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Page "Chicago Tribune" ¶ 10
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Tribunes and front
* Edgar Degas — 43 paintings including The Parade, also known as Race Horses in front of the Tribunes, The Bellelli Family, The Tub, Portrait of Édouard Manet, Portraits, At the Stock Exchange, L ’ Absinthe
The International Herald Tribunes Mike Zwerin noted the band's style of having " four lead singers, four potential front men "— Imaginates strength was in their collective sound, argued Zwerin.
The front page of the International Herald Tribunes 20 May 1992 issue was blacked out with felt tip pen, as was an editorial of the Bangkok Post of the same date, though other articles relating to the demonstrations remained untouched.

Tribunes and page
The strip originated on the Chicago Tribunes black-and-white Sunday page, The Rectangle, where staff artists contributed one-shot panels, continuing plots or themes.
The Chicago Tribunes Courtney Crowder lists Molly Weasley as her favourite literary mother, describing her as the " original Mama Grizzly ", citing her many touching moments with Harry as well as the final book in the series, where " her feelings jumped off the page " as testament to her strong personality.
Kass's column appears on page 2 of the Tribunes news section.

Tribunes and America
In his later work, Our Nine Tribunes: The Supreme Court in Modern America, however, Lusky includes facsimiles of the original drafts of the footnote, the first of which is in his own hand.

Tribunes and had
By this, Plutarch probably means that as Plebeian Tribune, Metilius had the Plebeian Council, a popular assembly which only Tribunes could preside over, grant Minucius quasi-dictatorial powers.
* Tribuni angusticlavii, Narrow Band Tribunes: Each legion had five more junior tribunes.
Tribunes had the power to convene the Plebeian Council and to act as its president, which also gave them the right to propose legislation before it.
Tribunes, the only true representatives of the people, had the authority to enforce the right of provoco ad populum, which was a theoretical guarantee of due process, and a precursor to the common law concept of habeas corpus.
This story was circulating in Chicago even before the flames had died out, and it was noted in the Chicago Tribunes first post-fire issue.
In 1986, the Tribune announced that celebrated film critic Gene Siskel, the Tribunes best-known writer, was no longer the paper's film critic, and that his position with the paper had shifted from being that of a full-time film critic to that of a free-lance contract writer who was to write about the film industry for the Sunday paper and also provide capsule film reviews for the paper's entertainment sections.
Both were replaced by Jane Hirt, who previously had been the editor of the Tribunes RedEye tabloid.
When ordinary citizens are confronted with tyranny, he wrote, ordinary citizens have to suffer it ( whereas in the Mandate of Heaven and in the theology of the Jesuits Bellarmine and Mariana, they have the right to rebellion and tyrannicide ), but magistrates have the duty to " curb the tyranny of kings ," as had the Tribunes in ancient Rome, the Ephori in Sparta, and the Demarchs in ancient Athens -- and indeed the Censorate of China.
These individuals, the so-called Consular Tribunes (" Military Tribunes with Consular powers " or tribuni militares consulari potestate ) were elected by the Century Assembly ( the assembly of soldiers ), and the senate had the power to veto any such election.
These Tribunes had the power to veto the laws of the Senate.

