Hey #CleaningTwit - Last week I asked all of you if you'd be interested in a MEGA thread on how we have booked 196 janitorial walk-throughs and sent out over $525,000 in proposals this year alone.
Here it is. Everything I got for you. No BS, no email, No RT/Like BS, no courses.
@ChrisMarlowe Thank you Chris for all your hard work. Thank you for being the voice I'll forever remember growing up as 'the voice of the Nuggets'. You will be missed!
@latimes If Californians see this and don’t go “wtf is going on”, regardless if you like Pratt or not, you deserve all that you get.
How incredibly sad this is where we’re at as a “democracy”
🚨 Meet Doris, she lives in California and is registered as a 126 year old who has voted in 51 elections and has NO IDEA.
California’s voting system is so corrupt that by simply knocking on the door of the “126 year old” proves election fraud.
EXPOSE IT ALL.
@berndogg9@markschlereth I’ve always been in awe that Green, Bailey and Sanders all suited up at once, too. Hard thing is though, people don’t affiliate Sanders and Bailey with Washington
The NHL Alumni Association is devastated to share that Claude Lemieux has passed away at the age of 60.
Born in Buckingham, Quebec, Claude was selected by the Montreal Canadiens in the second round of the 1983 NHL Entry Draft and would make his NHL debut just a few months later on October 13, 1983 and scored his first career NHL goal on December 4, 1983.
Claude split time between the Canadiens organization and the QMJHL from 1983 to 1985, capturing the President’s Cup with the Verdun Junior Canadiens in 1985 as QMJHL playoff champions, while earning the Guy Lafleur Trophy as Playoff MVP.
The very next season, Claude recorded 10 goals and 16 points in 20 playoff games as he and the Montreal Canadiens won the Stanley Cup. Claude remained with the Canadiens for an additional four seasons before joining the New Jersey Devils ahead of the 1990-91 season.
In 1994-95, his fifth and final season with New Jersey, Claude led the Devils to their first Stanley Cup championship, registering 13 goals in 20 playoff games, taking home the Conn Smythe Trophy as Playoff MVP. As a member of the Colorado Avalanche in 1995-96, Claude was once again an integral part of team history as the Avalanche hoisted Lord Stanley’s Cup for the very first time in 1996.
Claude played 297 regular-season games in an Avalanche uniform before rejoining the New Jersey Devils in November of 1999, and for a fourth and final time, would be crowned a Stanley Cup champion on June 10, 2000. Claude later played for the Phoenix Coyotes and Dallas Stars before making a comeback with the San Jose Sharks during the 2008-09 season.
Internationally, Claude represented Canada on several occasions, including capturing a gold medal at the 1985 World Junior Hockey Championships and winning the 1987 Canada Cup.
He was loved by his wife and four children, and on behalf of the Lemieux family, we kindly ask that everyone respect their privacy during this difficult time.
Memorial service details to follow.
@VicLombardi@JoelDreessen Vic, thanks for always sharing stories of him. He seemed like one of a kind. Praying for you, your family and your father today.