NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS MAGAZINES INVENTORY FOR SALE -
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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 = dsulipa@gmail.com (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 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),(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 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 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 transform 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; Bill 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 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 vanishing border);
2000 (March 6 – Marty McSorley whacking Donald Brashear); (March 20 – David Bowie & Sarsh McLachlan; music piracy on the internet); (October 9 – Pierre Trudeau 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 Universities); (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 Canadians 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 sequel; Ottawa debates legalizing marijuana); (August 13 – Newfoundland 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; America'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 conceived 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); (June 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 – Special 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 – Growing 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);
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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); (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); (November 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 Favorties);(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 (painted cover of President Mustafa İsmet Inonu of Turkey by Ernest Hamlin Baker; Condition: G/VG=$14; G=$12; FA/G=$10) (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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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; backcover “Chesterfield” 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);
1950; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 2 – Winston Churchill); (January 16 – Illinois' Paul Howard Douglas); (January 30 – Commerce Secretary Sawyer); 9February 6 – Labor's Clement Attlee); (February 20 – School Superintendent Oberholtzer);; (February 27 – Arthur Godfrey); (March 13 – Admiral Sherman; bc/cv “Coke” ad); (March 20 – Russia's Malenkov; bc/cv “Chesterfield” ad with Gregory Peck); (April 3 – Siam's King Phumiphon); (April 17 – Eddie Rickenbacker; bc/cv “Checterfeld” ad with Kirk Douglas); (July 17 – Joseph Stalin; backcover “Camel” ad with Fran Warren); (August – General Craig U.S.M.C.; backcover “Camel” ad with Nanette Fabray); ((August 21 – Russia's Malik); (September 25 – General O.P. Smith U.S.M.C.; backcover “Camel” ad with Kyle MacDonnell); October 2(Gerenal Lucius Harris Walker; backcover “Coke” ad), (October 16 – Korea's Syngman Rhee); October 23 (General Almond; backcover “Camel” ad with Martha Tilton); (November 20 – Christopher Fry; bc/cv “Camel”ad with peter Lind Hayes); (December 4 – CBS's Frank Stanton); (December 11 – Red China's Mao); December 18 (Airlifter – General Tunner; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 25 – Artist's Fred Meyer “The Gift”; backcover “Coke” as with Santa Claus);
1950; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 2(Man of the Half – Century: Winston Churchill); January 23 (Mark III Computer); February 27 (Arthur Godfrey); May 22 (President Harry S. Truman), May 29(Vietnam's Bao Dai); June 12(Darryl F. Zanuck); July 31(General Walton Harris Walker); October 2(Gerenal Lucius Harris Walker), October 23 (Gerenal Almond);
December 18 (Airlifter – General Tunner);
1951; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 8 – Secretary of State Acheson); (January 22 – Senator Paul Douglas; backcover “Coke” ad); (January 29 – Chrysler's President Colbert; backcover “Camel” ad with John Wayne); (February 5 – Warren Austin); (February 12 – Dwight Eisenhower); (February 19 – Charles E. Wilson; backcover “Coke” ad); (March 5 – General Ridgway); (March 12 – Tennessee's Estes Kefauver); (March 19 – Price Controller Disalle; backcover “Camel” ad with baseball stars Ed Sawyer, Jim Konstanty, Bob Lemon, Vic Raschi); (April 2 – France's Auriol); (April 16 – DuPont's Greenewalt; backcover “Coke” ad); (April 30 – General Douglas MacArthur); (May 21 – Argentina's Huan & Evita Peron); May 28 (United Aircraft's Rentschler); (June 4 – Iran's Mohammed Moddadeq); (June 11 – Yale's President Griswold; backcover “Coke” ad); (June 18 – Communist Chou En-Lai; backcover “Camel” with Paul Lukas); (July 2 – The Pentagon); July 16 (General Ridgway; backcover “Camel” ad with Rise Stevens); (July 23 – RCA's Sarnoff); (August 27 – Tennis Star Dick Savitt; bc/cv “Camel” ad with Joan Crawford); (September 10 – King Farouk; backcover “Camel” ad with Robert Merrill); ((September 17 – Kremlin Courier); (September 24 – General De Lattre De Tassigny; backcover “Camel” as with Vivian Blaine); (October 1 – Bert Lahr; backcover “Coke” ad); (October 8 – William Marshall Boyle); (October 15 – Rabbi Finkelstein); (October 22 – Senator Joe McCarthy; backcover “Camel” ad with John Wayne, Joan Crawford, Dick Powell); (October 29 – Author Graham Greene; backcover “Coke” ad); (November 12 – US Steel's Fairless); (December 3 – Metropolitan Opera's Patrice Munsel); (December 10 – The Dewitt Wallaces); (December 17 – Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.; backcover “Camel” ad with Santa Claus); (December 24 – Chartres' Madonna & Child; backcover “Coke” ad with Santa Claus);
1951; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 1 (Man of the Year: Name – American, Occupation – Fighting Man); May 28 (United Aircraft's Rentschler); (July 2 – The Pentagon); July 16 (General Ridgway); (July 23 – RCA's Sarnoff); (July 30 – Baudouin I of the Belgians); (August 20 – Stalin's Son); (December 3 – Metropolitan Opera's Patrice Munsel);
1952; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 14 – A.E.C.'s Gordon Dean; backcover “Camel” ad with Henry Fonda); (January 21 – Andrea Mead Lawrence; backcover “Coke” ad); (February 4 – Canada's Clarence Decatur Howe); (February 11 – Britain's Anthony Eden); (March 10 – US taxpayer); (March 31 (Charles Laughton); (April 7 – Eleanor Roosevelt); (April 28 – Baseball's Eddie “The Brat” Stanky); (May 5 – South Africa's Malan); (may 12 – General Hoyt Vanderberg; backcover “Coke” ad); (May 19 – Candidate Senator Richard Russell of Georgia); (June 2 – Robert taft); (June 23 – Commodore Manning of the United States); (July 28 – Alben Bakley); (August 18 – Merck & Co.'s George Merck); (September 1 – Katherine Hepburn; bc/cv “Coke”ad); (September 8 – Egypt's Naguib); (September 15 – Michigan's Governor “Soapy” Williams); (September 29 – Texas Governor Shivers; backcover “Coke” ad); (October 6 – Josef Stalin & Malenkov); (October 13 – Senator John Williams); (October 20 – Author Joyce Cary; backcover “Camel” ad with Ruth Hussey); (December 1 – Amereca's Jacobsen);
1952; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** March 31 (Charles Laughton); June 16 (Dwight Eisenhower); July 7 (General Mark Clark); September 15(Michigan's Governor “Soap” Williams); November 3 (Candidate Dwight Eisenhower);
1953; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 12 – Thornton Wilder); (February 16 – Attorney General Brownell; backcover “Coke” ad); (March 2 – Westinghouse's Price); (March 9 – Korea's Syngman Rhee); (March 23 – Russia's Malenkov); (March 30 – Rasalind Russell); (April 6 – Germany's Bishop Dibelius); (April 13 – Agriculture Secretary Benson; backcover “Coke” ad with Ballerina's); (April 20 – Russia's Molotov); (April 27 – Test Piilot Bridgeman); (April 27 – Latin American Edition; Test Pilot Bridgeman); (May 25 – Italy's De Casperi); (May 25 – Latin American Edition; Italy's De Casperi); (June 15 – Mickey Mantle; bc/cv “Camel” ad with Alan Ladd/ Eva Gabor/ Charlton Heston/ Tyrone Power); (June 22 – Democrat's Lyndon Johnson); (July 27 – Yachtsman Cornelious Shields; bc/cv “Camel” Ad with Marge & Gower Champion); (August 17 – Massachusett's Governor Christian Herter); (August 24 – Alfred Kinsey; backcover “Camel” ad with Maureen O'Hara); (August 31 – West Germany's Konrad Adenauer; backcover “Coke” ad); (August 31 – Latin American Edition; West Germany's Konrad Adenauer); (September 14 – Latin American Edition; Mexico's President Ruiz Cortines); (November 23 – harry Dexter White; backcover “Coke” ad); (December 21 – Chief Justice Warren; backcover “Coke” ad);
1953; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** August 10 (Shirley Booth);
1954; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 11 – Atomic Submarine's Admiral Rickover; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Arthur Godfrey); (February 1 – The Milwaukee journal's Harry Grant); (February 8 – Air Force Chief Nathan twining; backcover “Lucky Strike” with Amy Vanderbilt); (February 22 – Haiti's President Paul Magloire; backcover “Camel” ad with figure skater Donna Atwood); (March 1 – Harvard's Presidnet Pusey); March 15 (TV's “Joe Friday” Jack Webb; backcover “Coke” Bowling ad); (March 29 – Polio Fighter Dr. Salk); (April 5 – Britain's Rab Butler; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with designer Lilly Dache); (April 19 – Theologian Van Dusen); (April 26 – Road Racer Briggs Cunningham); (July 12 – France's Premier Mendes – France); (August 2 – Do-it-yourself; backcover “Parliament Cigarettes” ad); (August 9 – Speaker of the House Joe Martin); (August 23 – Atlantic edition; Secretary McKay); (August 30 – Burma's Premier U Nu); (September 6 – Archbishop of Canterbury; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Jean& Joan Corbett); (September 27 – Social Scientist David Riesman); (October 4 – Senator Watkins); (October 18 – New Jersey's Clifford Case Jr.); (November 15 – Pennsylvania's Governor – Elect Leader); (November 22 – Indo – China's Ho-Chi-Minh); (December 6 – Brazil's Cafe Filho);
1954; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** March 15 (TV's “Joe Friday” Jack Webb); April 4 (South Vietnam's Diem);
1955; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 3 – John Dulles); (January 10 – The Bull Market on Wall Street; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Rory Calhoun & Lita baron); (January 17 – Senators from Oregon Wayne Morse & Richard Lewis Neuberger); (January 24 – Presidential Advisor Joseph Dodge; backcover “Sheraton – Cadillac Hotel” ad); (February 7 – Admiral Pride of the Seventh Fleet; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Van Johnson); (February 28 – Venezuela's Perez Jimenez; backcover “Sheraton Plaza” ad); (March 7 – Indiana Governor George Craig); (March 14 – Japan's Premier Hatoyama); (March 21 – A.F.L.'s George Meany); (March 28 – IBM's Thomas J. Watson Jr.); (April 4); (April 18 – Chiang Kai-Shek); (April 25 – Georgia's Senator George; bc/cv “Coke” ad); (May 2 – Fashion Designer Claire McCardell); (May 9 – Russia's Marshall Zhukov); (May 16 – Caltech's Lee Dubriege); (May 23 – Britain's Anthony Eden); (May 30 – California Govenor Goodwin Knight & Daughters); (June 6 – Yugoslovia's Tito); (June 13 – Gwen Verdon of “Damn Yankees”); (June 27 – The U.N.'s Dag Hammarskjold); (Julu 4 – U.S. Presidnet Dwight Eisenhower); (July 18 – France's Andre Malraux; bc/cv “Coke” ad); (July 25 – Russia's Premier Bulganin); (August 1 – The Big Four; Bulganin, Eisenhower, Faure, Eden); (August 15 – A.E.C.'s Willard Libby);(August 22 – Tammany's Carmine De Sapio); (September 5 – Author Herman Wouk); (September 12 - Space Surgeon Stapp); (October 3 – New York Yankee's casey Stengel); (October 17 – TV's Ed Sullivan); October 24 (Star Farmer Joe Moore of Tennessee); (October 31 – Heart Specialist Dr. Irvine Page); (November 14 – New York's Governor Harriman); (November 21 – New York Stock exchange president Funston); (November 28 – Julie Harris as Joan as Arc); (December 5 – Baptist President Theodore Adams); (December 19 – Florida's Governor Collins); (December 26 – FRA Angelico's Virgin & Child);
1955; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** July 4 (President Dwight Eisenhower ); October 24 (Star Farmer Joe Moore of Tennessee);
1956; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 9 – Sherman Adams; backcover “Sheraton Mt. Royal Montreal” ad); (January 16 – Israel's Premier Ben-Gurion); (January 23 – Budget Director Rowland Hughes); (January 30 – The Missle; backcover “Coke” ad); (February 6 – NATO's General Gruenther); (February 13 – Brazil's Presidnet Kubitschek); (February 20; Ohio's Governor Frank Lausche); (Febraury 27 – William Holden); (March 5 – Red China's Police Boss Lo Jui-Ching); (March 12 – G.O.P. Chairman Leonard Hall); (March 19 – France's Pierre Poujade); (March 26 – Mississippi's Senator Eastland); (April 2 – Jordan's King Hussein); (April 9 – American Express's President Reed); (April 16 – Publisher Philip Graham) (April 30 – Nikita Khrushchev); (May 7 – Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson); (May 21 – Admiral Arleigh Burke); (May 28 – Pitcher Robin Roberts); (June 4 – Defense Secretary Wilson); (June 11 – Jacques Barzun); (Latin American Edition; Jacques Barzun); June 18 (President Dwight Eisenhower); (June 25 – World Bak's President Black); (July 2 – Architect Eero Saarinen); (July 9 – Steelworker's David McDonald); (July 23 – Rex Harrison in “My Fair Lady”); (July 30 – India's Nehru); (August 13 – Harry S. Truman); 9August 27 – Egypt's Nasser); (September 3 – Washington's Governor Langlie); (September 10 – Federal Reserve's Martin); (September 17 – Estes Kefauver); (September 24 – John Davison Rockefeller Jr.); (October 1 – New York's Mayor Wagner); (October 8 – Michigan State's Coach Daugherty); (October 15 – Georgia's Gene Talmadge); (October 22 – Iowa's Governor Hoegh); (October 29 – Soprano Maria Callas);; (November 19 – Sir Anthony Eden); (November 26 – United Nation's Hammarskjold); (December 3 – Olympian Parry O'Brien); (December 10 – Poland's Gomulka); (December 17 – Weatherman Carl Gustaf Rossby); (December 24 – Painter Edward Hopper); (December 31 – Antarctic Explorer Siple); (December 31 – Atlantic Edition; Antarctic Explorer Siple);
1956; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** (February 20; Ohio's Governor Frank Lausche); June 18 (President Dwight Eisenhower);
1957; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 14 – California's Governor Knowland); (January 21 – Britain's Prime Minister Harold MacMillan); (January 28 – Saudi Arabia's King Saud); (February 25 – Admiral Arthur Radford); (March 4 – Christian Dior); (March 11 – Israel's Ben-Gurion); (March 18 – Prudential's President Shanks); (March 25 – Dr. Charles Bailey); (April 1 – Air Force Major General Bernard Schriever); (April 8 – Teamster Boss Dave Beck); (April 22 – The Sultan of Morocco); (April 29 – Engineers Woolridge & Ramo); (May 6 – Atlantic Edition; Jordan's King Hussein); (May 13 – Attorney General Herbert Brownell); (May 20 – Poland's Cardinal Wyszynski); (May 27 – Senator John McClellan); (June 3 – Argentina's Aramburu); (June 10 – Ford Foundation's Henry Heald); (June 17 – Iraq's Premier Nuri As-Said); (July 1 – Chief Justice Warren); (July 8 – Cincinnati Reds' Birdie Tebetts); (July 15 – Los Angeles' Norman Chandler); (July 22 – Russia's Nikita Khushchev); (August 5 – Canada's John Diefenbaker); (August 12 – Georgia's Senator Russell); (August 19 – Inductrialist Krupp); (August 26 – Tennis Star Althea Gibson); (September 9 – Teamster Union's Jimmy Hoffa); (September 23 – Arkansas Governor Faubus); (September 30 – TV's Edward R. Murrow); (October 21 – Britain's Prince Philip); (November 4 – Ford Stylist George Walker); (November 11 – Morocco's Princess Aisha); (November 18 – Nuclear Physicist Edward Teller); (November 25 – Air Force Chief Thomas White); (December 9 – Richard Nixon); (December 16 – NATO's General Lauris Norstad); (December 23 – Music in the Air); (December 30 – Actress Maria Schell);
1957; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** February 11 (TV's Quiz Champ Van Doren);
1958; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 6 – Russia's Khrushshev); (January 13 – Defense Secretary McElroy); (January 20 – General Dynamics' Frank Pace); (January 27 – White House Press Secretary Hagerty); (February 3 – Turkey's Premier Menderes); March 3 (President Teddy Roosevelt), March 10 (Indonesia's Sukarno); March 17 (Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson); (March 24 – Wall Street Bull, Spring 1958); (March 31 – Architect Edward R. Stone); (April 7 – Lutheran Franklin Clark Fry); (April 28 – The Dodges' Walter O'Malley); (May 12 – Those cars 1958; Ford's Ford/ GM's Curtice/ Chrysler's Colbert); (May 26 – France's Charles DeGaulle); (June 2 – Soviet Scientist Nesmeyanov); (June 9 – Alaska's Governor Stepovich); (June 23 – Puerto Rico's Governor Munoz Marin); (June 30 – Sherman Adams); July 21(Movie “The Music Man”); (July 28 – Egypt's Nasser); (August 4 – Admiral Holloway); (August 11 – U.N. Ambassador Lodge); (August 18 – Jack Paar); (August 25 – Robert Murphy); (September 1 – Admiral John Thach); (September 15 – Democrat Pat Brown); (September 29 – Charles Goren); (October 6 – Nelson Rockefeller); (October 13 – Algeria's Ferhat Abbas); (October 27 – Michigan's Chamberlain); (November 3 – Soprano Renata Tebaldi); (November 17 – Cyrus Smith); (December 1 – Chairman Mao); (December 8 – Mexico's President Lopez Mateos); December 15 – Author Boris Pasternok; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Jack Benny); (December 22 – Pat Suzuki & Miyoshi Umeki in “Flower Drum Song”); (December 29 - Wall Street Bull; backcover “Volkswagen” ad);
1958; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 6 (Man of the Year: Khrushchev); March 3 (President Teddy Roosevelt), March 10 (Indonesia's Sukarno); March 17 (Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson); July 21(Movie “The Music Man”); November 24 (John F. Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, Stuart Symington, Lyndon Johnson, Pat Brown, Robert Meyner);
1959; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 5 – Charles De Gaulle); (January 12 – General Electric's Ralph Cordiner); (January 19 – Space Exploration); February 2 (Texas's Sam Rayburn, Missouri's Clarence, Joe Cannon); (February 9 – Squa Valley's Alec Cushing);February 16 (Guinea's Sekou Toure); February 23 (The Telephone Man); (March 9 – Warren North, a Farmer); (March 23 – Michiko Shoda; bc/cv “Coke” ad); (April 6 – American Motor's George Romney); (April 20 – The Dalai Lama); (April 27 – State Department's Heater); (May 4 – Physicist James Van Allen); May 11 (General Lemnitzer); (May 18 – Chris-Craft's Harsen Smith); (May 25 – Berlin's Willy Brandt); (June 8 – Minority Leader Halleck); (June 15 – Lewis Strauss); (July 6 – Oceanographer Columbus Iselin); (July 13 – Russia's Frol Kozlov); (July 20 – US Steel's Roger Blough); (July 27 – National Cancer Institute's Dr. John R. Heller); (August 3 – Vice-President Richard Nixon); (August 10 – Hawaii's Governor Quinn); (August 17 – Jacques Soustelle); (August 24 – Cleveland Brave's Rocky Colavito); August 31 (Teamster Boss Jimmy Hoffa); (September 28 – Nikita Khrushchev); (October 5 – Chevrolet's Edward N. Cole); (October 12 – China's Liu Shao-Chi); (October 19 – Britain's MacMillan); (October 26 – TV's Private Detectives); (November 2 – Morgan Guaranty's Henry Alexander); (November 9 – Candidate Stuart Symington); (November 16 – Robert Kintner of NBC TV); (November 23 – Treasury Secretary Anderson); (December 7 – General Foods' Charles Mortimer); (December 14 – India's Nehru); (December 21 – Actress Anne Bancroft); (December 28 – The Nativity);
1959; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** February 2 (Texas's Sam Rayburn, Missouri's Clarence, Joe Cannon); February 16 (Guinea's Sekou Toure); February 23 (The Telephone Man); May 11 (General Lemnitzer); August 31 (Teamster Boss Jimmy Hoffa);
1960; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 25 – Japan's Kishi); (February 1 – Hubert Humphrey); (February 8 – Venezuela's President Betancourt); (February 22 – US Airways Boss Quesada); (April 18 – Christian Missionaries from St. Paul to 1960); (May 9 – John H. Loudon of Royal Dutch Shell); (May 16 – US Pilot Francis Powers); May 23 (“Big Four Summit” by Ronald Searle); May 23 (Latin American Edition; “Big Four Summit” by Ronald Searle); (June 13 – Nikita Khrushchev); (June 20 – The Suburban Wife); (June 27 – US Ambassador Douglas MacArthur II); (July 18 – Lyndon Johnson); (August 1 – Richard Nixon & Nelson Rockefeller); (August 8 Cuba's Che Guevara); September 5 (Maine's Senate Race: Smith vs. Cormier); (September 19 – New Products); (September 26 – Henry Cabot Lodge);October 3 (“Khrushchev andhis Gang” by Herbert Lawrence Block); (October 10 – Campaign Manager Bobby Kennedy); (October 17 – Unversity of California's Clark Kerr); (October 24 – Michigan Candidate Paul Bagwell); (November 28 – Business Columnist Sylvia Porter); (December 12 – Father John Courtney Murray); (December 19 – West Germany's Franz Joseph Strauss); (December 26 – Secretary of State Dean Rusk);
1960; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** March 21 (Caryl Chessman; Pacific Edition); March 28 (Jacques Cousteau); May 23 (“Big Four Summit” by Ronald Searle); May 30 (Soviet Defense Minister Malinovsky); July 11 (The Kennedy Family: JFK, Jackie, Rose, Joe Sr); September 5 (Maine's Senate Race: Smith vs. Cormier); (September 26 – Henry Cabot Lodge); October 31 (Candidate Richard Nixon);
1961; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 2 – Men of the Year); January 6 (Pacific Commander Harry Felt); April 7(Defense Secretary Mcnamara), (April 14 – Playwright Jean Kerr); (April 21 – Russian Astronaut Yuri Gagarin); (April 28 – Cuban Rebel Leader Jose Miro Cardona); (May 19 – Travel; the Faraway Places); (May 26 – Presbyterian Eugene Carson Blake); (June 2 – Alabama's Governor Patterson); (June 23 – Barry Goldwater);July 28 (Presidental Advisor Taylor); August 4 (South Vietnam's Ngo Dinh Diem), August 11 (Southern Pacific Rail's President Russell), August 18 (Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon); (August 25 – East Germany's Ulbricht); (September 1 – Presidential Aide Larry O'Brien); (September 8 – Nikita Khrushchev);September 22 (Labor Secretary Goldberg), September 29 (U.N. President Mongi Slim); October 6 (Jean Monnet); (October 20 – Civil Defenseman Virgil Couch); (October 27 – Northrop's President Tom Jones); (November 3 – Radcliffe's Mary Bunting); November 10 (Atomic Energy Chairman Seaborg); (November 17 – Virologist John Enders); (November 24 – Aristotle Contemplating the bust of Homer); December 1 (Red China's Economic Planner Li Fu-Chun); (December 8 – World Churchman Visser T. Hooft); (December 15 – Christmas Shopping); December 22 (Katanga's Tshombe), December 29 (Jackie Gleason);
1961; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 6 (Pacific Commander Harry Felt); January 20 (Jacqueline Kennedy), January 27 (Inauguration of John F. Kennedy); February 10 (Speaker of the House Rayburn); March 31(“The Cry” by Edvard Munch); April 7(Defense Secretary Mcnamara), April 14 (Playwright Jean Kerr); May 21 (Astrnaut John Shepard); July 7 (A.M.A. President Leonard Larson); July 14(Camping: Call of the not so Wild), July 21 (Cartoonist Bill Mauldin); July 28 (Presidental Advisor Taylor); August 4 (South Vietnam's Ngo Dinh Diem), August 11 (Southern Pacific Rail's President Russell), August 18 (Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon);(September 8 – Nikita Khrushchev); September 22 (Labor Secretary Goldberg), September 29 (U.N. President Mongi Slim); October 6 (Jean Monnet); November 10 (Atomic Energy Chairman Seaborg); December 1 (Red China's Economic Planner Li Fu-Chun), December 22 (Katanga's Tshombe), December 29 (Jackie Gleason);
1962; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 12 – US Ambassador's Reischauer, Kennan, & Galbraith); (January 19 – Speaker of the House McCormack); (January 26 – Algeria Terrorist Salan); (March 30 – Arturo Frondizi); April 13 (Soviet Poet Evtushenko), April 27 (Communist Chief Blas Roca); May 4 (Nuclear Test Director William Ogle); (May 11 – US General Paul Harkins); (May 18 – General Motors Chairman Frederic G. Donner); (June 1 – Bear vs. Bull on Wall Street); (June 8 – White House Advisor Walter Heller); (June 15 – Nelson Rockefeller); (June 22 – Spain's Don Juan); June 29 (U.S. Open Champion Jack Nicklaus);August 10 (Space Planner D. Brainerd Holmes), August 17 (Virginia's Senator Harry Byrd), August 24 (Russian Cosmonauts Nikolayev & Popovich), August 31 (The Berlin Wall); (September 7 – Banker; David Rockerfeller); (September 14 – Senator Everett Dirksen); (September 21 – President James Monroe); (September 28 – Teddy Keddedy); (October 26 – Andover's John M. Kemper; backcover “Marlboro” ad with Green Bay Packer Paul Hornung); (November 9 – Nikita Khrushchev); (November 16 – Republican George Romney); (November 23 – Folk singer Joan Baez); (November 30 – India's Nehru); December 14 (Adlai Stevenson), December 21 (Green Bay Packer's Coach Vince Lombardi), (December 28);
1962; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** February 9 (Notre Dame's President Hesburgh), February 16 (Robert Kennedy); April 13 (Soviet Poet Evtushenko), April 20 (Theologian Karl Barth), April 27 (Communist Chief Blas Roca); May 4 (Nuclear Test Director William Ogle); June 29 (U.S. Open Champion Jack Nicklaus); July 6 (Korvette Inc's. Boss Eugene Ferkauf), July 13 (British Negotiator Heath), July 20 (Mrs. Winston Guest: Blueblood), July 27 (Published Sam Newhouse); August 3 (Builder Del Webb), August 10 (Space Planner D. Brainerd Holmes), August 17 (Virginia's Senator Harry Byrd), August 24 (Russian Cosmonauts Nikolayev & Popovich), August 31 (The Berlin Wall); December 7 (Funeral of Rene Coty), December 14 (Adlai Stevenson), December 21 (Green Bay Packer's Coach Vince Lombardi),