Tribunes and was
This was followed by The Pilgrims of the Rhine ( 1834 ), The Last Days of Pompeii ( 1834 ), Rienzi, Last of the Roman Tribunes ( 1835 ), and Harold, the Last of the Saxons ( 1848 ).
One of the Plebeian Tribunes ( chief representatives of the people ) for the year, Metilius, was a partisan of Minucius, and as such he sought to use his power to help Minucius.
The Plebeian Tribunes were the only magistrates independent of the Dictator, and so with his protection, Minucius was relatively safe.
Tribunes of the Plebs were meant to be untouchable and their veto inalienable according to the Roman mos maiorum ( although there was a grey line as to what extent this existed in the declaration of and during martial law ).
Tribunes were required to be plebeians, and until 421 BC this was the only office open to them.
Several years later, researchers discovered that the editorial in question was missing, apparently having been removed from the Tribunes archives, as well as the ' Oklahoma Edition ' of the Tribune in the state archives.
The Tribunes chief adversary through this period was the Chicago Times, which supported the Democrats.
In December 1993, the Tribunes longtime Washington, D. C. bureau chief, Nicholas Horrock, was removed from his post after he chose not to attend a meeting that editor Howard Tyner requested of him in Chicago.
In 1994, reporter Brenda You was fired by the Tribune after free-lancing for supermarket tabloid newspapers and lending them photographs from the Tribunes photo library.
Consequently, the Tribunes Marcus Fundanius and Lucius Valerius thought it was time to propose the abolition of the Oppian law ; but they were opposed by their colleagues, Tribunes Marcus Junius Brutus and Titus Junius Brutus.
Ceres was patron and protector of plebeian laws, rights and Tribunes.
The secret to Lord's success, according to the New York Herald Tribunes critic Stanley Walker, was that he used " a kind of literary pointillism, the arrangement of contrasting bits of fact and emotion in such a fashion that a vividly real impression of an event is conveyed to the reader.
The first wind of adversity was blown by the Tampa Tribunes exposé of gambling in Fort Walton.
The latter, however, was essentially divided into the aristocratic Senate, whose will was executed by the consuls and praetors, and the comitia centuriāta, " committee of the centuries ", whose will came to be safeguarded by the Tribunes.
He even briefly accepted a position as the New York Daily Tribunes correspondent in Washington, D. C. By April 1850, however, his desire to return to Canada was too great, and he moved back to Toronto in May 1850.
During the 24 Hours of Le Mans, in the third hour of racing, while on the Tribunes Straight, he clipped the Austin-Healey of Lance Macklin that was forced to make an evasive move after Mike Hawthorn dived into the pits.
He was imprisoned by the Tribunes for attempting to enforce a troop levy too harshly.

Tribunes and military
Tribunes could also be appointed by the consuls or by military commanders in the field as necessary.
The Plebeians named these new officials Plebeian Tribunes ( tribuni plebis ), a name they probably took from the military officers (" Military Tribunes " or tribuni militum ) who led them during their secession.
During the 440's, the office was quite often replaced with the establishment of the Consular Tribunes, who were elected whenever the military needs of the state were significant enough to warrant the election of more than the two usual consuls.
The tribuni militum consulari potestate (" military tribunes with consular authority "), in English commonly also Consular Tribunes, were tribunes elected with consular power during the so-called " Conflict of the Orders " in the Roman Republic, starting in 444 BC and then continuously from 408 BC to 394 BC and again from 391 BC to 367 BC.

Tribunes and by
Tribune also launched daily newspapers targeting urban commuters, including the Chicago Tribunes RedEye edition in 2002, followed by an investment in AM New York one year later.
However, the Patricio-Plebeian aristocracy in the senate still retained other means by which to control the Plebeian Council, in particular the closeness between the Plebeian Tribunes and the senators.
Neither Tribunes nor Aediles were technically magistrates, since they were both elected solely by the Plebeians, rather than by both the Plebeians and the Patricians.
The Plebeians, by now exhausted and bitter, demanded real concessions, so the Tribunes C. Licinius Stolo and L. Sextius passed a law in 367 BC ( the " Licinio-Sextian law "), which dealt with the economic plight of the Plebeians.
Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen ( WWV 49 ) ( Rienzi, the Last of the Tribunes ) is an early opera by Richard Wagner in five acts, with the libretto written by the composer after Bulwer-Lytton's novel of the same name ( 1835 ).
It was the enthusiasm of Colts fans in particular that led to the stadium being dubbed " The World's Largest Outdoor Insane Asylum " by Cooper Rollow, the Chicago Tribunes head NFL writer at the time.
Tribunes were elected by open ballot and, thus, this limited measure of democracy was corrupted by vote buying.
The trademark name is now owned by the Tribunes old rival, the Winnipeg Free Press.

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