Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Body of Marine's missing wife found in mine shaft


Aug 18th 2014 6:15PM 524 Comments
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FILE - This undated file photo released by the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department shows Erin Corwin. Corwin disappeared after leaving her home on the Twentynine Palms Marine Corps base. Christopher Brandon Lee, 24, a recently discharged Marine who volunteered at a horse ranch with Corwin, was arrested July 4, 2014, on suspicion of possession of a destructive device, authorities said Monday, July 21. But they wouldn’t say whether the cases of Lee and Erin Corwin are connected. Lee, then a Marine corporal, was arrested after a search warrant was served at a home in Yucca Valley, then released on bail two days later, the San BernardinSo Sheriff’s Department said in a statement. (AP Photo/San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department, File)


By AMY TAXIN
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -- The body of the missing, pregnant wife of a U.S. Marine has been found deep in an abandoned mine shaft in Southern California, where her husband had been stationed, and Alaska authorities have arrested her alleged lover on suspicion of homicide.
The remains of Erin Corwin were found Saturday 140 feet down a mine shaft on federal land near Twentynine Palms after authorities spent nearly two months searching 300 square miles in the remote area east of Los Angeles, San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon said. Corwin was 19 when she disappeared, the sheriff said.
Her remains were identified Sunday through dental records, he said.
Her alleged lover and former neighbor, Christopher Brandon Lee, was arrested around 9 p.m. Sunday in Anchorage, Alaska, on suspicion of homicide under an extradition warrant from California, said Jennifer Castro, a spokesman for the Anchorage Police Department.
Corwin was in the early stages of pregnancy when she disappeared from her home in Twentynine Palms, California, on June 28, according to court papers. Her husband, Marine Cpl. Jonathan Corwin, reported her missing the next day.
The investigation grew to focus on Lee, who was the Corwins' neighbor, according to court papers.
Erin Corwin's friend told investigators that Corwin and Lee were having an affair and that the unborn child might be Lee's, the papers show.
Corwin told her husband when she left that day that she was going to scout out hiking trails that she and her mother could explore when her mother visited a few days later. But the friend showed authorities text messages that said Corwin was planning to go on a special hunting trip with Lee the day she disappeared to celebrate.
"It is highly likely that Erin could have been harmed by an unknown firearm," investigators wrote in the documents. "Sometime after Erin left with Lee, her phone was deactivated (turned off). Detectives believe if Erin was injured and left at an undisclosed location, she would not (be) able to call for help."
Other evidence was found in the shaft - one of more than 100 in the area - but sheriff's officials declined to discuss what it was.
Authorities also declined to release the manner of death and said they could not confirm Corwin's pregnancy until an autopsy was completed.
Corwin would have been 20 if alive, but authorities say she likely died before her birthday.
Lee, a former Marine, told investigators that he was not with Corwin that day and had been hunting in Joshua National Park. He told police that although the two had kissed, they had never had intercourse.
The investigation found that Lee and Corwin did have an "intimate relationship" dating back to at least February, sheriff's Sgt. Trevis Newport said.
It wasn't immediately clear if Lee, who has yet to make a first court appearance or arrive in California, had retained an attorney.
"Let's just wait until the facts come out before jumping to conclusions," Bob Lee, Christopher's father, told an Associated Press reporter during an interview outside the family's home in a working class neighborhood in Anchorage. He said the arrest came as his son and daughter-in-law, Nichole Lee, were returning home.
Newport said Lee's immediate family lives in Alaska and his only tie to California stems from his military service.
Lee was arrested in July on suspicion of possessing a destructive device after a search warrant at a Yucca Valley home where he was temporarily living.
Lee was taken into custody after the July 4 search and released on bail two days later.
He was honorably discharged after seven years in the Marine Corps and subsequently moved his family to Alaska.
Corwin and her husband are from Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
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Flaccus reported from Tustin, California. Associated Press Writer Rachel D'Oro contributed to this report from Anchorage, Alaska.

some more of the idiots you see on 48 hours.I got a wife-she prenant,can't handle that.might have grow up.I know shotgun through the head and flee the place where I live,then blaime it that Jon Binay Ramsey killer,OJ,or Jack the Ripper.Redjack,Redjack,Redjack,ha hahahaha-kill you all make you suffer.
I love these guys got a wife and family or one of the way,but what they do if off someone,thinking that'll work.That peterson jerk,now lives in a prison block closett,up there with 456 other assholes just like him.
I'm sure she bored everyone about how wonder he was.He's Marine and all that shit.Her airhead freinds saids thats so wonderful.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Rudy the Robot ® by Remco Inc.


