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Sarah Parker Schlesinger joins Continuity Family Business Consulting
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Continuity Family Business Consulting welcomed Sarah Parker Schlesinger, of Newton, as a senior consultant.
In this role, Schlesinger will oversee development of Continuity’s Center for Wealth Integration, which will help high-net-worth families and family enterprises navigate the opportunities and challenges of generational and shared wealth.
“We’re thrilled to welcome Sarah and to have her spearhead this important practice area,” said Continuity Managing Partner Blair Trippe. “Enterprising families nationwide are seeking increased guidance for their rising generation of family stakeholders and inheritors as they transition into leadership roles. Sarah’s specialized expertise and problem-solving acumen make her the ideal professional to lead this charge.”
In the final days of December 1980 multiple, strange encounters and wild incidents occurred in Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk, England. And across a period of three nights, no less. Based upon their personal encounters, many of those who were present believed that something almost unbelievable came down in the near-pitch-black woods on the night of December 26. Lives were altered forever – and for the most part not for the better, I need to stress. Many of those who were present on those fantastic nights found their minds dazzled, tossed and turned – and incredibly quickly, too. Those incidents involved American military personnel who, at the time it all happened, were stationed in the United Kingdom. Their primary role was to provide significant support in the event that the Soviets decided to flex their muscles just a little bit too much – or, worse still, planned on hitting the proverbial red button and ending civilization in hours. Maybe, even in minutes.
Our friends at The Record talked with Shtokhamer about lessons learned at CERT. The conversation has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
TR: You recently stepped down as executive director of Israel’s National CERT. Which measures or initiatives did you take while at Israel’s CERT that you’re most proud of or were the most impactful?
LS: There have been a lot of things we’ve done the last couple of years. I think one of the most important ones was establishing our national information sharing platform. After a few months it became our immune platform it would help immunize entire organizations in Israel by having a full API for indicators. That’s how we had the possibility, for example, to share indicators by the click of a button, to share it to an API and have it received by monitoring and patching systems in less than a second. In addition to that, we established some new sectorial CERTs. I was the founder of the financial CERT, we have an energy CERT, we
I am doing things a little bit differently this week, as all three of my historic pictures will be part of the story of one of Bandon s oldest businesses, the Capps Motor Co.
The first picture shows Capps Garage before the fire of 1936. It is the building on the east side of Oregon Avenue, which was the main highway into town in those days. Today it leads down the hill past Holy Trinity Catholic Church and joins First Street across from the Port of Bandon s marketplace building. If you look closely you can see the overhang which covered the gasoline tanks in front of the big concrete two-story structure. West of Capps Garage is The Golden Rule, which after the fire relocated on Second Street in the building that is now the Continuum Center.