1963; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** January 11 (Congressman Wilbur Mills), January 25 (Britain's Economic Woes);February 1(Tax Collector Mortimer Caplin) ;February 15 (Secretary of Defense McNamara), February 22 (Cleveland Conductor George Szell); March 1 (Labor Strike Leader Bert Powers), March 8 (Physicist William Pickering), March 15 (Chicago's Mayor Daley), March 29 (Egypt's President Nasser); April 5 (Agriculture Secretary Freeman), April 12 (Mayalsia's Abdul Rahman), April 19 (Canada's Prime Minister Pearson); (April 26 – Richard Burton); (May 3 – Surgeon Francis D. Moore); May 10(Abraham Lincoln), May 17(Author James Baldwin), (May 24 – Astronaut Gordon Coope); (May 24 – Latin American Edition - Astronaut Gordon Coope);May 31 (The Rising U.S. Economy); June 7(Pope John XXIII), (June 14 – Barry Goldwater); June 28 (Pope Paul VI); July 5(The Peace Corps' Sargent Shriver), July 12 (Irish Prime Minister Sean Lemass), July 19(Conrad Hilton), July 26 (Firemen's Gilbert: Railroad); (August 2 – Averell Harriman); (August 9 – South Vietnam's Nadame Nhu); (August 16 – The Archbishop of Canterbury Ramsey); (August 23 – The Sizy and Condition of the US Atomic Arsenal); August 30 (Roy Wilkins of the N.A.A.C.P.); September 6(City Planner William Pereira), September 13 (Red China: the Arrogant Outcast), September 20 (Lovers in Polish Film) , September 27 (Governor George Wallace); October 4 (Litton's “Tex” Thornton), October 11 (Britain's Harold Wilson), October 18 (Navy's Quarterback Roger Staubach), October 25 (Britain's Lord Home); November 1 (Ludwig Erhard), (November 8 – General Duong Van Minh); November 15 (New York City's Superintendent Calvin Gross), November 22 (Washington Hostess Nicole Alphand); (November 29 – President Lyndon Johnson); (December 6 – Secretary of State Dean Rusk); December 13 (Archaeologist Nelson Glueck), December 20 (Guy De Rothschild), December 27 (Painter Andrew Wyeth);
1963; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 4 (Man of the Year: Pope John XXIII); January 11 (Congressman Wilbur Mills), January 18 (Arshitect Minoru Yamasaki), January 25 (Britain's Economic Woes); February 1(Tax Collector Mortimer Caplin) ,February 8 (French President Charles Degaulle), February 15 (Secretary of Defense McNamara), February 22 (Cleveland Conductor George Szell); March 1 (Labor Strike Leader Bert Powers), March 8 (Physicist William Pickering), March 15 (Chicago's Mayor Daley), March 22 (Cassius Marcellus Clay), March 29 (Egypt's President Nasser); April 5 (Agriculture Secretary Freeman), April 12 (Mayalsia's Abdul Rahman), April 19 (Canada's Prime Minister Pearson); May 10(Abraham Lincoln), May 17(Author James Baldwin), May 31 (The Rising U.S. Economy); June 7(Pope John XXIII), June 21 (Bobby Kennedy), June 28 (Pope Paul VI); July 5(The Peace Corps' Sargent Shriver), July 12 (Irish Prime Minister Sean Lemass), July 19(Conrad Hilton), July 26 (Firemen's Gilbert: Railroad); August 30 (Roy Wilkins of the N.A.A.C.P.); September 6(City Planner William Pereira), September 13 (Red China: the Arrogant Outcast), September 20 (Lovers in Polish Film) , September 27 (Governor George Wallace); October 4 (Litton's “Tex” Thornton), October 11 (Britain's Harold Wilson), October 18 (Navy's Quarterback Roger Staubach), October 25 (Britain's Lord Home); November 1 (Ludwig Erhard), November 15 (New York City's Superintendent Calvin Gross), November 22 (Washington Hostess Nicole Alphand); December 13 (Archaeologist Nelson Glueck), December 20 (Guy De Rothschild), December 27 (Painter Andrew Wyeth);
1964; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** January 10 (R. Buckminster Fuller), January 17 (Texas Governor Connally), January 24(“Siesta” by John Koch), January 31 (State Department's Thomas Mann); February 7(French Foreign Minister Couve De Muville), February 14( Marina Oswald Wife of Lee Harvey Oswald),March 6 (Senate Witness Bobby Baker), March 13 (Tanganyika's President Nyerere), (March 20 – Majority Leader Mansfield); March 27 (Author John Cheever); April 3 (Cambodia's Prince Sihanouk), April 17(Ford's Boss Lee Iacocca), April 24(Russia's Lenin); (May 1 – President Lyndon Johnson); (May 8 – Methodist Bishop Gerold Kennedy); (May 22 – Nelson Rockefeller in Oregon); (May 29 – A.T. And T. Chairman Kappel); June 12(Barry Goldwater), June 19(Illinois Senator Dirksen), June 26 (Laos General Kong Le); (July 3 – Denmark's Princess Anne-Marie); July 10(Dirksen & Goldwater In Chicago), (July 24 – Barry Goldwater); (July 31 – Harem, New York City); (August 7 – South Vietnam Premier Khanh); (August 14 – Pacific Commander Sharp); August 21(Boston's Cardinal Cushing), August 28(Lady Bird Johnson); September 4(Lyndon Johnson & Hubert Humphrey), September 11(Baltimor Orioles' Manager Bauer), September 18 (Illinois Republican Percy), September 25 (The Nuclear Issue); October 2(Lee Harvey Oswald), October 9(Supreme Court Justice Black), (October 16 – Pierre Salinger); October 23 (Harold Wilson/ President Johnson/ Kosygin/ Leonid Brezhnev), October 30 (Candidate New York Senator Keatine); November 4(President Johnson; Election Extra); (November 6 – Philadelphia's Edmund Bacon); November 13 (China's Chou En-Lai Greeted by Russia's Kosygin), November 20 (Notre Dame Coash Parseghian); (November 27 – DuPont's Copeland); December 4(Congo Massacre Dr. Paul Carlson), December 11 (Buddhism), December 18(Los Angeles' Buff Chandler), December 25 (Christian Renewal);
1964; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 3(Man of the Year: Martin Luther King Jr.), January 10 (R. Buckminster Fuller), January 17 (Texas Governor Connally), January 24(“Siesta” by John Koch), January 31 (State Department's Thomas Mann); February 7(French Foreign Minister Couve De Muville), February 14( Marina Oswald Wife of Lee Harvey Oswald), February 21 (Soviet President Leonid Brehnev), February 28 (Jazzman Thelonious Monk); March 6 (Senate Witness Bobby Baker), March 13 (Tanganyika's President Nyerere), March 27 (Author John Cheever); April 3 (Cambodia's Prince Sihanouk), April 10 (Barbra Streisand), April 17(Ford's Boss Lee Iacocca), April 24(Russia's Lenin); June 5(A Confidential Guide to the New York Fair), June 12(Barry Goldwater), June 19(Illinois Senator Dirksen), June 26 (Laos General Kong Le);July 10(Dirksen & Goldwater In Chicago), July 17 (Writer William Faulkner); August 21(Boston's Cardinal Cushing), August 28(Lady Bird Johnson); September 4(Lyndon Johnson & Hubert Humphrey), September 11(Baltimor Orioles' Manager Bauer), September 18 (Illinois Republican Percy), September 25 (The Nuclear Issue); October 2(Lee Harvey Oswald), October 9(Supreme Court Justice Black), October 16 (Queen Elizabeth II in Canada) , October 23 (Harold Wilson/ President Johnson/ Kosygin/ Leonid Brezhnev), October 30 (Candidate New York Senator Keatine); November 4(President Johnson; Election Extra); November 13 (China's Chou En-Lai Greeted by Russia's Kosygin), November 20 (Notre Dame Coash Parseghian); December 4(Congo Massacre Dr. Paul Carlson), December 11 (Buddhism), December 18(Los Angeles' Buff Chandler), December 25 (Christian Renewal);
1965; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** January 1,(Man of the Year: President Lyndon Johnson); January 8 (Macy's Jack Straus), January 15 (Majority Leader Carl Albert), January 22 (Senator Fulbright), February 5 (U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff), February 12 (Soviet Economist Liberman), February 19 (Commander William Westmoreland); (Febrauary 26 – Red China's Foreign Minister Chen Yi); (March 5 – Jeanne Moreau); (March 19 – Martin Luther King); (April 28 – King Constantine of Greece); (June 4 – Norton Simon); (June 11 – Ed White & Jim McDivitt); (June 18 – Phyllis McGinley); (June 25 – McGeorge Bundy); July 2(Michael Anderson at Sea Island); (July 9 – Champion driver Jim Clark); (July 16 – Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh); (July 23 – Mariner space craft's William Pickering); (July 30 – Chagall self portrait); (August 6 – President Lyndon Johnson); (August 13 – India's Prime Minister Shastri); (August 20 – Los Angeles Watts Riot); (August 27 – Flight Director Chris Kraft); (September 3 – Farm Bureau's Charles Shuman); (September 10 – Secretary of the Treasury Fowler); (September 17 – Pakistan's Ayub vs. India's Shastri); (September 24 – Bust of Pope Paul); (October 1 – Water: Worldwide use & misuse); (October 8 – Cuba's Fidel Castro); (October 15 – Education Commissioner Francis Keppel); (October 22 – The turning point in Vietnam); (October 29 – Bill Moyers); (November 5 – Rhodesia's Ian Smith); (November 12 – Republican John Lindsay); (November 19 – The Biggest Blackout); (November 26 – Cleveland Browns Jim Brown); (December 3 – Millionaires under 40); (December 10 – General Johnson Army Chief of Staff); (December 17 – Arthur Schlesinger Jr.); (December 24 – On the Road to the Moon); (December 31 – John Maynard Keynes);
1965; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 1,(Man of the Year: President Lyndon Johnson); January 8 (Macy's Jack Straus), January 15 (Majority Leader Carl Albert), January 22 (Senator Fulbright), January 29 (Today's Teen-agers); February 5 (U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff), February 12 (Soviet Economist Liberman), February 19 (Commander William Westmoreland); March 12(Peru's President Belaunde);July 2(Michael Anderson at Sea Island);
1966; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 14 – President Lyndon Johnson/ Shelepin & Ho in Hanoi); January 21 (Spain's General Franco); (January 28 – Indira Gandhi); (February 4 – Dean Rusk); (February 11 – Lockhead's Courtlandt Gross); (February 18 – South Vietnam's Premier Ky); (February 25 – Arthur Rubinstein); (March 4 – Secretary Weaver, First Negro in Cabinet); (March 11 – Astronomer Maarten Schmidt; backcover “Ford Mustang” ad); (March 18 – Rumania's Party Boss Ceausescu); March 25(Broadway's David Merrick); (April 1 – Hubert Humphrey); (April 8 - -Is God Dead?); (April 15 – London the Swinging City); April 22 (South Vietnam's Thich Tri Quang); (April 29 – Danny Escobedo); May 6 (USA Universities Great Teachers), May 13 (Sargent Shriver); (May 20 – General Motors President Roche); (May 27 – The King & Queen of Thailand); (June 3 – Cal State's Gary Wilson); (June 10 – Pitcher Juan Marichal of the Giants); (June 17 – North Vietnam's General Giap); (June 24 – Senator Jacob Javits); (July 1 – Charles DeGaulle); (July 8 – Defense Secretary McNamara); (July 15 – Indonesia's General Suharto); (July 22 – TWA's Tillinghast); (July 29 – Lauren Bacall); (August 5 – Luci Baines Johnson & Partrick Nugent); (August 12 – Charles Whitman); (August 19 – Shockbroker James Thomson); (August 26 – South Africa Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd); (September 2 – Los Angeles Mayor Yorty); (September 9 – China's Defense Minister Lin Piao); (September 16 – Senator Robert Kennedy); September 23 (Metropolitan Opera's Rudolf Bing); (October 7 – Ronald Reagan; California's Governor Race); October 14 (TV's Walter Cronkite); (October 21 – Philippine President Marcos); (October 28 – Football Notre Dame's Terry Hanratty & Jim Seymour); (November 4 – President Lyndon Johnson); November 11(Bishop Pike); (November 18 – Republican's Rockefeller, Reagan, Percy, etc.); (November 25 – Julia Child); (December 2 – Arkansas Governor Winthrop Rockefeller); December 9 (German Chancellor Kiesinger); (December 16 – Bennett Cerf); (December 23 – Julie Andrews); (December 30 – Bank of America's Rudolph Peterson);
1966; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 7(Man of the Year: General Westmoreland); January 21 (Spain's General Franco); March 25(Broadway's David Merrick); April 22 (South Vietnam's Thich Tri Quang); May 6 (USA Universities Great Teachers), May 13 (Sargent Shriver); September 23 (Metropolitan Opera's Rudolf Bing); October 14 (TV's Walter Cronkite); November 11(Bishop Pike); December 2(Governor-Elect Winthrop Rockefeller), December 9 (German Chancellor Kiesinger); December 30( Bank of America's Rudolph Peterson);
1967; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 13 – China's Chairman Mao); (January 20 – H.E.W. Secretary Gardner); January 27(Polluted Air: Los Angeles at 3:30P.M.); February 3(Astronauts Grissom, White and Chaffee); (February 10 – Japan's Premier Sato; backcover “Ford Mustang” ad); (February 17 – US Senator Edward Brooke); February 24 (CIA Director Helms); March 3 (Playboy's Hugh Hefner), March 10 (Henry R. Luce); (March 17 – Lynn Redgrave & Vanesse Redgrave); March 24 (Protestant Martin Luther); March 31 (Aerospaceman James McDonnell); April 7 (The Birth Cotrol Pill); April 14 (US Politics: Weighing infor 1968), April 21 (Brazil's President Costa E Silva); (April 28 – Greece King Constantine); (May 5 – General Westmoreland Before Congress); May 12 (Federal Judge Frank Johnson), May 19 (Tonight Show's Johnny Carson), May 26 (Sgt. Clide Brown Jr.; The Negro in Vietnam); (June 2 – Robert Lowell); (June 9 – Israel's Premier Eshkol); (June 16 – Israel's General Moshe Dayan); (June 23 – Yale President Kingman Brewster Jr.); (June 30 – Kosygin & President Johnson at Glassboro); (July 14 – Jordan's King Hussein); (July 21 – Newark Cab driver John Smith); July 28 (Urbanologist Pat Moynihan); August 11(Urban League's Whitney Young); (September 1 – Sandy Dennis); September 8 (Conglomerate President Harold S. Geneen); (September 15 – Vietnam's Thieu); September 29 (Mr. & Mrs. Guy Smith, an Interracial Wedding); (October 6 – Under Fire at Con Thien, Vietnam); October 13(Sculptor Tony Smith), (October 20 – Rockefeller for President, Ronald Reagan for Vice-President); October 27 (Antiwar Protesters March at Lincoln Memorial); (November 3 – William Buckley); November 17(Cleveland's Negro Mayor Stokes); (November 24 – Britain's Prime Minister Harold Wilson); (December 1 – Fashioin Designer Rudi Gernreich); (December 8 - “Bonnie and Clyde” Movie); (December 15 – Dr. Christiaan Barnard); (December 22 – Bob Hope); (December 29 – Jersey Standard's Michael Haider);
1967; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 27(Polluted Air: Los Angeles at 3:30P.M.); February 3(Astronauts Grissom, White and Chaffee); February 24 (CIA Director Helms); March 3(Playboy's Hugh Hefner), March 10 (Henry R. Luce); March 24 (Protestant Martin Luther); March 31 (Aerospaceman James McDonnell); April 7 (The Birth Cotrol Pill); April 14 (US Politics: Weighing infor 1968), April 21 (Brazil's President Costa E Silva); May 5( Canada's Prime Minister Pearson), May 12 (Federal Judge Frank Johnson), May 19 (Tonight Show's Johnny Carson), May 26 (Sgt. Clide Brown Jr.; The Negro in Vietnam); July 7 (Canada Begins it's Second Century, Celebration at Parliment Hill); July 28 (Urbanologist Pat Moynihan); August 11(Urban League's Whitney Young); September 8 (Conglomerate President Harold S. Geneen); September 15 (Tory Leader Robert Stanfield); September 29 (Mr. & Mrs. Guy Smith, an Interracial Wedding); October 6(Soldier Under Fire at Con Thien, Vietnam); October 13(Sculptor Tony Smith), October 27 (Antiwar Protesters March at Lincoln Memorial); (November 3 – William Buckey); November 17(Cleveland's Negro Mayor Stokes); (December 8 – Premiers Johnson & Robarts); (December 22 – Bob Hope);
1968; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** (January 5 – Man of the Year President Lyndon Johnson); (January 12 – New York's Samuel B. Gould); (January 19 – Conductor Zubin Mehta); January 26 (Penn-Central's Stuart Saunders); February 9 (Hanoi's General Giap); February 16 (John Kenneth Galbraith); (February 23 – Soviet Admiral Gorshkov); (March 15 – Joffrey Ballet's “Astarte”); March 29(Monetary Fund's Pierre – Paul Schweitzer); April 19 (General Creighton Abrams in Vietnam); (May 3 – Hurbert Hoover); May 31( Charles De Gaulle); (June 14 – Robert Kennedy); June 28 (Aretha Franklin); (July 5 – Justice Abe Fortas); July 12(Commercials: The Best and Worst on TV); (July 19 – Los Angeles Police Chief Reddin); July 26(US Presidential Challengers); (August 2 – Owings of “Skidmore, Owings and Merrill”); August 9 (Republican Keynoter Dan Evans); August 23(Biafra's Agony: Conlonel Ojukwu); September 6 (The Democrats After Chicago); September 13(Detroit Tiger's Denny McLain); (September 20 – Spiro Agnew); Septembert 27 (Author Alexander Solzhenitsyn); November 1 (New York Mayor Lindsay); November 8(President Johnson; Bombing Decision); (November 15 – Richard Nixon); (December 13 – Fedayeen Leader Arafat);
1968; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** (January 5 – L.B.J. As King Lear); (January 12 – New York's Chancellor Samuel B. Gould); January 26 (Penn-Central's Stuart Saunders); February 2 (U.S.S. Pueblo Lloyd Bucher); February 9 (Hanoi's General Giap); February 16 (John Kenneth Galbraith); March 8 (the Race for the G.O.P. Nomination: Richard Nixon vs. Nelson Rockefeller); (March 22 – Eugene McCarthy); March 29(Monetary Fund's Pierre – Paul Schweitzer); April 5 (Czechoslovakia Party Boss Dubcek); April 12(Canada's New Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau); April 19 (General Creighton Abrams in Vietnam) April 26 (Author John Updike);May 10 (Paris Peasce Talks; Cyrus Vance/ Xuan Thuy/ Averell Harriman/ Mai Van Bo); May 17(Poverty in Ameria:It's Cause& Extent); May 31( Charles De Gaulle); June 7(The Graduate 1968 Brian Weiss of U.C.L.A.), June 28 (Aretha Franklin );July 12(Commercials: The Best and Worst on TV); July 26(US Presidential Challengers); August 9 (Republican Keynoter Dan Evans); August 23(Biafra's Agony: Conlonel Ojukwu); September 6 (The Democrats After Chicago); September 13(Detroit Tiger's Denny McLain); Septembert 27 (Author Alexander Solzhenitsyn); October 18(George Wallace & Curtis Lemay); October 25(Jacqueline & Aristotle Onassis); November 1 (New York Mayor Lindsay); November 8(President Johnson; Bombing Decision); November 22 (Pope Paul VI; Rebellion in the Catholic Church); December 20(Secretary of State William Rogers); December 27 (Johann Sebastian Bach);
1969; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** January 10(Senator Edward Kennedy); January 17 (Fiat's Giovanni Agnelli);April 18(Rage & Reform on Campus); (May 30 – Justice Warren Burger);June 6(Supertourist Temple Fielding); August 29(Defense Secretary Laird); September 12 (North Vietnams Ho Chi Minh), November 7(California: Here it Comes!), November 14 (Spiro Agnew),
1969; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); ** *** January 3 (Men of the Year:” Astronauts Anders, Borman and Lovell); January 10(Senator Edward Kennedy); January 17 (Fiat's Giovanni Agnelli); February 7(Dustin Hoffman & Mia Farrow); February 21 (What's Wrong With US Medicine); March 7(LTV's Ling/ Textron's Miller/ Gulf & Western's Bluhdorn), March 14 (The Great Missle Debate) , March 21 (Astrologer Carroll Righter); April 18(Rage & Reform on Campus) , April 25 (Ethel Kennedy); May 2(Northwest Territories' Duncan Pryde); June 6(Supertourist Temple Fielding); June 27(PrinceCharles Necessary?); July 4(Cesar Chavaz), July 11(The Sex Explosian), July 18(To the Moon Special Supplement), July 25 (Man on the Moon Astronaut Neil Armstrong); August 8(John Wayne), August 22(The Mafia vs. America ); August 29(Defense Secretary Laird); September 5 (New York Mets Baseball's Wunderkinder), September 12 (North Vietnams Ho Chi Minh), September 19 (Israel's Golda Meir), September 26(Drugs and the Young); October 3(Mario Procaccino: the Battle for New York), October 10(Socialist Willy Brandt), October 24 (Richard Nixon), October 31(Prime Minister Trudeau); November 7(California: Here it Comes!), November 14 (Spiro Agnew), November 21 (Counterattack on Dissent) , November 28 (Raquel Welch Epoxy Resin Sculpture by Frank Gallo); December 5(Lieut. William Calley Jr.), December 12 (The Consumer Report), December 19 (Economist Milton Friedman), December 26 (Is God Coming back to Life?);
1970; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** January 19(Pan AM's Najeeb Halaby), March 16(Heroin Hits the Young); (December 28 – The U.S. Family; “Help!”);
1970; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
**January 5(Man and Woman of the Year: the Middle Americans), January 12(The Band: Canada's Contribution to Country Rock) , January 19(Pan AM's Najeeb Halaby), January 26 (Biafra: End of a Rebellion); February 2(Ecologist Barry Commoner),February 9 (The American Indian: Goodbye to Tonto), February 16 (Jane, Henry and Peter Fonda), February 23 (Anita Caspary & James Shannon: Why Catholic Priest & Nuns are Quitting); March 2(Japan Shows Off at Expo 1970), March 9 (Retreat from Intregration), March 16(Heroin Hits the Young),March 23 (Inefficiency in America), March 30 (US Postal Strike: A National Crisis); April 6(US Postal Strike: a National Crisis); April 13(Author Gunter Grass), April 20(President Richard Nixon), April 27 (Apollo 13 Astronauts: James A Lovell Jr./ Fred W. Haise Jr./ John L. Swigert Jr.); May 4(Russian Leader Brezhnev), May 11 (Quebec's Robert Bourassa), May18 (Protest), May 25(Sex Researchers Masters & Johnson); June 1(Federal Reserve's Arthur Burns), June 8(President Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, Mitchell, Haldeman, Ehrlichman), June 15(Director Mike Nichols), June 22( The LeDain Report & Canada's Drug Culture), June 29( Canada's Threatned Enviroment); July 6(Fight Over the American Flag), July 13 (Washington Police Chief Wilson), July 20(Henry Ford II); July 27 (Alaska Last Chance for a Last Frontier); August 3(Growing Old- the Unwanted Generation), August 10(Secretary of the State Rogers), August 17 (How to Educate Your Parents), August 24 (Wall St.'s New Money Managers), August 31 (Femenist Kate Millett); September 7(Man from “M.A.S.H.” Elliot Gould), September 14 (John Fairchild of “Women's Wear Daily”), September 21(Pirates in the Sky) September 28(Actress Genevieve Bujold); October 5 (President Richard Nixon), October 12(Egypt's Nasser), October 19( The New FLQ Terrorism: James Cross), October 26(Prime Minister Trudeau); November 2 (The Urban Guerrillas), November 9(US Workers New Power), November 16(New Faces in Washington: Tunney/ Brock/ Buckley/ Stevenson), November 30 (Martha Mitchell); December 7(The Plight of the Vietnam War Prisoners), December 14(The Battle of the US Dollar), December 21(Admiral Zumwalt), December 28 (The US Family: “Help!”);
1971; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 4(Man of the Year: Willy Brandt), January 11(Actress Ali MacGraw), January 18(US Prisons: School for Crime), January 25(Rebel Priests Philip & Daniel Berrigan); February 1(House Speaker Carl Albert), February 8(The Welfare Maze), February 15(General Creighton Abrams), February 22(The Cooling of America); March 1(The New Rock: James Taylor), March 8(Muhammd Ali vs. Joe Frazier), March 15(Prime Minister Trudea & His New Bride Margaret Sinclair), March 22 (George C. Scott), March 29 (Kremlin Roulette: New Faces); April 5 (After Aerospace Industry SST), April 12 (Lieut. William Calley Jr.), April 19 (The New Genetics), April 26(China: A Whole New Game); May 3(Cana's New Democrats David & Stephen Lewis), May 10 (Sony's Akio Morita), May 17 (Egypt's President Anwar Sadat), May 24(The Graduate 1971), May 31(Canadian Novelist Mordecai Richler);
June 7(TV's Dick Cavett), June 14(Tricia Nixon & Edward Cox), June 21 (The Jesus Revolution), June 28 (Canada's Finance Minister Benson); July 5 (The War Expose: Daniel Ellsberg), July 12 (The Mafia at War: Joe Colombo SR.), July 19 (Golf's Lee Trevino), July 26 (President Nixon/ Henry Kissinger); August 2 (Pakistan's Agony), August 9 (Apollo is Astronauts: Scott/ Irwin/ Worden), August 16 (George Shultz/ Arthur Burns), August 23 (Oakland A's Pitcher Vida Blue), August 30(President Richard Nixon); September 6(George Meany),September 13 (Senator Edmund Muskie), September 20 (B.F. Skinner), Septmeber 27(Attica Prison Riots); October 4 (Japanese Emperor Hiohito), October 11 (The New Spy), October 18(John Connally), October 25(“Jesus Christ Superstar” Rocks Broadway); November 1(Ontario Premier Bill Davis), November 8 (China's Chou En-Lai), November 15 (The US Battle Over School Busing), November 22 (Queen of Opera Beverly Sills), November 29 (Ted Kenndy: Can He Win in 1972?); December 6 (Indira Gandhi/ Yahya Khan), December 13 (Looking for Life Out There: Seti), December 20 (The Bloody Birth of Bangladesh), December 27 (Stained Glass: the Good Samaritan);
1972; TIME magazine (USA Editions);
September 4 (“The Global War on Heroin”);
1972; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 3(Man of the Year: President Richard Nixon), January 10(Masked I.R.A. Fighter), January 17 (Quarterbacks Roger Staubach and Bob Griese), January 24 (Howard Hughes), January 31 (Comedian Flip Wilson); February 7(Henry Kissinger), February 14(Canada's Master Architect Arthur Erickson), February 21 (Clifford Irving by Elmyr De Hory) , February 28 (Liza Minnelli); March 6(President Nixon's China Odyssey), March 13 (Is the US Goiing Broke?), March 20(Special Issue: the New Woman), March 27 (Governor George Wallace); April 3 (Jack Anderson, Supersnoop), April 10 (What it Means to be Jewish), April 17 (Vietnamese Soldier), April 24 (Gang War: the How and Why of Murder); May 1(President Richard Nixon), May 8 (Senator George McGovern), May 15 (North Vietnam's General Giap), May 22 (Nixon Strikes Back), May 29(Leonid Brezhnev);
