Some day the workers will take possession of your city hall, and when we do, no child will be sacrificed on the altar of profit!
The first book that they gave me was Jeannie, a young teenager. I went on with her maybe ten books.
There were eleven publishers in New York City, and when it was all over, I think it went down to four or five, and then finally just the three of them, the Big Three.
Then he took me off Jeannie and he gave me Millie the Model. That was a big break for me. It wasn't doing to well and somehow when I got on it became quite successful.
I started working with Timely in 1946. Stan Lee hired me.
What made me want to go into doing comics was I was working as a laborer with my father, a gardener.
Once publishers got interested in it, it was a year in developing, and it was launched, I think, in 1960. But Willie Lumpkin didn't last long - it only last a little better than a year, maybe a year and a half.
I scarcely know the meaning of your question; much less can I answer it.
I grew up with nothing - I remember sometimes not having shoes.
Never think, because you cannot write a letter easily, that it is better not to write at all. The most awkward note imaginable is better than none.
If I am hungry, that is a material problem; if someone else is hungry, that is a spiritual problem.