Showing posts with label Supergirl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supergirl. Show all posts

Action Comics #333: "The Duel Between Superwoman and Superboy!"

Action Comics #333
"The Duel Between Superwoman and Superboy!"
February, 1966

Story: Leo Dorfman
Art: Jim Mooney

When the Maid of Steel first arrived on Earth, she was trained in
secret by Superman, before she revealed her existence to the world. As
is known, Supergirl passed with flying colors, but in this imaginary
story, things have been reversed, and it's an adult Superwoman who trains
a teen-age Superboy. This, however, is not the only change in store
for "The Duel Between Superwoman and Superboy!" On the splash page,
the Boy of Steel is pushing Superwoman out of his laboratory, and tells
her that being sick of being told what to do. He'll release the Phantom
Zone villains, then destroy her, and conquer the Earth. She recalls
Superboy's arrival from Argo City, and how her willful and stubborn
cousin has become both her enemy and a traitor. When she tried to train
Kal-El, he was eager to prove himself, but unaccustomed at using his
super-powers, such as the time he broke the key to the Arctic Fortress of
Solitude.

He is shown the many secrets within the Fortress, such as the boxes
containing different types of Kryptonite which only affect those from
their native world. Only the lead containers keep them from harm. He
sees the box containing Gold Kryptonite and some Gold K capsules,
coated with lead.  These would be used in an emergency against a escapee
from the Phantom Zone. When Superwoman turns away, Superboy takes some
Gold K Capsules in case of an emergency, and knows that his cousin
will never miss them. Moments later, the reckless boy of steel opens the
box containing Red Kryptonite, which causes weird effects. Both he
and his cousin begin to feel a strange tingling. Superboy grows bigger,
stronger. He becomes a Superman, while Supergirl shrinks into a teen-age
Supergirl. The effects of the Red K end, in time for Superwoman to
respond to an emergency at the Atomic City Nuclear Plant.

When she returns to the Fortress of Solitude, Superwoman finds that
her cousin has released monstrous creatures from a parallel dimension,
but fortunately she reverses the control knob to draw them back to their
own world. Fed up with his childish behavior, she tells Superboy that it
will take years before he is ready to be her secret weapon. He sees that
his cousin is jealous and wants to be the only super-being on Earth. At
Midvale Orphanage, he resumes the identity of Cal Ellis, and is
determined that the world will soon learn about Superboy. One evening,
Superwoman checks out an explosion at an abandoned junkyard and finds
Superboy trapped in an underground laboratory with Gold Kryptonite.
Before rescuing him, she uses her heat-vision to make the wall hot enough
to melt the piece of lead above the Gold K. He tells her how he was
trying to find a Kryptonite antidote when he created artificial
Kryptonite. The furnace exploded, and the gold-colored rock flew out, and
he felt his powers leave him. She tells him that he accidentally created
Gold Kryptonite, and it has destroyed his super-powers forever. He is
now a ordinary boy, and must return to the orphanage.

He has fooled his cousin completely. He still has his powers and
throws the fake Gold K into outer space. The following day, Superwoman
visits Cal at the orphanage and promises to find a way to restore his
super-powers, but she is unaware that he's planning to leave there as
soon as he can. He sees Dr. Kean, famous physicist, who are interested
in adopting an orphan named Diane. Inside her room, Cal sees the dolls
she collects, and has an idea how to make the Keans not be interested in
adopting her. He shoots some marbles at the dolls at super-speed, making
it seem that she destroyed them herself. His cruel scheme succeeds, and
the Keans see the mutilated dolls. They are fearful that the girl may
become destructive and harm their pets.

The girl weeps and casts her broken dolls into a nearby brook,
while Cal watches from behind a rock, and hopes for a chance to be
adopted by the Keans. To his chagrin, they are interested in another
boy. Stan is very responsible and is in charge of the reception desk.
The bright, manly young boy is just what they want, and the Keans tell
the matron to get the papers ready. While Stan heads to his room to
pack, Cal has a fool-proof scheme. He opens the orphanage safe by using
his super-hearing to listen to the tumblers. The valuables are placed in
Stan's suitcase while he is saying goodbye. As he goes through the door,
Cal uses his heat-vision to melt the metal link of Stan's suitcase. The
matron sees the valuables drop from Stan's suitcase and comes to the
conclusion that he was stealing them. The Keans are ready to forgive him.
The matron is sorry but the orphanage can't release Stan until he's been
cured of stealing. They don't want to give the orphanage a bad name. The
Keans then ask if there's anyone else she can recommend.

Inside, while he waits, Dr. Kean uses a blackboard to work out an
mathematical equation. When he is called into an office, Cal finishes
the equation at super-speed. When Dr. Kean returns, he is amazed to see
that Cal solved the complex equation. Seeing the boy's talent, Dr. Kean
asks if he'd like to come live with them. The papers are signed and Cal
is taken to Metropolis where he is shown the penthouse apartment complex,
where Dr. Kean offers him its use anytime he likes. While his
foster-parents are at a physics conference, he has the lab to himself,
and begins to work on delicate blueprints for his anti-Superwoman plans.

He dons his Superboy costume and begins to get to work. One morning,
having heard that Cal Ellis was adopted, Superwoman arrives to
see how he's doing and wonders why he's not in his Cal identity. She
sees that he's using his heat-vision to weld some metal parts, and
realizes that he lied about losing his powers. Superboy is tired of
being told what to do. He doesn't want to be her stooge. He'll use
his powers any way he sees fit. She sees that he's building a device to
free the Phantom Zone criminals. He knows all about the eerie twilight
dimension from his time on Argo City, and plans to free them so that they
can conquer Earth. She is reminded of Van Dal, the worst juvenile
delinquent on Krypton. He was coached by his mother, Tir-An, a criminal
scientist, who praised her son's every evil deed. One such deed involved
the use of a tornado projector on a city below.

The mother and son were captured, and sent into the Phantom Zone.
Superboy is interested in Van Dal and Tir-An, then declares war on
Superwoman. In her other identity as Carole Zorelle, private eye, she
asks her fellow private eye, Jimmy Olsen, for help on an important case.
She ducks into a closet and at super-speed, becomes Superwoman. At the
Fortress of Solitude, two Superwoman robots have been monitoring
Superboy's progress, and decide that their creator is too soft-hearted to
do what must be done. They plan to erase the Boy of Steel's powers with
Gold K. In his lab, he hears the alarm which detects Gold Kryptonite,
and activates his protecto-belt, just as the Superwoman robots approach.

The protecto-belt creates a force field to repel the Gold K,
hurling it into the sea.  The belt then sends a blast of hyper-energy to
demolish the robots. As he continues his work, Superboy receives a
telepathic message from the Phantom Zone. He is told to take his device
to Riverside Park, where he sets up the Zone-Release Machine. The dial is
set to zero and he peers through the view-finder, where Van Dal and Tir-An
appear. He agrees to free them, then activates his force-shield just in
case.

The two materialize and Van Dal offers to create a Kryptonite
antidote to protect Superboy from all Kryptonite effects. Tir An is
directed by her son to squeeze the sap from an oak tree, then crush a
limestone rock to powder, and extract the juice from a thorn bush at
super-speed. The Boy of Steel refuses to drink the potion.  Since he
wishes to be immune to Kryptonite, Van Dal drinks the potion. Half the
cup is drunk, and Van Dal flies to show that he is unharmed by the
antidote. When Superboy begins to drink the cup, he begins to feel the
effects of Red K and begins to lose his super powers. Tir-An is really
Superwoman, who tells Superboy that both Tir-An and Van Dal never
existed. Van Dal is really Jimmy Olsen in disguise, and is flying with a
anti-gravity belt that Superwoman gave him. It was the Red K pebble in
the cup which took away the Boy of Steel's powers, and won't do the same
to Superwoman since she's been exposed to it before.

When Superboy asks how he could have seen them as phantoms, his
cousin tells him that this was caused by fog from the combined use of her
heat-vision and super-cold breath. She intends to use the Phantom Zone
projector on the Boy of Steel, but he still has enough super-power left
to melt it with his heat-vision. Her super-hearing picks up an S.O.S. at
sea, and Jimmy is to handle Superboy. The detective removes his
anti-grav belt to meet as equals. When Superboy rushes him, Jimmy
punches him on the jaw. The Boy of Steel feels his strength returning,
and Jimmy recalls that although the effects of Red K last 24 hours, this
time it hasn't. Superwoman returns just in time to see the Boy of Steel
lose his powers a second time, but this time not due to Red K.

In shooting marbles at Diane's doll collection, one of the
lead-coated Gold K capsules was lodged in one of the dolls. The
discarded doll floated downstream and was lodged beneath a lead-bearing
boulder. This was the same one which Superboy lifted to use on Jimmy. The
capsules lead-coating was rubbed off and the Boy of Steel lost his
super-powers permanently. The Gold K is safely re-buried beneath the
boulder. Superwoman uses super-hypnosis to cure her cousin of his
evil tendencies by causing him to forget his past. She invents an excuse
for Cal's disappearance. In a faraway orphanage, an unknown lad awaits
adoption. He is an amnesiac, knows nothing of his past, except that he is
an orphan. He is bright, and will have a great future one day.

Things tend to take a cruel twist of fate in the Weisinger imaginary
tales in order to assure us that things are as they should be, and would
be disastrous, otherwise.

Unlike Supergirl, this Superboy is malicious and rebellious.

His cruelty towards his fellow orphans ultimately sets him up for
his super-downfall.

Jimmy Olsen would still have a connection to a super-being in this
imaginary tale.

Steve Chung
"The Review Between Superwoman and Superboy!"

Action Comics #327: "Supergirl, Fugitive From Justice!"

Action Comics #327
"Supergirl, Fugitive From Justice!"
August, 1965

Story: Leo Dorfman
Art: Jim Mooney

The name of Supergirl stands for truth, justice, and the American way. She is sworn to stop criminals, but imagine her surprise when the Maid of Might is arrested as a wanted criminal. Even more startling, the Man of Steel aids in the capture of "Supergirl, Fugitive From Justice!" On the splash page, the authorities of Dimension Z have arrived to place Supergirl in chains for the trip back. As she pleads to her cousin to aid her, Superman refuses. They have proven her guilt, and he will not aid a killer. On an Atlantic island, a British destroyer arrives, in answer to a mysterious message received at Scotland Yard. When the inspector heads for land, he meets Colonel Dupre of The French Surete, who tells him about the message he received about a great danger threatening the nation of France.

Director Haynes of the F.B.I. is next to arrive by helicopter. The three men turn to see a space ship materialize nearby. They come from Dimension Z.  Deputies Stix and Hubro present their credentials of the Inter-Dimensional Bureau of Investigation. They are hear to arrest a dangerous criminal from Dimension Z, who calls herself Supergirl. Colonel Dupre laughs at the idea that Supergirl is a criminal. Stix and Hubro invite them onto the ship. They are shown images from a visi-recorder from Dimension Z of Supergirl, who was known as Serpena. It is from the punch card file, the lawmen watch. The daughter of a famous scientist, Serpena began her crooked career by using her father's invention to freeze the hydroponic tank farms.

