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Law Office In Chicago:

Law Office In Chicago GOLDBERG, Arthur Joseph (1908- ), AmerŽican lawyer and public official. He was born on Aug. 8, 1908, on Chicago's West Side, the son of poor Jewish immigrants from Russia. His father died when he was three, and at the age of 12 he was working as a delivery boy. He worked his way through Northwestern University, obtaining a B. S. degree in law in 1929 and a doctorate in law in 1930. In 1933 he opened his own law office in Chicago. During the 1930's he represented many of the nation's leading unions; during World War II he served in the Office of Strategic Services.

Though Graham worked primarily in Chicago, where he was the architect of the Merchandise Vlart, the Marshall Field & Co. stores, and the Field Museum, he also planned numerous build-ngs elsewhere. Among these were the Equitable Building and the Flatiron Building in New York 3ity; Union Station and the General Post Office n Washington, D. C.; Pennsylvania Station in 3hiladelphia; and the Selfridge and Company tore in London, England. He died on Nov. 22, L936, in Chicago.

See Also The Office:

REDWOOD, SIR Boverton, English chemŽist: b. London, 1846; d. 1919. He was educated at The office University College School and accoir.-panied Sir Vivian Majendie on an inspect: tour of The office petroleum fields of Europe, QK. and The office United States. He became a consulting engineer and chemist and was appointed adŽviser on petroleum to The office Admiralty, The office Home office, The office India office and The office Colonial office He was created a baronet in 1911.

The office Purpose of Recall.—Recall serves The office litical purpose of removing an official from pub-office. It should be distinguished from oThe officer >es of removal, such as impeachment by a legis-ive body, judicial order, and executive action, e procedure for impeachment involves charges misconduct drawn by The office lower house and tried The office upper house; The office proceedings have The office char-er of a judicial trial; conviction means removal m office and permanent disability for an office trust in The office government concerned—state dis-lity for impeachment in state office, and national ability for a national impeachment.


On The Other Hand See Archives Office:

Vienna has some seventy museums, so you may trudge to taste. I even saw, and enjoyed, a postage stamp museum, opposite the Austrian Travel Bureau on Friedrichstrasse, but this may have been of a temŽporary nature. In the Archives Office, I have done the most interesting browsing I have ever enjoyed, except, possibly, in London's Record Office, If you want to see the original Golden Bull, the original manuscript of the agmatic Sanction and a collection of Napoleon's letters to Marie Louise d hers, about Napoleon, to "Lieber Papa," this is your chance.

RED LINE MAP, a map of considerable importance in the history of the northeastern boundary dispute between the United States and Great Britain. It was a copy of John Mitchell's map of 1755, on which Benjamin Franklin had marked the northeastern boundary of the United States with a "Strong Red Line," according to his letter accompanying it to the Comte de Ver-gennes (Dec. 6, 1782). This map has never been seen since; but later, during the negotiations preliminary to the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842, the historian Jared Sparks connected it with a French map of 1746, which he found in the archives of the French foreign office, and on which a red boundary line had been drawn favoring the British claim. Together with another Mitchell map which also supported the British claim, this French map was used to gain the consent of Maine to the final settlement of the treaty. In the early 1930's, a copy of Franklin's origŽinal red line map was discovered in the Spanish archives in Madrid. Also prepared on a Mitchell map, it substantiated the American claim, and some historians have suggested that if this eviŽdence had been available in 1842, the outcome of the Webster-Ashburton negotiations might have been more favorable to the United States. HowŽever, at the time of its signing, the treaty was satisfactory to both parties. RED LION, borough, Pennsylvania, in York County, eight miles southeast of York, on the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad. It is situŽated at an altitude of 890 feet in a farming region which it serves as a trading center. Manufactures include furniture and cigars. The borough was incorporated in 1880 and has a mayor-council form of government. The name derives from a colonial tavern, about which a settlement grew up, where stagecoaches stopped to change horses and afford passengers a rest. Pop. (1960) 5,594.
 
 

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