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This a category of magazines which were first established in 1933. Pages in category "Magazines established in 1933" The following 78 pages are in this category, out of 78 total.
Science fiction magazines established in the 1930s (21 P) Pages in category "Magazines established in the 1930s" This category contains only the following page.
The first issue of the magazine was dated February 17, 1933. Seven photographs from the week's news were printed on the first issue's cover. [19] In 1937, News-Week merged with the weekly journal Today, which had been founded in 1932 by future New York Governor and diplomat W. Averell Harriman and Vincent Astor of the prominent Astor family. As ...
American Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge (1834–1837) The American Mercury (1924–1981) The American Museum (1787–1792) American Review (1967–1977) The American Review (1933–1937) The American Review: A Whig Journal (1845–1849) American Thunder (2004) The American Weekly (1896–1966) Amerika (1944–1994) Amiga World ...
The brand's stores and e-commerce site disappeared in 2010. Merry-Go-Round – Merry-Go-Round had more than 500 locations during its heyday in the 1980s. It went bankrupt in 1995. [65] Mervyn's – a California-based regional department store founded in 1949. Mervyn's ill-fated expansion out of West Coast markets in the months before a ...
Magazines established in 1933 (78 P) N. Newspapers established in 1933 (30 P) Pages in category "Publications established in 1933" The following 2 pages are in this ...
Minotaure was a Surrealist-oriented magazine founded by Albert Skira and E. Tériade in Paris and published in French between 1933 and 1939. Minotaure published on the plastic arts, poetry, and literature, avant garde, as well as articles on esoteric and unusual aspects of literary and art history.
On March 4, 1933, Lawrence Hoyt (1902–1982), [1] [2] a former sales manager for Simon & Schuster, [3] and Melvin T. Kafka (1905–1992) [4] [5] opened a rental library within leased space inside a Bridgeport, Connecticut, department store under the name Walden Book Company (named for Henry David Thoreau's Walden, a meditation on simple living in natural surroundings). [6]