Corey Perich

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Corey Perich

Corey Perich

@CoreyPerich

High School Math teacher. Hey Jesuit... i'm comin for ya. #y=mx+Me

813 Bergabung Şubat 2010
974 Mengikuti370 Pengikut
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SportsCenter
SportsCenter@SportsCenter·
Madden Orlovsky had a heartfelt message for his family and friends in honor of World Autism Awareness Day 🥹 This was a special moment for all of us at ESPN. Thanks, Madden and @danorlovsky7 ❤️
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813Preps
813Preps@813Preps·
Of all the legends at the former Legend Fields, I’m happiest to see my guy THE Pete Young, @JesuitTampaFL Communications Director
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Tim Alberta
Tim Alberta@TimAlberta·
Okay so, 1) an American citizen exercises his First Amendment right to peaceably assemble and his Second Amendment right to bear arms, out of apparent concern that a tyrannical federal government is violating basic protections afforded under the Constitution 2) after coming to the aid of an unarmed woman who's been shoved to the ground by a masked federal agent, the citizen -- impaired by pepper spray, holding nothing but a cell phone -- is dragged to the ground by a group of other masked agents 3) during the scuffle, shortly after one masked agent removes the weapon from the restrained citizen's person, several other masked agents open fire, unloading 10 shots from close range and killing the unarmed citizen 4) despite video evidence, a spokesman for the federal government says the citizen approached agents with a gun, provoked a violent confrontation, and planned to "massacre" law enforcement You really want to defend this? Go ahead. Just know, you look like an absolute fool.
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Corey Perich
Corey Perich@CoreyPerich·
Respect @linkinpark.
Houston Stressans@TexansCommenter

.@DanGrazianoESPN asked Azeez Al-Shaair about the defensive mindset after a turnover: “My mindset is it doesn’t even matter. We have this thing called ‘White Boy Wednesdays’ in the weight room where they play rock music. There’s this one song—I don’t even know the name—but I know the part where it goes, ‘In the end, it doesn’t even matter.’”

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Josh Barzon
Josh Barzon@JoshuaBarzon·
Ham is better than Turkey at Thanksgiving
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Mindset Machine 
Mindset Machine @mindsetmachine·
The Golden Rule when you're learning a new skill‼️👇
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Alexandra Francisco
Alexandra Francisco@ByAlFrancisco·
How can you not be romantic about football? To honor Rob Gronkowski the New England Patriots just scored on a 69-yard drive. Nice
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2000s
2000s@PopCulture2000s·
24 years ago, linkin park released ‘in the end’
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Jesuit Tampa
Jesuit Tampa@JesuitTampaFL·
Jesuit musicians play "Gabriel's Oboe" by Ennio Morricone during all-school Mass on Wednesday, with A.J. Brazel '27 on the oboe. #AMDG #JesuitMusic @JesuitsUCS
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A few minutes after United Airlines Flight 175 struck the South Tower of the World Trade Center, 24-year-old Welles Crowther left a final voicemail for his mother: “Mom, it’s Welles. I just wanted to let you know that I’m OK.” It was the last time she ever heard his voice. Welles was a financial broker working on the 104th floor. When chaos erupted, he didn’t think of escape. Instead, he made a different choice—he went back into the heart of the destruction. On the 78th floor, amid smoke and fire, he pulled a red handkerchief from his pocket and tied it around his face. It wasn’t for disguise—it was just something to breathe through. But that red bandana would come to define him forever. He carried one injured woman down 15 flights of stairs. Then he went back up. He rescued another. And another. Each time, he returned into danger without hesitation. “Anyone who can stand up, get up now. And if you can help others, do it,” he urged. Calm, steady, determined—his voice cut through the terror. Welles was last seen heading upward again, alongside firefighters, a rescue tool in his hand. His body was later found among them. He had been climbing back into the flames one final time. Ling Young, one of the survivors he saved, called him her guardian angel: “Without him, we would have just been stuck there, waiting for the collapse.” That day, Welles Crowther saved at least 12 lives. He died wearing the red bandana that has since become a symbol of courage, sacrifice, and love. Some heroes are soldiers. Some are leaders. But the greatest are ordinary people who, when the moment comes, choose to put others first. Welles Crowther was one of them. His red bandana reminds us still—that the strongest force in the world is the will to save others.
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ESPN
ESPN@espn·
Welles Crowther was a former Boston College lacrosse player whose trademark was a red bandana. On September 11, 2001, he led people to safety after terrorists struck the World Trade Center. This is his story.
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