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You know, I thought she was. In the version immediately preceding Grant Morrison's JLA, along with Obsidian and Nuklon, perhaps during Our Worlds At War? But the intarwebs do not support this theory. My apologies.
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
I would point out that Terra-Man wasn't exactly "displaced" from the 1800s; he was just very long-lived, due to spending much of his time in faster-than-light space travel.
But anyway:
The Justice League of America once fought a trio of super-villains who used the same kind of weapon, and they were in the employ of a fourth villain who did not use that kind of weapon. Which three, what kind of weapon, and who was their employer?
I think CuCr meant they worked for scale wages.
A little humour on his part. At least on one of his parts. Only his doctor and wife would know the part.
The Justice League of America once fought a trio of super-villains who used the same kind of weapon, and they were in the employ of a fourth villain who did not use that kind of weapon. Which three, what kind of weapon, and who was their employer?
The three villians were/are Jeph Loeb, Grant Morrison and Chuck Dixon.
Their weapon is a word processor.
Their employer was/is Dan Dido.
"Don't you see? It's an anagram! DiDio will stop at nothing until DC Comics are the market leader!"
"OK, DAN'S HOT FOR DC ONE?"
"Clearly!"
--wyld
Last edited by wyld; 01/15/2009 at 09:53..
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Captain Cold, Heat Wave, Sonar, ray guns, and Amos Fortune.
--I know, I'm giving Amos Fortune a lot of credit with that answer.
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Ha ha, you fool! That was my plan all along! And you fell right into it!
Regardless, I still don't know the answer. I will need more plan.
--professor wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
You actually got one of the four right in that answer.
Eh, if I recall the "Identity Crisis" right, then Heat Wave showing up with several others who used flames as a weapon, over in a Superman comic, could be considered the right answer for the three people and the flame as their weapon, and Despero as the guy behind them at that point. But I can't remember who the other two were.