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May 8, 2021 Grace W. Ferrari of Hershey, Pa., peacefully entered the Church Triumphant on May 4, 2021, from her home. Born Jan. 14, 1928, in Academia, Juniata County. She was the daughter of the late Lewis A. Walters and Alice C. Walters. On Jan. 17, 1970, Grace married the late O. D. Ferrari with whom she shared 24 years of marriage. Grace is survived by: one sister, Beulah-Mae W. Lukens, Hershey, Pa.; stepdaughter Joan F. Greene and husband LTC (USA Ret) Robert Greene, Potomac Falls, Va.; niece Shelia Conner and husband Bruce, Marionville, Pa.; nephew Paul Ferrari and wife Karen, Rimersburg, Pa.; cousins June Gochenour, Roy, Jr. and wife Debra Gochenour, Jan and Kirk Fry; Jill and Tim Argie; Donna W. Heinbaugh; Linda Simmons and husband Phil; second cousins from North Dakota; and a host of friends. ....
Charles Clevenger, the first director of the Dixon University Center, dies at 79 Updated Apr 15, 2021; The death followed a six-year battle with brain cancer, his obituary said. Clevenger was a Brooklyn native who began his career as an editor and writer while earning his master’s and doctoral degrees through The State University of New York system. In 1984 he accepted the position of dean of the College of Education and Human Services at Shippensburg University and moved his family to Carlisle. In 1993, the center’s board of governors recognized the leadership and generosity of its founding chairman, F. Eugene Dixon Jr., by renaming it in his honor. Clevenger would become the Dixon University Center’s first director. ....
‘There’s a lot of people in Harrisburg who are generous’: A panhandler’s story Updated Dec 18, 2020; Posted Dec 18, 2020 Douglas Irving carries a sign reading God loves you as he panhandles on the corner of Cameron and Market Streets in Harrisburg on Dec. 2, 2020. Joe Hermitt | [email protected] Facebook Share They’re panhandlers, pleading with messages scrawled on cardboard, along with smiles and waves. When traffic stops, they walk the line of idling vehicles waiting for someone to see their need, hoping for a car window to roll down, praying that a little help will pass through. There are no reliable statistics on panhandling in Harrisburg. But those driving through the city on mid to later afternoons, especially toward the end of the week – payday for those lucky enough to still have jobs – have witnessed the rise in their numbers. ....
Scenes from a homeless shelter on a cold night amid the coronavirus Updated Dec 18, 2020; Posted Dec 17, 2020 Men wait in line outside Downtown Daily Bread homeless shelter in Harrisburg on Dec. 9, 2020.
Joe Hermitt | [email protected] Facebook Share They start lining up shortly after the sun goes down. By the time darkness blankets the city, there’s nearly two dozen. Their bags are packed. Some carry food. They might be lining up for a train or bus, but no. Rather, they’re all waiting to come in from the cold for a precious night’s sleep in a warm bed. As winter encroaches, this scene will be repeated nightly through March in an alley outside the Downtown Daily Bread soup kitchen and shelter, located in the shadows of Pennsylvania’s capitol building off North Third Street. ....