NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS MAGAZINES INVENTORY -

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>>>> Below is a Current Inventory List of ITEMS IN STOCK & ready to sell.

They are NOT cataloged by price & condition, as we have FAR FAR too many items & they are always changing;

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If you see items that interest you, PLEASE;

(1) REQUEST Condition, Price & Confirmation of availability;

(2) State preferred Condition; (A) Highest Available Grade; (B) Middle Grade; (C) Lowest grade, cheapest copy;

(3) List up to a MAXIMUM of 50 items that interest you [Pulling, Grading & Pricing for the GINAT Inventory in our 8000 Square

Foot warehouse, can be EXTREMELY Time Consuming; (So please; Try to send Serious Inquiries & ask for MOST WANTED Items]

If you list MORE than 50 items, we will begin at the top of the list & stop at the 50th Item; Unfortunately most people who ask for more

than 50 items, do not buy anything & they end to to be just “window shopping;

(On 50 items quotes we spend 30-120 Minutes of Labor & another 15-60 Minutes putting it all back if they buy nothing)

IF you make a purchase from the Original 50 or Less item Quotes, we will be very HAPPY to Quote MORE items];

(4) SEND your WANT LIST by EMAIL to = cworld@mts.net (Our Most Efficient Method of replying with Quotes;

OR, you can PHONE Us at = 1-204-346-3674 [ We usually CANNOT give an INSTANT & On the Spot Quote, thus EMAIL is usually better]

(5) Once we get your WANT LIST, based on our IN STOCK Inventory Lists, we will be VERY happy to respond with what is in stock,

As Soon As Possible; WE USUALLY REPLY to Inquires in 1-3 DAYS. (Perhaps Longer for BIG & Time-Consuming Inquires);

(6) PLEASE; Be Sure to let us know which COUNTRY you live in [USA, Canada, Overseas, etc] so we can quote Postage.

(7) MANY Customers have SPAM FILTERS that BLOCK our EMAIL REPLIES, thus it is always a GOOD IDEA to enclose your

Complete MAILING ADDRESS and PHONE NUMBER (and FAX number) along with your Inquiries.

[IF your Server REJECTS our EMAIL Replies, we can then answer you by Snail Mail, Phone or Fax]

THANK YOU ! ..... Doug Sulipa

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Our WEB PAGE (includes HUGE Inventory of ITEMS IN STOCK; >> The WORLD'S BIGGEST SELECTION, on the entire Internet, on MANY ITEMS; Please GO TO = www.dougcomicworld.com

[ Book Mark This page! NOTE; Please REFRESH your bookmark for our Webpage occasioanlly, to get the NEWEST & MOST up to-date version; This is done by; Re-Typing

our " www.dougcomicworld.com " address into your browser & pushing ENTER ];

NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS MAGAZINES INVENTORY -


MACLEAN'S;

1932 (December 1);

1938 (July 1); (August 1, 15); (September 1, 15); (October 1,15);

1940 (January 1); (March 15); (June 15); (July 1 15); (August); (September 1 15); (October 1); (November 1 15); (December);

1941 (February 1); (March 15); (May 15); (July 1, 15); (September 1); (November 1); (December 1);

1942 (April 1); (December 1);

1943 (July 1);

1948 (March 1);


MACLEAN'S;

1951 (April 1);

1952 (February 15); (March 15); (April 1, 15); (May 15); (July 15); (October 1); (December 1);

1953 (January 1,15); (February 1,15); (March 1,15); (April 1,15); (May 1,15); (June 1); (July 1); (September 1);

1954 (February 1); (March 15); (April 1,15); (May 15); (June 1;Ray Bradbury, 15); (July 15);

1955 (June 11,25); (August 20); (October 1);

1956 (September 15, 29); (October 27);

1957 (April 27); (June 8); (December 7, 21);

1958(January 1,18); (February 1,15); (May 10); (June 21); (August 16); (September 27); (October 25);

(November 8,22); (December 6,20);

1959(January 3, 17); (February 14); (March 14); (May 9, 23;The Queen); (November 7, 21); (December 5);

1960(January 2, 30); (February 13); (March 26); (April 27); (May 7, 21); (June 4); (July 2, 30); (August 24);

(October 22); (November 5, 19); (December 17);


MACLEAN'S;

1961(January 14,28); (February 11, 25); (March 11, 25); (April 8, 22); (May 6, 20); (June 3, 17); (July 1, 15);

(August 12, 26); (September 9, 23); (October 7, 21); (November 4, 18); (December 2, 16);

1962(January 6, 27); (February 10, 24); (March 10, 24); (April 7, 21); (May 5, 19); (June 2, 16, 30); (July 14, 28);

(August 11, 25); (September 8, 22); (October 6, 20); (November 3, 17);

1963(January 5); (February 9); (March 23); (April 6, 20); (May 4); (July 6,27); (August 10); (September 7);

(October 5, 19); (December 2, 14);

1964(January 4, 25); (February 8, 22); (March 7, 21); (April 4, 18); (May 2, 16); (June 6, 20); (August 8);

(September 5, 19); (November 16); (December 14);

1965(January 2, 23); (March 20); (May 15); (September 4, 18); (October 2); (December 15);

1966(January 1, 22); (February 5, 19); (March 5, 19); (April 2, 16); (June 4); (September 3); (October 1);

(December 17);

1967(January); (April); (May); (June); (July); (September); (October); (November);

1968(January); (April); (May); (June); (July); (August); (September); (October); (November); (December);

1969 (February – Hockey star Bobby Orr); (March – Cello player at grain docks “New Life in the Near North”); (April – Water Skier “Explore Canada”); (May - “Man and Woman: What We're Learning from Animals”); (July - Female scuba diver “The Rapture of Scuba”); (September – Toronto Argonaut's quatrback Wally Gabler); (December - “The Distinguished Ambassador fr4om Canada ... Who Needs Him?”);


MACLEAN'S;

1970 (April – Elaine Bedard; Joey Smallwood); (August - “Love, Violence and the Family”); (September – Donald Sutherland); (October - “How to Keep up with Fashion's shifting Erogenous zone”); (December – Genevieve Bujold/ Paul Almond);

1971(January - “The Battle to Keep Vancouver Livable”); (March - “Toronto Must Room for People”); (May – John Turner “The once and Future Contender”); (June - “Class of '71; The Craduates Nobody Wants”); (July – Chief Dan George); (September – Montreal Alouettes Sam Etcheverry);

1972(January -”Emergence of the Hand held Neighborhood Film Stars”); (February – Pierre Trudeau); (March – Bruno Gerssi); (April – Hockey's Derek Sanderson);(June – Leonard Cohen); (July – Corporal Jack Ramsay); (August – Queen Elizabeth II/ John F. Kennedy); (October – Margaret Trudeau); (November - “Great God Bless America Issue”); (December – Pierre Burton/ “Team Canada; Why big money won't buy us time”);

1973 (January - “Election Stalemate; The day the king got His”); (February – Hockey's Ken Dryden by Jack Ludwig); (March – Murray McLauchlan); (April - “Redefining our Past; MacKenzie and other Heroes”); (May - “Death of a Great Spirit: Canada's Indians speak Out”); (July -”Get out of Town – Run away to Sea'); (August – Olympic Swimmers; Pat McGregors/ Linda Cuthbert/ Cindy Shatto/ Beverly Boys); (September – Queen Elizabeth Royal visit 1973); (October – CFL's top quarterbacks; Joe Theismann/ Don Jonas/ Chuck Ealey); (November – TV's Carole Taylor); (December - “How Alan Eagleson plays Santa Claus);

1974(January – Sir Wilfred Laurier); (February - “Curling as a way of life, Tricks of the Broom” by Ernie Richardson); (March – Johnny Bassett); (April – Karen Kain/ Rudolf Nureyev); (May - “The bare facts about Acupuncture); (June – Joni Mitchell); (July – Chief Jutice Bora Laskin); (August – Margaret Trudeau); (September – Team Canada's Bobby Hull); (October – Soprano Riki Turofsky); (November – Anne Murray); (December – Magician Doug Henning);

1975(January – John Diefenbaker); (February - “Drapeau and the Selling of the Olympics”); (March - “James Richard and ... Our Spent Forces”); (April - “8 ways to save our Crumbling Economy”); (May - “How the Land is Lost; Canada's Land Grab”); (June – Golfer Sandra Post); (July – Alberta Premier Peter Lougheed); (August – Quebes Premier Robert Bourassa); (September – Capitalist John Angus “Bud” Modougald); (October 6 – Finance Minister Donald Stovel MacDonald), (October 20 – Postmaster General Bryce Mackasey); (November 17 – Malcolm Bricklin and his car);

1976(January – Jean Drapeau); (February 9 – Pierre Trudea in Cuba/ Fidel Castro); (March 22 – The Jackal; World's Most Wanted man); (April 5 – Montreal Canadians; Guy Lafleur/ Rocket Richard/ Jean Beliveau), (April 19 – Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead; “Marriage in Crisis”); (May 3 - “Terror in Belfast; Northern Ireland at War”), (May 17 - “Baseball and Beer; Why Labatt's wanted into the Majors”); (May 31 - “The Case against the RCMP”); (June 14 – Ontario MLA Roy McMurtry); (July – Montreal Olympic review); (September 6 – Canada Cup Star Bobby Hull); (November 15 – President elect Jimmy Carter);

1977(January 10 - “News mkaers of 1977”), (January 24 - “The Fitness Explosion”); (February 7 - “Race: The Debate Becomes Violent”);, (February 21 (“Canada's Battered Dollar: Will it drop to .85 cents?); (March 7 – Pierre Trudeau & Jimmy Carter), (March 21 – Mick Jagger & Margaret Trudeau); (April 4 - “The Agony of English Speaking Quebec; Stay or Go”); (May 2 – Israel's Days of Decision; Elecision), (May 16 – Auto Mania; Great Canadian Love Affair), (May 30 – Maggie Smith & Barry MacGregor at the Stratford festival); (June 13 – Pierre & Margaret Truedeau), (June 27 – Canada'a Pre-eminent historian Donald Dreighton); (July 11 – Are the mounties out of control?), (July 25 – Bob Blair; Aratic gas pipeline); (August 8 – Fashion designer Kenzo), (August 22 - “Metric Madness”); (September 5 - “Tornonto; A walk on the wild side, Younge St.”), (September 19 – Finance Minister Donald MacDonald); (October 3 – Queen Elizabeth), (October 17 – Liberal Jack Horner), (October 17 – Liberal Jack Horner); (October 31 – House of Commons); (November 14 – RCMP; Spooks in Scarlet), (November 28 – Canadian TV News ratings War); (December 26 – Vancouver Conductor Kazuyoshi Akiyama);

