| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Jeff" |
| Date: |
09 Mar 2006 11:32:32 AM |
| Object: |
"Roll Up The Rim To Win" in Afghanistan! |
x-no-archive: YES
Freedom, democracy, doughnuts and coffee restored to the people of
Afghanistan!
Story below:
Tim Hortons franchise brewing in Afghanistan
By DANIEL NOLAN
The Hamilton Spectator
(Feb 25, 2006)
Canadian soldiers serving in Afghanistan may soon be able to get their
morning coffee and doughnut at a Tim Hortons coffee shop.
The company, co-founded in Hamilton in 1964 by the famous NHL hockey player
and local police officer Roy Joyce, is in talks with the military about
setting up a store to serve soldiers on the front line of the war on terror
in Kandahar.
General Rick Hillier, head of the Canadian Armed Forces, stepped up the
negotiations yesterday by offering to personally take Tim Hortons president
and CEO Paul House of Stoney Creek to visit soldiers in Afghanistan to help
convince him the idea has merit.
Hillier says soldiers pester him about when they might see one of the coffee
shops open at the Kandahar base and he believes it would boost morale to
have a Tim Hortons in the Afghan city that gave birth to the radically
militant Taliban regime.
American troops serving in Kandahar have their own Subway, Pizza Hut and
Burger King outlets.
"I invite the CEO (Paul House) of Tim Hortons to come with me to Afghanistan
and see the powerful implications that would come from that," Hillier said.
House was out of the country and could not be reached for comment, but Tim
Hortons spokesman Greg Skinner said the company is very honoured by
Hillier's invitation.
"If we do end up doing something, people will be heading over there to look
at the whole situation on the ground and see how it will work," Skinner said
from the company's Oakville headquarters.
"There's a lot of considerations."
Skinner said Tim Hortons and the Canadian military have been in talks for
the last few weeks about setting up a Kandahar outlet.
He said the company always gets calls from "our customers in the military"
and appreciates that they like Tim Hortons products.
"We're both exploring the possibility and that's really where it is at now,"
Skinner said. "Both sides are going to do what we can do to make it happen,
but right now there's no timing ...
"It's pretty far away to set up a store ... You don't want to build up
expectations, but we're looking at it seriously."
Captain Tim Fletcher of the 31 Canadian Brigade Group in Hamilton, which
oversees the operation of 14 army units in southwestern Ontario, said a Tim
Hortons coffee shop in Kandahar would be well received by the troops. He
said Tim Hortons coffee is one of the most requested items soldiers ask for
in care packages from home.
"A common phrase I hear from soldiers who just come back is the first thing
they do is head to Tims," said Fletcher.
"It's a unanimous opinion that the first thing they hit after family is the
local Timmys. You can see what it occupies in their psyches. It's home.
There's no doubt about it."
dnolan@thespec.com
905-526-3351
http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=hamilton/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1140824435989&call_pageid=1020420665036&col=1014656511815
.
|
|
| User: "No Spam" |
|
| Title: Re: "Roll Up The Rim To Win" in Afghanistan! |
09 Mar 2006 12:35:00 PM |
|
|
"Jeff" <nowhere@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:1210plepr0f2f26@corp.supernews.com...
Freedom, democracy, doughnuts and coffee restored to the people of
Afghanistan!
Tim Hortons is owned by Americans and is part of the
Wendy's Restaurant chain.
I wonder if Tim Horton and Dave Thomas are spinning
in their graves.
.
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: "Roll Up The Rim To Win" in Afghanistan! |
10 Mar 2006 04:40:17 PM |
|
|
On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 18:35:00 GMT, "No Spam" <no.spam@shaw.ca> wrote:
"Jeff" <nowhere@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:1210plepr0f2f26@corp.supernews.com...
Freedom, democracy, doughnuts and coffee restored to the people of
Afghanistan!
Tim Hortons is owned by Americans and is part of the
Wendy's Restaurant chain.
I thought it was owned by shareholders of any country.
I wonder if Tim Horton and Dave Thomas are spinning
in their graves.
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "A Veteran for Peace" |
|
| Title: Re: "Roll Up The Rim To Win" in Afghanistan! |
09 Mar 2006 12:20:10 PM |
|
|
In article <1210plepr0f2f26@corp.supernews.com>,
"Jeff" <nowhere@nowhere.com> wrote:
x-no-archive: YES
Freedom, democracy, doughnuts and coffee restored to the people of
Afghanistan!
Story below:
Tim Hortons franchise brewing in Afghanistan
By DANIEL NOLAN
The Hamilton Spectator
(Feb 25, 2006)
Canadian soldiers serving in Afghanistan may soon be able to get their
morning coffee and doughnut at a Tim Hortons coffee shop.
The company, co-founded in Hamilton in 1964 by the famous NHL hockey player
and local police officer Roy Joyce, is in talks with the military about
setting up a store to serve soldiers on the front line of the war on terror
in Kandahar.
General Rick Hillier, head of the Canadian Armed Forces, stepped up the
negotiations yesterday by offering to personally take Tim Hortons president
and CEO Paul House of Stoney Creek to visit soldiers in Afghanistan to help
convince him the idea has merit.
Hillier says soldiers pester him about when they might see one of the coffee
shops open at the Kandahar base and he believes it would boost morale to
have a Tim Hortons in the Afghan city that gave birth to the radically
militant Taliban regime.
American troops serving in Kandahar have their own Subway, Pizza Hut and
Burger King outlets.
"I invite the CEO (Paul House) of Tim Hortons to come with me to Afghanistan
and see the powerful implications that would come from that," Hillier said.
House was out of the country and could not be reached for comment, but Tim
Hortons spokesman Greg Skinner said the company is very honoured by
Hillier's invitation.
"If we do end up doing something, people will be heading over there to look
at the whole situation on the ground and see how it will work," Skinner said
from the company's Oakville headquarters.
"There's a lot of considerations."
Skinner said Tim Hortons and the Canadian military have been in talks for
the last few weeks about setting up a Kandahar outlet.
He said the company always gets calls from "our customers in the military"
and appreciates that they like Tim Hortons products.
"We're both exploring the possibility and that's really where it is at now,"
Skinner said. "Both sides are going to do what we can do to make it happen,
but right now there's no timing ...
"It's pretty far away to set up a store ... You don't want to build up
expectations, but we're looking at it seriously."
Captain Tim Fletcher of the 31 Canadian Brigade Group in Hamilton, which
oversees the operation of 14 army units in southwestern Ontario, said a Tim
Hortons coffee shop in Kandahar would be well received by the troops. He
said Tim Hortons coffee is one of the most requested items soldiers ask for
in care packages from home.
"A common phrase I hear from soldiers who just come back is the first thing
they do is head to Tims," said Fletcher.
"It's a unanimous opinion that the first thing they hit after family is the
local Timmys. You can see what it occupies in their psyches. It's home.
There's no doubt about it."
dnolan@thespec.com
905-526-3351
http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=hamilton/Lay
out/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1140824435989&call_pageid=1020420665036&col=10
14656511815
oh, yes, we need the troops hopped up on sugar, caffeine and armed!
Like another "a-hole" in the WH.
--
I'm unfettered,unbound,triumphant,glorious& splendid
.
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|