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Lada had cooperated with a number of magazines (both Czech and foreign) and his drawings are still frequently used to complement various articles or the work of other artists (including musicians). Posters, calendars, postage stamps, theatre props and backdrops, LP, MC, CD, VHS or DVD covers, mugs, glass, grocery products, toys… you name it.
The plot of The Battle Cats takes place across four main story sagas, three subchapter sagas in the Legends Stages, and various miscellaneous stages. Dialogue in the form of scrolling text before and after the completion of Chapters, unit and enemy descriptions, and battles during gameplay provide most of the game's lore and story.
Operation Badr (1973) order of battle; Operation Savannah (Angola) order of battle: South Africa; Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation order of battle: Commonwealth; Iran–Iraq War order of battle; Western Libya campaign order of battle; Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) order of battle: Ottoman Navy
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Josef Lada: A talking black cat. [51] Mingus The Unwritten: Mike Carey: A winged cat who acts as the protagonist's familiar in the Tommy Taylor novels, a fictional 13-part series within the universe of The Unwritten. Mirliton Mirliton: Raymond Macherot: A gentle cat unable to hunt as he is best friends with mice and birds. [52] Mr. Scruffy The ...
John Dirks' drawing shifted slightly towards a more square-formed line, though it maintained the original style until The Captain and the Kids ended its run in 1979. [ 7 ] Knerr continued drawing The Katzenjammer Kids until his death in 1949; the strip was then written and drawn by C.H. "Doc" Winner (1949–1956), with Joe Musial taking over in ...
Kat, known in Japan as Kitten, [1] is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Gravity Rush series. A young woman with retrograde amnesia, she awakens in the city of Hekseville after falling from the sky, and sets out to discover the origins of her power to shift gravity. She becomes a hero to the people of the city after defending them ...
"The Boy Who Drew Cats" (Japanese: 猫を描いた少年, Hepburn: Neko wo egaita shōnen) is a Japanese fairy tale translated by Lafcadio Hearn, published in 1898, as number 23 of Hasegawa Takejirō's Japanese Fairy Tale Series. [1] [2] It was later included in Hearn's Japanese Fairy Tales. [3]