Using a roto-borer made by her father, Serpena sought valuable minerals for an evil experiment. She causes the buildings of an entire city to cave in! Serpena was jailed, but used the hyper-power from her cell illuminator to melt the bars of her prison door to escape. At her father's lab, she uses the trans-dimensional ship to leave Dimension Z. After years of building the second trans-dimensional ship, they have arrived to take Serpena back. The lawmen believe that they are mistaken, for Supergirl is a heroine, and they seek to prove it to Stix and Hubro.

In America, the ship has arrived outside a federal maximum security prison, filled with inmates who'll attest for Supergirl's character. One tells about the time he heard about a shipment of gold bricks being taken to Fort Knox, and he succeeded in stealing it, as well as making his escape.  Supergirl found the gold with her x-ray vision, painted and cemented in the wall of his home. Stix and Hubro admit that Supergirl does fight against crime in this dimension. At a rocket-test base, they hear how a capsule circled the Earth for a hundred orbits.

There was too much friction upon the descent to Earth, and the parachute was ignited. Supergirl saved the astronaut's life, while cooling the capsule with her super-breath. Stix admits that the astronaut believes her to be a hero. At the National Space Observatory, they learn how the Maid of Might headed for a black nebula in space, which was caused by a giant, metallic space-squid. It was frightened by the light of the sun, and fired an inky cloud in self-defense.  She takes the squid into the darkness of deep space.

The ship heads to where Supergirl is digging up an ancient bed of fossil bones, and is sorting them at super-speed. When finished, they would be placed in a museum she would build. Stix believes that Supergirl has a Jekyll and Hyde split-personality and demands that the lawmen aid in her arrest. Hearing the news, the Maid of Might wonders if this is a joke, and Stix knew that she'd deny being Serpena from Dimension Z. She agrees to cooperate with the F.B.I. and attend a hearing at their office. The following day, Stix accuses her of being Serpena and of escaping from Dimension Z, where there are no super-beings.

Supergirl stops Stix and demonstrates her power of flight, which is a result of her being a Kryptonian under Earth's yellow sun. As she takes her seat, Stix asks her to raise her right boot. He finds a miniature transistorized super-energy cell, which was stolen from Serpena's father's lab, giving her super-powers. He turns it off. When Supergirl tries to fly again, she is unable to. The heroine manages to hurt her knee against a chair, and discovering that she's no longer invulnerable. She insists that she's never seen the device, but Stix is determined to prove her guilt. He accuses her of freezing the hydroponic garden, and committing murder.  This brings her to tears.

Stix brings in Exhibit A, a pair of glass figures which were once living beings. Supergirl insists that she's never taken a life. Stix brings in a portable visi-recorder to show how Serpena stepped into an experimental brain evolution machine, which caused a third eye to grow on the back of her head. The eye caused whatever is glanced by it to turn to glass. When two lab assistants enter and see Serpena's transformation, they, too, are turned to glass.

When the visi-recorder is switched off, Supergirl demands to see the figures. When Stix seeks to bar her, he bumps into the figures, and the evidence is destroyed. Supergirl wishes that Superman were present to testify on her behalf, but he's on a space mission. Stix says that this is a lie.  The Man of Steel has agreed to testify against her. She is relieved to see him and asks him to tell how she's his Kryptonian cousin. He says that he's been fooled by her simulated super-powers and has been aware of her criminal tendencies for some time. This ties in with Stix's story. She insists that she has been a force for good, but the Man of Steel tells how the previous week, they were repairing a collapsing steel bridge.

She is certain that this should prove that she's a heroine. Superman shows a piece of the bridge with her hand's imprint, which weakened the bridge in the first place. Supergirl recalls nothing of this. He tells her how she's led a Jekyll-Hyde existence for years, and how he's covered up for her in hopes that she'd use her powers properly. Now the evil has outweighed the good. Stix points out that Supergirl got her powers from the device on her boot. When she insists that she's never seen the device, Supergirl realizes that she can prove her innocence since she doesn't have a third eye. Superman finds it on the back of her head, beneath her hair. Naturally, she was never aware of it, then wonders how the Man of Steel hasn't been turned to glass. He figures that it's because he's invulnerable or because her power doesn't work in this dimension.

She asks Superman about her childhood memories, her life on Argo City, her arrival on Earth,and her parents in the Bottle City of Kandor. He tells her these are figments of her imagination, designed to conceal her evil personality. Her Jekyll-Hyde career is over and she is to be sent back to Dimension Z to answer for her crimes. Upon seeing the manacles, Supergirl runs out of the office, with Superman, Stix, and Hubro in pursuit. She ducks behind a locked door, but Superman breaks it down. Supergirl asks where his loyalty lies, but the Man of Steel is sworn to uphold the law. Supergirl is chained, but knows that Superman wouldn't lie to her.

She is led to the trans-dimensional ship, and asks to say goodbye to the Danvers, then asks if they were figments of her imagination, too? The Man of Steel assures her that they are real, but it would be better if they didn't learn that their foster-daughter is a criminal, and he'll cover for her absence. She boards the ship, and as the ship heads for Dimension Z, she is to be punished for crimes she does not remember committing.

Stix and Hubro look like actors from an old Republic serial or Flash Gordon one, which is a delight.

The roto-borer is a vehicle which Cave Carson would envy.

Its slogan would probably be, "Call Roto-Borer, that's the name, and away goes the city down the drain!"

On Earth, we have electricity and lights, and on Dimension Z, they have hyper-power and illuminators.

Their illuminator bills must be astronomical.

A Space-Squid inks the sun.

Let's hope that the universe feels like calamari tonight.

At least the Sun-Eater won't give it indigestion.

In The Silver Age, Marvel had the law firm of Nelson and Murdock.

The Bottle City of Kandor had their lawyers.

On Lexor, when Superman was accused of killing Luthor, he received legal counsel.

In The Incredible Hulk #138, a transfusion from the Sandman would cause Betty Ross to become a being of immobile glass.

Iris Jacobs, a character in Karate Kid's book,  was turned into the Deadly Diamondeth.

Steve Chung
"Supergirl, Fugitive From Review!"

Action Comics #311: "The Day Super-Horse Became Human!"

Action Comics #311
"The Day Super-Horse Became Human!"
April, 1964

Story: Leo Dorfman
Art: Jim Mooney

Linda Lee Danvers is kissing Bronco Bill, who is the man of her dreams. She intends to reveal her secret identity to him.  Bill is in reality, Super-Horse.  On Valentine's Day at Midvale, Linda Lee Danvers is the recipient of  valentines from Dick Malverne and Sandy Powers. Upon visiting the Daily Planet as the Maid of Might, Perry White shows her the valentines and greetings sent to her from around the world.


At the Fortress of Solitude, Supergirl is carrying a large mailsack over her head. Comet the Super-Horse greets her telepathically. While
there, she receives a telepathic message from Jerro. He bids her to come to Atlantis. Upon arriving in Atlantis, she sees that Jerro has some luminous fish spell out the sentiment in his heart. She is overcome by the living valentine, then gives Jerro a kiss. Comet wishes that he could express her admiration for her, as well. Emerging from the depths, Supergirl decides to take a tour of Oil City. Super-Horse figures that she regards him just as another super-pet. If he were a man, he'd tell her how he'd feel, and it would be worth losing his super-powers, too.

Comet travels at super-speed through the centuries, to arrive in Ancient Greece. He is greeted by Circe, who knew him as the Centaur Biron. The Centaur saved her life from the wizard Malador. The wizard's spell gave her horns ,but her next command made his body twist into knots. As winner of the contest, she received the oracle bowl. With it, she could see into the future. Biron wondered if her sorcery could aid him in becoming human. Malador sought to use a poison in the spring from which she drank from, but an arrow from Biron was able to foil his scheme. Circe rewarded Biron, but the wrong potion was used when Malador switched it. Biron became a horse, instead. To make up for the mistake, Circe endows him with the super-powers of the gods.

Circe asks Comet what happened to him since then. He remembers being exiled to the constellation Sagittarius by Malador. He was trapped until repeller rays from the rocket ship carrying Kara to Earth freed him. Upon arriving on Earth, he made the acquaintance of Supergirl, who named him Comet. He asks Circe for the opportunity to declare his love for the Maid of Might by turning him into a mortal. She has come up with such a potion. She first demonstrates it on a lamb. The lamb is turned into human child, which will be given to a childless couple. Peering into her oracle bowl, Circe sees that Comet will be unhappy as a mortal and will wish to be changed back. For the nonce, he wishes to become human.

The drops from the potion will turn him into a man once he returns to the future. Comet knows that should he wish to be turned back Circe will aid him. Comet also knows that he wishes to be human. Returning to 1964, Comet is dazed by the potion and lands in a subterranean pool of oil. Still befuddled, the Super-Horse emerges covered in oil, and sans his cape.  Circe's potion has given Comet temporary amnesia.

The Hooded Demon, a masked bandit wandering the countryside is eluding the law. As night falls, he sees the flying black horse and takes it to be the legendary devil horse. He makes some flames, which ignites Comet's oily surface and sets him on fire. The amnesiac Super-Horse is unharmed. Comet believes that the Hooded Demon is his friend since he removed the oil.  The Hooded Demon believes that Comet will obey him. Using his gun on Comet, he sees that the Devil Horse is indeed invulnerable.

With his telepathy down, Comet doesn't sense the evil nature of the Hooded Demon, who plans to use the devil horse on his train robbery tomorrow. The next day finds the Hooded Demon riding the devil horse and trailing the train. He orders his steed to stop the train. Comet, who regards him as his friend, obeys. The express car is torn apart, while the Hooded Demon commands his steed to go before the Marshall arrives. Once the posse arrive, they know that only Super-Horse could be that strong to damage a train, but knows that the horse wouldn't do it.

The Marshall and his posse sight the Hooded Demon and the Devil Horse. They open fire upon him, injuring him and Comet.  The Super-Horse is losing his super-powers due to Circe's potion. The Hooded Demon commands Comet to take him to the hideout. He changes clothes and escapes on foot with his loot, intent on finding a doctor. After he leaves, Circe's spell goes into effect, and Comet the Super-Horse becomes human.  Knowing that the transformation only occurs whenever he's in sight of Halley's Comet or another, he remembers Circe's potion and recalls his misdeeds while gripped with amnesia. He changes into some clothes and heads for a doctor.

In the forest, he finds a cabin, and tells the forest ranger that he was injured by a careless hunter. The ranger sees a group of riders, who tell him of The Hooded Demon. By then the human Comet makes his way to the ranger's horse tied behind the cabin, and flees. Passing by the oil pool, he retrieves his super-cape, and places it in the saddlebag. He then pens the white horse some miles away in a box canyon.

On a mountain trail, Comet sees Linda Lee Danvers.  She is with a group of Midvale students on a sightseeing trip of Oil City. He also sees that the ledge she's standing on is crumbling. Before her secret identity can be compromised, Comet grabs the rope from Dick Malverne's shoulder, and lassos her before she can fall far. He introduces himself as Bronco Bill Starr, having used that name when he was last human. Linda doesn't let on that she knows him as Supergirl. She then offers to give him a kiss. As they kiss, she remembers doing this as Supergirl.  Bill remembers that fond time, as well. Knowing the area as Super-Horse, he offers to be their mountain guide. Their hired guide just got sick, and Linda sighs as she takes in how handsome Bill is.

