Your article about Westinghouse woes is an example of reporting important information but not being completely accurate.
You have published many pieces about Westinghouse and more than twice you …
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Your article about Westinghouse woes is an example of reporting important information but not being completely accurate.
You have published many pieces about Westinghouse and more than twice you have said that it is in bankruptcy and working its way through a New York bankruptcy court. Not true. You only had to do a simple internet search to find that Westinghouse emerged from bankruptcy nearly 2 years ago and was bought 100% by Brookfield Business Partners, a limited partnership in Toronto, Canada. Errors like this make one question the accuracy of the entire piece.
John Fezio, Lexington
We thank Mr. Fezio for correcting us. We want to keep the record straight.
What to do in a crisis
An overwhelming catastrophe does not have to be overcome all at once but is more effectively dealt with in small steps.
I recall the story of a boy in rural Ohio who became the 1st human survivor of rabies. His small town doctor lacked the training to deal with this devastating infection.
Instead of treating his patient for rabies, he treated each symptom as it appeared.
He knew what to do about high fever, kidney failure and swollen limbs. Finally there were no more symptoms.
Can I say that you don’t actually have to “cure rabies” to cure rabies?
Preston Hardy. Gulf Breeze, FL
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