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Page "Chicago Tribune" ¶ 24
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Tribune and scored
King Features Syndicate launched the strip on January 10, 1927, not long after it was apparent that the Chicago Tribune Syndicate had scored a huge hit with Little Orphan Annie.

Tribune and coup
* In 1940, a boardroom coup installed Raymond Postgate as the editor of British magazine Tribune.

Tribune and 1984
In 1984 Tribune Media Services ( TMS ) and the Associated Press operated a cable television channel called " AP News Plus " that provided NAPLPS-based news screens to cable television subscribers in many U. S. cities.
* John W. Gallivan: publisher of The Salt Lake Tribune from 1960 to 1984
* Chicago Tribune ( 1852 – 1984 )
In January 1984, noted Sun-Times business reporter James Warren quit to join the Tribune.
Beginning in October 1984, Simon's columns from Baltimore began appearing in the rival Chicago Tribune.
* Chicago Tribune, August 13, 1984 ;
The station was bought by Chicago-based Tribune Broadcasting in 1984.
CBN changed the station's call letters to WANX-TV in 1977, and sold the outlet in 1984 to the Tribune Company, who renamed the station WGNX.
" The Boston Herald gave a positive review and the Chicago Tribune called it " The most shockingly realistic science fiction book since Orwell's ' 1984 '...."
Educated at Oxford University ( Balliol ) and the London College of Printing, Anderson was deputy editor of European Nuclear Disarmament Journal ( 1984 – 87 ), reviews editor of Tribune ( 1986 – 91 ), editor of Tribune ( 1991 – 93 ), deputy editor of the New Statesman ( 1993 – 96 ), co-author with Nyta Mann of Safety First: The Making of New Labour ( 1997 ) and editor of Orwell in Tribune: ' As I Please ' and Other Writings ( 2006 ).
Educated at University College London, Williamson worked as a reporter on Tribune ( 1982 – 84 ) and was then briefly its literary editor ( 1984 ) before becoming editor ( 1984 – 87 ) as successor to Chris Mullin.
His column, which began in 1984, is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.
A lifetime leftist, he served from 1971 to 1984 as the Literary Editor of the socialist weekly Tribune ( a position once held by George Orwell ), where he regularly reviewed science fiction despite the continued refusal of the literary world to take it seriously.
* Chicago Tribune, January 4, 1984.
Unhappy with his prospects at the Tribune, in 1984 he joined the campaign of U. S. Senator Paul Simon as communications director ; within weeks he was promoted to co-campaign manager.
I'd never even read ' Peter Pan ,'" Jacobson told the Chicago Tribune in a profile in 1984.

Tribune and when
In Rome, even when led by a bold Tribune the people lacked anywhere near the influence they enjoyed at the height of the Athenian polis.
In February 1906, when a quarter of Chicago's population was of German descent, James Keeley, editor of The Chicago Tribune traveled to Germany to procure the services of the most popular humor artists.
Foot became a journalist, working briefly on the New Statesman, before joining the left-wing weekly Tribune when it was set up in early 1937 to support the Unity Campaign, an attempt to secure an anti-fascist United Front between Labour and the parties to its left.
However, it gained national recognition at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair when the New York Tribune namelessly attributed the hamburger as, " the innovation of a food vendor on the pike.
One of the great scoops in Tribune history came when it obtained the text of the Treaty of Versailles in June 1919.
The Tribune won its first post-McCormick Pulitzer in 1961, when Carey Orr won the award for editorial cartooning.
At that point, Kirkpatrick wrote, Tribune editors decided to accept the resignation that Soll offered when the investigation began.
Jack Fuller served as the Tribune < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s editor from 1989 until 1993, when he became the president and chief executive officer of the Chicago Tribune.
Howard Tyner served as the Tribune < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s editor from 1993 until 2001, when he was promoted to vice president / editorial for Tribune Publishing.
The Tribune on weekdays was $ 0. 75 until January 18, 2010, when it was raised to $ 1.
The paper continued as an afternoon broadsheet until 1969 when the Tribune converted the paper to the tabloid-format Chicago Today.
Particularly important and unprecedented political events took place in 133 BC when, in the midst of riots in and around the Forum, the Tribune Tiberius Gracchus was lynched there by a group of Senators.
In 1995 the city received more unwanted attention when the Star Tribune carried a headline that " Tiny Hilltop is Crime Capital " due to its 131 serious crimes in 1994, which worked out to one for every six residents.
He went into a depressive state and was institutionalized ; when he escaped, The New York Times ran a cover story declaring him missing, and after he was found in New Jersey, a picture of him behind bars was printed in the New York Herald Tribune.
He went into a depressive state and was placed in institution ; when he escaped, The New York Times ran a cover story declaring him missing, and after being found in New Jersey, a picture of him behind bars was printed in the Herald Tribune.
Although after 1860 he increasingly lost control of the Tribune ’ s operations, and wrote fewer editorials, in 1864 he expressed defeatism regarding Lincoln ’ s chances of reelection, an attitude that was echoed across the country when his editorials were reprinted.
A few years later, O ' Hare was honored when Colonel Robert R. McCormick, publisher of the Chicago Tribune, suggested a name change of Chicago's Orchard Depot Airport as tribute to Butch O ' Hare.
Subsequently, when an Albuquerque Tribune online survey helped the team decide its new name, " Isotopes " received 67 percent of the 120, 000 votes.
In 1865, when Horace White became managing editor of the Chicago Tribune, Villard became its Washington correspondent.
This shift was made all but official when Mike Royko defected to the Tribune.
Mackenzie stayed in Albany, editing the Albany Patriot until spring 1847 when he returned to New York City to work for the Tribune and to edit almanacs for Horace Greeley.
To make ends meet he translated French murder mysteries, served as the art editor for the European edition of the New York Herald Tribune and was an art critic for Art International ( 1960 – 65 ) and a Paris correspondent for Art News ( 1963 – 66 ), when Thomas Hess took over as editor.

