Bookstore in washington, d. C. In 2019. Hello, everyone. Im a member of the event staff and i would like to welcome you all on this cold evening to politics and prose. Just a few quick notes before we get started, cspan is here with us tonight and we are also filming for our own Youtube Channel so if you could take a moment to silence your cell phone please take a moment along the same lines when we get to the q a portion of the event, we have a microphone up over here we want to make sure we keep the dialogue running. Books are available at the register. Also fun and an interesting books that make great gifts to you might want to pick up a couple of those as well which is of course why we are here the secret plot to kill George Washington. Writing history with the same command that made him one of the finest thriller writers he tells the story of the plot to assassinate George Washington. Looking back, he shows the iconic view was brought with uncertainty. It was anything but a sure.
By MELISSA HARTMAN | The Santa Cruz Sentinel | Published: March 6, 2021
Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See more staff and wire stories here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. SANTA CRUZ Local military veteran Jim McBurney described getting inoculated through Veterans Affairs as an operation with military precision. In the wake of limited vaccine supply across the state of California, hundreds of Santa Cruz veterans such as McBurney are turning to nearby VA clinics for their shots. According to information provided to the Sentinel by VA Palo Alto Health Care System public affairs specialist Michael Hill-Jackson, residents in almost every city in the county have turned to the VA to be vaccinated. More than 800 Santa Cruz County veterans have taken advantage of having another vaccine route from their military background.