Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Roster

Chris: Please make the usual copies of the attached roster.
Bob: Please use the roster to follow-up via email and/or telephone with any club and/or business shown as having unpaid dues. I'll be picking up Shorty's check tomorrow.
Robert:  Please bring the VW club dues to the meeting.
See you all there/then.
Thanks!!!
Larry
P.S. I don't see a need to follow up with the Peninsula Mustang Enthusiasts because I believe I've shared previously the evidence that they no longer exist.

Monday, March 14, 2016

Re: A poker run is coming to the Peninsula

Fellow Hobbyists: Forwarded for you consideration.
VPCCC Delegate: Please pass to your memberships.
Andra: Good Luck!!! – This distribution covers the Classic Cruiser Car Club and delegates to the Virginia Peninsular Car Club Council.
Larry
Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2016 10:44 AM
Subject: A poker run is coming to the Peninsula
 

Hello Mr. Hanson,

 

My name is Andra Wilson, and I am a board member of the Down Syndrome Association of Hampton Roads. I would like to reach out to as many car clubs as possible to let them know of our upcoming Poker Run on April 17th. I hope I am not being too forward in contacting you. I sent Mr. Sample an email as well about our Poker Run.

 

Our Poker run this year is on the Peninsula, starting at the Auto haus in Williamsburg at 9am, and ending in Hampton.

I would be so appreciative if you could let your membership, and anyone else who may be interested, know about our Run this year. It is a nice and scenic drive encompassing some of the colonial parkway. There will be fantastic prizes and signup is as easy as going to our website.

 

Please feel free to contact me with any questions, which I know you will have. I will try and also get a list of the prizes, which may be more incentive!!

 

Thank you so much for your time, and have a great day.

 

Thank you,

Andra Wilson

 

 

Andra J. Wilson, LEED AP, BD+C

Civil Engineering Technician

T 1-757-873-0559

D 1-757-383-6220 

andra.wilson@aecom,com

 

AECOM

11832 Rock Landing Drive, Suite 306

Newport News, VA 23606

www.aecom.com

AECOM and URS are now one company. Learn More.

 

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

TOMORROW: Women of the Revolution LIVE!




THURSDAY, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET
Women of the Revolution
Women of the Revolution

Bravery. Loyalty. Sacrifice. Women of the Revolution possessed all of these qualities. Explore the excitement, peril, and individual stories of Deborah Sampson, Mary Perth, Martha Washington, and other women, on both sides of the conflict, who proved their mettle in America's war for independence.
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Tweet us your questions and comments! @CWFLearn #HEROLive

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  • toll-free number
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Meet the hosts of tomorrow's live broadcast!

Karl Palenkas
Karl Palenkas is a junior at Isle of Wight Academy located in Isle of Wight, Va. He is a member of the National Honor Society and is interested in pursuing a career in criminal and forensic science. Karl has been professionally acting for three years and is active in his school's drama club. His most recent role was that of an revolutionary soldier in the upcoming season of Legends and Lies
 
Annie Lewis
Annie Lewis
Annie Lewis is an Associate Producer in Colonial Williamsburg's Education Outreach department. Last year she was honored to receive an Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for her work in producing the HERO Live! broadcast of The Amazing Trade Shop Math Race. She enjoys acting, filmmaking, and directing with her production group DoG St. Media, as well as gardening and spending time with her fiancé and her cat, Dr. Whiskers.
 
Holly Mayer
Holly Mayer Holly A. Mayer served in the U.S. Army, earned a Ph.D. at the College of William and Mary, and is a historian at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her research centers on the social and cultural histories of military forces in late eighteenth-century North America. Mayer's publications include the book Belonging to the Army: Camp Followers and Community during the American Revolution.
 
Donna Wolf (Sarah Bache)
Originally from Los Angeles, Donna moved to the East Coast to study theater, earning two BFA's and a BA. With a background in Improvisational Theater, she has performed up and down the East Coast ending up at Colonial Williamsburg's Revolutionary City. For the past 11 years, Donna has been an actor, storyteller and street character interpreter. 
 
