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Comanche Indian Veterans Association honors two Vietnam-era veterans with headstone placement Members of the Comanche Indian Veterans Association placed headstones at Cache Creek Cemetery west of Apache to honor two fallen veterans.

Comanche Indian Veterans Association honors two Vietnam-era veterans with headstone placement
www.kswo.com/2026/03/10/c...

#Oklahoma #Comanche

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The Boy Captives by Clinton L. Smith, Paperback | Pangobooks Save 70% or more on The Boy Captives by Clinton L. Smith buying from fellow readers on Pango. Explore new and used inventory or list your own books today!

A really interesting and rare memoir of two brothers, captured as youths and taken into Native American familes -- one into the Comanche, the other sold into service to the Apache. Both ended up in the household of their respective tribes' chiefs. #booksky #apache #comanche #rarebooks #history

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プラモ仲間からお届け物。もちろん予告無し😂
なんかもっさりひとまとめでどれも説明書無し、一目で分かる戦闘ヘリコプターのプラモ。
開いてみたら…
#ハセガワ #アパッチ #Apache

#タミヤ #イタレリ アパッチ

多分同イタレリ #コマンチ #comanche
の3セット

これは挑戦か?インチキしろと?
よかろう、受けて立つ

#プラモデル #プラモ #plamo
#インチキプラモ同好会

ハセガワの安心感すげぇな
説明書無くても取り付け場所が浮かんで見える。
尚、ヘリプラモ初心者(童貞ではない)

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💥 BACK ON THE MARKET! 💥
Chappell Creek Ranch
293± acres
Comanche Co, TX
csmandson.info/ChappellCreek

Scenic property with over a mile of Chappell Creek.

Charlie Middleton
806.786.0313

#csmandson #forsale #hunting #land #landforsale #ranch #ranchforsale #texasranch #comanche #followers

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"Comanche" by In This Moment
"Comanche" by In This Moment YouTube video by Alex Metz

youtu.be/-HrBTe5nAiE?...
#Comanche #apache I need ALL my tribes. All my diverse and beautiful warrior people to rise with me against this tyranny of oligarchs for our waters, our kids. Our land and culture. Please rise with me in the spirit of the #Marque de La Fayette
We are a UNITED STATES

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Prey on Disney+. When #danger threatens her camp, the #fierce and highly skilled #Comanche warrior #Naru sets out to #protect her people. trakt.tv/movies/prey-...

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🔹UNDER CONTRACT!🔹
Chappell Creek Ranch
293± acres
Comanche Co, TX
csmandson.info/ChappellCreek

Call today & get your ranch marketed & sold!

Charlie Middleton
806.786.0313
charlie@csmandson.com

#csmandson #forsale #hunting #land #ranch #realestateInvesting #texasranch #comanche #followers

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By around 1725 the #Comanche had established authority throughout the whole of the Southern Plains region, pushing the Eastern #Apaches into the mountains of the front range of the Rockies in New Mexico

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NEW LISTING!
4-D Game Ranch
737± acres
Comanche Co, TX
csmandson.info/4DGame

Premium recreational, wildlife, & agricultural property.

Sylinda Meinzer
806.392.5396

Wyman Meinzer
940.256.8932

#csmandson #forsale #hunting #land #ranch #ranchforsale #texasranch #comanche #highfence #followers

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In the days before horses were introduced, and before the historic southward migration of the #Comanche Nation, in the early 1700s the Plains #Apaches were the lords of the southern plains

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Lançamento BD: Rever Comanche | Central Comics Rever Comanche conta a história de Red Dust, entre vingança e amor, numa aventura épica ambientada no Wyoming do início do século XX

Rever Comanche conta a história de Red Dust, entre vingança e amor, numa aventura épica ambientada no Wyoming do início do século XX. É da Edições ASA.

www.centralcomics.com/rever-comanc...

#ReverComanche #RomainRenard #BandaDesenhada #BDHistorica #EdiçõesAsa #RedDust #Comanche

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Master Lock Comanche takes Line Honours Matt Allen and James Mayo have sailed Master Lock Comanche to Line Honours in the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart, the 80th edition of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia's 628 nautical mile race.

4/4 This victory cements Comanche's status as the ultimate line honours machine. While the line honours are settled, the focus now shifts to the IRC overall standings where the TP52s and the French teams are fighting for the Tattersall Cup. 🗺️🥇
#SydneyHobart #Comanche #LineHonours #Sailing

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Sydney Hobart. Master Lock Comanche premier en temps réel Matt Allen et James Mayo ont remporté sur Master Lock Comanche la victoire en temps réel sur cette 80e édition de la Sydney Hobart, course de 628 milles nautiques du Cruising Yacht Club of Australia. ...