1978(January 9 - “The Class of '78; Iintrocuding the New Elite”), (January 23 – Canadian Rockers RUSH); (February 20 – Ottawa confidertial); (April 3 – 1968 to 1978 the Pierre Trudeau decade), (April 17 - “The Perils of the Birth Control Pill”); (May 1 – Gordon Lightfoot); (June 12 - “the Singles Myth” Vicky Umlauf); (July 24 – Janet Nutter at Edmonton Commonwealth games); (August 7 – Older women/ younger men), (August 21 - “Jimmy Carter's inferno; all the Presidnet's “Freinds”); (September 4 - “In the Canadian Style; Fashion”); (October 2 – The newest centurions; graduating poice), (October 9 – Pope John Paul I; 1912 – 1978), (October 16 – Montreal Canadiens Guy Lafleur), (October 23 – CBC's Al Johnson), (October 30 – Tory Leader Joe Clark); (November 6 - “Fighting Back; the Forces reborn”), (November 13 – Celine Lomez), (November 20 - “The Plight of Canada's Kids”), (November 27 – Finance Minsiter Jean Chretien); (December 11-Superman Christopher Reeves), (December 25 – Hudson's Bay President Don McGiverin);

1979(January1 – The Turin Shroud “Is this Jesus?”), (January 15 – Iran: Downfall of the Shan), (January 22 - “The Rush to Indian Art”), (January 29 – Peter C. Newman reviews the seventies/ Pierre & margaret Trudeau/ Farrah Fawcett); (February 5 – British Colombia Premier Bill Bennett), (February 12 – Chief Colombia Premier Bill Bennett), (February 19 – The Constitution Debates), (February 26 – Islam: The Power and the Passion); (March 5 – China at war: Vietnam), (March 12 – Toronto Dominion's Dick Thomson), (March 19 – The Sun Seelers; a billion dollar Exodus to Florida), (March 26 – Margaret Trudeau); (April 9 – Election 1979; Pierre Trudeau/ Joe Clark/ Ed Broadbent), (April 16 – Prince Charles), (April 23 – NDP Leader Ed Broadbent), (April 30 – New Hudson Bay boss Ken Thomson); (May 7 – The undecided votes; Where will they go?), (May 21 – Ontario; The keys to the kingdom, election), (May 28 – The anatomy of happiness); (June 4 – Conservative Prime Minister elect Joe Clark), (June 11 – Class of '79; The great job race), (June 25 – Dressing the new woman); (July 2 – Asian Holocast? Refugees in Malaysia), (July 9 - Peter Bronfman), (July 16 – Director George Romero), (July 23 – Expos' catcher Gary Catcher), (July 30 – Young Suicides); (August 6 – Africa; the commonwealth's burden, (August 13 – Quebes actress Carole Laure), (August 20 – The nuclear power debate), (August 27 – John Diefenbaker 1895 – 1979); (September 3 – External affairs Minister Flora MacDonald); (September 10 – Joe Clark; the first 100 days), (September 17 – Toronto criminal Lawyer Edward Greenspan), (September 24 – Television; the new season); (October 1 – Peter Ustinov at Stratford, (October 8 – Pope John Paul II as Superstar), (october 15 – Author Margaret Atwood), (October 22 – Joe Clark; The Tories get tough), (October 29 – The fall kill; hunting season); (November 5 – Is this Art?), (November 12 – The Energy Crisis; a special report), (November 19 – Iran boils again), (November 26 – Mississauga Nightmare; Chemical Train wreck); (December 3 – An Era Ends; Trudeau Resignes), (December 10 – Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini), (December 17 – Finance Minister John Crosbie), (December 24 – Election 1980; Here we go again), (December 31 – 1979 the year that was);

1980(January 7 – The 80's; the tightrope decade), (January – 14 - Claude Ryan's natinoal dream), (January 21 – Russian Preimer Brezhnev's gamble), (January 28 – Election 1980; where have all the leaders gone?); (February 4 – Election 1980; Wrestling for resources), (February 11 – Ambassador Kenneth Taylor; the great escape), (February 18 – Cruising; Lure of the love boats), (February 25 – Pierre Trudeau; the second coming); (March 3 – Silver Medalist Gaetan Boucher; the troubled olympics), (March 10 – Squeezing the Middle Class), (March 17 – Finance Minister Allan Maceachen), (March 24 – Los Angeles Kings Marcel Dionne), (March 31 – Teen Sex; Younger Gamblers, younger losers); (April 7 – New wave music; no-star rock, (April 14 – Quebeair President Alfred Hamel); (April 21 – Inside Afghanistan's War); (May 5 – Stress; the business of coping), (May 12 – Referendum report; the fear merchants), (May 19 – British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher), (May 26 – Quebec Claude Ryan; non, now what?); (June 2 – Mexico President Jose Lopez Portillo), (June 16 – New life for sale; Biotechnology); (July 14 – Cape Breton coal miner Bernie Gillis), (July 21 - Ronald Reagan; can he run America), (July 28 – Nursing Homes; everybody's nightmare); (August 4 – Smile! Here come the tourists), (August 11 – Canadian business goes South), (August 18 – Screen wars; The future of TV), (August 25 – Fred Johnsen; Millionaire's mysterious disappearance); (September 1 – The big three fight back; GM, Ford, Chrysler), (Septmber 8 – Eskimo's Quarterback Tom Wilkinson), (September 15 – Alberta premier Peter Longheed), (September 22 – Rewriting History; Costitution 1980), (September 29 – Doctors in Crisis); (October 6 – Iraq's President Hussein/ Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini), (October 13 – Losing to the Yanks; fish, cars, trade, dams ...); (October 20 – Anne Murray); (October 27 – The Boat People one year later); (November 3 – Brian Peckford; Crusade against Ottawa), (November 17 – President elect Ronald Reagan), (November 24 – The global struggle for human rights); (December 1 – Western Separatism; fact of fad?), (December 8 – The Mood Drugs; cure or curse?), (December 15 – Making Canada work; Search for industrial strategy), (December 22 - John Lennon 1940 – 1980), (December 29 – Anne-Maire Sten; Canada's jet set);


MACLEAN'S;

1981(January 5 – 1980 the turbulent year that was), (January 12 – Terry Fox and the Nature of Heroism), (January 19 – The NHL comes of age), (January 26 – Pierre Trudeau's quest for a foriegn policy); (February 2 – Home free; Iran's American Hostage's go free), (February 9 – Prima Ballerina Karen Kain), (February 16 – Downhill skier Steve Podborski), (February 23 – Trudeau & Margaret Thatcher; who will stand down), (March 2 – The day Alberta turns off the oil), (March 9 - Lady Diana Spencer; our next Queen), (March 16 (The Happy Hoofers; Ontario provincial election), (March 23 – Ronald Reagan & Pierre Trudeau), (March 30 – Hunger for Housing); (April 6 – The Science of Running, (April 13 – America's high noon mentality and the shoting of Ronald Reagan); (May 11 – The Press Barons; Southam's Gordon Fisher & Thomson's Kenneth Thomson), (May 18 – Making of a Martyr; Republican funeral in Belfast), (May 25 – Pope John Paul II shot; the ultimate blasphemy); (June 1 – Cree Chief Billy Diamond; coming crunch onland claims), (June 8 – High cost of money; interest rates), (June 15 – El Salvador Soldier; war torn Central America), (June 22 – Don't drink the water; Kitchen sink chemical cocktails); (August 10 – Prince Charles & Princess Diana's wedding); (September 21 – artist Christopher Pratt, (September 28 – Nova Scotia's John Buchanan & Newfoundland's Brian Peckford); (October 12 – Suprme Court Justice Laskins fateful legacy), (October 19 – The murder of Anwar Sadat), (October 26 – Rich vs. Poor; one last chance); (November 2 – Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou), (November 9 – Vicrail service cuts), (November 16 – Pierre Trudeau & Rene Levesque), (November 23 – Finance Minister Allan MacEachen's Budget 1981), (November 30 – Manitoba Premier Howard Pawley); (December 7 – A bold bid for Peace; U.S.S.R. & USA), (December 14 – Pierre Trudeau; a special report on the Constitution), (December 28 – Images of 1981);

1982(January 4 – God's new Warriors; Worldwide Religious fighters), (January11 – The expanding Universe; Earth as seen from the Moon), (January 25 – Ronald Reagan; the first year); (February 1 – Why police pay criminals), (February 8 – Mitel's Michael Cowpland), (February 15 – Is World War III Inevitable?); (March 1 – 84 die in Oil Rig Disaster off Newfoundland), (March 8 – The challenge of Japan), (March 15 – Living without the pill; other birth control methods), (March 22 – The long shadow over Parliament), (March 29 – Central America at the Abyss); (April 5 – The gospel according to Northrop Frye), (April 12 – The Struggle for the Holy Land), (April 19 – Britain's call to war; the Falkland Islands), (April 26 – Queen Elizbeth & Pierre Trudeau; rebirth of a nation); (May 3 – The Economy in crisis), (May 10 – The Battle for the Falklands); ((May 31 – Assault on the Falklands); (June 7 – The banruptcy crunch), (June 14 – Economic summit under siege), (June 21 – Israel's lightning strike into Lebannon),(June 28 – The Global Peace Crusade); (July 5 – Prince Charles & Princess Diana with Prince William), (July 12 – Finance Minister Allan Maceachen vs. Clc President Dennis McDermott), (July 19 – Disney's moive “Tron”), (July 26 – Yasser Arafat's Plo); (August 2 – 1920's fashion back in style), (August 9 – After hours learning; our most popular pastime), (August 16 – The new politics of pain; 6/5), (August 23 – Lebanon; Flames and the future), (August 30 – The Economy's flash of hope); (September 6 – The New Medicines Grave Risks), (September 13 - US Secretary of State George Shultz), (September 20 – Canadian expedition on Khumbu icefall Mt. Everest), (September 27 – UAW Canadian director Robert White); (October 4 – Lebanon after the Massacre; Israel on trial), (October 11 – Ousted German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt), (October 18 - Glenn Gould 1932 – 1982), (October 25 – USA & Canada friends again); (November 1 – Pierre Trudeau; a question of trust), (November 8 – Finance Minister Marc Lalonde); (Novmeber 29 – The future of Canadian culture); (December 13 – accused spy Hugh Hambleton); (December 27 – SCTV's Andrea Martin);

1983 (March 14 – Queen Elizabeth II in America); (April 25 – Power in High Places); (May 9 – The war on Strokes; New insights into the brain), (May 23 – Conservative John Crosbie); (June 13 – Financier Leonard Rosenberg, (June 20 – Brian & Mila Mulroney), (June 27 – Prince Charles & Princess Diana); (July 4 0 The new census; a portrait of Canadians), (July 11 – All star Pitchers Dave Stieb & Steve Rogers), (July 18 – The economic Recovery takes shape), (July 25 – Dr. Henry Morgentaler); (August 8 – U.S.S. New Jersey on route to Nicaragua), (August 15 – Beer; the shakeup of the industry); (December 5 – Pierre Trudeau's peace crusade);

1984 (January 2 – Image of 1983), (January 30 – Remona & Bert Vokey of St. John's; Canada's forgotten poor); (April 16 – Germaine greer; life with less sex), (April 30 – Chief Justice Brian Dickson);(June 4 – Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones), (June 11 – D-Day remembered); (August 20 – Women and the election), (August 27 – East German soldier at the Berlin Wall); (September 3 – Election 1984; the day of decision); (October 8 – Special report on Capitol Punishment; Hanging) (November 26 – South African President Pieter W. Botha);

