The company is led by Susan Reetz, who is the writer, director and producer of Honor in the Air. Alwin s younger sister, Pamela Alwin Fullerton, a retired attorney and writer, is part of the production team as associate producer.
The two met in 2019 when they sat together on an author s panel. When Reetz learned about Alwin, she immediately knew his story needed to be told and would rivet people.
Alwin was an extraordinary person even as a child growing up in Fort Atkinson, Fullerton said. He read about military leaders throughout time, including Caesar and Hannibal.
She talks about when she was about 10 and he was about 12, she told him that she was doing a school report about David Livingstone, the English explorer who famously searched for the source of the Nile.
VAntage Point
The short sweet story of the Veteran’s birthday that almost wasn’t
VA Chaplain to the rescue for Veteran’s daughter
Like most health care facilities across the country, the Audie L. Murphy Memorial Veterans Hospital has restricted visitation policies throughout the pandemic to continue to fight COVID-19.
Family members and loved ones of inpatient Veterans have not been able to visit them for months due to the safety precautions.
On February 11, Skye Miller decided she would give her luck a try and visit her father, Robert “Bob” Miller, at the hospital.
She wanted to celebrate Miller’s 73rd birthday by bringing colorful balloons, a beautiful cake and gifts to his bedside. She was unfortunately stopped by the screeners and told she could not visit her father due to the current visitation policy.
The Associated Press
FILE - In this Feb. 23, 2021, file photo, a crane is used to lift a vehicle following a rollover accident involving golfer Tiger Woods, in the Rancho Palos Verdes suburb of Los Angeles. The Los Angeles County sheriff plans to announce Wednesday, April 7, 2021, what caused Woods to crash an SUV in Southern California earlier in the year, seriously injuring himself in the wreck. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu, File)
LOS ANGELES Tiger Woods was driving more than 80 mph nearly twice the posted speed limit on a downhill stretch of road when he lost control of an SUV and crashed in a wreck that seriously injured the golf superstar. Sheriff Alex Villanueva blamed the Feb. 23 crash outside Los Angeles solely on excessive speed and Woods’ loss of control behind the wheel. The athlete will not face any citations for his third high-profile collision in 11 years. “The primary causal factor for this traffic collision was driving at a speed unsafe for the road condition