Captain Compass

Người đăng: lecuongle on Chủ Nhật, 27 tháng 5, 2012

Captain Compass was one of many features that Detective Comics had over the years. He originally appeared in issues of Star Spangled Comics, starting in #83. He bumped Robotman from that book, and that feature moved over to Detective, starting with #138.

Mark Compass wasn't really a captain; rather he was a trouble-shooter/house detective, initially sailing on the SS Nautilus, and later roving on various vessels of the Penny Steamship Lines. He lasted in Star Spangled until the very last issue of that title, #130, after which the book was converted into Star Spangled War Stories.

With no place to call a home, Captain Compass was assigned to Detective Comics starting with #203, where, ironically enough, he once again bumped Robotman out of a slot, ending that long-running feature. Captain Compass was a decent detective, although like many in the comics he depended on eavesdropping:

And his fists:
Almost as much as his wits:
Captain Compass appeared in Detective until issue #225, when he was replaced by the debut of Martian Manhunter (he also missed #206, which had a Sierra Smith adventure instead). In his earlier adventures he sometimes flirted with a nurse he called Red, much to her displeasure:
Unfortunately, by the time the series moved over to Detective, Red had vanished. Captain Compass only made one more appearance after that; in an ensemble story in Detective #500 featuring many of the gumshoes who had appeared in the pages of Tec over the years.
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D2-068 - "Food Ship” (9/28/66 to 2/11/67)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 22 tháng 5, 2012

Almost 16 and half months ago, I received it with 4 spanish pages (18, 19, 20, and 21). Thanks to team effort, we are reading complete story today.
  • Scans contributor: Wichien Abhichartvorapan
    Spanish pages were scanned by him.
  • Translation team: Emile, Wichien Abhichartvorapan & Venkitachalam Subramanian
  • Strips texts replacement: TPH
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Story: Harry Harrison 
Art: Dan Barry
Original run:  9/28/1966 to 2/11/1967
Summary: Relaxing after his tumultuous time on the planet Ognom (Read D2-067 Ming IV), Flash is ordered to urgently pilot a supply ship to the planet Titan in the wake of two previous relief ships disappearing without trace.
Starting out on the crucial mission, it is not long before Flash’s ship also exhibits disturbances and is inexorably drawn towards a sector in space that goes under the name of “Sargasso in Space”...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net)

Download (29.4 MB)
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Flash Gordon - S051 - Child Men and Giants (1954-10-24 to 1955-01-09)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 18 tháng 5, 2012

Story & Art: Mac Raboy 
Original run: 1954-10-24 to 1955-01-09
Summary: Returning to the US with Pebbles, the orphaned boy from the asteroids (S050 The Star Tree), Flash decides to pay Dr. Zarkov a visit at his laboratory, but the visit is cut short when a space vessel lands nearby, prompting the two men to investigate.
Finding no-one inside the ship, Flash and Zarkov are suddenly put to sleep by a knockout gas and taken to a distant planet, where they rendezvous with other ships carrying their frightened human cargo...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 


 All credits go to "spax".
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Odds and Ends

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 5, 2012

Interview with Stan Lee at the Huffington Post.  I liked this question and answer:

If all the superheroes in the world were wiped out, but you could keep one around, who would you keep that had the highest value to humanity? And who would you keep for selfish reasons?
I think I’d have to say Iron Man because Tony Stark has the wealth, inventive genius and impenetrable armor to accomplish almost anything.
 Ah, but he also has that ticker problem which could leave the world hero-less at any moment.  Stan didn't answer which hero he'd keep around for selfish reasons, but I'd suspect the answer is Spidey; IIRC, Stan kept writing that title longer than any other Marvel book with the exception of Fantastic Four (both of which he relinquished effective with the October 1971 issues).

Hat Tip: A regular emailer.

Was Spider-Man a male chauvinist pig?

A Nick Cardy/Carmine Infantino self-swipe cover? Note the significant difference in the attitude of the kid in the chair in the two versions.

Jacque Nodell posts some Danish romance covers of the 1970s.  Not a whole lot of difference with American romance covers of the time, although perhaps a few less tears.
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Flash Gordon - S050 - The Star Tree (1954-08-08 to 1954-10-17)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Ba, 15 tháng 5, 2012

Story & Art: Mac Raboy 
Original run: 1954-08-08 to 1954-10-17
Summary: Approaching Earth on their return flight from the asteroids (S-049 Bandit of the Asteroids), Flash, Dale and Pebbles are forced to make an emergency landing in South America when their ship hits a tropic electrical storm.
Emerging from their craft in the Amazon jungle, the three space-travellers are met by a baffling sight: a frozen winterland dominated by a bizarre man-eating tree with hungrily writhing branches...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 


 All credits go to "spax".
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Flash Gordon - S049 - Bandit of the Asteroids (1954-05-09 to 1954-08-01)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Sáu, 11 tháng 5, 2012


Story & Art: Mac Raboy 
Original run: 1954-05-09 to 1954-08-01
Summary: Starting the long journey back from Cortinus (S-048 Thanatos), Flash and Dale fail to receive a reply from the Earth’s space station, and on arrival the station is eerily orbited by the crew’s frozen bodies.
After thawing the personnel, Flash realises that the self-inflicted freezing merely constitutes an unorthodox survival technique after an inexplicable theft of the station’s entire oxygen supply. With the trail leading to a nearby uranium prospector’s station, Flash begins his pursuit...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 


 All credits go to "spax".

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Flash Gordon - S048 - Thanatos (1954-01-24 to 1954-05-02)

Người đăng: lecuongle on Thứ Tư, 9 tháng 5, 2012

Story & Art: Mac Raboy 
Original run: 1954-01-24 to 1954-05-02
Summary: Returning from Callisto (S-047 The Mind), Flash is told by a concerned Dr. Zarkov that Dale has uncharacteristically joined an archaeological expedition in Africa led by the eccentric Dr. Eric Sark.
Racing to the Libyan desert to catch up with the expedition, Flash learns that the doctor is trying to harness the powers of a mythological being who in reality is a visitor from outer space – but Dale has already succumbed to the strange force...
(Source of summary: www.ipcomics.net) 


 All credits go to "spax".
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