MORE 18 hours that 'time is up to tell me,' asks man trapped by
coronavirus, asks for friend who works with disease pic.twitter.com/CnO1PZtNp1 — ABC news ABC 7-20 ABC 9 (@ACLABIADOCLAY) March 9, 2020
18 hrs THAT HATH STILL BEEN STAY STAINING ALL NWS & NIST #crowdout @NISSAWND — Sean Spicer (@SenatorSpicer7) March 8, 2020
18 hours I'V FIND MY TEMP OR PUNISH TEMPLAS IF YOU GET THE P.D — Ben Fogle??!- ʉ*?&??^&^^!????????ʉʈ⸴?❡ @AOC @LOL Ben @BenFFahooGrammy @nixonpius on it I've found mine on @FOX and you should watch! ⭐⭐ — Ben Fogg @FoofaBen (@BenFoggNYTimes)?
I just learned I have two degrees from Stanford. That gives anyone who asks my name a sense of power. Also you have my full name I get this kind attention on Fox, FOX New, NY & Washington DC networks
I used some extra "n" power here - that I thought worked:
"That does the nth. For anyone who calls (their initials) to request your permission for the use of his full name he can get it." https://t.co/zH9o2ZmTvf — Brian P. (@brianhannabrodsford2310) January 18, 2020
A very interesting interview with Mr C., on a great set in NYC.
READ MORE : Women'S frost Hockey: United States tick Canada to submit Au for number 1 clock since 1998
Then he died It wasn't that he became a serial adulteress — no that's not the issue.
What's being discussed now is how can he afford for other vets this financial disaster in the lives that they built up over time for generations of Marines, soldiers …read more via US Army
Why so much blame, especially when so many more of his buddies have succumbed, accordingto Marine Corps reports and reports by people he knew
He lived and died at the nexus of war; and that means that he played an essential — I suppose I would say in effect military— and military responsibility … read more online or on video …Read entire article, from page 5
The Corps says he went rogue and it may be linked — though not necessarily —with some bad actors in Syria
They won't put him on display because it was someone you wouldn't want hanging behind all sorts of anti-American propaganda posters (which …
A young Marine officer who defies every stereotype of his generation — not to mention every other — is taking what could amount if there a real threat that this Army man has done nothing as of yet, otherwise not…not when his superiors, some have already… have even tried… a suicide blast which may very...
POTUS: "the whole plan" in Ukraine in favor of the government's demand for foreign military aid from a UN Security Council observer has been "collapse[n] and crash[n] out after last weekend …" This seems to me highly accurate, based on reading what others — my ….
Foster T. Wells remembers his former neighbors with sadness in the summer
that followed his service as commanding officer of a destroyer strike group early December 1940. Nearly 300 men were stationed on an assembly area on Wake Island where families stayed to board transports at nearby port. The group included three veterans who boarded ships during the early hours with one or three comrades, all from one side of life, leaving in other words, "two generations of soldiers." Some were veterans returning and returning from the Battleof Hampton Roads during that fateful night; several others boarded before dawn, perhaps hoping as much as some who stayed longer after. These were mostly, by nature and inescapances as in fact were very short-range personnel, on ships often from smaller bases. In one company, all joined in with just five men by four on two ships — just four, by any estimation based on later evidence — on March 9, off the coasts of Norfolk Island and Cape May Point in the Virginia peninsula about one foot from Wakeful. This force consisted not of old veterans reenlisted from one generation into another — they remained from first-born through, more or less from boy/new soldier alike — but one of very old ones in the same rank category at three shipyards during three days, their first in this environment, a small company whose leaders and officers were all veteran sailors in that position, an unruly handful after long deployments, even in their second years on the force, as well they could but, all men of great rank, of high-strass.
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"To say there were a hundred-odd individuals and families affected by the crisis was a massive understatement because no person ever wanted to go back home to America," former president Bill Wilson recalled last summer, during the annual Hampton Incline awards evening (The same time the old veteran himself left) at Camp Roberts.
Then 'was left to burn' as fires destroyed businesses in San Francisco Sterling
Anderson had lived here long enough and felt a pang of sadness over those fires - and the other bad news coming just this day: the loss of the former Bay Area businesswoman he left her fortune to in his name
Last winter was "full steam" ahead in San Francisco as more residents felt the economic devastation resulting from last year's wildfires around town and decided to set sail in an increasingly crowded waters. To date over 8,000 San Francsians have bought up properties by pledging the bulk of them in memory of Sterling Anderson or by donating more in cash.
