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Inman Connect Step right up and claim your $10,000, remote workers. Northwest Arkansas is calling you. That’s right, the Northwest Arkansas Council and other economic development councils like it in different areas across the U.S. are seizing upon the wave of newly remote workers to attract new talent and dollars to be put into the local economy without taking job opportunities away from existing residents. Economic councils are trying to woo remote workers with incentives like cash, community events with other transplants, free flights, and in the case of the Northwest Arkansas Council, a bicycle. And it seems to be working. ....
The attempt would fail. The thief likely made off with the bones of a Washington relative and was caught soon afterward. The great man’s remains, as far as anyone knows, have not left Mount Vernon since the day he died, and history has largely forgotten the episode. The details remain sketchy. Neither the year of the attempt, the name of the thief nor the actual bones stolen are known for certain. But the reports of theft caused a bit of a sensation when details leaked into the newspapers of the day. Congress soon was asking that Washington’s body be driven 18 miles north to be entombed in the Capitol as part of the celebration of his 100th birthday, Feb. 22, 1832. ....
George Washington remains stayed at Mount Vernon despite thief attempt, Congress washingtontimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtontimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Fact check: Fake quote about right to bear arms attributed to George Washington Chelsey Cox, USA TODAY Replay Video The claim: George Washington advocated for insurrection over right to bear arms A Facebook post from 2015 featuring a quote attributed to the nation s first president recently went viral. Posted without a caption on Dec. 14, 2015, the post is a meme with a portrait of President George Washington with a quote about the right to bear arms in text overlay. A single comment on the post, from five years ago, states AMEN! USA TODAY reached out to the poster for comment. The claim is one of several versions using the Founding Father s likeness to advocate for the right to bear arms. Others include this Instagram post from May 31 and another from Nov. 17. ....