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Mr. David R. Givens

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Cronin and Company , Inc.
Glastonbury, CT
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    Commuter’s 372-mile haul wins Midas contest - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/11/2006    Last Visited: 5/11/2006  

    SAN JOSE, Calif. - If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens of California.

    Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa, Calif., to his job at Cisco in San Jose.

    Last week, as prices skyrocketed and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.

    For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the 'America's Longest Commute' contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th anniversary celebration.Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner.

    'I was surprised to win,' said Givens, who won $10,000 from Midas along with an array of maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker in North Carolina, he said, 'I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute.'

    That would be hard for most to fathom.For the past two years, with kids grown and a desire to get home to his wife and their 7½-acre ranch, the 46-year-old electrical engineer has commuted every workday, from the Sierra through the Central Valley to the Bay Area, alternating over Pacheco Pass or the Altamont Pass depending on traffic.

    That's 3½ hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County.

    'It's actually exhilarating,' Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials 'driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.I enjoy taking the curves.It feels like I'm a professional driver going down a closed course.'

    Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay area.But that was when he was a project manager working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports and listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.

    Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla 'to do the coffee thing.' Then he heads down highways 233 and 152 and 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report.

    By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle - fresh, believe it or not.

  • View Online Source
    Cronin and Company - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/27/2009    Last Visited: 3/27/2009  

    Dave Givens

    Dave Givens once survived a train wreck.

  • View Online Source
    Economy Goes Forward - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/22/2005    Last Visited: 11/22/2005  

    "There's this tremendous feeling of exposure to risk. 'I'm doing OK, but you know what, it could be disaster at the next turn because of things out of my control,'" says David Givens, 43, of York, Pa., a manager at a technology firm.

    Having been through ups and downs in the tech industry, Givens has no expectation of job security.He says average Americans have no leverage to seek higher wages to cope with higher prices and can't modify their behavior enough to offset higher energy costs.

    "All the indicators look pretty cheery, but I can tell you: For the average Jane or Joe going out and shaking hands with this economy, it's pretty daunting," Givens says.

  • View Online Source
    Economy goes forward but leaves many behind: Financial... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/26/2005    Last Visited: 11/26/2005  

    "There's this tremendous feeling of exposure to risk. 'I'm doing OK, but you know what, it could be disaster at the next turn because of things out of my control,' " says David Givens, 43, of York, Pa., a manager at a technology firm.

    Having been through ups and downs in the tech industry, Givens has no expectation of job security.He says average Americans have no leverage to seek higher wages to cope with higher prices and can't modify their behavior enough to offset higher energy costs.

    "All the indicators look pretty cheery, but I can tell you: For the average Jane or Joe going out and shaking hands with this economy, it's pretty daunting," Givens says.

  • View Online Source
    InsureHub.com - Time Saving Solutions for Insurance... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/16/2001    Last Visited: 6/5/2001  

    David GivensSymmetry Technology Labs , Inc2928 Main StreetGlastonbury , CT 06033David.Givens@InsureHub.com

    · FormsHub · News & Links · FAQs/Help · Contact Us ·· Home ·

    Click GO to make this.your default homepage

  • View Online Source
    KRT Wire | 05/03/2006 | Longest U.S. commute: 186... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/3/2006    Last Visited: 5/3/2006  

    SAN JOSE, Calif. - If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens of California.

    Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa to his job at Cisco in San Jose.

    Last week, as prices skyrocketed and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.

    For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the "America's Longest Commute" contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th anniversary celebration.Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner.

    "I was surprised to win," said Givens, who won $10,000 from Midas along with an array of maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker in North Carolina, he said, "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."

    That would be hard for most to fathom.For the past two years, with kids grown up and a desire to get home to his wife and their 7 1/2-acre ranch, the 46-year-old electrical engineer has commuted every workday, from the Sierra through the Central Valley to the Bay Area alternating over Pacheco Pass or the Altamont Pass, depending on traffic.

    That's 3 1/2 hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County.

