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A look at the U.S. Navy in the Panama Canal through a series of period photographs.
Topical study for Christian adults. This volume examines love.
Yorkville (Tennessee) High School's World War II military service banner explored and explained.
No one drew dames like Baker, pally! In fact, no one drew anything quite like Baker. The art of Matt Baker, one of the very first African-American artists in comics, was more than simply beautifully rendered. His art, particularly the women, had a realism and honesty that few others could even approach. Baker was one of the most imitated artists of his time with skilled illustrators like John Forte and Jack Kamen among the best.
Collected from Magazine Enterprises' comic books of the late-1940s, the complete adventures of Starr Flagg, the Undercover Girl, present a microcosm of post-war American popular culture and paranoia from the unique perspective of a female protagonist. In the comics of the atomic age espionage was an almost entirely male occupation but chain-smoking Starr traded punches and gun shots with a bevy of antagonists, both male and female. The stories were all most likely written by Gardner Fox and were definitely illustrated by Ogden Whitney. Bob Powell provided the three covers for the three reprint issues of Undercover Girl.
Dogface Dooley was typical of the comical cartoon soldier created during the Second World War. He ran for five issues within ME's omnibus series, A-1 Comics. While none of the original Dogface Dooley comics are exactly easy to find, issue number five is particularly difficult. It is also something of a good girl art favorite.
A comics fanzine, this issue focuses on the Comics Code Authority and E.C.
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