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unusual facts about This magazine



Vincenzo Pietropaolo

In 2011 Satu Repo, wrote about the first or Pietropaolo's photographs to be published, in 1971, in This magazine.


see also

Abhidhanantar

Many new poets and critics like Saleel Wagh, Sachin Ketkar, Manya Joshi, Sanjeev Khandekar, Mangesh Narayanrao Kale, besides Hemant himself, have published their significant work in this magazine.

Bangadarshan

Many of Bankim's novels were serialized in this magazine, which also carried work by writers such as the Sanskrit scholar Haraprasad Shastri, the literary critic Akshay Chandra Sarkar, and other intellectuals.

GamePro

This magazine feature's section was renamed as "Code Vault" in 2002, to match the name of GamePro's short-lived cheat-code spinoff magazine, although the change could also be credited to 9/11, as the December 2001 issue cover (which featured Luigi's Mansion) featured the "GamePro" logo dressed in the American flag to commemorate the event, and the name was changed just one issue afterwards.

José Régio

Aside from this magazine he also made contributions to newspapers such as the Diário de Notícias and the Comércio do Porto.

Koakuma Ageha

Sociologist Shinji Miyadai has described this magazine as a "textbook for hostesses".

Nafeh

In this magazine has been published interviews with many writers, poetss, film directors, composers and singers such as Victor Erofeyev, Ahmad Shamlou, Orhan Pamuk, Günter Grass, Mahmoud Dolatabadi, Abbas Kiarostami, Asghar Farhadi, Kamran Shirdel, Bahman Farmanara, Shahrdad Rohani, Alireza Assar and Mohammad-Reza Lotfi.

Rudy Pompilli

Research conducted by Haley historian Chris Gardner for a February 2006 article on Pompilli for Now Dig This magazine resulted in no evidence being found that Pompilli performed on the Marterie's version of "Crazy Man, Crazy".

This Magazine Is Haunted

Like its better-known competitors, This Magazine is Haunted was notable for its black humor and frequent O. Henry climaxes.

Tip Top Weekly

Promoted as "an ideal publication for American Youth," this magazine featured several fictional heroes but was mainly devoted to the ongoing adventures of student Frank Merriwell, who began at a fictional New England academy and then moved on to Yale.

Young Adult Library Services

This magazine was split in two: Young Adult Library Services and Children & Libraries in 2002.