    "It's actually exhilarating," Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials "driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.
    ...
    Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay.But that was when he was a project manager and working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports, listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.

    Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla "to do the coffee thing."Then he heads down Highway 233 and 152 and 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report possible.

    By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle - fresh, believe it or not.

    "When I get in, I'm pumped up, ready to go," Givens said.
    ...
    The woman who finally gave up her 90-minute-plus drive and moved last summer to Cupertino calls Givens "absolutely insane."

    "How one person can do 186 miles each way is completely beyond my comprehension," said the 32-year-old software engineer, who says she had virtually no personal life because she spent so much time on the road.
    ...
    "I could not have the lifestyle I want in the Bay Area or even Gilroy," Givens said.
    ...
    "I've got another five or 10 years in me," Givens said.

  • View Online Source
    MercuryNews.com | 04/28/2006 | Longest U.S. commute:... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 4/28/2006    Last Visited: 4/28/2006  

    If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens.

    Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa to his job at Cisco in San Jose.

    On Thursday, as prices in California skyrocketed 3 cents more, to a record average of $3.18 a gallon and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.

    For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the "America's Longest Commute" contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th anniversary celebration.Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner.

    "I was surprised to win," said Givens, who won $10,000 from Midas along with an array of maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker in North Carolina, he said, "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."

    Ride is `exhilarating'

    That would be hard for most to fathom.For the past two years, with kids grown up and a desire to get home to his wife and their 7 1/2-acre ranch, the 46-year-old electrical engineer has commuted every workday, from the Sierra through the Central Valley to the Bay Area alternating over Pacheco Pass or the Altamont Pass, depending on traffic.

    That's 3 1/2 hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County.

    "It's actually exhilarating," Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials "driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.
    ...
    Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay.But that was when he was a project manager and working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports, listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.

    But first, a cup of java

    Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla "to do the coffee thing."Then he heads down Highway 233 and 152 and 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report possible.

    By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle -- fresh, believe it or not.

    "When I get in, I'm pumped up, ready to go," Givens said.
    ...
    The woman who finally gave up her 90-minute-plus drive and moved last summer to Cupertino calls Givens "absolutely insane."

    "How one person can do 186 miles each way is completely beyond my comprehension," said the 32-year-old software engineer, who says she had virtually no personal life because she spent so much time on the road.
    ...
    "I could not have the lifestyle I want in the Bay Area or even Gilroy," Givens said.
    ...
    "I've got another five or 10 years in me," Givens said.

  • View Online Source
    MercuryNews.com | 04/28/2006 | Longest U.S. commute:... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 4/28/2006    Last Visited: 4/28/2006  

    SAN JOSE, Calif. , If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens.

    Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa to his job at Cisco in San Jose.

    On Thursday, as prices in California skyrocketed 3 cents more, to a record average of $3.18 a gallon and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.

    For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the "America's Longest Commute" contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th anniversary celebration.Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner.

    "I was surprised to win," said Givens, who won $10,000 from Midas along with an array of maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker in North Carolina, he said, "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."

    Ride is `exhilarating'

    That would be hard for most to fathom.For the past two years, with kids grown up and a desire to get home to his wife and their 7 1/2-acre ranch, the 46-year-old electrical engineer has commuted every workday, from the Sierra through the Central Valley to the Bay Area alternating over Pacheco Pass or the Altamont Pass, depending on traffic.

    That's 3 1/2 hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County.

    "It's actually exhilarating," Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials "driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.
    ...
    Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay.But that was when he was a project manager and working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports, listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.

    But first, a cup of java

    Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla "to do the coffee thing."Then he heads down Highway 233 and 152 and 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report possible.

    By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle -- fresh, believe it or not.

    "When I get in, I'm pumped up, ready to go," Givens said.
    ...
    The woman who finally gave up her 90-minute-plus drive and moved last summer to Cupertino calls Givens "absolutely insane."