June 5(President Nixon & Leonid Brezhnev), June 12 (Innkeeper “Holiday Inns” Kemmons Wilson), June 19 (The Occult Revival), June 26 (Polaroid's Land); July 3(Woody Allen), July 10 (Cincinnati's Catcher Johnny Bench), July 17 (Democrat Delegate Kenneth Elstein), July 24 (George McGovern & Tom Eagleton), July 31 (Boris Spassky vs. Bobby Fisher); August 7(Tom Eagleton), August 14(Sargent Shriver), August 21(Sex and the Teenager), August 28 (President Nixon and Spiro Agnew); September 4 (The Global War on Heroin), September 11 (The Phrenology of Prime Minister Trudeau), September 18 (Murder in Munich Olympics), September 25 (Red Foxx/ Carroll O'Connor/ Bea Arthur); October 2 (The Two America's Nixon's and McGovern's), October 9 (Hockey Phil Esposito), October 16 (New York Jets Quarterback Joe Namath), October 23 (An American Disgrace; The $400,000,000 Election), October 30 (Canada's Campaign 1972); November 6 (The Shape of Peace), November 13 (Pierre Trudea/ Robert Stanfield/ David Lewis), November 20 (President Richard Nixon), November 27 (Ernest & Julio Gallo); December 4 (Actress Liv Ulman), December 11 (Miami Dolphin's Coach Don Shula), December 18 (Eating May not be Good for You), December 25 (Skier Linda Agustsson);
1973; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 1 (Men of the Year: President Richard Nixon & Henry Kissinger), January 8(After the Bombs, What Peace?), January 15 (Crisis in Congress), January 22 (Marlon Brando), January 29 (President Richard Nixon by Jack Davis); February 5(Vietnam Cease Fire), February 12 (Roberta Flask/ Carole King/ Ian Anderson/ Harry Nilsson), February 19 (Vietnam Prisoners Return Home), February 26 (George Shultz); March 5 (Carlos Castandeda: Magic and Reality), March 12 (Europe: America's New Rival), March 19 (Immunologist Robert Good), March 26 (Austalia's Prime Minister Gough Whitlam); April 2 (Libya's Strongman Gaddafi), April 9 (Food Prices: The Big Beef), April 16 (Watergate Prober, Sam Ervin), April 23 (Jesuit Superior General Pedro Arrupe), April 30 (Watergate Breaks Wide Open); May 7(Chicago Conductor Georg Solti), May 14(President Richard Nixon), May 21 (John Mitchell), May 28 (Watergate Dynamite: How Much Damage?); June 4 (President Richard Nixon Fights Back), June 11 (Superhorse Secretariat), June 18 (President Nxon's Other Crisis), June 25 (Russia's Leonid Brezhnev); July 2(John Dean), July 9 (Can Nixon Survive Dean?), (July 16 – Marilyn Monroe & Norman Mailer);July 23 (John Mitchell), July 30 (President Nixon & Tapes); August 6 (Showdown in the West), August 13 (Minnesota's Governor Wendell Anderson), August 20 (President Nixon and Spiro Agnew), August 27 (President Nixon Scrambling to Break Free); September 3 (Henry Kissinger), September 10 (Tennis Player Bobby Riggs), September 10 (Tennis Player Bobby Riggs), September 17 (McDonald's Hamburger Empire), September 24 (Chile's President Salvador Allende Gossens); October 1 (The Spiro Agnew Crisis), October 8 (President Nixon & Spiro Agnew), October 15 (War in the Middle East), October 22 (New Vice President Gerald Ford), October 29 (Egypt's Anwar Sadat); November 5 (President Nixon: The Push to Impeach), November 12 (President Nixon's Jury, the People), November 19 (Saudi Arabia's King Feisal), November 26 (TV's Peter Falk as “Colombo”); December 3(The Big Freeze: Energy Crisis), December 17 (Gerald & Elizabeth Ford: Special Report on Comet “Kohoutek”), December 24 (The Child's World Christmas 1973), December 31 (The Big Car: End of the Affair);
1974; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 7(Man of the Year: Judge John Sirica), January 14 (Inside the Brain), January 21 (Energy Boss William Simon), January 28 (Nixon's Telltale Tape); February 4 (House Leader Tip O'Neill), February 11 (Defense Secretary Schlessinger), February 18 (Exxon: Testing the Tiger), February 25 (Alexander Solzhenitsyn); March 4 (What Ails the CBC?), March 11 (Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski), March 18 (Robert Redford & Mia Farrow “The Great Gatsby”), March 25 (Counsel for Nixon James St. Clair); April 1(Henry Kissinger), April 8 (World Inflation), April 15 (President Nixon's Tax Scandal), April 22 (Alcoholism: New Victims, New Treatments), April 29 (Patty Hearst); May 6 (Merle Haggard), May 13 (President Richard Nixon), May 20 (Canada's Campaign), May 27 (Mid-East Massacres); June 3 (Oakland A's Reggie Jackson), June 10 (Henry Kissinger), June 17 (Middle Class Blacks: Making it in America), June 24 (Presidnet Nixon and Anwar Sadat); July 1 (President Nixon & Leonid Brezhnev), July 8 (Pierre Trudea/ Robert Stanfield/ David Lewis), July 15 (World Leaders), July 22 (Pierre & Margaret Trudeau), July 29 (Battle Over Cyprus); August 5 (Alberta's Premier Peter Lougheed), August 12 (Jack Nicholson), August 19 (President Gerald Ford), August 26 (President Ford on the Move); September 2 (Nelson Roskefeller), September 9 (The Big Headache: the Economy), September 16 (The Falling US Birth Rate), September 23 (President Ford Under Fire), September 30(CIA Director William E. Colby); September 30 (Britain Adrift; Europe Issue); October 7 (Political Wives: Pat Nixon, Betty Ford, Joan Kennedy), October 14 (Canada vs. Russia: Hockey Melee 1974), October 21 (British Prime Minister Harold Wilson), October 28 (TV's Mary Tyler Moore & Valerie Harper); November 4 (Pierre & Margaret Trudeau in Europe), November 11 (Palestine Leader Yasser Arafat), November 18 (The Democrateic Sweep, Now What?), November 25 (The Big Raise: Labor and Inflation); December 2 (Israel Premier Yitzhak Rabin), December 9 (Inside Canada's Prisons), December 16 (Joni Mitchell) , December 23 (The American Pet), December 30 (How True is the Bible?);
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1975; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 6 (Man of the Year: King Faisal), January 13 (Dr. John Laragh Conquering Hypertension), January 20 (President Gerald Ford), January 27 (Doctoring the Economy); February 3 (China's Premier Chou En-Lai), February 10 (Detroit's Big Gamble: Rebatees and Smaller Cars), February 17 (Immigration: What Kind of Canada?), February 24 (Philadelphia Flyer's Goalie Bernie Parent); March 3(The World Arms Trade), March 10 (American Jews and Israel), March 17 (Cher), March 24 (The Dredging Scandal in Canada), March 31 (Vietnam: The Last Retreat); April 7 (America and th eWorld “A Moment of Danger”), April 14 (Collapse in Vietnam), April 21 (President Gerald Ford), April 28 (Wages: The Scramble to Catch Up); May 5 (Hanoi's Triumph), May 12 (Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh), May 19 (Mikhail Baryshnikov), May 26 (President Ford); June 2 (Old Age: How to Help Our Parents), June 9 (Egypt's Anwar Sadat), June 16 (Margaux Hemingway), June 23 (Toronto's Mayor David Crombie), June 30 (Crime: Why and What to Do); July 7(Rock's Captain Fantastic Elton John), July 14 (Adam Smith), July 21 (Space Spectacular: Science, Politics and Show Biz), July 28 (President Ford andn Family); August 4 (Showdown in Helsinki: President Gerald Ford and Premier Leonid Brezhnev), August 11 (Lisbon's Troika: Red Thread in Portugal), August 18 (Oatland A's Charlie Finley), August 25 (Mid-East: is Peace at Hand?); September 1 (Forecast: Earth Quake), September 8 (Air Force Sergeant Matlovich “I am a Homosexual”), September 15 (The Girl who Almost Killed President Ford: Lynette Fromme), September 22 (Busing Battle in US), September 29 (Apprehended: Patty Hearst, Alias Tania); October 6 (Canada's Finance Minister Donald MacDonald), October 13 (The Maharishis: Meditation), October 20 (New York's Mayor Beame), October 27 (Strong Medicine for Canadian Economy); November 3 (Canadian Author Robertson Davies), November 10 (Music's Wonder Woman: Sarah Caldwell), November 17 (President Ford “My Guys” by Jack Davis); December 1 (Bloomingdale's), December 8 (Pittsburgh Steeler's Front Four), December 15 (Marisa Berenson in Stanley Kubrick's “Barry Lyndon”), December 22 (The Truth About J. Edgar Hoover), December 29 (Living Saints: Mother Teresa);
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1976; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 5 (Women ofthe Year: All of the Them), January 12 (Soap Operas: Bill and Susan Seaforth Hayes), January 19 (China's Teng Hsiao – Ping: Chou's Successor), January 26 (US Representative to UN Pat Moynihan); February 2 (Olympic Preview: Skater Dorothy Hamill), February 9 (Prime Minister Trudeau with Fidel Castro in Cuba), February 16 (Patty Hearst & Defense Lawyer F. Lee Bailey), February 23 Lockheed Scandal); March 1 (Canada's New Tory Leader Joe Clark), March 8 (Who is Jimmy Carter?), March 15 (Americans on the Move), March 22 (Model Carol Gustafson), March 29 (Dustin Hoffman & Robert Redford in “All the President's Men”); April 5 (The Porno Plague in America), April 12 (The Mideast Agony: How Israel Got the Bomb), April 19 (Howard Hughes), April 26 (“Baseball Springs Eternal” by Jack Davis); May 3 (Modern Royalty), May 10 (Jimmy Carter), May 17 (Republican Rumble: Ronald Reagan vs. Gerald Ford), May 24 (US Catholicism: a Church Divided), May 31 (Paul McCartney); June 7 (The West Point Scandal), June 14 (Italian Communist Leader Berlinguer), June 21 (Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reager, Gerald Ford), June 28 (Travel '76: Rediscovering America); July 5 (America's New Immigrant's), July 12 (The Bugs are Coming: Killer Wasps), July 19 (Democratic National Convention in New York), July 26 (Jimmy Carter & Family); August 2 (Rumania's Nadia Comaneci), August 9 (Gerald Ford), August 16 (Disease Detectives: Tracing the Philly Killer), August 23 (“The Plight of the G.O.P” by Jack Davis), August 30 (Gerald Ford and Bob Dole); September 6 (Sex and Tennis: The New Battleground), September 13 (US Campaign Kickoff), September 20 (Chairman Mao TSE-Tung), September 27 (The South Today: Jimmy Carter Country); October 4(Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford), October 11 (Rhodesia's Ian Smith), October 18 (Gerald Ford's Setback), November 1 (Voting Your Pocketbook), November 8 (Jimmy Carter & Gerlad Ford by Jack Davies), November 15 (Jimmy Carter “What I'll Do”), November 29 (Artist Rauschenberg); December 6 (Gambling Goes Legit), December 13 (Howard Hughes: His Secret Life), December 20 (Jimmy Carter's Great Talent Hunt), December 27 (Stars: Where Life Begins);
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1977; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 10 (The Great American Spectacle: Superbowl), January 17 (Media Mogul Rupert Murdoch), January 24 (America's Mood: Hopeful – Sort of), January 31 (The Big Freeze: Record: Record Winter Cold); February 7(Amy Carter and Her Dog Grits), February 14 (“Roots” Author Alex Haley and Actor Levar Burton), February 21 (Russia's Andrei Sakharov); February 28 (Linda Ronstadt); March 7 (Uganda's Idi Amin), March 14 (“Total Joy” Author Marabel Morgan), March 21 (Mao's Wife Tells Her Story), March 28 (New Queen of Comedy: Lily Tomlin); April 4 (James Schlesinger), April 11 (Air Travel: How Safe?), April 18 (The DNA Furor), April 25 (President Jimmy Carter); May 2 (Uncle Jimmy Wants You: But Will America Enlist?), May 9 (Richard Nixon, David Frost), May 16 (The Mafia: Big, Bad and Booming), May 23 (Defense Secretary Harold Brown), June 6 (Hamilton Jordan, Jody Powell), June 13 (Jockey Steve Cauthen, Peter Frampton, Cookie King Famous Amos, Novelist Colleen McCullough), June 20 (James Earl Ray), June 27 (Spanish Premier Adulfo Suarez); July 4(Here Comes Summer: The New Swimsuits), July 11 (Youth Crime), July 18 (Minnesota Twin's Rod Carew), July 25 (Blackout '77: Once More, with Looting); August 1(Sociobiology: a New Theory of Behavior), August 15 (New York Times Publisher Sulzberger), August 22 (Getting Out of the Panama Canal), August 29 (Minority Within a Minority: The Underclass); September 5(ABC's TV Showman Fred Silverman), September 12 (Sky-High Housing), September 19 (The Lance Affair: What it Cost Jimmy Carter), September 26 (Diane Keaton); October 3 (Author John Le Carre), October 10 (The battle Over Forced Retirement), October 17 (President Jimmy Carter, Israel's Moshe Dayan), October 24 (Maestro Mstislav Rostropovich), October 31 (War on Terrorism); November 7 (Anthropologist Richard Leakey, Homo Habilis), November 14 (US High Schools in Trouble), November 21 (South African Prime Minister John Vorster), November 28 (Egypt's President Anwar Sadat); December 5 (National Wopman's Conference 1977), December 12 (Washington Governor Dixy Lee Ray), December 19 (The Cooking Craze), December 26 (The Evangelicals: New Empire of Faith);
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1978; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 9 (Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds), January 16 (Superbowl XII: Broncomania vs. Cowboy Cool), January 23 (Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd), January 30 (Treasury Secretary Blumenthal); February 6 (CIA Director Stansfield Turner), February 13 (Prime Minister Trudeau, Quebec Premier Rene Levesque), February 20 The Computer Society), February 27 (Muhammad Ali); March 13 (A Special Report: Socialism), March 20 (Coal Crisis), March 27 (Yassar Arafat, Menachem Begin); April 3(John Travolta), April 10 (Those **@*!! Lawyers!), April 17 (The Fantastic World of Artist Steinberg), April 24 (Secretary of State Cyrus Vance); May 1 (Ballerina Gelsey Kirkland), May 8 (Attack on the Navy), May 15 (England's Prince Charles), May 22 (Saudi Arabia's Prince Fahd), May 29 (Jockey Steve Cauthen); June 5 (Africa: A Political Jungle), June 12 (Hew Secretary Joseph Califano), June 19 (California's Howard Jarvis Leads Tax Revolt), June 26 (Women in Sports); July 3 (Warren Beatty), July 10(What Bakke Means: Quotas – No, Race – Yes), July 17 (Federal Reserve Chairman G. William Miller), July 24 (The Trial of Anatoli Shcharansky), July 31 (The Test – Tube Baby); August 7 (Lobbyists: Swarming Over Washington), August 14 (New Era in the Air: Cheap Farets, Crowded Flights), August 28 (“The Godfather” Author Mario Puzo); September 4(The New Pope: John Paul I), September 11 (Israel's Premier Begin), September 18 (The Shan of Iran), September 25 (Israel's Premier Begin, Egypt's President Sadat); October 2 (President Jimmy Carter), October 9 (Pope John Paul I; 1912 – 1978), October 16 (Hispanic Americans), October 23 (Elections '78: The Tax Slashers), October 30 (Pope John Paul II); November 6 (The New US Farmer: Minnesota's Pat Benedict), November 13 (To the Rescue: US Economy), November 20 *The Election Big Senate Winners), November 27 (Social Arbiter Letitia Baldrige); December 4 (Peoples Temple: Cult of Death), Decmeber 11 (Revlon's Michel Bergerac), December 18 (Convention Fever), December 25 (President Jimmy Carter, China's Teng, Hsiao-Ping, Israel's Menachem Begin);
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1979; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 1(Man of the Year: Teng Hsiao-Ping), January 8 (US Architect Philip Johnson), January 15 (Crescent of Crisis: Troubles Beyond Iran), January 22 (Leonid Brezhnev), January 29 (The Colombian Connection: Billions in Pot and Coke); February 12 (Iran's Ayatullan Khameini), February 26 (Iran: Anarchy & Exodus) ); March 5 (Asian Communists at War), March 12 (“Mork and Mindy” Robin Williams), March 19 (President Jimmy Carter), March 26 (Mideast Peace: Its Risks and Rewards); April 2 (Psychiatry's Depression), April 9 (Nuclear Nightmare Three Mile Island), April 16 (Islam: the Militant Revival), April 23 (How Gay is Gay? Homosexuality in America), April 30 (Woody Allen); May 7 (The Oil Game), May 14 (Britiash Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher), May 21 (Now the Great Debate: Salt II), May 28 (Medical Costs: Seeking the Cure);
June 4 (Columnist Russell Baker), June 11 (West German Chancellor Schmidt), June 18 (Pope John II in Poland), June 25 (The Summit: President Carter & Leonid Brezhnev), July 2 (The Energy Mess), July 9 (Opec's Tighting Oil Squeeze), July 16 (Here Comes Skylab), July 23 (President Carter at the Crossroads), July 30 (President Carter's Cabinet Shake-Up); August 13 (Actress Diane Lane), August 20 (Judging the Judges), August 27 (The Topsy-Turvy Economy); September 3 (Photograppher Ansel Adams), September 10 (G.O.P. Candidate John Connally), September 17 (Storm Over Cuba: Fidel Castro and US Secretary of State Cyrus Vance), September 24 (Opera's Golden Tenor Pavarotti); October 1 (“White House Years” Henry Kissinger), October 8 (Mexico President Jose Lopez Portillo), October 15 (Pope John Paul II), October 22 (Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker), October 29 (Expanding America's Arsenal: General David C. Jones); November 12 (Starvation: Deathwatch in Cambodia), November 19 (Iran Blackmailing the US), November 26 (President Jimmy Carter, Ayatullah Khomeini); December 3(Attacking America: Fury in Iran), December 10 (Iran's Deposed Shah), December 17 (Rock's Outer Limits: The Who), December 24 (The Cooling of America: Cold Waves and Fuel Up), December 31 (The Art and Antique Boom);
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1980; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 14 (Moscow's Bold Challenge), January 21 (Grain as a Weapon: Who Wins, Who Loses), January 28 (Squeezing the Soviets); February 4 (President Jimmy Carter), February 11 (US Olympic Skaters: Eric & Beth Heiden), February 18 (Operation Abscam: The FBI Stings Congress), February 25 (TV's News Dan Rather); March 3 (Peter Sellers), March 10 (Ronald Reagan), March 17 (Diplomacy in Crisis: Bogata, Iran, UN Fiasco), March 24 (President Jimmy Carter vs. Inflation), March 31 (Interferon: the If Drug for Cancer); April 7 (Boeing Boss T.A. Wilson), April 14 (The Palestinians), April 21 (Is Capitalism Working?), April 28 (High Noon for America's Allies: President Carter); May 5(President Carter's Debacle in the Desert), May 12 (Senator Edmund Muskie), May 19 (Darth Vader “The Empire Strikes Back”), May 26 (Pablo Picasso's Show of Shows); June 2 (Mount St. Helens Blows), June 9 (Who'll Fight for America: Manpower Crisis), June 16 (Help! Teacher Can't Teach), June 23 (Inside the U.S.S.R.), June 30 (Swedish Tennis Star Bjorn Borg); July 7 (Rediscovering America), July 21 (Detroit Hosts Republican Convention), July 28 (Ronald Reagan & George Bush Sr.); August 4 (Coping with Brother Billy Carter), August 11 (TV's “Dallas” Larry Hagman), August 18 (The Carter Presidency), August 25 (Present Jimmy Carter); September 1 (Poland's Angry Workers), September 8 (GM's Murphy, Ford's Caldwell, Chrysler's Iacocca), September 22 (Poisoning of America: Those Toxic Chemical Wastes), September 29 (Supercoach Alabama's Bear Bryant); October 13 (The Jackpot States: Where the Election will be Won), October 20 (Astronomer Carl Sagan), October 27 (The Persian Gulf: Will it Explode?); November 3 (Ronald Reagan, President Carter), November 10 (The Iran Hostage Drama), November 17 (President-Elect Ronald Reagan), November 24 (Saturn: Encounter in Space); December 1 (TV's Sunrise Serenades: Early Morning Shows), December 8 (The Robot Revolution), December 15 (Rocky Mountain High: Soaring Prospects for the 1980's), December 22 (The Death of John Lennon), December 29 (Poland's Lech Walesa);
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1981; TIME magazine (USA Editions);
(June 8 - “The Savings Revolution); (July 27 – Defense Secretary Caspar Weiberger); (August 3 – Princess Diana & Prince Charles);
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1981; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 5(Man of the Year: Ronald Reagan), January 12 (Space Shuttle Columbia), January 19 (Mending the Economy), January 26 (The Iran Hostages: Breakthrough); February 2 (The Ordeal Ends: Iran Hostages Freed), February 9 (Brooke Shields), February 16 (Embattled Britai: Margaret Thatcher), February 23 (American Renewal); March 2 (The Ax Falls: “New Beginning”), March 9 (Genentech's Herbert Boyer), March 16 (Secretary of State Alexander Haig), March 23 (The Curse of Voiolent Crime), March 30 (How Japan Does It: World's Toughest Competitor); April 6 (Abortion: The Battle of “Life “ s. “Choice”), April 13 (President Ronald Reagan), April 20 (Wowing Britain: Lady Diana Spencer), April 27 (Space Shuttle Columbia); May 4 (What Business Schools are Doing to Us), May 11 (Oakland A's Billy Martin), May 18 (Troubles Israel), May 25 (Pope John Paul Iiis Shot); June 1 (Heart Attacks: New Insights, New Treatments), June 8 (The Savings Revolution), June 15 (New York Mayor Ed Koch), June 22 (Attack and Fallout: the Target – Iraq's Reactor), June 29 (French President Mitterrand); July 27 (Defense Secretary Sasper Weinberger); August 3 (Prince Charles& Princess Diana) , August 10 (The Royal Wedding), August 17 (Winging It: Coping Without Air Trffic Controllers), August 24 (City Master Planner James Rouse), August 31 (Author John Irving); September 7 (Actress Meryl Streep), September 14 (Conservative Senator Jesse Helms), September 21 (President Reagan's “Reaganomics”), September 28 (We, the Jury); October 5 (Broadway Blockbuster Dickens “Nicholas Nickleby”), October 12 (The High Cost of Entitlements), October 26 (Arming the World: What are the Limits?); November 2 (The Fitness Craze), November 9 (President Ronald Reagan), November 16 (Katharine Hepburn & Henry Fonda “On Golden Pond”), November 23 (Paradise Lost? South Florida), November 30 (Peace Demonstrator in West Germany); December 7 (Cats: Love 'em! Hate 'em!), December 14 (The Presidents Men: How the White House Works – and Doesn't), December 21 (Libya's Colonel Muammar Gaddafi), December 28 (Poland's General Jaruzelski);
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1982; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 4 (Man of the Year: Lech Walesa), January 11 (Children of War), January 25 (San Francisco 49'ers Joe Montana); February 1 (FDR's Disputed Legacy), February 8 (Unemployment: The Biggest Worry), February 15 (Apple Computer's Steven Jobs), February 22 (Jaclyn Smith Expectant Actress); March 1 (Henry Kissinger: Memoirs), March 8 (Federal Reseve Chairman Paul Volcker), March 15 (Salt: a New Villian?), March 22 (Gunship Over El Salvador), March 29 (Thinking the Unthingable: Nuclear War); April 5 (Fashion Designer Giorgio Armani), April 12 (Jerusalem: Protest and Prayers), April 19 (Battle Stations: Showdow in the South Atlantic), April 26 (Senate Leader Howard Baker); May 3(The Compueter Generation), May 10 (Argentine Troops Defending the Falkands), May 17 (H.M.S. Sheffield in the Falklands), May 24 (Social Security: What Can the Nation Afford?), May 31 (D-Day in the Falklands); June 7 (President Reagan, Pope John Paul II in Britain), June 14 (Sylvester Stallone, Gerry Cooney), June 21 (Israel Tank: Invading Lebannon), June 28 (The Spoils of War); July 5 (Secretary of State George Schultz), July 12 (American Women: The Climb to Equality), July 19 (Beirut Under Siege), July 26 (Ayatullah); August 2 (Herpes: Today's Scarlet Letter), August 9 (Turnaround at Fiat Motors), August 16 (Destroying Beirut: Israel Tightens the Noose), August 23 Interior Secretary James Watt), August 30 (The New Ideal of Beauty: Fitness for Women); September 6 (Wall Street Ole!), September 13 (The Inmate Nation: What are Prisons For?), September 20 (Israel's Menachem Begin), September 27 (Massacre in Lebanon: Palestinian Civilians); October 4 (Israel Defense Minister Ariel Sharon), October 11 (Jimmy Carter: Memorirs), October 18 (Author John Updike), October 25 (The Pac Men: Turning Cash into Votes); November 1 (Busted: John De Lorean), November 8 (Acid Rain: The Silent Plague), November 15 (America's Message: Keep on Course – But Trim the Sails), November 22 (Russia's New Leader Yuri Andropov), November 29 (Chicago Archbishop Bernardin); December 6 (Paul Newman), December 13 (President Reagan), December 20 (Mexico's New Presidnet Miguel De La Madrid), December 27 (The New Missioary: Preaching the Gospel inNew Guinea);
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1983; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 3 (Machine of the Year: The Computer Moves in), January 10 (The Dept Bomb: Worldwide Peril), January 17 (America's Top Maestro James Levine), January 24 (The Death Penalty), January 31 (America's Pershing II Nuclear Missle); February 7 (Robert Mitchum in “The Winds of War”), Febraruy 14 (The KGB Today), February 21 (Israel's Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon), February 28 (Princess Diana, Royalty vs. The Press); March 7 (Pentagon's Frankklin C. Spinney), March 14 (Pope John Paul II in Central America), March 21 (Chrycler Chairman Lee Iacocca), March 28 (Tax Cheating: Bad & Getting Worse); April 4 (President Reagan: Budget Battles & Star Wars), April 11 (Fighting Cacaine's Grip), April 18 (Arms Control: Making the Wrong Moves?), April 25 (King Hussein, Yasser Arafat); May 2 (Actress Nastassia Kinski), May 9 (Central America: Harsh Facts, Hard Choices), May 23(George Lucas & Star Wars III “Return of the Jedi”), May 30 (The New Economy); June 6 (Stress! Seeking Cures for Modern Anxieties), June 13 (Los Angeles: America's Uneasy New Melting Pot), June 20 (British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher), June 27 (Pope Paul II Returns to Poland); July 4 (Disease Detectives: Aids Hysteria), July 11 (IBM Chairman John Obel), July 18 (David Bowie), July 25 (Travel: Americans Everywhere); August 1 (Japan: a Nation in Search of its Self), August 8 (National Security Adviser William P. Clark), August 15 (Babies: What do They Know? When do they Know It?), August 22 (Rev. Jesse Jackson), August 29 (The America's Cup: Here Come the Aussies!); September 5 (Private Violeance: Wife Beating, Child Abuse, Rape), September 12 (Soviets Destroy Korean Flight Kal 007), September 19 (Putting Moscow onthe Defensive: Reagan), September 26 (China's Deng Xiaoping); October 3 (US Troops in Lebanon: Holding the Line), October 10 (US Superdollar: Dominating World Currencies), October 17 (Los Angeles Olympics Peter Ueberroth), October 24 (Presidnet Reagan: Making his Moves), October 31 (Mideast Madness hits the Marines: Carnage in Beirut); November 7 (Rescue in Granada: Worth the Price?), November 14 (President John F. Kennedy: How Good Was He?), November 21 (Splitting At and T), November 28 (“1984” Author George Orwell); December 5 (Soviets Walk Out of Geneva Arms Talks), December 12 (Accusing the Press: What are Its Sins?), December 19 (Syrian President Hafez Assad), Dedcember 26 (Video Rocks! A Musical Celebration);