1985(January 14 – Canada's vanishing forests), (January 21 – Rene Levesque; the eclipse of separatism);(February 18 – New Brunswick Premier Richard Hatfield); (March 11 – The Ernst Zundel holocast trial); (April 15 – Prostitution; moral dilemma facing Police & Lawmakers); (May 20 – Baby Boomers bring up babies); (June 3 – The car at 100), (June 24 – The price of power; Patronage in Ottawa); (July 1 – TWA pilot John Testrake with gunman at Beirut airport last week), (June 15 – Politics in the office); (September 30 – Toronto Blue Jays Ernie Whitt); (December 9 – For fun & profits; the wrinkle puppet);

1986(January 13 – Mary Tyler Moore), (January 20 – Coretta King; lliving black in North America), (January 27 – Finance Minister Michael Wilson; the dollar in danger); (February 3 – New hope for starving children; Salvadoran child refugee in Honduran Mesa Grande Camp), (February 17 – Margot Kidder filming in Banff), (February 24 – How Ottawa lobbyists influence Marcos); (March 10 – Jean Chretien's defiant departure), (March 17 – Brish Columbia's Expo Centre), (March 24 – Brian Mulroney at Washington summit); (April 7 – An epidemic of back pain), (April 14 – Newfoundland Premier Brian Peckford), (April 21 – Cuban President Fidel Castro), (April 28 – Libyan Leader Mohammed Khadafy); (July 14 – George Netawastenum of Perrless Lake, Alberta); (August 11 – BC, Premier William Vander Zalm), (August 18 – Why Britain may abandon the Commonwealth); (September 1 – Censored; a sweeping attack on explicit sex); (October 6 – Making the best of growing old; a matter of care), (October 13 – The Immigrants; a new campaign to open doors), (October 20 – Ronald Reagan & Mikhail Gorbachev; Iceland summit); (November 3 – CBC President Pierre Juneau), (November 10 – Parents, jobs & children), (November 17 – Washington D.C.; the new capitol stars); (December 1 – The New Joe Clark), (December 8 – Ronald Reagan; Iran-Contra Scandal), (December 15 – Barbie vs. Rambo; Warfare in Toyland), (December 22 – West Edmonton Mall's Eskander & Nader Ghermezian), (December 29 – The Maclean's 1986 honor roll; 12 who made a difference);

1987(January 5 – A volatile national mood in Canada), (January 12 – Sex in the Eighties), (January 19 – Brazil's new beat; on the brink of greatness), (January 26 – Canadian Tire Co-Founder A.J. Billes); (February 2 – Brian Mulroney; Days on scandal), (February 9 – Michael J. Fox), (February 16 – Canada's homeless; the search for a future), (February 23 – Sandinista women troops on parade); (March 2 – Comeback star Tina Turner); (March 9 – A state of disgrace; Iran-Contra scandal), (March 16 – The Debate over Capitol Punishment), (March 23 – Selling Winter Olympics), (March 30 – Rick Hansen; a hero comes home); (April 6 – Free Trade; the biggest deal in history), (April 13 – Supermodel Monika Schnarre), (April 20 – Living the future now; high tech explosion), (April 27 – Food that can kill; chemicals in what we eat); (May 4 – Dome Chairman J. Howard MacDonald), (May 11 – Behind the new Constitutional accord), (May 18 – Gary Hart's downfall; Donna Rice), (May 25 – The trial of Klaus Barbie; the Nazi Hunt); (June 8 – Hollywood hits 100), ) (June 15 – Brian Mulroney with Ontario's David Peterson & Quebec's Robert Bourassa), (June 27 – The crackdown on smoking); (July 6 – Canadian superstar Bryan Adams), (July 13 – Labor's fight to survive), (July 20 – Lt. Col. Oliver North; Hero or Outlaw?), (July 27 – Fabulous Fergie; the Duchess of York in Thunder Bay, Ontario); (August 3 – NDP Leader Ed Broadbent), (August 10 – Donald Sutherland as Norman Bethune), (August 17 – Hong Kong's Li Ka-Shing builds a Canadian empire), (August 24 – The Undeerground traffic in Human Beings), (August 31 – Sex and Aids; a special report); (September 7 – The new fears of the young), (September 14 – Pope John Paul II; restless Catholics), (September 21 – Ontario Premier David Peterson's stunning victory), (September 28 – Movie mogul Garth Drabinsky); (October 19 – Brian Mulroney; Canadians debate free trade), (October 26 – New Brunswick Premier Frank McKenna); (November 2 – Living with the Wall Street crash), (November 9 – Princess Diana; a royal scandal), (November 23 – The transplant revolution; Ottawa's dr. Wilbert Keon), (December 7 – Megan follows as Anne of Green Gables), (December 14 – Candian speed skater Gaetan Boucher), (December 21 – Mikhail & Raisa Gorbachev);

1988(January 4 – Canadian speak out; how we see ourselves), (January 11 – Chief Justice Brian Dickson), (January 18 – God's new militants; from Ireland Janet Jones), (January 25 - Wayne Gretzky with fiancee Janet Jones); (February – A Special Iuuse on teh Winter Olympics); (February 1 – Flame of passion; the olympic torch odyssey), (February 8 – Dr. Henry Morgentaler; abortion and the Supreme Court), (February 15 – Calgary welcomes the world to Winter Olympics), (February 22 – Finland's Ski Jump Olympic Champion Matti Nykanen), (February 29 – Figure Skater Katarina Witt dazzles the world), (March 7 – The secrets of super Tuesday; a critical Presidental Vote), (March 14 – Kurt Waldheim; Austria faces its Nazi past), (March 21 – Nostalgia trips; relive golden memories), (March 28 – John Turner; can he win?); (April 4 – Director Norman Jewison), (April 11 – Ottawa neurosurgeon Brien Benoit), (April 18 – The Palestinian Rebellion; where will it end), (April 25 – New blueprint for a nation; more than a war of words); (May 2 – Paul Hogan & Linda Kozlowski), (May 9 – Liberal Sharon Carstairs of Manitoba), (May 16 – Almighty gold; the rush to mine), (May 23 – Canadian Architect Moshe Safdie inside New National Gallery), (May 30 – Mikhail & Raisa Gorbachev ready for summit); (June 6 – Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis), (June 13 – The Suns killing Rays; skin cancer), (June 20 – Brian Mulroney at the Tornto Lakeside summit), (June 27 – George & Joyce Frerichs near Rosetown, Sask; North America's Savage Drought); (July 4 – Kevin Costner & Susan sarandon in “Bull Durham”), (July 11 – Mikhail Gorbachev's Moscow revolution),(July 18 – Killers at large; convicted sex killer Allan George Foster), (July 25 – Jant Jones & Wayne Gretzky Wedding); (August 1 – Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca), (August 8 – Canadian Olympic Sprinter Ben Johnson), (August 15 – Beyond reach; Skyrocketing home prices), (August 22 – Reformist Hungarian leader Karoly Grosz), (August 29 – Candian troops monitor Persian Gulf; CPL.W.T. Patchett leaving for Baghdad); (September 5 – Our Threatened Planet; enviromental destruction); (September 12 – the Summer Olympics; Seoul, South Korea), (September 19 -Election fever; will free trade steal the show), (September 26 – Northern Ireland's wave of terror; Belfast Street scene); (October 3 – Canadian Olympic gold medal Sprinter Ben Johnson), (October 10 – Brian Mulroney; decision 1988), (October 17 - John Lennon; tampering with Beatles Legend), (October 24 – Paul Reichmann; the roots with the polls), (October 31 – John Turner; Uphill battle with the polls); (November 7 – President Candidate George Bush sr.), (November 14 – Canadian election; straight to the heart), (November 21 – Election countdown; Brian Mulroney, Ed Broadbent & John Turner), (November 28 – Ballet star Karen Kain);(December 5 – Brian & Mila Mulroney), (December 12 – Mikhail Gorbachev on the road), (December 19 – Mikhail Gorbachev/ Earthquake terror in Armenia), (December 26 – The Maclean's 1988 honor roll; Canadians who made a difference);

1989(January 2 – A spotlight on Candians), (January 9 – Police under fire; a Series of shootings and charges of Racism), (January 16 – Patrick Watson 'The Struggle for Democracy”), (January 23 – President George Bush Sr. Take over the White House), (January 30 – Wardair Airline founder Maxwell Ward); (February 6 – Canada's Richest Man Kenneth Colin Irving),(February 13 – The crisis in health care; sick to death), (February 20 – Pittsburgh Penguins Mario Lemieux), (February 27 – Author Salman Rushdie; why Khomeini ordered him executed); (March 6 – The Cher effect; stars in the boardroom), (March 13 – The Steroid scandal; disgraced sprinter Ben Johnson), (March 20 – Brian Mulroney; the divided nation), (March 27 – Kymberley Huffman & Michael Burgess in “Les Miserables”); (April 3 – A Deadly Plague of drugs; assassinations and gang wars), (April 10 – Jack Nicklaus; the hottest game), (April 17 – Polish Solidarity Union Leader Lech Walesa), (April 24 – 150 years of photography); (May 1 – Finance Minister Michael Wilson; What is Deficit?), (May 8 – The Tax Squeeze; Burden will get heavier), (May 15 – Celebrating Revolution; France at 200 years old), (May 22 – Gang Terror; Teenage Gangs in Canada), (May 29 – Thunder out of China; Stundents take control of Tiananmen Square); (June 5 – Four Seasons founder Isadore Sharp's Luxury Empire), (June 12 – Toronto open its giant Skydome), (June 19 – China Massacre; the terror now), (June 26 – Acid Rain; can it be stopped); (July 3 – USA & Canada; Portrait of two nations), (July 10 – Immigration Minister Barbara McDougall; an angry racial backlash), (July 17 – Media Wars; Publisher Conrad Black), (July 24 – Andrew & Sarah; the Yorks battle the critics), (July 31 – Barbara Dodd's change of heart; abortion of trial); (August 7 – CBC Newsworld's Joan Donaldson), (August 14 – Hostages to terror; lonely prisoners of Beirut), (August 21 – Transport Minister Benoit Bouchard; Will he stop the trains?), (August 28 – Polish Solidarity Union Leader Lech Walesa); (September 4 – Fifty years ago World War II; the legacy), (September 11 – Tomorrow's world; fears of the coming millennium), (September 18 – South Africa's rage; President Frederik de Klerk & Anglican archbishop Desmond Tutu), (September 25 – Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa; Quebec election); (October 2 – Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Mookie Wilson), (October 9 – The Dangers of dieting), (October 16 – Why thousands of East Germans are defecting), (October 23 – Hiding the Drug money; Laundering), (October 30 – San Francisco Earthquake; survivors Christi Virdee & Mark Armour); (November 6 – Pierre Trudeau; Critical constitution debate), (November 13 – To Russia with Cash; Canada's Business Deals), (November 20 – Fall of Communism; Berlin Wall Celebration), (November 27 – The Horror of Sex Crimes against children); (December 4 – Prague's Autumn revolt; East European uprising), (December 11 – New face of the NDP; Audrey McLaughlin), (December 18 – Massacre in Montreal; Mass murder of 14 Women), (December 25- The Maclean's 1989 Honor Role; Twelve who made a difference);

