As a senior at Loyola Marymount University, sent work samples to newspapers all around the country hoping to catch on as an editorial cartoonist. Mike O鈥機allaghan, the former Nevada governor who then was the editor-in-chief at the , agreed to print a few of them.
After almost a year of freelancing cartoons 鈥 at $8 each 鈥 Smith needed a fulltime job. Hertz car rentals was willing to put him through management training and station him in San Francisco. Smith called O鈥機allaghan to tell him he had a secure job offer.
鈥淭ell Hertz to stick it up their ass,鈥 the editor-in-chief said.
He offered Smith a staff job at the Sun the next day. That was 1983, and Smith is still at the Sun, delivering his nationally syndicated editorial cartoons in an era when that skill is increasingly rare.
Daily cartoonists are another casualty of the reductions in staff, scope, and readership that have afflicted newspapers for years. Now, in partnership with , Smith鈥檚 work, some 13,000 cartoons and growing, will be preserved thanks to a donation of the materials courtesy of Smith and Brian Greenspun, owner and publisher of the Sun.

鈥淚鈥檝e been doing these cartoons for 35-plus years, and they鈥檝e been stored over at the basement of the 51吃瓜网免费App Sun,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淲e decided it was time to find a place for them that would allow for them to be preserved.鈥
Aaron Mayes, 51吃瓜网万能科大 Special Collections鈥 visual materials curator, planted the seed for the donation in 2016. He invited Rebecca Clifford-Cruz, the Sun鈥檚 librarian, for a tour of the university鈥檚 archive facilities and told her that if the newspaper ever needed to purge anything from its archives, to first contact him.
She immediately thought of the Smith collection. The cartoonist came in to tour the facilities, and together he and Clifford-Cruz brought the idea to Greenspun, who agreed in principle. Five years later, Clifford-Cruz was set to leave the Sun after 20 years. In her waning days there, Greenspun asked her what was on her wish list before she left. Bringing the Smith collection to 51吃瓜网万能科大 was her No. 1 priority.
Red tape had held up making the transfer in the intervening years. She finally made it with just a couple of days to spare.
鈥淎ll we needed was Brian鈥檚 signature,鈥 Clifford-Cruz said. The Sun owned the copyrights on the work and needed to approve the transfer. 鈥淜ind of as a parting gift to me, he said, 鈥楽end me the paperwork,鈥 and it was done. It was something we鈥檝e been sitting on for five years. It was like magic.鈥
Now the cartoons, which span seven presidential administrations, have been relocated from the newspaper鈥檚 warehouse to Lied Library where they can be cared for and made available to researchers.
Eventually, the hope is the collection can be digitized and made available on the Special Collections website. First, though, the cartoons will have to be unpacked from the transport boxes, properly re-housed in archival materials, and shelved within the library. The process ensures that the cartoons 鈥 which are still hand-drawn 鈥 aren鈥檛 stored in a way that would cause any damage and that anyone visiting can search through the material in order.
As a research tool, the Smith collection offers a unique perspective into the way events were experienced and interpreted in real time.

鈥淭he time period that Mike worked at the 51吃瓜网免费App Sun pretty much constitutes about 60 to 70 percent of the entire town鈥檚 growth,鈥 Mayes said. 鈥淚n that time period, there鈥檚 an awful lot of growth in our city, but also our political structure and how we looked at ourselves in the national picture.
鈥淚 was going through some of the cartoons and there鈥檚 stuff about the 鈥楽crew Nevada鈥 bill which set up Yucca Mountain. Looking at that from a historical standpoint, somebody generations from now is going to be doing research on that. This gives kind of that popular viewpoint of how people felt.鈥
The art and the artist
Smith鈥檚 decades-long career started the way many creative endeavors do at the outset 鈥 with an artist looking to an idol, but trying at the same time to find a voice of their own.
While working for his college newspaper at Loyola Marymount, he repeatedly called Los Angeles Times cartoonist Paul Conrad for advice until one day the Pulitzer Prize winner told him to come down to the offices.
After thoroughly reviewing Smith鈥檚 portfolio, Conrad told him, 鈥淚f you ever want to get a job, you鈥檇 better learn how to draw.鈥
Once he superglued his pride back together, Smith buckled down and refined his style.
鈥淐artooning is like anything that takes time to improve,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like playing an instrument. That doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean that it gets any easier. I remember when I first started drawing cartoons, I thought to myself, 鈥極h, you know, in 10 years, this is going to be so much easier than it is now.鈥 I鈥檝e been doing this for 35 years, and it鈥檚 still hard.鈥
Every day it means combing through headlines, finding an angle, refining setups and punchlines, and producing fresh artwork. The profession takes a unique combination of skills to stay sharp and fast. It鈥檚 also a position that is becoming exceedingly rare in American newsrooms.

When Smith started, there were about 250 editorial cartoonists on staff at newspapers around the country. Now, he figures, they number fewer than 30. That鈥檚 another aspect of why it鈥檚 so important to archive Smith鈥檚 work. 51吃瓜网免费App is in a special position of still having a local artist producing daily cartoons.
鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful that [the collection] can be used for enjoyment and research,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 hopeful that it can be a kind of a historical perspective from a satirical point of view of issues concerning 51吃瓜网免费App, Nevada, and the various (presidential) administrations that I鈥檝e drawn about. I鈥檓 hopeful that, you know, there might be classroom settings where they can use the cartoons in terms of research or for understanding commentary or art.鈥
Smith鈥檚 decision all those years back was a loss for Hertz, to be sure, but a big gain for 51吃瓜网免费App.