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A pilot who died in a North Carolina plane crash tried to avoid a turtle on the runway

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:India   来源:Books  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Bix is among the major characters who won’t go on to “Rogue One” or other existing “Star Wars” stories. “Andor” lets her complete her emotional arc with a tear-jerking but well-earned set of scenes.

Bix is among the major characters who won’t go on to “Rogue One” or other existing “Star Wars” stories. “Andor” lets her complete her emotional arc with a tear-jerking but well-earned set of scenes.

POSEN: I hadn’t had my company since before COVID, since 2019, when my company closed. And it had been this interesting time period ... Obviously COVID happened. I had to figure out how to support myself, and I was doing one-of-a-kind pieces. I did some projects with Ryan Murphy on ‘Feud: Capote Versus the Swans,’ and little projects here and there, and I was looking at different opportunities, mostly around within luxury and with luxury brands that I’d been in conversations with for quite some time. And I had this amazing opportunity here.POSEN: GapStudio is using a totally different skill set of mine, the ability and honor to be able to kind of call the team back after ... losing a family that I had built and grown with for over 20 years of incredible artisans and craftspeople and designers that I worked with for many years that had been broken apart, is a full journey story that I actually never saw or expected in my life, and it’s really meaningful. It’s really beautiful to create environment in a space and to have an American institutional corporation and brand invest in creativity and talent at this level is really unprecedented.

A pilot who died in a North Carolina plane crash tried to avoid a turtle on the runway

POSEN: Great question. Gap is Gap. Gap will always be evolving. The world has evolved. Great classics are always great classics. They always need those elements of elevation to them. I think design and how people dress today has changed. I think that new consumers in the marketplace are requesting elements to mix into their classics that are more elevated, that are more stylish. That’s how we capture a new, younger audience.POSEN: Denim is quintessentially American. It’s such an incredible fiber. Right? It is cotton and it’s indigo. These are two plants. I don’t know. I’m a gardener. So I’ll just add that. But, you know, denim is utility. Denim is artisanal. Actually, a pair of jeans that gets made has as many steps as a couture gown. You don’t really realize that as a consumer. I go to the washhouses, and I see these incredible artisans kind of modeling, building, washing, scrubbing, sanding, dramaling, I mean, it’s mind blowing that, you know, this world that we’re living in, wearing all these jeans, have no sense of those processes.POSEN: For me, durability or quality is important in any piece one makes. I’m not interested in disposable clothing. Even with my gowns, I believed in quality and integrity of make and construction. And so, when you take it to a larger audience, you want pieces that can be a keepsake. I don’t believe in building a collection that is age focused. This collection definitely has a voice for a new customer and definitely has cute styles for a younger customer, but it should totally be cross-generational. It should be able to work on a lot of different body types. That’s how I’ve always designed my collections, and durability, for sure. I mean, you want pieces that can become keepsakes and beloved and passed on and shared.

A pilot who died in a North Carolina plane crash tried to avoid a turtle on the runway

POSEN: I think that Gap is a staple. Gap represented kind of a way of dress, a kind of modern wardrobe for the consumer that was rooted in ... classic fabrications and ... reinventing them, representing American style to the consumers all around the world. I hope to kind of hold that quality and those attributes and bring in kind of style and bring in a sense of trend and pieces that just add a little bit of that magic.POSEN: We will see. We will see.

A pilot who died in a North Carolina plane crash tried to avoid a turtle on the runway

NEW YORK (AP) — Growing up on the south side of Chicago, the Rev. Dr. Howard-John Wesley was given the message early on:

as a Black man mattered.Too sick to care for himself alone, Hermida eventually moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, to be closer to family and in hopes of receiving more consistent health care. He enrolled in an

clinic that receives funding from the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, a federal safety-net plan that serves over half of those in the country diagnosed with HIV, regardless of their citizenship status.His HIV became undetectable after he was connected with case managers. But over time, communication with the clinic grew less frequent, he said, and he didn’t get regular interpretation help during visits with his English-speaking doctor. An Amity Medical Group representative confirmed Hermida was a client but didn’t answer questions about his experience at the clinic.

Hermida said he had a hard time filling out paperwork to stay enrolled in the Ryan White program, and when his eligibility expired in September 2023, he couldn’t get his medication.He left the clinic and enrolled in a health plan through the Affordable Care Act marketplace. But Hermida didn’t realize the insurer required him to pay for a share of his HIV treatment.

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