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Magazines established in 1933

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Newsweek
Newsweek is an American weekly news magazine based in New York City. Founded as a weekly print magazine in 1933, it was widely distributed during the twentieth century and has had many notable editors-in-chief. It is currently co-owned by Dev Pragad, the president and chief executive officer (CEO), and Johnathan Davis, who sits on the board; each owns 50% of the company.
U.S. News & World Report
American news magazine
Esquire
American men's magazine
Kirkus Reviews
American book review magazine
Die Weltwoche
Swiss newspaper
Neues Volk
monthly publication of the Office of Racial Policy in Nazi Germany
Poedjangga Baroe
Indonesian literary magazine
Minotaure
Minotaure was a Surrealist-oriented magazine founded by Albert Skira and E. Tériade in Paris and published in French between 1933 and 1939. Minotaure published on the plastic arts, poetry and literature, the avant garde, as well as articles on esoteric and unusual aspects of literary and art histories. Also included were psychoanalytical studies and artistic aspects of anthropology and ethnography. It was a lavish and extravagant magazine by the standards of the 1930s, profusely illustrated with high quality reproductions of art, often in color.
Das deutsche Mädel
Nazi magazine for girls
Nástup
thumb|upright|Nástup, volume 7 issue 6 (1938) Nástup (translated as "line up" "forming ranks", "deployment", or "ascent") was a semimonthly Slovak periodical, published between 1933 and 1940, that advocated Slovak autonomy, ethnonationalism, and antisemitism. Founded by Ferdinand Ďurčanský and his brother Ján, the magazine was oriented at younger Slovak Catholics, especially university students. Its readers, the most radical wing of the Slovak People's Party, were called "Nástupists" or "Nástup faction"; many of them had been previously affiliated with Rodobrana paramilitary and later with the
Sygnały
'''Sygnały Magazyn' (Signals Magazine) was a Polish cultural and social magazine published 1933–1939 in Lwów (Lemberg, today Lviv, Ukraine). It was a leading periodical of the leftist Polish intelligentsia. The journal started as a 12-page monthly and was subsequently published once every two weeks, with editions of up to 32 pages. Sygnały was published in the tabloid format, similar to the New York Times'' at about 56x40 cm (22x16 inches).
Harijan
magazine by Mahatma Gandhi, 1933 to 1948
al-Risālah
Arrissalah ( Ar-Risala: the message, or Ar-Risala Magazine) was an Arabic-language weekly cultural magazine for literature, science, and art published in Cairo from 1933 to 1953. It has been described as "the most important intellectual weekly in the 1930s Egypt and the Arab world."
Tekhnika Molodezhi
magazine
Apu
Finnish magazine published in Helsinki
Chess Review
American magazine
Panjebar Semangat
Indonesian magazine
Bungei
Japanese literary magazine