Darvas's first newspaper job was with the
Toledo News Bee as an artist. He moved to Cleveland and worked with the
Cleveland Press from 1938 onwards. During
World War II, he served in the
United States Army Air Corps as head of the drafting and art room of the senior staff school supervising charts and graphs for secret Air Force statistical records. During his stint in the Army, he won the first place for cartoons in the art show of the Army Air Corps Tactical Center at
Orlando, Florida in 1944. He was the author of a daily comic strip called "
Half Nelson" for the
Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate for a year before returning to Cleveland Press. His work appeared regularly from 1946 onwards on the cover of the
Sporting News. Lou Darvas died aged 73, and was survived by his wife Margaret, his daughters Janet and Laura, his son Robert, his stepdaughter Terry Rohde, 2 grandchildren and a sister. ==Awards==