1990(January 1 - An uncertain Nation; Canada at a Crossroads), (January 8 – Romania unchained; celebration in Bucharest), (January 15 – Danger in the water; National anxiety over tap water), (January 22 – An epic family struggle; Toronto Maple Leafs owner Harold Ballard), (January 29 – Fall of a Tycoon; Robert Campeau's US downfall); (February 5 – Jean Chretien joins Liberal Leadership race), (February 12 – South Africa tearing down the system; F.W. De Klerk), (February 19 – Gorbachev's gamble; end of Communist Monopoly), (February 26 – Author Margaret Atwood; Handmaid's tale “Opens at Berlin Film Festival”); (March 5 – Brian Mulroney; taking the rap), (March 12 – Canada in crisis; Meech Lake accord), (March 19 – Germany reborn; West German's Helmut Kohl), (March 26 – Mexican President Carlos de Gortari); (April 2 – Pierre Trudeau & Brian Mulroney; the Meech Lake Discord), (March 9 – Hockey Superstar Wayne Gretzky & wife Janet Jones), (April 16 – The Jews; a rising tide of European Anti-semitism), (April 23 – The Mysteries of sleep & Dreams), (April 30 – Earth Day's Aftermath; the financial cost of cleaning up the planet); (May 7 – Bank of Canada Governor John Crow; interest rate gamble), (May 14 – Margaret Thatcher suffers a setback at home & abroad), (May 21 – The James Bay Power Project; Power to burn), (May 28 – The Cannes film festival; sex, sand and celluloid); (June 4 – Brian Mulroney; Constitutional debate deadline), (June 18 – Newfouundland Premier Clyde Wells), (June 25 – Portrait of two nations; Canada & USA); (July 2 – Brian Mulroney; facing the Perils after Meech Lake), (July 9 – Two faces of Israel), (July 16 – The wonder drug; Asprin), (July 23 – The battle of Oka; a Mohawk warrior at Barricade), (July 30 – Banks New weapon; being nice; Bank of Montreal Chairman Matthew Barrett); (August 6 – Rough Justice; after Oka will violence spread), (August 13 – Tyrant of the Gulf; Iraq President Saddam Hussein), (August 20 – The Gulf Crisis; Iraqi troops on an exercise), (August 27 – Ontario Premier David Peterson); (September 3 – Women executives having it all; Sherry Cooper & her son Stefan), (September 10 – The Fury of Oko; a soldier faces off with Mohawk Warrior), (September 17 – Ontario NPD Premier – Elect Robert Rae), (September 24 – Brian Mulroney outside 24 Sussex; under the gun); (October 1 – Preparing for War in the Gulf; CF-18's on Exercise), (October 8 – How much can Canadians take; murmers of revolt), (October 15 – The FLQ crisis 20 years later; Pierre Trudeau), (October 22 – Food for living; the best and the worst), (October 29 – Reform Party's Preston Manning); (November 5 – A trillion dollar windfall – baby boomers inherit), (November 12 – What does Canada want; Brian Mulroney in the Commons), (November 19 – George Bush Sr.; fighting mad), (November 26 - Working class hero; Polish Presidential hopeful Lech Walesa), (December 3 – Margaret Thatcher; Prime Minister May 1979 – November 1990), (December 10 – Jean Chretien; the lonely road home), (December 17 – Canada's troops settle in for lonely Witer in Gulf), (December 24 – Al Pacino in “Godfather III”), (December 31 – The Maclean's 1990 Honor role; Twelve who make a difference);


MACLEAN'S;

1991(January 7 – Annual Maclean's & Decima Poll; a shaken Nation bares its anger), (January 14 – Wars on ice; figure skaters Katarina Witt & Elizabeth Manley), (January 21 – After midnight; Canada and the World on the edge of Persian Gulf War), (January 28 – Flames of War; special report); (February 4 – Digging in for a ground war), (February 11 - The Gulf War and Islam),(February 18 – The choice Canadians have to make; Constitution), (February 25 – The endgame; multiple launch rocket system); (March 4 – The Gulf War final phase; General Norman Schwarzkopf), (March 11 – Canadian Persian Gulf War soldier coming home; Captain Gerald Mackinnon in CF-18), (March 18 – Giving up, moving out, firms relocating to United States and Mexico), (March 25 – Terror in the streets; young Asian gangs); (April 1 – Mikhail Gorbachev; when a nation breaks), (April 8 – B.C. Premier William Vander Zalm Resigns), (April 15 – G.M. President Lloyd Reuss with Saturn sports Coupe; the future of the car), (April 22 – Canadian arms dealer Gerald Bull's secret – and fatal – deal with Saddam Hussein), (April 29 – The borderline shopping binge; Canadian's flock to US); (May 6 – Notre Dame's Rocket Ismail & Toronto Argonauts Part owner Wayne Gretzky), (May 13 – Madonna; on the record), (May 20 – The victims; world wide flood, famines and war), (May 27 – The silencers; Politically correct crusaders); (June 3 – Rajiv Gandhi 1944 – 1991), (June 10 – Brian Mulroney; the private life in words and pictures), (June 17 – Meaner and leaner; attack on armed forces budget), (June 24 – The fight to find a job; Wayne Decker looking for fifteen months); (July 1 – How Canadians can agree on their future), (July 8 – Baseball's world of struggle and joy; Moose Jaw Astros vs. Kindersley Royals in Saskatchwan), (July 15 – A genetic revolution; why Ashley Dyer hopes to survive cystic fibrosis), (July 22 – The search for Ploitical Leaders), (July 29 – B.C. Premier Rita Johnston); (August 5 – Viking ship “Gaia” under sail for Newfoundland from Norway), (August 12 – President of Alias research Inc. Stephen Bingham), (August 19 – Mid-life Panic;taking care of your kids and parents), (August 26 – Rating Ontario's Bob Rae); (September 2 – The destruction of Soviet Communism; Boris Yeltsin), (September 9 – Budding hockey superstar Eric Lindros), (September 16 – The day the Soviet Union died; Sept 5, 1991, 11:40 A.M.); (September 23 – Brian Mulroney vs. The Unions), (September 30 – A pain in the back; new forms of treatment); (October 7 – Constitutional affairs Minister Joe Clark), (October 14 – The Private Life of Publisher Ken Thomson), (October 21 – Ranking the Universities), (October 28 – Canada welcomes Prince Charlie & Princess Diana); (November 4 – NDP Premiers Roy Romanow, Bob Rae & Mike Harcourt), (November 11 – Women in Fear; Caroline case of Etobicoke, Ontario), (November 18 – 50 years after Pearl Harbor; miracle of modern Japan), (November 25 – What If? Part 1 Quebecois leader Jacques Parizeau); (December 2 – The Olumpic dream; World's best athletes), (December 9 – Canadian supermodels; Linda Evangelista), (December 16 – Special report; the fate of the earth), (December 23 – Freedom's Year; images of 1991), (December 30 – The Maclean's 1991 honor roll; Canadians who make a difference);

1992(January 6 – an action plan for Canada), (January 13 – Medicare to the Rescue; Americans look to Canada for a cure), (January 20 – Conservative's Chief of Staff Hugh Segal), (January 27 – Canadian Rocker Bryan Adams); (February 3 – Striking gold; readying for the Olympics), (February 10 – How to beat hard times), (February 17 – Mike Tyson; his word or hers), (February 24 – Canadian Olympic gold Medal Skier Kerrin Lee-Gartner); (March 2 – Canada's first hockey medal in 24 years; Goalie Sean Burke), (March 9 – Beauty and the Breast; implants), (March 16 – Assembly of first nations National Chief Ovide Mercredi), (March 23 – Cleaning up the teamsters; Leader Diana Kilmury), (March 30 – Sharon Stone & Michael Douglas in “Basic Instinct”); (April 6 – Paul Reichmann; an outsider imported to help restore vast empire), (April 13 – After the hockey strike, what? Wayne Gretzky), (April 20 – Near-Death experiences Raising new Questions about Afterlife), (April 27 – David Milgaard & Mom; his 23 years behind bars); (May 4 – Space images show origins of Universe), (May 11 – Genius at work; Microsoft's Bill Gates), (May 18 – Young Black & angry; a Toronto riot), (May 25 – On the ropes; Albert & Paul Reichmann); (June1 – Canada's hottest star Celine Dion), (June 8 – Mad as heck; why Canadians typically are repressing their rage), (June 15 – The battered crown; Princess Diana's story), (June 22 – Every parent's nightmare; Martensville child abuse scandal), (June 29 – Who speaks for Canada? Brian Mulroney); (July 6 – The storied land; discovering what shaped out nation), (July 13 – Maj.- Gen. Lewis Mackenzie Commander of U.N. Forces in Yugoslavia), (July 20 – A baby boom ticket; Bill Clinton & Al Gore), (July 27 – Class of the field at summer Olympics; Silken Laumann); (August 3 – Media world of Tycoon Corad Black), (August 10 – Canada's Gold Medal Rowers Marnie McBean & Kathleen Heddle), (August 17 – The new techno toys), (August 24 - Special issue; British Columbia a state of mind), (August 31 – The Fixers; what makes the first ministers); (September 7 – The cry of a dying people; Somalia), (September 14 – Ontario NDP Premier Bob Rae's revolution), (September 21 – Help for the heart; controlling dietary iron), (September 28 – Referendum file; Pierre Trudeau speak out);

(October 5 – Wayne Gretzky; sidelined by a back injury), (October 12 – Referendum file; the fear factor), (October 19 – Secrets from the Back Room; Political Campaigns); (October 19 – Special Issue; Referendum File; as time Runs Out), (November 2 – Referendum File; why Canadians Voted No), (November 9 – Ranking the Universities), (November 16 – Bill Clinton & Canada), (November 23 – Europe's Nightmare; Racism & Nazism), (Novmeber 30 – A royal fire storm; Princess Diana); (December 7 – Prime time Violence),14,21,28);

1993(January 4 – Hope in hard times; Canadians speak out), (January 11 – Special report; What's wrong at School?), (January 18 – Global cobs; Canada and the U.N. Police an explosive World), (January 25 – My Canada includes Florida; Winter getaways); (February 1 – Bill & Hillary Clinton in the White House), (February 8 - Cult of Horror; Roch Theriault), (February 15 – The New Russia), (February 22 – The world of Teens; Portrait of Canada's Youth); (March 1 – The Greatest Fear; Accused Rapist Paul Bernardo), (March 8 – The Mulroney years; Brian & Mila Mulroney), (March 15 – Where the Jobs are; Technology), (March 22 – Tory front runner Kim Campbell), (March 29 – Oscar Nominee Susan Sarandon); (April 12 – The Religion Poll; God is Alive), (April 19 – The Westray File; One year after the mine Explosion), (April 26 – One Hundred Years of the Stanley Cup); (May 3 – One lived, one died; Two Canadian women with David Koresh); (May 10 – China; will they be Capitalists?), (May 17 – The burning ambition of Kim Campbell), (May 24 – A new “Miss Saigon” canadian actress Ma-Anne Dionisio); (May 31 – Why National day cre is dead); (June 7 – Tory Candidate Jean Charest & wife Michele Dionne), (June 21 – Ms. Prime Minister Kim Campbell), (June 28 – For Better and for Worse; high cost of saying “I DO”); (July 5 – 100 Canadians to Watch), (July 12 – A crisis within the NDP Rocks Canadian Socialism), (July 19 – Unspeakable Crimes; Karla Homolka), (Jule 26 – Canadian comedy stars; Mike Myers, Dan Aykroyd & Lorne Michaels); (August 2 – 1,550,000 unemployed; will they find work?), (August 9 – How dodging taxes feeds a growing underground economy), (August 16 – Vancouver Island showdown; Is Canada an environmental outlaw?); (August 30 – CBC co-anchors Peter Mansbridge & Pamela Wallin); (September 6 – Family Fued between Harrison & Wallace McCain), (September 13 – The Party leaders face a grumpy electorate), (September 20 – Election Focus; who will save your job?), (September 27 – How Ottawa collects & specnds money); (October 11 – Canadian porn chain owner Randy Jorgensen), (October 18 – Jean Chretien; tomorrow's man?); (November 1 – Jean & Aline Chretien; today's man), (November 8 – Michelle Wright takes on Nashville), (November 15 – Racking the Universities), (November 22 – He's back; Trudeau on Trudeau), (November 29 – Jean & Aline Chretien at Asia – Pacific summit); (December 6 – Calgary Oilman Grant Billing), (December 13 – The Bean Counter finance minister Paul Martin);

1994(January 3 – How we differ; Revelations about Canadians), (January 10 – Actors Jessica Tandy & Hume Cronyn), (January 17 – Wired World; Using computer networks), (January 31 – The Male Myth; Hunt for a New Identity); (February 7 – The lessons of Vancouver; Debating Immigration), (February 14 – National Skating champions Elvis Stojko & Josee Chouinard), (February 28 – Olympic figure skater Josee Chouinard, Nancy Kerrigan & Tonya Harding); (March 7 – Alberta Premier Ralph Klein; cutting to the bone), (March 14 – Public schools; are we wheating out kids?), (March 21 – Ted Rogers the New Media Czar), (March 28 – Night of Savage Torture in Somalia; Guilty of Manslaughter Pte. Elvin Brown); (April 11 – New Brunswick Premier Frank McKenna), (April 18 – Murder next door; 3 dead in Toronto), (April 25 – From prisoner to President; South Africa's Nelson Mandela); (May 2 – Body Obsession; the Tyranny of image), (May 9 – Are they worth it? Soaring stars Salaries), (May 16 – MP Svend Robinson; Gay and Proud), (May 23 – Questioning Prozac); (June 6 – D-Day Remembered; War Hero Charlie Martin returns to Normandy), (June 13 – Lucien Bouchard; the man and his Seperation Strategy); (July 18 – Montreal Comet Buff David Levy); (August 8 - K.Richards & M.Jagger), (August 15 – Special Report; Kids Who Kill), (August 22 – Commonwealth Decathlon Champion Michael Smith); (October 3 – Policing Haiti; RCMP Chief Supt. Neil Pouliot), (October 10 – The New Spirituality; Hanne Strong), (October 17 – Quebec's Cult of Death Leader Luc Jouret), (October 24 – Dan Aykroyd & Rosie O'Donnell in “Exit to Eden”; the battle over censorship); , (October 31- Prince Charles & Princess Diana; Still be King?); (November 7 – Garth Drabinsky; Troast of Broadway), (November 14 – Ranking the Universities), (November 21 – The Dionne Quints; a bitter family tragedy), (November 28 – The death of Tracy Latimer; a father's “Mercy” killing); (December 5 – Gretzky inc; Great One's Business Empire), (December 12 – Lucien Buchard's Fight of his life; Amputation), (December 19 – Sex and the Vatican; Canadian Catholics in crisis), (December 26 – The 1994 Maclean's Honor role; Olympic double Gold winner Myriam Bedard);

1995(January 2 – Looking inward; examining the Canadian state of mind), (January 16 – The War pf Fat; Bad diets and good alternatives), (January 23 – How Bad can the Dollar get? Lining up for work at GM), (January 30 – DNA on trial; helped free Guy Paul Morin & may convict O.J. Simpson); (February 13 – To Tax or not to Tax), (February 20 – Is dating Dead? No but it sure has changed), (February 27 – Chief Matthew Coon come Challenges Quebec's separatists); (March 6 – The Middle Class; Battle the tax crunch), (March 13 – Finance Minister Paul Martin fashions a leaner nation), (March 20 – When Money Traders rule the world old rules crumble), (March 27 – Canadian Rock explodes?; Sloan, the Tragically Hip and The Crash Tet Dummies); (April 10 – The cast of “Stars on Ice”), (April 17 – Inside stories; fired Pamela Wallin & CTV's Keith Morrison), (April 24 – Is Separatism Dead?); (May 1 – Oklahoma City April 19, 1995/ Charlottetown P.E.I. April 20, 1995; Is no place safe?), (May 8 – The enemy within; The Ultra-right declares war), (May 15 – Private Schools; Students at Lakefield College School), (May 22 – Crime in Cybercity; Dark Side of internet), (May 29 – The Case Against Paul Bernardo); (June 5 – The angry revolt over gun control; Doug and Becky Middleton of Senlac, Sask.), (June 19 – Ontario Premier Mike Hassis), (June 26 – The Karla Homolka Enigma; To Testify); (July 10 – Canada's Cocaine King Bernardo Arcila), (July 17 – Corel's Michael Cowpland & wife Marilyn); (August 7 – The Bomb fifty years later; Hiroshima); (September 4 – Montreal's Jojo Savard; Late night TV Psychics), (September 11 – Paul Bernardo; the untold story), (September 18 – Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau Referendum Campaign); (October 23 – Ed Schreyer and the Moonies), (October 30 – Referendum Special; The Choice); (November 6 – Quebec Votes; 49.4% yes, 50.6% no), (November 13 – Bloc Quebecois leader Lucien Bouchard), (November 20 – Ranking the Universites); (December 4 – Brian Mulroney vs. The Mounties), (December 11 – Franklin the Turtle with creators Paulette Bourgeois & Brenda Clark), (December 18 – The MacLean's Tenth Annual Honor Roll), (December 25 – January 1/1996 – Can Canada survive/ National Poll results);

1996(January 8 – Coping with stress), (January 15 – Can Fidel Castro change Cuba?), (January 29 – How the Internet of tomorrow will tranform lives); (February 5 – Jean Chretien fighting back with new cabinet), (February 19 – Izzy Asper forges New TV Empire), (February 26 – Canadian Satire; Mary Walsh of “This hour has 22 Minutes”); (March 4 – Montreal's uncertain Future; Anglo Angst), (March 11 – Jobs; Cutbacks and layoffs create a mood), (March 25 – Parole on Trial; Murderers early release?); (April 15 – General Jean Boyle; What did he know?); (May 6 – The Liberals GST flip flop; public cynicism on promises), (May 13 – Sheila Copss; Cost to Liberals to save her career); (June 10 – B.C. NDP premier Glen Clark), (June 24 – Canadian animators make it big); (July 22 – Canadian chairman sprinter Donovan Bailey), (July 29 – Atlanta Olympics; on the go for gold); (August 5 – Olympic Gold for sprinter Donovan Bailey, Rowers Heddle & McBean; bombing at the Olympics), (August 12 – Olympic Gold for Canada's relay team), (August 19 – Beyond abortion; New thinking about the first nine months of life); (September 16 – How Clinton's bombing helped Saddam Hussein), (September 23 – Canada's top novelist Margaret Atwood), (September 30 – Is your job safe? Downsizing and outsourcing); (October 14 – Jean Chretien's Ottawa; Who's up, Who's down), (October 21 – Jean Chretien and Ontario Premier Mike Harris; Secret Summit on Constitution), (October 28 – Leaving the fast lane behind; Elizabeth & Charles Long of Rideau Ferry, Ontario); (November 4 – Poised for re-election; Bil Clinton with Hillary), (November 11 – Conrad Black poised for larger print media empire), (November 18 – Peter Gzowski battles to save CBC radio show “Morningside”), (November 25 – Ranking the Universities); (December 2 – radical Surgery from Ottawa on Medicare), (December 9 – Peter Munk; World's biggest gold miner);

1997(January 20 – Brian Mulroney's revenge; airbus scandal); (May 5 – Is Jean Chretien up to the job?); (June 16 – Formula one driver Jacques Villeneuve);(August 18 – Clifford Olson; Serial Killers Plea for Parole), (August 25 - Princess Diana; Summer of Scandal); (September 8 - Princess Diana of Wales 1961 – 1997), (September 29 – Gettig ready for Retirement); (October 13 – Paul Gross in TV's “Due South”); (December 15 – Is Jesus really God? Battle over Christ's divinity);

1998 (February 9 – Olympic speed skaters Jeremy Wotherspoon & Catriona Lemay Doan), (February 16 – Elvis Stojko leads Canada's medal quest at Nagano Winter Olympics), (February 23 – Olympic Gold for spped skater Catriona Lemay Doan); (March 2 – Olympic Magic monents; Canada's six Gold Medals), (March 23 - Shania Twain the Queen of Country Music); (May 11 – The Curse of Casinos; VLT's the Deadly addiction); (July 13 - Critics of military Justice sustem; Cheif Warrant Office Everett Boyle); (October 5 – The Dying Seas; Over fishing and Pollution);

1999 (February 15 – U.N. Ranks Canada an No. 1; but for how long?); (March 1 – The mother load; Supermowan is burned out); (April 26 – Wayne Gretzky retires; end on an Era); (May 24 – Star Wars the Phantom Menace; Pop Culture as Religion); (June 7 – The Health Report; Rating 16 cities on health care), (June 21 – Can Prince Edward & Sophine survive the spotlight); (July 1 – Special Issue; Canada's Century), (July 5 – Canadian sovereignty; common currency with USA?), July 12 – A Canadian guide to shopping online), (July 19 – Defborah Cox Canada's Queen of R and B), (July 26 – John Jr. & Carolyn Bessette Kennedy Missing); (October 4 – Pierce Brosnan & Annie Galipeau in “Grey Owl”), (November 22 – Wayne Gretzky's new world); (December 20 – The Annual Canadian poll; the vanishig border);

2000 (March 6 – Marty McSorley whacking Donlad Brashear); (March 20 – David Bowie & Sarsh McLachlan; music piracy on the internet); (October 9 – Pierre Trudau 1919 - 2000); (November 6 – Robert Milton vows to fix Air Canada); (November 13 – Election 2000; Jean Chretien & Paul Martin's uneasy alliance); (November 20 – Ranking the univesities); (November 27 – Election 2000; what you need to know); (December 4 – Jean Chretien wins third term); (December 11 – The smugglers' slaves; Chinese migrants);


