CACI s Jack London dead at 83
The government market has lost one of its giants.
Jack London, executive chairman and chairman of the board of CACI International, has died at age 83.
London joined CACI in 1972 as a program manager. CACI was just 10 years old at the time and he was the 35th employee. He rose quickly through the ranks, joining the company’s board in 1981 and named president and CEO in 1984. In 1990, he became chairman.
He served as chairman, president and CEO for 23 years. In 2007, he gave up the role of president and CEO to become executive chairman, the role he retained until his death.
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Angela Evelyn Brown
Angela Evelyn Brown joined our Lord on Friday, Jan. 15, 2021. Angela was born in Baltimore, Md., on April 25, 1936 as the only child of Albert D. Perce and Evelyn Byrne Pearce. She was educated in the Catholic school system in the Baltimore area. She was a graduate The Institute of Notre Dame High School. As a side note, Senator Barbara Mikulski was a homeroom classmate. Angela was a parish member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Lexington Park, Md.
Although she was a resident of Lexington Park, Md., she was recently living at the Solomons Nursing and Rehab Center in Solomons, Md. Angela is survived by her husband, Captain Donald L. Brown, USN (Ret.), of Lexington Park; her daughter Deborah B. Radivo and son-in-law Nick A. Radivo of Centreville, Md. She is predeceased by her 9-year-old daughter, Barbara E. Brown; her parents of Baltimore; her mother and father-in-law, Hazel and Nelson Chub Brown of Fort Scott, Kan., and an aunt and uncle, Col
El Salvador struggles 29 years after peace accords
The civil conflict left 75,000 dead and at least 8,000 disappeared
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A woman holds flowers at the Monument to Memory and Truth during the commemoration of the 29th anniversary of the Peace Accords that put an end to El Salvador s civil conflict (1980-1992), in Gerardo Barrios Park known as Civic Square in San Salvador, on January 16, 2021. (Photo: MARVIN RECINOS / AFP)
The mural in the town of La Laguna depicts a rifle firmly planted into the ground but one that, with time, becomes a tall corn plant with a dove hovering nearby.
The mural from rifle to corn depicts what happened in this part of the Salvadoran countryside, as it evolved from a theater of war in the late 1970s and 1980s to a thriving agricultural area, after rifles and other weapons were laid to rest with the signing of peace accords in 1992.
Heavy Military Presence as Capitol Prepares for Inauguration Like No Other
WASHINGTON The nation’s capital is preparing for a presidential inauguration like no other in U.S. history, marked by extensive security measures, a large military presence, and pandemic restrictions. President-elect Joe Biden is set to be sworn in on Jan. 20.
Up to 25,000 members of the National Guard coming from all 50 states will be stationed at the Capitol. The number of Guardsmen sent to Washington far exceeds the number of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, which has been reduced to 2,500. National Guardsmen have been permitted to use lethal force in order to support law enforcement in the Capitol and city.
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