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United States Marines #3: A Leatherneck Flamethrower was a comic published by Government Enterprises. It was authored by Milburn McCarty and drawn by Mart Bailey, Wood Cowan, Ogden Whitney, and Ray McGill. [6] This comic book series was published during World War II and continued for a time afterwards.
(The mid-1960s black-and-white comics magazine Blazing Combat, produced by Warren Publishing, was similarly devoted to authentically drawn and researched combat stories with a self-professed anti-war slant.) Around 1959, several recurring characters began to appear in mainstream comic lines, including Sgt. Rock and The Haunted Tank in the DC line.
File:The Art of Star Wars book cover.jpg; File:The Art of Walt Disney book cover.jpg; File:The Birds of the Malay Peninsula.jpg; File:The Book of Adventure Games.jpg; File:The Curious Sofa.jpg; File:The dinner party book cover.jpg; File:The Elements of Typographic Style.jpg; File:The Emperor's New Clods.jpg; File:The Invention of Art A Cultural ...
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Donald Gets Drafted was the first of a six-part series, within the larger Donald Duck series, which shared a continuity of Donald serving in the army during World War II. The cartoon also revealed for the first time Donald's middle name - Fauntleroy - seen on his "Order to Report for Induction" form from the film's title screen. [2] [citation ...
[12] [15] Black and White has both order and chaos, expressed through the story, illustrations, and design of the book. [12] The chaos of the story increases, reaching its climax when the only colors used are black on white on a page, before order is restored at the end of the stories and at the end of the book. [16]
A page from the comic book version of Beetle Bailey. Beetle Bailey is an American comic strip created by cartoonist Mort Walker, published since September 4, 1950. [2] It is set on a fictional United States Army post.
Images of America - Camp Pendleton by Thomas O'Hara; Iwo Jima - Portraits of a Battle by Eric Hammel; Jarhead: A Marine's Chronicle of the Gulf War and Other Battles by Anthony Swofford; The Journal of Patrick Seamus Flaherty: United States Marine Corps, Khe Sanh 1968 by Ellen Emerson White; Making the Corps, by Thomas E. Ricks