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The following is a list of comic strips. Dates after names indicate the time frames when the strips appeared. Dates after names indicate the time frames when the strips appeared. There is usually a fair degree of accuracy about a start date, but because of rights being transferred or the very gradual loss of appeal of a particular strip, the ...
April 1: The Nero story De Hoed van Geeraard de Duivel is first published in the newspapers. Halfway the story the main cast member Madam Pheip makes her debut. [2] April 8: Marc Sleen's Doris Dobbel makes its debut. [2] [5] April 14: The first issue of the British comics magazine Eagle is published. It will run (in two incarnations) until 1994.
January 6: Charles M. Schulz' Peanuts receives its first Sunday comics page. [4] January 10: André Franquin's Starter makes its debut. [5] January 23: The first episode of the Mickey Mouse story The Midas ring is published, by Floyd Gottfredson and Bill Walsh. January 31: In Spirou et les Héritiers by André Franquin the Marsupilami makes his ...
Phoebe and Her Unicorn (2012– ) by Dana Simpson (originally a webcomic called Heavenly Nostrils before moving to the newspapers in 2015) Phoebe's Place (1990–1991) by Bill Schorr (US) Pickles (1990– ) by Brian Crane (US)
Reno Browne, Hollywood's Greatest Cowgirl #50 renamed from Margie Comics - Marvel Comics; Romantic Affairs #4 renamed from Romances of the West - Marvel Comics; Spy Cases #26 renamed from Kellys, The - Marvel Comics; Spy Cases #4 renumbered from #29 - Marvel Comics; True Adventures #3 renamed from True Western - Marvel Comics
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The Green Sheet was a four-page section of the Milwaukee Journal printed on green paper. It was published from the 1910s to 1994, containing comics, the crossword puzzle and other games, celebrity news, local human-interest stories, and bits of ephemera. [1] [2]
Comics historian Stephen Donnelly noted: The main characters of the daily strip, which began June 16, 1952, were Vana, a Terran spy living on Earth to keep tabs on our technology so the Terrans could be sure we and our war-like ways didn't pose a menace to them; and Garry Verth, an FBI agent to whom Vana revealed herself in the opening sequence.