
This idea was quickly abandoned when the second Zeppelin attempting this approach nearly overturned.

This point at the top of the Empire State Building was originally intended as a docking point for airships. Thus firmly clinging to this piece of iron, Wonder Woman avoids certain death.

In this issue 122 of the series, the two authors continue to imagine adventures to Wonder Woman in New York. Under the direction of Robert Kanigher and Ross Andru, the Amazon queen achieves this feat after being chased by a flying saucer. “She is known only as Wonder Woman, but who she is, or whence she came from, nobody knows!” Presentation of Wonder Woman in All-Star Comic #8 in 1941 Wonder Woman on top of the Empire State BuildingĮighteen years after Wonder Woman‘s first appearance in the comic book universe, the reader finds her in a very bad way, hanging from the spire of the Empire State Building.

She is hanging from the spire of the Empire State Building, ready to fall into the void. Rose and Thorn came back in Superman #336 (June, 1979, by Len Wein and Curt Swan), and in two issues of Brave and the Bold ( #188 and #189, written by Kanigher, and art by Jim Aparo) with Batman.Wonder Woman is in trouble. Kanigher wrote most of the back ups (with Cary Bates writing a few), and other artists on the series included Gray Morrow, Dick Giordano, Rich Buckler and Don Heck by the back-ups end in Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane #130. This caused Rose to develop the split personality of the Thorn (hiding her short blond hair with a brown wig).and working to take the mobsters down, occasionally making a wild and wacky Lois Lane cover (and co-starring in the main feature).

Rose Forrest was a police detective's daughter, traumatized by the death of her dad at the hands of the 100 (an evil crime syndicate based in Metropolis). The second Rose and Thorn started in Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane #105 (October, 1970) in a story written by Kanigher, with art by Ross Andru (who had worked with Kanigher on Wonder Woman as well).
