This is "Look Back," a feature that I plan to do for at least all of 2019 and possibly beyond that (and possibly forget about in a week, who knows?). The concept is that every week (I'll probably be skipping the four fifth weeks in the year, but maybe not) of a month, I will spotlight a single issue of a comic book that came out in the past and talk about that issue (often in terms of a larger scale, like the series overall, etc.). Each week will be a look at a comic book from a different year that came out the same month X amount of years ago. The first week of the month looks at a book that came out this month ten years ago. The second week looks at a book that came out this month 25 years ago. The third week looks at a book that came out this month 50 years ago. The fourth week looks at a book that came out this month 75 years ago.

Today, we look at the 50th anniversary of Green Lantern #76 (by Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams), the launch of the new era now known as "Hard Travelin' Heroes"!

I've written about this iconic issue before, so I'm mostly retreading familiar territory, but suffice it to say that, as we neared the end of the 1960s, Green Lantern's creator, John Broome, and the main other Green Lantern writer, Gardner Fox, were writing less and less Green Lantern stories and DC's newer generation of writers began to get their shot at telling Hal's stories, with Denny O'Neil and Mike Friedrich each writing about three or four issues each in the two years leading up to 1970 (while Broome and Fox continued writing the book, as well).

Things changed with 1970's Green Lantern #76, where Denny O'Neil became the regular writer and he was joined by Neal Adams (O'Neil was working full script, so I don't know if O'Neil even knew that Adams had been assigned to draw the new approach on the character when he first wrote #76).

O'Neil had been writing Justice League of America, and Green Arrow had become a favorite of his, as he could do more with the character than with the others (since Oliver Queen didn't have his own regular feature). Neal Adams had also recently given Arrow an awesome looking new costume (and goatee) in an issue of Brave and Bold. Green Arrow was a very liberal guy and O'Neil used him to sort of push the buttons of the other heroes.

Editor Julius Schwartz approved the idea of then bringing Green Arrow into the pages of Green Lantern as a regular addition to the book who could serve to, well, you know, push Hal Jordan's buttons, as well.

The issue opens with Hal Jordan on a regular patrol of the city where he sees a group of people outside of a building seemingly picking on a lone older man. Hal Jordan swoops in and rescues the man but when Hal takes a beat where he expects to hear the audience share their approval for his heroism, he is shocked when they accost him instead!

And into the fray jumps Green Arrow, who joins in with the abuse on Hal! He explains that Hal has backed the wrong horse here, which he thinks is emblematic of how out of touch Hal Jordan really is nowadays...

Of course, this can't be a Green Arrow comic book if he doesn't take things way over the line. "I think you are on the wrong side here" quickly becomes, "You are basically a Nazi!"

That, though, leads to a fateful encounter that changes Hal's life forever (or for at least the next couple of years).

One of the residents of the building has a challenge for Hal, he basically wants to know why Hal hasn't used his great power for civil rights...

Over the years, some fans (I will admit that even I have made this joke in the past) have argued that it is unfair to give Hal guff on this issue, as he has saved the whole world on numerous occasions, so he has done just as much for ALL the people on Earth as he has done for the people on other planets, namely save them from destruction.

Heck, there have been comic book writers who have even worked this idea into the comics, but I think that that is a mistake, as really, it is always fair to question people on stuff like this. Hal Jordan isn't a bad guy, but it is fair to ask him to question his privilege and that's really all that is being asked of him here. Denny O'Neil recalled to my pal Abe Riesman, "“I pretended that I was liberal, I pretended that I understood. And then you’d go through Harlem and it’s, ‘What are you doing here, white boy?’ And how did that happen? Excuse me, you’re just another guy, right? But you happen to have darker skin and you’re treating me like I put you there. And guess what? I did. I did put you there. That was the reality.”

Of course, Hal is chagrined by the challenge...

He then agrees to help take the slumlord down, which he and Green Arrow do in the rest of the issue.

However, Hal's bosses, the Guardians of the Universe, do not approve of his actions and they are going to punish him for going beyond his normal purview when Green Arrow starts speechifying and basically challenges the Guardians into seeing some more of Earth, as well, and they are so moved that they send one of their members to go drive around the country with Hal and Oliver to "see the real America"...

That, then, was the start of "Hard Travelin' Heroes" and it kicked off with quite a speech.

If you folks have any suggestions for February (or any other later months) 2010, 1995, 1970 and 1945 comic books for me to spotlight, drop me a line at brianc@cbr.com! Here is the guide, though, for the cover dates of books so that you can make suggestions for books that actually came out in the correct month. Generally speaking, the traditional amount of time between the cover date and the release date of a comic book throughout most of comic history has been two months (it was three months at times, but not during the times we're discussing here). So the comic books will have a cover date that is two months ahead of the actual release date (so October for a book that came out in August). Obviously, it is easier to tell when a book from 10 years ago was released, since there was internet coverage of books back then.