Arthur Guy Empey wrote the bestselling WWI memoir, Over The Top. He was an American who volunteered and served with the British as a bomber and machine-gunner, wounded at the Somne. After the war, he wrote fiction, creating Terence O'Leary.
The sinking of the Lusitania seemed to the cause Empey, an American sergeant, volunteered with the British, and was soon living in the squalor of the trenches in France - lice, rats, mud and Germans trying to kill you for the cherry on top.
Empey was wounded in hand-to-hand combat with a bayonet, but survived. Then he was trained as a 'bomber' - not in a plane, but tossing fragmentation grenades. He was wounded at the Somme going 'Over the Top' - 17 of his 20 men unit died - and he laid in No Man's Land for a day+
Unfit for further military service, the US wouldn't take him, so he did the rounds as a speaker drumming up support for US intervention in the war. Turns out he was a mighty good speaker. The book came out in 1917 and sold well.
A silent film was made of the book in 1918, starring Empey - but no print of the film exists and it is only loosely based on the book anyway (mostly a melodrama). He made a faux paus in front of Pres Wilson when he said voluteers are real heroes, unlike draftees.
Empey had a career in the silent pictures but couldn't make the transition to talkies. His scifi stuff was of midling success.
You can read about Arthur Guy Empey, including his less savory aspects in articles like this.
More of these classic comic book ads.
(my original thread got broken, so attempting a patch)
This is from 1967 by Lucky Products. Looks like no game here, just the soldiers.
Go, capture the Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine!
Some of these were 3D, but others were very flat (Shipped in a footlocker indeed).
I've played many an hour playing games using cardboard tokens, so flat plastic seems fine.
Calling All Space Rangers!
From 1953! Over 70 ships and people, all made of space color plastic! Take command, Squadron Leader, of your Space Patrol! Use your cosmic ray neutralizer to defend against deadly cosmic rays (cc: Reed Richards)
There were only 2 issues, and they had completely different creative teams (even different editors). Done in familiar 70s Bronze Age horror style. The 3rd issue 'a crippled cougar' possibly permanently???
For credits for this and all entries, perhaps I'd do best just to point you to the GCD pages
Here it is for Cougar issue 1 comics.org/issue/28486/
Once a military secret, Private Snafu (voiced by Mel Blanc) was part of a multi-talent effort to train the military in WWII. These were intended for adults, about serious topics, despite looking like Looney Tunes to modern audiences.
There were different ideas about training films - are they like textbooks, serious and sober, or could serious and sober topics use humor, sex and other more or less juvenile aspects to open up heads. Frank Capra thought boring was bad.
Disney originally was asked to make training films, but wanted to own and market the character and was undercut by Warner Bros - who got the gig. Private Snafu (Situation Normal, All F'd Up) would be in 26 short training films (this is Booby Traps)
About 50 years ago, right before Thanksgiving, 1971, a man who gave his name as Dan Cooper successfully skyjacked a plane, bailing out with $200,000 - never to be seen again.
If you are an American and have never heard of the comic Dan Cooper, that is to be expected. It is a Franco-Belgian comic book, begun in 1954,mabout a Canadian fighter jock. I think it was in French and German, but not English.
Dan Cooper was likely sold in Canada as well as Europe. There is some thought that D.B Cooper encountered this comic book as inspiration for the nom de guerre.