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Page "Cursus honorum" ¶ 23
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Tribune and was
`` Mr. Miller was in the shop '', the Herald Tribune story related, `` but was reluctant to have anybody's picture taken inside, because his business was too ' confidential ' for pictures.
Even after the incident between Bang-Jensen and Shann in the Delegates' Lounge and this was not the way the Chicago Tribune presented it ''.
The other was by Chesly Manley in the Chicago Daily Tribune.
Newspaper advertising was mainly concentrated in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal ( Eastern and Midwestern editions ) which averaged two prominent ads per month, and to a lesser degree the New York Herald Tribune and, for the west coast, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal ( Pacific Coast edition ).
This illusion was described in a far-sighted editorial in The New York Herald Tribune, on March 5, 1947, in connection with the submission of the satellite peace treaties to the Senate.
Failing to heed the lesson so clearly contained in the satellite treaties, President Truman re-declared the Cold War on March 12, 1947, in the Truman Doctrine, exactly one week after the Herald Tribune editorial was written, and a year after the Cold War had been announced by Churchill at Fulton, Missouri, in Truman's presence.
Because the consul was the highest executive office within the Republic, they had the power to veto any action or proposal by any other magistrate, save that of the Tribune of the Plebs.
Their abilities to govern were only limited by the decrees of the Senate or the people's assemblies, and the Tribune of the Plebs was unable to veto their acts as long as the governor remained at least a mile outside of Rome.
The office of Tribune of the Plebs was an important step in the political career of plebeians.
This office, like the Tribune, did not own imperium, was not escorted by lictors, and could not wear the toga praetexta.
This was the only decision that could not be vetoed by the Tribune of the Plebs.
When introducing a law, he sat on a bench between the consuls in his position as Holder of the Power of Tribune ( The Emperor could not officially serve as a Tribune of the Plebes as he was a Patrician, but it was a power taken by previous rulers ).
The Tribune company, in financial distress, was acquired by real-estate mogul Sam Zell in December 2007.
At the end, the team was technically owned by the Tribune company, which itself had been controlled by Zell since December 2007.
What would become the influential Poetry Magazine was founded in 1912 by Harriet Monroe, who was working as an art critic for the Chicago Tribune.
The day Edgar Allan Poe was buried, a long obituary appeared in the New York Tribune signed " Ludwig ".
In November 1943, Orwell was appointed literary editor at Tribune, where his assistant was his old friend Jon Kimche.

Tribune and office
This included winning an unconstitutional re-election to the one year office of Tribune.
Brutus happened to be Tribune of the Celeres, a minor office of some religious duties, but one which as a magistracy gave him the theoretical power to summon the curiae, an organization of patrician families used mainly to ratify the decrees of the king.
" The signature act of Richard Daley's 22 years in office was the midnight bulldozing of Meigs Field ," according to Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn.
According to Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman, " Daley lasted 22 years in office partly because he resolved to ingratiate himself with black Chicagoans.
The Tribune call for Nixon to resign made news, reflecting not only the change in the type of conservatism practiced by the paper, but as a watershed event in terms of Nixon's hopes for survival in office.
Although the Tribune criticized the Bush administration's record on civil liberties, the environment, and many aspects of its foreign policy, it continued to support his presidency while taking Democrats, such as Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich and Cook County Board President Todd Stroger, to task and calling for their removal from office.
In 1922 the Chicago Tribune hosted an international design competition for its new headquarters, and offered $ 100, 000 in prize money with a $ 50, 000 1st prize for " the most beautiful and distinctive office building in the world ".
According to a 1957 article in the Tulsa Tribune, an agent for the townsite company was told by the railroad home office to name a town for the director.
In the printing office of the New York Tribune the machine was immediately used on the daily paper and a large book.
The Tribune was the only magistrate to continue his independence of office during a dictatorship while the other magistrates served the dictator as officers.
The local daily English-language newspapers are the San Gabriel Valley edition of The Los Angeles Times, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune and the Pasadena Star-News, both printed at the same office in West Covina.
At the time Casca held the office of Tribune of the People.
The result of this first secession was the creation of the office of Plebeian Tribune, and with it the first acquisition of real power by the Plebeians.
Born in Crawfordsville, Indiana, Bill Holman ( 1903 – 1987 ) moved to Chicago, where he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts while working as an office boy in the Chicago Tribune art department.
Upon leaving the speaker's office in 2008, the San Diego Union Tribune quoted Jamie Regalado, director of the Pat Brown Institute at California State University about Núñez ' tenure as speaker.
At the age of twelve, Frohman started to work at night in the office of the New York Tribune, attending school by day.
* " Samsung chairman's office raided as part of inquiry ", International Herald Tribune, January 14, 2008.
Clements left the Tribune in 1982 and became office manager for Michael Foot, the leader of the Labour Party.
In a 1966 New York Herald Tribune feature by his former office manager-turned-journalist, Marilyn Mercer claimed, " Ebony never drew criticism from Negro groups ( in fact, Eisner was commended by some for using him ), perhaps because, although his speech pattern was early Minstrel Show, he himself derived from another literary tradition: he was a combination of Tom Sawyer and Penrod, with a touch of Horatio Alger hero, and color didn't really come into it ".
Although the Chicago Tribune gave permission for its name and image to be used, the actual newspaper office where Theresa works, according to the film's official Web site, was built inside a Los Angeles warehouse.
According to the histories of Livy and Dionysius of Halicarnassus, the magistracy of the tribuni militum consulari potestate was created during the Conflict of the Orders, along with the magistracy of the censor, in order to give the Plebeian order access to higher levels of government without having to reform the office of consul ; plebeians could be elected to the office of Consular Tribune.