4/4 Flotte IRC : grosse performance tricolore en vue ! Michael Quintin (Leon) mène en IRC 5 et Alexis Loison (Mi River) domine l'IRC 6. Le TP52 Celestial semble, lui, intouchable pour le titre suprême en IRC Overall. 🇫🇷🥇
#SydneyHobart #CourseAuLarge #Régate #Comanche

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🔊ON & UP
😍👇🏾'Men’s #Fancy Dance, #Comanche Little Ponies New Year’s Celebration 🎊'
(FB Live: Comanche Little Ponies. Dec 27, 2025)
#FancyDance #NewYears #NativeAmericans #Indigenous #FirstNations

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In the days before horses were introduced, and before the historic southward migration of the #Comanche Nation, in the early 1700s the Plains #Apaches were the lords of the southern plains

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Oklahoma man doing target practice in his backyard accused of fatally shooting woman blocks away The victim was on a covered front porch with family members at a residence in Comanche, Oklahoma, when she was shot, according to the probable cause affidavit.

#GunViolence #ChristmasDay2025 #Comanche #Oklahoma

Man doing target shooting in Comanche, Oklahoma backyard strikes elderly woman holding infant on porch a few blocks away ChristmasDay 2025. Baby ok. Woman killed. Deputies: Man had no bullet backstop on property:

abcnews.go.com/US/oklahoma-...

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When the #Spanish were able to conclude a treaty of peace with the #Comanche in 1786, they employed large bodies of #Comanche and #Navajo auxiliary troops with #Spanish regulars in implementing a policy that pacified the entire SW frontier by 1790

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By around 1725 the #Comanche had established authority throughout the whole of the Southern Plains region, pushing the Eastern #Apaches into the mountains of the front range of the Rockies in New Mexico