As the day passes, Linda becomes more impressed with Bill.  He saves a bear cub from quicksand. When she believes she's alone, Linda
carves their initials on a tree. Bill sees this from behind a rock. At Sweetheart's Pass, Bill tells her about a legend that when true sweethearts are in love, that a rainbow forms in the west. At the foot of the falls, Linda uses her heat-vision to cause a rainbow to form.  Before the rainbow, Bill and Linda kiss. She wonders if this is the man she'll marry. Bill wonders if Circe was wrong about her prediction? As Bill scouts a mountain trail that afternoon, the posse has arrived. They are searching for him as the Hooded Demon. Bill knows that he can't tell Supergirl the truth, how he went from being a centaur to a horse to a human! (Gee, in a Weisinger comic, that's a bit much to take, isn't it?)

Bill heads to the canyon and mounts the horse, determined to find the real Hooded Demon. The posse meets Linda and her friends, telling them about Bill's description and the Hooded Demon. Separating from her friends, she becomes Supergirl and soars towards Bill. She believes him to be the Hooded Demon and the horse he's riding on to be Comet, not knowing that he is actually Comet.  Unfortunately for Bill, a bit of Super-Horse's cape is sticking out of his saddlebag. The Maid of Might is convinced that he's used magic on Super-Horse. Bill maintains his innocence. Upon passing the gusher, Supergirl is weakened by what she believes to be a spell from Bill. He knows that there's something else which is afflicting her. Knowing that he could get away, Bill now is a fugitive and knows that Circe was right about him having regrets.

In the past, Circe has been watching the proceedings. She hears Bill when he asks to become a Super-Horse again. The two drops are administered. Bill once again becomes Super-Horse. He removes his clothes and puts on his cape before his arms disappear. As Comet, he gives a telepathic thanks to Circe, then heads for Supergirl. She tells him that she's been weakened by some Kryptonite in the oil pool. Comet must have brought it up when he first landed there. He saves her by kicking it away, then listens as she tells him to help in the hunt for the Hooded Demon. As they make their way, the Marshall and the posse tell them that they've found the real Hooded Demon with the loot. Supergirl now knows that Bronco Bill is innocent, accused wrongly by her. She confides in Comet about Bronco Bill, the noble man she met, and now knows that she'll never see him again. The Super-Horse tells her that it's possible that she'll meet him again.

Boy meets Girl.

Boy turns out to be horse who used to be centaur.

Boy becomes human to get Girl.

Girl thinks he's a crook.

Boy must become a horse again.

It's the same old Silver Age story in a Mort Weisinger Super-Title, that is.

Circe turns a sheep into a human baby.

All I can say is, "It hadda be ewe!"

Comet gets amnesia, is doused in oil, burned, and shot at.

Gee, the Animal Rights people woulda loved Mort.

The Hooded Demon wears a purple mask and has a blue shirt and pants.

I don't know what happened to Comet Pre-Crisis or Post-Crisis, but poor Biron deserves a happy ending, and at least he got some super-smooches from Linda Lee Danvers.

Steve Chung
"The Day Super-Horse Became Reviewed!"

Action Comics #296: "The Girl Who Was Supergirl's Double!"

Action Comics #296
"The Girl Who Was Supergirl's Double!"
January, 1963

Script: Leo Dorfman
Art: Jim Mooney

Black Canary!  Phantom Girl!  Saturn Girl!  Wonder Woman!  You've read
about these heroines, but the one who is involved in this story is the
Maid of Might herself.  Along with her cousin, Supergirl fights a
never-ending battle.  She is a super-heroine, but there is another with
incredible powers of her own.  Find out who she is in... "The Girl Who
Was Supergirl's Double!"  Linda Lee Danvers and her foster-mother are
shopping for a costume for Linda to wear at the Midvale Charity Ball.
For the "Come as your favorite hero or heroine party," Mrs. Danvers
recommends that her foster-daughter go dressed as Pocahontas.  Since she
is the Maid of Might, Linda sees sense in not wearing a flashy costume.
Outside, they meet with Lena Thorul, who has already bought her own
costume, and wants to surprise them as to what it is.

Lena suddenly senses that something bad is about to happen around the
corner, and Linda tells her foster-mother about her friend's extrasensory
powers.  She manages to reach a blind man who was about to walk in front
of a bus, and unbeknownst to her, Linda uses her super-breath to slow
down the bus for the save.  After leading the blind man across the
street, the two young women talk about Lena's application with the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.  She will keep her job with the Midvale
Library until she hears back from the agency.  In the upper-class area of
Midvale, another girl is trying on a expensive Cleopatra costume, and
asks her father for his opinion.  He tells his daughter that she looks
like a queen, and that the rented jewelry from Cartier's will arrive
shortly.  The Giltedge's butler announces the arrival of the messenger
from Cartier's.  As the father and daughter open the jewel case, they are
unaware that the butler is phoning a crooked crony of his with the news.

The evening finds Linda Lee Danvers being escorted to the costume ball by
Dick Malverne.  Dick is wearing the costume of the world's greatest hero,
and he tells his date that a Superman costume is most appropriate.  The
Man of Steel is her hero, but Linda knows that Dick is trying to get her
to admit that she's Supergirl.  The costume contest begins, with Clarissa
Giltedge being carried into the ball by a pair of bearers, and two armed
guards watching over the jewels.  The next contestant to step forward is
Lena Thorul in a Supergirl costume.  Both Linda and Dick notice the
resemblance between her and the real Maid of Might.  The prizes are
awarded to Dick Malverne and Lena Thorul for their super choice of
costumes, while Clarissa seethes with jealousy over the outcome.  A local
news photographer asks them to pose for a special picture.

Now on steel wires, both Dick and Lena looks like they're flying, while
Linda feels left out of the picture.  Two men dressed as astronauts enter
through the ballroom entrance, with Lena getting a sense of their evil
nature.  Blackie throws some knock-out pellets, which causes the
partygoers to lose consciousness.  Only Linda is invulnerable to the
attack, and she pretends to pass out from the attack.  The astronauts
find the Giltedge girl and are about to remove the jewelry.  Changing to
Supergirl at super-speed, she cracks open their helmets, and causes the
jewel thieves to inhale the knock-out gas themselves.

As she changes back to her Pocahontas costume, Linda sees that the gas is
evaporating, and the thieves should be ready to be put into custody.
Lena Thorul is the first to revive, and uses the guard's belts to bind
the astronauts hands behind their backs.  The others recover to hear Lena
explain what's happened, and one of the astronauts blurts out that the
Giltedge's butler had betrayed them into a trap.  The police plan to take
him in, too, and one of the officers compliments Lena by calling her
"Supergirl".  She accepts the compliment, but insists that the costume is
only a rental.  Dick thinks that Lena is the real thing, and whispers to
Linda that she probably used her x-ray vision to pierce the astronauts'
disguises.  Now that it looks like Lena is the Maid of Might, Dick
decides to ask her out for a dance.  Linda hopes that her friend will
straighten Dick out.

Dick and Lena share many dances during the course of the evening.  Linda
should be pleased that he no longer thinks that she's Supergirl, but
she's not.  As he drops Linda off at her house, Dick is in a hurry to
drive Lena home, and Linda misses out on a goodnight kiss.  She uses her
telescopic-vision to see what they're up to, and sees Dick saying
goodnight to Supergirl -- errr... Lena.  Her boyfriend and her best
friend have found one another.  The following day finds Doctor Malverne
getting ready for a geological field trip, with Dick promising his father
to take care of his mineral collection.  The teen is handling a green
rock, which his father tells him is none other than a Kryptonite meteor.
He is to keep it in a lead container until Doctor Malverne can give it to
Superman or Supergirl.  Dick wonders what his father would say if he knew
that Supergirl was going to visit him today.  Lena arrives at the
Malverne home with some chemistry books from the library.  Dick invites
her in, telling her that he's just finishing up an experiment in his lab,
and not suspecting that the teen is planning a fake explosion to have the
Maid of Might come to his rescue.

Lena notices the cute parakeet, which the Malvernes call "Chipper", and
she can play with him until Dick is done with his "experiment".  Chipper
is accidentally freed from his cage by Lena, who chases after the
parakeet, and knocks over the loving cup on the table.  POP!  Unbeknownst
to the young girl, a knock-out pellet had rolled into the cup during last
night's robbery, and Lena is overcome by the fumes.  THUMP!  BANG!
Opening the door, Dick sees that his friend must have accidentally
exposed herself to the Kryptonite meteor, and it's knocked her out.

After putting the green rock back in the lead container, Dick revives
Lena, and hears her story about the fumes.  Even if she's not Supergirl,
he insists that she get rid of the Kryptonite, and Lena promises to give
it to the Maid of Might as soon as possible.  Dick watches her leave, and
wonders when she'll admit to her dual identity.  Lena plans to bury the
box containing the Kryptonite in the ground, and asks Linda if she'd like
to see it.  She declines the offer, of course.  The following days find
Dick inviting Lena to the Rod Kelly Disc-Jockey Show, with Linda knowing
that she would have been the one invited.  As they drive home, Linda
weeps, and watches as they cuddle together in the front seat.

Up in the sky, a plane is on fire, and a pilot is bailing out.  Dick sees
that the chute has failed to open, and he begs for Lena to use her
super-powers to save him.  As she insists that she doesn't have any such
powers, Linda uses her super-breath to open the pilot's chute.  Back on
the ground, Lena is the recipient of a grateful kiss from Dick Malverne,
and Linda sees that her good deed has been rewarded to someone else.
That evening in the Danvers's home, Linda sees Lena and Dick dancing on
the Rod Kelly Show.  She wonders what would happen if she told her
boyfriend that Lena is the sister of Lex Luthor.

In reality, Linda would never do such a thing, and insists that she wants
Dick to love her for herself.  A news bulletin summons Supergirl to the
Metropolis Penitentiary.  Once there, the Maid of Might meets with Lex
Luthor in his "solitary cell".  Since his sister's birthday is tomorrow,
Lex would like to give her a gift to ease her financial hardships.  What
gift could a criminal in solitary confinement possibly give?  In years
past, Lex created a method for creating diamonds by using the heat and
energy of a lighting storm on lumps of coal.  Before the process could be
perfected, Luthor was taken into custody, and he had planned to use the
chest of diamonds to finance his future criminal endeavors.

The diamonds are legally his, but he wants to make a deal with Supergirl.
If Lex tells her where the diamonds are, she can give them to charity,
and give some to Lena as a birthday present.  Since it's for charity, the
Maid of Might agrees to help Luthor.  After tearing up the stone floor of
Lex's deserted lab, she finds the diamonds to give to the orphan's fund,
and some for Lena Thorul.  Supergirl gives Lena the diamonds, and tells
her that they're from an unknown friend whose identity must remain
secret.  As she leaves, Supergirl sees Dick Malverne driving up for a
visit to Lena's.  She is placing the diamonds on the mantelpiece of her
fireplace when the doorbell rings.  One of the diamonds falls into the
coal scuttle, and as she is about to pick it up, Dick enters the house.

