(1980)
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Japan
(1980)
From “When Magneto Strikes!” in Journey into Mystery #109, October 1964. Stan Lee script, Jack Kirby pencils, Chic Stone inks, Stan Goldberg (?) colors, Sam Rosen letters.
Info from Grand Comics Database
Ron Wilson and Chic Stone “The Thing and Sandman” Marvel Two-in-One #86 Cover Art (1982) Source
Thor by Jack Kirby and Chic Stone
the Shadow of the Vulture! by Barry Windsor-Smith with Inks by Sal Buscema, Dan Adkins, and Chic Stone, Lettering by Artie Simek, and a Script that Roy Thomas Co-Wrote with Barry.
BHOC: THOR #286
This was the issue that put me off of reading THOR, at least for a short while. I already wasn’t all that interested in the ongoing plotline involving trying to paste Jack Kirby’s Eternals into the Marvel Universe–I’d sampled ETERNALS and not found it much to my liking, so bringing all of this baggage into a series that I was reading wasn’t a sales draw for me. But this was the way of Marvel in…
View On WordPress
Remembering inker Chic Stone on his birthday.
"The Devil Printer", "The Dance Flaw"
We are here over a year past the last appearance of Cheryl. Interestingly, had Kathleen Webb wanted to drop in a character name she would have gone with "Gloria Gudlucks", though I don't know what Betty would say instead of "that red-headed witch". Rich Margopoulos, writer of the last trailing off stories with the Blossoms -- focused a bit more on class antagonisms via athletic competitiom from Pembroke Academy than on the vixen seductress and bad boy attraction angle -- still had her in his head to pull out for plot referencing detail-- and that and this are where you can spot her between 1985 and 1995.
About a year later, and if you want to decide this is Cheryl whom Moose is asking for a date -- kind of working counterways on how comics dot org's indexers decide every unnamed red haired girl is Cheryl -- this where the artist Stan Goldberg has a girl named Cheryl to draw and he knew of a Cheryl.