Skip to content

Tag: Debra J. England

NEWCASTLE, ENGLAND — Could this cat living in the UK be the oldest in the world?

CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND — British archaeologists working on the Must Farm project in England’s Cambridgeshire Fens can hardly restrain themselves.

LONDON — The internet has spoken — and “RRS Boaty McBoatface” is the people’s choice to name a $300 million state-of-the-art polar research ship.

By AMANDA BANKS Director of Public Relations, Grace College WINONA LAKE — Grace College students were spread across the world for cultural encounter trips over spring break, Feb. 26 – March 8. Groups of students and advisors traveled to the Bahamas, southern California, Taiwan, Atlanta, Dubai, England, Hong Kong, India and Philadelphia. The teams were …read more.

ESSEX, ENGLAND — Two people have been arrested after a young girl died from serious injuries suffered when she was blown around in a bouncy castle during an Easter fair in Essex, England.

COLUMBIA CITY — Dodgeball, the game that strikes terror in the hearts of middle school PE students everywhere, is deeply entrenched in the heart of one Columbia City man. Columbia City native, Scott Stoffel, has the opportunity to represent the United States in the first ever Dodgeball World Cup in Manchester, England, but he needs …read more.

The Canal and River Trust, which works to preserve more than 2,000 miles of waterways throughout England and Wales, has created walking lanes exclusively for ducks in London, Birmingham and Manchester. The walkways have heavy foot traffic and the initiative is part of a campaign to raise awareness of sharing space and watching where people, …read more.

Debra J. England

January 5, 2015

Debra J. England, 59, passed away at 6:03 a.m. Friday, Jan. 2, 2015, at her Pierceton, Ind. residence. She was born April 13, 1955, in Celina, Ohio, to Paul Walter Earl and Paulena (Cowhick) Haggerity. On Oct. 31, 1992, she married Richard England in Warsaw, Indiana. She worked 20 years at RR Donnelley as a feeder. …read more.

Powered by WordPress