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1984; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 2 (Men of the Year: Ronald Reagan & Yuri Andropov), January 9 (Pope John Paul II Meets and Pardons the Gunman), January 23 (US Venture Capitalist Arthur Rock), January 30 (US Olympic Skiers Phil Mahre & Tamara McKinney); February 6 (President Ronald Reagan), February 13 (Nuclear Power: Seabrook N.H. $5 Billion Over Budget), February 20 (Yuri Andropov), February 27 (Russia's New Leader Konstantin Chernenko); March 5 (That Monster Deficit: Economic Black Hole), March 12 (US Democrats Head for a Showdown), March 19 (Michael Jackson: Inside His World), March 26 (Cholesterol: and Now the Bad News...); April 2 (Alexander Haig: Memoirs), April 9 (Sex ubteg '80's), April 16 (Microsoft Boss Bill Gates), April 23 (Mining Nicaragua's Harbors), April 30 (China's New Face); May 7 (Rev. JesseJackson: Black Pride, White Concerns) May 14 (Shirley MacLaine at 50), May 21 (Olympic Turmoil: Why the Soviets Said Nyet), May 28 (D-Day: Forty Years After); June 4 (Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro, San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein), June 11 (Why Pain Hurts), June 18 (Nominee Walter Mondale), June 25 (Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko); July 2 (Author Erma Bombeck), July 9 (What Next for Israel? Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir), July 16 (San Francisco Democratic Convention), July 23 (Vice President Hopeful Geraldine Ferraro), July 30 (Olympic Sprinter Carl Lewis); August 6 (Mexico City: The Population Curse), August 13 (Carl Lewis with Olympic Gold), August 20 (Cheryl Tiegs: Fashion in Sears), August 27 (Ronald Reagan, George Bush Sr.); September 3 (Geraldine Ferraro Fights Back), September 10 (Making Babies: The New Science of Conception), September 17 (Canada's Prime Minister-Elect Brian Mulroney), September 24 (America's Upbeat Mood); October 1 (Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko), October 8 (Supreme Court in Transition), October 15 (Crackdown on the Mafia), October 22 (US Election: A Real Race?), October 29 (President Regan, Walter Mondale); November 12 (Indira Gandhi 1917 – 1984), November 19 (President Reagan's Election Triiumph), November 26 (The US in Space: What's Up and What's Ahead); December 3 (America's Banks: Awash in Trouble), December 10 (Surgeon Devries with an Artificial Heart), December 17 (India's Disaster: Union Carbide), December 24 (VCR's Santa's Hottest Gift), December 31 (David Lean Director);
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1985; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 7 (Man of the Year: Peter Ueberroth), January 14 (First Lady Nancy Reagan), January 21 (New Chief of Staff Donald Regan) , January 28 (President Reagan Begins Second Term); February 4 (Pope John Paul II: Discord in the Church), February 11 (A Russian Defector's Story), February 18 (Going Broke: Failing Farms), February 25 (Cocaine Wars: South America's Bloody Business); March 4 (Corporate Raider T. Boone Pickens), March 11 (Star Wars: The Scientific Challenge), March 25 (Russia's New Boss: Mikhail Gorbachev); April 1 (Prime Minister Mulroney, President Reagan), April 8 (The Goetz Case), April 15 (Vietnam Ten Years Later), April 22 (The World's a Bargain for US Tourists), April 29 (May 8,1945 “Never a Greater Day”); May 6 (Did Comets Kill the Dinosaurs?), May 13 (President Reagan with Helmut Kohl), May 20 (America's New Drinking Habits), May 27 (Madonna: Why She's Hot); June 3 (Who has the Bomb), June 10 (Soccer's Day of Shame: 38 Dead in Brussels), June 17 (The Spy Scanal Grows), June 24 (Hijack Terror: Muslim Extremist); July 1 (America Under the Gun: Struggle Against Terrorism), July 8 (Immigrants: the Changing face of America), July 15 (Movie Magician Steven Spielberg), July 22 (President Reagan Enters Bethesda Hospital), July 29 (The Atomic: Hirochima August 6, 1945); August 5 (South Africa: Black Rage, White Repression), August 12 (Aids: The Growing Threat), August 19 (Ciincinnati Red's Pete Rose), August 26 (The Fun of American Foods); September 2 (Reverend Jerry Falwell), September 9 (Premier Mikhail Gorbachev), September 16 (Don Johnson & Philip Michael Thomas “Miami Vice”), September 23 (China: Moving Away from Marx), September 30 (Mexico's Killer Quake); October 7 (US Trade Wars), October 14 (The Poisoning Of America'85 Toxic Wastes), October 21 (US F-14s Intercept the Getaway Plane), October 28 (Hijack Fallout: President Reagan, P.L.O. Leader Arafat, Persident Mubarak, Prime Minister Craxi); November 4 (Author Garrison Keillor), November 11 ( Prince Charles & Princess Diana), November 18 (President Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev), November 25 (Colombia's Agony); December 9 (Teen Pregnancy in America), December 16 (Halley's Comet Swings By), December 23 (Merger Tango: Business), December 30 (A Christmas Story);
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1986; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 6 (Man of the Year: Deng Xiaoping), January 13 (People Express Chairman Donald Burr), January 20 (Slimming Down: What Works, Doesn't And New), January 27 (Superbowl XX: Chicago Bear's Walter Payton & “Refrigerator” Perry); February 3 (Philippine Election: Aquino vs. Marcos), February 10 (Space Shuttle Challenge Explodes), February 17 (Televangelist Pat Robertson), February 24 (Philippine's Corazon Aquino); March 3 (Lobbyist Michael Deaver), March 10 (Philippine President Aquino & Vice President Salvador Laurel), March 17 (Drugs on the Job), March 24 (Sorry, America, Your Insurance Has been Canceled), March 31 (Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega); April 7 (New York Met's Pitcher Dwight Gooden), April 14 (Good News! Cheap Oil! Bad News! Cheap Oil!), April 21 (Libyan Dictator Munmmar Gaddafi), April 28 (Tripoli Under Attack); May 5 (Pianist Vladimir Horowitz), May 12 (Chernobyl Reactor Meltdown), May 19 (Baby Boomers Turn 40), May 26 (Teen Actress Molly Ringwald); June 2 (New York Governor Mario Cuomo), June 9 (Fixing Nasa: Space Shuttle Atlantis), June 16 (Special Issue: American Best), June 23 (Star Wars Games: The Stakes Go Up), June 30 (Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist); July 7 (President Ronald Reagan), July 14 (America Celebrate Lady Liberty Turns 100), July 21 (Sex Busters: Attorney General's Commission on Pornography), July 28 (Sigourney Weaver & She-Monster “Aliens”); August 4 (Pressuring South Africa: Sanctions), August 11 (“Alvin” Explorig the “Titanic”), August 18 (Andrew Wyeth's “The Helga Painting), August 25 (Breakthrough! Tax Reform); September 8 (Harvard President Derek Bok), September 15 (Drugs: The Enemy Within), September 22 (Loew's Laurence Tisch Takes Over CBS), September 29 (Mafia on Trial; John Gotti); October 13 (USA & Russia Minisummit in Ireland), October 20 (Star Wars Missle Defense Sinks Summit), October 27 (David Byrne of “Talking Heads”); November 3 (Viruses: Keys to Life and Death), November 10 (High-Tech Wall Street), November 24 (Sex Education; “Peanuts cover” by Charles Schulz); December 1 (Insider Trading: Investor “Ivan the Terrible” Boesky), December 8 (Iran-Contra Scandal), Decmber 15 (Playwright Neil Simon), December 22 (Iran-Contra Scandal: Oliver North), December 29 (A Letter to the Year 2086);
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1987; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 12 (Air Travel; How Safe Is It?), January 19 (Arms Dealer Adnan Khashoggi); February 16 (How Hetrosexuals are Coping With Aids); March 2 (Bette Midler), March 9 (President Ronald Reagan), March 16 (Chief of Staff Howard Baker, National Security Adviser Frank Carlucci, CIA Nominee William Webster), March 23 (Bang! A Star Explodes), March 30 (America's Agenda After Reagan); April 6 (Trains: The Enduring Romance of Rail), April 13 (Trade Wars: Japan vs. USA), April 20 (Spy Scandals; Marine Corps Woes), April 27 (Rock's Hottest Ticket “U2”); May 4 (South Africa; Hints of Hope), May 11 (Wiring the Future; Superconductivity Revolution), May 18 (Gary Hart's Fall; Sex and Politics), May 25 (Whatever Happened to Ethics?); June 22 (British PrimeMinister Margaret Thatcher), June 29 (South Korean President Chun Doo Hwan); July 6 (“We the People”; The American Constitution at 200), June 27 (Mikhail Gorbachev's Revolution); August 10 (America's Vanishing Coastline), August 17 (Iran vs. The World; Ayatullah Khomeini), August 24 (Actor Steve Martin), August 31 (Those Asian – American Whiz Kids); September 7 (US Catholics Await Papal Visit), September 14 (The Selling of America; Foreign Investors), September 21 (Nominee for the Supreme Court Robert Bork), September 28 (Olympic Cities; Calgary, Alberta, Seoul, South Korea); October 5 (Energia Rocket Blasts off from Baikonur Cosmodrome), October 12 (Are Women Fed Up? Yes, and Men are to Blame), October 19 (How the Earth's Climate is Changing; Global Warming), October 26 (A Day inthe Life of the Soviet Union); November 2 (The Crash; A Wild Wall Street Week), November 9 (Who's in Charge? America's Leaderhship Crisis), November 16 (Michael Douglas & Glenn Close), November 23 (Bringing the City Back to Life), November 30 (Alcoholism; Science is Discovering the Cause); December 7 (Shirley MacLaine; New Age Nutbar), December 14 (Mikhail Gorbachev in Washington), December 21 (Ethiopian Famine), December 28 (Gary Hart; Will He Spoil Democrats Changes?);
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1988; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 4(Man of the Year; Mikhail Gorbachev), January 11 (1968; The Year that Shaped a Generation), January 18 (Andrew Lloyd Webber; Magician of the Musical), January 25 (Iowa; a Profile of the Fiesty Folks); February 1 (School Principle Joe Clark; Is Getting Tough the Answer?), February 8 (CBS's Dan Rather), February 15 (US Olympic Figure Skater Debi Thomas), February 22 (Americans are Living Longer; But Who Will Foot the Bill?), February 29 (Swiss Skier Pirmin Zurbriggen at the Calgary Olumpics); March 7 (Panama's General Noriega; Drug Thug), March 14 (Superman Turns 50; by John Byrne), March 21 (George Bush, Sr.), March 28 (Computers of the Future); April 4 (Israel; 40 years of Achievement & Conflict), April 11 (Rev. Jesse Jackson's Surprising Surge), April 18 (Butt Out! The War Over Smoking), April 25 (Mickey Mouse & Disney's Boss Michael Eisner); May 2 (Michael Dukakis; Can he Unite the Democrats?), May 9 (Kids Who Sell Crack); May 16 (Astrology in the White House; Nancy Reagan), May 23 (The Battle inside Your Body; The Immune System), May 30(Should Drugs be Made Legal?); June 6(Raisa Gorbachev), June 13 (Mikhail Gorbachev & President Reagan), June 20 (Paradise Found; a Return to Gardening), June 27 (Heavyweight Boxer Mike Tyson); July 4 (Super Japan; a Global Power?), July 11 (Hispanic Actor Edward James Olmos), July 18 (Onward to Mars), July 25 (Michael Dukakis & Lloyd Bentsen); August 1 (Our Filthy Seas), August 8 (Through the Eyes of a Child; Growing Up in the US Today), August 15 (Who was Jesus?), August 22 (George Bush Sr. In Hew Orleans), August 29 (George Bush Sr. & Dan Quayle); September 5 (South Korea; Olympic Host Takes a Bow), September 12 (Gridlock; in the Air and onthe Ground), September 19 (Olympian Jackie Joyner-Kersee), September 26 (Computer Viruses); October 3 (Political Handlers; Buch's James Baker, Dukakis' John Sasso), October 10 (Canada's Disgraced Spinter Ben Johnson, October 17 (Zapped; The Networks Under Attack), October 24 (Richard Nixon & John F. Kennedy; 1988, You're No 1960), October 31 (Nuclear Scandal; The Clawsons of Ohio); November 7 (Death of a Narc; US Drug Agent “Kiki” Camarena), November 14 (Israel Divided; Yitzhak Shamir), November 21 (Election Special; President-Elect George Buch Sr.), November 28 (JFK's Assassination; Who Was the Real Target?); December 5 (Prime Minister Brian Mulroney), December 12 (“Good” Cholesterol), December 19 (Ronald Reagan; Mikhail Gorbachev; George Bush Sr.), December 26 (Yasser Arafat);
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1989; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 2 (Planet of the Year: Earth), January 9 (Willem Dafoe & Gene Hackman in “Mississippi Burning”), January 16 (Why Does Libya So Rile the US?), January 30 (President George Buch Sr.); February 6 (Armed America; More Guns, More Shootings, More Massacres), February 13 (Secretary of State James Baker), February 20 (Betrayal; 1987 Marine Spy Scandal), February 27 (Ayatullah Khomeini Orders a Hit on Author Salman Rushdie); March 6 (The Tower Fiasco; Bush's First Crisis), March 13 (Greek Embezzler George Koskotas), March 20 (Solving the Mysteries of Heredity), March 27 (The US; Love It, Loathe It, or Both); April 3 (The College Trap; US Athletes), April 10 (The New U.S.S.R.), April 17 (Alaska; The Battle for America's Last Frontier), April 24 (The Rat Race; How America is Running Itself Ragged); May 1 (Abortion; Will the Courts Turn Back the Clock?), May 8 (Fusion or Illusion?), May 15 (Soviet Foreign Minister Shevardnadze), May 22 (Politics, Panama Style), May 29 (China in Turmoil); June 5 (Beijing; Defying Dictatorship, Moscow; Demanding Democracy), June 12 (Massacre in Beijing; Tia Nanmen Square), June 19 (Revolt Against Communism; China; U.S.S.R.; Poland), June 26 (Kevin Costner); July 3 (Angry Sun Stage a Spectacular Show), July 10 (Baseball's Pete Rose; You Bet Your Life), July 17 (Death by Gun; America's Toll in a Typical Week – 464), July 31 (Doctors and Patients; Image vs. Reality); August 7 (ABC's Diane Sawyer), August 14 (The Hostage Agony; Did Israel Go To Far), August 21 (How President Bush Decides), August 28 (World War II; September 1939 Germany Invades Poland); September 4 (Rockd Rolls on “The Rolling Stones”), September 11 (Detroit's Rantine McKesson Fights for her Neighborhood), September 18 (Torching the Amazon; Can the Rain Forest be Saved), September 25 (Atlantic City; Boardwalk of Broken Dreams); October 2 (A Day in the Life of China), October 9 (Want a Baby? Joy and Anguish of Adoption), October 16 (The Ivory Trail; From Africa to Asia), October 23 (Is Government Dead? Politicians Unwilling to Lead), October 30 (Earthquake San Francisco October 17, 1989); November 6 (The Big Break; Moscow Ltes Eatern Europe Go), November 13 (Arseno Hall), November 20 (Freedom! Down Comes the Berlin Wall), November 27 (Picasso's “Au Lapin Agile”! 40.7 Million); December 4 (Women Face the '90's), December 11 (Presidnet Bush & Mikhail Gorbachev), Decmeber 18 (Money Laundering; Trillion Dollar Shell Game), December 25 (Tom Cruise);
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1990; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 1 (Man of the Year; Mikhail Gorbachev), Janaury 8 (Buchareest December 1989; When Tyrants Fall), January 15 (Antarctica; Is any Place Safe From Mankind?), January 22 (The Baltics; Winds of Secession), January 29 (Soviet Republics “Almost Civil War”); February 5 (Nelson Mandala; Free at Last?), February 12 (Germany; The Pull Fro Unification; The Puch for Troop Cuts), February 19 (Mikhail Gorbachev Turns his back on Lenin), February 26 (Collapse of Drexel Burnham; Michael Milken); March 5 (Asian's Try to find their Place on North America's West Coast), March 19 (The Right to Die; Peter Busalacchi & Daughter Christine), March 26 (The Germans; Should the World Worry?); April 2 (Richard Nixon; Memoirs), April 9 (America's Changing Colors; When Whites are a Minority), April 16 (Colossal Colliders; Unlocking the Secrets of the Universe), April 23 (Earth Day 1990), April 30 (Vietnam; 15 Years Laters); May 7 (Dirty Words; Foul Mouthed Pop Culture), May 14 (Sakharov; Memoirs), May 21 (Global Finance; Barebknuckle Banking), May 28 (Arnold Schwarzenegger); June 4 (Mikhail Gorbachev; In the Eye of the Storm), June 11 (Friends in Need; Bush & Gorbachev), June 18 (Canada's Internal Conflicts); July 2 (Nelson Mandela; a Hero in America), July 9 (Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions), July 16 (Twentysometing; Laid Back or Lost?), July 23 (The Palestinians; A Long Bloody Search for Nationhood), July 30 (Germany's Helmut Khol); August 6 (US Supreme Court Nominee David Souter), August 13 (Saddam Hussein; Iraq on the March Takes Kuwait; Canadian & US Issues), August 20 (Presidnet Buch Masterminds Global Response to Iraq), August 27 (Talk of War; Persian Gulf); September 3 (US Soldier Test Chemical Warfare Gear in Saudi Arabia), September 10 (Saddam Hussein; Playing Cat & Mouse), September 17 (I Love N.Y.; The Rotting of the Big Apple), September 24 (Saudi King Fahd; Under the Gun);October 1 (Children Without Hope; Does Anyone Care?), October 8 (Germany is One), October 15 (High Anciety; Looming Recession, War), October 22 (Trumpet Master Wynton Marsalis), October 29 (GM's New Car “Saturn”; Can America Still Complete? ); November 5 (Ronald Reagan; Memoirs “An America Life”), November 12 (The Chunnel Connection), November 19 (The Untouchables; US Politicians), November 26 (The Junk Mail Explosion?); December 10 (What War Would Be Like), December 17 (Homeless in America), Decmber 24 (What is Kuwait? And is it Worth Dying For?), Decmber 31 (The Best of 1990; Bart Simpson);
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1991; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 7 (Man of th eYear; President George Bush Sr), January 14 (Breast Cancer; 1 in 10 American Women will Get It), January 21 (January 15; Deadline for War), January 28 (War in the Gulf; Baghdad January 17, 2:44 A.M.); February 4 (Stalking Saddam; General Norman Schwarzkopf), February 11 (Saddam's Weird War; Armored Person Carriers after Khafji Battle), February 18 (Deadly Calculations; Ground Assault – French Soldiers in Saudi Desert), February 25 (Beginning of the End; Inside Iraq); March 4 (Into Kuwait! Tightening the Noose), March 11 (Kuwait City February 27/1991), March 18 (Kuwait is Burning! Oil Fields Fires); April 1 (US Globo-Cop; Coming Soon to Your Country?), April 8 (Governemtns Everywhere Selling Assets), April 22 (Nancy Reagan; Is She that Bad?), April 29 (China; The Poisoned Earth); May 13 (Hong Kong; The Years of Living Anxiously), May 20 (India's Moment of Truth; Election Time); June 3 (Rajiv Gandhi 1944 – 1991), June 17 (The Gift of Life: Medical Miracles), June 24 (The Unwanted; Refugees Around the World); July 1 (Cocaine Inc.; The New Colombian Drug Lords), July 8 (Americans Debate Their Identity), July 15 (The New France; Asterix & Obelisk Cover), July 22 (W.A. Mozart 200th Anniversary), July 29 (B.C.C.I. - The World's Sleaziest Bank); August 5 (Was it Worth It? The Gulf War Aftermath), August 12 (Busybodies & Crybabies; The American Character), August 19 (Hostages; Why Now? Who's Next? John McCarthy & Terry Anderson), August 26 (Immigrant; Europe Under Siege); September 2 (Russian Revolution 1991; Boris Yeltsin), September 9 (Russian Power Vacuum), September 16 (Supermodels; Naomi Campbell), September 23 (Highland Tribesman, Papua New Guinea), September 30 (Curing Infertility); October 7 (Defusing the Nuclear Threat), October 14 (Jodie Foster; a Director is Born), October 21 (Sex, Lies and Politics; Anita Hill & Clarence Thomas), October 28 (Oliver North “Reagan Knew Everything”); November 4 (The Global Baby Chase; Adoption of Third World Babies), November 11 (Syria's Al-Sharra & Israel's Shamir), November 18 (California; The Endangered Dream), November 25 (Stolen; Thievery of Fine Art); December 2 (Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941; Day of Infamy), December 9 (New Europe; Future Uncertain), December 30 (The Search for Mary Mother of Jesus);
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1992; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 6 (Man of the Year; CNN's Ted Turner), January 20 (Why are Men and Women Different), January 27 (Asia in the New Age); February 17 (Vanishing Ozone Layer); March 9 (Authors Susan Faludi & Gloria Steinem); April 13 (The College Cruch; Strappen for Cash), April 20 (British Prime Minister John Major);May 4 (Why Roe vs. Wade is Already Moot), May 11 (Rodney King May 1, 1992 “Can we all Get Along?”), May 18 (The Two Americans; E Pluribus Unum?), May 25 (Ross Leading inthe Polls); June 15 (Islam; Should the World be Afraid?) , June 22 (Allergies; How you get & Get Rid of ); July 13 (Gorilla in Ndoki Rain Forest; World's Last Eden), July 27 (Ross Perot's Vanishing Act); August 3 (Losing the Battle; HIV & AIDS), August 10 (Canadian Olympic Gold Medal Winner Mark Tewksbury), August 17 (The Balkans; Muslim Prisoners in a Serbian Detention Camp), August 24 (Presidnet George Bush on his Presidency), August 31 (Woody Allen Defends Himself); September 7 (The Agony of Africa), September 14 (Hillary Clinton; Is She Helping or Hurting her Husband?); October 5 (Lying; Everybody's Doing it (Honest), October 19 (Ted Thin Elk & Reginald Bird Horse in Sioux Indian Chief Naming Ceremony, Rosebud Reservation, South Dakota), October 26 (The Iceman's Secrets; Frozen 5,300 Year Old Corpse from Melting Alpine Glacier); November 2 (Bill Clinton's Long March), November 9 (Canada Beyond the No; Constitutional Reform), November 16 (President – Elect Bill Clinton), November 23 (God & Women; Second Reformation Sweeps Christianity), November 30 (Princess Diana; a House Divided); December 7 (Can Russia Escape It's Past), December 14 (Canada 2000; Reflection's on What's Ahead), December 21 (Restoring Hope; Somalia, Why Not Bosnia?), December 28 (What Does Science Tell us About God?);
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1993; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 4 (Man of the Year; Bill Clinton), January 11 (Megacities; World's Sprawling Urban Centers), January 18 (Fighting Back; Rita Collins Killed Her Abusive Husband), January 25 (President Bill Clinton; Stand & Deliver); February 1 (Global Gangster; Chinese Triads Spread), February 8 (Novelists from Britains's Former Colonies Write Back), February 15 (The Chemistry of Love), Febarury 22 (Uncle Bill (Sam) Wants $150 Billion or So); March 1 (Into the Heart of Whiteness; Adventurers Ran Fiennes and Erling Kagge in Antarctica), March 15 (In the Name of God; David Koresh of Waco, Texas; Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman of New Jersey), March 22 (Boris Yeltsin's Darkest Hour), March 29 (British Actress Emma Thompson); April 12 (The Information Highway; Coming Soon To Your TV), April 19 (Los Angeles; Is It Going to Hell?), April 26 (The Truth About Dinosaurs; Mononychus); May 3 (Tragedy in Waco; David Koresh), May 10 (Hillary Clinton; Most Powerful First Woman in History), May 17 (Breke, Bosnia; A Serb Murders a Wounded Man), May 24 (Kids, Sex and Values); June 7 (President Clinton; The Incredible Shrinking President), June 14 (Giant Step; Nelson Mandela), June 21 (Sex for Sale; Customer andn Bar Girl in Bangkok), June 28 (Fatherhood; a Changing Role); July 5 (Hitting Back at Terrorlists), July 12 (What's Happened tp World Leadership), July 26 (Sarajevo Dying; The Lesoons of Bosnia); August 2 (Gun Crazy; America's Youth & Firearms), August 23 (America the Violent; Crime is Spreading), August 30 (David Letterman; Is American Ready?); September 6 (Miami Florida; Glitzy & Violent), September 13 (Leap of Faith; Israel's Rabin, Yasser Arafat), September 20 (Middle East Miracle; Plo & Israel Recognize Each Other), September 27 (Attack of the Video Games); October 11 (How Life Begins; New Surprising Discoeries), October 18 (October 4, 1993 The Russian White House Under Attack), October 25 (The race for Sunken Treasures); November 1 (Beyond Mickey Mouse; Comics Grow Up), November 15 (Bad Blood; Aids Tainted Scandal), November 22 (Shrinking the Pacific; Economics); December 13 (Detroit's Big Three; Chrysler's Bob Eaton; Ford's Alex Trotman; GM's Jack Smith), December 20 (New Tork's Slaughter On a Commuter Train);
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1994; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 3 (Men of the Year; Yitzhak Rabin/ Nelson Mandela/ F.W. De Klerk/ Yasser Arafat); February 21 (Sarajevo Ultimatum), February 28 (Norway Olympic Skater Johann Olav Koss); March 7 (Accused CIA Spy; Alrich H. Ames), March 14 (How Man Began; Homo Erectus), March 21 (Whitewater; Hillary & Bill Clinton), March 28 (Doomed! Tigers onteh Brink of Extinction); April 4 (Kim Il Sung; Would North Korea Win War?), April 11 (Wild Wall Street; High Tech Gambles), April 25 (Hope in the War Against Cancer); May 9 (Nelson Mandela; New South Africa), May 16 (Rwanda; “No Devils Left in Hell”), May 23 (Shattered Comet About to Hit Jupiter), May 30 (Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis; 1929 – 1994); June 13 (Kim Il Sung; Iis he Bluffling?); August 15 (Infidelity; It May be in our Genes), August 22 (Baseball Strike!); September 12 (Revenge of the Killer Miscrobes); October 31 (New Hope for US Public Schools; First Grader Zachary Leipham, Grand Rapadids, Michigan);November 7 (Cutting a Deal? World's Largest Cocaine Cartel), November 14 (Susan Smith; How Could She Do It?) , November 28 (Star Trek; William Shattner; Patrick Stewart); December 19 (Republican Newt Gingrich);
