Message from @Outcast
Discord ID: 492032742637436939
Wut I miss
You guys are helping me feel better. Thx much love😚😚😚
Strings cut, Clowns out.
@BigD
Sill pondering NK.
@pocketangel3 💐💙🤗
@V77
Ty, 🤗
@pocketangel3 🤗 💐
@stefanon
Your on 🔥🔥🔥
@pocketangel3 lol lol shhhh dont tell anyone! lol😂 💕
Nice target prActice.
WTW
@stefanon
Love that full circle.
@pocketangel3 Me too!! We are all in this together!!! 🙏
So Schiffy was wanting it all out in open but not so much now??🤔https://twitter.com/RealJamesWoods/status/1042262204144394240
You have gained a rank @BigD, you just advanced to 4 . Thanks for all you do Patriot!
Teresa Heinz (born Maria Teresa Thierstein Simões-Ferreira; October 5, 1938),[3][4] also known as Teresa Heinz Kerry,[5] is an American businesswoman and philanthropist of Portuguese descent. Heinz was the widow of former U.S. Senator H. John Heinz III and is the wife of former U.S. Secretary of State, longtime U.S. Senator, and 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry. Heinz serves as Chair of the Heinz Endowments and the Heinz Family Philanthropies.
Check out @FoxNews’s Tweet: https://twitter.com/FoxNews/status/1042474774704939009?s=09
Maria Teresa Thierstein Simões-Ferreira was born in the city of Lourenço Marques (later renamed Maputo) in the colony of Portuguese Mozambique (which later became the nation of Mozambique).[6][7] Her parents were Dr. José Simões-Ferreira, Jr.,[8] a "Portuguese-born oncologist"[9] and tropical disease specialist,[10] and Irene Thierstein, a Portuguese and British[11] national.[12] Irene Thierstein's father "was the scion of Swiss-German family living on Malta, and her mother was the half-French, half-Italian daughter of an Alexandrian shipowner who traded with Russia during the Crimean War;[13] both emigrated to Portuguese East Africa.[14][15]
In 1960, Simões-Ferreira earned a Bachelor of Arts in Romance Languages and Literature from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. In 1963, she graduated from the School of Translation and Interpretation at the University of Geneva and moved to the United States to be an interpreter at the United Nations.
A great story! https://t.co/BUcbTz1lNX
On February 5, 1966, at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania's gothic Heinz Chapel on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh, Simões-Ferreira married future U.S. Senator Henry John Heinz III. Heinz was an heir to the H. J. Heinz Company. In 1971, Teresa Heinz became a naturalized United States citizen. The couple had three sons: