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The encouraging number of birds we saw Saturday.In fact, had Ray Christensen been doing our play-by-play, his tone would have been cheerful, if not ecstatic.The day was, in fact, in the bag, with no worries.Nick Sovell, left, of Elko, Minn., and his son, Nicholas Sovell, also of Elko, with their dogs and a rooster taken Saturday, when the Minnesota pheasant season opened. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)A sign at Buck Manor, a pheasant hunting headquarters in the tiny hamlet of Arco, Minn., population 100. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)Hunting with Dennis Anderson in extreme western Minnesota Saturday were, back row, standing, from left, Ken Meyer, Tim Pengra, Bob O’Neel, Gary DeAustin and Bob DeAustin. Front row, kneeling, are Deano Kaye, Nick Sovell, Denny Lien, Nicholas Sovell, Chuck Meek, and Cindy DeAustin. Not shown is Kris DeAustin. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)about the writerDennis AndersonColumnistOutdoors columnist Dennis Anderson joined the Star Tribune in 1993 after serving in the same position at the St. Paul Pioneer Press for 13 years. His column topics vary widely, and include canoeing, fishing, hunting, adventure travel and conservation of the environment.See MoreFree livestream: Nolan Groves and Orono face William Kirsch and Metro West rival Waconia in the Star Tribune Game of the Week.This article attempts to give us an idea of loading performance when there are a lot of Datawrapper embeds.
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Granddaughter Corrie Lubenow, join the congregation in song on Thursday, March 5, 2015, during a memorial service for martyrs of the civil rights movement at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Selma, Alabama. John Reeb's health prevented him from joining his family on their six-hour round trip from Atlanta to Selma due to health reasons. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb passes the former Walker's Cafe, where his father, the Rev. James Reeb, dined with fellow Unitarian ministers Orloff Miller and Clark Olsen before the three were attacked on March 9, 1965, in Selma, Alabama. The Rev. Reeb died two days after the attack in a Birmingham hospital, one week after John's 13th birthday. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March With his wife Norine at his side, John Reeb comforts his mother, Marie, at the site of the fatal attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March After visiting the site of the deadly attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, John Reeb and his daughter, Leah, walk through downtown Selma, Alabama, on Saturday, March 7, 2015. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb, center, and his family join the Rev. Clark Olsen and the Rev. Orloff Miller at the site of the attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, and the two Unitarian ministers on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. "In a way, I guess I was having a different picture of how the event would unfold," John said. "To tell you the truth, I wish I would've been alone for a little bit. Just to reflect. There was just too much going on." (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Sitting at the site of the Rev. James Reeb's memorial, Rev. Orloff Miller points out an old photograph of Walker's Cafe, where he dined with Reeb and Rev. Clark Olsen before being attacked, on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Donning bow ties in honor of the late Rev. James Reeb, John Reeb, right, marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge beside his mother Marie Reeb and daughter Corrie Lubenow on March 8 in Selma, Alabama. The family traveled to Selma for the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery marches, where the Rev. James Reeb was killed for his support of the civil rights movement before he was able to complete the march. Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune Fifty-Year March Dick Howlett lays a bouquet of flowers at a memorial for the Rev. James Reeb on Saturday, March 7, 2015, outside the Old Depot Museum in Selma, Alabama. Howlett remembersGreensburg Tribune-Review. The Greensburg Tribune-Review
3 of the 6 geopolitical zones in Nigeria. Click on this link to access the National Mirror newspaper online8. The Guardian NewspaperGuardian Newspaper is one of the major Nigerian dailies. Going with the slogan: Conscience, nurtured by truth, Guardian Nigeria newspaper reports up to date information in many Nigerian news categories including business and politics, Saturday and Sunday magazines.The Nigeria Guardian Newspaper is trusted when it comes to conservative news reporting. The news medium launched an online portal to reach a wider audience with a frequent update of digital news in newsworthy events across the country. It has been said that the Guardian is the most “respected” Nigerian Newspaper and is read by mostly the elites.7. Nigeria Tribune NewspaperThe Nigerian Tribune newspaper was established in 1949 and is the oldest surviving private newspaper in Nigeria. it was started by Chief Obafemi Awolowo with the interest of catering for the interest of the common people. Nigerian Tribune is one of the most credible mouth-piece of the teeming Nigerian masses. The Nigerian Tribune aims to remain the best newspaper with unassailable quality of value-added service in news gathering