Valarie Holmes (Dinah Mitchel)
Valarie Holmes is from New Jersey and attended Rutgers University, Pace University and received a B.S. in Marketing from Hampton Institute and a MFA from Regent University in Performing Arts. Valarie portrays women, some enslaved and some free, during various periods of the history of our country, particularly during the colonial period, for Colonial Williamsburg. She creates roles with the mission to portray with dignity, the complexity of life of enslaved and free African American women. 
Questions? Contact us at 800-761-8331 or HEROsupport@cwf.org.
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Education Outreach, PO Box 1776, Williamsburg, VA 23187
Sent by herosupport@cwf.org in collaboration with
Constant Contact

Thursday, March 3, 2016

My First Job Taught Me This

Congressman Randy Forbes

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My First Job Taught Me This
By Congressman Randy Forbes
March 3, 2016


As a boy growing up in what was a very rural Hampton Roads at the time, summers were mostly spent mowing my neighbor's, my grandmother's, and my aunt's lawns, doing odd jobs for a bit of pocket money, visiting with my grandparents, or playing Parcheesi with friends on our small front porch until the sun faded to dusk and the lightening bugs came out.

While I worked a number of summer jobs over the years, I still smile when I remember my early days of glass bottle recycling entrepreneurship.

Walking along the roadsides of our neighborhoods, you could often spot old Coca-Cola bottles littering the ditches, tossed there by passengers in Chevy and Ford trucks. Once my best friend and I learned that you could exchange those old glass bottles for 3 cents apiece, we made it our mission to spend those long summer days collecting as many Coca-Cola bottles as we could. Our financial goal? To earn enough money to buy candy from the local store.

Our "job" proved lucrative. We spent many hot days pulling glass bottles from the embankments, hauling the bottles to exchange, and counting our earnings. I doubt anyone really noticed our clean-up effort, but it taught me valuable lessons about work. And, in my young mind, our effort paid huge dividends: those coveted Hershey bars with almonds.

Those simple summers hold a fond place in my heart. I think it's because it was one of the earliest points in my life when I realized the true value and meaning of work. It laid the foundation upon which I view business and work today.

We talk a lot about jobs in our nation, and rightly so. Work is a fundamental part of the American character.  To many Virginians, work is a pay check, but it's also so much more than a livelihood. Work is the hope for greater opportunities. It's a chance to meet personal goals. It's the opportunity to serve a family, a community, an industry, or a mission that is bigger than ourselves.

Indeed throughout our history, individual Americans have used their work – their livelihoods – to help our nation burst through economic sluggishness. Ronald Reagan once shared: "I would match the American worker against any in the world. The people whose labor fuels our industry and economy are among the most productive anywhere.… Let us tap into that well of human spirit…"

But, he cautioned, "Our destiny is not our fate; it is our choice."

His caution is right. The legacy of the American worker rests on our ability as a nation to create opportunities for work.  Every day, we as a nation face critical choices. We must decide whether we will empower people in their entrepreneurial ventures. Every day, we as a nation must decide whether we will give our business owners the freedom to build, grow, and innovate. And every day, those are the choices that are on my mind as I make decisions that impact Virginia and our nation.

That's why I choose to strengthen our shipbuilding and defense industrial base.  Virginia's shipbuilding and ship repair industries employ thousands of engineers and tradesmen – the Hampton Roads region alone accounts for roughly one fifth of the nation's total shipbuilders. Their daily work is critical to our national security.  National defense is not a faucet that can be turned on and off (both for the sake of our national security, as well as for our jobs and economy). That's why I've led the charge to fully fund Navy ship repair, successfully pushing the Navy to accelerate maintenance and modernization work to better sustain the ship repair sector throughout 2016 and beyond.