2001 (January 22 – Booming trade in exotic pets; lioness subira); (February 5 – Faded glory; Montreal Canadiens to be sold to Americans); (February 12 – Alberta bound; the boom is on); (February 19 – Protecting your privacy; who's watching you?); (February 26 – Heather Reisman takes control of Booksellers Chapters Inc.); (March 5 – Redesigning Work; less stress more options); (March 12 – Canadian activist Naomi Klein Guru on Anti-Globalization); (March 19 – Mystery of the first North Americans); (March 26 – Rick rage; how parents are spoiling kids sports); (April 2 – Figure Skaters Jamie Sale & David Pelletier); (April 9 – The kids are alright; today's teens); (April 16 – Soul searchers;growing variety of spiritual retreats); (April 23 – Nunavut premier Paul Okalik); (May 7 – Hell on wheels; traffic's bad, drivers are worse); (June 11 – Ranking health care across Canada); (June 18 – National gallery debating fate of Albrecht Durer's “Nude Woman with Staff”); (June 25 – Prisoner of Riyadh; Bill Sampson); (July 1 – Fifty people who chose Canada; Jazz great Charlie Biddle); (July 9 – Cheating time; science struggles with aging); (July 16 – Mordecai Richler 1931 – 20001); (July 23 – The selling of Prince Edward Island); (July 30 – Army brats in love; Troy McLean & Joanne Laird); (August 6 – Reefer Madness the sequeal; Ottawa debates legalizing marijuana); (August 13 – Newfoundloand ghost ports); (August 20 – Zap! It's the future; Technology on the move); (August 27 – Author Lawrence Hill; Biracial Canadians); (September 3 – Provincial power; Does Ottawa matter?); (September 10 – Pierre Burton on Canada's Great War); (September 24 – Special Report; after the terror at ground zero); (October 1 – War on terror; Americia's ready, are the rest of us?); (October 8 – The economy after 9/11; what the fallout means to you); (October 15 – War begins; October 7, 9 PM; Afghan Time); (December 31 – January 7 2002 (Annual Canadian Pool; Now What?);


2002 (January 14 – Team Canada's stand-up Guy Brendan Shanahan); (January 21 – The happy divorce; how to break & make up); (January 28 – The best & worst mutual funds); (February 4 – Peter Gzowski 1934 – 2002; a tribute to Michael Enright); (February 11 – Olympic speed skater Catriona Lemay Doan); (February 18 – Fifty most influential Canadians); (march 4 – Canadians soldiers in Afghanistans; Privae Angie Abbey); (March 11 – Olympic hockey gold for Canada; Mario Lemieux); (March 18 – Luc Ethier Murdered in Kuwait; crime of greed or act of terror); (March 25 – Medical marvel; R.J. Brack two years after recieving mechanical heart); (April 1 – Living the faith; Nine Canadians put beliefs into actions); (April 8 – The Queen Mother 1900 – 2002); (April 22 – Paradise found; Hidden gems in Canada's Hinterland); (May 6 – World's new information King David Thomson; by Peter C. Newman); (Who's my birth father? Canadian's concieved by donated sperm curious about genetic roots); (May 27 – Jewish & Arab Canadians battle for public's ear; Montreal's Liela Mouammar & Gill Troy); (June 3 – Saving our cities; how to fix what's broken); (Hune 10 – Wendy Mathewson struggle to reclain life after devastating brain injury); (June 17 – Measuring health care across Canada); (June 24 – Mordecai Richler remembered one year after death); (July 1 – Specail issue 2002 honour roll; Diana Krall); (July 22 – Keeping the faith; Toronto world youth day); (July 29 – Fouling our cities; Past time for clean up); (August 5 – Growning up large; Obesity epidemic among kids); (August 12 – Old flames; Newlyweds Ross Thomas & Eileen McGregor); (September 2 – Jean Chretien; Going, going... but far from gone); (September 9 – Leaders of tomorrow; 25 young Canadians who are changing the world; 17 years old Eva Vertes); (September 16 – 9/11; one year after); (September 23 – Canada won't escape an American War with Iraq; Jean Chretien, George W. Bush & Saddam Hussein); (September 30 – From tots to teens; what parents don't know); (October 2 – Queen Elizabeth's Canadian tour); (November 4 – The politics of pork; Ottawa and patronage); (November 18 – Ranking the universities; Kinston Ontario students Jody Louie, Michael O'Neill &j Nicolas Pratt); (November 25 – American Lite; is that out future?); (December 23 – Justin Trudeau “When I Run”);


2003 (January 13 – Avril Lavigne of Napanee Ontario); (January 27 – How to protect your money; best and worst mutual funds 2003); (March 3 – Retired Canadians reborn; former teacher Nora Perra as clown); (March 10 – War; what is it good for?); (March 17 – The pluck of the Irish immigrants; by Sharon Doyle Driedger); (March 24 – Governor General Adrienne Clarkson); (June 2 – How to heal nature; Polar Bear & cub); (September 1 – Nell Shipman Canada's first female director); (September 8 – Young talented Canadians changing our world; Victoria rocker, hot hot heat); (September 15 – Canadian Idol's Ben Mulroney);


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1924; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (April 21 – Mrs. Herbert C. Hoover); (May 5 – William E. Borah); (May 12 – Homer St. Gaudens); (June 23 – Imperial Wizard Dr. Hiram Wesley Evans of the Ku Klux Klan); (September 8 – China's General Mu); (September 29 – Hiram W. Johnson); (October 13 – Glenn H. Curtiss); (November 17 – Frederick Huntington Gillett); (December 15 – Dwight F. Davis);

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1926; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (June 7 – Josef Pilsudski); (August 23 – Le Capitaine Rene Fonck); (September 27 – Rudyard Kipling); (October 4); (October 11); (October 18); (December 20 – Senator Charles Curtis);

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1927; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 17 – Charles T. Copeland); (January 31 – Pierre S. Dupont); (February 14 – Mortimere L. Schiff); (February 21 – Mustafa Kemal Pasha); (March 7 – James A. Reed); (March 21 – French Ambassador Paul Claudel); (April 18 – Melba of Melbourne); (April 25 – Dr. Robert Andres Millikan); (May 2 – Dikran “Green Hat” Kuyumjian); (May 9 – Charles F. Hughes); (May 16 – Julius Klein); (May 23 – Andre Tardieu); (June 13 – John Joseph Kennedy); (June 20 – Smedley Darlington Butler); (June 27 – N.M. Butler/ J.J. Mcgraw); (July 11 – Jon Bratiano); (July 18 – Ambassador to Belguim Hugh Simpson Gibson); (August 29 – Bishop Brent); (September 19 – Roger Wolfe Kahn); (November 21 – L.D. Trotsky); (December 5 – Geraldine Farrar);

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1930; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (July 21 – David Aiken Reed); (August 18 – Mrs. Thomas Hitchcock Sr.); (September 29 – Dwight Whitney Morrow); (October 6 – Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick); (November 17 – College football fans); (November 17 – Ohio's Robert Johns Bulkley); (December 1 – James John Davis); (December 8 – Haakon VII King of Norway); (December 22 – Frau Elsa Einstein Einstein);

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1931; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (June 8 – Dr. David Starr Jordan); (July 6 – Betty Nuthall); (August 3 – Willa Sibert Cather); (August10 – Paul Weeks Litchfield); (August 17 – Samuel Seabury); (November 30 – The right honorable Walter Runciman; backcover “Lucky Strike” with Kay Francis); (December 7 – John Nance Garner);

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1932; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (February 1 – Franklin Delano Roosevelt); (February 8 – Hugh Simons Gibson; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with June Collyer); (February 15 – Nicholas Murray Butler);

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1933; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 23 – Japanese was Minister Sadao Araki); (February 6 – Carter Glass); (February 20 – William Wallace Atterbury); (April 17 – Cordell Hull); (May 8 – Raymond Moley); (May 15 – Cuban dictator Machado); (June 12 – Fedinand Pecora; backcover “Coke” ad); (July 17 – Curtis Bok); (September 18 – US Commisstioner George Frederick Zook); (October 2 – President of United Mine Workers of America John Lewis); (October 9 – George Michael Cohan); (November 6 – George Nelson Peek; backcover “Camel” ad with Billiard champion Erich Hagenlocher); (December 4 – Setop Porter);

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1934; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (March 12 – Gaston Doumergue); (March 19 – Robert Ferdinand Wagner); (March 26 – George Arliss); (April 2 – Arturo Toscanini; backcover “Camel” ad with New York Rangers Captain Bill Cook and Ruth Dodd); (April 16 – Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington); (April 23 – Errett Lobban Cord); (May 14 – Samuel Insull); (June 18 – Princeton's Harold Willis Dodds); (October 8 – Helen Rogers Reid/ Ordway Tead/ Valentine Chandor/ Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve/ Eleanor Roosevelt); (November 5 – Republican National chairman Fletcher); (November 19 – Wisconsin's Robert Marion LaFollette); (November 26 – Justice Benjamin Nathan Cardozo); (December 3 – Mexican President Lazaro Cardenas); (December 31 – New York's Govenor Lehman);


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1935; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (March 4 – Richard Berry Harrison); (July 29 - Harvard's Harlow Shapley);


1936; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 13 – Arthur Holly Compton); (February 3 – George Santayana); (February 10 – Federal Reserve Board's Marriner Stoddard Eccles); (March 16 – Martin Withington Clement); (May 11 - Anthropologist Franz Boas); (August 31- Clark Gable); (October 26 - US Surgeon General Thomas Parran Jr.; (November 2 - Publisher – Partners Patterson & McCormick); (Novmeber 23 – Labor's Edward Francis McGrady); (December 28 – Japan's Emperor & listening ears; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Santa Claus);


1937; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (May 10 -Matt Winn & Derby Favorites);(June 7 – President Sidney Howard of the dramatists guild; backcover “Camel” ad with world's champion high-diver Dorothy Poynton); (June 28 – Ethel DuPont/ Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr.); (July 5 – Pennsylvania's Governor George Howard Earle III); (July 12 – Chief Scout Executive West; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Constance Bennett); (July 19 – Labor's Harry Bridges; backcover “Coke” ad with soda jerk); (August 9 – His Majesty Farouk I, Sovereign of Nubia, the Sudan, Kordofan and Darfur, King of Egypt; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Gary Cooper); (August 23 – Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley); (August 30 – Japan's Navy Minister Mitsumasa Yonai; backcover “Camel” ad with various Aquatic stars); (September 13 – Germany's tennis star Gottgried Von Cramm); (September 20 – Ontario's Mitchell Hepburn); (November 29 – Speacker of the House William Bankhead; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Lauritz Melchior); (December 13 – Colby Mitchell Chester);


1938; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 24 – Colored People's Walter White; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Myrna Loy); (February 14 – Spain's Leftist General Pazas); (February 21 – John G. Bates & Blarney's Bit O' Luck; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Dolores Del Rio); (February 28 – Secretary James Roosevelt; backcover “Spam” ad); (March 21 – Chancellor of Austria Ribbentrop; backcover Lucky Strike” ad with Claudette Colbert); (April 4 – Albert Einstein); (April 11 – G.O.P.'s Joe Martin); (June 20 – Research Professor Robert Williams Wood); (July 18 – Harry Hopkins; backcover “Coke” ad); (November 28 – Britain Lord Beaverbrook); (December 12 – Yugoslav Prince Paul);


