke engines are usually the standard type used in lawn mowers. The 2-stroke is usually more powerful than the 4-stroke and can attain up to 30 horsepower or more. Sprint karts can usually get up to about 60 mph while the more powerful enduro karts can reach a top speed of up to 90 mph. Shifter karts use a manual transmission and a clutch to bring out all the engine has to offer and can reach speeds of 160 mph or more. These are not toys. As with Formula One racing the kart tires can be either slicks or rain tires. Slicks have no tread and are used for best traction on a dry track. Rain tires have tread and are used during wet weather. And in icy conditions there are specially-made spiked tires that give good grip on the slippery ice. Go karts are generally considered a safer and cheaper way to get into racing. With the many different levels available drivers can move up the line until they reach the professional level. With the right mixture of talent and practice racing alongside the top pros is certainly a possibility.”
Cartoonist David “Dave” Berg was born in Brooklyn, New York, on June 12, 1920. He studied at the Pratt Institute (at age 12!), the Cooper Union At School and the Art Students League. (He later attended the College of New Rochelle.) Berg served with the US Army Air Corps and as a war correspondent during World War II. He began his career as working for the Demby art studio in 1939; the next year, he moved up to the art studio of Will (THE SPIRIT) Eisner -- alongside such cartoonists as the young Jules Feiffer -- first as a writer, then as a writer/artist. One of his assignments there was “The Death Patrol” a feature created by cartoonist Jack Cole in 1941, one that ran in the pages of Quality Comics’ MILITARY COMICS; Berg drew the humorous feature from MILITARY COMICS’ fourth issue through its twelfth. Berg also worked on Quality’s BLACKHAWK, UNCLE SAM and Will Eisner’s own syndicated Sunday feature, THE SPIRIT. In the early days of his long career, Berg also worked for Dell Publications (“Jinx”, “Three Wishes” and “War Heroes”), Fawcett Publications CAPTAIN MARVEL, “Sir Butch” and “Spooks”) and Fiction House (“Private Elmer Pippin”). Dave Berg had a long relationship with Timely/Atlas/Marvel Comics from the mid-1940s through the mid-1950s. Working for editor Stan Lee, the astonishingly versatile Berg did work for such titles as ARIZONA KID, ASTONISHING COMICS, BATTLE, BATTLE ACTION, BATTLEFIELD, BATTLEFRONT, COMBAT KELLY, CRAZY, GEORGIE, JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY, JOURNEY INTO UNKNOWN WORLDS, MAN COMICS, MARINES IN ACTION, MARVEL TALES, MEN IN ACTION, MEN’S ADVENTURES, MYSTERY TALES, MYSTIC, MYSTICAL TALES, NAVY ACTION, NAVY COMBAT, NAVY TALES, OUTLAW TALES, RINGO KID, RIOT, STRANGE TALES, TESSIE THE TYPIST, TRUE WESTERN, UNCANNY TALES, VENUS, WAR ACTION, WAR ADVENTURES, WAR COMBAT, WAR COMICS, WESTERN GUNFIGHTERS, WESTERN OUTLAWS AND SHERIFFS, WESTERN WINNERS, WILD WESTERN, WILD, WORLD OF FANTASY, WORLD OF SUSPENSE, WORLD’S GREATEST SONGS, WYATT EARP and YOUNG MEN. During this prolific period, Berg also freelanced for Archie Publications (ARCHIE and SUZIE), Better Publications (“Junior Judo”), EC Comics, (TWO-FISTED TALES), Hillman Periodicals, St. John Publishing (WHACK!), Stanmor (JUNIOR HOP), Toby Press (MEET MERTON), Vic Verity Comics and Ziff-Davis Comics (ALICE, “David And The Dragon”, DOLLY IN DREAMLAND, “Little Sheriff”, NURSERY RHYMES and SANTA CLAUS PARADE). In 1956, Dave Berg joined “the usual gang of idiots”, writing and drawing a wide variety of features for publisher William M. Gaines’ MAD magazine, a relationship that lasted for forty years, primarily doing the magazine’s “The Lighter Side Of…” feature, which primarily examined life in suburban America, which Berg created in 1961. “The Lighter Side Of…” often featured Berg's own family, headed by his perpetually irked lookalike, “Roger Kaputnik”, his wife Vivian and his children Nancy and Mitch. Despite the fact that “The Lighter Side Of…” often used somewhat mundane situations and predictable gags, it was by far MAD’s most popular feature. Berg’s “The Lighter Side Of…” articles appeared in dozens of MAD reprint magazines and paperback books. Berg also authored a number of original MAD paperbacks, including:
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT THE U.S.A. (1964)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT PEOPLE (1966)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT THINGS (1967)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT MODERN THINKING (1969)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT OUR SICK WORLD (1971)
-- MAD MORALITY OR THE TEN COMMANDMENTS REVISTED (1972)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG MY FRIEND GOD (1972)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT LIVING (1973)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG ROGER KAPUTNIK AND GOD (1974)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AROUND (1975)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG MAD TRASH (1977)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG TAKES A LOVING LOOK (1977)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS, LISTENS AND LAUGHS (1979)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT YOU (1982)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT THE NEIGHBORHOOD (1984)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT OUR PLANET (1986)
-- MAD'S DAVE BERG LOOKS AT TODAY (1987)
Over the years, Dave Berg also illustrated record albums, greeting cards, safety booklets, was a creative consultant for television shows and drew gag cartoons for the Treasury Department. For many years, he wrote and drew features for MOSHIACH TIMES, a children’s religious magazine, as well as articles for the B’NAI B’RITH NEWSLETTER. Berg was a member of the Author’s Guild, the B’nai B’Rith, the National Cartoonists Society and the Writer’s Guild West; he also actively provided public service by working with the Boy Scouts Of American, the Girl Scouts Of America, the Little League and the PTA, as well as guest-lecturing at many schools and colleges. Berg held an honorary doctorate in theology and in 1978, New Rochelle, New York, officially observed “Dave Berg Day”. To the opposite extreme, Berg was also notoriously parodied in an early issue of THE NATIONAL LAMPOON (“Are you Dave Berg? Boy, are you an asshole!”) He also created the syndicated newspaper comic strips CITIZEN SENIOR (1989 - 1993), ROGER KAPUTNIK (1992 - ?) and ASTRONUTS (1994 - ?). Dave Berg died on May 17, 2002 at the age of 81.
