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The images within this category are sorted as follows: Comics images, alphabetic by series title Series are then sorted by issue number within the series Issue images are presented as cover as published, if present, followed by art only and/or individual panels or pages; Spinoff media, alphabetically by type, which include
Magazines which were first established in 1965. Pages in category "Magazines established in 1965" The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total.
A distinctive element of Tiger Beat was its covers, which featured cut-and-paste collaged photos – primarily head shots – of current teen idols. For the first twelve issues, Thaxton's face appeared at the top corner of the cover (at first the magazine was titled Lloyd Thaxton's Tiger Beat), and he also contributed a column. [6]
File:Kamui Den on the cover of Garo Magazine, 1965.jpg; File:Kamui Den on the cover of Garo No. 15 (November 1965).jpg; File:Kerokero Ace cover 20071025 first issue.jpg; File:Kurogane on the cover of Morning No. 46 (October 1997).jpg
Ranger was a weekly British comics periodical published by Fleetway Publications from 18 September 1965 to 18 June 1966. Intended as an educational publication, the cover described it as "The National Boys' Magazine" and the content mixed comic strips with a much larger quotient of factual articles than most other Fleetway children's titles of the time.
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Nova was a British glossy magazine that was published from March 1965 [1] [2] to October 1975. [1] [3] It was described by The Times as "a politically radical, beautifully designed, intellectual women's magazine." [4] Nova covered such once-taboo subjects as abortion, cancer, the birth control pill, race, homosexuality, divorce and royal ...
Fifth Estate was started by Harvey Ovshinsky, a seventeen-year-old youth from Detroit. [2] He was inspired by a 1965 summer trip to California where he worked on the Los Angeles Free Press, the first underground paper in the United States; Harvey's father, inventor Stan Ovshinsky, knew the editor of the Free Press, Art Kunkin, from their years as comrades in the Socialist Party. [3]