Rudy the Robot ® by Remco Inc.A mystery action, battery operated robot that walked forward and contact a reversing switch to make it walk the opposite direction.He had a bar on the front and rear that stuck out so when he hit a wall, it would press in and change his walking direction. It has bump and go movement, moving legs and flashing lights and "Where it goes nobody knows!"
I had this much forgotten toy as a kid.He's not Robby the Robot,nor is he the Robinson Robot.My brother had the one Remco made of him,so I had have my own robot.My father loved this guy could over to a wall and go backwards,once the bar is pushed in.Sometimes,he might fall over,but he was great.
Unfortunately,his broke off and became a flying space ship.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Speedy ,Hank,Pinky,Dirty Chicken,Broken Neck Pinky

Speedy ,Hank,Pinky,Dirty Chicken,Broken Neck Pinky


Star Reach #1 (1974)

Science Addiction: Star Reach #1 (1974)


Sometimes finding the long lost early works of a respected artist can throw one for a loop and blow them away. Such is the case of what happened when I first read Star Reach #1. Star Reach was an independent anthology comic book that wasn't easily found among the comic racks in department and convenience stores at the time. This was the type of book you had to mail order or subscribe for, or if you were the type, might have found in a head shop. It contained dark subject matter featuring sex and drugs within sci-fi and fantasy realms.

The importance of the first issue however is thanks to Jim Starlin (the creator of freakin' Thanos mind you, as well as many others), who back then had yet to emerge into the 'star' he is today. Starlin provided not one, but two beautiful-yet haunting stories about Death himself for this issue. Not only does the artwork exude that classic Starlin touch, but the stories are masterful as well.

The first story, "Death Building" is the tale of Steve Apollo and his acid-induced challenge to beat Death. I have a feeling this is not going to end well...Full story:

*Although the original Star Reach was in black and white, a reprint was later released in color. I scanned the color version for maximum effect*


Love how Starlin himself makes an appearance in his own story! I also wonder if acid was a real imaginative motor for Jim. The next story is Starlin's take on the birth of Death, titled well...,"The Birth of Death!". Full story:



 Starlin would go on to continue to use Death in many of his other stories, even as a love-interest for Thanos. While there are many other terrific stories to enjoy in this first issue such as Howie Chaykin's, "Cody Starbuck" series, Starlin's contributions undoubtedly steal the show in Star Reach #1.

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Star#Reach

Bronze Age Grad School

Reaction Paper #11: On Comic Book Artist Vol. 2 #2’s look at Star#Reach

Editor’s note: Last fall, as part of my Master’s studies through Fort Hays State University, I enrolled in an independent reading project on the Bronze Age of the American comic book. Over a four-month period, I read several books and articles about the Bronze Age, and wrote a reaction paper about each. This is #11 of a 17-part series.
CODY STARBUCK, FROM EDITOR JON B. COOKE’S
COMIC BOOK ARTIST VOL. 2, #2.

(Illustration by Howard Chaykin)
Published by Top Shelf, © Jon B. Cooke, 2003
[Buy from Mile High]

As the previous two Reaction Papers made clear, industry leaders Marvel and DC did face some competition during the Bronze Age. But companies like Charlton (see Reaction Paper #9) and Atlas (Seaboard) (see Reaction Paper #10) were also-rans who competed with the “Big Two” via traditional newsstand distribution. By the end of the Bronze era in the mid-’80s, that newsstand distribution system would take a backseat to a direct sales market, one filled with a myriad of small, independent publishers. Long before then, in 1974, one visionary publisher would launch a comic book geared for the then-emerging market. And while Mike Friedrich’s Star*Reach might not have lasted long enough to reap the benefits, there is little doubt his company — also named Star*Reach — helped pave the way for the market revolution to come.
Friedrich and Star*Reach were the subject of a special section in editor Jon B. Cooke’s Comic Book Artist Vol. 2, # 2, published in October 2003. Over the course of three interviews with Friedrich, Cooke works to chronicle the history of the innovative publisher, and to establish where exactly Star*Reach fits into the big picture of comic-book history. From the very beginning, it was clear that Star*Reach was different from the mainstream publishers of the time. Using a business model that more closely resembled the underground comix system than the one used by mainstream publishers, Friedrich looked to publish “ground level” comics aimed at an older audience (p. 49). These older readers would get their comics from used bookstores, mail-order comics retailers, convention dealers, and some of the first actual comic-book stores; collectively, these outlets would grow into the direct market (p. 70). The material in Star*Reach would feature “fantasy material that had more of an adult flavor, whether it was science-fiction or humor” (p. 69). Early on, this material was produced by some of the biggest rising stars of the era — Howard Chaykin, Jim Starlin, P. Craig Russell, etc. — artists Friedrich had encountered during his earlier days as a writer for both DC and Marvel. The budding, young publisher — Friedrich was still in his 20s — was able to attract such top talent by offering them the chance to do more adult-oriented work (though not as sexually explicit as the undergrounds), ownership of that work, and royalty payments — concepts all foreign to the Big Two at the time (p. 59). And while it’s easy to romanticize such advances in creator rights, Friedrich also felt these moves were good business: “I was convinced the business model would take over the world” (p. 60).
Initially, the model worked extremely well. Star*Reach #1 (see Comics Bronze Age’s review) sold out its initial print run of 15,000 copies and eventually sold “somewhere around 30,000” (p. 62). Dozens of other comics — more issues of Star*Reach, and other titles, like Quack andImagine — soon followed. The company’s best year came in 1977, when Star Wars hit theaters and created a demand for “anything that had the word ‘star’ in it” (p. 67). But soon business missteps would take a toll on Star*Reach. Friedrich notes that the decision to move to color proved “disastrous,” pointing to both cost and quality issues (p. 71). He also notes that he “stopped really focusing on the commercial aspects of comics,” and started publishing books that were “less commercially interesting” (p. 71). By the end of the decade, Star*Reach was all but finished.
But Friedrich and the direct sales market he helped to develop were both there to stay. In January of 1980, the former publisher took a position at Marvel to help the industry leader retool its sales department to take advantage of the new distribution model. Following that, he went on to establish an agency that represented comic creators and advocated for their rights. Star*Reach might have been ahead of its time, but the concepts at the company’s core proved prescient.
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CERBERUS

