Mayor john cook biography sample

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  • John Major

    Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1990 to 1997

    This article fryst vatten about the former prime minister. For other people with the same name, see John Major (disambiguation).

    Sir John Major (born 29 March 1943) is a British retired politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party from 1990 to 1997. He previously held Cabinet positions beneath Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, his gods as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1989 to 1990. Major was Member of Parliament (MP) for Huntingdon, formerly Huntingdonshire, from 1979 to 2001. Since stepping down as an MP in 2001, Major has focused on writing and his business, sporting, and charity work, and has occasionally commented on political developments in the role of an elder statesman.

    Having left school just before his sixteenth birthday, Major worked as an insurance clerk, joined the ung Conservatives in 1959, and soon became a highly active member. He was elected to L

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  • Mayor John Wentworth Inaugural Address, 1860

    John Wentworth Biography

    Inauguration date: March 22, 1860

    This speech is recorded as it first appeared in print. Archaic spelling and misspellings in the original document have not been corrected.

    Gentlemen of the Common Council

    The Chapter of the Charter of the City of Chicago which, requires me to take and subscribe to the oath of office, just administered to me, defines the duties of the Mayor, as follows:

    “He shall preside over the meetings of the Common Council, and take care that the laws of the State and ordinances of the City are duly enforced, respected, and observed, and that all other Executive officers of the city discharge their respective duties. He shall, from time to time, give the Common Council such information, and recommend such measures, as he may deem advantageous to the City.”

    There are many laws and ordinances appertaining to our Municipal government, the propriety of which may be questioned; but the oath


    From the Field--

    THE JOHN COOK BOOK:

    A Thrilling Adventure in the Speculative Use

    of the Conditional Verb Tense

    by H. Scott Wolfe*


    Well, the holidays are over, and Santa’s sleigh has disgorged a number of gifts for yours truly, the epitome of the unworthy. Of course there was the requisite case of “Moose Drool Brown Ale,” brewed in my college town of Missoula, Montana, and necessary for the physical alignment of my brain cells and the proper lubrication of my aging joints. And, in addition, Old Saint Nick provided me with a generous armful of the more recent publications relating to Old John Brown.
    The first to be drawn from the stack was an eagerly anticipated volume written by Steven Lubet, a Professor of Law at Northwestern University. Entitled John Brown’s Spy: The Adventurous Life and Tragic Confession of John E. Cook [Yale University Press, 325 pp.] it seeks to tell “the nearly unknown story of John E. Cook, the person John Brown