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Forty years ago, after Karen Buller gave birth to her daughter, the head nurse at the Santa Fe Indian Hospital stopped by Buller’s room when her shift ended. “She came in to see me and see my baby,” recalled Buller, who is now the board chair at the Santa Fe Indigenous Center. “And she said, ‘I just wanted to make sure another Comanche came into the world OK.’ ” That nurse was Geneva Woomavoyah Navarro (Comanche), a woman who would later teach songs in the Comanche language to Buller’s daughter — an early interaction in a post-retirement career dedicated to preserving the language and passing it on. Over the years, Navarro touched museums, schools and even the U.S. Senate with her activism. Geneva Navarro. Courtesy Autumn Gomez She died Dec. 10 at 99, less than a month shy of her 100th birthday. When Buller called her daughter to relay the news, she suggested they honor Navarro by singing a song. “This is sort of silly, but we sang ‘Old MacDonald Had a Farm’ in Comanche together over the phone,” Buller said. “And that made us feel better about our loss of her.” ### Nursing career Navarro was born in Apache, Okla., on Jan. 4, 1926. She was raised by grandparents who did not speak English — making Navarro’s first language Numunu, or Comanche, and meaning she served as the pair’s English interpreter. Navarro studied nursing at Haskell Institute — now called Haskell Indian Nations University — in Kansas, then attended St. Anthony’s Nursing School in Oklahoma. There, according to an article by one of Navarro’s daughters, Navarro faced racism. ## Don't miss the next story. Subscribe. SIGN UP “Her non-Native roommate was scared of her because she was a Comanche and would not room with Geneva because she was afraid of getting attacked by a ‘wild Indian,’ ” the article reads. Navarro became a registered nurse, working with the Hopi and Navajo tribes in Keams Canyon, Ariz., once she got out of school. Her four-decade nursing career later took her to California, Oklahoma, Arizona and New Mexico. After she retired in 1986, Navarro began volunteering as a docent at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. It was then she took note of the dwindling number of people who were fluent in the Comanche language — and the fact that most of them were elders whose knowledge being was lost at a quicker rate than new speakers were being born, according to the Sam Nobel Museum outside of Oklahoma City, which houses recordings of some of her classes. “It was not until the late 1980s and early ’90s that I realized we were losing our language,” Navarro told _The New Mexican_ in 2000. “I just thought it would be here forever, but now it’s going away. After people my age have gone, I don’t know what will happen.” ### Language preservation The Comanche Nation Language Department estimates fewer than 50 fluent Comanche speakers remain, though in the 1800s, the tongue was the predominant trade language spoken by thousands in the Plains region. The Comanche Nation’s main headquarters is near Lawton, Okla.; its approximately 17,000 enrolled members live all across the United States. Navarro’s language work began in Santa Fe with a collaboration with the Indigenous Language Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting Indigenous language preservation nationwide. She simultaneously made a point of teaching the Comanche language to her grandchildren — Autumn and Matthew Gomez — and their cousins. “She was invested in teaching the language, not only to her grandkids, but realizing that the issue of language loss was happening all over the United States,” said Autumn Gomez (Taos/Comanche). “And she had an understanding that so much of our culture and our relationship with the land is tied into our language and our customs.” From left, Autumn Gomez, Mary Motah, Jan Woomavoyah and Walter Bigbee stand behind Geneva Navarro, front. Courtesy Karen Buller Matthew Gomez (Taos/Comanche) started learning Comanche with Navarro’s guidance at age 8, _The New Mexica_ n reported in 2002, when Gomez, then 11, presented at the annual Native Youth Language Fair and Powwow. Navarro helped establish this fair and a similar one in Norman, Okla., which is still an annual affair. Looking back, Matthew Gomez said attending Navarro’s Comanche classes — which she taught in Santa Fe and Albuquerque — brought a tone of respect to his childhood that he still carries today. Even then, he said, he knew she was giving him the knowledge of something special. “Being in those classes was like being in school and seeing the same respect that my peers would give a teacher,” Matthew Gomez said. “Her peers — all the adults that were there — would give her the same amount of respect.” Memories about roadtrips with Navarro stand out to both grandchildren. They visited Oklahoma and other points of interest, often alongside Comanche Nation elders. They never turned the radio on, instead opting to talk for hours about Comanche traditions and family history. “She was such a good community person,” Autumn Gomez said. “She was one of those people who, no matter where she went in town, she would know someone or she would have friends.” As the siblings grew up, Navarro moved back to Oklahoma, settling into an adjunct instructor position at the Comanche Nation Tribal College. In 2003, Navarro testified in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs about amendments to the Native American Languages Act to support Native American language survival schools. As the siblings grew up, Navarro moved back to Oklahoma, settling into an adjunct instructor position at the Comanche Nation Tribal College. In 2003, Navarro testified in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs about amendments to the Native American Languages Act to support Native American language survival schools. Navarro supported a further amendment that would have exempted teachers of Native American languages in public schools from a requirement to obtain certification from outside of their tribes, noting no Comanche speakers at the time had college