-- Neal Adams
There's just something about Hal's look here, like the ground has just shifted under him.
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Cliff Chiang
Source: Chad Garrett (comicartfans)
Cliff Chang's Hard Traveling Heroes, in Chad Garrett's Chang, Cliff Comic Art Gallery Room (comicartfans.com)
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Green Arrow (2001) #24
Throuple activities if you care
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How I understand the teams in DC:
JSA: Need to be in a nursing home at this point.
JLA: Complains that they have to get a birthday cake for someone in the office but can work together.
Hard Traveling Heroes: Oliver is a true SJW from a private college.
Teen Titans: The closest thing to Found Family littered with horrific slang.
The Outlaws: A polycule that just is a no for me.
The Outsiders: The only way these people get written about even though they’re interesting.
Young Justice: They share one brain cell but it fell down a vent and they haven’t retrieved it.
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They're timid souls!
Green Lantern (Volume 2) #78
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8 Hal/Ollie
Hal sat in the shotgun seat of Ollie’s truck. They had only left the small town of Desolation, West Virginia a few hours ago and their time there was still eating at Hal’s mind. He had been so sure that the mayor would listen so sure that things could be solved without violence. He had trusted the system and it had let him down: again. On the radio: Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan were singing about “The Girl From The North Country.” Ordinarily, Hal loved Country and Folk music but right now it was just noise as he stared out the window at the vast forests that stretched along on all sides of the car for miles.
“See for me that her hairs hanging down! It curls and falls all down her dress! See for me that her hairs hanging down! That’s the way I remember her best!” Ollie sang along with the radio. Hal knew he was probably thinking of Dinah as he did and he did not want to think about how that made him feel. He felt a sigh coming, tried to hold it down, but only succeeded in making the sigh louder when it came out.
“What’s wrong Hal?” Ollie asked. “We did great work back there, and that town is no longer under the control of cruel bosses!”
“Yeah but people got hurt!” Hal said. “We were trying to do things without violence!”
“You were trying to, not me.” Ollie said chuckling. “I made no such promises.”
“I wish I had your confidence,” Hal said with another sigh.
Ollie reached out and took Hal’s hand with a squeeze. “You are a strong, good man. You’ve done so much to help others and we are making things better for others. I promise you that we will find America and we will help her be better than she was before.”
Hal smiled. Ollie’s charisma was infectious and there was work to do.
On the radio: Joan Baez was singing “Blowin’ in the Wind” and- with Ollie’s hand in his- Hal sang along passionately.
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