He had come for the interesting specimen she had promised him for his
father's mineral collection.  Lena promises to give it to him, just as
soon as she takes out the diamond from the coal scuttle.  In the mind of
Dick Malverne, this can only mean that it's a diamond that Lena has
formed out of coal by using her super-strength.  She insists that he's
wrong, and shows him a piece of coral she had found at the seashore on
her last vacation.  Dick insists that Lena used her super-strength to
turn coal into a diamond, and he wants her to admit it.  She sighs and
admits that she's Supergirl.  Lena's "confession" has just been overheard
by the real Maid of Might via her super-hearing, and she wonders why Lena
would deliberately lie like that.  Is she becoming a criminal like her
sibling?

This story was reprinted in Super DC Giant #S-24 (May-June, 1971).

Since Bill Henley reviewed Action Comics #295, I figured that I'd review
the next part of the story, and it just happened to be reprinted in a
comic book I have.

On the splash page, Dick Malverne rushes to Lena Thorul's aid, and sees
how the Green Kryptonite has weakened her.

I remember reviewing "The Girl Who Was Lucy Lane's Double" in an issue of
Jimmy Olsen.

Looks like everything goes double in a Silver Age Mort Weisinger D.C.
Comic book, doesn't it?

Black Canary and Wonder Woman are the senior super-heroines, while the
rest are teenaged Legionnaires in the 30th Century.

I wonder what happened to Fred Danvers in the story.  Was he working out
or what?

In saving a blind man from being run over by a truck, Matt Murdock was
struck by a radioactive isotope, and later became Daredevil.

Another heroine who worked at a library was Barbara Gordon, a.k.a.
Batgirl.

A hero who worked at a library was Adam Blake, AKA Captain Comet.

Lena Thorul is quite a sight in her Supergirl costume, and by using a
slightly different hairstyle, Jim Mooney is able to emphasize the
resemblance between her and Kara.

The Far-Out Space Nuts get their collective lights punched out by the
Maid of Might.

Dick Malverne has got some super-nerve in trying to uncover Supergirl's
secret identity by dating Lena Thorul.

We meet Doctor Malverne and wonder whatever happened to Mrs. Malverne.

Did one of Dick's fake explosions prove to be more realistic than
necessary?

No wonder Chipper was eager to flee his cage.  The parakeet must be a
stool pigeon in disguise.

Victor Von Doom was a young scientist who got caught in an lab explosion
during one of his experiments.

Just as the knock-out gas pellet found its way into the loving cup, Linda
Lee Danvers found herself fuming over the developments between Dick and
Lena.

Look!  Up in the sky!  It's a bird (Chipper)!  It's a burning plane!
It's Supergirl!  (Lena Thorul)?

Her super-breath may have saved a pilot, but Dick and Lena's relationship
took Linda's breath away.

I wonder what surname you could come up with to respell Malverne.

Diamonds are a brother's best friend, but Lena is getting the coal
shoulder from Dick by the end of the story.

It's up to Supergirl to scuttle this relationship before the couple get
hurt, and Linda gets dumped.

Steve Chung
"The Girl Who Was Supergirl's Review!"

Action Comics #262: "Supergirl's Greatest Victory!"

Action Comics #262
"Supergirl's Greatest Victory!"
March, 1960

Story: Otto Binder
Art: Jim Mooney

The Girl of Steel is impervious to harm, but she shares with her cousin
one weakness... Kryptonite. The Man of Steel has never found a cure for
this radioactive threat. The day comes when his cousin appears to have
come up with a solution to their problem in "Supergirl's Greatest
Victory!"

It's recess at Midvale Orphanage, with the kids eager to fly their kites,
but there's no wind at all. Linda Lee uses a gust of super-breath to
guide the kites to upper air currents, where they'll stay up by
themselves. Two girls are roller-skating, but neither one notices the
crack in the sidewalk from last night. Linda uses her x-ray vision to
fuse the crack shut, and the two skate safely over it now. The
headmaster and his assistant have come outside, see their happy charges,
and feel as though someone is watching over them.

THUD! Linda's super-hearing picks up the sound of a Kryptonite meteor
falling near two forest rangers. The rangers plan on getting rid of it
after their fire patrol is over. They'll also send a message to the Man
of Steel, too. After receiving the message, Superman heads for the
Fortress of Solitude. The evening finds Linda Lee writing in her diary,
and remembering how her home planet of Krypton blew up years ago. Each
of the planet's fragments was turned into Green Kryptonite. She learned
from her cousin how he escaped Krypton's destruction as a baby in a
rocket. He was thought to be the sole survivor, but a quake caused a
chunk carrying a town to be sent into space. A huge air bubble
surrounded it, and kept the citizens alive.

Although they had air to breathe, the ground beneath them had turned to
Green Kryptonite, and the radiations would poison them in time. Zor-El
had the people cover the bare ground with some lead foil he had been
using for radiation experiments. Life had resumed for the refugees from
Krypton, and a baby daughter was born to Zor-El and his wife. By this
time, Superboy was already in Smallville, and this is why Kara is younger
than her cousin. When she became a teenager, a meteor swarm fell and
smashed through the lead shield, causing the Kryptonite radiation to be
released. Zor-El builds a space rocket and Allura uses a space telescope
to search for a suitable world for their daughter to travel to.

By using the hyper-radio, Kara and her mother learned the language, as
well as gleaning information about Earth's greatest hero. When the
Kryptonite radiation proved too much, Kara's rocket was launched, and she
thought her parents perished with the others. Now on Earth, the Man of
Steel spotted her arrival, and met his cousin from Krypton. She wonders
why the Kryptonians weren't super-strong away from Krypton's heavy
gravity. It turns out that their powers come from lighter gravity and
ultra solar rays which strike Earth both night and day. The rays only
affect people from other solar systems. Only yellow stars like Earth's
sun emit those rays. On worlds without yellow suns, they would not have
super-powers, even when under lighter gravity. Since Krypton's sun was
red, the people who lived with Kara did not gain super powers. She then
asks why Kryptonite is deadly to them. The rays can penetrate even their
skin, turning red corpuscles to green, and this blood poisoning causes
Kryptonite fever.

Closing her diary, Supergirl now has an idea for overcoming Kryptonite.
At the Fortress of Solitude, the Man of Steel sees that his cousin is
excited about something. She figures that just as people can take many
doses of the Polio vaccine and become immune to Polio, the same could be
done with Kryptonite. Superman had tried it, but it didn't work. The
Girl of Steel figures that since she's younger, it should work for her.
Her cousin insists that it's too dangerous, then shows her his latest
space trophy kept inside a black box. It is a space flower which must be
kept from light or else it will wither. She is told to use her x-ray
vision at full power since the box is very thick. KRACK! Supergirl sees
how the beautiful flower makes its own rainbow colors. The Man of Steel
now shows her the latest creatures from his interplanetary zoo. The
specimens come from a low-gravity solar system where insects are gigantic
and dinosaurs are small.

The Metal-Eaters enjoy iron nails for lunch, but one of them's missing.
Supergirl notices how her x-ray vision must have gone through the black
box, and cracked the glass cage. Superman brings a lead box containing
some Green Kryptonite, and uses it to lure the Metal-Eater back from the
steel foundation. When it emerges, the Metal-Eater heads for the
Kryptonite thrown by the Man of Steel into the glass cage. The Man of
Steel rivets a metal plate in the floor, while the Girl of Steel fuses
the hole in the glass cage with her x-ray vision. After leaving the
Fortress of Solitude, Supergirl decides to carry out her plan for
Kryptonite immunity, and will wait for the half-term recess week to
begin. During recess week, Linda uses her telescopic-vision to see that
the Kryptonite meteor has not been moved by the rangers.

Supergirl heads for the forest, where she plans to conduct her experiment
in secret, and somehow manage to get the meteor into a nearby cave. The
Maid of Might lifts up a section of grassy sod to create a slope, and
rolls the Kryptonite meteor into the cave. She enters the cave and sees
that the meteor is at the far side of the cavern. On the outer fringe of
the radiation, the Girl of Steel bears it for as long as she can. A
stalactite is used to mark the spot where she first felt weak, and the
following day, Supergirl finds that she is able to get closer. Her
cousin checks in on her progress with his telescopic-vision, and sees how
the Girl of Steel is able to approach the meteor.

Days pass, with Supergirl halfway to her goal, and with enough
super-strength to smash a stalagmite. At three-quarters of the way, her
super-breath is able to blow away the surrounding boulders. Superman
sees that his cousin's x-ray vision has not been affected by the meteor.
At the Fortress, the Man of Steel sees that the second Metal-Eater is
sad, and he tries to cheer her up by feeding her some gold. Later, when
Superman super-bores underground for some ancient fossils, he comes
across a tunnel which he doesn't recall making. He meets with another
Kryptonite meteor in the cavern and becomes weak.

The rock walls prevent him from using his super-breath to blow the meteor
away, and his x-ray vision is now too weak to melt it. His super-powers
are gone. The Girl of Steel is now able to touch the meteor, and feel
only the slightest pain. Using her x-ray vision, she sees her cousin's
predicament, and flies for his location. Since Kryptonite radiation
cannot harm her, it should be a simple matter for Supergirl to save him.
Now in the cavern, she becomes weak, and loses her super-powers.
Superman now knows what must have happened.

He tells his cousin to train her x-ray vision with his on a vein of gold.
She wonders how doing this will save them from the radiation. The Man
of Steel knows that Gold is number 79 in the atomic table of elements,
and Lead is number 82. Since their atomic structure is similar, his plan
should work. Their dual x-ray vision has worked as an atomic ray, and
turned the gold atoms into lead atoms to stop the Kryptonite radiation.
Now free from their trap, Superman is about to explain to his cousin what
had happened with her experiment. At the cave, the Girl of Steel is able
to touch the meteor, but she is told to use her x-ray vision. Within the
thin shell of Kryptonite, there is a Metal-Eater, and he must have bored
his way in from the rear.

When the Man of Steel came across the tunnel, his x-ray vision saw the
veins of metal ore along the way. The Metal-Eater had made his way
through the ores, and found the Kryptonite meteor. As it nibbled its way
into the meteor, the less radiation was emitted, and this was how
Supergirl was able to get closer to it. Since there's only two
Metal-Eaters in the glass cage, the Girl of Steel wonders where this one
came from. At the Fortress of Solitude, Superman reunites the
Metal-Eater with its parents, and tells his cousin how the female must
have laid an egg while it was away from its cage. That evening at
Midvale Orphanage, Linda finishes her diary entry about the Kryptonite
immunity plan which laid an egg.

This story was reprinted in Superman Family #167 (October - November,
1974).

At Midvale Orphanage, Linda Lee aids her fellow orphans with their
kite-flying and their roller skating.

In this retelling of Krypton's destruction, Kal-El's rocket has got a
window for the baby to see what happened to his planet, and the unnamed
Argo City looks something like the Astrodome of Space.

Leave it to Zor-El to foil the Kryptonite from grounding their future.

It's strange that Superman didn't use his x-ray vision to follow the
cross tunnel at a safe distance, and avoid the Green Kryptonite trap.

Only the Man of Steel and the Girl of Steel can turn gold into lead.

The Metal-Eater is an orange reptile and looks like a turtle without its
shell.

