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Former Trump aide bidding to unseat Dem says young people brainwashed by Big Tech, need to step up
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The Recorder - Thomas Aquinas College names alumnus next president
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At age 25, Joey Smith has a thriving career in construction and is already serving as an advocate to help other young people get into the industry and climb the ladder.
Smith is a project administrator at Great Falls Construction in Gorham and chair of the steering committee of the Emerging Contractors Group, a group of young leaders in the construction industry.
“I’m two-and-a-half years out of school and working full-time and comfortable with where I’m at financially,” he says. “You find your niche in construction, and you can do well.”
Beyond stereotypes
Communicating all of the opportunities in construction and related trades can be a challenge. Many people stereotype the industry as hard labor. But pathways abound, says Matthew Marks, CEO of Associated General Contractors of Maine in Augusta.
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Rivier University nursing students practice on dummies during a lab class. (Courtesy photo)
It would be difficult to say that there has been a lot of good to come out of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the field of nursing, however, there may be a positive: the pandemic has focused attention on nursing careers, and schools around the Granite State are seeing more people apply to become nurses.
“The pandemic has shined a light on how difficult the job [of a nurse] is,” said Pamela DiNapoli, executive director of the New Hampshire Nurses Association, a not-for-profit advocating for all nurses in the state. “I was thinking the younger population may not want to go into a job so difficult. But I have been pleasantly surprised that there is a real resurgence in the role.”
Navy Honors Cheshire’s Barnum, Medal of Honor Recipient
Navy Honors Cheshire’s Barnum, Medal of Honor Recipient
File photos by Nick Sambides Jr., Record-Journal staff
An 80-year-old Cheshire native was honored this week for his Medal of Honor service during the Vietnam War with the laying of the keel of a U.S. Navy destroyer named in his honor.
Retired U.S. Marine Col. Harvey C. Barnum Jr. and his wife Martha Hill were in Maine on Tuesday to strike welding arcs into a steel plate that will be incorporated into the hull of the future USS Harvey C. Barnum, Jr., a guided missile destroyer being built at Bath Iron Works, company officials said Wednesday.
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