degrees. She ended her testimony with three sentences in Comanche that translated to, “A long time ago we all spoke Comanche. Now we will all speak Comanche again. From now on, we will speak Comanche forever.” Later, Navarro moved back to New Mexico. And even toward the end of her life — when she could not speak as much — she attended Comanche classes on Zoom, cracking jokes and teaching correct pronunciation, Buller said. Navarro’s hobbies and interests always ended up involving the community or making it stronger, Autumn Gomez said. “She was guided by traditional value,” Matthew Gomez added. “She inspired the people she loved, and she was a healer at heart.” ## Thank you for reading. You have unlimited free articles remaining because we don't have a paywall. ### New Mexicans deserve the truth. Help us report it. Independent New Mexico reporting needs your support. Searchlight NM delivers fact-based journalisms — and our community of members, the readers who donate, make our work possible. Help us bring you in-depth news and information. Will you support our nonprofit newsroom with a donation of any amount? DONATE NOW ### _Related_ Republish This Story Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license. Close window ## Republish this article ##### Guidelines for republishing articles 1. You must give the writer credit, in a format similar to “by John Smith, Searchlight New Mexico”. 2. If you publish online, you must include the links from the story, and a link to our website. 3. You may make changes to fit your house style, i.e., “Raton, N.M.” instead of “Raton”. You may trim our articles. 4. If you make significant changes beyond style, such as adding new reporting, you must include a note similar to “with additional reporting by (your publication or your reporter’s name)”. 5. You may republish our photos, videos and graphics along with the stories in which they originally appeared. Proper copyright credit to Searchlight New Mexico must be given. For other uses of visual materials, you must receive advance permission from us. 6. When possible, include the following with our republished articles: “Searchlight New Mexico is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that seeks to empower New Mexicans to demand honest and effective public policy.” 7. If you share an article on social media, please mention @SearchlightNM (Twitter), @searchlightnm.bsky.social (Bluesky) and/or @SearchlightNewMexico (Facebook). 8. You may not sell our articles. 9. You must immediately comply with any request from Searchlight New Mexico to remove republished content from your website. # Woman preserved and celebrated Comanche language by Chris Potter, Searchlight New Mexico December 18, 2025 <h1>Woman preserved and celebrated Comanche language</h1> <p class="byline">by Chris Potter, Searchlight New Mexico <br />December 18, 2025</p> <p>Forty years ago, after Karen Buller gave birth to her daughter, the head nurse at the Santa Fe Indian Hospital stopped by Buller’s room when her shift ended.</p> <p>“She came in to see me and see my baby,” recalled Buller, who is now the board chair at the Santa Fe Indigenous Center. “And she said, ‘I just wanted to make sure another Comanche came into the world OK.’ ”</p> <p>That nurse was Geneva Woomavoyah Navarro (Comanche), a woman who would later teach songs in the Comanche language to Buller’s daughter — an early interaction in a post-retirement career dedicated to preserving the language and passing it on. Over the years, Navarro touched museums, schools and even the U.S. Senate with her activism.</p> <figure class="wp-block-image alignright size-full"><img src="https://searchlightnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/geneva_2.webp" alt="" class="wp-image-103065" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Geneva Navarro. Courtesy Autumn Gomez</figcaption></figure> <p>She died Dec. 10 at 99, less than a month shy of her 100th birthday.</p> <p>When Buller called her daughter to relay the news, she suggested they honor Navarro by singing a song.</p> <p>“This is sort of silly, but we sang ‘Old MacDonald Had a Farm’ in Comanche together over the phone,” Buller said. “And that made us feel better about our loss of her.”</p> <h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-nursing-career">Nursing career</h3> <p>Navarro was born in Apache, Okla., on Jan. 4, 1926. She was raised by grandparents who did not speak English — making Navarro’s first language Numunu, or Comanche, and meaning she served as the pair’s English interpreter.</p> <p>Navarro studied nursing at Haskell Institute — now called Haskell Indian Nations University — in Kansas, then attended St. Anthony’s Nursing School in Oklahoma. There, according to an <a href="https://diverseelders.org/2014/11/10/living-the-legacy-keeping-the-comanche-language-and-culture-alive" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">article</a> by one of Navarro’s daughters, Navarro faced racism.</p> <p>“Her non-Native roommate was scared of her because she was a Comanche and would not room with Geneva because she was afraid of getting attacked by a ‘wild Indian,’ ” the article reads.</p> <p>Navarro became a registered nurse, working with the Hopi and Navajo tribes in Keams Canyon, Ariz., once she got out of school. Her four-decade nursing career later took her to California, Oklahoma, Arizona and New Mexico.</p> <p>After she retired in 1986, Navarro began volunteering as a docent at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. It was then she took note of the dwindling number of people who were fluent in the Comanche language — and the fact that most of them were elders whose knowledge being was lost at a quicker rate than new speakers were being born, according to the <a href="https://samnoblemuseum.ou.edu/collections-and-research/native-american-languages/native-american-languages-collections/geneva-navarro-collection" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Sam Nobel Museum</a> outside of Oklahoma City, which houses recordings of some of her classes.