Steve Chung
"Supergirl's Greatest Review!"

Action Comics #252: "The Supergirl From Krypton!"

Action Comics #252
"The Supergirl From Krypton!"
May, 1959

Story: Otto Binder
Art: Al Plastino

As everyone knows, the Man of Steel arrived on Earth in an experimental rocket ship when he was an infant! Superman has always thought he was the only survivor of the late planet, Krypton! Fate has dealt him a strange twist! The Man of Steel's loneliness is over with the arrival of a new member of the "Superman Family!" "The Supergirl From Krypton!" Great Guns! Superman seems to see a flying young girl, wearing a super-costume similar to his own! It can only be an illusion! Supergirl tells her cousin to look again, because she is very real! One day at the Metropolis Daily Planet, mild-mannered reporter Clark Kent's super-hearing picks up a roaring sound from outside of town! Using his telescopic vision, Clark sees a guided missile about to crash! With a human passenger on board, he knows this is a job for Superman!

Shedding his outer garments, the Man of Steel is grateful there is no one else in the office, and hopes he has enough time to reach the rocket in time! Even with his super-speed, Superman is too late! It traveled at greater speed than any known rocket on Earth! It reminds him of the rocket that brought him to Earth when he was an infant! He had survived the crash because he was from Krypton, a heavy gravity planet! In Earth's lesser gravity, he gained invulnerability and super-powers! Whoever was inside the rocket could not have survived! The Man of Steel is in for a super-shock when he meets the young girl who is invulnerable like him! She is also from Krypton, but could not have been born when Krypton exploded long ago! Why is she wearing a super-costume like his? How does she know who he is? How can she speak English so well? The young girl tells Superman her story as her parents told it to her! When Krypton exploded, he was not the only Kryptonian to escape the planet's destruction...

A large piece of the planet was hurled away into space, saving them from the explosion! Among the survivors was a scientist named Zor-El... With a large bubble of air over their city and a fully functional food machine, they could survive indefinitely! Their joy was short-lived when the evening came... and the ground emitted a greenish glow! The nuclear explosion has transformed their planetary chunk into Kryptonite, a deadly radioactive element that could destroy them in time! Zor-El had a roll of sheet metal in his laboratory and had the others cover the entire ground around their homes! It would enable them to survive, safe from the deadly Kryptonite rays! Years later, Zor-El married and the couple had a daughter! Kara could grow up in safety as long as the lead shield beneath their community warded off the Kryptonite radiation! Now a young girl, Kara and her father run into the house when a meteor shower smashes holes in the lead shielding, releasing the deadly Kryptonite radiation!

Zor-El raced against time to construct a space rocket! They have a month before the Kryptonite radiation poison their air! Before that deadly hour, the experimental rocket would send their daughter to another planet! Zor-El's wife uses the super-space telescope to find a civilized planet where Kara can grow up in safety! After examining several worlds, Kara's mother found an amazing phenomenon on Earth... Their space radio is used to decipher the native language! Metropolis was honoring the Man of Steel, who came from the planet Krypton! Since he gained super-powers in Earth's lesser gravity, so would Kara! Kara's mother made her daughter a special costume... Once on Earth, it would become indestructible super-cloth! Zor-El announces the space rocket is completed and Kryptonite radiations are filling the air! Once in the rocket, Kara's course is set for Earth, and she is now an orphan of space!

As Kara Zor-El finishes her tragic story, the Man of Steel tells her about having the same thing happen to him when his father, Jor-El, sent him in an experimental space rocket! Kara realizes that Jor-El is her father's brother! Great Scott! Kara and Superman are... cousins! This is the happiest moment in the Man of Steel's life, to discover he has a living relative from his homeworld! They may be orphans, but they have each other now! He will take care of Kara like a big brother! When his cousin asks if she can come and live with him, Superman realizes his secret identity might be jeopardized! He has an idea for Kara's life on Earth! First, they will see if she can fly! Kara has got super-powers like her cousin! In his youth, he was honored as Superboy in Smallville! Kara will gain her fame as Supergirl, the Girl of Steel! Kara will need much practice before she can use her super-powers properly. In the meantime, Midvale Orphanage will be her home!

Kara will be needing a secret identity! Her cousin will bring her some Earth clothes for a disguise! Now wearing a wig of pigtails, Kara looks like an entirely different girl! As they prepare to register her in the orphanage, Kara has already used her super-hearing for a good Earth-girl name... Linda Lee! Lana Lang was his girlfriend when he was Superboy, and Lois Lane became his girlfriend when he became Superman! By coincidence, his cousin has picked the same initials of L.L.! The Man of Steel brings the disaster survivor to the orphanage... Miss Hart, the headmistress shows Linda to her room! Superman promises Kara one day the entire world will learn of her existence as Supergirl! Until then, she will live a quiet life as an ordinary girl until she is used to earthly things!

With Midvale Orphanage overcrowded, Linda is given her own room... Now alone, Linda uses her super-powers to straighten the iron leg of her cot! She also uses her super-breath to blow the dust out of her room! The heat of her x-ray vision fuses a cracked mirror smooth once more! Linda also uses her x-ray vision to see the other orphans and hopes she can make friends with all of them! From now on, Earth is her home! When everyone else is asleep, Linda changes to Supergirl, and looks over her new town! No one will see her in the dark, so she is not disobeying her cousin!

The Girl of Steel is now on secret patrol of Midvale! She likes the small town and hopes to be able to do super-deed without being seen, as a kind of guardian angel! A movie theatre is now showing old time historical films of Superboy in Smallville! Kara is proud of the acclaim her cousin has earned throughout his life! Will she be able to do as good a job as Supergirl? What will the future hold for her?

This story was reprinted in Superman Annual #1 (1960).

Otto Binder was no stranger to stories about super-powered relatives, having written the Marvel Family for Fawcett Comics.

Experimental Kryptonian rockets favor the classic purple and green color scheme.

Kryptonian convicts survived their planets destruction because they were serving their sentence in the eerie twilight dimension known as the Phantom Zone.

Al Plastino's Supergirl is perky in appearance and has a hairstyle reminiscent of Audrey Hepburn.

Black Canary is another example of a super-heroine who uses a wig to disguise her appearance.

The street of homes which survived Krypton's destruction was known as Argo City.

Prior to Krypton's destruction, Kandor was shrunk down and stolen by Brainiac.

The Man of Steel favors the Wayne Boring method of flying as if he were running in mid-air.

Steve Chung
"The Supergirl From Review!"

Action #359, "People vs. Superman!"

