including the self styled world s fastest accountant. eugene amo dadzie only took up the sport at 26 and now, four years later, he s the oldest new sprinter on the block. he ran 9.93 earlier this season in austria to help him qualify for budapest. i want to show that an accountant is more than just spreadsheets and numbers. forwhatever more than just spreadsheets and numbers. for whatever reasons, we get a bad rap numbers. for whatever reasons, we geta bad rap boring, numbers. for whatever reasons, we get a bad rap boring, stale. for me, was a bit of a play on, you didn t know what i was talking about. when i came up with it, my wife was really cheesy. thought it was. that is my own self branding and i have no clue it would capture the imagination. i m currently still working full time, so that s why put myself as the world s fastest accountant. when i was about eight or nine, i was at the fastest kid in
love the rivalry but we all bring the best out of each other. i think you don t have longevity in the game if you not in competitive spirit. i think he always out. jim hines who was the first man to run the one hundred metres in under 10 seconds, has died at the age of 76. the american first broke the record at the us championships in 1968 when he recorded a hand timed 9.9 seconds hines then broke his own record shortly after while winning gold at the 1968 olympics, where an electronic timer in mexico city recorded him at 9.95.his record held for nearly 15 years until calvin smith ran a time of 9.93 in 1983. that is the longest length of time an athlete has held the record for the men s 100m since the international amateur athletic foundation began keeping track 110 years ago. hines was born in the state of arkansas in 1916 but was raised in oakland, california.he had an early love of sport, namely baseball, but showed a real talent for sprinting as a teenager. he attended texas sout
science is a process, right? and with this unprecedented virus you can expect new data to change the approach. but at some point people get worn out, not just with misinformation, but legitimate messaging that is accurate, but can appear contradictory, especially if it doesn t fit neatly into a headline. yes, because even accurate but cherry-picked data can be misleading. one of the key numbers this weekend is that 99.93% of fully vaccinated americans have not tested positive for covid. in other words, the vast majority of americans who have been vaccinated have not become ill with this virus. and yet the numbers and the headlines in the last few days from outlets like the washington post and new york times have portrayed a situation that seems like a crisis for the vaccinated than it actually is. look, i could see this coming when the cdc indicated they were going to be issuing new guidance
does with protectionism. i was blown away by this that i found about half way through your book. this is about who we were. in 1951, when the average american ate 50% more than the average european, americans controlled two-thirds of the world s productive capacity, owned 80% of the world s electrical goods, produced more than 40 percent of its electricity, 60% of itsole and 66% of its steel. america s five percent of the world s population had more wealth than the other 95% and americans made almost all of what they consumed, 99.93% of new cars sold in america in 1954 were u.s. brands. that knocked me out, too. by the end of the 50s, gm was a bigger economic entity than belgium and los angeles had more cars than did asia.