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1995; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 9 (Anatomy of a Hijack; French Commandos Storm Airbus Held by Islamic Terrorists), January 16 (Americans Are Fater Than Ever), January 23 (Wired Democracy; George Washington), January 30 (The Quake; Worst inJapan Since 1923); February 6 (O.J. Simpson Trial Begins), February 13 (Secrets of the Stone Age; cave Paitings), February 20 (Cuba's Fidel Castrol; Open for Business), February 27 (Growing Movements to Stregthen Marriage); March 6 (When Did the Universe Begin?; Galaxy M100), March 13 (Nicholas Leeson; The Man who Lost a Billion), March 20 (How Low Can It Go? US Dollar), March 27 (Steven Speilberg; David Geffen; Jeffrey Katzenberg); April 3 (Toxic Terror on Tokyo's Subway), April 10 (Can We Still Believe in Miracles? “The Resurrection” by Noel Coypel), April 17 (Claudia Schiffer), April 24 (Vietnam; Twenty Years Later); May 1 (Accused Oklahoma Bomber Timothy McVeigh), May 8 (50 Years After V-E Day), May 15 (America's Christian Crusder Ralph Reed), May 22 (Unburied Sins; Genocide from Argentina to Cambodia), May 29 (Secrets of the Lost Tomb; Ramesses the Great); June 5 (Master of the Universe; Microsoft's Bill Gates), June 12 (Pawns of the Serbs; Hostages are Freed), June 19 (America Rescues Downed US Pilots Scott O'Grady), June 26 (Estrogen; Ever5y Women's Dilemma); July 10 (George Soros, July July 17 (Global Agenda; Ten Technologies That Will Change Out Lives), July 31 (In Search of the Mind; Scientist Peer into the Brain); August 7 (Will NATO be Drawn into Balkan War?), August 14 (Mysteries of the Deep; Anglerfish), August 21 (Cyber War; Computers into Weapons), August 28 (20th Century Blues; Stress, Anxiety); September 4 (The Rape of Siberia), September 11 (Bringing the Serbs to Hell), September 18 (Colin Powell; an American Journey), September 25 (Peace, or Else ...; NATO Bombs Serbs); October 2 (Author Michael Crighton), October 9 (O.J. Simpson; Will Verdict Split America), October 16 (O.J. Simpson; Not Guilty), October 23 (The U.N. 50th Anniversary; Reform or Die?), October 30 (State of the Planet; Stormy Forecast); November 6 (Peace Now? Bosnia Peace Talks), November 13 (Yitzhak Rabin; 1922 – 1995), November 20 (Canada Special Report; State of the Nation), November 27 (Is Bosnia Worth Dying For? US Army Trooper Andrew F. Hawley); December 4 (Evolution's Big Bang), December 11 (A Shameful Death; Elisa Izquierdo 1989 – 1995), December 25 – 1996 January 1 (Man of the Year; Newt Gingrich);
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1996; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
January 8 (Fat Free Fat? Olestra), January 15 (New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton), January 22 (Kobe, Japan; Painful Comeback After Quake), January 29 (Gone Li “Temptress Moon”); February 12 (Basketball Star Magic Johnson; Living With Aids), February 19 (Netscape's Marc Andreessen), February 26 (Pat Buchanan; Bashes Big Business); March 11 (Princess Diana; Seperation from Charles), March 18 (First Lady Hilary Clinton; Truth About Whitewater), March 25 (The Lost Children; Shooting in Dunblane Scotland School); April 1 (Do Machines Think? Scientists Say Yes), April 22 (7-Year Old Pilot Jessica Dubroff); May 6 (Auction of Kennedy Memorbilia); June 3 (Mafia Crime Boss Giovannia Brusca Arrested), June 10 (Israel's Benjamin Netanyahn); July 1 (Hillary Clinton vs. Elizabeth Dole), July 15 (Canadian Olympic Sprinter Donovan Bailey), July 22 (British Prince William); August 5 (Courage & Cowardice; Olympics Go On), August 12 (Diva Celina Dion), August 26 (Christopher Reeve's Heroic Battle); September 16 (Microsoft's Bill gate's; Whose Web Will It Be?); October 7 (Goldie Hawn; Diane Keaton & Bette Midler “The First Wives Club”), October 21 (The News Wars; Print, Cable & Internet), October 28 (And God Said ... New Debate Over Genesis); November 4 (The Choice; Bill Clinton or Bob Dole), November 18 (President Bill Clinton; How he Won); December 2 (O.J. Simpson; Civil Trial – Will they Believe Him?);
1997; TIME magazine (USA Editions); ** *** July 14 (Mars July 4, 1997; USA Edition),
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1997; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 13(Bill Gates; His Private World), January 20 (Madonna “Evita”), January 27 (Green Bay Packers' Brett Favre and Reggie White); February 10( The Return of “Star Wars”), February 24 (Echoes of the Holocaust; The Fight Over Nazi Gold); April 14 (Ellen Degeneres; “Yep, I'm Gay”); April 21 (The Most Influential People in 1997), May 19 (Fool's Gold; Bre-X and the Great Mining Hoax), May 26 (What's Cool This Summer); June 2 (Steven Spielberg; Smiling at 50), June 9 (Generation X; US Edition); June 23 (The Roswell Files; 50th Anniversary of Crash); July 14 (Mars July 4, 1997; Canadian Edition), July 21 (Sarah McLachlan); July 21 (Singer, Songwriter Jewel; US Edition); August 4 (Power Trip; Is America IN Danger of Becoming a Global Bully?) , August 11 (Sharks; Doomed to Extinction?), August 18 (Apple-Microsoft Deal; Apple's Steve Jobs), August 25 (The Death of Privacy); September 1 (The Scourge of Asthma), September 8 (Princess Diana 1961 – 1997), September 15 (Princess Diana Commemorative Issue), September 29 (How Mood Drugs Woork ... And Fail);October 6 (“The Promise Keepers”; New US Movement), October 20 (Hillary Clinton Turns Fifty); December 15 (Helen Hunt), December 22 (Images '97; Princess Diana);
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1998; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 12 (Jerry Seinfeld; Why He Quit); February 9 (Special Prosecutor Ken Starr); March 2 (President Bill Clinton; Iraq & Monica), March 9 (75th Anniversay Issue), March 16 (John Travolta “Primary Colors”), March 30 (Actress Neve Campbell); April 13 (Leaders and Revolutionairies of the 20th Century); April 27 ( The Future of Money), May 4 (The Potency Pill; Viagra), May 25 (Francis Albert Sinatra; 1915 – 1998); June 8 (Artists and Entertainers of the Century), June 22 (Michael Jordan); (July 6 (The Royal Tyrrell Museum's Phil Currie and Fossilized Dinosaur – Bird), July 20 (Jerry Yang of “Yahoo!”; Online Shopping); August 3 (Killer Germ; E Coli), August 17 (John Glenn; Return to Space), August 24 (Bill Clinton; Truth and Consequences), August 31 (Bill Clinton; Bombshells); September 21 (Bill Clinton; The Starr Report), September 28 (Is Impeachment Only Way Out?); October 5 (Oprah Winfrey “Beloved”), October 19 (What Makes a Greart Student; Moira Harding of Windor, Nova Scotia); November 9 (What Corporate Welfare Costs), November 16 (The Fall of Newt Gingrich), November 23 (The Herbal Medicine Boom), November 30 (Quebec Premier Lucien Bouchard; Liberal Jean Charest ); December 7 (The Most Influential Business Geniuses of the Century), December 21 (Will They Really Do It? Impeachment), December 28 – 1999 January 4 (Men of the Year: Bill Clinton & Kenneth Starr);
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1999; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 18 (The End of the World? Y2K Insanity!); February 1 (Bill Clinton; Campaign to Survive), February 8 (Hip-Hop Nation; Lauryn Hill), February 22 (How The Scandal was Good for the US); March 1 (Senator Hillary Clinton?), March 8 (The Truth About Women's Bodies), March 15 (Monica Lewinsky; “My Story”); March 22 (Bill Gates “My 12 Rules for Succeeding in the Digital Age”); April 5 (The Attack; US Led Against Milosevic); April 12 (Kosovo Special Report; Albanians Walk Into Macedonia; Woman Breast Feeding); April 19 (Kosovo Crisis; Strike Force Apache Helicopters); April 26 (The Complete Guide to “Star Wars: The Phantom Menace”); May 3 (The Monsters Next Door; A Special Report on the Colorado School Massacre); May 17 (Can the United Kingdom Stay United?); May 24 (Latin Music Goes Pop! Ricky Martin); May 31 (Canada; a Changing People); June 14 (Heroes and Icons of the Century); June 21 (President George Bush Jr.?), June 28 (Taking on the World; What After Nafta?), July 5 (Tom Cruise & Nicole Kidman “Eyes Wide Shut”); July 12 (Sport Crazed Kids; 7 Year Old Chase Austin Ross of Denver, Colorado); July 19 (Cholesterol... and Now the Good News); July 26 (John Fitsgerald Kennedy Jr.; 1960 - 1999); August 2 (In Memoriam; John F. Kennedy Jr.);August 9 (Canadian Creativity; Taking the World by Storm); August 16 (“The Blair Witch Project “Directors Daniel Myrick & Eduardo Sanchez); August 23 (How Man Evolved); August 30 (Earthquake in Turkey; Among the Ruins); September 13 (The I.Q. Gene? How Memory Works); September 17 (Canada's Leaders for the 21st Century); September 20 (The Magic of Harry Potter); October 4 (Getrich.com; Silicon Valley); October 11 (The Laser Fix; Eye Surgery); October 18 (Steve Jobs; CEO of Pixar & Apple); October 25 (Green Business; Nature Friendly Profits); November 1 (Low-Carb Diets); November 8 (Beyond 2000; Questions for the New Century); November 15 (Busting Bill; Ruling Means for Microsoft); November 22 (Pokemon!; Is it Bad for Kids?), November 29 (The Ultimate New Year's Eve; Millennial Hype?); December 6 (Jesus at 2000), December 13 (Trading Blows; Seattle's Days of Rage – Global Capitalism), December 20 (The Columbine Tapes; Home Videos), December 27 (Person of the Year: Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos;
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2000; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- January 1 (New York's Times Square), January 17 (Regis Philbin's “Millionaire”), January 24 (AOL's Steve Case and Time Warner's Jerry Levin), January 31 (Hockey Takes a Beating; Attawa Senator's Grant Ledyard and New Jersey Devil's Krzysztof Oliwa); February 7 (Big Money & Politics; Who Gets Hurt); February 14 (G.O.P. Race; The McCain Mutiny); February 21 (Leonardo Dicaprio); March 6 (Cops, Brutality and Race; Amadou Diallo 1975 – 1999); March 13 (Katie Couric Colon Cancer Crusade); March 20 (The Rebirth of Design; Rubber Radio by Marc Berthier), March 27 (Stephen King; Do-It-YOurself.com); April 3 (Pope John Paul II in the Holy Land; at Mount Nebo), April 10 (Visions of the Future; Space & Science); April 17 (Scary Markets; Future of Canada's Exchanges); April 24 (Testosterone; Is the Edge Worth It?); September 11 (Olympic Special; US Runner Marion Jones); October 9 (Pierre Elliott Trudeau 1919 - 2000); December 11 (Canada's “King” Jean Chretien);
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2001; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- February 26 (The Incredible Shrinking Ex-President Bill Clinton); March 5 (Dale Earnhardt 1951 – 2001); September 24 (One Nation, Indivisible; President Bush Jr. At 9/11 Site); October 15 (Anti-American Protesters in Peshawak, Pakistan), October 29 Going In; Ground Operations in Afghanistan); November 26 (Inside the Manhunt; Osama Bin Ladan); December 10 (George Harrison 1943 – 2001); December 17 (The Last Days of the Taliban; Mullah Omar);
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2002; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- April 8 (All Boxed in; Yasser Arafat); April 29 (“Episode II; Attack of the Clones” Exclusive Look at New Star Wars); May 13 (Tile Mural of Saddam Hussein in Bagdad); May 20 (Blockbuster Movie Summer “Spider-Man”); May 27 (While America Slept; What Bush Knew Before 9/11); June 17 (President Bush; Will His Plan Make US Safer?); August 12 (The Secret History; 9/11); September 23 (Confessions of an Al-Qaeda Terrorist); December 9 (Canadian Superstar Shania Twain);
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2003; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
- February 10 (“The Colombia is Lost” February 1, 2003); February 24 (America the Anxious); March 3 (Do You Want this War; President Bush Depicted as Uncle Sam); March 31 (Gulf War II; Baghdad March 21, 2003); April 7 (What will it Take to Win? US Marines Near Nasiriyah, Iraq); April 14 (Saddam Hussein's Last Stand); May 12 (Secrets of the New “Matrix” Movie); June 9 (The Mess in Iraq; US Soldier Attempts Crowd Control in Baghdad); June 16 (Hillary Clinton; In her Own Words); June 23 (Why Harry Potter Rules by Nancy Gibbs); August 18 (Ahhnold!? Governor Schwarzenegger?); September 22 (Johnny Cash 1932 – 2003); October 6 (Mission Not Accomplished; President Bush); December 22 (“We Got Him!” The Capture of Saddam Hussein); December 29 – January 5 (Person of the Year; The American Soldier);
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2004; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
April 19 (State of Siege; Rebellion in Iraq);
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2005; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions); (May 9 – Darth Vader);
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2006; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
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2007; TIME magazine (CANADIAN Editions);
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TIME magazine SPECIALS; (Canadian)
SPECIALS -
SPECIAL ISSUE – 1977 (The Year in Review);
SPECIAL ISSUE – 1995 Spring (Welcome to Cyberspace);
SPECIAL ISSUE – 1996 Summer (Olympics ; Track Star Michael Johnson of USA);
SPECIAL ISSUE – 1997 November (Our Precious Planet);
SPECIAL ISSUE – 2000 Spring (Earth Day);
EUROPE EDITION -
1974 (September 30);
PACIFIC EDITION -
1960 (March 21);
NEWSWEEK; (Newsweek, Inc. Pub.) -
1938 (May 30 – Seabiscuit and War Admiral; Earle & Jones; C.I.O. Warning?); (June 20 – Nose of the Twentieth Century Limited); (June 27 – Spanish Guns Strike Back at the Sky Raiders); (July 4 – Swedish Crown Prince Gustav Adolf, Crown Princess Louise); (August 1 – Coney Island, N.Y.); (August 15 – Russian Tanks, Stalin, Emperor Hirohito); (September 5 – Senator Farley, Senator Tydings); (December 26 – Charles Laughton, Lawrence Tibbett);
1939 (January 2 – Capitol Hill); (January 16 – Professor Felix Frankfurter Named to Supreme Court); (January 23 – U.S. Navy Ready for Caribbean War Games); (January 30 – Harry Hopkins of Iowa); (February 6 – Spain's Francisco Franco); (February 13 – Governor Bricker of Ohio); (March 6 – Count Galeazzo Ciano, Fascist Missionary, Goes to Poland); (March 20 – Commander Chadwick leads American Legion); (March 27 – William O. Douglas Named to Supreme Court); (May 8 – H.M. Navy, Again German Rival); (June 26 – Itagaki of Japan); (July 3 – U.S. Admiral Yarnell in the Far East); (July 10 – British Gunners Scan the Skies); (July 24 – Harrignton of the WPA; He stand by the law); (August 28 – Lt. General Drum); (October 2 – King Carol of Rumania); (October 16 – Neville Chamberlain);
1940 (August 8 – U.S. Test iron cavalry for biggest maneuvers; tanks);(August 12 – Duke & Duchess of Winsor; New adventure in the Bahamas); (August 26 – A British plane in the ar above the Thames); (September 2 – The National Guard prepare to shed its civies); (December 30 – The U.S. Steps up its neutrality Patrol);
1941 (July 14 – Moscow's Hope; Red Blasters vs. Panzers); (July 28 – Half Trained U.S. Army); (August 11 – U.S. Working Women in National Defense); (August 18 – Wounded Nazi on the Eastern Front);
1942 (January 5 – U.S. Fighter Planes); (January 12 – Dutch Submarine in the Pacific); (January 26 – U.S. Submarine on Surface); (February 2 – America's Troop Embarkation); (February 9 – Flying Fortress; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Lois January); (February 16 – War work draws Women); (February 23 – Australia's Airmen); (March 16 – Convoy Ship; The Guns That Guard the Troops); (March 23 – China's Army); (March 30 – Pacific Front; U.S. Army Mans Guns); (April 13 – Ship Shortage Complicates our Problem); (April 20 – Air Force Pilot Recruits); (April 27 – British Commando Forces Landing); (May 4 – Chinese Fighting in Burma; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Rita Hayworth); (May 11 – Yanks in Ulster; Doughboys are Ready); (May 18 – The Navy meets the Enemy); (June 1 – Japanese Army Training); (June 29 – B52 Bomber); (July 6 – United We Stand; American Flag in Color); (July 13 – Nazi Afrika Korps); (July 20 – Russian Tank Men); (July 27 – Bomber Lockheed A-29; backcover “Cherterfield” ad with Deanne Fureau); (August 3 – U.S. Submarine on Surface Patrol); (August 10 – Nazi Soldier Crossing Bridge); (August 17 – American Bomber Crew in Australia); (August 24 – U.S. Marines in Solomon Islands Landing); (August 31 – U.S. Flying Forturess); (September 21 – Japanese Bombers); (September 28 – Soviet Troops Fighting in Stalingrad); (October 5 – A U-Boat Yields a Prisoner); (October 12 – Camp Callanite; “Train Right to win the Fight”); (October 19 – Marines Searhead War for Island Bases; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Claudette Colbert); (November 2 – British Warship “The Duke of York”); (November 9 – U.S. Marine); (November 16 – U.S. Soldiers on the Africa Front; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Rosalind Russell); (November 23 – American Tanks); (November 30 – American Parachutist); (December 28 – Miss Mickey Malloy Signing a Bomb for Hirohito);
1943 (May 24 – General Dwight Eisenhower); (May31 – Italian Soldiers Surrendering in Africa); (June 21 – U.S. Bomb Toter Helps Keep Air Force Flying); (September 13 – U.S. Carrier Dive Bomber); (November 15 – Cossacks in Modern Battle Dress); (December 6 – Army Private Lloyd Culuck);
1944 (January 17 – Czechs who fight with Stalin); (January 24 - Tom Dewey, Wendell Wilkie);
1945 (January 22 – Road to Manila); (April 23 – Franklin D. Roosevelt on his 57th Birthday);
1946 (April 1 – Child of Europe; Freedom needs food); (May 13 – Germany one year after V—E Day);
1947 (June 30 – Dinah Shore); (October 13 – Winston Churchill; backcover “Chesterfield” ad with Dorothy Lamour); (October 20 – What the well dressed Princess Elizabeth wears);
1948 (February 2 – Winter Olympian Georgette Thioliere Miller); (February 23 – Philip Murray); (April 19 – Harold E. Stassen); (April 26 – Boston Red Sox Manager Joe McCarthy, Braves Manager Billy Southworth); (May 24 – Will the Arabs Unite?); (June 7 – U.S. Battleship U.S.S. Mississippi); (June 28 – Paul Hoffman); (August 16 – Josef Stalin); (September 6 – Radio's Fred Allen); (October 4 – Russia's Andrei Y. Vyshinsky); (October 18 – Dwight Eisenhower at Columbia); (October 25 – Sonja Henie); (November 1 – Secretary of State George Marshall); (November 22 – Henry Kaiser); (November 29 – Israeli Army); (December 20 – Whittaker Chambers); (December 27 – Quentin Massys 'Adoration of the Magi”);
1949 (January 3 – China's Bosses Mao TSE Tung and General Chu Teh); (January 17 – Dean Acheson the New Secretary of State); (January 31 – French Workers; Wages vs. Work); (February 7 – David E. Lilienthal); (April 18 – Air General Lemay);
1950 (April 10 – Easter in Rome; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Ray Bolger); (June 5 – Archbishop of Canterbury Geoffrey Fisher; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Marlene Dietrich); (August 28 – U.S. Bomber B-29; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Alice faye and Phil Harris); (September 4 – Russian Soldier); (September 18 – U.N. Headquaters in New York City);
1951 – (January 1 – Britain's King George and Queen Elizabeth; backcover “Camel” ad with Dick Powell); (January 8 – U.S. General Ridgway); (January 22 – Japan Premiere Yoshida); (Janaury 29 – Charles E. Wilson; backcover “Camel” ad with John Wayne); (February 5 – U.S. Air Force F-94's); (February 12 – British Soldiers on Parade); (February 19 – Air Force General Vandenberg); (march 5 – Marchal Tito of Yugoslavia); (March 12 – Army Nurse Captain Anne B. Steele); (March 19 – Sid Caesar); (March 26 – West Point Cadets; backcover “Camel” ad with baseball stars; Bob Lemon, Ed Sawyer, Jim Konstanty, Vic Raschi); (April 2 – G.I. Training; Fourteen Weeks to Make a Soldier); (April 9 – Modern Middle East); (April 16 – U.S. Admiral Badger); (April 23 – General Douglas Macarthur); (April 30 – General Ridgway in Korea); (May 7 – Korea; U.N. Army at Bay); (may 14 – The Joints Chief of Staff); (May 21 (WAC Colonel Hallaren); (May 28 – London Beefeater); (August 6 – Sgt. John Parkinson in Korea); (August 20 – Stalin's Blueshirts; Communism Uber Alles); (August 27 – Franciso Franco and his wife Carmen); (September 3 – Second Lt. Patrick J. Halloran and First Lt. Rhonel E. Morgan); (September 17 – Europe Hears a Message of Freedom); (September 24 – Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett); (October 1 – Air Force General Horstad); (October 8 – Aircraft Carrier “Coral Sea” with the Sixth Fleet; backcover 'Coke” ad); (October 15 – Dean Millicent Carey McIntosh of Barnard College); (October 22 – Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip in Canada; backcover “Coke”ad); (October 29 – General James A. Van Fleet in Korea); (November 12 – Margaret Truman);
1952 (January 7 – France's New Army); (January 14 – Alec K. Pringle of New Hampshire); (January 21 – Helicopters in Korea); (January 28 – U.S. Champion Skier Katy Rodolph; backcover “Camel” ad with Maureen O'Hara); (February 4 – Estes Kefauver & Wife); (February 11 – Rise Stevens as “Carmen”); (February 25 – The Bitter Lesson of Korea in Winter); (March 3 – Panama Canal); (March 10 – U.S.S. Toledo Fires it's Eight Inch Guns); (March 17 – Charles Degaulle); (March 24 – Dodger Outfielder Dick Williams, Scout & Instructor John Corriden; backcover “Camel” ad with Dick Powell); (March 31 – Dwight D. Eisenhower); (April 7 – Senator Robert A. Taft); (April 14 – Governor Adlai Stevenson); (April 21 – M-46 “Patton” Tank); (April 28 – Lord Beaverbrook); (May 5 – Gordon Dean and Picture of the Latest Atom Bomb Test); (May 12 – Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip); (May 19 – Arthur Godfrey); (May 26 – Estes Kefauver); (June 23 – Marge & Gower Champion); (July 7 – Lockheed F-94-C); (July 14 – Chicago Republican Convention; backcover “Camel” ad with Robert Young); (July 21 – Dwight D. Eisenhower); (August 4 – Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson);
1954 (February 8 – U.S. Crime Wave; What Can Be Done?; backcover “Lucky Strike” ad with Amy Vanderbilt); (February 15 – Hawaii; The Promise of Statehood; backcover “Chesterfield” as with Deborah Herr); (March 15 – Ann Candler in Front of her school North Fulton High, Atlanta; backcover “Coke” ad); (March 29 – Edward R. Murrow); (July 5 – Jesse Jones & Cynthia Steward of Texas; backcover “Coke”ad); (July 12 – German Army soliders on guard); (July 19 – Arlene Francis);
1955 (March 28 – Dr. Eugene Carson Blake); (April 11 – Taxes; No Place to Hide?); (June 6 – U.S. Air Force Lt. Richard D. Day); ((June 13 – Archbishop Montini); (June 20 – Henry Ford II); (July 4 – U.S. Sailing; Its biggest Season yet; backcover “Coke” ad); (August 8; Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh); (August 22 – Chrysler President L.L. Colbert); (August 29 – Author Robert Ruark; backcover “Coke” ad); (September 5 – The $64,000 Question; The Gameshow);9September 19 – Bryon S. Miller Jr. Of Kent School); (October 24 – The Mind; Science's Search for a Guide to Sanity; backcover “Coke” ad); (October 31 – Baritone Geroge London); ((November 7 – Harlow Curtice); (November 21 – U.S. Railroad); (November 28 – Nikita Khrushchev);
1956 (May 21 – Ohio Governor Frank Lausche); (May 28 – Mamie Eisenhower); (June 4 – Atomic Plane Concept); (June 11 – Alfred Hitchcock; nothing succeeds like a scare); (June 18 – Missouri Senator Symington); (July 2 – Union of South Africa Prime Minster Strijdom); (July 9 – Framework for a Skysicraper on Manhattan's East Side); (July 23 – Governor Averell Harriman); (July 30 – Audrey Hepburn, Mel Ferrer “War and Peace”); (August 6 – James C. Hagerty); (August 13 – Democrat Governor Frank G. Clement); (August 20 – George Gallup); (September 3 – Concept Car the Astra – Gnome; The Great American Cars); (September 10 – Airiel Storm Detection); (September 17 – A.T. & T.'s Cleo Craig); (September 24 – Britain's Sir Anthony Eden); (October 1 – Vice-President Richard Nixon); (October 8 – The Eggheads; Who He is and Who he Thinks He is); (October 15 – Estes Kefauver); (October 22 – Gisele MacKenzie); (October 29 – Charles W. Slater of Habron, Ohio); (November 5 – The Women and Politics); (November 12 – Dwight D. Eisenhower); (November 19 – Red Army Boss Marshall Zhukov); (November 26 – Boiling Point at the U.N.) (December 3 – Nasser of Egypt); (December 10 – First Post War All Model Auto Show); (December 17 – NATO Commander Norstad); (December 24 – Cardinal Mindszenty); (Decmber 31 – Ethel Merman);
1957 (January 7 – The New Florida); (January 14 – Sand Drifts on Once Rich Pasture Land); (January 21 – Britain's Prime Minister Harold MacMillan); (January 28 – Treasury Secretary Humphrey); (February 4 – James Thurber); (February 11 – Sixth Fleet's U.S.S. Boston); (February 18 – German Army); (February 25 – Labor Boss Dave Beck); (March 4 – Race Into Space; Can We Win?); (March 11 – Pope Plus XII); (March 18 – Ed Sullivan, Fred Allen); (March 25 – Streaks across the sky; Jet Airplanes for Passengers); (April 8 – Dave Beck, Senator McClellan); (April 15 – The Outboard Motor Comes of Age); (April 22 – Harvard's President Pusey); (April 29 – Closing the Gap in the Air; the Reds are Coming up Fast); (May 6 – NATO's Paul-Henri Spaak); (May13 – Rosalind Russell “Auntie Mame”); (May 27 – Picasso's art; The Grand Display); (June 3 – Sherman Adams; “Assistant President”); (June 10 – 1958 Ford Edsel; Automakers Battle of Detroit); (June 24 – Premier Kishi of Japan); (July 8 – Lendy Firestone by the Backyard Pool); (July 22 – Hugh O'Brien, TV's “Wyatt Earp”); (July 29 – The Coming Atomic Powered Ship); (August 5 – Califoria Senator William Knowland); (August 12 – Juan Carlos & Franco of Spain); (August 19 – Pat Boone); (August 26 – German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer); (September 2 – J. Edgar Hoover); (Septemer 16 – TV's Mike Wallace); (September 23 – Nanci Browning of University of California); (September 30 – Fleets and Men; The Big Show); (October 7 – President Dwight Eisenhower) (October 21 – Moon Travel;G = $8 ); (October 28 – Janos Kadar of Hungary); (November 4 – Wall Street); (November 11 – Nikita Khrushchev); (December 2 – Secretary of Defense Neil McElroy); (December 30 – The Artful Camera);