</p> <p>“It was not until the late 1980s and early ’90s that I realized we were losing our language,” Navarro told <em>The New Mexican</em> in 2000. “I just thought it would be here forever, but now it’s going away. After people my age have gone, I don’t know what will happen.”</p> <h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-language-preservation">Language preservation</h3> <p>The Comanche Nation Language Department <a href="https://www.talkcomanche.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">estimates</a> fewer than 50 fluent Comanche speakers remain, though in the 1800s, the tongue was the predominant trade language spoken by thousands in the Plains region. The Comanche Nation’s main headquarters is near Lawton, Okla.; its approximately 17,000 enrolled members live all across the United States.</p> <p>Navarro’s language work began in Santa Fe with a collaboration with the Indigenous Language Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting Indigenous language preservation nationwide. She simultaneously made a point of teaching the Comanche language to her grandchildren — Autumn and Matthew Gomez — and their cousins.</p> <p>“She was invested in teaching the language, not only to her grandkids, but realizing that the issue of language loss was happening all over the United States,” said Autumn Gomez (Taos/Comanche). “And she had an understanding that so much of our culture and our relationship with the land is tied into our language and our customs.”</p> <figure class="wp-block-image aligncenter size-full"><img src="https://searchlightnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/geneva_3.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-103066" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">From left, Autumn Gomez, Mary Motah, Jan Woomavoyah and Walter Bigbee stand behind Geneva Navarro, front. Courtesy Karen Buller</figcaption></figure> <p>Matthew Gomez (Taos/Comanche) started learning Comanche with Navarro’s guidance at age 8, <em>The New Mexica</em>n reported in 2002, when Gomez, then 11, presented at the annual Native Youth Language Fair and Powwow. Navarro helped establish this fair and a similar one in Norman, Okla., which is still an annual affair.</p> <p>Looking back, Matthew Gomez said attending Navarro’s Comanche classes — which she taught in Santa Fe and Albuquerque — brought a tone of respect to his childhood that he still carries today. Even then, he said, he knew she was giving him the knowledge of something special.</p> <p>“Being in those classes was like being in school and seeing the same respect that my peers would give a teacher,” Matthew Gomez said. “Her peers — all the adults that were there — would give her the same amount of respect.”</p> <p>Memories about roadtrips with Navarro stand out to both grandchildren.</p> <p>They visited Oklahoma and other points of interest, often alongside Comanche Nation elders. They never turned the radio on, instead opting to talk for hours about Comanche traditions and family history.</p> <p>“She was such a good community person,” Autumn Gomez said. “She was one of those people who, no matter where she went in town, she would know someone or she would have friends.”</p> <figure class="wp-block-image aligncenter size-large"><img src="https://searchlightnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/geneva_4-768x1024.webp" alt="" class="wp-image-103067" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">As the siblings grew up, Navarro moved back to Oklahoma, settling into an adjunct instructor position at the Comanche Nation Tribal College. In 2003, Navarro testified in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs about amendments to the Native American Languages Act to support Native American language survival schools.</figcaption></figure> <p>As the siblings grew up, Navarro moved back to Oklahoma, settling into an adjunct instructor position at the Comanche Nation Tribal College. In 2003, Navarro testified in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs about amendments to the Native American Languages Act to support Native American language survival schools.</p> <p>Navarro supported a further amendment that would have exempted teachers of Native American languages in public schools from a requirement to obtain certification from outside of their tribes, noting no Comanche speakers at the time had college degrees.</p> <p>She ended her <a href="https://www.indian.senate.gov/wp-content/uploads/navarro.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">testimony</a> with three sentences in Comanche that translated to, “A long time ago we all spoke Comanche. Now we will all speak Comanche again. From now on, we will speak Comanche forever.”</p> <p>Later, Navarro moved back to New Mexico. And even toward the end of her life — when she could not speak as much — she attended Comanche classes on Zoom, cracking jokes and teaching correct pronunciation, Buller said.</p> <p>Navarro’s hobbies and interests always ended up involving the community or making it stronger, Autumn Gomez said.</p> <p>“She was guided by traditional value,” Matthew Gomez added. “She inspired the people she loved, and she was a healer at heart.”</p> <p>This <a target="_blank" href="https://searchlightnm.org/woman-preserved-and-celebrated-comanche-language/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://searchlightnm.org">Searchlight New Mexico</a>.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/searchlightnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/cropped-searchlight-icon-1-1.png?resize=150%2C150&amp;ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"></p> <img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://searchlightnm.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=103062&amp;ga4=G-LWQC5MVF9L" style="width:1px;height:1px;"><script> PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: "https://searchlightnm.org/woman-preserved-and-celebrated-comanche-language/", urlref: window.location.href }); } } </script> <script id="parsely-cfg" src="//cdn.parsely.com/keys/searchlightnm.org/p.js"></script> Copy to Clipboard 1

