Prairie Grove woman trains dogs, owners
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Fitness fundraiser launched to raise money for cancer treatment
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Photos by Terri Richardson | The Journal Gazette
Currently only the strings of the Fort Wayne Terrible Orchestra are meeting because of COVID-19 concerns.
Debra Graham, founder of the Fort Wayne Terrible Orchestra, conducts the musicians. They meet each Monday for 10 weeks.
The orchestra hopes to play for friends and family once the 10-week session is complete. Previous Next
Tuesday, March 02, 2021 1:00 am
Terrible way to relearn music
Orchestra way to reacquaint with instrument
TERRI RICHARDSON | The Journal Gazette
One by one, musicians slowly start to file into the gym of First Missionary Church.
They each put their items in one of several chairs that are spaced 6 feet apart. After settling in, the musicians begin to tune their instruments. It sounds and looks similar to watching a professional orchestra prepare for a rehearsal.
A GRANDMOTHER has been given the gift of more time with her family after she received the news that her life-prolonging cancer treatment has been effective - but still needs to raise £160,000 to continue the chemotherapy that will give her more time with her loved ones. As previously reported, Geraldine Morley was diagnosed with ocular melanoma - a rare form of eye cancer which affects less than 700 people in the UK each year - in March. The cancer then spread to her blood and liver and, in August, she was given a six month prognosis. Her daughter, Debra Graham, 37, launched a fundraiser with the help of her siblings to try to raise money to pay for chemosaturation therapy, a treatment not currently provided by the NHS, which allows for very high concentrations of chemotherapy to be administered directly to the liver in isolation and then cleared from the blood.