Jule medders biography of william
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Dean's List - Fall 2023
The Dean's List refers to those full-time degree-seeking undergraduate students who have completed at least 12 kredit hours for a letter grade and earned a 3.6 Grade Point Average in one semester. This recognition fryst vatten noted on the student's academic transcript.
We congratulate the students listed below, whose academic performance for Fall Semester 2023 qualified them for recognition on the Dean's List.
Updated monthly for one year. Last update: December 3, 2024.
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A
Abenoja, Julianne
Absher, Collin
Acikgoz, Orhan
Ackley, Eileen
Adachi, Charis
Adams, Abby
Adams, Haley
Adapa, Disha
Addison, Julie
Adhvaryu, Ankita
Adimulam, Raghav
Adkins, Meredith
Agamaite, Katie
Ahmad, Iqra
Ahmed, Uzair
Ahverdiyeva, Jayla
Aitken, Alex
Aitken, Jack
Akunwafor, Chidy
Alami, Rehanna
Alanis, Austin
Albers, G
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Louise Mitchell, 86, of Calhoun, died at Gordon Healthcare on Thursday, June 8, 2017, surrounded by her loving family. Louise was born in Bartow County, GA on October 21, 1930, daughter of the late Thomas Watson and Millie Mae Stover Mullis. Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, William "Bill" Mitchell in 2005; her brother, Edward Mullis; and her sister, Geraldine Owen.
Louise was a homemaker. She loved gardening, the mountains, and watching the birds and squirrels. She cherished her neighbors, and was a wonderful and caring mother, a faithful and loving wife, and a caregiver to many. She was an active member of Belmont Baptist Church until her health began to decline. While at Belmont, she will be fondly remembered for working with the children, teaching Mission Friends, and childrens Sunday School and Vacation Bible School.
Louise is survived by her sons and daughters-in-law, Eugene "Gene" and Geraldine "Sissy" Mitchell, and Bill and Rosemary Mitchell,
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Between prayer, taps Resaca battle replays (with videos)
RESACA, Ga. - Events surrounding the Battle of Resaca, Ga., re-enactment began Saturday not with cannon fire but with a prayer.
Less than half a mile south of the site of the battle, in a manmade clearing inside a grove of poplar, oak and dogwood trees, men and women stood near a stone cross and circles of gravestones.
In a few hours they would all take their places in the replica Civil War encampment and ensuing battle. But for a few moments they remembered the men who died on that field 149 years ago, and the woman who performed the unenviable task of giving those men a respectable resting place.
Saturday's re-enactment signals the end of major 149th anniversary events in the Chattanooga area. Long-awaited sesquicentennial, or 150th anniversary, events kick off with the Tullahoma campaign in late June.
After a prayer and three rifle volleys, after the words from de