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Residents Raise Money For UPS Driver's New Roof | 103.7 WQOL

By Heath West Dec 22, 2020 A UPS driver in Clayton, Missouri was blown away by an act of kindness from her customers. Carolyn Crump has been delivering for the company for 23 years and she’s gotten to know the people on her route, as well as their pets and kids. And when she recently mentioned to customer Jason Lehtman that she was looking to get a new roof next summer, he had an idea to help her out sooner. Lehtman works in roofing, so he got an estimate put together, then started a GoFundMe for the cost. Neighbors in the community chipped in and they’d raised thousands of dollars in just a few days. Then they blindfolded Crump and led her to a nearby park and a crowd of 60 customers surprised her with a check for the cost of the new roof, plus a little extra for bills and Christmas.

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ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில்
கரோலின்-நொறுக்கு

Grateful customers surprise UPS driver with a new roof

Grateful customers surprise UPS driver with a new roof
stltoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stltoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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St. Louis UPS driver surprised by customers with check for new roof

St. Louis UPS driver surprised by customers with check for new roof
stltoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stltoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Gone but never forgotten in a quilt

Gone but never forgotten in a quilt “Ode to George Floyd,” a quilt by Peggie Hartwell. Members of the national Women of Color Quilters Network draw on personal experiences of injustice, turning their needlework into symbols of liberation, resistance and empowerment. Peggie Hartwell via The New York Times. by Patricia Leigh Brown (NYT NEWS SERVICE) .- Peggie Hartwell, a fourth-generation quilter from South Carolina, has found it hard to return to her needlework since she completed “Ode to George Floyd,” in which she renders Floyd’s face in subtle brown batiks, and an image of his mother barely visible behind a grove of trees. “I had to talk to him, get to know him,” the 81-year-old quilter said of the process. “I pick up a piece of fabric and see his face.”

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