and information dissemination to every Nigerian.6. This Day Live NewspaperTHISDAY newspaper as it is popularly called was established in 1995. On hitting the newsstand on the 22nd January of that year, It carved out its market share especially in business and political reporting. This is acknowledged by the fact that within the first years of its publication, THISDAY won the Newspaper of the Year Award and for three consecutive years. THISDAY became a pacesetter in 1997 when it became the first Nigerian newspaper to introduce full-color paper printing. THISDAY newspaper still remains one of the preferred newspaper among the business, political and diplomatic elite in Nigeria with one of the widest coverage in Nigeria.5.. GREENSBURGH, Pa. (PIX11)Before xylazine, the horse tranquilizer, exploded into the national consciousnessbecause of horrifying street scenes in Philadelphiapolice in west VALLEY NEWS DISPATCH GREENSBURGH TRIBUNE REVIEW. Caregiver READ NOW. North Pittsburgh College Fair 2025 READ NOW. WCCC 2025 READ NOW. Outstanding Young Citizen READ NOW. Summer Fun READ NOW. Century21 - American Heritage READ NOW. Butler Farm Show 2025 READ NOW. Quest for Best 2025 READ NOW. Spring Education 2025Nigerian Tribune News Highlights - Tribune Online
Nearly over, the Jews from the province of Asia, having seen Paul in the Temple, set about rousing the fury of all the people against him. 21:28 They laid hands on him, crying out, "Men of Israel, help! help! This is the man who goes everywhere preaching to everybody against the Jewish people and the Law and this place. And besides, he has even brought Gentiles into the Temple and has desecrated this holy place." 21:29 (For they had previously seen Trophimus the Ephesian with him in the city, and imagined that Paul had brought him into the Temple.) 21:30 The excitement spread through the whole city, and the people rushed in crowds to the Temple, and there laid hold of Paul and began to drag him out; and the Temple gates were immediately closed. 21:31 But while they were trying to kill Paul, word was taken up to the Tribune in command of the battalion, that all Jerusalem was in a ferment. 21:32 He instantly sent for a few soldiers and their officers, and came down among the people with all speed. At the sight of the Tribune and the troops they ceased beating Paul. 21:33 Then the Tribune, making his way to him, arrested him, and, having ordered him to be secured with two chains, proceeded to ask who he was and what he had been doing. 21:34 Some of the crowd shouted one accusation against Paul and some another, until, as the uproar made it impossible for the truth to be ascertained with certainty, the Tribune ordered him to be brought into the barracks. 21:35 When Paul was going up the steps, he had to be carried by the soldiers because of the violence of the mob; 21:36 for the whole mass of the people pressed on in the rear, shouting, "Away with him!" 21:37 When he was about to be taken into the barracks, Paul said to the Tribune, "May I speak to you?" "Do you know Greek?" the Tribune asked. 21:38 "Are you not the Egyptian who some years ago excited the riot of the 4,000 cut-throats, and led them out into the Desert?" 21:39 "I am a Jew," replied Paul, "belonging to Tarsus in Cilicia, and am a citizen of no unimportant city. Give me leave, I pray you, to speak to the people." 21:40 So with his permission Paul stood on the stepsTribune Advert rateTribune Online - Tribune Online
For you shall be a witness for Him, to all men, of what you have seen and heard. 22:16 And now why delay? Rise, get yourself baptized, and wash off your sins, calling upon His name.' 22:17 "After my return to Jerusalem, and while praying in the Temple, I fell into a trance. 22:18 I saw Jesus, and He said to me, "`Make haste and leave Jerusalem quickly, because they will not accept your testimony about Me.' 22:19 "`Lord,' I replied, `they themselves well know how active I was in imprisoning, and in flogging in synagogue after synagogue those who believe in Thee; 22:20 and when they were shedding the blood of Stephen, Thy witness, I was standing by, fully approving of it, and I held the clothes of those who were killing him.' 22:21 "`Go,' He replied; `I will send you as an Apostle to nations far away.'" 22:22 Until they heard this last statement the people listened to Paul, but now with a roar of disapproval they cried out, "Away with such a fellow from the earth! He ought not to be allowed to live." 22:23 And when they continued their furious shouts, throwing their clothes into the air and flinging dust about, 22:24 the Tribune ordered him to be brought into the barracks, and be examined by flogging, in order to ascertain the reason why they thus cried out against him. 22:25 But, when they had tied him up with the straps, Paul said to the Captain who stood by, "Does the Law permit you to flog a Roman citizen--and one too who is uncondemned?" 22:26 On hearing this question, the Captain went to report the matter to the Tribune. "What are you intending to do?" he said. "This man is a Roman citizen." 22:27 So the Tribune came to Paul and asked him, "Tell me, are you a Roman citizen?" "Yes," he said. 22:28 "I paid a large sum for my citizenship," said the Tribune. "But I was born free," said Paul. 22:29 So the men who had been on the point of putting him under torture immediately left him. And the Tribune, too, was frightened when he learnt that Paul was a Roman citizen, for he had had him bound. 22:30 The next day, wishing to know exactly what charge was being brought against him by the Jews, the Tribune ordered his chains to beFor Tribune and our National Grid - Tribune Online
