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Scope was a South African weekly men's lifestyle magazine. The magazine was launched in the 1960s and was controversial for challenging Apartheid-era South Africa's strict censorship laws with its bikini-clad cover girls.
The paper was founded in 1992 by James P. Reza, Greg Ryan and Robert Ringle as a free monthly publication called Scope Magazine covering Southern Nevada's culture, arts, music and lifestyle from a decidedly Generation X perspective.
During the 1967–68 Detroit newspaper strike, [3] Gordon published Scope Magazine [4] in order to fill the news-hole made by a lack of daily newspapers in Detroit. Lou Gordon was the president of Scope Publishing, as well as a writer, and published the weekly until the Detroit newspaper strike ended. [4]
The Electric Company Magazine, Scholastic (1972–1987) Enter, Sesame Workshop (1983–1985) Highlights for Children; Hot Dog!, Scholastic (1979–199?) Jack and Jill, The Saturday Evening Post (1938-2009) Lego Magazine (defunct) Muse; National Geographic Kids Magazine; Nickelodeon Magazine (defunct) The Open Road for Boys (defunct)
The union, which represents the magazine's editorial staffers, issued a warning to management, scheduling its walkout on the same day as the release of Forbes' well-known "30 Under 30" list, which ...
He founded the first science magazine in the Gujarati language called Scope and wrote several books. The Nagendra Vijay Science Foundation also launched the English-language science magazine Safari, in March 2008, [2] [3] of which he is the Editor-in-Chief. He had previously published newsweekly Flash and a science magazine Scope. [1]
Kobayashi then got up by herself in the early morning, gathered her luggage and “walk[ed] off on her own,” Franco told the magazine. “These things we were able to corroborate,” Oldfield said.
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