While 2020 has been a whirlwind for most health care workers, the staff at Pascagoula Hospital in Pascagoula still have a sense of humor and the Christmas spirit. A small tree that s a dead ringer for the Charlie Brown Christmas tree sprung up in the hospital s parking lot early December.
Heather Higginbotham Koch, lab technician for Singing River Health System, noticed something strange in the parking lot while on her way to work a shift Dec. 1. A defiant weed sticking out of the concrete had a single ornament on it. She said she thought it was cute and wanted to share it.
Favorite Christmas Movie Says About You v1019.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from v1019.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Including Releases from Prince, Cocteau Twins, The Divine Comedy, The Charlatans, and More Dec 24, 2020 By Mark Redfern Web Exclusive
For the ninth installment of our 2020 Holiday Gift Guide we offer up a few music reissues and box sets (we are a music magazine and website after all). This guide is a little lighter than in previous years as some notable reissue labels didn’t have product to easily send out due to COVID-19 challenges. So there are many other titles you could also consider from Rhino, Sony Legacy, UMe, and others.
Also check out the other parts of our 2020 Holiday Gift Guide: Part 1 on video games, Part 2 on drinking, Part 3 on table top and board games, Part 4 on collectibles, Part 5 on toys, Part 6 on books and graphic novels, Part 7 on Blu-rays and DVDs (which was split into part one and part two), and Part 8 on apparel, technology, and household items. This is our final installment.
âPerfectâ for 2020, effort raises funds for school
Dec 25, 2020
RICHMOND, Va. Frank Pichel’s Christmas trees will probably never be chosen to light up New York’s Rockefeller Center. They look more like the droopy, pitiful tree made famous in the 1965 children’s animated classic, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”
But Pichel and his customers don’t seem to mind in a year when little seems normal. His trees have been flying off a tiny neighborhood lot since he started selling them last month to raise money for a private middle school that provides scholarships for students from an impoverished area of Richmond.
Frank Pichel’s Christmas trees will probably never be chosen to light up New York’s Rockefeller Center. They look more like the droopy, pitiful tree made famous in the 1965 children’s animated classic, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”