retired firefighter and emergency shanghai escort
medical technician Tony Exline, Gunnery Sgt. Clive Bailey and Bridgett Higgs, an emergency department at Civista Medical Center in La Plata, rushed to Morgan's side to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation and then use an automatic exterior defibrillator to jumpstart his heart, said retired U.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Ron Fry, the senior naval science instructor at the high school. Exline, whose 15-year-old son, Jonathan, is in the NJROTC program at La Plata, said having an AED at the school helped save Morgan's escort . "I did 20 years with Prince George's County Fire Department and normally a patient is so far gone by the time that you use an AED there's not much of a chance of saving them," he said. "Having the AED right there at the school was critical."
ypjzdqr0811 Evelyn Arnold, the school's principal, said there are four AEDs at La Plata High School. In fact, every high school in the county has the units in the event one of them might be needed during athletic events, she said. Arnold said she is proud of everyone who responded so swiftly during the incident. "The thing that I was most proud of is that everyone remained calm," she said. "It just worked like clockwork. Everything went together perfectly ... I was proud of Courtney and all of the kids." Morgan returned to the school May 26 and presented the American Legion JROTC General Military Excellence Award to cadet Lt.Travis Gragan and the American Legion Scholastic Excellence award to cadet Lt. Cmdr. Jake Medina, Arnold said. Thompson reacted admirably when Morgan showed signs of distress, Fry said, adding that he and Arnold presented her with a Meritorious Achievement Award for her swift response during the incident. "Courtney kept everybody calm and moved everyone outside," Fry said, adding that everyone's swift response to Morgan's plight was remarkable. "It couldn't have gone any more perfectly," he said. "There was an immediate response. All of the right people were there."
also tell Jonathan that in no way will we alter our car-free escort style, even for a hybrid; so he tells me he will spare no expense to refurbish the vintage Schwinn in our basement when he gets home. In November 2010. Dealing with the unknown We have already told everyone when they can start expecting money from us when we learn that he may not be mobilized until September. It is the way of the Army, that every day is another duplicate, triplicate piece of paperwork; that we can calculate his earnings to the penny; that we will not know until he actually "ships" for sure, for totally actually certain, when or where or with whom he will go. It could change at any time. It could be delayed, or moved up, or left where it is after having been canceled, then reinstated. So I must work each day, write things for pay and cook nourishing food for our boys and juggle our utility bills and never know if it will be months or weeks or days before the numbers we have written down on scraps of paper become dollars in our bank account, before that unbelievable separation - I'll be a war wife! - begins. I thank the heavens that we are on the pleasant end of the spectrum of reservist financial situations; many families whose reservists daddies go to war are dependent on bigger salaries than the ones you can find in the military pay tables; for them, war is a financial minefield, too. For us, it is a Godsend, and though thatalso makes me sad, I think to myself, this was meant to be, and I take solace in our modest escort style, and I imagine a time we will have a savings account with more than 45 cents in it, and I pray more often than I used to.
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