Reeb as his caring youth minister during his service at All Souls Church in Washington, D.C., where Howlett's father served as minister. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb takes his mother Marie's hand on Sunday, March 8, 2015, as the family crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, in memory of their patriarch, the Rev. James Reeb, who was killed in Selma during the March 1965 campaign for equal voting rights for African Americans. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March "They told him to take the wheelchair, but he's been fighting it," Norine Reeb said about her husband John, as the family prepared to march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday, March 8, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. John often experiences a great deal of pain in his feet and was worried about whether he would be able to complete the march across the bridge in memory of his father. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Donning bow ties to pay homage to the Rev. James Reeb, John Reeb speaks with his mother, Marie, as the family prepares to march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday, March 8, 2015, in Selma, Alabama, fulfilling the goal that his father was never able to achieve before he was killed in March 1965. "We'll march across and be able to say to my dad, 'We've done this, and I hope you're proud of us,'" John said. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Flanked by his daughter Corrie Lubenow, left, and his wife Norine, right, John Reeb takes in the sights as tens of thousands of people complete a march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday, March 8, 2015, in Selma, Alabama, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the "Bloody Sunday" attack on protesters during the Selma-to-Montgomery marches. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb, third from left, is recognized alongside his family, including his mother Marie, left, and daughter Leah, right on Sunday, March 8, 2015, after crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. The march marked the 50th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday," when police attacked black demonstrators marching to Montgomery for equal voting rights. The horrific events prompted Reeb's father, the Rev. James Reeb, to join the cause in Selma, where he was killed for his support of the movement. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb takes in the sight of tens of thousands of people during the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday, March 8, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. The march marked the 50th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday," when police attacked black demonstrators marching to Montgomery for equal voting rights. The horrific events prompted Reeb'sNigerian Tribune News Highlight - Tribune Online
On this day 60 years ago, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated while taking part in a parade in Dallas, Texas.Kennedy was killed and Texas Gov. John Connally, who was riding with Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, was injured as their motorcade passed through the city’s Dealey Plaza.News of the assassination reached all corners of the globe, and many newspapers published special editions in order to bring the news to readers as quickly as possible.Here are front pages from the TribLive family of newspapers from that day as well as the day after, Nov. 23, 1963.Daily Dispatch, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Daily Dispatch from Nov. 23, 1963.Valley Daily News, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of The Valley Daily News from Nov. 23, 1963.Tribune-Review Extra, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the extra edition of the Greensburg Tribune-Review from Nov. 23, 1963.Daily Dispatch, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Daily Dispatch from Nov. 23, 1963.Valley Daily News, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the The Valley Daily News from Nov. 23, 1963.Tribune-Review, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Greensburg Tribune-Review from Nov. 23, 1963.Patrick Varine is a TribLive reporter covering Delmont, Export and Murrysville. He is a Western Pennsylvania native and joined the Trib in 2010 after working as a reporter and editor with the former Dover Post Co. in Delaware. He can be reached at pvarine@triblive.com.. GREENSBURGH, Pa. (PIX11)Before xylazine, the horse tranquilizer, exploded into the national consciousnessbecause of horrifying street scenes in Philadelphiapolice in west VALLEY NEWS DISPATCH GREENSBURGH TRIBUNE REVIEW. Caregiver READ NOW. North Pittsburgh College Fair 2025 READ NOW. WCCC 2025 READ NOW. Outstanding Young Citizen READ NOW. Summer Fun READ NOW. Century21 - American Heritage READ NOW. Butler Farm Show 2025 READ NOW. Quest for Best 2025 READ NOW. Spring Education 2025
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After standing for a family portrait in front of Casper's First Presbyterian Church, where Rev. Reeb was first ordained in 1953. A near-death experience led to John's decision to come to terms with his father's legacy and death in the months leading up to the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights marches, where Rev. Reeb was attacked and killed in March 1965 when John was just 13 years old. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb reads a news clipping about the trial of the men accused of killing his father, the Rev. James Reeb, who was clubbed on the head after leaving a cafe with two other Unitarian ministers on March 9, 1965, in Selma, Alabama, during the voting rights campaign. The men were acquitted. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Shortly before leaving for the premiere of the movie "Selma," Leah Reeb looks through boxes filled with news clippings, letters, mementos and other memories of her late grandfather Rev. James Reeb on Friday, Jan. 9, 2015, at her home in Casper. Rev. Reeb was attacked and killed in Selma, Alabama, in March 1965 after answering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s call to clergy across the nation to join him in the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march. Reeb's death sparked outrage across the country, leading Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March First light reaches the span of the Edmund Pettus Bridge over the Alabama River on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. The town of roughly 20,000 woke to a downtown transformed to accommodate thousands of visitors from across the world who had traveled for the 50th anniversary of the "Bloody Sunday" march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March The night before visiting the site where his father was brutally attacked, John Reeb takes a moment to himself in his Montgomery, Alabama, hotel room. "Back when I had all the opportunities in the world - the different anniversaries, the dedications such as the Civil Rights Memorial Wall - I was still ... I didn't have any desire to go face that, I guess - be a part of it," John said. "There was still too much, not hatred, but I just didn't want to go down south." (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March While his family watches video from the day's events, John Reeb prepares for bed on the eve of the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Montgomery, Alabama. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March The family of the late Rev. James Reeb, including his daughter Karen Reeb, left, andGreat Bend Tribune - Great Bend Tribune
They went to the High Priests and Elders and said to them, "We have bound ourselves under a heavy curse to take no food till we have killed Paul. 23:15 Now therefore you and the Sanhedrin should make representations to the Tribune for him to bring him down to you, under the impression that you intend to inquire more minutely about him; and we are prepared to assassinate him before he comes near the place." 23:16 But Paul's sister's son heard of the intended attack upon him. So he came and went into the barracks and told Paul about it; 23:17 and Paul called one of the Captains and said, "Take this young man to the Tribune, for he has information to give him." 23:18 So he took him and brought him to the Tribune, and said, "Paul, the prisoner, called me to him and begged me to bring this youth to you, because he has something to say to you." 23:19 Then the Tribune, taking him by the arm, withdrew out of the hearing of others and asked him, "What have you to tell me?" 23:20 "The Jews," he replied, "have agreed to request you to bring Paul down to the Sanhedrin to-morrow for the purpose of making yourself more accurately acquainted with the case. 23:21 I beg you not to comply; for more than forty men among them are lying in wait for him, who have solemnly vowed that they will neither eat nor drink till they have assassinated him; and even now they are ready, in anticipation of receiving that promise of you." 23:22 So the Tribune sent the youth home, cautioning him. "Do not let any one know that you have given me this information," he said. 23:23 Then, calling to him two of the Captains, he gave his orders. "Get ready two hundred men," he said, "to march to Caesarea, with seventy cavalry and two hundred light infantry, starting at nine o'clock to-night." 23:24 He further told them to provide horses to mount Paul on, so as to bring him safely to Felix the Governor. 23:25 He also wrote a letter of which these were the contents: 23:26 "Claudius Lysias to his Excellency, Felix the Governor: all good wishes. 23:27 This man Paul had been seized by the Jews, and they were on the point of killing him, when I came upon them with the. GREENSBURGH, Pa. (PIX11)Before xylazine, the horse tranquilizer, exploded into the national consciousnessbecause of horrifying street scenes in Philadelphiapolice in westlegend brian samuels Archives - Tribune Tribune
