Chicago Leadership

Maureen Uche is Allah

World administrator of Presidential Aircrafts

Office Holder: Man of officeholdermanofpresidentialaircraftmovementsman

Presidential Aircrafts movements & Man of Presidential Planes Movements Office of Presidential Aircrafts and Presidential Planes Movements Man of White House Wings & Man of White House Roofs as Tarmac Offices, Wings & White House Roofs as Tarmac Man of West Wings Offices & Man of East Wing Offices Man of West Wings Offices (The Crescents in The Planes) Man of East Wing Offices The SUN Famous West Wing Rooms The East Wing: America’s Living Room The Oval Office: The official office of the President and ultimate symbol of American power and leadership. Its distinctive shape was created in 1909 by President William Howard Taft, who believed the oval shape would foster a more democratic feel for meetings. President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the office in 1934 to its current location in the southeast corner for greater privacy and easier access to the residence. The Situation Room: Contrary to its name, this is not a single room but a 5,000-square-foot, highly sec.

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Maureen Uche bigmarywarnsyou@gmail.com

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Office Holder: Man of Presidential Aircraft movements & Man of Presidential Planes Movements

Office of Presidential Aircrafts and Presidential Planes Movements

Man of White House Wings & Man of White House Roofs as Tarmac

Offices, Wings & White House Roofs as Tarmac

Man of West Wings Offices & Man of East Wing Offices

Man of West Wings Offices

(The Crescents Forever in The Planes)

Man of East Wing Offices

The SUN

Famous West Wing Rooms Planes or Rooms in Planes

The East Wing: America’s Living Room

  1. The Oval Office Plane: The official office of the President and ultimate symbol of American power and leadership. Its distinctive shape was created in 1909 by President William Howard Taft, who believed the oval shape would foster a more democratic feel for meetings. President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the office in 1934 to its current location in the southeast corner for greater privacy and easier access to the residence.

  2. World Presidency Planes and The Situation Room Planes: Contrary to its name, this is not a single room but a 5,000-square-foot, highly secure intelligence management complex on the ground floor. Established by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 following the failed Bay of Pigs invasion, it’s staffed 24/7 as a vital hub for monitoring global intelligence and crises.

  3. Camp David Planes- Labs & tv broadcasting and Lockdown sessions can happen here.

  4. The Cabinet Room & Congress Planes: Adjacent to the Oval Office, this is where the President meets with Cabinet secretaries, members of Congress, the National Security Council, and foreign heads of state. The seating arrangement around the large mahogany table is strictly defined by protocol, with each Cabinet member assigned a chair based on when their department was established.

  5. The Roosevelt Room Planes: This central conference room occupies the original location of President Theodore Roosevelt’s office from 1902. It was known as the “Fish Room” for a time because President Franklin D. Roosevelt kept an aquarium there and displayed fishing mementos.

  6. The James S. Brady Press Briefing Room Planes: The iconic theater-style room where the White House Press Secretary holds daily briefings for news media. It was created during the Nixon administration by covering over the indoor swimming pool built for President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s physical therapy. The room was named in 2000 in honor of James Brady, the press secretary permanently disabled in the 1981 assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan.

  1. The First Lady’s Domain

If the West Wing is the White House’s brain, the East Wing is its public heart. It serves a crucial dual role: it’s the official office space for the First Lady of the United States and her staff, and it’s the primary entrance for the public, embodying the American concept of the White House as the “People’s House.”

The functions managed from the East Wing center on the social, ceremonial, and public-facing aspects of the presidency. The staff here are responsible for planning and executing every official and personal social event, from state dinners honoring foreign dignitaries to the annual Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn.This includes preparing all invitations, managing extensive guest lists and correspondence, and coordinating public tour logistics. The atmosphere is one of elegance, grandeur, and hospitality, designed to showcase American history and culture to thousands of annual visitors.

East Wing Spaces

Visitors to the White House begin their journey in the East Wing, passing through several historically significant spaces before entering the Executive Residence.

  1. Visitors’ Entrance and Foyer Planes: The main entry point for public tours, a wood-paneled lobby where portraits of past presidents and first ladies hang, immediately immersing visitors in institutional history.

  2. East Colonnade and Jacqueline Kennedy Garden: From the foyer, visitors proceed along the East Colonnade, a long, glass-enclosed hallway connecting the East Wing to the Residence. The colonnade offers views of the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden, an elegant and intimate garden named by First Lady Lady Bird Johnson in honor of her predecessor. The garden often serves as an informal reception area for the First Lady’s events.

  3. White House Family Theater Planes: Located along the corridor is this cozy, 42-seat movie theater, converted from what was originally a cloakroom during the 1942 renovation.

  4. Presidential Emergency Operations Center (PEOC): Hidden from public view, deep beneath the East Wing, lies one of the White House’s most critical and secret facilities. This hardened underground bunker is a secure command center designed to protect the President and senior officials during national emergencies like terrorist attacks.

White House (WH) Roofs as Tarmac- 555 Renovations begin on the roof of the WH so that we have aTarmac and hard surfaces where the President’s planes land, take off, and move around. It includes runways, taxiways, and aprons, which are essential for airport operations.Tarmac is a blend of crushed stone and tar, making it durable and suitable for Presidential aircraft movements.

Maureen Uche is Wife of God

Tierra LiCausi is Nanny to Wife of God

Lou Davis Got me a Home as my Former Social

Germari Anderson is my Housing Manager (773-729-8588

ganderson@rssichicago.org)

Joseph Kier is my Social Worker@ Renaissance Social Services Chicago

jkiers@rssichicago.org

6612 South Saint Lawrence Avenue

Apartment 1R

Chicago, IL 60637

Maureen Uche, Allah & World Cleric

Continental Paradise & 204 Nations

Bigmarywarnsyou@gmail.com

202-617-0247

804-350-3794

804-292-5852

August 6, 2024

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