On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
This is the last of our faux front pages, Good thing too as we may have been a bit off in our predictions.
Previous: National Post, 1967
Previous: National Post, 1942
Previous: National Post, 1929
Previous: National Post, 1867
Previous: Medieval Post
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: National Post, 1942
Previous: National Post, 1929
Previous: National Post, 1867
Previous: Medieval Post
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: National Post, 1929
Previous: National Post, 1867
Previous: Medieval Post
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: National Post, 1867
Previous: Medieval Post
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: Medieval Post
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: Imperial Post
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Previous: Prehistoric Post
On the occasion of our fifth anniversary, way back in 2003, the National Post put together a series of front pages, wondering what they would have looked if we’d been around in previous ages. They’d been long forgotten until a dusty poster turned up under a reporter’s desk and now revived here. (Pages by Rob Mckenzie and Kagan McLeod)
Newspaper headlines and clippings are posted on a wall inside a staff office at the White House in Washington May 2, 2011, the morning after U.S. President Barack Obama announced the death of Osama bin Laden. (Jason Reed/Reuters)
Christopher Hitchens: Osama, like Saddam, was tracked to a shrunken domain
Charles Lewis: Forgive Bin Laden? No way in hell
RCMP assessing threat to Canadians after Bin Laden death
Daughter of Canadian 9/11 victim in ‘shock’ over bin Laden death