KIT KARTER was published soon after Dell Publishing stopped using editorial material provided by the Western Publishing Co., Inc. Essentially starting from scratch, this was a period of interesting experimentation for Dell, which tried all sorts of concepts and approaches in their new comic books. KIT KARTER was one of these, but Dell only published one issue of the comic -- which combined “Archie”-type teenage shenanigans with the national craze of go karting -- which carried no advertisements. (Perhaps that accounts for the lack of a second issue of KIT KARTER.) That “Have Kart, Will Travel” line on the cover? It’s a take-off on the title of a popular TV western series at the time, HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL (9/14/1957 - 9/21/1963), which starred Richard Boone as “Paladin”.
This issue’s 8-page “Kit Karter” lead story is “A Kart Is Born”, written, drawn and lettered by Dave Berg. It begins at the Karter family dinner table, in a conversation that would be right at home in a non-existent MAD installment of “The Lighter Side Of Go Karts”. Of course, through the whole discussion, Kit is day-dreaming about riding in a go kart:
KARL KARTER:
The commander of my veterans post made me chairman of collecting food for the flood victims. I can’t seem to get our neighbors to contribute…GO GO KARTER:
You can’t HELP LIKING people and they can’t LIKE HELPING people?KARL KARTER:
As for you, Kit, why aren’t you eating?KIT KARTER:
Huh? Oh, the sprockets and jack shaft doesn’t taste good.KARL KARTER:
What’s he talking about?KATHY KARTER:
According to Dr. Spook, when a teenage boy doesn’t eat, he suffers from gastric acidity of the lower tract.GO GO KARTER:
In other words, he’s not hungry!KIT KARTER:
Dad, can I have about $300 to buy a GO KART?KARL KARTER:
$300 to BUY A WHAT? Do you think I’m MADE of MONEY?KIT KARTER:
It’s an interesting thought!
Of course, in typical Dave Berg fashion, Kit [pic2]visualizes his father[pic2] as literally being “made of money”!
Then Kit provides a concise definition of a “go kart”:
KIT KARTER:
Anyway, a kart is a kind of midget open air racing car. It’s built low to the ground and runs on a two cycle engine mounted in the back. The sport started about 1957, and it’s getting more popular than pizza pies. MANIFOLD ALIVE, Dad, I gotta have one!
But dear old Roger Kaputnik, er -- dear old Dad immediately launches in a familiar speech:
KARL KARTER:
WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE, that was before I was a sergeant in the Marines, when I wanted to buy something, I got a PAPER ROUTE. So if you want to buy a WHATCHAMACALLIT…a KART…DELIVER PAPERS! In fact I’m calling your bluff. I’ll call them for you!
A scant hour later, a representative of THE DAILY STAR arrives at the Karter house with a bundle of newspapers and a list of subscribers. But when Kit hears his father bellow for him, he vamooses:
KARL KARTER:
KIT! KIT KARTER! FRONT AND CENTER!KIT KARTER (thinking):
Oh, oh, when I hear that call I get nerves that jingle jangle jingle. I better make myself scarce.
