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Cato and appears
Cato also appears in Thornton Wilder's highly-fictionalized " fantasia " Ides of March, where Cato is described by Caesar as one of " four men whom I most respect in Rome " but who " regard me with mortal enmity ".
Poetry: Cato appears as a character in Dante's Purgatorio.
The agricultural writings of Palladius may be compared to those of Marcus Priscus Cato, Marcus Terentius Varro and particularly Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella, whose De re rustica appears to have served as a model for Palladius, to such an extent that the Opus agriculturae has been described as an " abridgement " of Columella.

Cato and again
At the siege of Tarentum, 209 BC, Cato was again at the side of Fabius.
Cato made use of the filibuster again in 59 B. C. E.
After the widowed Marcia inherited considerable wealth, Cato married her again, in a ceremony lacking many of the formalities.
Between Hortensius ' death in 50 BC and Cato's leaving Italy with Pompey in 49 BC, Cato took Marcia and her children into his household again.
In June 1780, Espejo wrote Marco Porcio Catón ( Marcus Porcius Cato ), Once again, Espejo used a pseudonym, “ Moisés Blancardo .” In this work, a parodied censor's response to the Nuevo Luciano, he scorned the notions and ideas of its critics.

Cato and at
* The Cato Institute named its lower level auditorium after Hayek, who had been a Distinguished Senior Fellow at Cato during his later years.
A 1990 article for the Cato Institute identifies Singer as the director of the science and environmental policy project at the Washington Institute for Values in Public Policy, on leave from the University of Virginia.
According to Oswald Spengler, the characteristic mistake of the Gracchan age was to believe in the possibility of the reversibility of history – a form of idealism which according to Spengler was at that time shared by both sides of political spectrum – Cato had sought to turn back the clock to the time of Cincinnatus, and restore virtue by returning to austerity.
In his 1992 book The Way Things Ought to Be, Limbaugh credited his friend Tom Hazlett, an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute, with coining the term.
Domestic tensions ran high at the start of the decade, with the Peterloo Massacre ( 1819 ), the Cato Street Conspiracy ( 1820 ), and the Radical War ( 1820 ) in Scotland.
O ' Rourke is the H. L. Mencken Research Fellow at the Cato Institute and is a regular correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, The American Spectator, and The Weekly Standard, and frequent panelist on National Public Radio's game show Wait Wait ... Don't Tell Me !.
* Articles at the Cato Institute
* Driving Like Crazy book talk at the Cato Institute, June 2009
Other villas in the hinterland of Rome are interpreted in light of the agrarian treatises written by the elder Cato, Columella and Varro, both of whom sought to define the suitable lifestyle of conservative Romans, at least in idealistic terms.
In the accident, a driver named Robert Cato ran a red light at the corner of California Street and Franklin and crashed into her Luxor taxicab.
He is a Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Cato Institute and professor at George Mason University.
* The Romans under Manius Acilius Glabrio and Cato the Elder cut the Seleucid king Antiochus III off from his reinforcements in Thrace and outflank his position at the pass of Thermopylae in the Battle of Thermopylae.
Diomedes Cato, a native-born Italian who lived in Kraków from about the age of five, became one of the most famous lutenists at the court of Sigismund III, and not only imported some of the musical styles from southern Europe, but blended them with native folk music.
From this time on, Cato keeps repeating the cry " Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam " (" Moreover, I advise that Carthage must be destroyed ") at the end of all his speeches, no matter what subject they concern.
Cato the Elder, their famous descendant, at the beginning of his career in Rome, was regarded as a novus homo ( new man ), and the feeling of his unsatisfactory position, working along with the belief of his inherent superiority, contributed to aggravate and drive his ambition.
His ancestors for three generations had been named Marcus Porcius, and it is said by Plutarch that at first he was known by the additional cognomen Priscus, but was afterwards called Cato — a word indicating that practical wisdom which is the result of natural sagacity, combined with experience of civil and political affairs.
According to the coherent chronology of Cicero, Cato was born in 234 BC, in the year before the first Consulship of Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus, and died at the age of 85, in the consulship of Lucius Marcius Censorinus and Manius Manilius.
When Cato was a very young man, the death of his father put him in possession of a small hereditary property in the Sabine territory, at a distance from his native town.
It is reported by Plutarch, that the lenient discipline of the troops under Scipio's command, and the exaggerated expense incurred by the general, provoked the protest of Cato ; that Scipio immediately afterwards replied angrily, saying he would give an account of victories, not of money ; that Cato left his place of duty after the dispute with Scipio about his alleged extravagance, and returning to Rome, condemned the uneconomical activities of his general to the senate ; and that, at the joint request of Cato and Fabius, a commission of tribunes was sent to Sicily to examine the behavior of Scipio, who was found not guilty upon the view of his extensive and careful arrangements for the transport of the troops.
The author of the abridged life of Cato which is commonly considered as the work of Cornelius Nepos, asserts that Cato, after his return from Africa, put in at Sardinia, and brought the poet Quintus Ennius in his own ship from the island to Italy ; but Sardinia was rather out of the line of the trip to Rome, and it is more likely that the first contact of Ennius and Cato happened at a later date, when the latter was Praetor in Sardinia.

