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I Advice - A Great American Love Story
Paycheck Calculators g and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends.A paycheck calculator promises to relieve at least one part of a company’s payroll gripes. A paycheck calculator does the payroll computations, deductions and filing for any business.Paycheck calculators are to found online, and claim to be able to eliminate delays, save money and help companies to be in control of their payroll processing. Moreover, these online paycheck calculators provide highly advanced computational features that include the printing of paychecks. There are a variety of calculators, all offering a unique range of functions.The paycheck calculator calculates an individual’s net pay, which essentially amounts to earnings after taxes have been withheld. The hourly paycheck calculator calculates net pay based on diverse wage rates as they are entered. Yet another versatile paycheck computer can ascertain gross wage amounts before taxes and deductions are withheld, on the basis of a certain net pay amount.There are two types of bonus calculators, one that uses the percentage method and another that employs the aggregate method. The former uses supplemental tax rates to determine withholding on particular earnings such as bonuses. The latter, on Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings f Avoid the 97 Percent MLM Failure Rate With One Simple Thing A Great American Love StoryYou can be successful in network marketing if you understand this, and it costs you nothing. Nobody has ever explained it to you like this before, and probably never will.There is a 97 percent failure rate in multilevel marketing (MLM) for one reason.Most of us learn the hard way.If you are not as successful as you want to be, it is because everything that everyone told you is wrong. If it wasn’t, it would be working… wouldn’t it?Let that soak in for a few seconds. Then congratulate yourself. You just learned something for free that costs most people a ton of money, not to mention the time it takes to learn it.To make it in MLM, you need ONE THING.Most people think it’s the product. That’s not it.Some people think it’s the money. And that’s not it.Some people think it’s the company. That’s not it either.Now don’t get me wrong. All those things are important. You won’t be in business long trying to do MLM without a product (and you may even end up in jail). You do need a company that supports you, and enough money to make it worth your time.But you can have the best product, in the best company, with the best compens The year was 1932, the year air conditioning was invented and the Zippo lighter. Americans were in the throes of the Great Depression and many were out of work and standing in long bread lines. Times were tough. The year 1932 would also mark the beginning of a great American love story that would last for 75 years and still be going strong as of this writing! This is not your typical love story, not by a long shot. But it is indeed a story filled with love, and comradeship, heartbreak, sacrifice, and sheer joy. It is the story of three American men who have been best buddies since the ages of 12, and 13, when first they met and started playing sandlot baseball together. Little did they know at the time, that their new friendship would last throughout all their high school days, World War II, and continue to flourish throughout their lives, even though geographical locations would eventually separate them physically. But true friendship survives distance and circumstances. These three men are living proof of that. They share a unique bond that most of us would envy. They are emotional doppelgangers of each other. They started out in those prewar years, playing sports - varsity baseball, basketball and football, all of them excelling or lettering in one sport or another. This was their life. Life was good despite the times. They were young and all that mattered was sports and listening to, and dancing to, the sounds of the Big Bands. Living in south New Jersey, it was only a hop, skip and a jump to the Jersey shore where they would go to the Steel Pier in Atlantic City to listen to Benny Goodman and other well known musicians. Sports, Big Band music and the three of them together. It just didn’t get any better than this. One of the men is my dad, Jack “6 for 6” Letzgus as we call him, having earned that monicker for getting a hit in 6 successive turns at bat (four singles and 2 triples). He played semi-professional ball, in one game even hitting three triples, tying a national record. Who knows what heights he would have achieved had it not been for the war. As his friend Ted Lewin said “Jack, the war interfered with our baseball careers.” My dad was described as a husky third sacker, although later, years of suffering from a very bad duodenal ulcer would see his slender but well built body diminish to a mere 132 pounds on his 5’10” frame. Our next door neighbor had commented that “Poor Jack is going downhill. I can see it each day. He won’t be around long.” If only she were alive today to see him a mere 2 ? years away from his 90th birthday. She wouldn’t believe it. I can’t believe it either. He’s even healthier today than he was in his twenties through his sixties. The adage “You can’t keep a good man down” is apropos in this situation. The school years were now coming to a close. They would graduate from Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey, in 1938. But one of the three is