1958 (January 6 – Caribbean Playgorund); (January 13 – Senate Leader Lyndon Johnson); (January 20 – The World as a Hess Board; Mortal Challenge); (January 27 – Auto Workers Boss Walter Reuther); (February 3 – Man in Spacesuit; Ready for Blast-off; G = $8 ); (February 10 – Jupiter-C Rocket); (February 17 – Morale in the Armed Forces; Fed Up); (February 24 – General Motors' Vauxhall Victor; Ford's Anglia; American Motors' Metropolitan); (March 3 – Actor Tony Perkins); (March 10 – West Germany's Defense Chief Franz – Josef Strauss); (March 17 – 1,000 Top Company Spending Blueprint); (March 24 – Perry Como); (March 31 – Heart Disease Breakthrough at hand); (June 30 – Sherman Adams); (July 7 – Yacht “Vim” defending the America's Cup); (July 14 – Bernard Goldfine; Witness for the defense); (July 21 – Prize winning homes); (August 4 – Nikita Khrushchev); (August 11 – Skin diving; New thrills and gear); (August 25 – Missle firing submarine; new space age weapon); (September 1; What is Man? 100 years of Darwin);(September 8 – Here come the new cars for 1959); (September 15 – Arkansa Governor Orval Faubus); (September 22 – China's Chairman Mao); (September 29 – Diane Varsi, Joanne Woodward, Suzy Parker); (October 6 – Stalking the big spending sportsman); (October 13 – TV – The most violent season);
1959 (January 12 – Russia's first Deputy Premier Anatas Mikoyan); (January 19 – Cuba's Fidel Castro- What Next for a Hero?; G = $12 ); (January 26 – Word Warfare; Must we Always Lose?); (February 2 – Coming Flight of the X-15); (February 9 – Girls at Work; Finishing Schools are Finished); (February 16 – Secretary of Defense Neil McElroy); (February 23 – Enchanting State of Hawaii); (March 2 – Maurice Chevalier); (March 9 – Britain's Prime Minister Harold MacMillan); (March 16 – Nikita Khrushchev & Germany); (March 23 – Ferrari; Sports cars, fast, furious and fancy); (March 3 0 – Lyndon Johnson); (April 6 – The Science of Dreams); (April 13 – Russia's Bolshoi Ballet); (April 20 – Germany's Ludwig Erhard); (July 6 – Water Skier Nancie Cooper); (July 13 – Why your mail was late; Our “Pony Express” postal system); (July 20 – Visit Russia; Main Street goes to Moscow); (July 27 – Richard Nixon, Nikita Khrushchev); (August 3 – The Yankee's Casey Stengel); (August 10 – The 1960's small cars, medium and big); (August 17 – Dwight Eisenhower); (August 24 – Luxery liners; Battle for the oceans?); (August 31 – Charles De Gaulle, Harold MacMillan, Konrad Adenauer); (September 7 – Sir Laurence Olivier); (September 14 – Jet age; How far? How much faster?); (September 21 – President Dwight Eisenhower, Nikita Khrushchev); (September 28 – President Dwight Eisenhower, Nikita Khrushchev, Mrs. Andrei Gromyko);(October 12 – Asia's Hungry Dragon; Red China today);(October 19 – John Brown's Raid; The Spark still Smoulders); (October 26 – World banker Eugene Black); (November 2 – Human Smashups; Why suicide); (November 9 – Charles Van Doren); (November 16 – Richard Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller); (November 23 – Villette Keber (15), David Kelsey (17), The Good American Teen-agers); (Noevmeber 30 – Art Carney); (December 7 – President Eisenhower's “Magic Carpet” Diplomacy by Jet); (December 21 – Charles De Gaulle);
1960 (January 4 – Phoenis, Miracle in Arizona); (January 18 – Author Erle Stanley Gardner); (January 25 – Tricky Viruses on the Loose); (February 1 – Nuclear Submarine; America's Firepower); (February 8 – France's Charles De Gaulle); (February 15 – U.S. Olympian Skier Penny Pitou); (February 22 – Life in outer space; Project Ozma); (February 29 – Dwight Eisnehower, Nikita Khrushchev); (March 7 – Young wives with brains); (March 14 – Lyndon Johnson); (March 21 – The Nosey Census of 1960); (March 28 – John F. Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, painted by John Engle); (April 4 – The new German Army); (April 11 – The Green Thumb means business); (April 18 – World on Wheels, springtime showing of U.S. And foreing cars); (April 25 – Charles de Gaulle, Mission to America); (May 2 – Mark Twain); (May 9 – Candidate Stu Symington); (May 16 – Those Splitting Headaches; How near a Cure?); (May 23 – Ike & K face to face); (June 13 – On the go 1960; a Newsweek spotlight on business); (June 20 – Governor of New York Nelson Rockefeller); (June 27 – Chairman Mao; will he rule the Pacific?); (July 4 – John F. Kennedy); (July 22 – Dawn of the Spaceman); (July 18 – Frankil D. Roosevelt); (October 31 – Lyndon Johnson, Henry Cabot Lodge); (November 7 – John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon); (November 14 – The President's Chair; The Eisenhower Years); (November 28 – Today's parents; Trapped in a child-centered world?); (December 12 – Q & A 1961); (December 19 – Robert McNamara);
1961 (January 9 – The Caribbean; Vacations in the sun); (January 30 – Douglas Dillion; Republican in the Cabinet); (February 27 – The rising Congo crisis; can the U.N. Survive?); (March 6 – Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg; can he run labor?); (March 13 – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley); (March 27 – Adlai Stevenson); (April 10 – Arizona's Barry Goldwater); (April 17 – Adolf Eichmann on trial); (April 24 – Yuri Gagarin; his voyage in Orbit;VG = $12); (May 8 – C.I.A. Director Allen Dulles); (May 29 – Neuroses; One Psychiatrist's troubled patients); (June 19 – Journey to the Moon; U.S. Timetable; VG/FN = $12); (June 26 – Shah of Iran); (July 3 – Summertime '61; Vacations off the beaten track); (July 14 – Secretary of Commerce Luther Hohges); (July 31 – East German Refugees); (August 7 – John F. Kennedy); (August 14 – Home Run Year; Target 60; VG/FN = $12 ); (August 28 – Barbed Wire and Bayonets; Berlin Report); (September 11 – Sector of Atomic Disaster, Drawing by Francis Brennan); (September 18 – Edward R. Murrow); (September 25 – The U.N. Meets; Disarmament, Berlin, Red China, Katanga); (October 2 – Storm over the U.N.; Can it Survive?); (October 16 – Atomic energy commission chairman Glenn T. Seaborg); (October 23 – Party Congress; How Russia is ruled); (November 6 – Shelters for survival?; Atomic fallout); (November 13 – New York, New York; Can anyone run it?); (November 20 – India's Nehru in Ameirca); (December 11 – Sears; Santa's biggest helper); (December 18 – Those Washington columnists); (December 25 – IRA Gwin; Peace Corps in action);
1962 (January 1 – Jacqueline Kennedy; First Lady's First year; VG/FN = $15); (January 15 – Speaker of the House John McCormack); (January 22 – U.S. Steel's Roger Blough); (March 12 – Defense secretary Robert McNamara); (April 23 – John F. Kennedy vs. Roger Blough); (May 14 – New York's Newlson Rockefeller); (May 28 – Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman); (June 4 – Astronaut John Carpenter); (July 2 – Franco's Spain today); (July 16 – John F. Kennedy & his critics); (August 6 – America's cup challenger “Nefertiti”;G= $7 ); (August 27 – Cosmonauts Nikolayev & Popovich); (September 3 – Red China today); (September 10 – San Francisco's golden gate bridge; number one state); (September 17 – Jacqueline Kennedy; the New White House); (September 24 – Conductor Leonard Bernstein; the New Lincoln Center); (October 1 – Pollsters & Politician; Louis Harris); (October 15 – Oxford, Mississippi; The sound and the fury); (October 29 – Richard Nixon; Pat Brown); (November 12 – Nikita Khruchchev; what happened in the Kremlin?); (November 19 – Nelson Rockefeller); (November 26 – Sid Caesar; The many faces of congress); (December 3 – India's Nehru); (December 10 – South Vietnam soldiers); (December 17 – Pope John XXII; the Vatican coucil);
1963 (January 7 – Europe Common markets' Walter Hallstein); (January 14 – Chairman ways & means Wilbur Mills); (January 21 – John F. Kennedy as seen by Walter Lippman); (January 28 – Charles De Gaulle); (February 4 – Playwright Edward Albee); (February 11 – Underground U.S. Missle Site California); (February 18 – Canada's John Diefenbaker); (February 25 – Hot year for General Motors); (March 11 – Brazilian President Joao Goulart); (March 18 – Robert Kennedy); (April 1 – Coal miner Ellis Grigsby; Unemployment in America); (April 8 – Pierre Salinger); (April 15 – Britain's Harold Wilson); (April 22 – Foreign Students; Diplomas & Diplomacy); (April 29 – Wall Street; Where's the Public); (May 6 – Konrad Adenauer; End of an Era); (May 13 – Model of DNA Molecule); (May 20 – Barry Goldwater in 1964?); (May 27 – Astronaut Gordon Cooper); (June 3 – Author John O'Hara); (June 10 – Pope John XXIII); (June 17 – World Hunger; 10,000 deaths every day); (June 24 – Alabama's Vivian Malone); (July 1 – Pope Paul VI); (July 8 – Smalltown, USA); (July 15 – Vietnam soldier on River Potrol; Laos & Vietnam); (July 22 – Nikita Khrushchev; at the crossroads); (July 29 – The Negro in America); (August 5 – a truce in the Cold War?); (August 12 – Fashion degisner Yves St. Laurent); (August 19 – Georgia's Senator Richard Russell); (August 26 – Nelson Rockefeller & wife Happy Murphy); (September 2 – The Lincoln Memorial; the March on Washington); (September 9 – Vietnam's Madame Nhu); (September 16 – New York school superintendent Calvin Gross); (September 23 – Walter Crokite of CBS); (September 30 – Bombing in Birmingham, Alabama); (October 7 – German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard); (October 14 – Catholicism in America; Cardinal's Meyer, Cushing, Spellman, Ritter McIntyre); 9October 21 – What the White man thinks of the Negro Revolt); (October 28 – Albert Finney “Luther”); (November 4 – Bank of America's Rudolph A. Peterson); (November 11 – Vietnam General Duong Van Minh); (November 18 – Smoking & Health); (November 25 – Chairman Mao; Red China, A paper dragon?); (December 9 – President Lyndon Johnson); (December 16 – Kenya's Kenyatta; From Mau Mau to Staehood); (december 23 – Danny Kaye); (December 30 – Reverend Raymond L. Whitehead in Hong Kong);
1964 (January 6 – Jacqueline Kennedy looking ahead); (January 20 – Walter Lippman; a critique of Congress); (January 27 – Republican Governor William Warren Scranton); (February 3 – Playwright Arthur Miller); (February 10 – Charles De Gaulle's France; a return to greatness?); (February 17 – Poverty, USA); (March 2 – Markarios of Cyprus); (March 9 – Nelson Rockefeller, Barry Goldwater in New Hampshire); (March 16 – Communications Satellite Corp. Chairman Leo D. Welch); (March 23 – Henry Cabot Lodge); (March 30 – Venzuela's President Leoni); (April 13 – Lyndon Johnson, Hubert Humphrey); (April 27 – Karl Marx; How Communism has changed); (May 4 – Choreograph George Balanchine); (May 11 – Chief Justice Earl Warren); (May 18 – Dwight Eisenhower & the Gop Race); (May 25 – Astrophyricist Fred Hoyle); (June 1 – The New Museum of Modern art, Director's Barr & D'Harnoncourt); (June 8 – North Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh); (June 15 – Barry Goldwater); (June 22 – William Scranton); (June 29 – India's Prime Minister Lal Shastri); (July 6 – Gynecologist John Rock; Birth Control, the pill and the church); (July 13 – Mississippi, Summer 1964); (July 20 – Gop National Convention in San Francisco); (July 27 – Barry Goldwater); (August 3 – Harlem, NYC; Hatred in the streets); (August 10 – The New Rumania; looking west); (August 17 – F-8 Crusader being launched; Vietnam the widening war?); (August 24 – Robert Kennedy); (August 31 – President Lyndon Johnson); (September 7 – Hubert Humphrey adn his wife); (September 14 – Racing yachts “Constellation” & “American Eagle” America's Cup 1964); (September 21 – Maxwell Taylor in Vietnam); (September 28 – Britain's Harold Wilson); (October 5 – the Assassination; The Warren Commission Report); (October 19 – Zero Mostel; Broadway's brightest star); (October 26 – Leonid Brezhnev; Shape-up inthe Kremlin); (November 9 – President Lyndon Johnson); (November 16 – The Grand Old Elephant's post election hangover); (November 30 – Charles De Gaulle; defiant);
1965 (January 4 – Painter Willem De Kooning; art in New York); (January 11 – President Johnson “The State of the Union”); (January 18 – Ambassador Taylor & General Khanh; any way out of Vietnam?); (January 25 – The Challenge of Automation); (February 1 – Winston Churchill 1874 – 1965) ( February 8 – Heart & Diet; Disease Control); (March 1 – Bill Moyers special assistant to the President); (March 8 – High Stakes – US investment in Europe); (March 15 – Red China; reckoning with it); (March 22 – Campus 1965; student Vicki Albright); (April 5 – The road from Selma, Alabama); (April 12 – Profile of the Viet Cong); (May 3 – The South; Into a new Century); (May 17 – American foreign policy; drift or design?); (May 24 – US Advisor Captain Charles B. Huggins in Vietnam); (May 31 – New York's John V. Linsay); (June 7 – Art Buchwald's Washington); (June 14 – Gemini 4 Space Walk; Astronaut Edward White) , (June 21 – Astronaut Edward White in space with Earth as Backdrop; G = $7); (June 28 – The Worries of Wall Street); (July 5 – General Westmoreland in Vietnam); (July 12 – Author Theodore H. White); (July 19 – Life Italian Style; Europe's biggest season); (July 26 – Mariner to Mars); (August 2 – Lyndon Johnson; the Politics of power); (August 9 – Hiroshima, 1945; The Bomb the next Twenty Years); (August 16 – Crime inthe streets); (August 23 – The water crisis); (August 30 – National Guard Patrols Los Angeles Watts districts after riot); (September 20 - War over Kashmir); (September 27 – Vietnam Premier Ky); (October 4 – 1966 cars; going like '66); (October 11 – Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax); (October 18 – President Lyndon Johnson's operation); (October 25 – The First year of life); (November 1 – The Demonstrators; Protest March in New York); (November 8 – Xerox President Joseph C. Wilson); (November 15 – New New York Mayor John Lindsay); (November 29 – What's wrong with newspapers?); (December 6 – Secretary of Defense McNamara and the joint Chiefs of Staff; the power in the Pentagon); (December 13 – Charles De Gaulle; once and future king); (December 27 – Rendezvous in space; Gemini 6/7 mission);
1966 (January 3 – Stanford's Robert Macafee Brown; Protesting Protestants); (January 10 – 1966 Economy, GNP 700 billion); (January 17 – Edward Kennedy, Robert Kennedy); (January 24 – Author Truman Capote); (January 31 – Thailand Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn); (February 7 – Jim Hall & Chaparral; Racing to the top); (February 14 – Vietnam; the Bombers go North); (February 21 – Australia lifesaving Club; beach guards); (February 28 – John W. Gardner; building the great society); (March 7 – Chinese soldiers; how big the threat); (March 14 – Foundations the American way of giving); (April 4 – India Prime Minister Indira Gandhi); (April 11 – The Draft; welcome to the United States Army); (April 18 – Turmoil in Vietnam; Roiting in Saigon); (May 2 – Life in Russia; the Red Square); (May 16 – George Wallace; Alabama Votes); (may 23 – President Lyndon Johnson's daughters Lynda Bird Johnson & Luci Johnson); (May 30 – Buddhists Tri Quang, Phap Tri; War within a war); (June 6 – Sophia Loren, Charlie Chaplin); (June 13 – What role for educated women?); (June 27 – Police on the spot); (July 25 – Jim Ryun; How fast the mile?); (August 1 – Men at war; How G.I.'s operate in Vietnam); (August 8 – Chairman Mao & China); (August 15 – White House wedding; Luci Johnson weds Patrick Nugent); (August 22 – a major survey of US racial attitudes today); (August 29 – the SST; racing for 25 billion); (September 5 – How much inflation?); (September 12 – Wall street; hitting bottom?); (September 19 – Rodolph Bing & the New Met); (September 26 – Campaign 1966 with Lyndon Johnson); (October 3 – U.N. Secretary General U Thant); (October 10 – Richard Nixon on campaign trail); (October 17 – Yugoslavia's Tito's; a Radical Communist); (October 24 – Senator Robert Kennedy); (October 31 – The US in Asia); (November 7 – Lyndon Johnson in Vietnam); (November 14 – Mike Nichols; lighting up Broadway); (November 21 – Republican's Ronald Reagan, Chuck Percy, George Romney, Mark Harfield, Edward Brooke, Nelson Rockefeller); (November 28 – Salesman Jack Thomas in Bangkok); (December 5 – General Westmoreland, a recipe for victory in Vietnam); (December 12 – Pearl Harbor 1941 to 1966); (December 19 – Rhodesia leader Ian Smith); (December 26 – Jacqueline Kennedy & “The death of a President”);
1967(January 2 – California's Otis Chandler); (January 9 – The agony of getting anywhere); (January 16 – Congressman Adam Clyton Powell); (January 23 – Gerald Ford,, Evertt Dirksen); (January 30 – Red Guards in Peking); (February 13 – the divorced women); (February 20 – Hanois Hochi Minh); (February 27 – Lew Alcindor, Basketball star of UCLA); (March 6 – Marshall McLuhan, the Message); (March 13 – Henry R. Luce 1898 – 1967); (March 20 – How US Catholics view their Church); (March 27 – Sprint Anti-Ballistic Missle; 30 billion dollar decision); (April 3 – David Rockefeller, a new era in banking); (April 10 – Twiggy); (April 17 – F.Lee Bailey, Defense attorney); (April 24 – Operating inside a hyperbaric chamber; New Medicing); (May 1 – Stalin's daughter Svetlana); (May 8 – General Westmoreland before congress); (May 15 – Martin Luther King, Whitney Young, Roy Wilkins, Floyd McKissick, Stokely Carmichael; which way for the Negro now?); (May 22 – California Governor Ronald Reagan); (May 29 – Mario Andretti, Champion Driver); (June 5 – Israeli tanks; Israel vs. The Arabs); (June 12 – Sir Francis Chichester and “Gypsy Moth IV”); (June 19 – Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan); (July 3 – Lyndon Johnson, Premier Kosygin; the Glassboro Summit); (July 10 – The Vietnam War and American life); (July 24 – Marijuana; the pot problem); (July 31 – Hong Kong harbor; Hong Kong under the gun); (August 7 – Battlefield, USA; Urban violence); (August 14 – Lyndon Johnson's 10 per cent tax hike); (August 28 – Charles De Gaulle); (September 4 – Lyndon Johnson in trouble; home & abroad);(September 11 – Nasser of the U.A.R.); (September 18 – United Auto Workers Walter Reuther); (October 2 – Boston Red Sox Carl Yastrzemski); (October 9 – US business mogul Jim Ling); (October 16 – Author William Styron); (October 23 – Russia after fifty years); (November 20 – The Negro in America; what must be done); (November 27 – Britain's Harold Wilson); (December 4 – The Federal reserve's William McChesney Martin); (December 11 – Robert S. McNamara); (December 18 – The promise & peril of transplant surgery); (December 25 – The Nun going modern; Sister Corita);
1968 (January 8 – Politics 1968); (January 29 – President Lyndon Johnson); (February 12 – G.I.'s Routing Viet Cong from Saigon Embassy); (February 26 – Megaversity; How good? - Class sizes swell); (April 1 – The Metropolitan's Thomas Hoving); (April 15 – Martin Luther King Jr., 1929 – 1968); (April 22 – President Lyndon Johnson, Ambassdor Harriman); (April 29 – Vice President Hubert Humphrey); (May 6 – Studnet Protest; Students at Columbia University); (May 27 – French Revolution 1968); (June 3 – the beauty busniess); (June 10 – Charles De Gaulle; showdown in France); (June 17 – Robert F. Kennedy 1925 – 1968); (June 24 – a question of guns); (July 1 – Target; Negro jobs); (July 8 – the Polls; do they count?); (July 15 – Champion Sprinter Tommie Smith; the angry Black Athlete);; (July 22 – The Frustrated voter); (July 29 – Czechoslovakia's Alexander Dubcek); (August 5 – Senator Edward Kennedy; wanted for Vice-President); (August 12 – The Gop in Miami; Republican National Convention); (August 26 – French actress Catherine Deneuve); (September 9 – Battle of Chicago; Democratic National Convention); (September 30 – Confrontation at Columbia; Rebels on the campus); (October 7 – Vice President hopefuls Edmund Muskie & Spiro Agnew); (October 21 – James Earl Jones); (November 18 – Can Nixon unite the Nation?); (November 25 – Male Plumage '68; Men's fashion; cut-out doll style cover); (December 9 – Norman Mailer); (December 16 – can Vietnam stand alone?); (December 23 – Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson);
1969 (January 13 – Edward Kennedy); (January 20 – Man vs. Virus); (February 3 – U.S.S. Pueblo's Captain Lloyd M. Bucher; who is to blame?); (February 17 – the Middle East, danger! Highly Explosive);(February 24 – Taxes; How to ease the squeeze); (March 3 – Richard Nixon goes to Europe); (March 10 – student rebels; how to tame the turmoil?); (March 17 – The sick, sick cities; a new section on urban life); (March 24 – the assassins; Martin Luther King, James Earl Ray, Robert Kennedy, Sirhan Sirhan); (March 31 – Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird; Vietnam); (April 7 – Dwight D. Eisenhower 1890 – 1969); (April 28 – Challenge from North Korea); (May 5 – Militants at Cornell; Universities under the gun); (May 12 – French Candidate Pompidou); (May 19 – Supreme Court justice Abe Fortas); (June 2 – Lunas Module 9.4 miles from the Moon's surface); (June 9 – The Military industrial complex); (June 16 – Russia in trouble); (July 7 – The earth as seen from the moon; How we got there and where we're going.); (July 14 – Queen Elizabeth II crowning Charles, Prince of Wales); (August 4 – Senator Edward Kennedy); (August 11 – Neil Armstrong's photo of fellow astronaut Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, their “Eagle” ship, and the moonscape); (September 22 – Alaska's North slope; The Great oil hunt); (September 15 – New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath); (October 6 – The troubled American; the white majority); (October 20 – Which way out? American soldiers in Vietnam); (October 27 – The 747 Jumbo jet arrives); (November 10 – Katharine Hepburn returns to Broadway); (November 17 – Vice President Spiro Agnew); (November 24 – Does TV tell it straight; Walter Knonkite, etc...); (December 8 – The killings at song my; the accused Lt. William L. Calley Jr.); (December 22 – Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger);
1970 (January 19 – Greek Premier George Papadopoulas); (February 23 – The Black Panthers and the law); (March 23 – Women in Revolt; Feminism turns militant); (March 30 – The day the mail stopped, Wildcat strike); (April 13 – Abortion and the law); (June 8 – Wall Street in a whirl; powerful rally); (December 21 – The Quest for an identity; psychoanalyst Erik Erikson);
NEWSWEEK;
1971 (February 8 – Welfare; There must be a better way); (February 15 – A wider war? That's secret); (March 15 – The Helicoper War; Cobra Gunchips in Trouble); (November 8 – China joins the U.N.; Cjou en Lai);
1972 (March 13 – Marlon Brando in “The Godfather”; VG = $12 ); (April 24 – World Trade; Can the U.S. Compete?); (June 26 – Tennis star Chris Evert);
1973 (April 30 – Nixon & Watergate; FN = $12 );(October 1 – Spiro Agnew) , (October 8 – Spiro Agnew fights back); (November 5 – Richard Nixon; Can he survive?;VG/FN = $10 ), (November 12 – Watergate; What Next?; VG/FN = $10 ) , (November 26 – Richard Nixon “I'm not a Crook”; VG = $10 ); (December 10 – Rose Mary Woods “Terrible Mistake”; FN = $10 );
1974 (May 20 – Richard Nixon; Will he resign?; VG/FN = $10 ); (September 16 – Richard Nixon; Was Justice Done?; G/VG = $8 ); (October 28 – Stevie Wonder); (December 9 – Gerald Ford; Sizing him up);
1975 (January 13 – Bob Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, Robert Mardian & John Mitchell; the Verdict); (February 10 – In Oil we Trust); (February 24 – Economic adviser Alan Greenspan); (March 3 – Abortion and the law); (March 10 – The Agony of Cambodia) (March 17 – Liv Ullman in “A Doll's House”); March 31 – The Great retreat in Vietnam; Mother with dead child); (April 7 – Henry Kissinger; a world of woes); (June 16 – Pitcher Nolan Ryan; Fastest arm in the west; VG/FN = $14 ); (June 23 – The CIA; who's watching whom); (September 1 – Author Saul Bellow); (September 29 – The Story of Patty Hearst); (October 6 – Gerald Ford; can the risk be cut?); (November 3 – Karen Ann Quinlan; a right to die?); (December 15 – Big Government); (December 29 – Betty Ford inteh White House);
1976 (January 5 – Club Mediterranee); (February 2 – Patty Hearst on Trial); (April 12 – How safe is Nuclear Enegy?); (April 19 – The Secret World of Howard Hughes); (April 26 – Who needs college?);
1977 (January 3 – Picture of '76); (February 14 – Sissy Spacek); (May 9 – Richard Nixon with David Frost); (June 13 – Queen Elizabeth II & her Jubilee); (December 19 – Diet Crazes);
1978 (January 30 – Jimmy Carter and your money); (February 20 – Cast of TV's “Three's Company”; Sex & TV); (March 20 – Jimmy Carter & Menachem begin); (April 3 – Steve Martin; Comedy's new face); (May 8 – Fashion '78 soft & sexy); (June 19 – Tax Revolt); (July 17 – Faith healer Ruth Carter Stapleton); (July 31 – Rock Tycoon Robert Stigwood; BeeGees, John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John); (December 4 – The Cult of Death; Jim Jones camp in Guyana); (December 18 – New York Philharmoni Conductor Zubin Mehta);
1979 (January 1- Superman Christpher Reeves); (March 26 – Jimmy Carter arrives home from Mid East peace talks); (May 28 – Ted Kennedy; Battle over health care); (June 4 – Innovation; Has America lost its edge?); (June 11 – Airlines & flying; How safe?); June 18th 1979 (Sigourney Weaver from Alien Photo on cover; Hollywood's Scary Summer = 4 page Article includes; Alien, Dawn of the Dead, Prophecy, Love at First Bite, Halloween & Phantasm, etc; ovearll VF, but with residue from removed mailing label at bottom of cover, thus FN/VF = $10); (June 25 – Jimmy Carter & Leonid Brezhnev; the Salt summit); (July 2 – The Agony of the Boat People); (July 9 – Over the oil barrel); (July 16 - The energy crisis; a program for the '80s); (August 20 – Secrets of the human cell); (August 27 – Andrew Young resigns); (September 3 – Yasser Araft; collision course over Plo); (September 10 – Man's closet look at Saturn); (September 17 – The angry West “Get of our backs Uncle Sam”); (December 17 – Jimmy Carter; Iran hostage situation);
