Highlights
A collection of news and information related to John Mason published by Tribune Company sources.
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Golf pros share their helpful tips
TOM SARGENT
Mesa Verde Country Club (Southern California PGA teacher of the year, 1995, 1993, 1986)
This will help you: Practice your short game. Most people are not very good wedge players. You have to learn how to bounce [the club], putt and chip....Tags: Fred Funk, Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Clubs and Associations, Greg Norman
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Runaway Bride's Former Groom Now Married
The man who was once engaged to the runaway bride has gotten married -- to another woman. John Mason, 35, married Shelley Martin, 34, in a quiet ceremony Saturday at his parents' home in Duluth, his father, Claude Mason, told People magazine for a...Tags: Punishment, Crimes, Sexual Assault, Missing Persons, New Mexico
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HOW TO ... BREAK UP WITH A FRIEND
Daily PressFriends should be supportive, encouraging and fun. But sometimes people grow apart. What used to be fun just isn't anymore. Or one friend is finally tired of being taken advantage of. So, how do you end the friendship? How do you break up with a friend?...Tags: Health Treatments, Newport News (Newport News, Virginia), Therapies
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Old pros with even older material
Newsday Staff WriterThere's a hard lesson to be learned from "Twenty Good Years," which - by the way - should be self-evident. Great stars do not a great show make. Great stars need good material and only then whatever magic they have in demonstrable abundance should...Tags: John Lithgow, Judith Light
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Wedding may be off for runaway bride
Newsday Staff WriterThe runaway bride who generated a media storm with her phony tale of abduction and the fiance who took her back have broken up for good, the man's friends and family told People Magazine. "We're just glad there's a final resolution," John Mason's father,...Tags: Family, Newspaper and Magazine, Punishment, Periodicals, Crimes
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Runaway bride: I am truly sorry
STAFF WRITERThe Georgia woman known to the nation as the Runaway Bride yesterday offered a public apology for the frenzy she caused and whetted expectations for a storybook ending to her aborted wedding. Still facing the threat of legal and financial retribution,...Tags: Family, Missing Persons, Georgia
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The Colonial Collision
Staff WriterAs the 17th Century dawned in Europe, two powerful countries pushed west across the ocean on a search for new lands to exploit and settle. Their collision in the New World would decide the future of Long Island. The two powers were the Netherlands and...Tags: Treaties, Executive Branch, Family, Sailing, Connecticut River
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A Man Named Lion
Staff Writer'In the year 1635, I, Lion Gardiner, Engineer and Master of works of Fortification . . .'' So begins the account written by an Englishman named Lion Gardiner of his extraordinary life. His story opens in the Netherlands, where he served in the English...Tags: Foxwoods Resort Casino, Family, Defense, Long Island, Connecticut River
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United imports new labor woes
Tribune staff reporterUnited Airlines' union for ramp and other workers promised Tuesday to support about 800 of the carrier's London employees if they decide to strike, a move that could hamper the airline's operations at O'Hare International Airport and elsewhere. Members...Tags: Heathrow, Pension and Welfare, Bankruptcy, Employees, Employers
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Southern Section
Saturday, March 13 TOURNAMENTS ARCADIA Quarterfinals Arcadia d. Claremont, 25-20 Jeff Hendershot had seven kills for Claremont. Pool Play Claremont d. Bellflower, 25-12, 25-13 San Marino d. Claremont, 25-23, 25-19 Canyon Country Canyon d. Claremont,...Tags: Beach Vacations, Colin Farrell, Pat Collins, Multi-Sport Events, Matt Morris
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Chapter One: The Plantation Next Door
The most disturbing evidence of Connecticut's long and profitable complicity in slavery lies hidden in plain sight in the town of Salem, in the fields and woods around an ice cream bar near Routes 11 and 82. There, archaeologists from Central Connecticut...Tags: Connecticut Historical Society, Executive Branch, Archaeology, Middletown, Rivers
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Chapter Two: The First Slaves
Out of a swampy thicket, near the blue waters of Long Island Sound, 200 old men, women and children stepped into the bright sunshine and entered a new world. Hundreds of edgy soldiers, mustered from villages and farms across Connecticut, had finally...Tags: Ohio State University, Sailing, Ceremonies, Around The World Sailing, Wetlands
Jun 26, 2008
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Mar 19, 2008
|Story| Associated Press
Sep 20, 2007
|Story| Hampton Roads Daily Press
Oct 11, 2006
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May 19, 2006
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May 6, 2005
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Jul 7, 2003
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Jul 7, 2003
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Aug 11, 2004
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Mar 8, 2004
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Sep 29, 2002
|Story| Hartford Courant
Sep 29, 2002
|Story| Hartford Courant


