Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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This week in 1982 delivered good news to those who like peace, because it saw the end of the Falklands War, as British forces retook the rather delightfully named South Sandwich Islands.
In the forty years since, has she finally achieved her ambition and been to herself?
Sadly, I cannot say. I've tried to offer her assistance by seeing if you can find a route to yourself via Google Maps but, sadly, it seems you can't.
Over on the UK album chart, a very different kind of destination was proving popular, as Roxy Music hit the top spot, with their LP named in honour of the isle of Avalon.
Google Maps has also failed to provide me with directions as to how get to Avalon.
So much for technology.
And he's more electrical than ever!
Fortunately, our wondrous webhead has the sense to don a rubber costume when facing him, thus rendering the villain's powers useless.
We also get the chance to win 30 Marvel annuals and we can discover whether our drawing's inside this issue.
But why would it be inside this issue? I'm pretty sure that's not where I left it.
Iron Man's also in action but I don't know just what action.
And, as with Spidey's comic, we can win 30 Marvel annuals and discover whether our drawing's inside.
Once more Onbarder, AKA Mark, has come to the rescue, and he's supplied me with the cover to Scooby-Doo and his TV Friends #18.
Also thanks to him, I know that, in this issue, Captain Caveman finds himself in a tale called The Shipping Magnet, written by no less an entity than Jack Kirby biographer Mark Evanier.
Elsewhere, there's news from Scooby-Doo's Ghostly Club House.
For those who want to find something to do with their hands, we also get a page that tells us how to make a Hair Bear Gripper Wallet.