Thanks for finding it, TELLE!
You're welcome!
For that same reason, I always loved Maggin's Superman because occasionally, Maggin had Superman get frustrated an angry with crime...there were some battles Supes didn't wisecrack through.
Maggin is almost alone in writing Superman stories that included credible emotional episodes. No one expects Superman's emotional life to be "normal" --meaning that he would have the same reactions as other poor or middle class white children raised in rural Kansas to horrific or insane events. Rather, as someone who was raised as an invulnerable moral paragon, he would have more complex or illogical (to us) reactions to certain human relations involving romantic love, lust, and relations with his parents (both sets). Hence we have some great sequences where Clark/Superman is easily reduced to infantilism when confronted with a version of the uber-father (Jor-El) and forced to deal with the somewhat Freudian dynamics involved.