1980 (April 14 – Violinist Itzhak Perlman); (July 14 – F-4 Phantom in US strike force; defending the Oil Fields); (September 15 – Rev. Jerry Falwell; Born again Politics); (September 29 – Vanessa Redgrave in TV's “Playing for Time”); (October 6 – War in the Oil fields; Iraq & Iran); (November 24 – The Riddles of Saturn);
NEWSWEEK;
1981 (January 5 – The New Mafia; Jimmy “The Weasel” Fratianno); (June 15 – Scene from “Indiana Jone's Raiders of the Lost Ark”; classic cliffhanger); (August 10); (September 7,14);
(October 19); (November 2- Cancer; a progress report), (November 9 – US Foreign Policy; World according to Reagan); (November 16 – Author V.S. Naipaul), (November 23 – The KGB in America); (December 14 – What Vietnam did US; Charlie Co. Ten years since), (December 28 – Poland's Ordeal; Lech Walesa);
1982 (August 2 – The Decaying of America; Infrastructure); (September 20 – NFL on strike; Union Leader Gene Upshaw); (September 27 – Princess Grace Kelly 1929 - 1982); (October 4 – Israel in Torment), (October 11 – The Tylenol Scare), October 18 – How to get America back to work.), (October 25 – Guns, Grass and money; North Carolina marijuana farmer); (December 27 – The Bible in America);
1983 (January 3 – The Plot to kill Pope John Paul II); (February 28 – Farewell to cast of TV's “MASH”); (June 27 – Pope John Paul II challenge to Warsaw); (July 4 – Super computers; can US beat Japan?);(September 5 - “414” computer hacker Neal Patrick); (November 7 – US paratrooper in Granada);
1984 (January 16 – El Salvador; the death squads); (January 23 - Boy George, Annie Lennox; Britain rocks America - Again); (March 5 – The Gene Doctors; preparing synthetic DNA); (April 23 – Phobia's; new drugs & therapes); (June 18 – Walter Mondale; now the hard part); (July 9 – Lt. General Walter F. Ulmer Jr.); (July 16 – Michael Jackson in concert, Kansas City), (July 30 – Is L.A. Ready for Olympics; Carl Lewis);
(August 6 – How VCR's are changing what you watch), (August 13 – U.S. Olympic gymnast Mary Lou Retton), (August 20 – U.S. Olympic gold medal winner; Greg Louganis, Miller, Hogshead, Moses & Vidmar), (August 27 – Ronald Reagan; How good a President?); (September 3 – Democratic come back? Geraldine Ferraro); (September 10 – Day care; Who's minding the children), (September 24 – Why teachers fail); (October 8 – Lee Iacocca; Tells his own story), (October 15 – Ronald Reagan & Walter Mondale; Who won the debate), (October 22 – The media on trial; Westmoreland vs. CBS), (October 29 – Ronald Reagan & Walter Mondale; the debate round two); (November 5 – Landslide election? Interviews with Ronald Reagan & Walter Mondale), (Novmeber 12 – India's crisis; after Indira Ghandi), (November 19 – The Billionaire Bass Brothers), (Novmeber 26 – Africa's nightmare; Famine);(December 3 – The agony of Alzheimer's Disease, (December 10 – Tax busters; the reform plan), (December 17 – Poison gas victims in India; Union carbide), (December 24 – Johan Sebastion Bach), (December 31 – The year of the Yuppie; Gary Trudeau cover art);
1985 (January 7 – Eddie Murphy; Mr. Box Office), (January 14 – Abortion; Anti-Abortion Demonstration in Pensacola, Florida), (January 21 – New White House Chief of staff Donald Regan), (January 28 – Ronald Reagan's Encore); (February 4 – Israel's General Ariel Sharon), (February 11 – Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger), (February 18 – America's angry famers; Keith Schippers of Monroe, Iowe), (February 25 – Cocaine; theevil empire); (March 4 - Cyndi Lauper; Rock and roll woman power); (March11 – Apartheid vs. US policy; protestors at the crossroads settlement), (March 18 – The war against pornography), (March 25 – Mikhail Gorbachev; Moscow's new generation); (April 1 – Big media, big money), (April 8 – Living with cancer; Helen Bartlett & family), (April 15 – The Legacy of Vietnam; Washington Memorial), (April 22 – Author Elmore Leonard), (April 29 – Nazi Graves in Bitburg cemetary); (May 6 – Who's taking care of our parents?), (May 13 – Ronald Reagan at the Bitburg summit), (May 20 – Rape and the Law; Catherine Crowell Webb, Gary Dotson), (May 27 – Cosmetic surgery; Kelly Bogart before and after); (June 3 – We are the children; Africa's loft generation), (June 10 – A family of spies; Walkers), (June 17 – Lt. General James Abrahamson; people behind weapons of the future), (June 24 – Terror on flight 847; Arab Hijackers); (July 1 – Looking ahead; Ten wys to fight terrorism), (July 8 – Striking back at terrorism; hooded terroriest making statment), (July 15 – The single parent), (July 22 – Ronald Reagan's cancer pregnosis), (July 29 – Forty years of the atomic age; A watch stopped by Hiroshima blast); (August 5 - Bruce Springsteen on stage), (August 12 – Aids epidemic; victim of disease Rock Hudson), (August 19 – Can South Africa save itself? Black rage and white reform), (August 26 – America's sweet tooth health hazards);(September 2 – Bill Cosby; He's No. 1), (September 9 – Halley's Comet is coming), (September 16 – South Africa; What can be done; Rev Wellington Mabuto), (September 23 – Ignorance and Uncertainty fuel fear of aids), (September 30 – Mexico killer earthquake); (October 7 – Geraldine Ferraro her story), (October 14 – Machine gun USA; weapons confiscated by Atlanta Police), (October 21 – Getting Even with Terrorist; F-14A Tomcat), (October 28 – Princess Diana coming to dinner); (November 4 – Philippines Presnet Ferdinand Marcoss; another Iran?), (November 11 – Actor Sam Shepard), (November 18 – Defector Vitaly Yurchenko on his way home), (November 25 – Ronald Reagan; How to deal with Moscow); (December 2 – Ronald Reagon and Mikhail Gorbachev; What was said behind closed doors), (December 9 – Pope John Paul II; church in crisis), (December 16 – Dr. Steven Rosenberg; The search for a cancer cure), (December 23 – Sylvester Stallone as “Rocky”), (December 30 – The Video Recoder generation);
1986 (January 6 – Abandoned; America's mental castoffs), (January 27 – Calcium, miracle Mineral?); (February 3 – David Letterman staying up late), (February 24 – US Federal reserve chairman Paul Volcker); (March 3 – Ferdinand Marcos; last act in Manila), (March 24 – Mario Cuomo; a profile), (March 31 – America's mothers balancing lifestyles); (April 7 – Palestinian Abu Nidal “America is our Target”), (April 14 – Pierce Brosnan as “Remington Steele”), (April 21 – David Stockman on the Reagan Revolution), (April 28 – Shooting to Kill; Reagan's Raid on Libya's Muammar Kaddafi); (May 5 – Job testing from lie detectors to Genetic screening), (May 12 – The Chernobyl Syndrome), (May 19 – Richard Nixon; He's back), (May 26 – Greed on Wall Street);
(June 9 – Danger in the sun; tanning and cancer), (June 23 – South Africa's Civil War brewing), (June 30 – Chief Justice William Rehnquist); (July 7 – Robin Williams; Comic Genius), (July 14 – Status of Liberty's birthday bash), (July 21 – The aids doctor; Gerald Friedland); (August 4 - Hugh Hefner; Playboy and the Meese Commision), (August 11 – The drug crisis “Saying No!”), (August 18), (August 25 – What Tax Reform means to you); (September 8 – Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd of TV's “Moonlighting”), (September 15 – Civil War at CBS), (September 22 – Can we deal with Moscow?); (October 13 - “Danger at the Summit?” by Henry Kissinger; Mikhail Gorbachev & Ronald Reagan), (October 20 – Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbache; the Iceland summit – Stalemate), (October 27 – a pictorial portrait of a day in the life of America); (November 3 – US Mercenarie's training contras), (November 10 – Our ice age Heritage), (November 17 – Reagan's secret Iran connection), (November 24 – Aids future shock); (December 1 – Ronald Reagan; The Iran mess), (December 8 – Who knew about Iran – Contra?; Chief of Staff Donald Regan), (Decamber 15 – Ronald Reagan's role in Iran – Contra), (December 29 – Nonstop around the world attempt in voyager);
1987 (January 19 – The battle for Baby M; surrogate Mother Mary Beth Whitehead), (January 26 – The Revolution in medicion; money, politics); (February 23 – NCS's computer secrets; suicide attempt by McFarlane); (April 20 – Max Headroom; TV's newest video cult), (April 27 – An arms deal that can work); (August 3=Elvis Presley; ten years after the legend grows); (September 21 – Pope John Paul II how he's changing the church), (September 28 – Donald Trump; billion dollar empire and ego); (October 5 – Formeer CIA director William Casey);
1988 (January4 – Greed goes out of style; Gary Trudeau cover art, (January 11 – The scientific search for Adam & Eve), (January 18 – Alcohol & the family), (January 25 – Miami, America's Casablanca); (February 8 – What you should know about heart attacks), (February 15 – Panama dictator Manuel Noriega), (February 22 – The Pacific Century); (March 7 – How itegrated is America? 5 year olds John Richard Foley & Cassidi Taylor), (March 14 – Sex in the age of aids; Masters and Johnson), (March 21 – The power Broker Jesse Jackson), (March 28 – The drug wars; Police sweep in Los Angeles); (April 4 – Fashion designer Ungero goes feminie; model Iman), (April 11 – Can Jesse Jackson win Democatic ticket), (April 18 – Andy Warhol; collection for sale), (April 25 – Stress on the job; Dagwood & Mr Withers cover); (May 2 – Yes, our schools can be saved), (May 9 – Remembering Bobby Kennedy), (May 16 – Saving premature babies), (May 23 – How smart are animals?), (May 30 – Mikhail Gorbachev; His Plan); (June 6 – Ronald & Nancy Reagan in Moscow), (June 13 – Master of the Universe Stephen Hawking), (June 27 – Roger Rabbit and Bob Hoskins); (July 4 – Garrison Keillor's fourth of July),(July 11 – The Greenhouse effect; Global warming), (July 18 – USS Vincennes on Maneuvers; Why the Gulf tragedy happened), (July 25 – Michael Dukakis; a profile); (August 8 – Author Tom Clancy), (August 22 – George Buch Sr.; a specail report), (August 29 – (Dan Quayle; a shaky start); (September 5 – Will we ever get over the sixties?), (September 12 – The Medical miracle of transplants), (September 19 – Olympic sprinter Forence Griffith Joyner), (September 26 – Tom Hanks “Punchline”); (October 3 – George Buch & Michael Dukakis;'The Debate”), (October 10 – Liftoff of Space Shuttle Discovery), (October 17 - John Lennon; The Battle over his memory), (October 24 – Steve jobs put the WOW back in computers), (October 31 – Nasty Presidential Race; Gary Trudeau cover art);
(November 7 – Scientist discover link between the brain and you health), (November 14 – Trash TV; Geraldo Rivera), (November 21 – George Bush; how he won), (November 28 – Crack addicts); (December 5 – The fashion revolt), (December 12 – Atale of abuse; Hedda Nussbaum), (December 19 – The agony in Armenia; Earthquake), (December 26 – The battle over animal rights);
1989 (January 2 – Explosin in the sky Pan AM flight 103), (January 9 – Ronald & Nancy Reagan; How he changed America), (January 23 – Defense dilemma; How to survive on 300 billion a year),(January 30 – The Battle over health benefits); (March 27 – How safe is your food?); (April 10 – William Bennett; the drug warrior); (May 29 – Upheaval in China; student protest); (June 12 – Bloodbath in Tiananmen Square), (June 19 – China's crackdown), (June 26 – The battle over time inc.); (July 3 – The summer of '69), (July 31 – California; American dream, American nightmare); (August 7 – The Hud Scandal), (August 14 – Dreams: new lessons from the mind), (August 21 – Leona Helmsley battles the lax man); (September 18 – Exxon Valdez: the damage from Alaskan spill); (November 6 - Michelle Pfeiffer, (November 20 – The Berlin Wall 1961 - 1989); (December 4 – Mikhail Gorbachev faces toughest test), (December 18 – All about Alzheimer's);
1990 (January1 – Target; Noriega; US Soldier in Panama), (January 8 – Last Days of Romania dictator Ceausescu), (January 15 – Noriega's arrest photo); (February 12 – Salman Rushie “My life in hiding”), (February 19 – Nelson Mandela; free), (February 26 – A United German; the new superpower); (March 5 – Scientist unlock secret of aging), (March 19 – Rap rage; Street rhyme gone big time); (April 16 – Earth Day 1990; life on the Mississippi), (April 23 – TV's “The Simpson”); (May 14 – Tennis superstar Jennifer Capriati), (May 28 – Scientist explore differences between boys and girls); (June 4 – Why Gorbachev is failing), (June 11 – Boris Yeltsin; after the summit), (June 18 – Donald Trump; the fall); (July 23 – The mind of a rapist);
NEWSWEEK;
1991 (January 7 – Saddam Hussein; More than just a Madman, (January 14 – Riding out the recession), (January 21 – The path to war; US fighter jet); (March 18 – The secret history of the Gulf War); (April 1 – Hannibal Lector “Silence of the Lamb”; violence goes mainstream); (May 27 – Fed up; is there anything safe to eat?);(July 1 – Doctors with Aids; Dr. Richard Duff), (July 8 – How far right? The Supreme Court), (July 15 – Lead and your Kids), (July 29 – The M.I.A. Mystery; Johanna Lundy); (September 9 – Independence Rally in the Ukaine), (Septmeber 17 – Judging Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas), (September 23 – Was Cleopatra Black?); (October 21 – Anita Hill “I had to tell the truth”), (October 28 – How dinosaurs lived); (December 9 – What you and your child should know about safe sex);
1992 (January 13 – The legacy of divorce), (January 20 – The day we stopped the War; Tanks in the Gulf), (January 27 – Pat Buchanan; His attack on the President); (February 3 – The secret life on serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer), (February 10 – Olympic figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi), (February 17 – The curse of self-esteem), 9February 24 – Born or Bred; The origins of Homosexuality); (April 13 – Sex and Psychotherapy, (April 20 – The Brain; New windows on the mind); (May 11 – Fire and fury; Los Angeles race riot); (December 7 – The new middle age);
1993 (February 8 – How call-in shows are shaking up politics), (February 15 – Hillary Clinton; How much clout?); (March 1 – Tax, Spend, Cut), (March 29 – White Male paranod; Michael Douglas in “Fallinf Down”); (April 12 – How the fight to save endangered species can backfire);(October 11- Stupid TV tricks; David Letterman, Beavis & Butthead); (November 22 – The JFK cover-up; Not what you think);
1994 (April 18- Kurt Cobain 1967 - 1994); (May 9 – Nelson Mandela; Black Power!); (June 27 – O.J. Simpson on Trial); (July 11 – How strong the case against O.J. Simpson), (July 25 – To walk on Mars); (August 22 – Baseball strike; Seattle marines Ken Griffey Jr.), (August 29 – The double life on O.J. Simpson); (September 5 – Disney's dilemma; Can the kingdom keep it's magic), (October 31 – Cast of TV's “ER”); (November 7 – Election Preview; Oliver North), (November 14 – Susan Smith's children; Sins of the Mother, (Novmber 21 – Republican Newt Gingrich), (November 28 – America's Quest for Spiritual Meaning); (December 5 – Has America's fat free food obsession gone to far), (December 12 – The Welfare Debate; Bring back the orphanage?), (December 19 – Paul Newman at 70), (December 26 – 1994 in perspective; How the Gingrich stole Christmas);
1995 (January 9 – A guide to the first 100 days); (February 13 – What color is black? Science, Politics and Racial identity); (March 20 – Michael Jordan; return to basketball); (May 1 – Oklahooma City bombing, April 19,1995), (May 8 – Cracking the Oklahoma conspiracy), (May 15 – Bye-bye, suburban dream), (May 29 – Everyday heroes; students from L.A.'s food from the hood); (June 5 – Retinking the riddles of the dinosaurs), (June 12 – Michael Ovitz; most powerful man in movies), (June 19 –Pilot Scott O'Grady home after being shot down in Bosnia), (June 26 – Jim Carrey); (August 14 – JFK, jr. Coming of age at 34), (August 21 – Jerry Garcia 1942 - 1995);
(October 16 – The O.J. Simpson Verdict), (October 23 – Meet the Beatles Again);
1996 (January 15 – Hillary Clinton; Saint or Sinner); (February 12 – Magic Johnson; new hope for living with HIV, (February 19- Your child's brain), (February 26 – Corporate killers; jobs but across US); (March 4 – Pat Buchanan; preaching fear), (March 11 - Princess Diana; royal split); (June 3 – The Biology of Beauty); (July 15 – Rosie O'Donnell; queen of nice), (July 22 – Olympic Decathlete Dan O'Brien), (July 29 – Death on TWA flight 800; pictures of passengers); (August 5 – US Olympic powers; a moment of silence, (August 19 – Bob Dole & running mate Jack Kemp); (October 7 – Shannon Lucid at 53; 188 days in space);
1997 (January 20 – The strange world of JonBenet); (February 17 – The O.J. Simpson Legacy);(September 29 – Ted Turner's one billion dollar gift); (October 27 – Kids who can't learn);
1999 (June 28 – America goes Holywood; a young Elizabeth Taylor); (August 2 – Family gathers for John & Carolyn Kennedy's memorial service); (October 25 – America's greatest athletes; Muhammad Ali);
2000 (January 1 – Charlie Brown “Good Grief”; Charlie Schulz set to retire); (August 14 – Untold story of Bobby Kennedy and the Cuban Missle crisis);
2002 (March 4 – Sex, Shame and the Catholic Church; Boston Cardinal Bernard Law);
2003 (March 3 – Black women of power; Beyonce Knowles, Star Jones and Mellody Hobson); (September 1- “So What's Paln B?”; How to win the afterwar in Iraq); (September 15 – Two years after 9/11; Widow Tekla Addison, Jennifer McCollum & Mayra Orozco);
2004 (February 23 – Their Vietnam War; George W. Bush & John Kerry);
1984 (November/December);
1991 (Spring/Summer); (Summer); (Fall/Winter);
1994 (Spring);
1997 (Spring/ Summer);
** No Date - News Makers (Digest Size);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NEW YORKER;
1955
September 3/1955 (VG = $12.00);
September 10/1955 (1/2 page AD missing from page 75/76, only Race Track article affected; rest is G/VG = $4.00);
September 17/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
September 24/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
October 1/1955 (Baseball cartoon cover; VG = $15.00);
October 8/1955 (page 83/84 missing; rest is VG = $4.00);
October 15/1955 (VG = $12.00);
October 22/1955 (VG = $12.00);
October 29/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
November 5/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
November 12/1955 (VG = $12.00);
November 26/1955 (VG = $12.00); December 3/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
December 10/1955 (VG = $12.00);
December 17/1955 (VG = $12.00);
December 24/1955 (VG = $12.00);
December 31/1955 (G/VG = $10.00);
The NEW YORKER;
1964 (May 23); (July 11); (November 28);
1965 (Janauary 23,30); (September 25);
1969 (October 11,18,25); (November 1,8,15,22,29); (December 6,13,20,27);
1970 (January 10); (February 21); (March 21); (April 4,11,18,25); (May 2,9,16,23); (June 27); (July 4);
1971 (January 23,30); (February 6,13,20,27); (March 6,13,0,27); (April 3,10,17,24); (May 1,8,15,22,29);
(June 5,12,19,26); (July 3,10,24,31); (August 7,14,21,28); (September 4,11,18,25); (October 2,9,16,23,30);
(November 6,13,20,27); (December 4,11,18);
1972 (January 1,8,15,22,29); (February 5,12,19,26); (March 4,11,18,25); (April 1,8,15,22,29); (May 6,13,20,27);
(June 3,10,17,24); (July 1,8,15,22,29); (August 5,12,19,26); (September 2,9,16,30); (October 7,14,21);
(November 4,11,18,25); (December 2,9,23,30);
1973 (January 6,13,20,27); (February 3,10,17,24); (March 3,10,17,24,31); (April 7,14,21,28); (May 5,12,19,26);
(June 2,9,16,23); (July 2,9,16,23,30); (August 6,13,20,27); (September 10,17,24); (October 1,8,15,22,29);
(November 5,12,19,26); (December 3,10,17,24,31);
1974 (January 7,14,21,28); (February 4,11,18,24); (March 4,11,18,25); (April 1,8,15,22,29); (May 6,13,20,27);
(June 3,10,17); (July 1,8,15,22,29); (August 5,12,19,26); (September 2,9,16,23,30); (October 7,14,21,28);
(November 4,11,18,25); (December 2,9);
1975 (August 18);
1976 (October 25); (November 1,22); (December 6,13);
1977 (February 28); (March 7,14); (April 4,18,25); (May 2,9,23); (June 6,20,27); (July 4,11,25); (September 19);
(October 3,10,31); (November 7,14,21,28); (December 5,12,19);
1978 (April 10); (November 27);
1979 (April 16);
The NEW YORKER;
1981 (January 12,26); (February 16,23); (March 2,9,16,25); (July 20); (August 17,31); (September 7); (October 12);
1982 (January 4,25); (February 1,15); (March 15,22,29); (April 5,12); (May 3,10); (June 7,28); (July 12);
(August 2,30); (September 6,27); (October 4,11); (November 8,22,29); (December 6,27);
1983 (August 15);(October 17); (December 5);
1984 (May 28); (November 19);
1985 (January 28); (May 20);
1986 (January 6,13);
1987 (September 21); (December 14);
1988 (February 8);
1989 (September 18); (December 4,18,25);
1990 (January 1,8,15,22); (February 19,26); (March 5,12,19); (April 2,9,23,30); (May 7,14,21,28);
(September 24); (October 8); (November 5);
1991 (March 25); (April 8); (May 6,13);
1993 (May 24,31); (June 28); (July 19);
1994 (June 13,20); (October 3); (December 12,19);
1995 (January 9,16); (April 24); (May 1,8); (June 12,19,26); (July 10); (October 16,23,30); (November 6,13,20);
*************************************************************************************
Vanity Fair (Conde Naste Pub. Inc.)
1983
March (Pan Illustrated by Milton Glaser); April (Clown's Head Illustrated by Mike Illustrated by Mike Haggerty); June (Feet Overlooking Lake); October (Susan Sontag);
1984
February (Valentine); March (Woman Smoking Illustrated by Blair Drawson); April (Young Starlet Holding Two Oscars); July (A woman of Independence Means); September (Paloma Picasso);
1985
February (Diane Keaton); August (Claus Von Bulow & Andrea Reynolds);
1986
January (David Bowie); April (Kate Mailer a Marilyn Monroe); May (Cher); June (Prince Andrew); August (Jack Nicholson); October (Heiress Basia Johnson); December (Madonna);
1987
January (Mikhail Baryshnikov); July (Sarah Duchess of York); September (Diane Sawyer); October (Robert De Niro); December (Bette Midler);
1988
March (Joan Collins/ Jackie Collins); April (Charlotte Rampling); June (Cybill Shepherd); July (Eddie Murphy); August (Sigourney Weaver); September Princess Diana); October (Jessica Lange); November (Jane Fonda); December (Ronald & Nancy Reagan);
1989
February (Michelle Pfeiffe); March (Diana Ross); (April Melanie Griffith); May (Kevin Costner); June (Kim Basinger); September (Goldie Hawn); November(Mikhail Baryshnikov);
1990 January (Daryl Hannah); February (Mikhail Gorbachev); April (Kathleen Turner/Madonna); June (Arnold Schwarzenegger); August (Harrison Ford); October (Debra Winger); December (Roseanne/ Tom Arnold);
1991 September (Barbra Streisand); November (Warren Beatty);
1992 January (Kevin Costner); February (Mick Jagger); April (Jack Nicholson); June (Annette Bening); July (Luke Perry); August (Demi Moore); September (Geena Davis);October (Madonna); November (Elizabeth Taylor);
1993 January (Claudia Schiffer); March (Andie MacDowell); June (Sean Connery); July (Harrison Ford); September (Michaell Pfeiffer);
1994 February (Roseanne Barr in Lingerie); April (Jak Nicholson); May (Jodie Foster); June (Tom Hanks); September (Annette Bening/ Warren Beatty); October (Tom Cruiuse); December (Liam Neeson);
1995 January (Michael Douglas); February (Brad Pitt);March (Jessica Lange);April (Gatefold/ Jennififer Jason Leigh/ Uma Thurman/ Nicole Kidman/ Patricia Arquette/ Linda Fiorentino/ Gwyneth Paltrow/ Sarah Jassica Parker/ Julianne Moore/ Angela Bassett/ Sandra Bullock);July (Nicole Kidman);September (Sandra Bullock);November Ralph Fiennes);December Cast of TV's Friends & ER);
1996 January (Uma Thuraman);April (Gatefold/ Tim Roth/ Leonardo Dicaprio/ Matthew Mcconaughey/ Benicio Del Toro/ Michael Rapaport/ Stephen Dorff/ Johnathon Schaech/ David Arquette/ Will Smith/ Skeet Ulrich);July (Nicolas Cage);October (Anthony Hopkins);
1997 March (Julia Louis-Dreyfus);April (Gatefold/ Cameron Diaz/ Kate Winslet/ Claire Danes/ Renee Zellweger/ Minnie Driver/ Alison Elliott/ Jade Pinkett/ Jennifer Lopez/ Charlize Theron/ Fairuzas Balk); May (Liv Tyler); August (Mel Gibson);
1998 February (Claire Danes); May(Jerry Seinfeld); July (Ron & Nancy Reagan); August (Chris Rock); September (Gretchen Mol); October (Michael Jordan);
1999 January (Charlize Theron); February (George Lucas & the cast from (Star Wars: the Phantom Menace); March (Cate Banchett); May(Natalie Portman); June (Julia Roberts); July (Will Smith); September (Carolyn Bessette Kennedy); October Ben Affleck); December (Meg Ryan);
2000 January (Cameron Diaz); February (Annette Bening/ Warren Beatty); April (Gatefold/ Penelope Cruz/ Wes Bentley/ Mena Suvari/ Marley Shelton/ Chris Klein/ Selma Blair/ Paul Walker/ Jordana Brewster/ Sarah Wynter); May (Kim Basinger); July (Rene Zellweger); August (Heath Ledger); November (Gatefold/ Bjork/ Bono/ Macy Gray/ Keith Richards/ Chuck Berry/ Patti Smith Fiona Apple/ Dr. Dre/ Faith Hill/ Carlos Santana/ Mary J. Blige/ Zack De La Rocha);
2001
March (Julianne Moore);
July (Josh Hartnett);
September (Penelope Cruz);
October (Special Harry Potter Issue);
2003
January (Cameron Diaz);
February (Salma Hayek);
April (Gatefold/ Tom Hanks/ Tom Cruise/ Harrison Ford/ Jack Nicholson/ Brad Pitt/ Edward Norton/ Jude Law/ Samuel L. Jackson/ Don Cheadle/ Hugh Grant/ Dennis Quiad/ Ewan McGregor/ Matt Damon);
July (Gatefold/ Amanda Bynes/ Ashley Olsen/ Mary-Kate Olsen/ Mandy Moore/ Hilary Duff/ Alexis Bledel/ Evan Rachel Wood/ Raven/ Lindsay Lohan);
December (Eric McCormack/ Sean Hayes/ Megan Mullally/ Carson Kreessely/ Gale Harold/ Debra Messing);
2004
January (Viggo Mortensen);
April (Keira Knightley);
May (Jackie Kennedy);
June (Brad Pitt);
August (Ronald & Nancy Reagan);
November (Johnny Depp);
Cover SCAN POLICY;
(1) >>> For SCANS of items priced US$0.01 to $19.99, we charge US$3.00 to defer some of the Costs of our Time & Effort.