1939; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 16 – Governor of Wisconsin Julius Peter Heil; backcover “Camel” ad with Rodeo star Carl Dossey); (February 6 – Fechner of C.C.C.); ( February 20 – Navy's Charles Edison); (February 27 – Ignace Jan Paderewski); (March 6 – Josef Beck); (March 27 – Spain's Francisco; backcover “Hormel Ham” ad); (April 17 – Anna Eleanor Roosevelt); (May 15 – Britain's King George VI); (May 22 – Nelson Rockefeller); (May 29 – Glenn Martin); (June 5 – Edouard Daladier of France); (July 3 – Biologist Conklin); (July 10 – Indiana's Paul Vories McNutt); (July 17 – Sonja Henie; backcover “Coke”ad); (July 24 – Edda Ciano); (July 31 – Wendell Wilkie); (August 7 – Turfman William Woodward); (August 28 – Frank Murphy); (September 11 - Polant's Smigly – Rydz); (September 18 – Joe Kennedy); (September 25 – German General Brauchitsche); (October 2 - Republican Arthur Vanderberg); (October 9 – Queen Elizabeth; the Queen Mother); (October 16 – Keller of Chrysler); (October 23 – Allied Air Chief General Giulio Douhet); (October 30 – Gustaf V of Sweden); (November 6 – Michigan's Tommy Harmon); (November 13 – Carol II of Romania); (November 20 – Broadway's George S. Kaufman); (November 27 – Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands); (December 4 – Carl Sandburg); (December 11 – U.S. Ambassador to China Nelson Johnson); (December 18 – Herbert Hoover)


1940; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 8 – Cordell Hull; backcover Chesterfield ad with Donna Dae); (January 15 – Britain's Viscount Halifax; backcover “Camel” ad with Boston Bruiin's Roy Conacher); (January 22 – Heldentenor Melshoir); (January 29 – Robert Alphonso Taft); (February 5 – Finland's Marshall Baron Mannerheim; backcover “Chersterfield” ad with Miss America Patrcia Donnelly of Detroit); (February 12 – Eve Curie; backcover “Camel” ad with sports writer Bill Corum); (February 19 – Mayor of Miami Beach E.G. Sewell); (February 26 – Thomas Edmund Dewey); (March 4 – Japan's Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Susann Shaw/ Florence Dornin/ Dana Dale); (March 11 – Jerome Frank; backcover “Camel” ad with U.S. Antarctis Expedition); (March 25 – Eamon De Valera); (April 15 – Burt Wheeler); (April 29 – Sweden's Royal Dynasty; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Elaine Shepard); (May 6 – Joe Pew; backcover “Camel” ad with race car driver Bob Swanson); (May 13 – Falkenhorst; invader of Norway); (May 20 – King Leopold of Belgium); (May 27 – Marshals of Royal Air Force; in Flanders Hell is over Earth); (June 3 – Maxime Weygand; backcover “Camel” ad with test pilot Homer Berry); (June 17 – Reynaud & Weygand & Petain); (June 24 – Mussolini & Badoglio; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Marion Hutton); (July 1 – Admiral Richardson U.S.N.; backcover “Camel” ad with swimmer Peter Fick); (July 8 – British Ambassador Philip henry Kerr); (July 15 – Russia's Molotov; backcover “Coke” ad); (July 22 – Japan Prince Fumimaro Konoye); (July 29 – Chief of staff George Marshall; backcover “Camel” ad with Florence Holliss); (August 5 – Commander of Britain's Defense Alan); (August 12 – Brazil's Vargas; backcover “Coke” ad); (August 19 – William Allen White; backcover “Chesterfield” ad Dorothy & Grace Alexander Drum Majorettes); (September 2 – Canada's Governor General Lord Athlone & wife); (September 9 – Joe Martin; backcover “Spam” ad with George Burns & Gracie Allen); (September 16 – Lord Beaverbrook); (September 23 – Henry Wallace of Iowa; backcover “Camel” ad with golf champion Lawson Little); (October 7 – Defense Commissioner Knudsen); (October 14 – Sir Archibald Percival Wavell); (November 4 – George II of Greece); (December 9 - Mexico's President Avila Camacho);


1941; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 20 – King Boris III of Bulgaria); (January 27 – C.I.O.'s Philip Murray); (February 3 – Gertrude Lawrence & Dram figures); (February 10 – Physiologist Carlson); (February 17 – Cunningham, Admiral of the Mediterranean); (February 24 – Defense buyer Nelson); (March 10 – Ambassador Henry – Haye; backcover “Camel” ad with skier Dick Durrance); (March 17 – Henry Ford); (March 24 – Nazis Marchsl list); (April 28 – Admiral Sir Percy Noble; backcover “Chesterfiel” ad with Ellen Drew); (May 5 – Argentina's Castillo); (May 12 – Leon Henderson); (May 19 – Turkey's Inonu); (May 26 – France's Darlan; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Patricia Morison); (June 2 – Admiral King; U.S. Commander in the Atlantic; backcover “Camel” with golfer Ben Hogan); (June 16 – Chen Cheng; Defender of Chungking); (June 23 – Navy air Chief Towers); (June 30 – Russia's Marshall Timoshenko; backcover “Camel” ad with speed swimmer Ralph Flanagan); (July 14 – Chief of the German High Command Keitel); (July 21 – Secretary of Agriculture Wickard); (July 28 - Boss of the R.A.F.: Portal); (August 11 – Under Secretary of State Welles); (August 18 – Van Mook of the Indis; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Vera Gilmer); (August 25 – Secretary of War Stimson); (September 1 – General Andrews, Commander of te hCaribbean); (September 15 – Harold Icke; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Fred Astaire & Rita Hayworth); (September 22 – Japan's Nomura); (September 29 – Champion boxer Joe Loiuis); (October 6 – Isolationist Robert Wood); (October 13 – Red Army's Budenny; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Angela Cummins); (October 20 – Air Marchall Bowhill); (November 17 – Planemaker Reuben Fleet); (November 24 – Commander of the Asiatic Fleet Admiral Hart);


1941; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (November 10 - Rita Hayworth by Vargas);


1942; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 19 – Brazil's Aranha); (January 26 – Ter Poorten of the Indies); (February 16 – Soviet strategist Shaposhnikov); (March 2 – Japan's Yamashita); (March 9 – Helfrich of the Indies); (March 16 – The Viceroy of India Lintithgow); (March 23 – Henry Ford); (March 30 – General Douglas MacArthur; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Joan Bennett); (April 6 – Mexico's Padilla; backcover “Camel” ad with Joe DiMaggio); (April 13 – Sir Stafford Cripps); (April 27 – The Fuhrer's Pierre Laval; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Rita Hayworth); (May 4 – Air Force General); (May 11 – Maxim Litvinoff); (May 25 – Yugoslavia's Mihailovch; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Adrienne Ames); (June 22 – Air Forces Henry Harley Arnold); (June 29 – Hitler's Halder); (July 6 – American Flag); (July 20 – Composer Shostakovish; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Deanne Fureau); (July 27 – Marshal Timoshenko of Russia); (August 3 – Japan's General Itagaki); (August 10 – Canada's General Andrew McNaughton); (August 17 – Vice Admiral Ghormley); (August 24 – India's Nehru; backcover “Camel” ad with Trapeze Antoinette Concello); (August 31 – Germany's Rundstedt); (September 7 – Frank Knox; backcover “Coke” ad); (September 14 – Alexander of Egypt); (September 28 – Ship Designer Gibbs); (December 14 – Russia's Zhukov; backcover “Camel” ad with Adeline Gray); (December 21 – Katharine Cornell/ Judith Anderson/ Ruth Gordon; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 28 – General Lesley McNair);


1943; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 11 – Byrnes of War Economy; backcover “Camel” ad with Olympian Dick Durrance); (January 18 – Air Commander Kenney of the South Pacific); (January 25 – Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau); (February 1 - Field Marchal Montgomery); (February 8 – Britain's Anthony Eden); (February 15 – Japan's Admiral Osami Nagano); (February 22 – Russian General Filip Ivanovich Golikov); (March 1 – Madame Chiang of China); (March 8 – Harry S. Truman); (March 15 – Elmer Davis of O.W.I.); (March 22 – Carl Spaatz of Tunisia); (March 29 – France's Giraud of North Africa); (April 5 – Sir Thomas Beecham); (April 12 – General George Patton); (April 19 – Avila Camacho of Mexico); (April 26 – Ohio Governor John William Bricker); (May 3 – Britain's General Kenneth Anderson); (May 17 – Sir Andrew Browne Cunningham); (May 31 – Sweden's Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf); (June 7 – Harris of the R.A.F. Bomber Command); (June 14 – Harold Smith, Director of the U.S. Budget); (June 28 – Bernard Baruch); (July 12 – Premier of Turkey); (July 19 – Georgia's Walter Franklin Geroge); (August 9 – Major General Terry Allen of the 1st Division); (August 16 – Pope Plus XII); (August 23 – Red Army's Rokossovsky); (August 30 – Brigadier General Ira Clarence Eaker); (September 6 – Paul G. Hoffman); (September 13 – General Dwight Eisenhower; backcover Chesterfield” as with Claudette Colbert/ Paulette Goddard/ Veronica Lake); (September 27 – Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn); (October 4 – Clark of the Fifth Army); (October 18 – Franco of Iberia); (October 25 – Stalin's Molotov); (November 1 – Governor Thomas Dewey); (November 8 – Japan's Admiral Koga); (November 15 – General John Pershing); (November 22 – Planemaker Douglas); (December 13 – Charles Edward Wilson; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 27 – Russia's Patriarch Sergei);


1943; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (June 7 - Harris of the R.A.F. Bomber Command);


1944; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 17 – WAC's Colonel Hobby); (January 24 – Jimmy Durante);


1945; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 15 – Ninth Air Force's Vandenberg); (November 12 – Army football stars junior Davis & Don Blanchard); (November 19 – Sergei Prokofiev); (Novemer 26 – Cartoonist H.T. Webster; backcover “Camel” ad with Ballerina Gloria Nord); (December 24 – The Christmas Event);


1945; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (March 12 -Captain McAfee of the Waves); (April 23 - President Harry S. Truman);


1946; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (February 11 – Poland's Mikolajczyk); (February 18 – Britain's Ernest Bevin); (March 4 – Chester Bliss Bowles); (March 11 – Danny Kaye); (March 25 – General George Catlett Marshall); (April 1 – General Bradley); (April 15 – Amadeo Peter Giannini; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Virginia Mayo); (April 22 – Mohamed Ali Jinnah); (April 29 – Iowa Farmer Gus Kuester); (May 20 – John L. Lewis); (May 27 – Memphis Boss Ed Crump); (June 3 – French Communist Thorez; backcover “Coke” ad); ((Juen 10 – Lever Brothers' Chuck Luckman); (June 17 – Union Leader Joe Curran); (July 15 – San Francisco's Mayor Lapham); (July 29 – Herbert Morrison); (August 5 – Montreal's Mayor Houde); (August 19 – Russia's Molotov); (August 26 – Jerusalem); (September 16 – Marshall Tito); (October 14 – Notre Dames Frank Leahy); (October 28 – Pennsylvania's Governor Ed Martin); (November 11 – The Metropolitan's Helen Traubel); (November 18 – Republican Joe Martin; backcover “Coke” ad); (December 2 – U.S. Ambassador to Argentina George Messersmith; backcover Chesterfield” as with Santa Claus); (December 9 – Russia's Andrei Zhdanov; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 16 – John L. Lewis);


1946; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (January 28 - Author Craig Rice); (October 21 - Eugene O'Neill); (December 23 - Indonesia's President Soekarno);


