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The Forum was an American magazine founded in 1885 by Isaac Rice. It existed under various names and formats until it ceased publication in 1950. Published in New York, its most notable incarnation (1885 until 1902) was symposium based.
Forum was founded in 1968 through a merger of various technology and business publications whose roots stretch back to 1880. Forum's stated mission is to act as an ”independent liberal magazine, editorially free from any party or organization, striving to promote a spirit of humanistic enlightenment, democracy, open and transparent business, as well as innovation and entrepreneurship”. [5]
Even though Forum is recognized as political magazine, [1] but still, other fields like economy, culture, and life, cover significant part of the magazine pages. The world stories are also fully covered by the correspondents in Moscow and Washington , and the busy stringers in the neighboring countries.
The first American edition of Penthouse Forum was published in 1971 and became the fastest-growing national magazine by 1978. [1] In the 1970s, Forum was one of the most-sold magazines in America. [2] In 1996, Forum had 400,000 subscribers. [3] The "letters" section of the magazine became popular, resulting in the creation of another Penthouse ...
Forum, Bangladeshi current affairs magazine; The Forum (alumni magazine), the Columbia University alumni magazine; Forum (business magazine), Swedish-language magazine in Finland; Forum (Macedonian magazine), weekly political magazine in the Republic of Macedonia; Forum, biweekly political magazine in Turkey published between 1954 and 1970
Update the archive overview for the current year at Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Archives/2025, by copying the date above (which will be older) and updating the issue number and date. Leave a note under Notes to thank this week's contributors and to announce any important upcoming news and any issues that have arisen with publication.
From this point forward, Rand acted as the sole editor for the magazine, bringing in Peikoff as an associate editor. In 1971, Rand decided on another format change, going back to a newsletter style publication, in the hope that this would allow her to reach a larger audience. [6] The final issue of The Objectivist was published in September 1971.
In Spring 2010, Creative Nonfiction evolved from journal to magazine format with the addition of new sections such as writer profiles and essays on the craft of writing, as well as updates on developments in the literary nonfiction scene. As of 2023, the magazine has ceased publication, with no information provided about when or if they will ...