    "How one person can do 186 miles each way is completely beyond my comprehension," said the 32-year-old software engineer, who says she had virtually no personal life because she spent so much time on the road.
    ...
    "I could not have the lifestyle I want in the Bay Area or even Gilroy," Givens said.
    ...
    "I've got another five or 10 years in me," Givens said.

  • View Online Source
    The Bellingham Herald | news | | Californian wins... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/4/2006    Last Visited: 5/4/2006  

    David Givens

    SAN JOSE, Calif. - If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens of California.Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa to his job at Cisco in San Jose.Last week, as prices skyrocketed and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the "America's Longest Commute" contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th anniversary celebration.Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner."I was surprised to win," said Givens, who won $10,000 from Midas along with an array of maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker in North Carolina, he said, "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."That would be hard for most to fathom.For the past two years, with kids grown up and a desire to get home to his wife and their 7½-acre ranch, the 46-year-old electrical engineer has commuted every workday, from the Sierra through the Central Valley to the Bay Area alternating over Pacheco Pass or the Altamont Pass, depending on traffic.That's 3½ hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County."It's actually exhilarating," Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials "driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.I enjoy taking the curves.It feels like I'm a professional driver going down a closed course."Because this road warrior finds that gas along the major highways tends to be more expensive, he gets his at Pacific Pride Commercial fueling stations off the beaten path back home.And mileage counts: He gets 30 mpg in his 2005 Accord.Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay.But that was when he was a project manager and working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports, listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla "to do the coffee thing."Then he heads down Highway 233 and 152 and 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report possible.By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle - fresh, believe it or not."When I get in, I'm pumped up, ready to go," Givens said.

  • View Online Source
    The Seattle Times: Nation & World: Your commute is... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/4/2006    Last Visited: 5/4/2006  

    David Givens was surprised to win Midas Muffler's "America's Longest Commute" contest: "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."
    ...
    SAN JOSE, Calif. - If you're howling about paying a lot more to fill up these days, thank your lucky nozzle you're not David Givens of California.

    Every weekday, Givens drives 372 miles commuting from Mariposa to his job at Cisco Systems in San Jose.

    Last week, as prices skyrocketed and Exxon Mobil reported a historic first-quarter profit of $8.4 billion, Givens talked with resignation of doling out $40 a day, $200 a week, $800 a month in gas money.

    For his daily round-trip journey, Givens won the "America's Longest Commute" contest conducted by Midas Muffler, which received nearly 3,000 entries from New York to the Golden State as part of a 50th-anniversary celebration.

    Considering the average one-way commute nationally is 25.5 minutes, you can call Givens a runaway winner.

    "I was surprised to win," said Givens, who won $10,000 along with maintenance services and products.Nominated by a co-worker, he said, "I thought for sure someone else would have a longer commute."
    ...
    That's 3 ½ hours one way: a decent trade-off, insists Givens, for living the outdoor lifestyle he and his wife relish in the pristine mountains of Mariposa County.

    "It's actually exhilarating," Givens said of his journey, likening it to TV commercials "driving a fancy car down Highway 1 with the top down.
    ...
    Givens began the mega-commute in 1989, spending a couple of nights a week overnight in the South Bay.But that was when he was a project manager and working 15 hours a day.Now he's an eight-hour-a-day guy, and instead of spending the extra time at the office, he's inside the confines of his Accord tracking traffic reports, listening to talk radio or cowboy novels on tape.

    Handlebar mustache trimmed and boots on, Givens is out the door heading down Highway 140 about 4:30 each morning.He stops at Starbucks in Chowchilla "to do the coffee thing."Then he heads across Highway 152 to 101 to Great America Parkway and Tasman Drive, changing radio stations constantly, listening for every traffic report possible.

    By 7:45 a.m., he's in his Ciscoland cubicle - fresh, believe it or not.

    "When I get in, I'm pumped up, ready to go," Givens said."Everybody else is dragging in looking for the coffeepot.
    ...
    "I could not have the lifestyle I want in the Bay Area or even Gilroy," Givens said.
    ...
    "I've got another five or 10 years in me," Givens said.

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