Unable to locate his son, Mr. Karter’s outraged when his wife insist that, since it was his idea to order the newspapers in the first place, it’s up to him to deliver them. Dejected, the ex-Marine peddles Kit’s bike through the suburban neighborhood, delivering newspapers. He’s spotted by Kit’s girlfriend, Claire DaLoon and her gal-pal, Vera Crews, who are curious about the reason he’s doing a kid’s job:
CLAIRE DALOON:
Mr. Karter, why are you delivering newspapers?KARL KARTER:
Well…er…it’s this way…KIT WASN’T EATING VERY WELL and…
Mr. Karter’s evasive response gives the girls the impression that the Karter family can’t afford to buy groceries, so they thoughtfully spread the word to all their neighbors to contribute food to Kit’s family -- including Axil Greez and Kris Kross:
MRS. KROSS:
Kris, Claire DaLoon just called. She said the Karters are so bad off that Mr. Karter has to sell newspapers to get enough food.KRIS KROSS:
That guy’s always telling people how he was a sergeant in the war. It looks like the Marines have landed…FLAT ON HIS FACE!MRS. KROSS:
Never mind that wise guy talk! You pack a box of food and bring it over to the Karters1KRIS KROSS:
EECCH!
Meanwhile, Kit is downtown, celebrating the fact that he’s just landed a job caddying golf. But when he sees throngs of people carrying boxes of groceries, he buys a sack of goods with the five dollars he’s just earned, follows the crowd, and is astounded to find the their [pic3]good Samaritan neighbors[pic3] (from New Rochelle, perhaps?) are delivering the food to his own family’s home! Mr. Karter is completely mystified by this gathering of good will:
KARL KARTER:
But…but…CLAIRE DALOON:
You don’t have to be proud, Mr. Karter. We understand.VERA CREWS:
You’d do the same thing for us if we were hungry and broke!KARL KARTER:
WHO’S HUNGRY AND BROKE? I’M MADE OF MONEY! Ask Kit!GO GO KARTER:
Maybe they think we’re poor because we’re the only family on the block who owns an American made car.KIT KARTER:
MANIFOLD ALIVE! So THIS is the family that’s starving!KARL KARTER:
YOU TOO BRUTUS!KIT KARTER:
BRUTUS? It’s me, KIT. It’s a wise man who knows his own son.KARL KARTER:
The MORTIFICATION! I’ll never be able to hold up my head in this town again. It’s all KIT’S FAULT! And what am I going to do with all this food?
But when the commander of Mr. Karter’s veteran’s post shows up with an armload of groceries, the ex-Marine sings a different tune:
VETERAN POST COMMANDER:
Karl, you ol’ son of a gun, CONGRATULATIONS! You sure pulled the WOOL over my eyes!KARL KARTER:
I DID? I guess I just had a good YARN.VETERAN POST COMMANDER:
What a great gimmick to invent that sob story about yourself just to get the people to contribute food to the flood victims, Karl, you’re BRILLIANT!KARL KARTER:
I didn’t think it showed.
While the commander arranges to have the groceries picked up and distributed to the folks that really need it, Mr. Karter’s demeanor softens, admitting that their neighbors are “pretty nice”, after all:
GO GO KARTER:
That’s what’s good about people…PEOPLE!KARL KARTER:
And I think that was a very sweet thing Kit did, giving up the money he earned to buy a kart -- giving it up to someone he thought was in trouble.
When Kit’s father realizes that there must still be neighbors who’re under the impression that his family is broke and starving, he dashes off to get something “loud and flashy” to show everyone that he’s got “money to spare”…and not long after that, he shows up driving [pic4]a bright red go kart[pic4]!
KATHY KARTER:
GRACIOUS! What’s all that noise?KARL KARTER:
You said to get something LOUD and FLASHY. These things don’t have any MUFFLERS.KIT KARTER:
Gee, Dad, it’s a GO KART for ME!GO GO KARTER:
Hey, that’s not fair. You got KIT something EXPENSIVE. You’ll have to get ME something EXPENSIVE too.KARL KARTER:
Huh?KIT KARTER:
I thank you a zillion time. I want you to know, Dad, that you get me right HERE where I love…in the HEART!KARL KARTER:
And I want you to know, son, you get ME right here where I live…in the WALLET!
(I’ll bet anything that the primary inspiration for this entire comic originated with the Berg family’s son Mitch bugging father Dave for his own go kart!)
Also included in this issue of KIT KARTER are the following stories, and features:
ODDBALL FACTOID – Surprisingly, in addition to KIT KARTER , Dave Berg simultaneously on other four-color comic books while creating “The Lighter Side Of…” for every issue of MAD magazine! These included Dell Publications’ ENSIGN O'TOOLE and PONYTAIL and Western Publishing Co. Inc.’s BEETLE BAILEY, “Billy Carter”, BULLWINKLE and NANCY AND SLUGGO, all during the early 1960s!
Bonus ODDBALL FACTOID – Dave Berg’s wife of fifty years, the former Vivian Lipman, also worked in the comic book business!
New Next Week: ODDBALL COMIC #1,192: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2007 – So, this priest walks into a Catholic school and he runs into a girl who’s too busy reading a copy of TREASURE CHEST OF FUN AND FACT comics to see him, so when they collide, she drops copies of the educational funnybook all over the floor and then… Hmmm, sounds like the set-up for a joke, doesn’t it? Actually, it’s just the cover for this week’s ODDBALL COMIC! (But is this religion-based anthology truly Oddball? Hey, is the pope Catholic?)