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Loved as an American icon and respected as an adventurer, Annie’s voyages pit her against some of the comics pages’ most notorious criminals. Annie’s tireless pursuit of justice has reinvigorated this classic strip, giving it more action, intrigue and curls than ever before.
Read Ted Slampyak's weekly adventure strip Jazz Age.© Tribune Media Services, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.
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Comments (7) (Please sign in to comment)
davidf42 said, 4 months ago
Morning, Anniephans!
Bring up the big guns, boys!
Here’s the link to Annie 2004 .
Flashold said, 4 months ago
How deep before it looses contact?
Teresa said, 4 months ago
Who’s controlling the satillite that’s controlling the worm?
Dr.Midnight said, 4 months ago
@Flashold
Just what I was thinking. Considering that it can be difficult to keep a GPS signal when you’re in the concrete canyons of a big city, how is this working underground?
Stuart Gathman said, 4 months ago
@Dr.Midnight
A ground relay that converts the satellite signals to seismic waves. At least, that was my theory when this was discussed earlier.
Night-Gaunt49 said, 4 months ago
If the digger has preprogrammed instructions it won’t need constant contact. However it would include reestablishing communications at some point.
Trucker Ron
said, 4 months ago
Night-Gaunt49 asked me 2 days ago: “Ever see “Varan the Unbelievable” it came out soon after “Godzilla” in the late 1950’s?”
No, I missed that one. I first saw “Mothra” on TV in about 1964. I loved it, but my grandmother was (or pretended to be) terrified by the monsters. I had to wait for “Mothra vs Godzilla” to hit the small screen to see it, no adults would take me to the theater.