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Texture (previously known as Next Issue) was a digital magazine app launched in 2012. [1] The service had a monthly subscription fee that gave readers access to over 200 magazines. [ 2 ] The service was established by Next Issue Media, a joint-venture between Condé Nast , Hearst Magazines , Meredith Corporation , News Corp , Rogers Media , and ...
Synapse Group, Inc. is a multichannel marketing company. Synapse is also the largest consumer magazine distributor in the United States, [3] with access to over 700 magazine titles from major publishers, including Hearst Corporation, Condé Nast Publications, Meredith Corporation, and Time Inc. Synapse attracts subscribers for these publications by working through a number of non-traditional ...
This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain . Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions .
File:GAMES Magazine logo July 1991 issue masthead.png; File:GAMES Magazine logo September 1985 issue masthead.png; File:GAMES Magazine logo, January-February 1978 issue masthead.png; File:GAMES World of Puzzles Magazine logo May 1994 issue masthead.png; File:GAMES World of Puzzles Magazine logo October 2014 issue masthead.png; File:Gamest logo.svg
Santa Photos in Center Court begins Nov. 17 through Christmas Eve, Dec. 24 near the mall’s north main entrance. Santa’s Grand Arrival Parade is at 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Nov. 18.
The Galleria was originally the Sunrise Center, an open-air shopping mall constructed in 1954, but was demolished except for the Jordan Marsh store (reopened as South Florida's first Dillard's in 1993; Dillard's stores later opened at Pembroke Lakes Mall in 1995 and The Mall at Wellington Green in 2001), and rebuilt as an enclosed mall. [1]
Built in 1969, Richland Mall was the first modern enclosed mall in north central Ohio and was anchored by Lazarus, the O'Neil's department store and Sears. Prior to Macy's, the store operated as ...
From the 1920s to the 1950s, the Omni area was a high-end shopping area with many major department stores along Biscayne Boulevard, such as Sears, Roebuck and Company (whose tower still stands at the Arsht Center), a Burdines directly to the north at the southwestern corner of Northeast 14th Street, and a Jordan Marsh at the northeastern corner of Northeast 15th Street built in 1956). [4]