April 13, 1866: The East Tennessee Union Flag reported, âAn interesting protracted meeting is now going on in the Presbyterian Church in this place. Considerable interest is being manifested by those in attendance, and we trust such good may be accomplished. The Church has no abler pastor than Rev. Dr. Waterbury, under whose superintendence the meeting is conducted.â
The East Tennessee Union Flag was a newspaper published in Jonesborough. The city was spelled that way on the masthead, but was spelled as Jonesboro in various places inside the newspaper.
April 13, 1899: The Comet reported, âMr. S.C. Williams has tendered his resignation as city attorney, to take effect within thirty days. Mr. Williams has made a most efficient and zealous official, but as he is the attorney for other corporations, whose legal interests are antagonistic to those of the city. Mr. Williams decided that the only proper course for him to pursue was to resign. His successor has not yet been
Crocodile tears over open lands?
City Council candidates Green, Haitz, and McCallister are shedding crocodile tears over their âexclusionâ from the Outdoor Recreation Councilâs questionnaire on public lands and recreation issues. As described in the Sentinel article on April 1 ,âcandidates miffed by public lands discourse,â the ORCâs screenshot proves that the questions were mailed to all 8 candidates; only three chose not to respond.
Coincidentally, these are the same three candidates who chose not to participate in two well-attended online forums hosted by Western Colorado Alliance in February and March, even though they were invited repeatedly.
Mr. Green in his response to the Sentinel claims to have 25 years of involvement in public access through âPublic Lands Access Associationâ and âCitizenâs Access for Public Lands.â Google these organizations and youâll find that they have little to do with public lands and recre
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Cybersecurity innovator Tiberium launched two Microsoft based services last week leveraging Azure Sentinel and Microsoft Defender. Founded by Kiwi, Drew Perry, the launch sees the first major step for Tiberium since closing a successful funding round and welcoming experienced security players to the Board at the turn of the year.
Perry is keen to stress the Outcome First and Automate Everything elements of the strategy within the company, which is seen as the foundation for differentiation in the UK MSSP market. The maturation of the Azure Sentinel and Microsoft Defender product sets has unlocked the potential of delivering services that fully realise the promise of automation and orchestration to deliver security outcomes that matter.
By
Sydney J. Freedberg Jr. on March 16, 2021 at 7:30 AM
Photo: Courtesy of Raytheon Missiles & Defense
WASHINGTON: Raytheon will soon deliver the Army’s first “production readiness” model of the new LTAMDS radar, in time for key tests this summer. By next September (2022), the first six early-model LTAMDS should have passed initial Army testing. That will allow the Lower-Tier Air & Missile Defense Sensor, to use its formal name, to be approved for “Urgent Materiel Release” to Army missile defense units.
If Raytheon makes that deadline, it’ll have gone from initial contract award – in Oct. 2019 – to operational fielding in less than three years. That’s a remarkable pace for the Pentagon, made possible in large part by using the streamlined Other Transaction Authority process instead of traditional contracting regulations.
March 12, 1869: The East Tennessee Union Flag alerted readers, “Our friends and patrons will take notice, that the Union Flag Office will be removed next week, to the old