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Detective Book Magazine was first published in April 1930 and monthly issues followed until the magazine was discontinued after the September 1931 edition.. The magazine was revived with the publication of an issue in 1937, and until 1952 the magazine was published as a quarterly (though in some years, only three issues were published, and in each of 1950 through 1952 only one issue was ...
BB, PRIMEDIA Consumer Magazine Group (1987–2000) BBW, Various including Larry Flynt Publications Inc. (1979–2003) Between C & D (1983–1990) Beyond Fantasy Fiction (1953–1955) Big Brother (1992–2004) Bill Apters W O W Xtra Magazine, H&S Media Inc. (2000–2001) The Black Cat (1895–1922) Black Issues Book Review (1999–2007) Black ...
The spangenhelm was an effective protection that was relatively easy to produce. Weakness of the design were its partial head protection and its jointed construction. It was replaced by similarly shaped helmets made with one-piece skulls ( nasal helms ), kettle hats and eventually the great helm or casque.
After 17 issues of Creepy and 11 of Eerie, Goodwin resigned as editor in 1967.The movement of Warren's operations from Philadelphia to New York City, combined with a change in distributors and a downturn in the market imposed a cash flow problem on Warren, and Goodwin along with all of the artists except for Tom Sutton and Rocke Mastroserio (who soon died) departed the company.
Back issue may refer to: A past (normally out-of-print) issue of a magazine or other periodical publication Back Issue! , a US magazine featuring articles and arts about comics
Operations Magazine by Multi-Man Publishing considers itself a direct descendant; editor Bruce Monnin's first issue (No. 46, Fall 2004) carried the following message: . On the MMP website, when describing Operations, it states, "The content of the magazine will slowly evolve to include other MMP games and will eventually become to MMP what The General was to The Avalon Hill Game Company."
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The first issue (cover-dated July 1968) featured a painted, color cover by men's adventure-magazine artist Harry Rosenbaum, in acrylic paint on illustration board, over layouts by The Amazing Spider-Man artist John Romita Sr. [3] The 52-page black-and-white Spider-Man story, "Lo, This Monster!", was by writer Stan Lee, penciler Romita Sr. and ...