Legendary All Black wing Stu Wilson becomes orderly at Tauranga Hospital
6 Mar, 2021 05:00 PM
6 minutes to read
Being back in a team environment is familiar to former All Blacks captain Stu Wilson. Photo / George Novak
Being back in a team environment is familiar to former All Blacks captain Stu Wilson. Photo / George Novak
He once flew down the wing in front of thousands of screaming rugby fans, but now former All Black captain Stu Wilson is ferrying patients up and down hospital hallways. Known as one of the greatest finishers of all time, the 66-year-old is now at home in the engine room of Tauranga Hospital.
now it is clearly a mess. more coming up on that as we get it. how about this development to tell but folks? ferry service may be setting sail between the united states and cuba for the first time in more than 50 years. there are several businesses as you would expect who are hoping to ride the wave of normalized relationships between the two countries. a ferry may be part of that deal. phil keating live in key west florida. phil what is the motivation for this? hi, martha. pure business capitalism and bringing back what was once a popular thing to do for american tourists come down to key west charter out a fishing boat for the day or buy a ferryboat ticket to head to havana. half a dozen american boat-buying entrepreneurs to apply with the treasury department which was popular before the cast veries took power, ferrying from the keys to cuba. the 90 mile trip takes 3 1/2 hours right through the florida
they recommend americans be no more than 50 no closer than 50 miles to any of these plants. that anyone closer than 50 miles should leave the area. the japanese government has had a 12-mile, 20 kilometer, 12 mile evacuation zone and additional 10 kilometers after that they say stay indoors and don t turn on ventilation systems in your houses. the u.s. government says 50 miles and u.s. pilots, ferrying supplies and trying to help with the relief effort have been told not to go within 50 miles of the nuclear plant. those statements are more forth right than what we are hearing from the japanese government. tom, we have six reactors here and problems in each one. give us a sense of what is going on as far as we can tell. i will tell you, one picture is worth a million words. this is the closest image we have had of the battlefields. come in if you can and show