Oreta “Pauline” Pershall
Butler County Times Gazette
Oreta “Pauline” Pershall, 94 of El Dorado, died December 30, 2020 at Homestead of El Dorado. Visitation will be held on Sunday, January 3 from 5-7pm at Kirby-Morris Funeral Home in El Dorado Services will be at the First Christian Church of El Dorado on Monday January 4 at 11:00 am with Interment to follow at Walnut Valley Memorial Park.
Pauline was born in Towanda to Floyd Basil Mc Kinney and Lena Pearl (Mosier) Mc Kinney. She was a 1944 graduate of El Dorado High School. After graduation she attended Wichita State University formally Fairmount College with studies in music.
Author of the article: Jonathan Juha
Publishing date: Dec 28, 2020 • December 28, 2020 • 2 minute read • Sarah Campbell, executive director of Ark Aid Street Mission, one of the organizations in Winter Interim Solution to Homelessness (WISH), stands next to some of the donations the coalition of agencies has received in support to a pop-up shelter on Elizabeth Street. JONATHAN JUHA/The London Free Press
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For the 20 or so Londoners who had checked in by Saturday morning, London’s first pop-up homeless shelter couldn’t have opened at a better time.
Just a day after intake began Wednesday at the 30-bed emergency space, the city was hit by a winter storm that dumped more than 20 centimetres of snow.
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A survey of single people found almost a third are still logging into their ex’s social-media accounts, some for revenge.
UPDATE
Breakups can be traumatic in all sorts of ways. Now we know they can pose a serious cybersecurity threat too. A new survey found that an alarming number of people are still accessing their exes’ accounts without their knowledge a handful for malicious reasons.
The survey conducted during November for Reboot Digital PR Agency found that 70 percent of exes polled have logged into their former partner’s Instagram account in the past week. And a full 65 percent of those who report social-media snooping said it had become an “obsession.”
LONDON, ONT As winter weather settles over London, steps to address street-level homelessness are progressing on several fronts. About 200 Londoners sought assistance for homelessness last month, according to a recent analysis by City Hall, including 117 who were sleeping in tents or makeshift shelters. On Tuesday, the Community and Protective Services (CAPS) Committee received updates on several initiatives launched by City Hall to address the crisis. A vacant lot at 122 Baseline Road W is the first site chosen for one of three modular buildings offering ‘transitional housing’ and support services for Londoners exiting homelessness. The four-storey, 61 unit building will be constructed with pre-fabricated components and assembled on site, speeding up the construction process.