i just don t like employers that set up this so that they don t have to pay as much. i think people, i think the minimum wage, of course, should be raised at all times, you know, to match inflation, and match the way the economy is. right. but, and i think tipping is the right thing. i agree. i mean a tip. i like giving tips. the thing is, so if you can t, that s okay, and if somebody is a waiter. go through a meal and everything, give a 25% tip, that s great. everything, but if you go buy a rock and somebody says, here, tip me for i just reached, i got this rock. i mean, you re like, okay. i ll give you 15%, i guess, because 12 of you are staring at me while i m holding a rock, doesn t make a lot of sense, but, jonathan lemire, i went, took my kids to play a game a come weeks ago. did you win? that s nice.
Cavaliers players, volunteers, and Sir C.C. tipped off the Season of Giving this month with food drives and other initiates around the city of Cleveland.
sourced manhunt spread via media but more importantly social media. that s right. the minute they put those pictures and video out last night it just took off. people started calling giving tips. they flooded local authorities and that is probably certainly part of what led to the downfall of the second suspect here tonight. kate snow starting off our coverage covering the story tonight. kate, thanks. our chief foreign correspondent richard engel in the studio with us tonight. there s a lot of ground to cover. you find meaning in the most interesting things that we have witnessed tonight. and that is from the applause that came at the end of the night to the people who saved the day to the fact that this suspect is alive. why those two things. i thought those were the two things that struck me about what we saw today. first that he s alive because now he can be debriefed and we can answer all of those
dedicated to giving tips and advice to help your small business grow. today s story is for anyone who s had an amazing idea for a new product but has no idea how to bring it to market. we asked the founders of texas-based locker look z to help us out. and they explain explained how they took a clever construction project and turned it into a multi-nation distribution. turning a clever idea into a marketable product can seem as uncertain as the spin of a wheel on a children s board game. but right at the start, these two dallas mother, joe jan brewer and christy sterling, didn t even seem like players. this was the first time we ever did this. it was just a completely new adventure for us. it was just berthed out of our own experience with our daughters. they were going into the sixth grade, wanted to decorate