*** $3.00 to by paid before scan is sent. [Additional Scans, in SAME email; add an extra $1.00 per extra scan];
** We accept VISA, American Express & MASTERCARD; -- OR -- Payments using PAYPAL are to be made to = dsulipa@gmail.com
*** Items priced at $5.00 or LESS, NO credit applied, even if purchased;
*** Items priced at $5.25 to $10.00, we will give $1.50 credit toward that first item, (and $1 per extra item)
if you purchase the item(s);
*** Items priced at $10.25 to $19.99, we will give full $3.00 credit toward that item, (and $1 per extra item) if you
purchase the item(s);
(2) >>> For SCANS of items priced US$20.00 and UP = FIRST 1 to 3 SCANS are FREE, after that, please send
US$1.00 Per Scan; IF you buy the items, you can have future Free Scans; [ If you use up your 3 Free Scans
& do NOT buy items, FUTURE scans will cost $3.00 for First Scan & $1.00 Per Additional Scan in any price range];
** We accept VISA, American Express & MASTERCARD; -- OR -- Payments using PAYPAL are to be made to = dsulipa@gmail.com
(3) >>> If you have NO intention of Buying the item, but would still like a SCAN;
PLEASE, kindly inform us UP FRONT if you are ONLY interested in a SCAN. We will be happy to oblige for a small &
very reasonable fee, to cover some of our costs. Hopefully this will REDUCE the 100's of requests we get, from those
who like to treat us as a Library, rather than a business that needs to make a profit. We do NOT mind helping out those
that NEED scans, but PLEASE be FAIR to us too. THEN you will ALSO be more fair to the REAL BUYERS that actually
want to make a purchase. We charge US$3.00 to defer some of the Costs of our Time & Effort.
*** $3.00 to by paid before scan is sent. [Additional Scans, in SAME email; add an extra US$1.00 per extra scan];
** We accept VISA, American Express & MASTERCARD; -- OR -- Payments using PAYPAL are to be made to = dsulipa@gmail.com
WHY do we Charge for SCANS?
Unfortunately, customers massively abuse this Privilege. About 85-90% of people who ask for scans of items under
$20.00, seemingly having pre-determined they are not going to buy the item. It seems they want a FREE image at our time & expense. Items priced over $20.00 do much better, as buyers are usually more serious & about 50-65% of items selling.
[Even more strangely, about 85% of items that we normally quote, sell without need of a Scan];
We need to cover PART of the Labour Costs. [Employee #1 reads email, then needs to PRINT & take the email to our warehouse, one block over; Employee #2 take the inquiry & goes into our 8000 sqaure foot warehouse to pull item off it's shelf; Employee #2 needs to physically deliver the item one block over, back to our Computer Offices; Employee #3 makes the Scan, then forwards it to Employee #1 via email; Employee #1 must Write an email about the item, add the Scan to the email & send it; IF (and usually WHEN), the item is NOT purchased, Employee #1 must then make the return trip with item, back to our Warehouse one block over; Employee #2 must then goes BACK into our 8000 sqaure foot warehouse to physically replace the item back on it's shelf; >>> This Process takes 10-20 minutes of our time. Even at $3.00 per item, we often lose both time & money making Scans. The $3.00 shows that you have a More Serious interest in the item & that you UNDERSTAND that you will be using up some of our time & that you are KIND enough to at least contribute to our COSTS for this Privilege; NATURALLY, if you turn out to be a Serious Buyer, we will return some or ALL of the small fees for making scans; Thus it remains more of a Privilege & NON-PROFIT (if not money losing) Service to our customers. Thank You kindly, for your Understanding on this matter. We like to & do spend our TIME giving our actual Customers, the BEST SERVICE possible.
*************************************************************************************
Satisfaction Guaranteed. Mail Order since 1971; >>> STRICT Condition Grading;
SEE the COMIC & Magazine Condition GRADING GUIDE (further down on this page if required);
We take; Visa, MC, Amex, Paypal, MO, etc. Prices in USA Funds, Plus Postage (as listed further down in this eMail);
>>> (NOTE; Complete Address & Ordering info listed below, please SCROLL down this page to see ALL this info);
>>( Note; USA letters to Canada, need 60 cents in stamps ); Send to & make payment to; Doug Sulipa's COMIC WORLD BOX 21986 STEINBACH, MANITOBA CANADA R5G 1B5
Email; dsulipa@gmail.com
(Phone; 1-204-346-3674) (FAX; 1-204-346-1632)
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
------------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAGE BELOW, is for the TOTAL Weight of JUST the Books! (We have allowed for packaging in totals);
------------------------------------------------------------------------
USA;
add,
POSTAGE
& HANDLING of;
(101-200 Grams; Un-insured Small Packet Surface= $3.00; OR Airmail / Lettermail = $4.00); /// (201-400 Grams; Un-Insured Small Packet Surface= $4.00; OR insured Small Packet Airmail= $6.00); /// (401-850 Grams; Un-Insured Small Packet Surface= $7.50; OR insured Small Packet Airmail= $10.00);
/// (Xpresspost for; 50-850 Grams; 6-9 Days; Post Office Air Shipping, with Full Tracking Number & FREE insurance included = $15.00);
/// (851-1800 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $10.00; OR Xpresspost=$18.00); /// (1801-2700 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $13.00; OR Xpresspost=$20.00); /// (2701-3600 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $14.00; OR Xpresspost=$23.00); /// (3601-4500 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $15.00; OR Xpresspost=$28.00); /// (4501-6500 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $16.00; OR Xpresspost=$31.00); /// (6501-8400 Grams; Expedited Surface Mail= $18.00; OR Xpresspost=$34.00); (8401-10,000 Grams; Expedited Mail Surface Mail=$22.00; Xpresspost= $45.00);
>>> [Surface parcels cannot be insured, unless over 1 KG = 1000 Grams]; >>> All AIRMAIL & Xpresspost PARCELS are INSURED for FREE!
USA; insured Small Packet Airmail ; [ 7-14 Days; (average is 9 days), FREE insurance included ];
USA; insured Small Packet Surface ; [ 14-28 Days; (average is 18 days), NO insurance availiable ];
USA; Expedited Surface Mail ; [10-20 Days; (average is 16 days), Post Office Surface shipping, with Limited Tracking Number & FREE insurance included ]; USA; Xpresspost Shipping ; [ 5-9 Days; (average is 7 days), Post Office Air Shipping, with Full Tracking Number & FREE insurance included ];
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
------------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAGE BELOW, is for the TOTAL Weight of JUST the Books! (We have allowed for packaging in totals);
------------------------------------------------------------------------ CANADA; add POSTAGE & HANDLING of;
50-400 Grams ONLY if UNDER 20mm or 3/4" THICK = (AIR Lettermail = US$3.00);
50-400 Grams = IF Over 3/4" or 20mm THICK package; = (insured Regular/Expedited Mail = US$6.00);
401-850 Grams = (insured Regular/Expedited Mail = US$6.00); 851-2700 Grams = (insured Regular/Expedited Mail = US$8.00);
2801-5500 Grams = (insured Regular/Expedited Mail = US$10.00); 5501-9500 Grams = (insured Regular/Expedited Mail = US$12.00);
NOTE; Canada Post offers NO surface rates for CANADA (but DOES to the rest of the World); ALL Canadian PARCELS are INSURED for FREE!
Expedited Mail to CANADA; (4-7 Days; Post Office Surface Priority shipping, with Limited Tracking Number & FREE insurance included); Xpresspost Shipping to CANADA; (2-3 Days; Post Office Air Shipping, with Full Tracking Number & FREE insurance included);
CANADA; (for FASTER shipping) XPRESSPOST;
50-600 Grams = 8-1/2" x 11" or SMALLER (Xpresspost to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta & B.C.= US$6.00);
50-600 Grams = LARGER than 8-1/2" x 11" (Xpresspost to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta & B.C.= US$9.00);
50-600 Grams = (Xpresspost to OTHER Canadian Provinces = US$9.00);
600-1800 Grams = (Xpresspost to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta & B.C.= US$8.00);
600-1800 Grams = (Xpresspost to OTHER Canadian Provinces = US$14.00);
2801-5500 Grams = (Xpresspost to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta = US$18.00);
2801-5500 Grams = (Xpresspost to to OTHER Canadian Provinces = US$25.00);
5501-9500 Grams = (Xpresspost to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta = US$23.00);
5501-9500 Grams = (Xpresspost to to OTHER Canadian Provinces = US$35.00);
Expedited Mail to CANADA; (4-7 Days; Post Office Surface Priority shipping, with Limited Tracking Number & FREE insurance included); Xpresspost Shipping to CANADA; (2-3 Days; Post Office Air Shipping, with Full Tracking Number & FREE insurance included);
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
------------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAGE BELOW, is for the TOTAL Weight of JUST the Books! (We have allowed for packaging in totals);
------------------------------------------------------------------------ Worldwide/FOREIGN/international - POSTAGE & HANDLING; =
[(100-200 Grams; Un-insured small packet Surface= US$4.00; Insured small packet Airmail= US$6.00);
(201-400 Grams; Un-insured small packet Surface= US$6.00; Insured small packet Airmail= US$11.00);
(401-850 Grams; Un-insured small packet Surface= US$10.00; Insured small packet Airmail= US$21.00);
(851-1800 Grams; Un-insured small packet Surface= US$14.00; Insured small packet Airmail= US$33.00);
*** Parcels from 1800-2700 Grams, are OFTEN Cheaper to SPLIT into 2 or More Smaller Parcels, to take advantage
of the "Small Packet" Rates above;
[(1801-2700 Grams; Xpresspost/Airmail =$47.00; Surface Parcel=$24.00);
(2701-3600 Grams; Xpresspost/Airmail =$62.00; Surface Parcel=$36.00);
(3601-4500 Grams; Xpresspost/Airmail =$78.00; Surface Parcel=$44.00);
(4501-5400 Grams; Xpresspost/Airmail =$85.00; Surface Parcel=$48.00);
(5401-6300 Grams; Xpresspost/Airmail =$92.00; Surface Parcel=$52.00)];
>>> Xpresspost & Airmail PARCELS are INSURED for FREE!
>>> Overseas Xpresspost & Airmail PARCELS take 7-14 Days to arrive, average is 10 Days.
>>> Overseas Surface PARCELS take 25-60 Days to arrive, average is 30 Days.
>>> Small Packet Surface (1800 or less Grams before packing) parcels cannot be insured & are shipped at customers choice & risk.
*** Parcels over US$300.00 value are REQUIRED to take insurance.
>> SURFACE Parcels (1800 or MORE Grams before packing) are INSURED for FREE. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
*** ALL PRICES IN USA FUNDS, unless noted;
>>>(Canadian's may pay, if desired, in Canadian funds, by adding CURRENT exchange to the USA funds price);
>>>IMPORTANT: With your payment please include; FULL NAME, Complete Mailing ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER (if we put on outside of parcel, it might arrive quicker), AMOUNT of Money you are sending, WHAT you are ORDERING.
------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>> WE ACCEPT payment by; (1) We gladly accept DIRECT payment by VISA, American Express & Mastercard; >>For CREDIT CARDS, we highly recommend sending information, split in to 2 or 3 separate E-Mail's, for safety! (This is very fast & easy; 1000's of previous customers have paid in this way for many years. This is the most common & safe method our customers use to make payments); For example; Send first 8 digits in email #1, second 8 digits in email #2 and send Expiry Date in email #2 or #3; Send your shipping address, & phone number. Do not forget expiry date; PLEASE, Double check the numbers before sending (it is very easy to make a single digit error);
OR you can Phone/Fax the information to us; Our FAX Line is secure & private;
( PHONE; 1-204-346-3674 ); or ( FAX; 1-204-346-1632 ) ] (2) *** We accept payment thru PAYPAL = www.paypal.com **** Payments using PAYPAL are to be made to = dsulipa@gmail.com (3) MONEY ORDERS or CERTIFIED BANK CHECKS; [Note; We have a USA Bank Account; THUS we CAN accept USA domestic MONEY ORDER's (7-11, Western union, post office, etc)! >>[For USA buyers = international MO's are NOT required! So do not waste money on the extra fees! ] >>[Foreign orders, MUST send International MO's only; Or MO's drawn on a USA or Canada address] (4) CASH (Maximum of $50.00 for safety; We do NOT accept responsibility for "LOST" cash, as we do not know if you actually sent it; But 99.9% does arrives safely; Please send NO money in coins, as it rips envelopes); ( 5 ) PERSONAL or Business CHECKS; [From USA & CANADA ONLY; *** $50.00 or less, we ship immediately; *** Checks from $50.01-$200.00 = (CANADA takes 2 weeks to clear, before we will ship)(USA takes 4 weeks to clear, before we will ship); *** Checks from $201 & up = (Canada takes 3 weeks to clear, before we will ship)(USA takes 6 weeks to clear, before we will ship); eBay Buyers with excellent feedback over +100 we will accept check to $100 without waiting to clear; NO Exceptions, due to bad experiences!];
*** [ It is recommended that you provide your Phone Number {with area code} to put on your parcel, in case Post Office needs to contact you ]***
*** [ USA customers, if you know the 4 digit extention to your ZIP CODE, thus making it 9 digits, please provide it = Your parcel will arrive faster ]***
>> Our WEB PAGE; [with HUGE Inventory of COMICS, Magazines, Books & other Collectibles IN STOCK;
WORLD'S BIGGEST Selection, on the Entire INTERNET, for MANY items! If you see items of interest, ASK for current Availiability, Price & Condition ] = www.dougcomicworld.com
I am Douglas W. Sulipa, an Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide SENIOR ADVISOR for 33 years {since Guide #2 way back in 1972; See Overstreet #32-35 on page 9 & 10 to confirm}; >> Read my MARKET REPORTS; (in the New Overstreet 2005 Annual #35, pages 94 thru 109, and see our AD on page 172);
And MY REPORTS in (Overstreet 2004 Annual #34, pages 89-100)(Overstreet 2003 Annual #33, pages 86-95)(Overstreet 2002 Annual #32, pages 72-81)(Overstreet 2001 Annual #31 on pages 64-75);
>>> ( Do not waste money on Global Priority, because to Canada, it is NOT any faster than Airmail )
>> We have IN STOCK; [ 1,300,000 COMICS, 1950's thru 2004, & some Older, with 95% of everything ALL Publishers & titles from 1960-2004 ]
[250,000 MAGAZINES, ALL types] [250,000 Mass Market PAPERBACKS, ALL types, 1940-1990's] [60,000 Hardcover Books, ALL subjects, from 1900-1990's] [100,000 Vinyl Records] [8,000 Music Cassette Tapes] [8,000 VHS Movies] [10,000 POSTERS; Movie (50's-90's), Video store (1980's & 90's) & chain store types (70's-early 90's)] [VIDEO GAMES; Atari, Coleco,Intellivision, Nintendo, Super-Nintendo, Sega, Genesis, etc] [HOCKEY CARDS, most 1951/2-1993] [Digests = Most Comic types, plus a selection of SF, Mystery & many Misc types] & MORE! >> 600,000 Pounds of inventory jam packed into an 8000 Square Foot Warehouse! So much material, we will NEVER get it all catalogued! BUT you can view our HUGE inventory lists at our website = www.dougcomicworld.com >>> SEND YOUR WANT LISTS! [Please limit to SERIOUS WANTS & limit the number of items, to 50 or less most wanted items! Filling want lists takes time! We reply ASAP! Thank You]! **** ORDER Multiple Items ALL from one seller; (1) SAVE on POSTAGE; (2) SAVE TIME locating the items; (3) GET them from a RELIABLE source; (4) Receive items PROPERLY GRADED by Condition; (5) Satisfaction Always Guaranteed! >>> MAIL ORDER since 1971, with OVER 25,000 DIFFERENT Satisfied Customers, with over 250,000 completed Mail Orders!
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Condition Scale, from Best at top, to worst at bottom; >> [Note plus "+" and Minus "-" Grades are not in common use, except on more expensive comics!] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - MT = (10.0 Mint); Absolutly Flawless in every way. Mostly a fantasy grade. Out of the 30 to 50 BILLION Comics so far Printed, so far only about 1000 Comics in Total grade a strict 10.0 or Perfect Mint; *** [ Imagine that you had 50 hours to pick the Single Best Copy, out of 5000 Copies on the DAY the item was printed, THAT copy MIGHT approach MINT; But if you could find the Tiniest of Flaws, inside or outside, where "It could be ever so slightly better", then it is NOT Mint. Less than 1 in 5000 collectors, will have a single book in their entire collection that grades MINT; At this time there is ONLY ONE comic in the World, Pre-1980 that is considered MINT; The current market value of a CGC graded 10.0 MT copy, is 50-100 Times Guide 9.2 price]; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - MT- (9.9) = MINT minus = Virtually FLAWLESS in EVERY Way, inside & outside. Might have only the tiniest of Flaws, almost microscopic in size, & probably not visible to the Human Eye, except to the most trained experts. [ current market value of a CGC 9.9 MT- copy, is 15-50 Times Guide 9.2 price] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NM/MT (9.8) = NEAR MINT to MINT; Only about (1 in 100) to (1 in 1000) Extremely Carefully Hand-Picked still Brand NEW items can attain this Lofty essentially Flawless Grade. Only the tiniest of nearly invisible flaws is allowed. The untrained eye will not be able to see a flaw.
[ current market value of a CGC graded 9.8 NM/MT copy, is about 6-20 Times Guide 9.2 price ] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NM+ (9.6) = NEAR MINT plus; Superb & Almost Flawless example. BETTER than MOST items when still Brand NEW on the Newsstands; MOST Brand New comics on day of release are not this high in grade. IF you get to hand-pick the BEST copy availiable out of about 50 copies upon day of Release, you will likely have a NM+; [ current market value of a CGC graded 9.6 NM+ copy, is about 4-10 Times Guide 9.2 price] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NM = (9.4 Near Mint); This grade is NO LONGER listed in the Overstreet Annual Guide, due to the scarcity. [9.2 is currently the TOP guide grade]
NM copies are almost LIKE NEW, & almost flawless. Most 1976-1985 items are SCARCE in this grade, if Strictly graded. Most 1975 & Older items are RARE in this grade, if Strictly graded. [Most 1975 & Older Non-Marvel/DC Super-Hero comics are VERY RARE in this grade, MANY with NO KNOWN copies in 9.4 condition]; We Rarely use this grade on our regular inventory, even on Original Un-Used Warehouse copies. [Unlike many dealers who incorrectly throw the grade around like they are common. If another dealer is NOT charging a premium for this grade, it is probably not a "True" NM]; Even MANY older Pedigree collection & File copies are not this high in grade [Most older File-Copies are more in the 9.0 condition range];
>>> Essentially in Hand-Picked AS NEW, Never Read, Never handled & immediately Bagged and BOARDED Condition; With only the tinest of Flaws, usually not apparent to the Un-Trained Eye. [About 50% of the BRAND NEW Comics Printed, do not quite Grade STRICT Near Mint, upon the Day they are released. IF you get to pick the BEST copy availiable oot of about 10 copies upon day of Release, you will likely then have a NM ]; **** [ current market value of a CGC graded 9.4 NM Copy, is about 3-6 Times Guide 9.2 price ] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NM- (9.2) = Near Mint minus; Currently the HIGHEST grade listed in the Overstreet Annual Guide. This is about the AVERAGE condition for a NON hand-Picked comics that is still Brand-New on day of release. Flaws usually include; 1-2 NON Sharp corners OR 1-2 very tiny STRESS marks on spine or elsewhere on comic.
**** [ Current market value of a CGC graded 9.2, NM- Copy, is about 2 to 4 Times Guide 9.2 price ] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VF/NM (9.0) Very Fine to Near Mint; >>> This is the condition the average NEW ITEM is in on DAY 2-14 after New Release (after packing, shipping, sorting & NORMAL handling by Distributors, Store Keepers & Customers); Flaws usually include; 1-3 NON Sharp corners OR 1-4 small STRESS marks on spine or elsewhere on comic. Might have a small dinged corner. Might have minor spine kinks. Might have MINOR handling wear or MINOR
rubbing or shelfwear. [Often mistaken as NM or NM+ to the untrained eye]; **** [ current market value of a CGC graded 9.0, VF/NM Copy, is about 1.5 to 3 Times Guide 9.2 price ] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VF+ (8.5) VERY FINE plus; Basically an overall NM appearance, but with several minor flaws, as described in the 9.0 description. A Scarce "High Grade" for most 1975 & older item's; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VF = (8.0 Very Fine); Nearly AS NEW copy, usually normal minor handling or shelf wear. Most of our Un-Read Original Warehouse copies fall in this catagory, usually with only minor shelf wear. [ This is the AVERAGE grade for an UN-Used condition example, or moderately well cared for, comic & magazine of the 1980-1990 period. Most 1980's Collectors did NOT use STIFF Back-Boards with their comic bags on 1985 & older
comics, thus many small flaws have accumulated on MOST copies on the market & even in MOST Original Owner collections]; *** [ Many inexperienced sellers, VERY commonly Mis-Grade FN/VF or VF copies as NM or "Mint" on eBay; Many INCORRECTLY assume if they bought it new & are Original Owner, it has to be "Mint"]; A Scarcer "High Grade" for most 1975 & older item's; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VF- (7.5) VERY FINE minus; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FN/VF = (7.0) FINE to VERY FINE; a Beautiful & WELL Above Average example on most items over 20 years old.
The beginning of "Higher Grade" for most items 1975 & older. An Un-Common Grade for most 1975 & older item's; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FN+ = (6.5) FINE+ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FN = (6.0 Fine); Above Average condition, for any comic Pre-1973; a NICE example. NO major problems. Nice, Clean, Solid & still very attractive example. Average Used condition for comics & magazines of the 1976-1984 period. Possibly an Un-Read Copy, with light handling, shelfwear, or rubbing wear. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FN- (5.5) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VG/FN (5.0) = VERY GOOD to FINE! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VG+ (4.5); - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VG = (4.0 Very Good); Decent average used condition example. No major flaws. Usually a few Reading Stress Lines, & light edgewear, or minor creasing at corners. Occasionally only a minor amount of Hidden & Non-Obvious Magic Tape repairs usually inside the covers; (Magic Tape is not allowed on FN or higher grades, unless with specific special mention); AVERAGE Used Condition Copy, still Collectible & still Attractive with Nice Eye Appeal. This is the average condition that 1964-1975 Comics & Magazines are found in! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VG- (3.5); - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - G/VG = (3.0) GOOD to VERY GOOD! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - G+ (2.5); - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - G = (2.0 Good); Well Used, but still COMPLETE, & intact, but not badly abused copy; Great as a still DECENT Reading Copy; Appears to have been Read lovingly several times. Still relatively attractive & NOT De-Faced. NO big chucks out, or NO severe damage. Minor to Moderate amounts of Magic tape Repairs are common & often present in this grade, but should not detract too much from the "Look" or appeal of the cover. (Defects might include, one or more of the following; Possible Creases to covers, Cover Partly splitting at spine, light to moderate stains, tears in cover at edges, some soiling to covers, bumped corners, cover wrinkles, minor small pieces out, etc); This is the average condition that 1933-1963 Comics, Magazines & other items are found in. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - G- (1.8); - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FA/G = (1.5) FAIR to GOOD! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FA = (1.0 Fair); Very Heavily Used & "Beat Up" Copy, but still complete; Cover is no longer attractive & most wear & tear is usually to the covers. Interior is typically much better; (Defects might include, one or more of the following; Writing, creases, rips, Defaced front cover, Stains, Water Damage,
heavy tape repairs, fragile covers or pages, cover plit spine, detatched cover, possibly 5-15% of cover missing, etc); Still great as a Cheap Reading Copy! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PR/FA = POOR to FAIR! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PR = (0.5 Poor); Horrible condition, nearly destroyed, usually NOT complete, pieces out, badly defaced, possibly big chunks of cover missing, etc. Special notes & descriptions usually stated. Often has 3 out of 4 stories complete, & might be partly readable. Often useful in repairing other copies.A "filler" copy at best, until a better copy comes alomg.
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>> Our WEB PAGE; [with HUGE Inventory of COMICS, Magazines, Books & other Collectibles IN STOCK;
WORLD'S BIGGEST Selection, on the Entire INTERNET, for MANY items! If you see items of interest, ASK for current Availiability, Price & Condition ] = www.dougcomicworld.com
>>SEE our eBay auctions, & superb FEEDBACK as " dwscw " = http://cgi6.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?MfcISAPICommand=ViewListedItems&userid=dwscw&include=0&since=-1&sort=2&rows=0
Please allow 7-10 DAYS for your LETTERS to arrive since you are sending to Canada. (We usually get it in 7 days average); We ship Mail orders within 24 hours of Payment (except weekends), but usually SAME DAY. [Unlike many eBay sellers & our competitors, who can take as long as 2-3 weeks to ship] *** All Shipments sent by AIRMAIL, unless o/w requested, if if too little shipping costs included; If you prefer CHEAPER Surface mail, on any lot where postage is $5.00 or more, please ask & we will quote; Allow 7 to 14 days for AIRMAIL Parcels to arrive, from day we get your payment; (7-10 days is average) *** SURFACE or "Expedited" MAIL = [In USA allow 2-4 weeks for delivery; Average is 3 weeks] [Canada = allow 1-2 weeks for delivery][Foreign Surface= allow 3-8 weeks for delivery = 4 weeks is average]; ** Expedited Surface Mail is the Least Expensive shipping method to USA for parcels weighing over 1 KG (or 2.2 pounds), it comes with a Tracking Number & FREE insurance; (Allow 10-20 Days for USA Expedited Parcels to arrive); >>All AIRMAIL shipments include INSURANCE, at OUR cost, as we have Private insurance for this purpose. >>>Note; "Priority mail" or "Global Priority" is not an availiable option in Canada, SORRY! >>>[X-Presspost is availiable for USA shipments, for about 50% MORE than the Expedited/Airmail Cost; This may speed your shipment by 1-2 weeks; Xpresspost to USA takes about 6-9 days]; >>> [ FED-EX, UPS & other COURIER PARCELS are expensive from Canada = $30.00 Minimum & up, for smaller or oversized letter parcel, but is availiable upon request. If you have a FED-EX account, we can havve charged billed to that account, if you provide the account number. Please triple check the account number ];
>> I am a strict and accurate grader. I do NOT overgrade or undergrade. I just try to grade as accurately as the current Professional Dealer market dictates. Unfortunately most sellers DO NOT know how to grade accurately especially when dealing with comic books (which has been my main specialty since 1971). >> I also pack all shipments VERY WELL , to avoid damage in transit; >>We have been selling by Mail Order since 1971; We are CBG customer service award winners; I am an Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, Senior Price Advisor, since Guide #2 in 1972, ONE of only 12 advisors to reach the Over 25 Year status; SATISFACTION IS ALWAYS GUARANTEED! ** [Return anything you are NOT happy with, within 7 days of the day you receive the parcel. Wrap well & clearly, in large letters, on outside of parcel, put "Returning Goods to Sender" = This is REQUIRED, to avoid Customs Hassles & Long Delays]; (The ONLY exception for Returns, is CGC professionally graded comics, these are NOT returnable, as with CGC you know in advance, what you will be getting) >>> [WE HAVE an eBay 99.98% SATISFACTION RATE, with over 1800 Positive Feedbacks] >> Superb Service for OVER 33 years; For the last 5 years, our average is well UNDER $25.00 in returns, per each $10,000. in Sales (1/4 of One percent) & most of those are Customer Errors!!! >>> MAIL ORDER since 1971, with OVER 25,000 DIFFERENT Satisfied Customers, with over 250,000 completed Mail Orders!
THANK YOU! ..... Douglas W. Sulipa