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Magazine Definition–noun | 1. | a publication that is issued periodically, usually bound in a paper cover, and typically contains essays, stories, poems, etc., by many writers, and often photographs and drawings, frequently specializing in a particular subject or area, as hobbies, news, or sports. | | 2. | a room or place for keeping gunpowder and other explosives, as in a fort or on a warship. | <
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table class="luna-Ent"> | 3. | a building or place for keeping military stores, as arms, ammunition, or provisions. | | | 4. | a metal receptacle for a number of cartridges, inserted into certain types of automatic weapons and when empty removed and replaced by a full receptacle in order to continue firing. | | 5. | Also called magazine show. Radio and Television. | a. | Also called newsmagazine. a regularly scheduled news program consisting of several short segments in which various subjects of current interest are examined, usually in greater detail than on a regular newscast. | | b. | a program with a varied format that combines interviews, commentary, entertainment, etc. | | | 8. | a supply chamber, as in a stove. | | 9. | a storehouse; warehouse. | | 10. | a collection of war munitions. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaNewsweek weekly newsmagazine published in New York City, one of the highly influential "big three" of American newsweeklies. It was founded in 1933 by Thomas J.C. Martyn, a former foreign-news editor of Time, ...
MAGAZINES: Ebony at 50 It was 1945 and World War II had ended when the premiere issue of Ebony magazine hit the newsstands in November. The brainchild of Johnson Publishing Co. founder John Johnson, Ebony (so christened by ...
Media and Publishing The economic downturn continued to batter American magazines in 2002, although some positive signs toward year's end pointed toward recovery. Magazine advertising revenue for September 2002 was up 9% ...
Media and Publishing Many established magazines moved into alternate language markets during 1996. In Latin America cross-border publications in Spanish included the business magazine Summa, which reprinted business news ...
Media and Publishing The magazine industry faced a bad year that got worse after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S. "The 11th" hastened the decline of an industry already suffering lowered revenues and ...
Publishing Although magazines made numerous technological advances in 1993, these technologies did not seem likely soon to replace magazines on paper. Wired, the new voice for multimedia fans that debuted in ...
Media and Publishing The magazine industry continued in 2006 to display an uncanny ability to adapt to new media threats. In 2005, the latest year for available data, advertising and circulation revenue reached record ...
Media and Publishing There was only limited growth in new magazines in 1995, with launches generally aimed at exploiting existing gaps. Wired, the U.S computer magazine, had a troubled launch in the U.K. and had to ...
Media and Publishing In 2005 Vanity Fair magazine shocked the world when, in its July issue, it became the first publication to reveal that W. Mark Felt, the 91-year-old former associate director of the FBI, was the ...
Media and Publishing London's Gramophone magazine, the voice of classical music, marked its 75th year in April 1998 with a look back at some of its less-than-stellar reviews. Of renowned opera singer Maria Callas, the ...
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Related topics from Ask NewsTed Rall Blasts 'Newsweek' for Cartoon Selections
Editor & Publisher - Found Jan. 6, 2009 NEW YORK Ted Rall, president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, is at it again -- and this time, it's Newsweek magazine that's at
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Newsweek: Quit Trying To Corrupt The Values of Our Young!
Christian Coalition of America - Found Dec. 26, 2008 ... without having a major weekly news magazine denigrating the Christian values we are trying to instill in them. 'Newsweek' magazine's latest...
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The Groop Rebrands and Designs New Identity for the Republican Party ...
Yahoo! Canada - Found Dec. 23, 2008 Source: The Groop Newsweek Magazine Special Double Issue with Republican Party Rebrand (Photo: Business Wire).
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Newsweek: Duke Energy CEO Rogers among âGlobal Eliteâ
Los Angeles Business - Found Dec. 24, 2008 According to Newsweek , Rogers has the power to make dreams of renewable power a reality. The magazine says Duke (NYSE: DUK) is not the worlds...
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The Groop Rebrands and Designs New Identity for the Republican Party ...
DiGiTAL50 - Found Dec. 24, 2008 - The Groop was asked by Newsweek magazine to provide ideas and design direction to help reposition and resurrect the Republican brand.
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The Horizon By Kayode Komolafe:Governance Remains The IssueIn the ...
This Day Online - Found Dec. 23, 2008 In the current Special Edition of the American Newsweek Magazine, the editor's note contains some paragraphs, which eloquently speak to our situation ...
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The Groop Rebrands and Designs New Identity for the Republican Party ...
MarketWatch - Found Dec. 23, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Groop was asked by Newsweek magazine to provide ideas and design direction to help reposition and resurrect the Republican ...
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Newsweek is a magazine in decline
MENAFN - Found Dec. 14, 2008 Davis' PC Magazine announce that the future lies exclusively online. It wouldn't shock me if the parent company eventually combined Newsweek...
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Dr. Joe Vitale to speak at wealth building seminar - Austin, TX, ...
Elites TV - Found 4 hours ago He has been interviewed on Larry King Live, The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch, and on Extra TV. He was also featured in Newsweek Magazine.
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Secular, multi-lateral government needed to solve Gaza conflict
Columbia Missourian - Found 3 hours ago On Dec. 29, Jonathan Alter, a columnist and senior editor for Newsweek magazine, talked about the crisis on MSNBC. “Part of the problem is...
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