Cato and end
He retained his position with Cato until the end of 2005.
His death, though painful and protracted, contained allusions to the deaths of Socrates and Cato, and was evidently presented by his biographer Arulenus Rusticus, and probably constructed by himself, as a model of a dignified, calm and humane end.
Porcia, the daughter of Cato the Younger and wife of Brutus the assassin, came to a less fortunate but ( in the eyes of her time ) heroic end: she killed herself as the Republic collapsed, just as her father did.
At the end of his military commission in Macedon, Cato went on a private journey through the Roman provinces of the Middle East.
At the end of the year, Cato stepped down from his quaestorship amid popular acclaim, and he never ceased to keep an eye on the treasury, always looking for irregularities.
Together with Metellus Scipio, Cato the Younger, his brother Gnaeus and other senators, they prepared to oppose Caesar and his army to the end.
Together with Metellus Scipio, Cato the Younger and other senators, they prepared to oppose Caesar and his army to the end.
After living in Algarve for a while, Monica tries to run away to Nepal, but Joe, Yigal and Cato end up getting into a fight with the people with whom she was going to run away.
He also mentions a longer Life of Cato at the end of the extant Life of Cato, written at the request of Titus Pomponius Atticus.
Tonson published Addison's tragedy, Cato, in April 1713 ; and, according to a concocted letter of Pope's, the true reason why Steele brought the Guardian to an end in October was a quarrel with Tonson, its publisher ; " he stood engaged to his bookseller in articles of penalty for all the
From the 1990s until the end of 2005, he was an adjunct scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, which hosted the JunkScience. com site.
At the end of the series, Moses reveals a plan to set up a school for children of all races, but only to Dr. Franklin and the Marquis de Lafayette, and his brother Cato goes to Canada with Mrs. Radcliffe, a British loyalist and friend of Sarah and her mother.

Cato and series
In the series, his personality and motives are accurate but Brutus ' relationship to Cato is not mentioned, and his three sisters and wife Porcia are omitted from the series completely.
They also had a monograph series called " Cato Papers " that ran 16 volumes from 1979 to 1980.
For example, John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon were inspired by the play to write a series of letters, Cato's Letters on individual rights, using the name " Cato ".
It is also the Legion in which Optio Quintus Licinius Cato and Centurion Lucius Cornelius Macro serve in during the first five books of the Eagle series by Simon Scarrow.
Novels: Cato is a major character in several novels of Colleen McCullough's Masters of Rome series.
Television: In the television series Rome, Cato, played by actor Karl Johnson, is a significant character, although he is shown as quite older than his actual age ( mid-forties ) at the time.
Cato was later appropriated as a pseudonym in a series of letters to the New York Journal in 1787 and 1788 opposing James Madison's views and urging against ratification of the U. S. Constitution.
Other major historical figures who appear and play prominent parts in the series include Mithridates VI of Pontus, Marcus Aemilius Scaurus, Publius Rutilius Rufus, Quintus Sertorius, Marcus Livius Drusus, Jugurtha of Numidia, Spartacus, Marcus Licinius Crassus, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, Marcus Porcius Cato, Publius Clodius, Titus Annius Milo, Vercingetorix, Marcus Junius Brutus, Gaius Cassius Longinus, Marcus Antonius, Cleopatra VII of Egypt, Caesarion and Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.
The film also introduces Herbert Lom as his boss, Commissioner Dreyfus, and Burt Kwouk as his long-suffering servant, Cato, who would both become series regulars.
* Burt Kwouk as Kato ( spelled " Cato " in subsequent films of the series )
As a member of the Jindyworobak Movement, Cato edited the 1950 Jindyworobak Anthology, one of a series of anthologies produced to promote indigenous Australian ideas and customs, particularly in poetry.
Returning series regulars include Herbert Lom as Chief Inspector Dreyfus, Graham Stark as Hercule LaJoy ( from the 1964 Pink Panther film A Shot in the Dark ) and Burt Kwouk as Clouseau's faithful manservant Cato.
To replace the book club's additional choices and augment the LBC selections, Gollancz launched the " Victory Books " series, a series of shorter monographs available to the general public, including two of the biggest sellers of the War: Guilty Men by Cato ( Michael Foot ) and Your M. P.
Cato made a series of speeches to the senate all of which ended with " Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam " ( Moreover, I advise that Carthage should be destroyed ).
As well as appearing in Christmas in the Park many times, Cato currently runs a company called Treehut Productions, producing a series of shows dedicated to sharing " Blue Light " safety messages.

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