“Don’t Take Less”
Neal Adams - Murphy Anderson
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He could be such a pompous jerk... huge, powerful personality... he should’ve been the one in movies... Lots of grandiose speech-making... long sermons about a new age of mysticism, with “magic eradicating all evil.”
A little mention of Sargon the Sorcerer in Zatanna (2010) #7
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An April 1941 house-ad announcing the then-upcoming Dr. Mid-Nite and Sargon the Sorcerer features in All-American Comics (1939).
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Sargona the daughter of Zatanna and Sargon The Sorcerer:
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(A little weird since Sargon is a friend of her Dad. Maybe it's actually David John Sargent, Sargon's grandson whom Zee worked with in Reign in Hell mini.
At least she has a name unlike Batgirl.)
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It's Sargon the Sorcerer's birthday!
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Making "Keep 'Em Flying!" happen, April 1942, All-American Comics.
(Oddly, The Red Tornado didn't go in for the new slang in this issue.)
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The New Teen Titans were introduced in the anthology DC Comics Presents 26#, cover date of October, 1980. The issue premiered Beast Boy/Changling, Cyborg, Raven, Starfire and Silas Stone who were created by Marv Wolfman and George Perez. ("Superman and Green Lantern: Between Friend and Foe", "New Teen Titans: Where Nightmares Begin", "Whatever Happened to Sargon the Sorcerer?", DC comic Event)
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While the rest of the DC Universe was dealing with a Crisis on Infinite Earths, Swamp Thing and other mystical characters had a crisis all their own to contend with. It came to a head in Swamp Thing #50 by Alan Moore, Steve Bissette, Rick Veitch and John Totleben, which was released on this day in 1986.
In this issue, Swamp Thing, Deadman, Etrigan, Phantom Stranger, Doctor Fate and an army of angels and demons would face off with the Great Darkness as John Constantine and a circle of magic types tried to help from Earth via a séance that would not end well for Sargon the Sorcerer, Mento or Zatara. This was Moore's Swamp Thing at its finest.
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