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Pages in category "Defunct magazines published in Chicago" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Pages in category "Defunct sports magazines published in the United States" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Defunct sports magazines published in the United States (27 P) Pages in category "Defunct sports magazines" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
True West was born to satisfy the readers' hunger for Old West history. True West was the largest Western magazine on the market in the 1960s, selling hundreds of thousands of copies monthly at newsstands. The magazine benefited from an era featuring popular television western series such as Bonanza, The Lone Ranger, and Gunsmoke.
Typos can do more than damage the credibility of a publication. Penguin books in Australia recently had to reprint 7,000 copies of a now-collectible book because one of the recipes called for ...
The Richmond, Virginia-based magazine was sold to Landmark Communications, which sold it to Krause Publications in 1999, publisher of the competing Sports Cards Magazine. The two magazines' content merged in 2000, taking the 'Tuff Stuff' name. The magazine took on the F+W Publications Inc. label after that company obtained Krause in 2002. [4]
Field had founded the Chicago Sun and the Chicago Sun Syndicate in late 1941. [3] Comic-strip historian Allan Holtz has written regarding the origins of the Field Syndicate and its relationship to the rest of the company: Field . . . was a syndicate initially created by Marshall Field to sell features from his Chicago Sun newspaper.
Sport was an American sports magazine. Launched in September 1946 [1] by New York–based publisher Macfadden Publications, Sport pioneered the generous use of color photography—it carried eight full-color plates in its first edition.