ACTION COMICS #359; Feb. 1968; DC Comics (National Periodical Publications); Mort Weisinger, editor (E. Nelson Bridwell as assistant editor at this time but not credited in indicia of this issue); cover-featuring ""The Case of the People Vs. Superman!" The cover is by Neal Adams, who was just starting his run as DC's go-to guy for covers. It depicts Superman sitting on the witness stand in court as a tearful little girl points the finger at him, literally; "That's HIM! He's the man who KILLED my Daddy!" (This scene does not, incidentally, appear in the interior story.)
Review by Bill Henley. Some time ago I reviewed the previous issue, Action 358, in which Superman is charged with murder. I didn't have this follow up issue then. Now I do, so I guess I'll review it, just in case anyone is still on tenterhooks over whether Supes beat the rap or went to the electric chair (well, for him it would have had to be the Kryptonite chair.)
The story is written by Leo Dorfman and pencilled by Curt Swan with inks by Pete Costanza. On the splash page, a grieving widow throws a sympathy wreath in Superman's face. "YOU KILLED MY HUSBAND! Get away from me, MURDERER!"
On a "bleak day in Metropolis Cemetery," mourners gather for the funeral of Ron Noble, upstanding Metropolis citizen who agreed to an exhibition "boxing match" for charity-- and wound up dead from Superman's punch! Or did he? "Lurking nearby is Dr. Frost, the notorious underworld scientist," who boasts to a cohort about how the late Mr. Noble was really a gang leader who cooperated in a scheme to frame Superman. But Frost doublecrossed Noble; what was supposed to be a suspended animation pill to feign Noble's death was actually poison! Now, not only is Superman up on charges, but the ignoble Noble is really dead and Frost has taken over his rackets! When Superman (who is apparently out on bail) shows up, "Doc Frost" departs, but not before making a "big slip"-- accidentally dropping a small capsule to the ground. Superman spots it and curiously picks it up, intending to check if it is an illegal drug. However, his real business here is to try to make amends with the widowed Mrs. Noble. Forget it; she dashes his wreath in his face, shouting "Murderer!" Nobody among the assembled mourners believes the death was an accident, as Superman claims. (They should, actually. It may be plausible enough to believe Supes misjudged his strength and delivered a fatal blow, but what motive would he possibly have had to purposely kill the supposedly upstanding citizen Noble?). A cop orders Superman to leave and slips in a verbal knife; "The crowd's getting ugly, and who knows what might happen! Especially since you obviously can't control your super-powers!"
Soon afterwards, Earl Barton, "famed TV writer-lawyer" who retired from active practice after an accident confined him to a wheelchair, receives an appeal to resume his career as defense attorney. His client; Superman! (At the time this story appeared, Raymond Burr was starring on TV as wheelchair-bound detective "Ironside". Earlier, of course, Burr played infallible defense attorney Perry Mason. Sounds like the character of Earl Barton was intended as a meld of these two characters. He's not drawn to look like Burr, but I wonder if maybe the script originally called for Barton to resemble Burr and Weisinger vetoed the idea for fear of legal problems.). Barton accepts the job and assures Superman that acquitting him will be "a cinch," but inwardly he's not so sure; "Who am I kidding? I'll need every courtroom trick I know to get him off the hook!"
Meanwhile, Metropolis district attorney Alonzo Kroll holds a press conference and addresses reporters, including Jimmy Olsen, with stirring words; "There is no special code of justice for Superman! Whether he is a hero or a hoodlum, I will prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law!" But a look at Kroll's inward thoughts tells us that his motives are less than pure; he hopes that the fame of convicting Superman will propel him to higher elected office, even to the Presidency. (Actually, I figure convicting the beloved Superman and ending his mission of protecting Metropolis, would just as likely be a ticket to political oblivion as to the White House. Better, in my opinion, if the D.A. Character had been written as an honest man reluctantly doing his duty.)
The trial begins with jury selection, which is a tough task since so many potential jurors are prejudiced in Superman's favor, such as a carnival owner who is grateful to Supes for saving his Ferris wheel and its passengers from being toppled in a windstorm. Another rejected juror is Bruce Wayne, who is known to be a friend of Batman who is Superman's partner. (What's Bruce Wayne, who lives in Gotham City, doing on a Metropolis jury panel? And considering that he really is Batman, the world's greatest detective, shouldn't he be helping look for clues to prove his buddy's innocence? But I'm reminded of a neat story that appeared in one of the cartoon-based "Batman Adventures" comic books. Bruce Wayne does serve on a Gotham jury and, when asked to state in court whether he has any aliases, he says, "I'm Batman". He has to-- he's under oath to tell the whole truth! Fortunately, everyone thinks it's a bad joke and he only he's chided by the judge for disrespect.)
As the trial of Superman starts, DA Kroll tries to prove that Supes is a "conceited super-egotist" and "reckless bully". He cites honors given to Superman, such as the naming of a new element "Supermanium" and the issue of Superman coins and stamps by foreign nations, as signs of Superman's super-egotism, implying that Supes performs his super-deeds only to receive such plaudits. Kroll even calls Jimmy Olsen to the stand against Superman! Reluctantly, Jimmy presents photos of two of Superman's less illustrious feats; he wrecked the launching of a satellite and wrecked the Army's proving grounds for advanced weapons with a tornado created by super-breath. Jimmy insists that in both cases Supernan ran amuck only under the influence of Red Kryptonite. But DA Kroll sneers at Red K as a "convenient alibi".
Superman reassures Jimmy that he doesn't blame him for testifying, but then his girlfriend Lois Lane is called as a hostile witness. (See, Supes, you should have married her after all. Then she couldn't be forced to testify against you.) Lois tells how Superman once deflected a "mysterious nuclear weapon" from Earth but a detonation of the device in space killed a spaceship full of aliens. Under cross-examination, Lois explains that the aliens turned out to be condemned murderers on their own world and that anyway, it was an accident. But Kroll points out that Superman didn't know the aliens were criminals, and that he still broke his code against killing.
Superman doesn't do himself any good when he himself is called to the stand. Incensed by Kroll's badgering, he pounds the arm of his witness chair-- and shatters it! Just the sort of "accident" that supposedly killed Noble.
With everything going against him, Superman makes an unorthodox proposal to the judge. By enclosing the judge and jury in a giant bubble and carrying them into space to overtake light rays that have left Earth, he can enable the court to witness the death of Ron Noble for themselves! This doesn't help much at first, as what defense attorney Barton describes as a "powder-puff punch", the DA insists is a killer punch that caused Noble to collapse and die instantly. But observing the scene with his super-vision, Superman spots a crucial clue-- at the moment Superman hit Noble, he (Noble) bit down on a small capsule he was holding in his teeth! Supes is able not only to match the capsule with the one he found in Metropolis Cemetery, but to detect the same fingerprint I each one! And so, Supes adopts a "new strategy" in court. The next day, he and Barton call a "surprise witness"-- Dr. Frost! Observing that Frost carries a bottle of capsules around with him, Barton demands that Frost swallow one in order to prove that they are harmless vitamin pills as he claims. When Frost refuses, Barton charges that they are really poison capsules and that one of them was the real cause of Noble's death. He seeks and finds a volunteer from the court audience to prove it-- Clark Kent! Despite Frost's shouted warning, "No! Don't, you fool!", Clark swallows the capsule-- and falls over, apparently dead!
Confronted with the fact that his warning indicated he knew the capsules were deadly, Dr. Frost breaks down in the best Perry Mason tradition and confesses all in open court- how he and the late Noble were both criminals plotting to frame Superman, and how he doublecrossed Noble to his death.
Frost thinks he has achieved some measure of revenge in that "your buddy, Kent" is dead! But Superman pulls out a vial of "revival gas" and brings the mild-mannered reporter back to life, explaining that he was in possession of the poison capsule long enough to concoct an antidote.
Later, after the case against Superman is dismissed, we learn that no antidote was really necessary, for Clark, who swallowed the poison, was Superman, and the "Superman" in court that day was really Batman in disguise. What would the judge say, Batman wonders, if he knew what was really going on? "Guilty of massive contempt of court" is probably what he'd say, but Supernan, mighty defender of law and order, doesn't care; "Does it matter? Justice came out on top!" Supes flies off to "pay his lawyer's fee", which in this case, rather than handing over cash, involves helping doctors perform an operation to help the crippled lawyer walk again. (Not that Barton seemed to do his client much good in court. He probably should have advised his client not to testify in that breakable chair.)
I don't remember if lawyer Bob Ingersoll ever made this story the subject of one of his "Law is a Ass" columns in The late lamented CBG, but if he did, he must have made a real hash of it. Myself-- as I think I said when I reviewed part 1-- I think it would have been a lot more interesting story if it had confronted the real possibility of Superman accidentally killing someone, and left the readers, and Superman himself, in a little more doubt what really happened.
The "Metropolis Mailbag" letters page contains a few familiar names. Martin Pasko, future writer of Superman and much else, inquires about the name of the "great" new cover artist and is told its Neal Adams. Dave Cockrum suggests that Supergirl's hairstyle is "unattractive" and she needs a new 'do. (When he went to work for DC some years later, Cockrum missed the chance to redesign Supergirl, but instead provided a mass makeover for the Legion of Super-Heroes and then, at Marvel, the X-Men.) And Tony Isabella, whose name rings a bell from somewhere, praises "The Annihilator," a recent villain, as a worthy addition to Superman's skimpy roster of bad guys (but I don't think the Annihilator ever reappeared).
"The Super-Initiation of Supergirl" is written by Otto Binder (nearing the end of his long comics writing career-- I see that his last DC story was in Action #377) and is the first Supergirl story to be drawn by Kurt Schaffenberger, following Jim Mooney's defection to Marvel. While checking on a malfunctioning Linda Danvers robot, Supergirl encounters a girl named Joan who is tied to a tree and being attacked by a swarm of angry hornets! It's all part of an initiation hazing by Stanhope College's "secret sorority," Xi-Pi-Hi-Fi. After rescuing the girl, Supergirl resolves to bring down Xi-Pi-Hi-Fi. But instead of simply informing on them to the college administration, she decides to "teach them a lesson" a different way. Supergirl invades Xi's secret clubhouse and demands to be initiated into the group herself! If she's blackballed, then she'll expose Xi to the Dean. The leaders of the sorority agree on condition that they be allowed to devise special "initiation tests" for the Girl of Steel. (Getting spanked with a Kryptonite paddle?) But the leader Sonya has a secret plan to thwart Supergirl by figuring out who-- out of three Stanhope co-eds with the right physical measurenents-- is Supergirl's secret identity.
The first initiation test is for Supergirl to write the entire US Constitution on a blackboard in 10 seconds. With super-recall and super-speed, this is easy enough_ but Supergirl spots the Xi girls checking handwriting samples and deduces their scheme. She thwarts the scheme by writing in shorthand.
The next test is for Supergirl to squeeze a lump of coal into a large diamond. The Xi girls cluster around to admire it, but Supergirl realizes they are really checking it for fingerprints. Again, she thwarts the scheme by surreptitiously changing Linda Danvers' prints on her college record.
Nonetheless, the "female finks" have zeroed their suspicions in on Linda Danvers, and so their final demand is for Supergirl to pick up Linda and fly her around the campus three times! Ordinarily the simple solution would be for Supergirl to activate her Linda robot, but the robot is on the blink- it's legs aren't working though it can use its arms. But when she sees a girl studying near the robot's hollow-tree hiding place, Supergirl has a "brainstorm". Shortly, Supergirl flies around campus looking for Linda Danvers, and the Xi girls gloat as she is seemingly unable to find the girl who is actually herself! But then Supergirl spots Linda, and asks her to take a ride as she tests a "new flying maneuver". And so the Xi girls watch in frustration as Supergirl meets their final test without exposing her identity.
Returning "Linda" to the robot's hiding place, Supergirl has the robot remove the Linda wig and cancel the hypnotic spell which caused an unknowing girl to impersonate Linda. Still under a post-hypnotic spell of forgetfulness, she thinks she has just dozed off while studying in the woods. (But kind of a high-handed use of an unknowing and unconsenting person in Supergirl's scheme. Legally, it might even have been kidnapping. And what if something went wrong, such as a sudden super-villain attack, while Supergirl was flying around with her?)
To complete the comeuppance of Xi-Pi-Hi-Fi, Supergirl, now an official member, insists on joining a club barbecue. But in the guise of "helping," she burns the hot dogs to charcoal with heat vision and blows smoke in the girls' faces. "I get it! You're joining our group so you can SPOIL our kicks with your super powers! Looks like WE'VE been SUPER-HAZED!" They agree to disband Xi-Pi-Hi-Fi, and even present the failed pledge Joan with a necklace with a gold hornet charm. While showing off the necklace to Linda, Joan asks if it was fun for her to fly around campus with Supergirl. "Er... Like Thrillsville, Joan!"

Brave & Bold #63 (Supergirl & Wonder Woman)

BRAVE AND THE BOLD #63; DC Comics; Dec. 1965-Jan. 1966; George Kashdan, 
editor; featuring Supergirl and Wonder Woman in "The Revolt of the  Super-Chicks!"
On the cover by Jim Mooney (Supergirl's regular artist at  the time),
Supergirl is trying to halt a hurtling missile, but Wonder Woman is  fastened to a
nearby flying disk and her body is emitting Kryptonite rays which  are making
Supergirl distinctly queasy.  Down in the corner of the cover, a  mushy-faced
figure is boasting, "MULTI-FACE talking!  I've turned WONDER  WOMAN into a
KRYPTONITE BOOBY-TRAP!  She'll be the death of SUPERGIRL  yet!"  And the cover
caption promises, "IT'S THE LIVING END!  TWO  SUPER-CHICKS ON A NEW KICK! 
SUPERGIRL-- A PARIS MODEL!  WONDER  WOMAN-- THE TOAST OF THE JET SET!"   

Review by Bill  Henley (toast of the rubber-band-airplane set)

The interior story is  written by Bob Haney, the regular B & B teamup writer,
and drawn by John  Rosenberger, according to the Great Comicbook Database.  B
& B was  notable at this point for using a variety of artists, some of whom
rarely if  ever worked on other DC superhero titles.  Rosenberger a few years
earlier  had been one of the main artists on Archie Comics' THE FLY and THE
JAGUAR.   Later on he would draw a number of Lois Lane stories for her title and
SUPERMAN  FAMILY.  This issue was also of note for being the first B & B
teamup--  and one of the few ever-- to feature a "Superman Famiily" character as
one of  the partners.  Evidently the obviousness of teaming up Supergirl and WW,
the two most powerful and prominent DC heroines, overcame Mort Weisinger's
well  known reluctance to allow any of "his" characters to be handled by any
other  editorial hands.

