Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cecil E A Wilson, also known as "Tugg" Wilson, (1930 – 22 Oct 2006), was a commissioned aviation officer in the Royal Navy whose humorous cartoons depicting situations in naval life, signed ‘Tugg’, earned him widespread popularity, the award of an MBE and the accolade from the Navy News magazine that "no other individual in the post war era has done more for the morale of the Royal Navy ...
During World War II, Ketcham was a photographic specialist with the U.S. Navy Reserve. He also created the character Mr. Hook for the Navy during World War II, and four cartoons were made (one by Walter Lantz Productions, in color, and three by Warner Bros. Cartoons, in black and white).
Broadside is a weekly, single-panel comic published in Navy Times from 1986 until March 2020, and written by Jeff Bacon. [1] [2] The humor is very specifically directed at United States Navy personnel, and considered nearly incomprehensible by many non-Navy servicepersons.
Gary Larson (born August 14, 1950) is an American cartoonist who created The Far Side, a single-panel cartoon series that was syndicated internationally to more than 1,900 newspapers for fifteen years. [1] The series ended on January 1, 1995, though since 2020 Larson has published additional comics online.
As a civilian in the post-World War II years, Buz became an oil company troubleshooter, traveling to far-flung locales. He married Christy Jameson on 13 December 1948, and their son Pepper was born in 1951. Buz rejoined the Navy in the 1950s and flew carrier-based reconnaissance attack jets over Vietnam during the 1960s.
Days after he was fired by President Donald Trump, former Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown took to social media to express his gratitude for his time in the military. "I ...
Half Hitch is an American comic strip by Hank Ketcham, in syndication first between 1943 and 1945 and later from 1970 to 1975.It is an example of military humor, but unlike most cartoons and comics of this genre, is focused on the navy, rather than the army.
They have such a bond,” said Paul Johnson, the now-retired former Georgia Tech coach who worked at Navy for eight years as an assistant and head coach. The bond goes beyond the football field.