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I think we're all familiar with the joke that starts with the words, "What's a Greek urn?"
And, this week in 1976, one Greek must have been urning a fortune.
That's because he was Demis Roussos and he'd just hit the Number One spot on the UK singles chart, courtesy of his never-to-be-forgotten EP The Roussos Phenomenon.
The neighbouring album chart, on the other hand, found its roost still being ruled by Rod Stewart, thanks to his latest offering A Night on the Town.
Open-minded as I am about music, I've never really been able to get into the oeuvre of Demis Roussos. Fortunately, there were tracks that I did find myself digging on that week's British Hit Parade. For instance:
You're My Best Friend - Queen
Leader of The Pack {1976} - the Shangri-Las
The Boston Tea Party - the Sensational Alex Harvey Band
History is made, as a certain future X-Men legend makes his full debut!
And it happens when Canadian super-agent Wolverine shows up to tackle both the Hulk and Wendigo at the same time!
Meanwhile, the sister of the man who became this version of the Wendigo is scheming in the background...
Speaking of scheming, Daredevil's still trying to foil the Gladiator's devious attempt to break out of prison.
And the Angel's having a scrap with Red Raven who's gone mad and is out to eliminate mankind, or something.
Then, we get the origin of the X-Men's Iceman which, as far as I can recall, involves him getting into an altercation with a local angry mob before being rescued from his police cell, by Professor X.
But, now, we must attend a wake - because the last-ever issue of The Avengers has arrived.
Next week, the team will be in The Mighty World of Marvel instead. Or, as it became known later, The Mighty World of Marvel with the Avengers and the Savage Sword of Conan incorporating Fury and Planet of the Apes with Dracula Lives.
How I recall walking into my local newsagent's and asking for a copy of that comic.
In fact, the title's so long that, 50 years later, I'm still in that newsagent's and haven't reached the end of asking for it yet.
As far as I can make out, this week, Rascally Roy Thomas adapts Gardner F Fox's Kothar and the Conjurer's Curse in which Conan survives an attack by the demonic Yemli, accepts a sorcerer's delivery mission and then rescues someone called Stefanya, from execution. I have to say that's one busy day, even by his standards.
Next, Nifty Neal Adams arrives in full as the Vision collapses at the Avengers Mansion - and Hank Pym decides he's going to have to conduct a life-saving operation by shrinking down to the size of a body cell and entering the android's body!
Following that, we, strangely, get Lee and Colan's origin of the Watcher which I think has already seen print in both The Super-Heroes and Planet of the Apes. Someone at Marvel UK clearly likes that story.
However, of Shang-Chi, there appears to be no trace.
Following that, we get the arrival of Paul Butterworth -- The Night-Staker in which an investigative reporter of that name assists Quincy Harker and friends in tackling Dracula.
From what I remember, this tale draws heavily on the Kolchak: Night-Stalker TV series.
Should anyone need confirmation, Laughter is Dead and that can only mean the Man-Thing continues to have problems with a dead clown who's determined that everyone in the local swamp gets to hear his life story.
And we complete the issue with To Save a Sabretooth. A Ka-Zar adventure the GCD informs me is swiped from The Bible's tale of Sodom and Gomorrah.
This is what we want!
The Spider-Mobile!
I don't care if its existence never made any sense - given that Spidey could get around New York faster without it than with it and that it made it easier for the police to find him. Only a madman wouldn't want a Spider-Mobile of their very own.
I don't care if its existence never made any sense - given that Spidey could get around New York faster without it than with it and that it made it easier for the police to find him. Only a madman wouldn't want a Spider-Mobile of their very own.
But that's not the only shock in store for us. This is the issue in which our hero discovers that Aunt May's about to get married to Dr Octopus!
Elsewhere, the Thing and Son of Satan are in the Arizona ghost town of Lawless and having to battle its founder, the spectre known as Ravenstorm!
Iron Man continues to contend with the Unicorn and Red Ghost.
But, far far away from there, the enigma that is the Silent One leads Thor to Hela who tries to kill the thunder god by ageing him to death. However, thwarting her plans, the Silent One sacrifices himself to save our pyrocumulonimbustastic protagonist.
And what of Dr Strange?
It seems he must to face The Final Curtain when challenged by an evil version of himself!
And we encounter yet another of the Mad Thinker's infallible schemes that's guaranteed to go wrong.
This time, I do believe he's decided to, one by one, replace the members of the Fantastic Four, with androids.
Beneath the waves, not only has Tiger-Shark defeated a weakened Sub-Mariner and kidnapped Lady Dorma, he's now turned up at the Atlanteans' current locale and demanded they make him their king!
As far as I'm aware, in his strip, Ghost Rider must rush the snake-bitten Roxanne to hospital for treatment, while Snake Dance's daughter defies her father, steals his antivenom and also races to save the woman.
When it comes to espionage, Hydra kidnaps one of its former members, and Nick and Dum Dum must launch a rescue bid while the Supreme Hydra infiltrates SHIELD, in disguise.
And of Captain America?
He's in Wakanda, with the Black Panther - and now a captive of Baron Zemo.
But all is not lost. Sharon Carter's there, pretending to be evil spy Irma Kruhl.
But will she have to kill her beloved, in order to protect her disguise?




