CERBERUS
Real Name: Cerberus
Occupation: Guardian to the Underworld
Legal Status: Citizen of Tartarus
Identity: The general populace of Earth is unaware of the existence of Cerberus except as a fictional being of mythological origin.
Other Aliases: None
Place of Birth: Unknown
Marital Status: Single
Known Relatives: Typhon (father), Echidna (mother, deceased), Geryon (uncle, deceased), Ladon, Orthrus, Chimaera (brothers, deceased), Hydra, Phaea, Sphinx (sisters, deceased), Medusa (great-grandmother, deceased), Chrysaor (grandfather), Callirrhoe (grandmother), Orion, Triton (great-uncles), Poseidon (great-grandfather), ZeusHades (great-granduncles), HeraDemeterHestia (great-grandaunts)
Group Affiliations: ally of Hades and Hela
Base of Operations: Hades (Tartarus)
First Appearance: Thor I #130
History: Cerberus one of the denizens of the underworld of Hades, reserved for the spirits of the worshippers of the Olympian gods. Placed at the gates of the underworld, Cerberus is the spawn of Typhon, the ancient wind-god who once challenged the Gods of Olympus, and the snake-goddess, Echidna, the daughter of the giant Chrysaor, son of Poseidon and Medusa, and the ocean-goddess, Callirrhoe. Echidna and Typhon had conceived a brood of mismatched creatures supposedly because they mated while in the throes of shape-shifting into several animals, their children having taken on the forms of those animals. Another theory is that their traits are the result of a curse Athena inflicted on Medusa and the other Gorgons for willingly allowing themselves to be seduced by Poseidon. Their father, Typhon, might also be partially demonic since his father was spawned from the energies of Tartarus itself.
Zeus imprisoned Typhon within Mount Aetna on Sicily. Echidna later fled to Libya where she abducted children as sustenance to her offspring, giving rise to the later legends of vampires and monsters. Arges, one of the Cyclopes loyal to Zeus, later killed her to stop her bloodshed.
Hades eventually employed Cerberus in establishing order in the Underworld after the defeat of the Titans and the beginning of his domain of the underworld. Cerberus slew Keres, an ancient spirit that terrorized and punished the dead and later took his place at the gates of Hades. He unerringly fulfilled his role in keeping the spirits of the dead from wandering back to the world of the living, but he was oft times distracted and waylaid by a few mortal heroes. Orpheus, the half-mortal son of the Muse Calliope, came down after his adventures with the Argonauts to retrieve his true love Eurydice who had died. Singing a song of woe, Orpheus was able to mesmerize Cerberus into letting him pass into the Underworld. The mortals Theseus and Peirithous distracted Cerberus to let them pass on their way to abduct Persephone, but Hades himself captured them. Hercules on his last labor was able to forcibly drag Cerberus all the way to the court of King Eurystheus of Mycenae. The ordeal obviously gave many mortal men their first true appearance of the beast that they knew only by rumors. Having proved himself, Hercules freed Cerberus to flee back to the Underworld alone. With the help of Zeus and Athena, the Phoenician princess Psyche lulled Cerberus into complacency with cakes to prove she was worthy to marry Cupid.
After Zeus allowed worship of the Olympian Gods to die out, Hades was not permitted to accept the souls of any more mortals. According to some accounts, he began venturing to Earth in mortal guise going after earthbound ghosts and evil spirits. Realizing Cerberus’ might and ferocity, he gave Cerberus the gift of intelligence and the power to alter his appearance and even attain a humanoid appearance. Hades started using him as an agent in his concerns. In his presence, Cerberus could appear as a black rottweiler of extraordinary size with red eyes or as a huge intimidating African-American humanoid bodyguard.
In modern years, Cerberus often clashed with Thor and Hercules time and time again as they confronted Hades for his actions on Earth. Cerberus was present at the formation of the short-lived group of heroes known as the Champions of Los Angeles. When the Avengers escaped his realm, Hades held Cerberus at fault and stripped him of his sentience and ability to change forms in order that Cerberus could regain his ferocity as a watchdog. He stored these memories into his Havoc-Bringer arrow, which eventually ended up on earth under unknown means. Cerberus escaped the arrow and briefly possessed a mortal man on Earth where he confronted Hercules again. Hela claimed Havoc-Bringer afterward and lured Cerberus from Hades, reuniting him with his consciousness stored in Havoc-Bringer. Hela sent him against Doctor Strange entering her realm for the icy remains of Thor. It is possible that Hades lent Cerberus to Hela for the soul purpose of guarding Thor’s remains, but this is unconfirmed. Cerberus was returned to Hades afterward and was borrowed by Loki to be used as a steed for his minion known as the Flame.
Sometime later, Cerberus witnessed the young wards of the Fantastic Four invade Hades to rescue Caledonia from Hippolyta, the Queen of the Amazons. When Valeria Von Doom attacked him, Cerberus called upon the armies of the Underworld to attack her and her allies. The young wards had to be rescued by Hercules and the Fantastic Four.