1947; TIME magazine (USA Editions)** (January 6 – Man of the Year James F. Byrnes); (January 13 – Milton Caniff); (January 20 – Senator Robert Taft); ((January 27 – India's Vallabhbhai Patel; backcoverChesterfield” as with Ann Sheridan); (February 3 – Alleghany Corp's Robert Young); (February 17 – Conductor Rodzinski; backcover “Coke” ad); (February 24 – George II, King of the Hellenes); (March 10 – Secretary of State Marshall); (March 24 – International Oilman Eugene Holman); (April 7 – Fred Allen); (April 14 – Brooklyn Dodger's Leo Durocher); (April 21 – United's Pat Patterson; backcoverChesterfield” as with Ted Williams & Stan Musial); (May 5 – Italy's Togliatti); (May 12 – Michigan Senator Arthur Vanderberg; backcover “Coke” ad); (May 19 – J. Arthur Rank; backcoverChesterfield” as with Gregory Peck); (May 26 – China's Chen Li-Fu; backcover “Camel” ad with Polo Player Cecil Smith); (June 9 – Colonel McCormick; backcover “Coke” ad); (June 16 – Alaska Governor Gruening; backcoverChesterfield” as with Bob Hope); (June 23 – Chief of Staff Dwight Eisenhower; backcover “Camel” ad with diving champion Mildred O'Donnell); (July 7 – zoo director Marlin Perkins); (August 4 – David Lilienthal; backcover “Camel” ad with Fencer Elaine Decker); (August 11 – The Queen Mary's Captain Illingworth; backcoverChesterfield” as with various sport stars, Star Musial, Ted Williams, Boby Riggs, etc.); (August 18 – Russia's Gromyko; “Camel” ad with Midget Auto racer Walter Ader); (August 25 – Presidential candidate Harold Stassen); (September 1 – Tennis star Jake Kramer; backcover “Camel” ad with Rodeo star Jerry Ambler); (September 15 – Fashion designer Sophie Gimbel; backcover “Camel” ad with table tennis star Mary Reilly); ((September 29 – Russia's Andrei Vishinsky; backcover “Camel” ad with trapeze artist Rose Gould); (November 17 – France's Charles de Gaulle; backcover “Coke” ad); ((November 24 – New Orleans Mayor Morrison; backcover “Camel” ad with figure skater June Arnold); (December 1 – Ambassador Lewis Douglas; backcoverChesterfield” as with Santa Claus); (December 8 – Author Rebecca West; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 15 – King Ranch's Bob Kleberg);


1947; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (April 14 - Brooklyn Dodger's Leo Durocher); (May 19 - J. Arthur Rank); (June 2 - Billy Rose); (June 23 - Chief of Staff Dwight Eisenhower); (July 28 - Hedda Hopper);


1948; TIME magazine (USA Editions); **(January 19 – Secretary of US Air Force Symington; backcover “Camel” ad with New York Rangers Cal Gardner); (January 26 – James Caesar Petrillo; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Rise Stevens); (February 2 – Figure Skater Barbara Ann Scott; backcover “Camel” ad with various sport stars); (February 2 – Barbara Ann Scott); (February 9 – Astronomer Edwin Hubble); (February 16 – Opera compser Benjamin Britten; backcover “Coke” ad); (February 23 – Karl Heinrich Marx; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Gregory Peck/ Valli/ Louis Jordan/ Charles Coburn/ Ann Todd/ Ethel Barrymore); (March 1 – France's Premier Schuman); (March 8 -Theologian Reinhold Nieburhr); (march 15 – Presidential Advisor Clark Clifford; backcover “Coke” ad); (March 22 – Lavrenty Beria; backcover Chesterfield” as with Claudette Colbert); (March 29 – Under Secretary of State Lovett; backcover “Camel” ad with Water Ski Champion Nance Stilley);April 5 ( Greek Guerrilla Chief Markos); April 12 (Kansas City's Roy Roberts; backcover “Coke” ad); April 19 (Ital's Premier De Gasperi; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Betty Hutton); April 26 (Maestro Arturo Toscanini; backcover “Camel” ad with 1946-1947 National Hill-Climbing Champion Clem Murdaugh); May 3 (Gesorge Gallup), May 17 (King Abdullah of Transjordan; bc.cv “Chesterfield” ad with Various sport stars, Joe DiMaggio, Bucky Harris, Ted Williams, etc); May 24 (King Abdullah of Transjordan; backcover “Camel” ad with Roller Skater Raven Malone);June 7(New York's Major O'Dwyer; backcover “Coke” ad), June 21 (Pennsylvania's Governor Duff; backcover “Camel” ad with Rodeo star Ken Roberts); June 28 (Jean Simmons as “Ophelia”); July 5(Republican Thomas Dewey; backcover “Coke” ad), July 12 (General Clay; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Rosalind Russell); August 2(U.S. Sprinter Mel Patton), August 9 (Henry Wallace; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with William Bendix), August 16 (Israel's Ben-Gurion; backcover with diving star Jim Fairbrother); August 30 (Governor Earl Long; backcover “Camel” ad with Stunt pilot Betty Skelton );

September 6 (Queen Juliana of the Netherlandsl backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Susan Hayward), September 13 (Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam); (September 20 – Communist Ana Pauker);October 18 (Historian Douglas Freeman), *** November 1 - Election USA; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Tyrone Power); November 22 (Tallulah Bankhead), November 29(Labor Boss Dave Beck); (December 6 – Chiang Kai-Shek); (December 13 – Columnist Drew Pearson); December 20 (Olivia De Havilland; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus), December 27 (“The Night Before Christmas” by Arthur Rackham; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Dana Andrews);



1948; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 5 (Man of the Year George Marshall); January 12 (Gregory Peck); January 19 (Secretary of U.S. Air Force Symington); January 26 (James Caesar Petrillo);

February 23 (Karl Heinrich Marx); March 1 (France's Premier Schuman); March 8 (Theologian Reinhold Niebuhr); March 29 Under Secretary of State Lovett);

April 5 ( Greek Guerrilla Chief Markos); April 12 (Kansas City's Roy Roberts); April 19 (Ital's Premier De Gasperi); April 26 (Maestro Arturo Toscanini);

May 3 (Gesorge Gallup), May 10 (Belguim's Premier Spaak), May 17 (King Abdullah of Transjordan); May 24 (King Abdullah of Transjordan); May 31 (Augustus John);

June 7(New York's Major O'Dwyer), June 14 (Young Bull “Wall Street Breed”); June 21 (Pennsylvania's Governor Duff); June 28 (Jean Simmons as “Ophelia”);

July 5(Republican Thomas Dewey), July 12 (General Clay); July 19 (Howard Hughes); July 26 (Igor Stravinsky); August 2(U.S. Sprinter Mel Patton), August 9 (Henry Wallace), August 16 (Israel's Ben-Gurion); August 30 (Governor Earl Long );

September 6 (Queen Juliana of the Netherlands), September 13 (Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam), September 27 (Earl Warren);

October 4 (New York Yankee's Joe Dimaggio), October 11 (J. Strom Thurmond), October 18 (Historian Douglas Freeman), October 25 (Psychiatrist Will Menninger);

November 8 (Physicist Oppenheimer) ,November 15 (Nicaragua's Somoza), November 22 (Tallulah Bankhead), November 29(Labor Boss Dave Beck);

December 20 (Olivia De Havilland), December 27 (“The Night Before Christmas” by Arthur Rackham);



1949; TIME magazine (USA Editions)** January 24 (Detroit's G.M. President Charles Wilson; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Dennis Morgan); (January 31 – Cole Porter); February 14(Hungary's Cardinal Mindszenty; backcover “Coke” ad); February 21 (Louis Armstrong; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Joan Fontaine); February 28 (Secretary of State Acheson; backcover “Camel” ad with Mezzo Soprano Gladys Swarthout & Coloratura Virginia MacWatters); March 7 (John P. Marquand); (March 14 – Washington hostess Perle Mesta; backcover “Coke” ad); March 21 (Britain's Health Minister Bevan; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Linda Darnell); March 28(Pan American's Juan Trippe; backcover “Camel” ad with Billiard Greats Millie Mosconi & Willie Hoppe); April 4(Artist Diego Rivera's Self Portrait); April 11(ECA's Paul Hoffman; backcover “Coke” ad), April 18 (Test Pilot Chuck Yesger; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with with Joan Crawford); April 25 (Eugene Dennis US Communist Boss; backcover “Camel” ad with Pitchers' Gene Bearden & Johnny Vander Meer);(May 2 – Puerto Rico's Munos Marin); May 9 (General Douglas MaCarthur; backcover “Coke” ad); May 16 (TV's Milton Berle; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with John Lund); May 23 (General Van Fleet; backcover “Camel” ad with Fencing stars Hugo Castello & Jane Gilbert); May 30 (Horse Trainer Ben Jones); (June 6 – Secretary of Defense Johnson); June 20 (John Jay McCoy; backcover “Camel” ad with Pro Golfers Lew Worsham & Gene Sarazen), (June 27 – Dr. Cornelius P. Rhoads); July 4 (Los Angeles Mayor Bowron; backcover “Coke” ad); (July 18 – Belgium's Leopold & Mary Liliane); July 25 (Harold Lloyd, Imperial Potentate); (August 1 – General Jean De Lattre De Tassigny); (August 8 – J. Edgar Hoover; bc/cv “Camel” ad with Yvonne De Carlo); (August 15 – Architect Richard Neutra); (August 29 – Labor's David Dubinsky); (Canda's Louis St. Laurent); (September 5 – Cardinals' Stan Musial; bc/cv “Chesterfield” ad with Alexis Smith); (September 19 – Lisa Fonssagrives); (September 26 – Britain's Ambassador Franks); (Ocrobert 3 – Pittsburgh's Richard Mellon; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Glenn Ford); (October 24 – Judge Medina); (November 7 – Microbiolgist Waksman); (November 28 (Gambler Frank Costello; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Arthur Godfrey); (December 5 – Germany's Konrad Adenaure; backcover “Camel” ad with Fred Astaire); (December 12 – Hotelman Conrad Hilton); (December 19 – Boston's Charles Munch; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 26 – Salvation Army's Pugmire; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Bing Crosby);


1949; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 3(Man of the Year Harry S. Truman), January 10(Golfer Ben Hogan); January17 (Minnesota's Senator Hubert Humphrey); January 24 (Detroit's G.M. President Charles Wilson); February 7(China's Mao Tse Tung); February 14(Hungary's Cardinal Mindszenty); February 21 (Louis Armstrong); February 28 (Secretary of State Acheson); March 7 (John P. Marquand); March 21 (Britain's Health Minister Bevan); March 28(Pan American's Juan Trippe); April 4(Artist Diego Rivera's Self Portrait); April 11(ECA's Paul Hoffman), April 18 (Test Pilot Chuck Yesger); April 25 (Eugene Dennis US Communist Boss); May 2 (Puerto Rico's Munos Marin); May 9 (General Douglas MaCarthur); May 16 (TV's Milton Berle); May 23 (General Van Fleet); May 30 (Horse Trainer Ben Jones); June 6 (Secretary of Defense Johnson), June 13 (Princess Margaret) , June 20 (John Jay McCoy), June 27 (Cancer Fighter Cornelius P. Rhoads); July 4 (Los Angeles Mayor Bowron); July 11 (Albert Schweitzer) , July 18(Belguim's Leopold & Mary Liliane), July 25 (Harold Lloyd, Imperial Potentate); August 8(J. Edgar Hoover); November 28 (Gambler Frank Costello);