Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Moon Mullins" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Comics and 1947
* Waugh, Coulton, The Comics ( 1947 ) Macmillan Publishers
" For approximately three years ( 1947 – 50 ), Fox wrote for EC Comics, including scripts and text pieces which appeared in the famous The Crypt of Terror, The Vault of Horror and Weird Fantasy titles, as well as in the lesser-known Gunfighter, Happy Houlihans, Moon Girl, Saddle Justice and the new trend title Valor, among others.
Cole's story " Murder, Morphine and Me ", which he illustrated and possibly wrote for publisher Magazine Village's True Crime Comics # 2 ( May, 1947 ), became a centerpiece of psychiatrist Dr. Fredric Wertham's crusade against violent comic books.
Category: Comics characters introduced in 1947
The early adventures of Robin included Star Spangled Comics # 65-130 ( 1947 – 1952 ), which was the character's first solo feature.
* Coulton Waugh The Comics, Macmillan, 1947 ISBN 0-87805-499-5
Terry-Toons Comics # 61 ( Oct. 1947 ).
The strip was reprinted in a long-running series of Cupples & Leon books ( 1927 – 1937 ), Big Little Books and comic books for Dell Comics ( starting in 1936 ) and later, the American Comics Group ( 1947 – 1948 ).
Through Li ' l Abner, the American comic strip achieved unprecedented relevance in the postwar years, attracting new readers who were more intellectual, more informed on current events, and less likely to read the comics ( according to Coulton Waugh, author of The Comics, 1947 ).
* Li ' l Abner ( 1947 ) 9 issues ( Harvey Comics )
* Waugh, Coulton, The Comics ( 1947 ) Macmillan Publishers
Red Ryder Comics consisted of reprints of the newspaper strip until issue # 47 ( June 1947 ), when it began producing original material.
His first three adventures were drawn by creator Dennis Neville ( who modeled Hawkman's costume on the hawkmen characters in the Flash Gordon comic strip by Alex Raymond ), then by Sheldon Moldoff, and later by Joe Kubert, who slightly redesigned his mask in Flash Comics # 85 ( Jul 1947 ) and then, one year later, replaced the winged-hawk-like mask by a much simpler yellow cowl in Flash Comics # 98 ( Aug 1948 ).
* Chic Young's Blondie ( 1947 – 1949 ) David McKay / King Comics, 15 issues
Broome and artist Irwin Hasen created the supervillian Per Degaton as a JSA antagonist in All-Star Comics # 35 ( July 1947 ).
* Bringing Up Father was a feature of David McKay's King Comics title from # 60 to # 135 ( 1941 – 1947 )
McNider's later romantic history is unknown, but another " old friend " of McNider, Miss Alice King, makes an appearance in All-American Comics # 90 ( October 1947 )
Stephen Ross " Steve " Gerber ( September 20, 1947 – February 10, 2008 ) was an American comic book writer best known as co-creator of the satiric Marvel Comics character Howard the Duck.
The prototype for the Invaders, the All-Winners Squad, created by publisher Martin Goodman and scripter Bill Finger, was an actual historic Golden Age comic book feature with only two appearances — in All Winners Comics # 19 ( Fall 1946 ) and # 21 ( Winter 1947 ; there was no issue # 20 ).
From 1947 until 1955 in Looney Tunes & Merrie Melodies Comics and Bugs Bunny Comics there appeared Lula Belle Bunny, another girlfriend of Bugs Bunny.
Christmas on Bear Mountain ( 1947 ) is a Donald Duck story by Carl Barks, first published in Dell Comics Four Color Comics # 178.

Comics and ),
* Atlas Comics ( 1950s ), the company that evolved into Marvel Comics
* Atlas ( DC Comics ), a fictional character published by DC Comics
" Comics ,” wrote Capp in 1970, “ can be a combination of the highest quality of art and text, and many of them are .” Capp would produce many giveaway educational comic books and public services pamphlets, spanning several decades, for the Red Cross, the Department of Civil Defense, the Department of the Navy, the U. S. Army, the Anti-Defamation League, the Department of Labor, Community Chest ( a forerunner of United Way ), and the Job Corps.
* Bob Diamond ( comics ), a Marvel Comics character
* Blitz ( comics ), a Flash-based Big Bang Comics hero
* Bloody Mary ( DC Comics ), a fictional extraterrestrial vampire
* Bloody Mary ( Marvel Comics ), a fictional telekinetic supervillain
* Capricorn ( comics ), Marvel Comics character
* Charon ( Marvel Comics ), a villainous wizard
* Calypso ( comics ), a character in the Marvel Comics universe
* Conspiracy ( comics ), a team of super powered beings in the Marvel Comics universe
2 ) # 53, when following his revelation to Lois of his role as Superman ( Action Comics # 662 ), he states: " I'm Clark, the man you love.
1983 ), American comic book editor and executive for DC Comics
First Comics published The Chronicles of Corum, a twelve issue limited series ( Jan. 1986-Dec. 1988 ) that adapted the " Swords Trilogy ", and was followed by the four issue limited series Corum: The Bull and the Spear ( Jan .-July ( bi-monthly ) 1989 ), which adapted the first book in the second trilogy.
* Cyclops ( comics ), a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe
* Darwin ( comics ), a fictional character in the Marvel Comics Universe, associated with X-Men
* Darkstar ( comics ), a Marvel Comics superhero
His favorite comic books growing up were Uncle Scrooge by Western Publishing and Little Lulu comics from Dell Comics ( Western Publishing ), and his sister's collection of MAD comics and magazines.
The Comic Book in America: An Illustrated History ( Taylor Publishing: Dallas, Texas, 1989 ), pp. 178 – 181, reprinted at website Religious Affiliation of Comics Book Characters: " The Significant Seven: History's Most Influential Super-heroes " < nowiki >< nowiki ></ nowiki ></ ref >
The company's second title, New Comics # 1 ( cover date December 1934 ), appeared in a size close to what would become comic books ' standard during the period fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books, with slightly larger dimensions than today's.
Action Comics # 1 ( June 1938 ), the first comic book to feature the new character archetype — soon known as " superheroes " — proved a major sales hit.
Despite the official names " National Comics " and " National Periodical Publications ", the line used the logo " Superman-DC " throughout ( the DC logo could be seen on their covers and ads as early as 1940 ), and the company became known colloquially as DC Comics for years before the official adoption of that name in 1977.

0.342 seconds.