SOUTHFIELD, MI, February 16, 2021 – Xeeva, Inc., a global provider of intelligent indirect spend management solutions, has announced that it was recognized as one of the “10 Best Tech Startups in Michigan” for 2021 by The Tech Tribune for the fourth consecutive year.The Tech Tribune delivers news, articles, and insights that recognize and honor the most respected young companies across the country. When researching companies, its staff considers the following factors for qualification: revenue potential, leadership team, brand/product traction, and competitive landscape. The publication also requires that the company be independent, privately owned, less than ten years old, and have received at least one round of funding.“Xeeva continues to demonstrate an impressive and consistent level of excellence. The team has now been honored in our last four Best Tech Startups in Michigan, as well as in our 2020 Best Tech Startups in Madison Heights (our only Madison Heights release). We still have a few years left to consider them as a startup (based on our methodology), and we are looking forward to continuing to honor them in every one of those,” stated Rafael Melvin, Editor-in-Chief of The Tech Tribune.“We are so honored to be featured once again as one of the best startups in Michigan,” stated Nina Vellayan, President and CEO of Xeeva. “It’s very exciting to see that our company is being recognized for its growth and impactful products. We are constantly working on improving our software and bringing on talented, driven individuals to our team. From SpendComments
The encouraging number of birds we saw Saturday.In fact, had Ray Christensen been doing our play-by-play, his tone would have been cheerful, if not ecstatic.The day was, in fact, in the bag, with no worries.Nick Sovell, left, of Elko, Minn., and his son, Nicholas Sovell, also of Elko, with their dogs and a rooster taken Saturday, when the Minnesota pheasant season opened. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)A sign at Buck Manor, a pheasant hunting headquarters in the tiny hamlet of Arco, Minn., population 100. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)Hunting with Dennis Anderson in extreme western Minnesota Saturday were, back row, standing, from left, Ken Meyer, Tim Pengra, Bob O’Neel, Gary DeAustin and Bob DeAustin. Front row, kneeling, are Deano Kaye, Nick Sovell, Denny Lien, Nicholas Sovell, Chuck Meek, and Cindy DeAustin. Not shown is Kris DeAustin. (Dennis Anderson, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)about the writerDennis AndersonColumnistOutdoors columnist Dennis Anderson joined the Star Tribune in 1993 after serving in the same position at the St. Paul Pioneer Press for 13 years. His column topics vary widely, and include canoeing, fishing, hunting, adventure travel and conservation of the environment.See MoreFree livestream: Nolan Groves and Orono face William Kirsch and Metro West rival Waconia in the Star Tribune Game of the Week.This article attempts to give us an idea of loading performance when there are a lot of Datawrapper embeds.
2025-03-29Granddaughter Corrie Lubenow, join the congregation in song on Thursday, March 5, 2015, during a memorial service for martyrs of the civil rights movement at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Selma, Alabama. John Reeb's health prevented him from joining his family on their six-hour round trip from Atlanta to Selma due to health reasons. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb passes the former Walker's Cafe, where his father, the Rev. James Reeb, dined with fellow Unitarian ministers Orloff Miller and Clark Olsen before the three were attacked on March 9, 1965, in Selma, Alabama. The Rev. Reeb died two days after the attack in a Birmingham hospital, one week after John's 13th birthday. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March With his wife Norine at his side, John Reeb comforts his mother, Marie, at the site of the fatal attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March After visiting the site of the deadly attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, John Reeb and his daughter, Leah, walk through downtown Selma, Alabama, on Saturday, March 7, 2015. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March John Reeb, center, and his family join the Rev. Clark Olsen and the Rev. Orloff Miller at the site of the attack on his father, the Rev. James Reeb, and the two Unitarian ministers on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. "In a way, I guess I was having a different picture of how the event would unfold," John said. "To tell you the truth, I wish I would've been alone for a little bit. Just to reflect. There was just too much going on." (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Sitting at the site of the Rev. James Reeb's memorial, Rev. Orloff Miller points out an old photograph of Walker's Cafe, where he dined with Reeb and Rev. Clark Olsen before being attacked, on Saturday, March 7, 2015, in Selma, Alabama. (Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune) Ryan Dorgan Fifty-Year March Donning bow ties in honor of the late Rev. James Reeb, John Reeb, right, marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge beside his mother Marie Reeb and daughter Corrie Lubenow on March 8 in Selma, Alabama. The family traveled to Selma for the 50th anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery marches, where the Rev. James Reeb was killed for his support of the civil rights movement before he was able to complete the march. Ryan Dorgan, Star-Tribune Fifty-Year March Dick Howlett lays a bouquet of flowers at a memorial for the Rev. James Reeb on Saturday, March 7, 2015, outside the Old Depot Museum in Selma, Alabama. Howlett remembers
