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Osjw Is it worth it to hire a personal organizer to help declutter
COLUMBIA, Tenn. 鈥?A 62-year-old bride and 71-year-old groom who met at their nursing home in Columbia, Tennessee, during the pandemic were married with the help of their staff on July 29.Henry Kelley Jr. and Mickey Stasser both moved to NHC Healthcare with health conditions that required much healing. When I first came here, no, I didn t make friends. I stayed in my room and it s just to myself mostly, explained Stasser. And then, later on, I started getting out and playing bingo, which he does also. So we met at bingo and sat on the front porch stanley cup in the rockers, which he did. We met there too. And just seeing him in the hallway and just seeing him at different places. Kelley remembers when he first saw her in the dining room. I met her in the dining room. She s sitting at another table, and I went to introduce myself, he recalled. And we met out here on the porch, and we got sitting and talking. Got to liking one another, and it just grew from there. And after a couple of months, I stole me a couple of kisses from her! Claire Kopsky Henry Kelley Jr. and Mickey Stasser Kelley sit together on the stanley bottles porch o stanley canada f their home care center, NHC Healthcare in Columbia, Tennessee, moments before their wedding. In a matter of months, their friendship grew into a relationship. I started going to meals with him and seeing him that way each day. And we played, like I said, bingo... and we played cards all time. I mean every day, and it just started gr Gfca Trump says he will invoke DPA to force companies to make more swabs for coronavirus tests
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. 鈥?Spy, prisoner of war, patriot 鈥?at one time or another, all those words described Dr. Mary Walker, a practicing surgeon for the Union Army during the Civil War. She was a woman ahead of her time, said Keith Hardison, director of the Charles H. Coolidge National Medal of Honor Heritage Center in Chattanooga, Tennessee.Now, though, Dr. Walkers time has come. She is the focus of a new special exhi stanley cup bit at the center. Dr. Walker wanted to go where the fighting was bloodiest, said exhibit curator Molly Randolph. She tried multiple times to join up and was denied. Yet, she persisted and volunteered her medical skills to Union commanders during the Civil War. They put her to work 鈥?for no pay 鈥?on the front lines.Thats when her career as a spy began. She used that cover of going into the countryside and providing medical care to do some espionage, Randolph said.Eventually, the Confederate Army captured her and held her as a prisoner of war for four months, where she became well-known for wearing he stanley cup r trademark pants. She was rather notorious, Randolph said. She was written up in the Confederate papers. Everyone thought t stanley thermoskannen his, you know, doctor - a female doctor who wore pants! - was a thing to poke fun at a little bit. Suffering severe malnourishment at the Confederacys notorious Castle Thunder prison, Dr. Walker was eventually released in a prisoner exchange. She was actually exchanged for a Confederate doctor, which she loved. She loved that she was worth s |
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