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References to and Quotes about
U.S. Army

Captain America (vol. 1) #232 (Apr. 1979): "The Flame and the Fury", page 6, panel 4:
Captain America (hitching a ride on a cap): "I appreciate it! I don't have any money on me, or I'd..."
cab driver: "Naw! Forget it! Back in the Big One, you pulled my platoon out of a scrape withsome Panzers in Brittany! I been waitin' a long time to repay ya!"

Police Comics #1 (Aug. 1941): "Dewey Drip", page 58, panel 11:
Dewy Drip (upon receiving draft letter): "They pays spendin' money fo' feudin'? Yewnited States Army - har ah come!"

Police Comics #2 (Sep. 1941): "Super Snooper", page 18, panel 3:
radio announcer: "This looks bad folks, the convict is leading snooper across an Army bomb-testing field!"

The Savage She-Hulk #1 (Feb. 1980): "The She-Hulk Lives", page 2, panel 4:
Bruce Banner: "Jen, I'm a wanted man! The police are after me! The Army! Sometimes I think--the whole human race!"

Note: Meeting his cousin Jen Walters for the the first time in many years, Bruce Banner (secretly the Hulk) confides in her that the police and army are after him.

Uncanny X-Men (vol. 1) #435 (Early Feb. 2004): "Trial of the Juggernaut, Part 1 of 2", pages 2-3, panel 2:
She-Hulk [to Juggernaut]: "Your prior offenses include, but are not limited to... damage to Hulkbuster Base One, the destruction of U.S. Army property and the sinking of a mothballed liberty freighter in Suisun Bay, Benicia."

The Walking Dead #5 (Feb. 2004): "Days Gone Bye, Part 5", page 10, panel 5:
Dale: "After I buried her . . . I set out for Atlanta. I had some cousins there and the radio said it was the safest place nearby. Of course . . . When I got there it had already been blocked off and the army was still trying to fight back the hordes inside. I ended up out here."

The Walking Dead #6 (Mar. 2004): "Days Gone Bye, Part 6", page 7, panel 6:
Shane Walsh: "Think Rick! We'll be lost out there. The army is going to rive through here any day now with supplies and shelterand all this will just go away. I don't want to risk being out in the country... I don't want to risk being left behind!"

Writer's Block (2014), page 4:
Robert (describing his idea for a play): "So then the son writes an essay about it, and he wins the Nobel Peace Prize. But he's not content. The essay can't bring his father back. So he joins the army, and goes to Vietnam. And when he comes back, he's paralyzed. But he's still gay, and he's also paralyzed and he has PTSD."