On the splash page, in separate scenes, Supergirl and WW  are both enjoying
the good life, female style, in "beautiful, glittering,  romantic Paris!" 
Supergirl is modeling a white floor-length evening gown  with elbow-length gloves
and pearl necklace, and as male onlookers utter French  endearments, she 
sneers at a mental image of her more usual self; "To  think I once wore that silly
costume and cape...NOW look at me!"  Likewise,  Wonder Woman is on a dance
floor being kissed by a handsome man, and wearing a  fashion gown (though she
stilll has on her Amazon tiara).  "When I wore  that frumpy Amazon outfit,
nothing like this ever happened to me!"  On a  "cockleshell" boat somewhere out in
the ocean, two lovers are stranded and  adrift, and things are about to get
worse for them, as a storm is ready to blow  up.  But the storm is man-made, as
the couple are movie stars shooting a  film on location, and the director on
shore nearby orders a giant fan to be used  to create wind and waves.  When the
fan goes out of control, it appears the  mock film tragedy may turn real, as
the small boat with the two stars is blown  through the air.  "Twenty million
bucks worth of talent-- gone with the  wind!", the director bemoans.  But
fortunately for the stars and Magna  Productions, Supergirl is happening by on
patrol, and she flies down to rescue  the boat and its famous occupants and carry
them ashore.  The Girl of Steel  is miffed, though, when the movie crew and
onlookers cluster around the stars,  particularly the leading lady, and ignore
her, the heroine of the  incident.  "I rescue the two most famous, valuable
stars in the world, and  all anybody can think of is her!  No wonder...she's all
woman....all  FEMALE!"  Looking at her image in the water, Supergirl is
suddenly  disgusted with her "loud costume" and her career of battling "grimy 
crooks".  She wants to "live the life of a normal, real, human girl" and  "be
feminine, desirable, adored by men".  (Uh, Supergirl, if you really  think the
typical "life of a normal, real, human girl" involves being a movie  star "adored
by men,", I'm sure a lot of normal, real, human girls would be glad  to
disabuse you of the notion....)  The news is flashed around the world  that
Supergirl has announced she is abandoning her super-heroine career, and  soon,
college student Linda Lee Danvers (in her demure schoolgirl clothes and  brown wig,
scarcely more glamorous than Supergirl's super-costume) receives a  visit from
her cousin Superman, who wants to dissuade her.  "You're simply  not like
other girls!  You can't escape your duty-- your destiny... the  responsibility of
using your great powers for mankind's benefit!"  But  Linda/Supergirl is
unmoved; she's determined that "that square chick, Supergirl,  is going out to
find glamor and romance-- something every girl needs!"   When Supes persists, she
gets downright cruel; "You sound like a stuffed shirt,  Superman!  What do
you know about women....how they feel...what they really  need?  You may be a
great hero-- but in the romance department-- well, just  ask Lois Lane!" 
Superman can only mumble, "Why...uh....ulp....I-- I'm very  FOND of girls....
I....uh...."  (Yeah, Supes, you better watch out, or Doc  Wertham may turn his
attention away from your friend Batman to you.)  As a  parting shot, Linda reveals
that her foster parents have given her permission to  take a year off from
college and are sending her on a trip to Paris.

But  Superman hasn't given up, and if he doesn't understand women, he'll find
someone  who presumably understands both women and super-heroics-- his JLA
comrade,  Wonder Woman.  He flies over Paradise Island (careful not to unleash 
disaster by actually "setting foot" on the female-only isle) where he is
spotted  by Wonder Woman, Wonder Girl (here, as in TEEN TITANS, Haney and editor
Kashdan  seem to think WG is a younger sister of WW) and their mother Queen 
Hyppolita.  Wonder Woman glides into the air to find out what Superman  wants,
and he explains how "Supergirl has forsaken the crime-fighting life to  seek
romance and glamor."  "Why, that foolish, giddy teen-ager!  She  can't do that! 
Super-heroines have a duty, a responsibility, a..."   "Uhh, that's what I
said!", Superman replies, and he begs WW to use her  "knowledge of female
psychology" to persuade Supergirl to change her mind.   WW eagerly agrees; "You bet I
will, Superman!" 

Arriving in Paris,  even WW is momentarily swayed by its romantic aura-- "If
only Steve were  here!"--but, "What am I saying!  I've got a job to do!" 
Trailing the  Giddy Teenager of Steel to an establishment called Anatole's, WW
finds her  modeling evening gowns for an admiring male audience, and then catches
one of  the admirers kissing Supergirl in the dressing room.  Ordering him
out, WW  accuses Supergirl of abandoning her duties to fall in with a "gigolo". 
But  she is distracted in mid-lecture by the sight of Supergirl's rack of 
high-fashion gowns, and when SG offers her the loan of one that would fit her, 
she agrees to do so, "just for fun, of course."  WW is dazzled by the sight 
of herself in the gown, but a mustachioed Latin-lover type named Andre Count De
Tour is even more dazzled, grabbing WW and smothering her with kisses.  And 
as she gazes into the Count's eyes, WW dizzily reflects, "Steve Trevor never 
kissed me like that.... I mustn't let this happen...this wonderful, delicious
thing... I'm WONDER WOMAN....wonder woman...."  It's not long before WW's 
superheroic duties are forgotten, as she tours Paris on the Count's arm.   But
the Count wants them to be "absolutely alone" together, and he has just the 
place in mind,  "a little isle in the sea-- Ile d'Amour!"  Curiously, 
Supergirl's own blond, beret-clad lover has exactly the same suggestion.   And on that
very Ile D'Amour, a a scientist informs a mysterious "Leader" that  something
called "Operation Armageddon", which will stagger the world, is now  ready to
start....

In Part 2 of "Revolt of the Super-Chicks", Supergirl  and the Count arrive at
the Isle of Love by boat, while Supergirl and her beau  approach from the
other direction by plane.  Each heroine idly wonders what  has become of the
other, but both are too distracted by their glimpse of glamor  to care much.  "But
both super-chicks are unaware that the Isle of Love is  also the secret
headquarters of a fantastic criminal character known only  as...MULTI-FACE!" 
Multi-Face, we learn, is thought dead in a prison  escape, but actually gained in a
freak accident the "ability to change my  features into any face, human or
animal, to suit my mood or purpose!"  His  current plan is to "strike at the
rocket freighters carrying precious cargos  over this island",  A plan which may
be stymied by the arrival on the  island-- reported to him by his spies-- of
two famous super-heroines, even if  neither is acting very heroic at the
moment.  "I cannot scare THEM away--  but perhaps I can INDUCE them to leave by
jeopardizing their male  escorts!"  Meanwhile, Wonder Woman's male escort,
whispering sweet nothings  in her ear, says he sees her as "at heart a truly frail,
feminine  creature!"  When a nearby drawbridge threatens to fall and injure
Andre, WW  has to perform a split-second superfeat while Andre has his eyes
closed to kiss  her, in order to avoid ruining her "weak and feminine" image. 
Similarly,  when falling boulders threaten Supergirl's French swain while they are
cavorting  on the beach, the Beach Bunny of Steel diverts his attention with
a wild  beachball toss and catches the boulders in midair-- then further
distracts him  by leaping into his arms in feigned fright at the sight of a small
crab.   Little do our reluctant heroines know that both threats have been
engineered by  Multi-Face and his agents.  Multi-Face sends his agents out to
create more  perils to distract Supergirl and WW.  Spotting a burning ship
offshore,  Wonder Woman manages to fix her lover's attention on an impromptu
performance of  "Cyrano de Bergerac" while she glides out to douse the fire by creating
a  waterspout.  However, "This is just so un-feminine-- and certainly doesn't
do a girl's hairdo any good!"  And still on the beach, Supergirl spots a 
plane about to crash, and sends her beau off to retrieve a lost beach towel 
while she flies up to restart the plane's engines with a blast of  super-breath. 
But returning to the island, she notes the complex of  buildings in the
isle's center and the"weird man" running it.  Then a cargo  rocket passes over the
island-- and is pulled off course by a magnetic beam  emanating from the
mysterious island installation.  And now the Chick of  Steel faces a dilemma.  Will
she keep her resolve to "give up being a  Supergirl who spends her life
battling crime", or will she "kiss romance goodbye  and wade into battle" against a
"fantastic hijacking scheme"?

In Part 3,  Supergirl decides to rescue the rocket, but she's not quite ready
to give up her  dream romance yet, so she makes sure her lover Henri is
trapped on a small ledge  while retrieving her towel before she flies on her
mission.  "Oh, if only  there were someone else here for this job!"  There is, but
she's not any  more enthusiastic either-- Wonder Woman sees Supergirl
struggling with the  runaway rocket, and decides she must help, but she persuades Andre
to jump into  the island castle's moat to retrieve a flower for her, knowing
he will have  trouble climbing back out.  Changing into her unfashionable but
functional  star-spangled bathing suit, WW prepares to go to Supergirl's aid,
but Multi-Face  sends a "strange disk" rolling after her from his nerve
center.  Suddenly  she finds herself helplessly held to the magnetic disk by her
metal Amazon  bracelets, and she is brought into Multi-Face's lab, where the bad
guy proceeds  to turn her from Supergirl's would-be ally into a weapon against
her, by  showering her helpless body with liquid Green Kryptonite. 
Multi-Face sends  the disk flying after Supergirl, who is still trying to stop the
runaway cargo  missile, and the Green K rays emanating from Wonder Woman quickly
weaken  her.  Supergirl realizes that WW gave up her own romance in order to
come  to her aid-- "I guess neither of us could escape being super-heroines!"--
but  will Multi-Face's scheme eliminate both of them?  Desperately, Supergirl 
uses her weakening heat vision to melt a load of gold bullion carried in the 
cargo rocket, causing it to drip down and cover Wonder Woman's body and block
the deadly Kryptonite rays.  (Funny, I always thought it was only lead that 
could stop Kryptonite rays, not gold.  And Supergirl is sure taking a  chance
on WW's degree of invulnerability to assume that a shower of molten gold 
won't do nasty things to her complexion and skin tone.)  The weight of the  gold
causes the flying disk to spin out of control and crash into Multi-Face's 
lab, and the impact of the crash frees WW from the magnetic grip on her 
bracelets as well as the coating of gold.  Leaping and spinning to the  attack, WW
punches out Multi-Face with a vengeance; "Time to punch your ticket,  you
romance-wrecker!"  Multi-Face's gang attacks WW with guns, but  Supergirl crashes
through the wall to stop them; "These characters didn't know  that Wonder Woman
and I are a double feature act!"  (I've owned this comic  for a while, but I
can't remember for sure if I actually read it before, and  while reading it this
time I kept expecting to learn that one or both of the  heroines' lovers were
Multi-Face in disguise.  But they weren't.  In  fact, Multi-Face never does
put his shape-changing ability to any good use in  the story, which makes one
wonder why Haney bothered to give it to him.  He  could have been any ordinary
scheming high-tech villain.)

After rounding  up Multi-Face's gang, Supergirl and WW realize their lovers
are each both still  stranded, but instead of trying to carry on their frail
flower act, they each  come to the rescue in their costumed identities and
reveal that their romances  must end because they cannot escape their destinies as
super-heroines.   Bidding a sad farewell to the Isle of Love and to love
itself, they fly back to  the U.S., where Superman thanks Wonder Woman for her
successful effort to bring  Supergirl back to her senses and her career as a
superhero.  Supergirl and  WW both wink at the reader-- and Superman folds his arms
with a skeptical look  on his face-- as Supergirl assures her cousin that WW
did, indeed, save her from  the awful fate of "living in Paris like a *sigh*
foolish, frivolous child!   Right, Wonder Woman?"  "Right, *sigh*, Supergirl!"

Also in the issue are a public service page, "Builders of the Future,"  about
the work of the United Nations organization UNESCO: a text page on "unsung 
heroines" such as Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell (the first American woman doctor) and
Susan B. Anthony; a house ad for the first appearance of Ultra the
Multi-Alien  in MYSTERY IN SPACE.  And also, oddly enough, a house ad for this selfsame
issue of BRAVE & BOLD.  ("They're BRAINY...they're BRAWNY... they're 
BEAUTIFUL... and they're the SWINGIN'EST SUPER-CHICKS you ever laid eyes on! Who 
else but SUPERGIRL and WONDER WOMAN!")  Apparently somebody in charge of 
slotting house ads on the pages didn't notice there wasn't much point in  promoting
an issue which presumably the reader has already bought and paid  for. 

