Yes, but with this team:
Batwoman
Green Arrow
Black Canary
Steel (John Henry Irons)
Orphan
Commander Cold
Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes)
Azrael (Michael Lane)
Huntress
Wild Dog
Speedy (Mia Dearden)
Question (Vic Sage)
Yes, but with this team:
Batwoman
Green Arrow
Black Canary
Steel (John Henry Irons)
Orphan
Commander Cold
Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes)
Azrael (Michael Lane)
Huntress
Wild Dog
Speedy (Mia Dearden)
Question (Vic Sage)
You are my favorite thing, Peter. My very favorite thing.
Archie Comics is guilty of it too.
It's hard to catch them because a lot of those stories have not sniffed a trade or collection. Or the creative team is not listed.
I have seen stories from the 1950-60s feature Archie, Jughead, Reggie, Moose and/or Dilton in either the original comic or EARLY 70s-80s digest.
In the late 80s-now digest suddenly those stories feature Chuck Clayton or some variation of him. Some stories you could just TELL it was retraced and colored.
I remember one story with Chuck & Dilton-I have the original comic, one of the early digests and one from the 2000s with that story.
Chuck's hair style was different in every story and on one both had different colored and styled shirts.
Another Dilton story had him as the school mascot-it went for being an Eagle to another animal.
I won't even get into how may covers I have seen redrawn with different artist names.
And you have to ask the question of those stories that no name was listed for them-how many of those stories were done by Tom Deflaco-who was working at Archie.
As did some of the shows adapted from overseas.
The first 6 episodes of Sanford & Son were exact copies of UK's Steptoe & Son (mind you the Sanford & Son was taken from that).
The Ropers, All in The Family & Three's Company too. Three Company even rehashed a script from one season to the second to last season.
Something about Dragnet -- I think it would have helped if Joe Friday had had partners who were more animated. Pairing him with guys who were as low-key as he was didn't provide enough contrast.
Something about Jack Webb -- although he went though a rough divorce with Julie London that cost him a lot of money, her later cast her and her next husband, Bobby Troup, in Emergency and made them rich. Few men would have done that, and he deserves respect for it.