While other pool cleaners are still tethered to electrical outlets, the Seagull Series is completely cordless! Committed to providing pool owners with smart, simple and hassle-free pool cleaning solutions, Aiper is helping people everywhere reclaim their summer days and enjoy their pool, not worry about cleaning them. Clean Smarter. Live Intelligently with Aiper. Click here for the Aiper (2023 Upgrade) Cordless Robotic Pool Cleaner, Pool Vacuum Lasts 90 Mins, LED Indicator, Self-Parking, Ideal for Above/In-Ground Flat Pools up to 40 Feet; it’s only $199.99! CORDLESS & EASY TO USE: No need longer to connect a power cable or to deal with messy pool hoses. The Seagull SE is completely cordless and hassle-free. Simply power the unit on and drop it...
While other pool cleaners are still tethered to electrical outlets, the Seagull Series is completely cordless! Committed to providing pool owners with smart, simple and hassle-free pool cleaning solutions, Aiper is helping people everywhere reclaim their summer days and enjoy their pool, not worry about cleaning them. Clean Smarter. Live Intelligently with Aiper. Click here for the Aiper (2023 Upgrade) Cordless Robotic Pool Cleaner, Pool Vacuum Lasts 90 Mins, LED Indicator, Self-Parking, Ideal for Above/In-Ground Flat Pools up to 40 Feet; it’s only $199.99! CORDLESS & EASY TO USE: No need longer to connect a power cable or to deal with messy pool hoses. The Seagull SE is completely cordless and hassle-free. Simply power the unit on and drop it...
A week after George Floyd’s killing by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020, Michelle Miller’s cell phone buzzed. The CBS Saturday Morning cohost had covered other stories about violence and racial animus: the shootings of Michael Brown and Trayvon Martin, the mass murder in a Charleston, South Carolina, church, the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre. Now, with the nation aflame over Floyd’s fate, a senior producer at CBS News’ weekday morning show—where Miller sometimes served as cohost— wanted her perspective. The resulting television segment was more personal than anyone expected. “I exposed why stories like that really resonated with me,” says Miller, who lives with her husband and children in South Orange. The contours of her childhood—indeed, of her...
A week after George Floyd’s killing by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020, Michelle Miller’s cell phone buzzed. The CBS Saturday Morning cohost had covered other stories about violence and racial animus: the shootings of Michael Brown and Trayvon Martin, the mass murder in a Charleston, South Carolina, church, the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre. Now, with the nation aflame over Floyd’s fate, a senior producer at CBS News’ weekday morning show—where Miller sometimes served as cohost— wanted her perspective. The resulting television segment was more personal than anyone expected. “I exposed why stories like that really resonated with me,” says Miller, who lives with her husband and children in South Orange. The contours of her childhood—indeed, of her...
66-year-old Lydia Lobsiger receives an FDIC check for all her money on July 5, 1934, after the Fond Du Lac bank failed.FDIC Press accounts described 66-year-old Lydia Lobsiger as wearing a “freshly laundered gingham dress” with a black straw hat on her head on July 5, 1934. What they didn’t describe was the stern matter-of-fact expression on her face as she looked at the camera, her left hand loosely holding one end of a check, with the other end being held by a balding man in a suit, his face expressionless. In her right arm, she carried her 3-year-old granddaughter.They were surrounded by local and federal officials, all male, all equally grim-faced.It was what we in the media like to...