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The campus' student-run newspaper is Central Michigan Life. The paper is published every Thursday during the academic year and www.cm-life.com, which receives 1 million page views per year, is updated daily. CM Life was named one of the top three non-daily newspapers in the nation for 2007, 2018, 2019 by the Society of Professional Journalists.
The following is a list of notable deaths in February 2024. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence: Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference. February 2024 1 Asahi, 21, Japanese professional ...
Alpheus Felch 1827, Michigan governor (1846–47), senator from Michigan (1847–1853), professor of law at the University of Michigan, and namesake of Felch Township in Michigan; John Hale 1827, congressman (1843–45) and senator (1847–53) from New Hampshire; ran against Franklin Pierce 1824 as the Free Soil Party candidate for President (1852)
Molly Ivins, 62, American newspaper columnist, political commentator and author, breast cancer. [290] Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, 49, Saudi brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden, shot. [291] Olevi Kull, 51, Estonian ecologist. [292] Arben Minga, 47, Albanian football player, pancreatic cancer. [293] Ronald Muldrow, 57, American jazz guitarist. [294]
"Andrew Johnson's Indenture" (Asheville News, August 20, 1869, Page 4) Johnson was not happy at James Selby's, and after about five years, both he and his brother ran away. Selby responded by placing a reward for their return: "Ten Dollars Reward. Ran away from the subscriber, two apprentice boys, legally bound, named William and Andrew Johnson ...
In 1959, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation aired R.C.M.P., a half-hour dramatic series about an RCMP detachment keeping the peace and fighting crime. Filmed in black and white, in and around Ottawa by Crawley Films , the series was co-produced with the BBC and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and ran for 39 episodes.
Newspapers promise $55,000 reward for information. Lingle is later found to have had contacts with organized crime. June 14 – An act of Congress establishes the Federal Bureau of Narcotics as a replacement for the Narcotics Division of the Prohibition Unit. June 17 – U.S. President Herbert Hoover signs the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act into law.
James Harden-Hickey (1898), Franco-American author, newspaper editor, duellist, adventurer and self-proclaimed Prince of Trinidad, overdose of morphine [542] Marlia Hardi (1984), Indonesian actress, hanging [543] Eric Harris (1999), one of the two American high school seniors who committed the Columbine High School massacre, gunshot. [544] [545]