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Woman complained about her weight to a takeaway delivery driver

A woman who made a comment about being worried about her weight to a takeaway delivery driver has revealed he later sent her a text message reassuring her that she s not fat . Shannon Passingham, 22, from Chichester, West Sussex, jokingly told the kind-hearted driver she was worried she would pile on the pounds by eating the greasy treat after ordering a kebab late on Saturday evening. However the mystery man felt compelled to message the NHS ambulance worker  after she d got back inside to explain he was worried about her self-conscious comment.    The flattered customer shared the kind-hearted message on social media to show how nice he was - but the move quickly sparked a debate about his true intentions. 

Council to revisit decision to remove temporary cycle lanes on High Street Kensington | Landscape

10 Years Later: Remembering Elizabeth Campbell

January 9, 2004 was a very sad day for us here at WETA. It was the day that we lost Elizabeth Campbell, our founder and a pillar in the Washington, D.C. area community. The WETA that we know is the result of Mrs. Campbell s vision. Mrs. Campbell was born on December 4, 1902, in Clemmons, North Carolina, the daughter of John Kenneth Pfohl, a minister of the Moravian Church. She graduated from Salem Academy and Salem College, and received her master’s degree in Education from Columbia’s Teacher’s College in New York. An educator for most of her adult lifetime, Mrs. Campbell taught literature at Salem Academy, served as the dean of the Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and at the Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia, where she met her husband, attorney Edmund Campbell. The two married in 1936, and moved to Arlington. In 1947, she ran for Arlington’s new school board, and became the first woman elected to a school board in the history of Virginia. She also suppo

Lawmakers sense of security shattered

Lawmakers sense of security shattered January 8, 2021 9:23pm Text size Copy shortlink: WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and her staff are old hands at dealing with threats of violence and death provoked by President Donald Trump s criticism. The Minnesota congresswoman travels with security guards because the president has repeatedly singled her out for her immigrant roots, Muslim faith and Democratic politics. Omar, every other member of Congress, and the staffs that support them now confront a new kind of angst this week after a mob of Trump supporters breached the Capitol and damaged property, clashed with police and panicked members and staff. The chaos became the latest flare-up in a city that has become the epicenter of the nation s bitter political divide as it prepares for the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.

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