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- In her 1940s incarnation, Etta Candy is a spirited, rotund young woman who leads the Beta Lambda sorority at Holliday College and aids Wonder Woman in her adventures. She is known for her moxie, her love for candy, and for her trademark call "Woo! Woo!" Other familiar characteristics included her junky car nicknamed Esmerelda, and a variety of sassy interjections, such as: "For the love of chocolate!" Her father, Hard Candy, lived with her mother, Sugar Candy, on a ranch that provided the setting for cowboy-themed adventures. Holliday College was the setting for science-driven stories.
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- In her 1940s incarnation, Etta Candy is a spirited, rotund young woman who leads the Beta Lambda sorority at Holliday College and aids Wonder Woman in her adventures. She is known for her moxie, her love for candy, and for her trademark call "Woo! Woo!" Other familiar characteristics included her junky car nicknamed Esmerelda, and a variety of sassy interjections, such as: "For the love of chocolate!" Her father, Hard Candy, lived with her mother, Sugar Candy, on a ranch that provided the setting for cowboy-themed adventures. Holliday College was the setting for science-driven stories. When Robert Kanigher became writer and editor of the adventures of Wonder Woman, the familiar characters of the Marston era — Etta, the Holliday College girls, Darnell, and most of the villains — were phased out during the Silver Age. In the Golden Age adventures, Etta was a young, college-age sidekick who aided military intelligence in times of crisis; in the television series, with its more streamlined cast, Etta was integrated in the workplace setting as a secretary to Gen. Blankenship. Etta Candy was revived in the early 1980s, when Steve Trevor and General Phil Darnell were also revived. Etta was featured as secretary to Darnell, and Diana's roommate. Unlike the Marston characterization of a bold, sassy, wisecracking sorority leader, Etta was now presented as meek and insecure. She was weight-conscious, and shared an apartment with Diana Prince, unaware of her secret identity. Her love interest was nerdy, hopelessly clumsy Howard Huckaby. In the years leading up to Crisis on Infinite Earths (1986), writers Dan Mishkin and Mindy Newell took Etta in a different direction. She displayed more confidence, and even became Wonder Woman for one evening, battling Cheetah, Angle Man, Captain Wonder and Silver Swan.
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