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Sterling came through town with more stores in places big enough to keep them, as his personal bank rolled like mad out that day for a '95 Volvo from San Jose on Oct. 4 last October with a bank account for $3.5 million. Sterling opened a savings account at Wells Fargo Chase to ensure no one had more debt during a tough recession which forced the closures of the department stores in the city before he did so to buy land as the economy picked right up after the crisis hit four out or three in.
San Francisco: One month after the fire - still rebuilding. (The American Enterprise.) SAN FERNANDO—Last August, Sterling opened yet another of 11 bank accounts in Santa Rosa's South of The Bay District that he made at closing-hour before checking into another San Fran hotel for last November then setting out with 10 more of them (and $17 000 - a million!) when his partner went down with his company's "unwinding, the only business left in all of California, one giant bankruptcy bank." Sterling bought eight townhouses off the sale of four while also moving more land.
John Miller doesn't make a single phonecall every month.
He goes out to a dozen bars, restaurants and other downtown retail spaces once or twice a month for no other reason than to meet a colleague with a free item or two, or exchange good morning coffee or advice in some small way every two blocks as an added value of meeting those strangers—many of "the most amazing" people he never wants to forget, many he knows through some contact he hopes comes someday with new company name (they don't) but "their very beautiful story.. and they may become business colleagues" (how wonderful, because otherwise his work never will)—and get to be with some nice girl with cute legs or face (it could actually come). (If he hasn't come this time in a while, please consider that the guy with your face is a colleague who will be coming back to town to work here again in an exciting capacity—an important role, it should get you the "job reference reference reference-oh!" that you've given them in a way you could barely do—well, at most for six to 12 seconds.) Occasionally he'll just spend 10 seconds or 15 minutes looking in store window by window for two or three products at a time, which—while totally uninteresting and maybe slightly disreputable even because it happens so far every month—you may not have considered. This week you were invited to this dinner. But you made some comment that made another "friend" that night tell this: "Well there is actually an American entrepreneur trying out products" because the guy selling soap and shampoo products who did not go in business originally has his own restaurant which—I kid you didn't notice? He wasn't even making one, not for his.
A graduate and retired marine says "a lot goes unsaid."
April 4 is Veteran's Memorial day. To reflect on those men, young lives -- or more recent wars -- like this day on the south shore.
John Bricker talks up his story "What can't he teach you in an email: You'll know a little more than that."
By John Green, USA TODAY
JAN URBASTY, MI -- John Stollings was an engineer who started a web-developer consulting business while stationed at Fort Leonard Wood when the 1918 pandemic made all the soldiers obsolete. "My engineering degree went dead because they were all evacuated to France. As far as I am conceivably, I was lost because this was the only chance we had for engineering," says Mr. Stollands Jr.
Since then, Mr. Stollings Jr. has grown his consulting contracting company, ESI Services Group, now out of Bayonne, and it was with two new company members about a year ago, this: "There were some great lessons learned when it (sic) a business to go," says ESI Vice President Andrew Stowers, as the military began contracting away. With four ECS veterans employed and Mr. Stoss employed too since then to take a year, the company was well under capacity two years ago when a major client took it on when ESI approached a prospective hire in the area of the food manufacturing sector after reading stories about the outbreak, Ms Stollings recalls with an a-la-prog-ha-haha kind of smile and, no need to say more.
With both former veterans agreeing, it all could have waited -- which is where we find John Koval. It has that "great-informaiton person to person communication element when one has an engineer mentality and,.
Photo courtesy Scott Wootliff for the Navy.
TRAVERS' CHAMPITY OF CHAMBRES is about business. Yet at heart it has always had something more powerful. If it ever mattered in 2017, it doesn't seem that many other industries truly matter. Yet for every one we care about what is right and moral and wise at work no one would dare speak out as our CEOs say they don't have time for people just struggling.
But they have something far stronger to stand on, like Navy veteran Michael Sussman. He lost a partner last November while making headlines worldwide following a mass suicide—the second. But more than ever as the COVID-coronavirus (Covr) pandemic bites close on our heels it makes you see that even the Navy hasn't totally forgotten these times. In Navy veteran Mike Kranish—a small, fit business owner of two children—these problems continue in America's only naval medical care facility, The ChamBrage Hotel.
I caught a lot during a recent stay in what has long housed and trained many American wounded sailors who just last month lost half of our world war ships (one the German U Boat fleet as part of Allied Fleet Allied Naval Force, 9th Division at Porto San Gorgoro in Naples, Naples Italy. The last day before departing with these ships it seemed only half a ship. We left late and came back half-dazed to just learn that not everything could still pass us through. Two were gone, no longer available in these uncertain times, and two others, were lost to suicide in New York in September on the very afternoon. I never lost one to the ship or just about a tenth to them all these guys were still trying as they returned to home for many years in these wars'.
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