Jess Peck Miller II
HAMPTON Dr. Jess Peck Miller II, 88, died Friday, Jan. 29, 2021, among family at his home. He was born in North Carolina in 1932, and was raised with his three brothers in Staunton, Virginia, and Wilmington, Delaware.
He graduated from the College of William & Mary and earned his medical degree from the University of Virginia, where he lived on the Range. He finished his medical training at University Hospital in Cleveland, where he met and married a beautiful and warm-hearted nurse named Patricia Namy. After two years of Navy service as the medical officer on a submarine, he and Pat moved the family to Hampton in 1964 where they have lived ever since. Together they raised seven children.
Jan 31, 2021
Sean and Kellie Ruane of Howland are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Michaela Nicole, to John James Graham, son of James and Claudia Graham of Cortland.
Miss Ruane is a 2010 graduate of Howland High School and received a bachelor’s degree in speech pathology and audiology from Kent State University in 2014. She graduated from Cleveland State University in 2016 with a master’s degree in psychology, and a specialty in school psychology in 2017. Miss Ruane is employed as a school psychologist with the Mahoning County Educational Service Center.
Dr. Graham graduated valedictorian in 2006 from Lakeview High School. He graduated summa cum laude in 2008 with a bachelor’s degree in natural sciences with a minor in chemistry from the University of Akron. He completed medical school at North East Ohio Medical University, and his internal medicine residency at University Hospital in Cleveland. Dr. Graham has been practicing hematolo
People are adopting buffalo leeches and keeping them as pets
Owners are also offering themselves as food for the parasitic creatures
Leeches can drink ten times their weight in blood in a single feeding
Owners say the leeches have their own personalities, like dogs or cats
They also share videos of the squishy sausages gorging on their blood
Breeders recommend feeding them every three or four months