#Language #Comanche #NewMexico obituary: "Woman preserved and celebrated Comanche language"

searchlightnm.org/woman-preserved-and-cele...

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Herman Lehmann – Wikipedia

Spannende Figur: #Hermann #Lehmann, 1859-1932. Eltern aus der Niederlausitz ausgewandert, er selbst lebte als Jugendlicher 9 Jahre unter #Apache und dann #Comanche und hinterließ mit seiner Autobiografie „Nine years among the Indians“ (1927) ein eindrucksvolles ethnologisch-historisches Zeugnis

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Ein Stapel mit 15+ Comics (Hardcover, Alben, Paperbacks, Taschenbücher), Rücken zum Betrachter. Auf hellem Holzboden, Holztür im Hintergrund. Die Titel: Physik für die Katz, Elch, Hexenkunst, Sonntag, Power Fantasy, East of West, Nach Mitternacht, Criminal: The Knives, Criminal: Deluxe 1, Spectactular Spider-Man by DeMatteis & Buscema, Corto Maltese: Lebensliie, Eine Falle für Parker, Black Sad: Weekly, Wiedersehen mit Comanche, Frank Cappa, Rückkehr nach Tomioka, Zorro: Die Legende lebt, Frontier, Starlight Deluxe

Ein Stapel mit 15+ Comics (Hardcover, Alben, Paperbacks, Taschenbücher), Rücken zum Betrachter. Auf hellem Holzboden, Holztür im Hintergrund. Die Titel: Physik für die Katz, Elch, Hexenkunst, Sonntag, Power Fantasy, East of West, Nach Mitternacht, Criminal: The Knives, Criminal: Deluxe 1, Spectactular Spider-Man by DeMatteis & Buscema, Corto Maltese: Lebensliie, Eine Falle für Parker, Black Sad: Weekly, Wiedersehen mit Comanche, Frank Cappa, Rückkehr nach Tomioka, Zorro: Die Legende lebt, Frontier, Starlight Deluxe

Und hier noch meine Comic-Highlights 2025. Hab bestimmt ein paar vergessen & ein, zwei Manga spontan nicht gefunden, aber ... #booksky #comic #comics #marvel #krimi #cortomaltese #tomgauld #comanche #western #spiderman #parker #criminal #lesen #reading #bestof2025 #sciencefiction

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In the days before horses were introduced, and before the historic southward migration of the #Comanche Nation, in the early 1700s the Plains #Apaches were the lords of the southern plains

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My father-in-law spent much of his last years working on fixing up the Comanche, a WWII-era tug in Tacoma. I took this photo of the radio the day we scattered his ashes off the bow.
#photography #monochrome #comanche #tug #wwii #tacoma #pugetsound

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🎮 Airwolf (Nintendo) Complete Gameplay
🎮 Airwolf (Nintendo) Complete Gameplay YouTube video by VICIOGAME Retro Games

🎮 Airwolf (Nintendo)

Longplay: youtu.be/kqd3S8u16mM

#Airwolf #Nintendo #Famicom #NES #ShootEmUp #Kyugo #CrossFire #arcade #shmup #Acclaim #BeamSoftware #helicopter #エアーウルフ #ファミリーコンピュータ #任天堂 #comanche #BlueThunder #Gameplay #Walkthrough #Playthrough #Longplay #LetsPlay #Game #Videogames #Games

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LADONNA HARRIS: INDIAN 101 @womenmakemovies.bsky.social
Highlights the life and activism of Comanche leader LaDonna Harris.
▶️ docuseek2.com/wm-harris
🎥 #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth2025 #Comanche #IndigenousVoices #Documentary #AcademicStreaming #WatchNow

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Prey Review - Sarah G. Vincent Views Sarah G. Vincent Views' hot take on Prey

New review: Prey
#PreyMovie #Predator #AmberMidthunder #DakotaBeavers #DaneDiLegro #MichelleThrush #Coco #BennettTaylor #DanTrachtenberg #PatrickAison #Comanche #NativeAmerican #indigenous #colonialism #Colonizers #hunter #prequel #scifi #alien #Hulu
sarahgvincentviews.com/movies/prey/

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We all know Darius Jones and Klev are the OTP in the MCU. #MCU #Marvel #MarvelCinematicUniverse #Comanche #ThomasQJones #LukeCage #Klev #ZachCherry

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#NowWatching: PREY (2022)

Directed by Dan Trachtenberg

Starring Amber Midthunder, Dakota Beavers, Dane DiLiegro, Michelle Thrush, Stormee Kipp, Julian Black Antelope & Bennett Taylor

#Movies #FilmSky #Scifi #Horror #Predator #NativeAmerican #Comanche #History #Prey #Cinema #HorrorSky

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Suoraviivaista villin lännen seikkailua komeissa maisemissa – arviossa Comanche-albumi Pedot SARJAKUVA | Hermannin ja Gregin luoma lännensarja siirtyy uudelle piirtäjälle ja saa ikäviä vieraita Red Dustin menneisyydestä. The post Suoraviivaista villin lännen seikkailua komeissa maisemissa – arviossa Comanche-albumi Pedot appeared first on Kulttuuritoimitus.
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