Tribune and hired
In March 1978, the Tribune announced that it hired columnist Bob Greene away from the Chicago Sun-Times.
Also in December 1993, the Tribune hired Margaret Holt from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel as its assistant managing editor for sports, making her the first female to head a sports department at any of the nation's 10 largest newspapers.
He ultimately returned to the Boston Globe, where he had been working immediately before the Tribune had hired him.
On June 25, 2008, the Tribune company announced they had hired a real estate company to entertain bids of the sale of both the Tribune Tower in Chicago, and the Times Building in Los Angeles.
Captain Joseph Patterson, editor for the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate, had admired Caniff ’ s work on the children's adventure strip Dickie Dare and hired him to create the new adventure strip, providing Caniff with the title and locale.
When Willard died suddenly on January 11, 1958, the Tribune Syndicate hired Johnson, who also had a natural gift for funny, slangy dialogue, to helm the strip as Willard's logical successor.
Later that year, the Sun-Times hired syndicated TV columnist Gary Deeb away from the Chicago Tribune.
In December 1986, the Sun-Times hired high-profile gossip columnist Michael Sneed away from the rival Chicago Tribune, where she had been co-authoring the Tribune's own " Inc ." gossip column with Kathy O ' Malley.
In 1944, John Cowles, Sr. hired William P. Steven, a Wisconsin native and former editor of the Tulsa Tribune, as managing editor of the two papers.
Shortly afterward, Greene was hired by Chicago Tribune and began making occasional guest appearances on local television, eventually landing a commentary slot on the ABC news program Nightline.
The shop did big business with the forerunner of the Chicago Tribune, and in 1859 Rand and McNally were hired to run the Tribune's entire printing operation.
In the late 1940s, after he left his teaching position at Wiley, the Washington Tribune hired Tolson to write a weekly column, which he called Cabbage and Caviar.
Disguised as the armored Tribune, Creed hired assassins to kill his mother and had his father implanted with a bomb.
In 1934, Caniff was hired by the New York Daily News to produce a new strip for the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate.
The Tribune has hired two former reporters of the City Weekly, while City Weekly has hired several former Tribune reporters over the same time span, with moves in both directions affirming the legitimacy of news reporting in City Weekly.
After Brook Farm's failure, Ripley was hired by Horace Greeley at the New York Tribune.
Sayles told the Chicago Tribune that he hired them not because they were rising stars, but because of their ball-playing talent.
After a highly publicized dispute with the Tribunes executive editor, Ann Marie Lipinski, over limiting all Tribune columns to just 650 or so words, Bayless decided to leave Chicago and was immediately hired by Knight Ridder Corporation to write for its flagship newspaper, the San Jose Mercury News.
Director Henry King noticed Hatton when he was working as a reporter with The Tampa Tribune covering the filming of Hell Harbor ( 1930 ) and hired him for a small role.
In December 1987, the Tribune Co. hired Frey to replace his old boss, general manager Dallas Green, who had resigned two months earlier.

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