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When the West Coast Avengers found themselves in the Old West during the Lost in Space-Time story arc, they teamed up with the Two-Gun Kid, Rawhide Kid, and Night Rider to battle a collection of seven of that era's 'super-villains,' all of whom had also appeared previously in Marvel's western books. Five sounds like a reasonable number, so name any five of these seven villains.
Rattle, Hurricane, The Living Totem, Iron Mask, Fat Man, Dr. Danger
Six for six, or more accurately six for five, as five was the minimum number of correct names I was looking for (although your Rattler seems to be missing an 'r')! The seventh villain was the Red Raven, not to be confused with the WWII hero of the same name and who sported a fairly similar costume.
(although your Rattler seems to be missing an 'r')!
He was thinking of the western bad guy who killed his first man while he was still a baby in his crib. That was also the last time anyone would pinch the Rattle's cheeks and go "Coochie Coo", and that's when the Rattle grabbed the guy's gun and fired into the guy.
Sorry about the typo!
OK, here's the question;
According to Jack Kirby, when he and Joe Simon first created Captain America, what was his suit made of?
Sorry about the typo!
OK, here's the question;
According to Jack Kirby, when he and Joe Simon first created Captain America, what was his suit made of?
Sorry about the typo!
OK, here's the question;
According to Jack Kirby, when he and Joe Simon first created Captain America, what was his suit made of?
I'm not sure if this is the Official Kirby version, but for many years, the main part of the shirt was supposed to be made of chain mail, so that's my guess: chain mail.
How this morphed into scale mail in the last few years is beyond me. And don't get me started about recent artists' apparent equation of visible seams on costumes, such as now appear on Cap's cowl, with 'realism.' When it comes to costumes, seams are now the Liefeld pockets of the 21st Century.
An American flag from a ship sank at Pearl Harbor.
--with little wings.
wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight