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A May 1, 1922, ad in the Long Beach Telegram warned, “There will not be enough apartments for everyone some will be disappointed. Don’t let it be you.” ....
- ADVERTISEMENT - In many cases, the office is still like that, because there’ll always be a need for office workers to deal with scraps of tin, or whatever other sort of widgetry still requires data entry and the stapling of invoice forms to work their way into the pipeline. During much of the COVID era, corporate bosses were somewhat obliged to send their office-workers home for great stretches of time, and in much of that time things went rather swimmingly for companies. Turned out that oftentimes people working in sweatpants and fuzzy slippers were at least as productive, if not more so, than when they were told to dress professionally before being stuffed into cubicles where no one could see them. ....
Ironically this deadly weapon that would kill so many was invented by a doctor. Key point: Mr. Gatling loved to create things and he invented the gun that bears his name. That weapon would go on to be used in many conflicts and modern versions are still used today. Richard Gatling was born in Hertford County, NC, on December 12, 1818. His father was a prosperous farmer and inventor, and the son was destined to inherit the “invention bug.” After three of his sisters died at a young age from disease, Richard Gatling decided to study medicine, and graduated from the Ohio Medical College in Cincinnati in 1850. He moved to Indianapolis the same year, and in 1854 married the daughter of a prominent local physician. There is no evidence that Richard Gatling ever practiced medicine after leaving medical school, but he was always referred to as “doctor.” ....