Joined: 12 Sep 2007 Last Visit: 12 Feb 2009 Posts: 56 Location: Berkeley, CA
Posted: Tue Dec 09, 2008 7:19 am Post subject: Europe ’44, Vol. 1 No. 3 (undated, late 1969)
Title: Europe ’44 Vol. 1 No. 3 (undated, late 1969)
Item Code: n/a
Type: Wargaming club zine supplement
Copyright: n/a
Place of Publication: n/a
Printer: Tom Carter
Cover Price: n/a
Mass: ??
Dimensions: 8 .5” by 11”
Format: Full sized, 19 pages not including cover and back, double-sided printing, mimeo. Two staples.
Editor-in-Chief: Read Boles
Co-Editors: Tom Cater, Jim Schoppman
Bulge Editor: Jim Hahnenberg
D-Day Editor: Read Boles
Anzio Editor: Joseph Alexander
The Editor Speaks
Censorship!!, by Tom Carter
Finances
Late Notes on the Merger
Notes
Name of the Game??????, by Read Boles
D-Day in Depth: The North Sea, by Read Boles
The North Sea-The Best Invasion Area?, by Louis Menyhert
D-Day Nazi Defeats, by Bob deMaio
The D-Day Thesis Part II, by George Phillies
D-Day and the Pigeons[sic], by Bill Hoyer
Logistics and the Broad Front Strategy-1944, by Ken Counselman
Members List (now 20)
Chairman’s Report
Happiness is…/Misery is… (humor, uncredited)
The Bulge Society News by Jim Hahnenberg, including:
What Happened to the Newsletter?????
Tourney #1
Tourney#2
Dues
Manuel[sic for “manual]
Ardennes
Battle of the Bulge Rule Interpretations
Deployment of Reinforcements in Battle of the Bulge
The Initial German Attack
Membership (35 members)
“TheBomb” (Anzio News)
Rangers in Italy, by Bill Hoyer
Anzio – In Miniature?, by Bryan Evans III
Membership (27 members)
Schedules
Printers Report
Inky's inklings:
First proper issue of Europe ’44 (volume numbering follows that of its D-Day Society precursor), covering three IFW Societies (D-Day, Bulge and Anzio) and a total of 71 unique members. Eventually this magazine served quite a number of IFW Societies and ultimately sported the highest production values and probably the highest circulation of any Society zine. Dating this issue is tricky. Vol. 1 No. 4 became available around February 1970, which given the overall frequency of publication at the time (roughly quarterly) suggests that v1n3 appeared late in 1969.
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