That's why I choose to unwrap the red tape that entangles our manufacturers. Manufacturers bring approximately a quarter million jobs to our economy in Virginia. Their daily work creates well-paying jobs, encourages growth, and fuels innovation. The industry is ripe for global competitiveness, which is why I've supported efforts to make government an enabler instead of a barrier -- like requiring detailed information about the economic impact of any new regulations. I have also worked to ensure companies like Lipton and Keurig Green Mountain have a clear, uniform set of regulations so they can continue to ship their products to all 50 states and employ hundreds in our area.

And that's why I choose to work to make our region attractive to new opportunities. New business and jobs will come to communities that have the infrastructure and environment to support them. I've partnered with community leaders to prioritize infrastructure decisions to help draw companies, like Amazon, to our communities. I've cosponsored legislation to remove bureaucratic hurdles for economic development and expedite permit approvals for major economic development sites. I have also worked diligently to support the continued growth of the Port of Virginia and ensure Virginia remains a hub for economic growth.

The federal government doesn't power America. It is the individual who powers America.  Individual workers, individual businesses, and individual jobs. And it is the collective power of that workforce that creates the backbone of our American economy.

Let us remember, as Ronald Reagan said, to tap into that well of human spirit. For our destiny is not our fate; it is our choice. 
 
 

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LIVE from Colonial Williamsburg! Women of the Revolution




March 10, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET
Women of the Revolution
Women of the Revolution

Bravery. Loyalty. Sacrifice. Women of the Revolution possessed all of these qualities. Explore the excitement, peril, and individual stories of Deborah Sampson, Mary Perth, Martha Washington, and other women, on both sides of the conflict, who proved their mettle in America's war for independence.
Featured Article
Follow us on Twitter
Tweet us your questions and comments! @CWFLearn #HEROLive

Featured Article
HERO Subscriber? Click here to access
  • toll-free number
  • lesson plans
  • web activities
  • on-demand video
 

Not a HERO subscriber? Click here to learn about the benefits of a full subscription!

Meet the hosts of the March 10 live broadcast!

Karl Palenkas
Karl Palenkas is a junior at Isle of Wight Academy located in Isle of Wight, Va. He is a member of the National Honor Society and is interested in pursuing a career in criminal and forensic science. Karl has been professionally acting for three years and is active in his school's drama club. His most recent role was that of an revolutionary soldier in the upcoming season of Legends and Lies
 
Annie Lewis
Annie Lewis
Annie Lewis is an Associate Producer in Colonial Williamsburg's Education Outreach department. Last year she was honored to receive an Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for her work in producing the HERO Live! broadcast of The Amazing Trade Shop Math Race. She enjoys acting, filmmaking, and directing with her production group DoG St. Media, as well as gardening and spending time with her fiancé and her cat, Dr. Whiskers.
 
Holly Mayer
Holly Mayer Holly A. Mayer served in the U.S. Army, earned a Ph.D. at the College of William and Mary, and is a historian at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her research centers on the social and cultural histories of military forces in late eighteenth-century North America. Mayer's publications include the book Belonging to the Army: Camp Followers and Community during the American Revolution.
 
Donna Wolf (Sarah Bache)
Originally from Los Angeles, Donna moved to the East Coast to study theater, earning two BFA's and a BA. With a background in Improvisational Theater, she has performed up and down the East Coast ending up at Colonial Williamsburg's Revolutionary City. For the past 11 years, Donna has been an actor, storyteller and street character interpreter. 
 
Valarie Holmes (Dinah Mitchel)
Valarie Holmes is from New Jersey and attended Rutgers University, Pace University and received a B.S. in Marketing from Hampton Institute and a MFA from Regent University in Performing Arts. Valarie portrays women, some enslaved and some free, during various periods of the history of our country, particularly during the colonial period, for Colonial Williamsburg. She creates roles with the mission to portray with dignity, the complexity of life of enslaved and free African American women. 
Questions? Contact us at 800-761-8331 or HEROsupport@cwf.org.
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Education Outreach, PO Box 1776, Williamsburg, VA 23187
Sent by herosupport@cwf.org in collaboration with
Constant Contact