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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.
This Wikipedia page provides a comprehensive list of magazines published in the United Kingdom.
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 ...
One of Burrows' most famous images was published first in a Life magazine article on 16 April 1965 named One Ride with Yankee Papa 13, about a mission on 31 March 1965. [ 10 ] Flying in a helicopter with the US Marines' Medium Helicopter Squadron 163, Burrows captured the death of Yankee Papa 3 co-pilot Lieutenant James Magel.
April 1965 Life "Drama of Life Before Birth" — — 8 [4] First-four days copies according to American Society of Magazine Editors [5] September 2001 Time "Sept.11, 2011 The Day That Shook America" September 11 attacks: 7.5 [6] November 1972 Playboy — Lena Söderberg: 7.16 [7] Playboy ' s highest-selling issue. [7] December 1994 Weekly ...
British Airways and Air France Concorde jets parked at DFW Airport, January 13, 1979 By 1965, a board with seven members from Dallas and four from Fort Worth was in place to develop what would ...
Princess (also known as Princess and Girl and Princess Magazine) was a British weekly girls' comic anthology published by Fleetway Publications and, later, IPC Magazines.The first version was published between 30 January 1960 and 16 September 1967, [a] and featured a mix of comic strips, text stories and a large proportion of features; it was merged with Tina to form a new title - Princess ...
Croydon was the first airport in the world to introduce air traffic control, a control tower, [12] [13] and radio position-fixing procedures. [14] The "aerodrome control tower", 15 ft (4.6 m) high with windows on all four sides, was commissioned on 25 February 1920 and provided basic traffic, weather and location information to pilots. [ 15 ]