2025-03-26Nearly over, the Jews from the province of Asia, having seen Paul in the Temple, set about rousing the fury of all the people against him. 21:28 They laid hands on him, crying out, "Men of Israel, help! help! This is the man who goes everywhere preaching to everybody against the Jewish people and the Law and this place. And besides, he has even brought Gentiles into the Temple and has desecrated this holy place." 21:29 (For they had previously seen Trophimus the Ephesian with him in the city, and imagined that Paul had brought him into the Temple.) 21:30 The excitement spread through the whole city, and the people rushed in crowds to the Temple, and there laid hold of Paul and began to drag him out; and the Temple gates were immediately closed. 21:31 But while they were trying to kill Paul, word was taken up to the Tribune in command of the battalion, that all Jerusalem was in a ferment. 21:32 He instantly sent for a few soldiers and their officers, and came down among the people with all speed. At the sight of the Tribune and the troops they ceased beating Paul. 21:33 Then the Tribune, making his way to him, arrested him, and, having ordered him to be secured with two chains, proceeded to ask who he was and what he had been doing. 21:34 Some of the crowd shouted one accusation against Paul and some another, until, as the uproar made it impossible for the truth to be ascertained with certainty, the Tribune ordered him to be brought into the barracks. 21:35 When Paul was going up the steps, he had to be carried by the soldiers because of the violence of the mob; 21:36 for the whole mass of the people pressed on in the rear, shouting, "Away with him!" 21:37 When he was about to be taken into the barracks, Paul said to the Tribune, "May I speak to you?" "Do you know Greek?" the Tribune asked. 21:38 "Are you not the Egyptian who some years ago excited the riot of the 4,000 cut-throats, and led them out into the Desert?" 21:39 "I am a Jew," replied Paul, "belonging to Tarsus in Cilicia, and am a citizen of no unimportant city. Give me leave, I pray you, to speak to the people." 21:40 So with his permission Paul stood on the steps
2025-04-04For you shall be a witness for Him, to all men, of what you have seen and heard. 22:16 And now why delay? Rise, get yourself baptized, and wash off your sins, calling upon His name.' 22:17 "After my return to Jerusalem, and while praying in the Temple, I fell into a trance. 22:18 I saw Jesus, and He said to me, "`Make haste and leave Jerusalem quickly, because they will not accept your testimony about Me.' 22:19 "`Lord,' I replied, `they themselves well know how active I was in imprisoning, and in flogging in synagogue after synagogue those who believe in Thee; 22:20 and when they were shedding the blood of Stephen, Thy witness, I was standing by, fully approving of it, and I held the clothes of those who were killing him.' 22:21 "`Go,' He replied; `I will send you as an Apostle to nations far away.'" 22:22 Until they heard this last statement the people listened to Paul, but now with a roar of disapproval they cried out, "Away with such a fellow from the earth! He ought not to be allowed to live." 22:23 And when they continued their furious shouts, throwing their clothes into the air and flinging dust about, 22:24 the Tribune ordered him to be brought into the barracks, and be examined by flogging, in order to ascertain the reason why they thus cried out against him. 22:25 But, when they had tied him up with the straps, Paul said to the Captain who stood by, "Does the Law permit you to flog a Roman citizen--and one too who is uncondemned?" 22:26 On hearing this question, the Captain went to report the matter to the Tribune. "What are you intending to do?" he said. "This man is a Roman citizen." 22:27 So the Tribune came to Paul and asked him, "Tell me, are you a Roman citizen?" "Yes," he said. 22:28 "I paid a large sum for my citizenship," said the Tribune. "But I was born free," said Paul. 22:29 So the men who had been on the point of putting him under torture immediately left him. And the Tribune, too, was frightened when he learnt that Paul was a Roman citizen, for he had had him bound. 22:30 The next day, wishing to know exactly what charge was being brought against him by the Jews, the Tribune ordered his chains to be
2025-03-31On this day 60 years ago, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated while taking part in a parade in Dallas, Texas.Kennedy was killed and Texas Gov. John Connally, who was riding with Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, was injured as their motorcade passed through the city’s Dealey Plaza.News of the assassination reached all corners of the globe, and many newspapers published special editions in order to bring the news to readers as quickly as possible.Here are front pages from the TribLive family of newspapers from that day as well as the day after, Nov. 23, 1963.Daily Dispatch, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Daily Dispatch from Nov. 23, 1963.Valley Daily News, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of The Valley Daily News from Nov. 23, 1963.Tribune-Review Extra, Nov. 22, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the extra edition of the Greensburg Tribune-Review from Nov. 23, 1963.Daily Dispatch, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Daily Dispatch from Nov. 23, 1963.Valley Daily News, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the The Valley Daily News from Nov. 23, 1963.Tribune-Review, Nov. 23, 1963Tribune-Review archives The front page of the Greensburg Tribune-Review from Nov. 23, 1963.Patrick Varine is a TribLive reporter covering Delmont, Export and Murrysville. He is a Western Pennsylvania native and joined the Trib in 2010 after working as a reporter and editor with the former Dover Post Co. in Delaware. He can be reached at pvarine@triblive.com.
2025-04-01