Tribune and first
" The Chicago Daily Tribune called it “ One of the most spectacular crimes of the 20th century, and what is believed to be the first airplane kidnap murder on record .” Because it occurred somewhere over three Missouri counties, and involved interstate transport of a stolen airplane, it raised questions in legal circles about where, by whom, and even whether he could be prosecuted.
* 1874 – The Oakland Daily Tribune publishes its first edition.
Orwell may have been the first to use the term cold war, in his essay, " You and the Atom Bomb ", published in Tribune, 19 October 1945.
* 1886 – The New York Tribune becomes the first newspaper to use a linotype machine, eliminating typesetting by hand.
" The first known use of the phrase punk rock appeared in the Chicago Tribune on March 22, 1970, attributed to Ed Sanders, cofounder of New York's anarcho-prankster band The Fugs.
He announced his invention of the first phonograph, a device for recording and replaying sound, on November 21, 1877 ( early reports appear in Scientific American and several newspapers in the beginning of November, and an even earlier announcement of Edison working on a ' talking-machine ' can be found in the Chicago Daily Tribune on May 9 ), and he demonstrated the device for the first time on November 29 ( it was patented on February 19, 1878 as US Patent 200, 521 ).
In late 1850, Anthony read a detailed account in the New York Tribune of the first National Women's Rights Convention in Worcester, Massachusetts.
The Oxford English Dictionary refers to the first mention of the word " White Russian " in the sense of a cocktail as appearing in California's Oakland Tribune on 21 November 1965.
* February 21 – The Oakland Daily Tribune publishes its first newspaper.
The first newspaper in present-day Idaho, the Lewiston Teller began publication in the city of Lewiston, Washington Territory in 1862, and was joined by the present ( and only ) newspaper, the Lewiston Morning Tribune in September 1892.
" The remark placed first in a 2010 online pool of Chicago Tribune readers.
His letters from the trip were first published in the Chicago Tribune and later compiled into the book ( 1891 ): A Summer's Outing and The Old Man's Story.
" Now often recast as " Getting there firstest with the mostest ," this misquote first appeared in print in a New York Tribune article written to provide colorful comments in reaction to European interest in Civil War generals.
" Hunting Wild Dogs " and " The Last of the Mohicans " were the first of fourteen unsigned Sullivan County sketches and tales that would appear in the Tribune between February and July 1892.
Jackson progressed through the minors quickly, reporting for his first training camp with the Single-A Lewis-Clark Broncs, Lewiston, Idaho in June, 1966, having signed for $ 85, 000 ( source: " 40 Years Ago Today " in the " Lewiston Morning Tribune " June 15, 2006 ,) and playing one season for the A's Single-A teams, the Broncs and Modesto, California and one more season for their Double-A affiliate in Birmingham, Alabama.
" Jay Bobbin of the Chicago Tribune remarked, " Cassie isn't the first artist to be measured against Janet Jackson, and odds are she won't be the last.
The Tribune was founded by James Kelly, John E. Wheeler and Joseph K. C. Forrest, publishing its first edition on June 10, 1847.
The lead editorial in the first issue the Chicago Tribune published after the Great Chicago Fire
The Tribune won its first post-McCormick Pulitzer in 1961, when Carey Orr won the award for editorial cartooning.
Not only was the Tribune the first newspaper to publish the transcripts, but it beat the Government Printing Office's own published version, and made headlines doing so.
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.
The paper decided to fire Thomas — and suspend his photographer on the Emerge story, Pulitzer Prize-winning Tribune photographer Ovie Carter for a month — because Thomas did not tell the Tribune about his outside work and also because the Emerge story wound up appearing in print first.

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