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These 2025 high school graduates can look back with pride and forward with confidence, as we salute them in our annual ...
Rose and her husband David Rocksavage met back in 2003 at a party, and started dating three years later in 2006. In 2009, they announced their engagement, and later, they said that they were expecting ...
Ellen Rose Potter was born Sep 21, 1938, in Zenas, Ind. and Passed Mar 21, 2025, in Loveland CO. Ellen was a registered nurse at McKee Hospital for 25 years. She was married to Hank Potter for 64 y… ...
Ellen Rose Efsic entered into rest on March 4, 2025. She was born in Urbana, IL on January 2, ... She began her career in non-profit fundraising at the Columbus Museum of Art in 1986.
At FLAG Art Foundation, the sweeping group show “A Rose Is” (on view through June 21) reassesses the multifaceted meanings and uses of the rose motif within visual art across numerous mediums ...
Ken did not want formal church services. The family will have a gathering to say goodbye and pay respects at Foulk Funeral Home, 200 Rose Hill Road, West Grove at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, March 26, 2025.
Rose “Rosie” Ellen Starling, 85, passed away Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. Born March 7, 1939, in Vincent, Ohio, she was the daughter of the late William Henry “Pappy” Yocum and Opal Mae Roberts ...
Rose "Rosie" Ellen Jones Taylor, aged 98, passed away peacefully on Tuesday, January 21, 2025, at 6:35 pm. surrounded by her family. She was born on August 4, 1926, in Hendersonville, NC to ...
Rose Ellen Wentworth Crandell, 94, of Petoskey and Ann Arbor, Michigan, passed away peacefully, surrounded by her family, on January 17, 2025. Born on January 12, 1931, in Detroit, Michigan, Rose ...
The Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University has announced its highly anticipated 2025 Spring exhibition season, presenting two new dynamic and thought-provoking exhibitions: Leonora Carrington ...
The Rose City Art Gallery, located at 328 S. College Ave. in Tyler, and is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. — Scott can be reached at jscott@tylerpaper.com.
I think it is safe to say that television’s voracious gobbling up of the literature of the past, which it regurgitates as Westerns, will leave Henry James’s works uneaten, and even unbitten.
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