Bunty No. 1626, dated 11 March 1989. Come Home, Kathleen cover by Ian Kennedy. DC Thomson.

seen from Spain

seen from Australia

seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Argentina
seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Italy
Bunty No. 1626, dated 11 March 1989. Come Home, Kathleen cover by Ian Kennedy. DC Thomson.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
@NiallOfficial: Niall Storm here with an urgent message . Tune into the sky to see the magic of reflection, refraction, dispersion and other complex physics I’m not gonna pretend to understand #HeartbreakWeatherWatch heartbreakweatherwatch.niallhoran.com
Paul playing drums during a recording session with Jackie Lomax on 11th March 1969. Produced by both Paul and George, Paul played drums on Thumbin’ A Ride, a Coasters cover which was slated at the time to be an A-side for Jackie’s next single, and possibly also on Jackie’s own composition, Going Back To Liverpool which was also recorded on this day. It was originally planned to be the B-side, but eventually it was decided to release a different song, New Day as the A-Side and Thumbin’ A Ride became the B-Side leaving Going Back To Liverpool unreleased until 1991.
Also on this date, Paul announced he would soon be getting married to Linda Eastman the following day.
Hay momentos y circunstancias a las que desearíamos volver un sinnúmero de veces.
M.
Oh no! Not the Snout in the Dark!
Valour No. 19, cover dated 11 March 1981. Conan cover by John Buscema originally from Conan the Barbarian No. 107 (Marvel US, 1980).
The "Important Message" at the top was a giveaway that this was the final issue. From the following week the title would be merged with the sci-fi themed weekly Future Tense. The number continued as No. 20 as both titles had originally launched the same week.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Warlord No. 338, dated 14 March 1981 with great free gift! Union Jack Jackson cover by Ian Kennedy. Below is an ad from the previous issue.
DC Thomson.
Valour No. 18, cover dated 11 March 1981 but it should have been 4 March 1981 (No. 19 is also dated 11 March while No. 17 had been dated 25 February). Incorrect or duplicated cover dates seems to have been a recurring problem with Marvel UK around this time.
An unusual Doctor Strange cover here in that it came from a splash page and not the cover of one of the US Marvel issues. The art is by Ricardo Villamonte and Tom Sutton and it originally appeared in Doctor Strange Vol.2 No. 31, 1978).
Also unusual is that Valour No. 17 had carried a message saying that Doctor Strange wouldn't be in the next issue but would be appearing in another comic soon. Valour No. 19 turned out to be the last issue of the title so it may be they decided to keep him on for the last few issues instead of replacing him. The splash page may have been used as the cover to save space inside the issue so that some of the stories could be wound up.
Flight into History from the pages of The Crunch. First solo flight from the UK to Australia took off 7 February 1928 (although it mistakenly says 1978 in the text) and landed on 11 March. 33 days. I've never been to Australia but I imagine the flight probably still feels as if it takes that length of time. Artwork here looks a bit like Mike Dorey but not sure. DC Thomson.