Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Mark Foley. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Mark Foley. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 4, 2008



Number 296

Foley of the Fighting 5th


You won't see a lot of Wild West-type comics on Pappy's cuz Pappy don't like 'em. Most of them, anyway; there are a few I like. Tom Gill's Lone Ranger and Dick Ayers' Ghost Rider spring to mind. I also like some of the DC Western comics, and I'll show you a couple as we ride along the dusty trail. I like this one from All-American Western #104, November 1948, because of the early Joe Kubert art. I like Joe's 1940s art but there are flaws, like the bad figure drawing on the bottom of page 4. John Giunta did the inking.

All-American Western, a continuation of All-American Comics, went for 24 issues, then became All-American Men Of War. In its war incarnation it lasted a lot longer than it did in its Western phase. This "Foley" strip is one of the stories in tear sheet form, cut out of the original comic books by a man who liked certain artists. The vandal would clip those stories and throw the rest of the book away. I got them over 25 years ago, hundreds of pages of loose tear sheets in a big box, and put them together like puzzles. It was probably that task that finally convinced me to wear glasses.

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Karswell, of The Horrors Of It All is posting a Zebra story today. He asked if I had any, and what I have is another of those crumbling stories cut from comics. The pages are much worse than the Foley story. They've disintegrated, as you can see, but the story is understandable…just screwy. John Doyle, the lawyer who is the Zebra, won't show up in any John Grisham novels. Considering how he represents this client I'm surprised he wasn't disbarred. The story, "The Phantom Philtre," was the last Zebra story, is from Green Hornet Comics #30, May-June, 1946, and is drawn by Bob Fujitani.












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Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 10, 2006

Number 39



Mark Foley's Comics Pages
As soon as I heard about Congressman Mark Foley's resignation because of impropriety toward Congressional pages I remembered an old issue of Treasure Chest with a story about page boys who work in the Capitol. This is
from Treasure Chest Of Fun and Fact, Volume 18 Number 12, February 14, 1963.

Treasure Chest, for those who don't know, was a comic book distributed during the school year to Catholic schools. What issues I've seen or owned I've found a bit pedantic. There was this notion, when it was started in 1946, that despite their popularity comic books were bad for kids, and adults, too. This was a way of getting kids to read about so-called healthier subjects in a format they liked.

Joe Sinnott, who is probably most famous for his inks on Jack Kirby's Marvel work of the 1960s, did the artwork. At that time Sinnott was not only inking Kirby's Fantastic Four, but drawing comic books like the life story of The Beatles for Dell, or doing stories for Treasure Chest. Sinnott worked in many genres of comics over the years, from some spooky horror stories for Stan Lee in the early '50s, to this more prosaic work in the 1960s and beyond.

Treasure Chest lasted from 1946 until 1972. A decent run for any comic book with a non-specific theme.


This story ends abruptly on page 5. Page 6 was probably drawn, but cut during the editing process; maybe the issue was one page too long. The last panel of the published story seems to leave things hanging a bit, but the story gets its point across.

In that more innocent era, the page boys are more concerned about girls someday becoming pages (horrors!) than they are about chickenhawk Congressmen lusting after them.

And as for Representative Mark Foley, I guess he thought pages were for turning.

Click on the pictures for full-size images.

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