Post |
Author |
Posted: Jan 19, 2025 09:24:58
Subject: pvqi First federal lawsuit filed in connection to Woodmore c
|
|
|
Gstb Hamilton County commissioners seek more transparency for outside legal expenses This undated photo provided by Heritage Auctions shows a glass U.S. penny. The rare coin was manufactured as a possible alternative to copper during WWII. The coin is expected to be auctioned in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017. Matt Poppolo/ Heritage Auctions via AP FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - An experimental penny made of glass during World War II is about to be auctioned.Owner Roger Burdette says the coin is the only known unbroken glass penny in existence.During the war, copper was needed for ammunition. The U.S. Mint authorized test <a href=https://www.nikedunk.us>nike dunk</a> s that included making uncirculated pen <a href=https://www.airmaxplus.de>airmaxplus</a> nies from other metals, plastic and rubber. The Blue Ridge Glass Co. <a href=https://www.airmaxplus.es>air max 1</a> in Tennessee made experimental pennies using tempered glass.Burdette says the impressions on the coins weren t precise, the weight and size weren t uniform and the coins developed sharp edges that cut fingers. He says they were likely destroyed. He says only one other glass penny exists and it is broken.The Mint made 1943 pennies from low-grade steel covered in zinc.Heritage Auctions in Fort Lauderdale is conducting Wednesday s bidding. insticator-wrapper {order: 2;} klangoo-wrapper {order: 1;} div<data>widget-id= rel_325-4 ] {display: block;} div<data>widget-id= rel_325-3 ] {display: none;} div.rc-desktop {display: none;} div.rc-mobile {display: block;} @media min-width: 40em { insticator-w Szde New fire chief takes over Chattanooga Fire Department UTC student Robert Fisher, 19, will be the fifth student from a Tennessee university and the second from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga to attend the Institute for <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley mugs</a> Responsible Citizenship. Robert Fisher was shooting baskets in a church gym in the Gentilly section of New Orleans last summer when a third-grader approached him. Where are you from the boy asked. Tennessee, said Fisher, of Clarksville. But you look like you re from New Orleans, the boy said.Fisher, 19, laughed. He doesn t normally think about the color of his own skin, what it means and why it matters -- not overtly, at least. But nine months after that mission trip to New Orleans, Fisher received a phone call from Washington, D.C.The staff at the Institute for Responsible Citizenship invited him to its summer leadership program for black men.After accepting the invitation at the beginning of March, Fisher reflected on that conversation last summer, and on the importance of race. Those kids, we had a rapport because there were similarities in how we looked, said Fisher, a University of Tennessee at Chattanooga political science sophomore who last week became Student Government Association president. As much as <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.ca>stanley cup</a> you want to get past <skin>color], at times I think t <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley deutschland</a> here is a benefit in that, too. They realize, Well, there s a guy who looks just like me. And if he can do it, then I can do it. William Keyes started the Institute for Responsible Citizenship in 2001 after a 35-year career working i
|
|
admin
|
|
|
|
Posted: Jan 17, 2017 20:04:49
Subject: pvqi First federal lawsuit filed in connection to Woodmore c
|
|
|
Giving someone a different time to meet with you is a good way to solve the problem.
|
|
charvey
|
|
|
|
Posted: Jan 13, 2017 18:42:25
Subject: pvqi First federal lawsuit filed in connection to Woodmore c
|
|
|
I can understand this
|
|
cmurillo
|
|
|
|
|