EUR 5,60
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Zustand: Good. Ongepag. : ill. ; 25 cm. Dutch Verspreid door de Amerikaanse voorlichtingsdiensten. Washington, Jefferson, Whitman, Lincoln, Carver, Carnegie, Addams, Edison.
Verlag: General Dynamics, New York, 1957
Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
EUR 87,62
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbWraps. Zustand: Good. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Format is approximately 7.25 inches by 9.75 inches. Cover has wear. RARE surviving copy. "Industrial" comic book. Mr. M. Philip Copp, a commercial artist-turned-agent-turned-publisher, a Connecticut sailing man from the Ivy League (well, he attended both Princeton and Yale), who set out, quixotically, to win over the leaders of the American Establishment for the "juvenile delinquency"-inducing medium they were, at that very moment, condemning-- comic books. According to a Sept. 1956 profile of "industrial comics," which anointed Mr. Copp as the go-to guy for American Business Interests' comic needs, TAR, which was "largely devoted to the peacetime uses of the atom," was designed as a resource for those "interested in learning something about the fundamentals of atomic life." More than a year in the making, Copp farmed out the creation of the book to "no fewer than eleven free-lance artists and four writers. Oliver Townsend, a one-time aide to Gordon Dean (ex-Chairman of The Atomic Energy Commission) is credited with the "basic text," and Life's science editor Warren Young turned in the final script. TAR was the brainchild of John Hay Hopkins, the chairman of Groton-based Electric Boat, a WWII submarine manufacturer, which, under Hopkins' leadership, became General Dynamics. Hopkins turned General Dynamics from a shipbuilder to a diversified one-stop-shop for the Cold Warrior, and the atom was a major part of GD's offering. It built the Nautilus, the first nuclear submarine, and launched its General Atomic Division in 1955.