Height: (humanoid) 7’ 3”
Weight: 725 lbs.
Eyes: Red
Hair: Black

Unusual Physical Features: In his true form, Cerberus resembles a large wolf with three heads. However, since his ability to alter his form, his appearance has often varied and he randomly resumes to his “true form” resembling a different breed of dog, such as a Doberman pinscher, rottweiler or pit bull.

Strength Level: In his human form, Cerberus possesses superhuman strength enabling him to lift (press) at least 50 tons under optimal conditions.

Known Superhuman Powers: Cerberus possesses the conventional physical attributes of the Olympian gods with whom he shares the same ancestors and relations. Like all Olympians, he is immortal: he has not aged since reaching adulthood and cannot die by any conventional means. He is immune to all Earthly diseases and is resistant to conventional injury. If he were somehow wounded, his godly life force would enable him to recover with superhuman speed. It would take an injury of such magnitude that it dispersed a major portion of his bodily molecules to cause him a physical death. Even then, it might be possible for a god of significant power, such as Zeus, Poseidon and Hades or for a number of Olympian gods of equal power working together to revive him. Cerberus also possesses superhuman strength and his Olympian metabolism provides him with far greater than human endurance in all physical activities. (Olympian flesh and bone is about three times as dense as similar human tissue, contributing to the Olympians' superhuman strength and weight.)

Cerberus has incredible superhuman strength, but he is no where as powerful as major immortals like Zeus, Hercules or Hades. He has the ability to mystically alter his form, becoming more humanoid and to regain his regular canine form, although he may be unconsciously influenced by different breeds and types of dogs from time to time, resulting in variations of his form as a "hell-hound." Possessed of great savagery and animal ferocity in this form, he can gather the shades ("souls") of the underworld en masse at his bidding by screaming or howling to the boundaries of Hades itself. He has several of the same attributes of dogs and wolves except at more superhuman levels. 

Comments: This bio pretty much encapsulates Cerberus of the Marvel Universe with aspects of his counterpart in the “God of the Dead” novella by William C. Uchtman. He has been briefly noticed a few times in “Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.”

Cerberus has counterparts in other pantheons including Garm/Fenris Wolf of the Norse, Sarameyau from Hindu/Vedic myth, Ammit from Egypt, Pek from the Aztec underworld, and Surma (Manalan-Rakhi) from Finland.
CLARIFICATIONS: Cerberus is not to be confused with:
  • Cerberus, pet wolf of O.Z. Chase, @ Dazzler #38
  • Cerberus, genetic creation of Dr. Zeus, @ Marvel Team-Up II #2
  • Cerberus, demonic dog of Oliver Stroker, @ Gambit II #2
  • Cerberus, robotic creation of Dr. Demonicus, @ Shogun Warriors #7
  • Cerberus, 24th Century robot war machine, @ Iron Man I #5
Updated: 12-29-07