Interview, Volume XXXIX, No. 9, December/January, 2010
New York: Interview, Inc., 2009. Wraps. 184 p. Includes illustrations. Many illustrations in color. More
New York: Interview, Inc., 2009. Wraps. 184 p. Includes illustrations. Many illustrations in color. More
New York: Interview, Inc., 2010. Wraps. 128 p. Includes illustrations. Many illustrations in color. More
New York: Interview, Inc., 2010. Wraps. 192 p. Includes illustrations. Many illustrations in color. More
Santa Barbara, CA: Forum for Contemporary History, 1974. Presumed first edition/first printing of each issue. Hardcover. Sturdily bound volume with special issues 1 through 16. Subtitle changed for issues 15 and 16 to The Magazine of Opposing Views. Issue number 1 is dated May/June, 1974. It was published bimonthly. Issue number 16 was November/December 1976. Many noted author's work appears in these special issues. Cover has slight wear and soiling. Each issue has about 60 pages, and cover illustrations are in color, orther are in black and white. More
New York: Valiant, a Division of Voyager Communications, Inc., 1995. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Unpaginated (32 pages, plus covers). Profusely illustrated (with colorful imagery). Includes several advertisements. Secret Weapons is a superhero team in the Valiant Universe. The original team consists of many of Valiant Comics' most popular characters, including the Geomancer Geoff McHenry, Bloodshot, Eternal Warrior, Shadowman, Solar, X-O. Manowar, as well as Livewire and Stronghold. The book's original creator was Joe St. Pierre working as both writer and illustrator. It concluded after 21 issues in 1995. The government has dispatched Amanda McKee – the technopath codenamed Livewire – to investigate the ruins of a secret facility formerly run by Toyo Harada, the most powerful telepath on Earth and her former mentor. In his quest for world betterment at any cost, Harada sought out and activated many potential psiots like himself. Those who survived, but whose powers he deemed to have no value to his cause, were hidden away at this installation. But Livewire, having studied Harada’s greatest strengths and learned his deepest weaknesses, senses opportunity where he once saw failure. A young girl who can talk to birds… A boy who can make inanimate objects gently glow… To others, these are expensive disappointments. But, to Livewire, they are secret weapons…in need of a leader. Now, as a mechanized killer called Rex-O seeks to draw them out, Livewire and her new team of cadets will be forced to put their powers into action…in ways they never could have imagined…. More
Fort Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D.C. National Defense University Press, 1996. Trade paperback. xii, 224 p. : ill. (some col. ), col. maps; 28 cm. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1996. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 53, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 53, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 53, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 53, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 52, [2] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1997. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 53, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Fort Knox, KY: United States Army Armor Center, 1999. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Wraps. [2], 61, [1] p. Includes: illustrations, diagrams, maps. More
Department of the Army, Headquarters, 2002. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Magazine. 58 pages plus covers. Illustrations (most in color). Approved for public release. Distribution is unlimited. ARMY AL&T MAGAZINE serves to educate, inform, motivate, and instruct the Army Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology Workforce by providing articles on new developments and critical issues relative to state-of-the art technology, capabilities, processes, procedures, techniques, and management philosophy. The magazine’s content, which is mandated by an Editorial Advisory Board of senior AL&T leaders, focuses heavily on lessons learned and best business practices. The magazine also serves to disseminate information pertinent to the professional development of the AL&T Workforce. The overall objective is to help the AL&T audience execute its broad and diverse missions, overcome challenges, and be highly innovative. In so doing, Army AL&T Magazine is dedicated to helping Soldiers be the decisive edge. More
New York: Dennis Stuff, Inc., 2007. Wraps. 128 p. Includes illustrations. More
Place_Pub: New Haven, CT: Dennis Stuff, Inc., 2007. 112, wraps, illus. (most in color), mailing information on front cover. More
Washington, DC: The Class of Nineteen Thirty-two, Trinity College, 1932. Hardcover. Includes illustrations. More
New York: Brill Media Ventures, LP. 2000. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. Format is approximately 9 inches by 11.25 inches. 116 pages. Wraps. Mailing label residue and scuffing on cover. Steven Brill (born August 22, 1950) is an American lawyer, journalist, and entrepreneur who founded monthly magazine The American Lawyer and cable channel Court TV. He is the author of the best-selling book, Tailspin: The People and Forces Behind America's Fifty-Year Fall – and Those Fighting to Reverse It. Brill's Content was one of the most innovative publishing initiatives. Steven Brill had a brainstorm: the public, he thought, was fascinated with news about highly visible media organizations, and this appetite could be converted into a business that would thrive as it revealed the mysteries and missteps of those organizations. In June 1998, Brill launched Brill's Content, a media watchdog publication that ceased publication in fall 2001. After sputtering for years, the vision died. Brill's Content magazine suspended publication, ending a three-year run of dissecting the personalities, obsessions and machinations of news organizations. The magazine caused a stir in its very first issue with Brill's article titled "Pressgate" charging that independent counsel Ken Starr and his office had been the source of much of the information for reporters regarding the grand jury proceedings about the Lewinsky scandal and that as a result Starr may have violated federal law or ethical and prosecutorial guidelines. More