Jul 2012 to 2000 Employee Communication ManagerON Semiconductor Phoenix, AZ Nov 2005 to Jun 2012 Senior Manager, Global Change Management and Employee CommunicationAmerica West Airlines/US Airways Tempe, AZ May 2004 to Nov 2005 Manager, Employee CommunicationCox Communications Phoenix, AZ May 1999 to May 2004 Senior Communications Specialist
Education:
University of Phoenix Jun 2002 MBA in Electronic BusinessArizona State University Dec 1998 BA in Journalism
Skills:
Web design, Change Management, Public Speaking, Communication Strategy Development
Dr. Colbert graduated from the University of Minnesota Medical School at Minneapolis in 1980. He works in Robbinsdale, MN and specializes in Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine and Sleep Medicine. Dr. Colbert is affiliated with North Memorial Medical Center.
Walt Disney World Resort (1990-1993) Siemens Stromberg-Carlson (1993-1996) Siemens Business Communications (1996-1998) NetRight Technologies (1998-1998) Ameritech (1998-2001) Black Dog Interactive (2001-2005) Fontana Solutions (2005-2007)
Education:
Cardinal Stritch University - Strategic Management of Information Systems, Seminole Community College - Electronic Engineering
Robert Colbert
Work:
Ford Motor Company - Senior Lead Support Tech/ Lead ToughBook Hardware support (2011)
Another officer, Robert Colbert, first shot Faisal with a less-than-lethal sponge round as Faisal approached him. Faisal then approached McMahon with the knife held out in front of him, McMahon yelled at Faisal to drop the knife, then McMahon shot him six times when Faisal got within 5 to 10 feet
shows grind and being treated like ham in a smokehouse, as he put it. In 1960 he sued producer Warner Bros. for breach of contract. He won the case and left the show, which replaced him first with Roger Moore (as Beau Maverick) and then Robert Colbert (as Brent) but soon left the air entirely.
Date: Jul 21, 2014
Category: Entertainment
Source: Google
'Two and a Half Men' isn't first show to replace a major character
The switch: James Garner walked off the show in 1960 because of a contract dispute. His character, gambler Bret Maverick, was replaced by Roger Moore's Beau Maverick and, later, Robert Colbert's Brent Maverick.