Post Tagged with: "restroom"

MYSTERY PHOTO: Your military experience might help with today’s Mystery

MYSTERY PHOTO: Your military experience might help with today’s Mystery

If you have been in the Army overseas, you may remember this scene. It’s a popular attraction. Figure out where this photograph was taken, and then send your answer to elliott@brack.net, including your home town. 

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by · September 5, 2023 · Mystery photos
4/12: Norcross updates; Restroom solution; Discrimination laws

4/12: Norcross updates; Restroom solution; Discrimination laws

Click here to read stories in the latest edition. Inside:
TODAY’S FOCUS: Update on the New Norcross Branch Library and Highway Improvements
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Seems To Be Simple Way To Solve Which Restroom To Enter
ANOTHER VIEW: What Discrimination Laws Will Do to Some Southern States
SPOTLIGHT: Infinite Energy Center
FEEDBACK: Closed Minds Lead to Destruction, plus Thanking Lilburn Alcohol-Selling Sites
UPCOMING: Upcoming Clean and Beautiful Dinner to Honor Wiggins, Volunteers
NOTABLE: Majority of Gwinnett Real Properties Will See Change in Valuations
GEORGIA TIDBIT: UGA Has Two Historic Paintings from American Artist George Cooke
TODAY’S QUOTE: What Knowing the Truth Can Do To You
MYSTERY PHOTO: Couple of Clues Awaiting This Edition’s Mystery Photo
LAGNIAPPE: Sugar Hill Bringing Back the Popular Thursdays@the Hill

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by · April 12, 2016 · Full issues
BRACK: Seems to be simple way to solve which restroom to enter

BRACK: Seems to be simple way to solve which restroom to enter

By Elliott Brack, editor and publisher | We in Georgia may think we have our problems. Yet recent action by the Legislature in North Carolina puts that state in the ranks of those with reactionary actions flying in the face of reasonableness.

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by · April 12, 2016 · Elliott Brack's Perspective
WILSON: What discrimination laws will do to some Southern states

WILSON: What discrimination laws will do to some Southern states

By George Wilson | Mississippi is the poorest state in the United States, with 24.1 percent or 695,915 of its citizens living below the poverty line. It also ranks last in its rate of child poverty (33.7 percent), and subsequently last in hunger and food insecurity.

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by · April 12, 2016 · Another View