Supergirl and Wonder Woman had one other Silver Age team-up, in WONDER  WOMAN
#177, which I reviewed on the list some time back.  It was a  transition
issue between the Kanigher/Andru/Esposito WW and the "new"  non-costumed WW, and
involved the two heroines both being kidnapped by an alien  conqueror and
forced to fight for the right to marry him.

World's Finest Comics #169

World's Finest Comics #169 (Sept 1967)

The cover by Curt Swan and George Klein depicted an unshaven, powerless Superman struggling to help Batman repair a broken-down Batmobile, as Supergirl and Batgirl hide behind a fence, gloating. It looks to me like another case of a cover being designed before the story was written, but judge for yourself.

"The Supergirl - Batgirl Plot"
Script: Cary Bates
Pencils: Curt Swan
Inks: George Klein

As the story opens, Supergirl is flying on patrol over an empty field somewhere between Stanhope College and Gotham City, when a huge cloud in the shape of a human hand appears out of nowhere and tries to grab her. Naturally, her own counterattacks pass through the gaseous creature with no effect, but when it catches her, the vapor is so intensely cold that it makes even her shiver.

At that moment, Gotham's newest crimefighter, the Dominoed Dare-doll, Batgirl, arrives on a Bat-Scooter. She tosses a chemical grenade at the giant fist, but it too has no effect, and the hand scoops her up as well. In desperation, Supergirl focuses her X-ray vision on the chemical residue from Batgirl's bomb. The X-rays alter the chemicals, somehow causing the cloud-hand to explode, and the two new friends congratulate one another on their teamwork.

Later that day, in their sorority house and library office respectively, Linda Danvers and Barbara Gordon watch a televised ceremony honoring Batman and Superman, as trophies of their past cases are placed into a time capsule to be launched into orbit for 500 years. They think, why shouldn't Supergirl and Batgirl get the same glory?

(What was the obsession with time capsules during the Silver Age? I can think of several more DC stories involving time capsules. Was this a fad that I missed in the sixties? Was there a fear that the commie hordes were going to wipe out all our museums and libraries, so that historical records had to be buried or launched into space to preserve them?)

The next day, Superman appears at a public ceremony to place the cornerstone of a new skyscraper -- that's already been built. As he shoves the stone into place, he pushes a bit too hard, and the tower begins to topple toward the crowd. Superman tries to fly up to catch it, but his powers suddenly and inexplicably vanish. Fortunately, Supergirl arrives at that moment to save the crowd. When her cousin's powers return moments later, the two fly off. Superman wonders what caused his powers to fail, and Supergirl thinks to herself that she was responsible, and that "this super-oaf" will soon be "as popular in Metropolis as an anteater in a flea circus."

That evening at Gotham's annual Fair of the Future, the Dynamic Duo corners a desperate criminal atop an atomic reactor. Robin tries to tackle the crook, but stumbles, allowing the fugitive to get him in a hammerlock. Batman thinks that "there's only one way to save Robin;" he drops to his knees and begs for Robin's life. The crook just laughs and throws the Boy Wonder down into the reactor -- but Batgirl arrives on the scene, rescues Robin with a Batrope, and subdues the criminal with a judo flip. Batman and Robin are both puzzled by Batman's compulsion to plead, and Batgirl thinks that "the gallant Caped Crusader will soon find out that his troubles are only beginning!"

A series of similar events over the next few days cause the World's Finest Team to suspect that their female counterparts are somehow behind their troubles, and note that Batgirl is still an unknown quantity. "Holy alter-ego!" Robin comments. "She might be a criminal... maybe even an alien!" Meanwhile, Batgirl and Supergirl, in a hidden cavern miles away, decide that "it's time for Step Two of Operation Take-Over!"

Batman and Robin, returning from an important case, find that the hidden entrance to the Batcave doesn't open as they approach. Parking the Batmobile outside, they enter Wayne Manor and take the elevator down to the cave, only to find it completely empty! At the same time, in the arctic, Superman finds his young cousin carrying his Fortress of Solitude away to a new location. When he confronts her, his powers disappear again, and he plummets into a snowdrift. Hours later, Batman and Robin, flying to the Fortress in the Batplane (which had been hangared somewhere outside the Batcave), spot Superman lying in the snow and give him a ride back to Metropolis. They wonder how Batgirl learned the Batcave's location and emptied it, and whether she is working with Supergirl or has super-powers herself.

The next day, the Dynamic Duo barges into the hideout of a criminal gang they'd been trailing, and makes short work of them. (Personal note: During this fight, Robin's mask somehow vanished from his face. The second letter I ever wrote to a comic was to point out this fact. Yes, I was an 8-year-old boo-boo hunter. The letter wasn't published, but I did receive a nice form letter on sage green paper, answering frequently-asked questions about the Superman Family.) As Batman ties up the gangsters, Robin goes out to the plane to radio Commissioner Gordon. When he doesn't return, Batman goes outside to find him and the plane gone without a sound -- and a Bat-Compact laying on the ground.

Later, Batman drives to Metropolis to find Superman at the side of the road, hitchhiking. His powers gone, his face covered with stubble, and his Clark Kent clothes missing, the Man of Steel had no other means of transportation. Batman drives Superman back to Gotham, planning to stop at Wayne Manor to pick up some things, but when he removes his mask to change to Bruce Wayne he finds that his face now resembles Curt Swan.

The heroes spend the night searching in vain for clues, when one of the Batmobile's supposedly blowout-proof tires gets a flat, and the car slams into a pole. In the scene from the cover, Superman struggles to pump up the tire while Batman notes that even the spare is flat. Suddenly, Supergirl and Batgirl step out from behind a fence and challenge their male counterparts to a showdown. Supergirl dares her cousin to catch her as she flies into space, and with a gesture she restores his powers and even makes his beard disappear. As he flies in pursuit, she hurls a meteor at him. He thinks she's gone crazy, but then his X-ray vision reveals that the meteor has a kryptonite core, making him wonder why she wasn't affected by it. He tosses another meteor at it, knocking it back at her, and it knocks her unconscious -- from the impact, not from the green K. He realizes that she couldn't be the real Supergirl, and surely enough, underneath a face mask and wig, she's really Black Flame, a Kandorian villainess who lost her powers years ago from gold K exposure.

Back on Earth, Batgirl pulls out a Bat-Whistle, which produces sonic vibrations that cause the sign on a tailor shop to break loose. The giant scissors that were part of the display pin Batman's cape to the ground; but he's still able to toss a Batarang, wrapping Batgirl up tight. He removes her mask, to find the face of Selina Kyle -- the Catwoman! ("Meow, Darling!")

Back in the Batcave, the heroes question the villainesses, now dressed in their own costumes. Black Flame explains that she invented a serum to restore her powers and give her immunity to kryptonite, though she was not as invulnerable as before. She used an enlarging spray to escape Kandor, and a brain command ring to make Superman think his powers were gone and that his and Batman's faces had changed, and Catwoman used a special variety of catnip to induce Batman's cowardice.

The next panel confuses me to this day. I think it only makes sense if Cary Bates assumed that the villainesses were still in disguise and Curt Swan jumped the gun by drawing them in their own costumes. If you have another explanation, please let me know: Batman asks, "Now where are the real Supergirl and Batgirl?" Superman interjects, "You mean this Batgirl is phoney, too?" Batman replies, "Of course! Batgirl's eyes are blue -- Catwoman's are green!" (Wasn't the fact that she's wearing a Catwoman costume enough of a giveaway?)

"The captive crime-chicks" take the heroes to their own cavern HQ, where Supergirl and Batgirl are shackled to chairs, Supergirl with kryptonite chains. Since Superman can't approach the green K, Batman steps forward to free them. But before he can touch them, a heat beam reduces them to ashes. Suddenly, the real Supergirl and Batgirl arrive, explaining that the mysterious cloud-hand carried them into another dimension and they've only just managed to escape. Supergirl used her heat vision to destroy the dummies in the chairs, because they were gimmicked to send Batman into that other dimension if he touched them.

"Suddenly, an amazing transformation..." as Black Flame and Catwoman change into Mr. Mxyzptlk and Bat-Mite! Bat-Mite declares that, since his hero Batman didn't fall into the trap, he has won their bet. But Mxyzptlk says that Batman would have fallen into the trap if Supergirl and Batgirl hadn't saved him, so Bat-Mite owes him 100 magic units. Bat-Mite concedes defeat, and writes out a check, which he signs with his real name to make it legal. Mxyzptlk reads, "Your name is Klt Pzy Xm?" and disappears into the fifth dimension. Bat-Mite explains that he only agreed to this bet so that he'd have a chance to trick Mxyzptlk back to his own dimension, and bids the heroes farewell, in what would turn out to be his last in-continuity appearance. (He would next be seen more that a decade later in Bob Rozakis's classic "Bat-Mite's New York Adventure.") "It's been fun!" he says as he leaves, and Batman replies, "As Robin might say, that kind of fun MITE drive us BATTY!"


"The Amazing Cube"
Script: George Kashdan
Art: Bernard Baily

The backup feature in World's Finest during this period was the Editors' Round Table, where different DC editors would choose favorite stories from the archives to reprint. This one first appeared in Tales of the Unexpected #9 (Jan 1957).

In a Las Vegas casino, gambler Harvey Hacker just lost his last dollar at the roulette table. As he's about to leave, he notices an odd-looking man at the craps table, asking for permission to use his own dice. The house decides to allow it after inspecting them and determining that they're not loaded. However, the player never loses while using them!

Harvey follows the stranger, hoping to figure out a way to learn his secret. Driving out of town, the stranger's car is wrecked as an "atomic station" explodes as he's driving past! The stranger begs Harvey to drag him away from the radiation, and Harvey agrees -- IF the stranger will tell him the secret of the dice. The stranger reveals that he carved them from a meteorite, and that he doesn't know why they always come up the way he wants them to. Harvey finds one of the dice, and concludes that the other one was destroyed in the explosion. Reneging on his agreement, he leaves the stranger to die with a casual "So long, sucker!"

Harvey drives home to his little shack, and locks the die in a metal strongbox, planning to have it analyzed by a chemist to see if in can be duplicated. In the middle of the night, he hears a noise. The cube has grown, and burst out of the strongbox. Not sure if he's awake or dreaming, Harvey carries the cube and locks it in a safe. But in the morning, as he drinks his coffee, the safe cracks open, and the cube is still growing! It's soon too big to fit through the doorway. Harvey grabs an axe and tries to chop it to pieces, but the axe breaks. Harvey runs out of the cabin just in time, as the cube fills the entire room, and soon breaks the house apart!

As Harvey wonders if it will ever stop, or just keep growing forever, a giant hand reaches down from above and lifts him into the air.

"What does it mean, Professor?" asks a scientist from the ruined atomic station. His colleague answers, "It seems that, somehow, the atomic radiation had an effect on this piece of carved meteor, making it temporarily give off rays that shrank everything near it!" Harvey drops to his knees and grabs his head as he realizes that the cube didn't grow any larger, but he's now stuck as a miniature man in a normal-sized world.