a bit younger than my dad and the other friend. His graduation year would be different…or at least it should have been. Jim Dunn is the baby of the three, a mere 86 now compared to my dad’s and Ted’s 87 years. He had skipped a grade in elementary school and for some reason he would have graduated a half a year ahead of my dad and Ted. School calendars were a bit different back then and they had half years. Jim wasn’t going to graduate without his two best buddies though, so he did something that most people would not do. He purposely failed a grade so that he would be put back and graduate in 1938 along with my dad Jack, and Ted. Most kids are anxious to get out of school. Not Jim. He wasn’t going anywhere without his pals.This is indeed a love story! The three of them continued to pal around, play sports, earn a living and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends. Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings fr Chicago Personal Injury Settlements cally.Persons residing in Chicago who have been injured by another party depend on Chicago personal injury settlements to recover the expenses of their medical treatment, restore lost wages, or else meet financial requirements resulting from their injuries. Personal injury settlements permit sufferers to get medical care and compensation for suffering and expenses related to the disaster.In the majority of cases, insurance companies will present personal injury settlements immediately after a mishap, in the expectation that an attorney has not yet been consulted. Attaining personal injury settlements at the beginning of the case permits insurance companies to avoid legal charges, and frequently implies that the victims do not obtain the entire settlement to which they are entitled. It is exceptionally vital that sufferers and their families not consent to any personal injury settlements unless they have time to discuss the case with an attorney.The sum of money consequential to Chicago personal injury settlements differ based on several issues, such as the character and degree of injuries. A number of Chicago personal injury settlements are effortlessly estimated, as in auto But true friendship survives distance and circumstances. These three men are living proof of that. They share a unique bond that most of us would envy. They are emotional doppelgangers of each other. They started out in those prewar years, playing sports - varsity baseball, basketball and football, all of them excelling or lettering in one sport or another. This was their life. Life was good despite the times. They were young and all that mattered was sports and listening to, and dancing to, the sounds of the Big Bands. Living in south New Jersey, it was only a hop, skip and a jump to the Jersey shore where they would go to the Steel Pier in Atlantic City to listen to Benny Goodman and other well known musicians. Sports, Big Band music and the three of them together. It just didn’t get any better than this. One of the men is my dad, Jack “6 for 6” Letzgus as we call him, having earned that monicker for getting a hit in 6 successive turns at bat (four singles and 2 triples). He played semi-professional ball, in one game even hitting three triples, tying a national record. Who knows what heights he would have achieved had it not been for the war. As his friend Ted Lewin said “Jack, the war interfered with our baseball careers.” My dad was described as a husky third sacker, although later, years of suffering from a very bad duodenal ulcer would see his slender but well built body diminish to a mere 132 pounds on his 5’10” frame. Our next door neighbor had commented that “Poor Jack is going downhill. I can see it each day. He won’t be around long.” If only she were alive today to see him a mere 2 ? years away from his 90th birthday. She wouldn’t believe it. I can’t believe it either. He’s even healthier today than he was in his twenties through his sixties. The adage “You can’t keep a good man down” is apropos in this situation. The school years were now coming to a close. They would graduate from Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey, in 1938. But one of the three is a bit younger than my dad and the other friend. His graduation year would be different…or at least it should have been. Jim Dunn is the baby of the three, a mere 86 now compared to my dad’s and Ted’s 87 years. He had skipped a grade in elementary school and for some reason he would have graduated a half a year ahead of my dad and Ted. School calendars were a bit different back then and they had half years. Jim wasn’t going to graduate without his two best buddies though, so he did something that most people would not do. He purposely failed a grade so that he would be put back and graduate in 1938 along with my dad Jack, and Ted. Most kids are anxious to get out of school. Not Jim. He wasn’t going anywhere without his pals.This is indeed a love story! The three of them continued to pal around, play sports, earn a living and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends. Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings f Ending a Sentence with a Preposition uccessive turns at bat (four singles and 2 triples). He played semi-professional ball, in one game even hitting three triples, tying a national record. Who knows what heights he would have achieved had it not been for the war. As his friend Ted Lewin said “Jack, the war interfered with our baseball careers.” My dad was described as a husky third sacker, although later, years of suffering from a very bad duodenal ulcer would see his slender but well built body diminish to a mere 132 pounds on his 5’10” frame.You must never end a sentence with a preposition! How often did you hear this in school? I have good news: you can end a sentence any way you choose to. Ending sentences with prepositions is something I looked into. Thoroughly.Let's define a preposition. It's a connective word that shows the relationship (in terms of time, space, cause, ownership, association, accompaniment, or manner) between a noun (or pronoun) and some other word in the sentence. Think "relationship," think "position," when you think "preposition."Some of the most commonly used prepositions: about, above, across, after, against, along, amid, among, around, at, before, behind, below, beneath, beside, between, beyond, by, concerning, during, except, for, from, in, inside, into, instead, of, off, on, onto, out, over, past, pending, regarding, respecting, round, since, through, to, toward, under, until, unto, up, upon, with, within, without.There are rules floating around--causing conflict and consternation--that were never really, truly, official grammar rules. They were often the personal preferences of people who liked to speak out on the subject. People in power. Like your fifth g Our next door neighbor had commented that “Poor Jack is going downhill. I can see it each day. He won’t be around long.” If only she were alive today to see him a mere 2 ? years away from his 90th birthday. She wouldn’t believe it. I can’t believe it either. He’s even healthier today than he was in his twenties through his sixties. The adage “You can’t keep a good man down” is apropos in this situation. The school years were now coming to a close. They would graduate from Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey, in 1938. But one of the three is a bit younger than my dad and the other friend. His graduation year would be different…or at least it should have been. Jim Dunn is the baby of the three, a mere 86 now compared to my dad’s and Ted’s 87 years. He had skipped a grade in elementary school and for some reason he would have graduated a half a year ahead of my dad and Ted. School calendars were a bit different back then and they had half years. Jim wasn’t going to graduate without his two best buddies though, so he did something that most people would not do. He purposely failed a grade so that he would be put back and graduate in 1938 along with my dad Jack, and Ted. Most kids are anxious to get out of school. Not Jim. He wasn’t going anywhere without his pals.This is indeed a love story! The three of them continued to pal around, play sports, earn a living and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends. Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings f Finding a Great Cash Back Credit Card Offer to a close. They would graduate from Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden, New Jersey, in 1938. But one of the three is a bit younger than my dad and the other friend. His graduation year would be different…or at least it should have been.When it comes to rewards programs, the cash back kind is one of the most favorite. Imagine it. In essence, the credit card company is giving you some of your money back for every purchase. It’s like a built-in rebate on everything from gas and food, a night out on the town to a new car. But if you put a lot of thought into these deals, they may not all seem like the best around. Better yet, sit back, read on, and let us put all the thought into helping you find the best cash back credit card.Let’s start with the benefits. Most cash back programs give you 1 percent back on all your purchases. Some will give you a higher percentage rate—say, 5 percent—if you buy from a particular company or type of item. For instance, a gas card credit company may give you 5 percent cash back on gasoline purchases made at their specific gas station, and 1 percent back everywhere else.That sounds great, and it adds up to some change back in your pocket. On a 1 percent cash back card, you would get $10 back for every $1000 you spend. That’s a higher percentage cash back figure, so don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched.What’s more to watch out for, too, is the fact that many Jim Dunn is the baby of the three, a mere 86 now compared to my dad’s and Ted’s 87 years. He had skipped a grade in elementary school and for some reason he would have graduated a half a year ahead of my dad and Ted. School calendars were a bit different back then and they had half years. Jim wasn’t going to graduate without his two best buddies though, so he did something that most people would not do. He purposely failed a grade so that he would be put back and graduate in 1938 along with my dad Jack, and Ted. Most kids are anxious to get out of school. Not Jim. He wasn’t going anywhere without his pals.This is indeed a love story! The three of them continued to pal around, play sports, earn a living and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends. Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings f Shopping for an Auto Loan? g and be happy, carefree young men. Then it happened. World War II. The Big One. This would be the first separation of these three dear friends.When consumers purchase a car, they shop around looking for the best deal. When the consumer buys a car, whether it is new or used, the dealer will usually offer the buyer a loan package. This usually is the easiest way for the consumer, but it is not always the best way. Consumers should shop around for an auto loan just as they shop around for a car. They should look for the best deal.Auto loan lenders differ in terms of the packages they offer. Shopping around for an auto loan will reveal differences in interest rate, down payment requirements and loan options. All of these need to be researched by the consumer who is looking for the best deal. Above all, the consumer must read the fine print. What might look like a good deal might actually turn out to be a very bad deal once the fine print and all the details are read. Keep your calculator close by because you will need it to figure out the different packages to determine what the best deal is.The auto loan interest rates are one of the terms that the consumer wants to check. The consumer can do this online or by calling different lending institutions in his area. There is some variability in the interest ra Their colorful love story takes on a different hue now as members of the fair sex slowly steal into their lives. Jim went into the Navy, positioned off the coast of Normandy on the USS Texas during the D-Day invasion. He also served in the Pacific. Jim had met his future wife, Dorothy, in the little town in which they all grew up, aptly named Fairview. It wasn’t long before sports took somewhat of a backseat to the feminine charms of Dorothy. They soon would marry. Ted had also been distracted from all things sports as he matured into his older teens. He had met a lovely young girl named Ruth and they married before Ted joined the Merchant Marine. The years would take him around the world but his heart was always back in Fairview with the lovely Ruth. My dad, Jack, received the Greetings from Uncle Sam and soon found himself drafted into the US Army, stationed in Texas and Louisiana before being shipped out to what was supposed to be duty in the Philippines. Fate stepped in, however, and steered the ship and his life in a much different direction. The Japanese had attacked the Philippines so my dad’s ship was diverted to Australia where he would soon win a marital victory, not necessarily a martial one. There, in Melbourne, Australia, he met the love of his life, my mother, the great Australian beauty, and dancer, Iris Robertson. The times being uncertain, as they are during war years with no one knowing what would happen in this unstable world, whirlwind courtships, and marriages were not uncommon. Within four months of meeting, my mother and father married. During these years, the best buddies were settling down with their wives and the children started arriving. I was born in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. My dad was sent to Hollandia, New Guinea, and after a long time, was shipped back home to the US, where my mother and I joined him 8 months later. He had been away from home for almost 5 years, a sacrifice hard to imagine today. Jim and his wife had four children and relocated to Arizona precipitated by the poor health of their middle daughter who suffered from severe asthma. The dry, desert heat would help her, they reasoned, and off they went - another rent in the rich tapestry of the three friends’ lives, but a necessary one. Meantime, enhancing the love story, Ted and his wife Ruth had three children, all boys whom they named Jack, Jim and Ted! Ted, Ruth and boys moved to California, motivated by a wonderful job opportunity for Ted. He landed a job with Shiley Corporation where he invented the blood oxygenator used in cardiac surgery. Years later he would be named California Inventor of the Year. With Jack still living in New Jersey, Jim and family in Arizona, and Ted and family in California, the visits were not as often now as any of them wanted. They stayed in touch though by telephone and letters and the occasional visit. How wonderful it would have been for them had they been able to avail themselves of the computer technology with webcams of today, but none of them can be persuaded to try it. My parents’ marriage would last for 50+ years, ending only because of the devastating disease of Supranuclear Palsy that would claim my mother’s life and make my dad the first widower of the three friends, a most unwanted distinction. Sadly, Jim’s wife, Dorothy was the next of the wives to pass away, she of cancer, after 50+ years of marriage. It wasn’t long before Ted would join their ranks of widower, when his wife of 50+ years, Ruth, passed away a few hours before 9/11. The three best buddies were now widowers and living far apart from one another. How strange that all three of them would outlive their beloved wives when statistically women outlive men. After Ted’s wife passed away, Jim remarked how incredible it would be if all three of them could share a house together and share the rest of their lives together, to be close together again, to play a little ball together in their twilight years. But life happens and we all must make the most of what we have left. Jim now spends his time running marathons and invariably comes home with a gold medal. So far, he’s won 9 of them. He quips that there aren’t many 86-year-olds to compete with him. Ted spends his days golfing, and reading, and enjoying the California lifestyle. My dad, Jack, who is as witty and humorous as he ever was, spends his time writing poems and limericks and recently had a short story that he had written during the war, bound and printed. These men are not going gently into that good night. They are an inspiration to all who know the
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